One contract for outpatient imaging. Every market, one national rate.
The in-network provider-of-record layer for outpatient imaging. Contract once, price once, and route members to high-value sites at the point of referral.
You know freestanding is the answer. Your members still route to the hospital.
Advanced imaging is a commoditized service: the scan is identical across sites. The cost lever isn't fewer scans, it's the right site of care.
Identical MRI or CT. Same machine, same read. The pink is overpayment you can route away.
Identical machine, identical read. The only variable is the bill, so steering site of care recovers margin without touching clinical quality or denying care.
Hospital pricing in your MLR
A hospital outpatient department bills 2-3x a freestanding center for the identical study. On a commodity, that delta is margin leakage, not clinical value.
Steerage that doesn't execute
Provider directories exist, but members default to the hospital brand they know. Routing is manual, and the cheaper freestanding option rarely wins.
Adequacy you can't build fast enough
Steering needs freestanding density in every market. Papering hundreds of centers one by one, each with its own fee schedule and claims feed, doesn't scale.
The answer is freestanding. The routing and adequacy to get members there is the missing layer. That's the layer Scan operates.
Most networks send a directory. We send a booked appointment.
We are API-integrated into the scheduling systems behind our imaging network, so we surface live, open slots and put members straight into them with dynamic patient scheduling. Care navigation stops being a list of numbers to call and becomes a confirmed appointment at a high-value site.
- Live RIS integrationWe connect into each centre's scheduling system by API.
- Real open slotsGenuine availability, not a callback queue.
- Sent to the memberOpen times sent straight to the member.
- Booked, data flows backConfirmed appointment and structured data to you.
The only network that books members, not just routes them.
Routing a member to a cheaper centre is a suggestion. Booking them into a live slot is a transaction. We are the only network that does the second, because it takes an API integration into every centre's scheduling system, one RIS at a time. That is years of work, and it is why we are the category leader while the rest of the market is still sending directories.
Reporting is in-house, so we standardize the data flows and feed them back to your team, claims-ready.
One connected flow, end to end
Works alongside your existing utilization management and prior-auth. No rip-and-replace, member opt-in, minimal provider disruption.
Contract once
A single national agreement at one rate. Scan.com is your in-network provider-of-record; you do not renegotiate market by market.
Route at the point of referral
We embed in care navigation, prior-auth and referral so the high-value site is the default, before the scan is booked, not a call after it's authorized.
Scan and specialist read
Board-certified specialist reads with structured reporting, delivered to the referring provider.
Clean claims and reporting
One clean, EDI-native claim per episode, with site-of-service shift and savings reporting at the plan level.
Adequacy where your members are
“A regional health plan shifted the majority of its advanced outpatient imaging to freestanding sites within the first two quarters.”
See the savings on your own claims
Send a de-identified claims extract under mutual NDA and we'll model site-of-service shift and savings against your current imaging spend, no commitment.
Request your savings model- Site-of-service shift opportunity by CPT and market
- Modeled annual savings vs. current allowed amounts
- Adequacy heatmap for your member geographies
- Implementation roadmap, 60-day pilot scope
Illustrative sample. Figures modeled from a de-identified claims extract under mutual NDA.
Ready to contract once and route everywhere?
Talk to the payer team about national coverage, rate design, and a 60-day pilot in your priority markets.
Talk to the payer team