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Edge Survey: Administrative Overload – Not Clinician Shortages – Is Emerging as Healthcare’s Next Workforce Crisis

Groundbreaking survey shows more than 76% of healthcare leaders say their organizations are overwhelmed by administrative workloads, signaling a new workforce breaking point

Edge today unveiled new research indicating the next major workforce strain in healthcare may come not from the bedside, but from the front-and back-office. National attention has focused on clinician shortages, yet the data points to a growing administrative capacity crisis. More than three-quarters (76.4%) of healthcare leaders say this workload is already overwhelming, creating backlogs, burnout, and rising operational risk.

“For years we’ve heard about clinician shortages, but this data shows the next breaking point is administrative capacity, the infrastructure that makes care delivery possible,” said Edge co-founder Dr. Rihan Javid, D.O., J.D., and psychiatrist. “This shines a light on a harmful but underappreciated problem: that administrative capacity constraints are already severe – and they’re rapidly getting worse. I can attest to that from my first-hand experience as a doctor.”

Administrative overload is now undeniable – it is systemic and has reached a breaking point.

Edge’s concerning research results provide an added perspective on this mounting problem:

  • The administrative burden is rising faster than organizations can adapt: 75.5% of healthcare leaders reported that workload has increased over the last 12 months.
  • This is no longer an efficiency issue – it’s now a systemic bottleneck: Backlogs have become the norm, with 56.3% experiencing weekly or daily administrative backlogs.
  • Mission-critical workflows are most strained: Strain is concentrated in compliance and regulatory reporting (47.2%), billing and revenue cycle (44.5%), scheduling and intake (42.9%), and data entry and documentation (42.5%). For physicians, administrative strain often translates directly into reduced patient access and growing after-hours documentation. When scheduling, prior authorizations, billing, and intake workflows fall behind, clinicians are pulled further from patient care – accelerating burnout and limiting practice growth.

The Edge survey was conducted in January by Propeller Insights, which interfaced with more than 250 healthcare leaders. The vast majority (98.2%) are primary or shared decision-makers, highlighting that the administrative capacity crisis is a leadership-confirmed operational reality.

Workload, burnout, and inefficiencies continue to grow – and current hiring can’t keep up.

Cost pressure is real, with well more than a third (37.4%) of survey participants saying their organization has been asked to reduce staffing or operational costs in 2026. But it’s misaligned. Staffing cuts are hitting crucial administrative roles, with functions most at risk including:

  • Scheduling and front desk (51.2%)
  • Patient communications (41.7%)
  • Compliance and documentation (35.8%)
  • Credentialing (31.9%)
  • Prior authorizations (30.7%)
  • Billing (24.4%)

Worse, most expect administrative work to rise (74.8%) or hold steady (19.7%) in the future.

Yet hiring qualified administrative or operational staff is difficult (70.5%) and typically takes anywhere from a week to four weeks (79.5%), and for many (15.7%) exceeds a month. Other widely used strategies, such as relying on internal staff to work overtime (44.9%), are also breaking down. This further fuels staff burnout and turnover (45.7%) and inefficiencies such as:

  • Billing or reimbursement delays (39.8%)
  • Low patient satisfaction (31.5%)
  • Compliance risk (31.1%)
  • Delayed care or treatment (29.9%)
  • High error rates (23.6%)
  • Appointment backlogs (20.9%)
  • And lost revenue (19.3%)

Now is the time to break the silence and address this challenge with the urgency it demands.

Edge customers describe administrative workload as “the silent bottleneck” behind delayed patient access, billing slowdowns, and strained internal teams. Rather than relying solely on overtime or incremental hiring, they are embracing compliant, orchestrated workforce approaches to serve patients better, prevent burnout, reduce risk, and stabilize operations. Edge customers report that distributed administrative teams can reduce workspace constraints, minimize workplace distractions, and improve operational consistency.

One multi-location medical group noted stronger adherence to performance benchmarks after expanding its remote workforce. Several organizations report operational improvements after expanding distributed administrative teams, including quieter clinical environments, reduced workspace pressure, fewer internal workflow disruptions, and more consistent task completion aligned to performance metrics.

Healthcare leaders are open to new workforce models, but only with guardrails. Comfort with global talent is high, with 93.8% expressing comfort with leveraging a global talent network. But their adoption will depend upon quality, compliance, and oversight:

  • 66.9% of the survey group emphasized the importance of work quality and accuracy.
  • 52% voiced concerns about compliance and regulatory risks associated with using global talent.
  • 50.8% added that oversight and management are critical to support regulated workflows.

“Healthcare organizations today sorely need the power to expand their administrative capacity,” said Dr. Javid. “Edge combines AI and a compliance-ready blended workforce, empowering operations to scale their administrative capacity safely, sustainably, and with accountability.”

Additional Resources:

About Edge

Edge solves the administrative capacity strain that many organizations face, helping businesses build high-performing remote teams by connecting them with top-tier talent in healthcare, dental, and insurance. Edge accepts only the top 2% of applicants, empowering its customers with skilled professionals who are trained in industry-specific compliance standards, including HIPAA, SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, and GDPR. Edge’s zero-risk hiring model means no upfront fees – pay only when you find the right fit. With Edge, companies reduce staffing costs by up to 70% without compromising quality or security. Join 500+ organizations across the U.S. and Canada reimagining the way they hire. Learn more at www.onedge.co.

“Healthcare doesn’t run without administrative infrastructure. When that capacity breaks, patient access, revenue, and clinician sustainability all come under pressure.” – Edge co-founder Rihan Javid, D.O., J.D., and psychiatrist.

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