
Healthcare Practice Management Statistics. Last Updated: April 2025 · Statistics: 61+ Sourced · Audience: Practices with 1–10 Providers
Table of Contents
- Healthcare Practice Management Market Size
- EHR and EMR Adoption Rates
- Telehealth Adoption Statistics
- Patient Scheduling and No-Show Statistics
- Medical Billing and Revenue Cycle Management
- Patient Communication and Engagement
- Mental Health Practice Technology Trends
- Practice Profitability and Technology ROI
- Recommended Tools for Small Practices
- Frequently Asked Questions
Introduction
Running a small healthcare practice — whether you’re a therapist, chiropractor, physical therapist, optometrist, or solo physician — has never been more administratively complex. Insurance denials are climbing. Patient no-show rates are creeping back toward pre-pandemic highs. Telehealth regulations remain unsettled. And the pressure to adopt the right technology stack is relentless.
Data helps. The right healthcare practice management statistics can tell you where your peers are investing, what returns they’re seeing, and which operational gaps are quietly bleeding revenue. This roundup compiles 61+ current, sourced statistics across eight critical domains — from EHR adoption and telehealth to billing performance and patient engagement — giving independent and small practice owners the benchmarks they need to make smarter decisions.
All statistics are drawn from authoritative sources including the American Medical Association (AMA), the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC), MGMA, the American Psychological Association, SimplePractice, and peer-reviewed research.
Key Statistics at a Glance
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Global PMS Market Size (2024) | $14.45 Billion |
| Office-Based Physicians with Any EHR | 86% |
| Physicians Using Telehealth Weekly (2024) | 71.4% |
| Annual Cost of Patient No-Shows (U.S.) | $150 Billion+ |
| Average Claim Denial Rate (2024) | 11.8% |
| Mental Health Clinicians on SimplePractice | 250,000+ |
1. Healthcare Practice Management Market Size
The practice management software industry is in the midst of a sustained growth cycle, driven by digital transformation mandates, regulatory compliance requirements, and healthcare workforce shortages that are accelerating the shift toward administrative automation. For small practice owners, this growth signals both opportunity and urgency: the tools are maturing rapidly, and falling behind on adoption carries real operational cost.
$14.45 Billion — The global practice management system market was valued at $14.45 billion in 2024, projected to reach $25.54 billion by 2030 at a CAGR of 10.19%. [Grand View Research]
Market Size Statistics
- The U.S. practice management system market alone was estimated at $5.89 billion in 2024, expected to reach $13.70 billion by 2033 at a CAGR of 10.03%. [Grand View Research]
- North America held the largest regional revenue share at approximately 42–47% of the global PMS market in 2024, driven by HIPAA compliance mandates, private insurance complexity, and a mature vendor ecosystem. [Mordor Intelligence]
- Integrated PMS systems — combining EHR, e-prescribing, patient engagement, and billing — captured 74–75% of global revenue share in 2024, as practices consolidate from fragmented point solutions to unified platforms. [Grand View Research]
- Cloud-based PMS solutions accounted for over 60% of new installations in 2024, with small and mid-sized practices driving adoption due to lower upfront costs and reduced IT maintenance burden. [Market Reports World]
- Small practice groups (under 10 providers) are projected to grow at a 10.54% CAGR through 2030 — the fastest of any segment by practice size — reflecting the acceleration of technology adoption among independent and small clinic operators. [Mordor Intelligence]
- The global medical practice management software market was valued at $8.87 billion in 2024 and is forecast to reach $18.08 billion by 2032. [Data Bridge Market Research]
- Over 480,000 healthcare institutions globally had adopted PMS solutions by 2024, with more than 52,000 being multi-location setups requiring scalable systems. [Market Reports World]
- Physician burnout reached 63% in 2024, and administrative staff turnover surpassed 25% — two pressures driving practices to invest urgently in automation tools that reduce manual workload. [AMA / Mordor Intelligence]
2. EHR and EMR Adoption Rates
Electronic health records are now the backbone of clinical operations for most practices. But adoption statistics mask significant variation — by practice size, specialty, and depth of use. For independent practices, the gap between having an EHR and using it effectively is where the most consequential opportunities (and risks) live.
86% — As of the most recent ONC data, 86% of U.S. office-based physicians had adopted any form of EHR — more than double the 42% adoption rate in 2008. [ONC Health IT Dashboard]
EHR Adoption Statistics
- About 91% of primary care physicians now use EHR systems, making primary care the highest-adoption specialty in the outpatient setting. [Market.us / ONC Data]
- EHR adoption in U.S. hospitals increased from just 9% in 2008 to 96% in 2021, according to ONC — a pace of change that has now shifted focus to interoperability and usability rather than raw adoption. [ONC / Grand View Research]
- Predictive modeling suggests EHR adoption in small practices (under 10 providers) may plateau near 87% under current conditions — meaning a meaningful minority of solo and small-group practices remain on paper-based or hybrid systems. [PMC / Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association]
- EHR adoption in behavioral health settings is significantly lower: fewer than 25% of behavioral health facilities report exclusive EHR use, creating a notable technology gap in that segment. [Aptarro / ONC Data]
- 32% of physicians surveyed by Tebra would not recommend their current EHR to other providers, while more than 60% said they would readily switch systems — indicating widespread dissatisfaction despite high adoption. [Tebra / Independent Physician Survey]
- In 2024, 69% of providers reported still encountering significant interoperability issues between their EHR and other practices or health systems — despite interoperability being cited as the top priority for EHRs by 67% of physicians as far back as 2018. [Tebra]
- Hospitals that participated in all four interoperability domains (send, receive, find, integrate) reached 70% in 2023, up from much lower levels in prior years. [ONC Health IT Dashboard]
- In 2024, 64% of physicians reported higher productivity due to integrated PMS-EHR platforms — a critical finding for practices still running billing software separately from their clinical records system. [Market Reports World Industry Survey]
3. Telehealth Adoption Statistics
Telehealth is no longer a pandemic accommodation — it’s a permanent component of care delivery. For small practices, virtual visits represent an opportunity to expand capacity without adding square footage, reduce barriers for patients with mobility or transportation challenges, and compete with larger health systems on convenience.
71.4% — In 2024, 71.4% of physicians reported using telehealth in their practices on a weekly basis — nearly triple the 25.1% rate reported in 2018, according to an AMA Policy Research Perspectives report. [American Medical Association]
Telehealth Statistics
- The U.S. telehealth market was valued at $42.54 billion in 2024 and is forecast to grow at a CAGR of 23.8% through 2030, making it one of the fastest-growing segments within healthcare technology. [ScienceSoft Telehealth Research]
- As of early 2024, 54% of Americans had participated in at least one telehealth visit, with 38% using it specifically for medical or mental health needs. [Mastermind Behavior / National Survey Data]
- Post-pandemic, 80% of physicians indicated plans to continue using telehealth as a permanent part of their practice model. [Mastermind Behavior]
- In 2023, telemedicine usage in mental health care was over three times higher than in any other medical specialty, according to Epic Research — making mental health the category where telehealth has most deeply disrupted traditional in-person care. [Epic Research / ScienceSoft]
- Psychiatrists had the highest share of telehealth-eligible spending billed as telehealth at 31.2%, followed by endocrinologists (8.5%), neurologists (7.3%), and gastroenterologists (6.6%) in 2024 Medicare claims data. [AMA Policy Research Perspectives]
- 55% of patients report greater satisfaction with virtual visits compared to in-person visits, and even 54.5% of older adults are now welcoming telehealth as a care option. [Sermo Physician Survey 2024 / McKinsey]
- As of February 2024, 78.6% of U.S. hospitals had installed a telemedicine solution — meaning the infrastructure exists, but small independent practices still lag larger systems in implementation. [Definitive Healthcare / ScienceSoft]
- By the end of 2026, 25–30% of all U.S. medical visits are projected to be conducted via telemedicine, up from current levels, with regulatory support from Congress as a key enabler. [ScienceSoft Research]
- Live videoconferencing is used by 80% of surveyed healthcare organizations, making it by far the dominant telehealth modality per the 2024 Telehealth Technology Survey. [2024 Telehealth Technology Survey / ScienceSoft]
- More than half of surveyed healthcare organizations plan to expand their telemedicine utilization in the near future — a signal that telehealth integration is moving from adoption to optimization. [ScienceSoft / 2024 Survey]
Despite these gains, 38% of doctors highlight the need for better patient access to telehealth technologies, and 22% request upgraded provider-side tools. Cross-state licensing remains a challenge too: as of January 2024, 27 U.S. states still did not allow practicing cross-state telehealth. [Cicero Institute / ScienceSoft]
4. Patient Scheduling and No-Show Statistics
Scheduling inefficiency is one of the most direct, measurable sources of revenue leakage in small practices. No-shows don’t just mean an empty chair for 30 minutes — they represent wasted staff preparation time, fixed overhead that still accrues, and a pattern of patient attrition that compounds over time.
$150 Billion+ — Patient no-shows cost the U.S. healthcare system more than $150 billion annually — a staggering figure driven by appointment non-attendance rates that range from 5.5% to 50% depending on specialty and patient population. [Curogram Research]
Scheduling and No-Show Statistics
- The national average no-show rate across all medical specialties hovers around 23%, with some specialty clinics and underserved area practices reporting rates as high as 80%. [Curogram]
- Each missed appointment costs a practice an estimated $200–$375, and an independent physician practice can lose $150,000 or more annually from accumulated no-shows. [Curogram]
- The MGMA single-specialty aggregate no-show rate rose to 6.81% in 2023, nearing the pre-pandemic benchmark of 7% recorded in 2019 — evidence that COVID-era improvements in attendance have mostly reversed. [MGMA DataDive Practice Operations]
- 42% of medical group leaders reported their practices now charge a no-show fee, compared to 58% that do not — a split reflecting ongoing debate over balancing revenue protection with patient access equity. [MGMA Stat Poll, January 2025]
- Automated text appointment reminders reduce no-show rates by 34–38%, making them one of the highest-ROI operational investments a small practice can make. [Imperial College London Study / Klara]
- Patient no-show rates drop by 29% when a self-scheduling tool is used, compared to phone-based scheduling, according to published research. [Dialog Health Research]
- Approximately 33% of patients who miss appointments report they simply forgot — making reminder systems (text, email, phone) the single most straightforward intervention available to any practice. [Dialog Health]
- A 2019 study found that patients who miss just one appointment have an attrition rate of nearly 70%, compared to only 19% for patients who consistently attend — meaning each no-show is also a retention risk event. [Dialog Health / Published Research]
- New patients who wait over one month for their initial appointment are more than twice as likely to cancel and not reschedule, compared to those who get an appointment within a week. [Study of 4.2M Appointments / Dialog Health]
- Only 15% of medical groups reported using predictive analytics to improve no-show rates or patient scheduling as of 2024 — suggesting significant untapped potential for AI-driven scheduling optimization among small practices. [MGMA Stat Poll, August 2024]
5. Medical Billing and Revenue Cycle Management
For independent practices with small administrative teams, the revenue cycle is both the most consequential and the most vulnerable operational area. Claim denials are rising, prior authorization burdens are increasing, and the shift toward patient financial responsibility means more of your collections now depend on effective patient communication — not just payer negotiation.
11.8% — The average initial claim denial rate reached 11.8% in 2024, up from 10.2% just two years prior — and industry projections suggest it may hit 12–15% in 2025 without stronger front-end processes. [Human Medical Billing / RCM Industry Data]
Billing and RCM Statistics
- Approximately 50% of all claim denials stem from front-end errors — including eligibility issues, missing demographic information, and insufficient prior authorizations — all preventable with better pre-visit intake workflows. [Human Medical Billing]
- Eligibility verification failures alone account for approximately 22% of preventable denials — making insurance verification at every visit one of the highest-leverage billing improvement actions for small practices. [Human Medical Billing]
- The AMA has indicated that 27% of prior authorization requests are automatically or always rejected — a significant administrative burden that disproportionately affects small practices without dedicated authorization staff. [American Medical Association]
- Over one-third (36%) of medical practice leaders plan to outsource or automate part of their revenue cycle management in 2025, with collections, billing, and medical coding as the most commonly cited areas. [MGMA Stat Poll, November 2024]
- The target Net Collection Rate (NCR) for well-run practices is 95%+, with best-in-class practices achieving 97–98%. Practices operating below 92% NCR typically lose $150,000–$700,000 annually in recoverable revenue. [Medical Billers and Coders]
- Once claims exceed 120 days in accounts receivable, recovery rates drop below 40% — making timely follow-up and automated AR aging alerts critical tools for any practice management system. [Medical Billers and Coders]
- The AMA has found that inefficiencies during the revenue cycle management process can result in a revenue loss of 5–10% for healthcare organizations — translating to tens of thousands of dollars annually for even a modest-volume independent practice. [AMA / Revco Solutions]
- 93% of consumers say a bad billing experience could impact whether they return to a specific provider or seek care elsewhere — tying revenue cycle management directly to patient retention. [Ingenious Med / Sage Growth Partners Survey]
- Patient collection rates currently average only 34–48% — far below what practices are owed — due to high patient cost-sharing, complex billing statements, and inadequate follow-up. [Human Medical Billing 2025]
- One-third of all patient payments are now made online, and over 50% of patients expect more online interaction with their healthcare providers around billing. [HFMA / Revco Solutions]
The AMA recommends that small practices track first-pass resolution rates and coding accuracy (targeting 95%), keep days in accounts receivable under 30, and verify insurance before every appointment as the three most impactful RCM interventions available without adding staff. [AMA]
6. Patient Communication and Engagement
Patient engagement is no longer a peripheral consideration — it directly correlates with appointment adherence, treatment compliance, billing outcomes, and retention. Small practices that invest in digital communication tools consistently outperform peers on revenue collection, no-show reduction, and online reputation.
65% — In 2024, 65% of individuals nationwide accessed their online medical records or patient portals — a dramatic increase from just 25% in 2014, reflecting how normalized digital health access has become. [Patient Partner / ONC Survey Data]
Patient Communication Statistics
- 84% of patients expect their healthcare providers to send personalized reminders and messages — setting a baseline digital communication expectation that most small practices have yet to fully automate. [LLCBuddy / Patient Engagement Survey]
- 88% of patients said they would book appointments online, and 84% said they enjoy using digital messaging to communicate with their providers — underscoring demand for patient portal and self-scheduling tools. [Patient Engagement Software Survey]
- Text reminders boost medication adherence by 15.2%, and no-show rates drop 34% when patients receive and engage with well-crafted text communications, per analysis of over 1 million healthcare text messages. [Dialog Health SMS Analysis]
- 42% of patients are more likely to follow treatment plans if reminded between visits — making between-visit digital touchpoints one of the most cost-effective clinical quality interventions for any practice. [Patient Engagement Research]
- Patient engagement tools can lower hospital readmissions by as much as 14%, demonstrating that engagement is not only a business function but a clinical outcomes driver. [Patient Engagement Software Statistics]
- 75% of patients believe digital health tools simplify their interactions with healthcare providers. The most valued features are digital test results (73%), appointment reminders (72%), and self-scheduling (67%). [Patient Partner / 2024 Research]
- For every one-point increase in digital engagement score (portal use, online scheduling, digital payments), there is a measurable one-point increase in the share of total patient charges paid within a year — per the athenahealth Patient Digital Engagement Index. [Medlaunch / athenahealth Index]
- 59% of patients use multiple portals across providers, labs, and insurers — highlighting the fragmented digital experience most patients navigate, and the competitive advantage practices can earn through streamlined, unified communication. [Patient Partner Research 2024]
7. Mental Health Practice Technology Trends
Mental health practices occupy a unique position in the small practice landscape: high telehealth adoption, lower EHR penetration than physical medicine, acute demand growth fueled by a national mental health crisis, and a rapidly maturing ecosystem of specialized practice management tools.
250,000+ — SimplePractice now serves more than 250,000 solo and group mental health practitioners. In 2025, those practitioners delivered over 125 million sessions of care to more than 10 million clients. [SimplePractice / Business Wire]
Mental Health Technology Statistics
- The global mental health software market was valued at $2.1 billion in 2021 and is growing at a CAGR of 15.2% through 2030 — making it one of the fastest-growing verticals within healthcare technology. [Grand View Research / TechBullion]
- Psychiatry leads all medical specialties in telehealth adoption, reaching 98.3% telehealth utilization during peak pandemic periods, and maintaining the highest billing ratio for telehealth-eligible services (31.2%) in 2024. [AMA Policy Research Perspectives]
- Telehealth usage in mental health care was over three times higher than in any other medical specialty in 2023 — demonstrating that virtual care has fundamentally restructured how behavioral health services are delivered. [Epic Research / ScienceSoft]
- Telehealth in mental health services generated a 315% ROI over three years in high-performing programs, reduced crisis escalations by 89%, and improved medication adherence by 76% — with 92% of patients preferring virtual follow-ups. [CTeL / National Health Analysis]
- Half of U.S. employees report moderate to severe levels of burnout, depression, or anxiety — driving sustained demand growth for mental health services that far outpaces supply, particularly from independent practitioners. [SimplePractice / Uprise Health Announcement]
- AI-powered practice management tools are now among the top six trends shaping therapy in 2026, with clinicians increasingly using AI to automate documentation, progress notes, treatment plans, and administrative scheduling. [SimplePractice Trends Report 2026]
- Fewer than 25% of behavioral health facilities report exclusive EHR use — meaning the majority of mental health practices still rely on hybrid or paper-based systems, leaving significant room for productivity gains through technology adoption. [ONC / Aptarro EHR Adoption Data]
- SimplePractice was acquired by Vista Equity Partners in January 2024 for approximately $4 billion — making it one of the most highly valued companies in the mental health tech space and signaling institutional confidence in this market segment. [SimplePractice Review / Crown Counseling]
8. Practice Profitability and Technology ROI
The most common barrier small practice owners cite for adopting new technology isn’t skepticism — it’s uncertainty about return on investment. These statistics put the ROI question in concrete terms: what specific operational improvements should you expect from practice management software, and at what scale?
40% — Modern practice management platforms cut routine administrative workload by approximately 40%, largely through digital check-in, real-time eligibility verification, and automated prior authorization processes. [Mordor Intelligence / AMA Data]
Profitability and ROI Statistics
- Clinics using PMS systems in a 2023 study experienced a 45% improvement in patient throughput and a 38% reduction in billing errors — two of the most directly measurable operational benefits of comprehensive practice management technology. [Market Reports World / PMS Industry Study]
- AI-based enhancements in scheduling and billing modules have improved accuracy and reduced human errors by 40% in clinics that transitioned to AI-supported systems. [Market Reports World]
- Telehealth programs in primary care settings generated a 225% ROI within two years, cut unnecessary specialist referrals by 67%, and boosted preventive care metrics by 58%. [CTeL National Analysis]
- Integrated PMS-EHR platforms deliver 85% higher quality scores in CMS MIPS reporting than disparate tools — translating directly into revenue protection through Medicare payment adjustments of up to 9%. [CMS / Mordor Intelligence]
- A single U.S. clinic that installed denial prediction software reduced denials from 14% to 4% within one year, recovering over $150,000 annually — representing direct, measurable ROI that justifies technology investment for small practices. [Human Medical Billing]
- Cloud-based PMS systems reduce IT maintenance costs by approximately 28% and deploy 35% faster than on-premise systems — a significant advantage for practices without dedicated IT staff. [Market Reports World]
- Payment-related text message links reduce accounts receivable anywhere from 21–54% depending on implementation — making SMS payment tools one of the highest-ROI communication investments for small practices. [Dialog Health SMS Analysis — 1M Messages]
- Over 32% of clinics upgraded or replaced legacy PMS with AI-integrated systems by 2024, reflecting a broad shift from first-generation digital tools to second-generation, intelligence-augmented platforms. [Market Reports World]
- PMS solutions with real-time analytics features saw a 33% adoption increase in 2024 — as practice owners discover that predictive scheduling and performance dashboards yield measurable improvements in both patient satisfaction and financial outcomes. [Market Reports World]
9. Recommended Tools for Small Practices
Based on the statistics in this roundup, every small practice should be evaluating its technology stack across four core areas: EHR and documentation, scheduling and patient communication, medical billing and claims management, and telehealth delivery. The tools below are purpose-built for independent and small group practices with 1–10 providers.
SimplePractice
Best for: Mental Health & Wellness Practitioners
The #1 EHR and practice management platform for mental health professionals. Used by 250,000+ therapists, counselors, and wellness practitioners. Includes integrated telehealth, billing, scheduling, and a HIPAA-compliant client portal.
Jane App
Best for: Allied Health & Multidisciplinary Clinics
A comprehensive practice management solution favored by chiropractors, physical therapists, and multidisciplinary clinics. Offers intuitive online booking, charting, billing, and telehealth — all from a single cloud platform.
Kareo
Best for: Medical Billing & Revenue Cycle Management
A cloud-based EHR and practice management platform built for independent medical practices. Strong revenue cycle management tools, including real-time eligibility verification, claim scrubbing, and denial management — critical for practices struggling with rising denial rates.
Tebra
Best for: Independent Physician Practices
Formed from the merger of Kareo and PatientPop, Tebra offers an all-in-one platform covering EHR, billing, patient engagement, and online presence management. ONC-certified and designed specifically for small, independent physician practices.
Note: Tool recommendations are based on publicly available feature sets and user feedback data. Hieing may receive compensation if you click on affiliate links and make a purchase. This does not influence our editorial assessments.
Insurance Agency Technology Statistics: 47+ Data Points Every Independent Agent Needs in 2026
Key Takeaways
The data across all eight sections of this roundup points toward a consistent conclusion: small practices that invest in integrated technology — EHR, billing, scheduling, and patient communication in a single platform — outperform those operating fragmented or legacy systems on virtually every operational metric.
- The market is growing at over 10% annually
- Claim denial rates are climbing to 11.8% and beyond
- Patient no-shows are returning to pre-pandemic levels (~7%)
- Telehealth is permanently reshaping care delivery
- Patients now arrive with digital expectations that paper-based or phone-only workflows cannot meet
The good news: the tools have never been more capable, more affordable, or more purpose-built for independent practitioners. Whether you’re a solo therapist using SimplePractice, a multi-provider chiropractic clinic on Jane App, or an independent physician practice on Tebra or Kareo, the ROI data supports meaningful investment in the right practice management stack — and the cost of inaction is measurable in lost revenue, avoidable denials, and patient attrition.
Frequently Asked Questions
How large is the healthcare practice management software market?
The global practice management system market was valued at approximately $14.45 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $25.54 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 10.19% (Grand View Research). The U.S. market alone was estimated at $5.89 billion in 2024, expected to nearly double to $13.70 billion by 2033.
What percentage of physicians have adopted EHRs?
As of the most recent ONC Health IT Dashboard data, approximately 86% of U.S. office-based physicians had adopted any form of EHR system — up from 42% in 2008. About 91% of primary care physicians specifically use EHRs. However, adoption in behavioral health settings is significantly lower, with fewer than 25% of facilities reporting exclusive EHR use.
How much do patient no-shows cost a medical practice?
Each missed appointment costs an estimated $200–$375. An independent physician practice can lose $150,000 or more per year from accumulated no-shows. Across the U.S. healthcare system, patient no-shows cost over $150 billion annually. The most cost-effective mitigation strategies are automated text reminders (which reduce no-shows by 34–38%) and self-scheduling tools (which reduce no-shows by 29%).
What is the average claim denial rate in medical billing?
The average initial claim denial rate reached 11.8% in 2024, up from 10.2% two years prior. Industry projections suggest denial rates may reach 12–15% in 2025. Best-in-class practices target a denial rate below 3%, with under 5% considered good performance. About 50% of all denials originate from preventable front-end errors like eligibility verification failures.
How widely is telehealth used by physicians?
In 2024, 71.4% of physicians reported using telehealth in their practices on a weekly basis — nearly triple the 25.1% rate in 2018, according to AMA data. Psychiatrists lead in telehealth use, followed by endocrinologists, neurologists, and gastroenterologists. By 2026, 25–30% of all U.S. medical visits are projected to occur via telemedicine.
What practice management software is best for mental health practices?
SimplePractice is the most widely adopted EHR and practice management platform in the mental health space, serving 250,000+ practitioners. It offers integrated telehealth, insurance billing, scheduling, and a HIPAA-compliant client portal. Other strong options include TherapyNotes for documentation-focused workflows and Jane App for multidisciplinary or allied health teams.
What is a good no-show rate benchmark for a small medical practice?
According to MGMA DataDive benchmarks, ideal no-show rates for well-run medical groups are 5–7%. Rates between 10–30% are common in many clinics, especially in underserved areas. Rates above 20% typically signal a need for urgent systemic intervention. Mental health and primary care specialties tend to have higher-than-average no-show rates due to their patient populations.
Primary Sources
- Grand View Research — Practice Management System Market Report (2024)
- Grand View Research — U.S. Practice Management System Market Report (2024)
- Mordor Intelligence — Practice Management System Market Analysis (2025)
- Data Bridge Market Research — Medical Practice Management Software Market (2024)
- Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) — Physician EHR Adoption Trends
- ONC — EHR Adoption Rates and Achieving Meaningful Use
- Aptarro — U.S. EHR Adoption Statistics (2026 Update)
- Tebra — EHR Statistics: Independent Physician Survey
- American Medical Association — Telehealth Use Variation by Specialty (2024)
- American Medical Association — Revenue Cycle Management for Private Practices
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- ScienceSoft — The Future of Telemedicine Adoption in the U.S.
- Mastermind Behavior — Telehealth Statistics (2024)
- Sermo — Telehealth in 2025: Key Insights for Physicians
- CTeL — Telehealth in 2025: Transforming Healthcare
- MGMA — No-Show Fees on the Rise (January 2025)
- MGMA — Patient No-Shows Still an Issue (August 2024)
- MGMA — Automating and Outsourcing Revenue Cycle Management (2024)
- Curogram — Average Patient No-Show Rate Guide (2025)
- Curogram — How Much Do No-Shows Cost the U.S. Healthcare System?
- Dialog Health — 50+ Patient No-Show Statistics
- Dialog Health — Healthcare SMS Analysis: 1 Million Messages
- Klara — Text Appointment Reminders Reduce No-Shows by 38%
- Human Medical Billing — Essential Medical Billing KPIs for 2025
- Medical Billers and Coders — Revenue Recovery Guide (2026)
- Ingenious Med — 7 RCM Trends for 2024
- Revco Solutions — Biggest RCM Trends of 2024
- Patient Partner — Behavioral Trends in Patient Engagement 2025
- LLCBuddy — Patient Engagement Software Statistics (2025)
- Medlaunch — 10 Must-Know Patient Engagement Statistics (2026)
- SimplePractice — 2024 Impact and Year in Review
- Business Wire — SimplePractice and Uprise Health Partnership (2026)
- TechBullion — Behavioral Health Practice Management Software 2024
- Market Reports World — Practice Management System Market Report
- PMC / NCBI — Predicting EHR Adoption by Physicians: Small Practice Focus
- SimplePractice — 6 Emerging Trends Shaping Therapy in 2026
© 2025 Hieing · hieing.com · This article is for informational purposes only. Statistics sourced from third-party research; verify independently before making business decisions.