Make faster SNF admission decisions without skipping the review.
AdmitScore⢠reviews each referral packet and surfaces possible payer, authorization, documentation, and high-cost medication questions in minutes, so staff can verify them and decide sooner. Faster means a better starting point, not skipped verification. It does not guarantee approval, payment, or savings.
Speed comes from a better starting point.
Most of the admissions clock is spent finding the few facts that matter inside a long packet. AdmitScore puts those facts up front so the team can verify and move.
Where the clock goes
Reading a long packet end to end, hunting for payer details, skilled need, and documentation, then re-checking before a bed hold.
Two role-based scores
Referral Fit stays financial-free for all roles. Margin Score is administrator-only planning context and remains an estimate, so admissions, clinical, and finance can review together.
Minutes, not the whole day
A structured summary with source links shortens the path from packet to a confident, verified decision.
Speed without skipping steps
Packet-derived findings link to the source and modeled signals show their basis so staff can verify them. AdmitScore does not approve payers or replace clinical judgment.
Common questions about decision speed.
How can AdmitScore speed up SNF admission decisions?
AdmitScore reads the referral packet and surfaces possible payer risk, authorization readiness, documentation gaps, and high-cost medication questions in minutes, with two role-based scores. Staff start from a structured summary instead of a blank packet, so the team can verify and decide sooner.
Does faster review mean skipping verification?
No. AdmitScore links packet-derived findings to the source and shows the basis for modeled signals so staff can verify them. Speed comes from a faster starting point, not from skipping clinical, payer, or documentation review.
Who makes the final admission decision?
Facility staff make final decisions after reviewing source documents, payer requirements, facility capabilities, and appropriate clinical, operational, legal, and financial guidance.