
UiPath has introduced new AI solutions for healthcare at the ViVE 2026 conference, aimed at helping healthcare providers as well as payers manage administrative and financial tasks more efficiently. These solutions use automation to improve processes like summarizing medical records, preventing claim denials, and speeding up prior authorization. The goal is to connect data, reduce inefficiencies, and help healthcare organizations manage their revenue cycles more effectively.
Healthcare systems face challenges like data management issues, labor shortages, and outdated systems, which make it hard to process payments accurately. UiPath’s new solutions help by turning complex medical records into clear summaries, preventing claim denials by identifying problems early, and automating the process of checking for insurance eligibility and medical necessity.
These solutions are designed to reduce time spent on paperwork, speed up patient care, and protect payment accuracy for both providers and payers. For this launch, UiPath is partnering with Genzeon, a company with expertise in Robotic Process Automation In Healthcare, to offer these AI-powered tools.
Executive Statement
According to Benjamin Smith, Vice President of Technology, medlitix, since implementing the UiPath MRS solution, they have reduced the average summary review time from 70 minutes to six, a 90 percent improvement. Their clinicians are spending more time on direct patient care and less time digging through documentation. The structured output and citations give us confidence in what they are reviewing.
According to Biju Samkutty, Chief Operating Officer, International & Enterprise Automation, Mayo Clinic, as an organization, they are moving down the path of the deployment of intelligent automation across the board. This was a fundamental decision to accelerate the transformation and the change they need to occur, allowing them to apply capabilities that are not inherent in healthcare the way they see it today. They are focused on technologies, platforms, and other ways to augment the work and reduce the administrative burden for our clinicians and staff so that they can do what they do best, care for patients and support them accordingly.
