Episode 23 · Jared Aron · 4 Mar 2026 · 20 min

    Why Half Your Patients Never Finish

    Most clinics lose around half their patients somewhere along the journey, and fixing that leak is an operations problem, not a clinical one.

    On this episode

    Jared Aron

    Co-founder & CEO, Coherent Healthcare
    Jared Aron is co-founder and CEO of Coherent Healthcare and the host of The Business of a Clinic. He spends his weeks with the owners and operators of private clinics, from single sites to large multi-site groups.

    Show notes

    A patient journey is rarely a straight line. It is a bowl of spaghetti that moves differently for every person, and at each turn (after the consultation, after surgery, after the follow-up) patients drift away. Jared explains that fewer than half of the patients who start with a provider tend to finish, and only some of those who leave were meant to.

    The answer is not an AI receptionist answering calls, and it is not a single patient coordinator who can only hold so many relationships. It is AI agents that track every patient start to finish, with experienced human coordinators stepping in when things get complicated, confusing or concerning, so empathy survives the automation.

    Underneath it all is a simple divide: the office of the doctor is excellent, and the office of the COO barely exists. Great clinical care sits inside a tangle of poor operations, and in healthcare the edge case is the case. Handled well, front-line follow-up becomes strategic feedback the whole practice can learn from.

    Key takeaways

    • Providers commonly lose more than half their patients across the journey, and without a clear status beside each record they cannot see where the leak is.
    • Coherent's model pairs AI agents that track every patient with human coordinators who handle complex, sensitive cases, rather than relying on an AI receptionist.
    • A single patient coordinator has a hard ceiling on how many patients they can support, and agents remove that capacity constraint.
    • In most practices the clinical side is highly trained while the commercial side, the office of the COO, has no equivalent expertise.
    • An AI receptionist addresses roughly one percent of the problem; the larger opportunity is doing the whole front-office job, not adding a booking layer.
    • Because the edge case is the case in healthcare, empathetic human follow-up can surface issues like a patient who did not feel heard and feed them back to improve care.
    In healthcare, the edge case is the case. Healthcare is the edge case.
    Jared Aron
    Stop the leak

    See how much revenue your clinic is leaking.

    Coherent gives private clinics one patient relationship engine, recovering revenue lost at enquiry, recall and billing.