Private medical, dental practices face new growth demands in 2026

NEVADA, UNITED STATES — Private medical and dental practices around the world are entering 2026 under growing pressure to modernize operations as rising costs, patient expectations and competition force a rethink of how small healthcare businesses grow.
In a Healthcare IT Today thought leadership article, Paul Vigario, founder and CEO of healthcare-focused IT company SurfCT, argued that while tools and technologies evolve, the fundamentals of sustainable growth remain unchanged and often overlooked.
Vigario argued that while tools and technologies evolve, the fundamentals of sustainable growth remain unchanged and often overlooked.
It points to branding, patient compliance systems and leadership structure as the core pillars separating stagnant practices from expanding ones.
“Creating a well-articulated brand, a strong system that encourages patient compliance, and having a leadership team whose strengths complement one another are the tried-and-true methods,” Vigario stated.
Leveraging branding and patient compliance systems
The analysis highlights branding as a critical but frequently underfunded growth driver, particularly as the cost of launching a practice can exceed $1 million in major markets.
Without a clear purpose and identity, Vigario noted, “no founder will be able to create a memorable brand, let alone build a performance marketing system that leads to massive growth.”
Patient compliance systems are also gaining renewed attention as practices adapt to consumer expectations shaped by retail and digital experiences.
Vigario pointed to frictionless processes as a competitive advantage, asking practitioners to reconsider, “What’s your system to move patients (customers) into and out of your office (your sales funnel)?”
Vigario warned that many practices rely on outdated workflows, even as digital tools and automation reshape administrative tasks. Industry forecasts suggest that operational excellence in 2026 will be defined by the successful integration of these technologies to reduce clinician burnout.
“Often, however, private practitioners apply backward-looking solutions when forward-thinking solutions are needed,” Vigario said, noting that AI-driven tools can now handle tasks traditionally assigned to front-desk staff.
Offshore staffing and leadership innovation
As practices seek efficiency without sacrificing care quality, offshore staffing and outsourcing models are emerging as viable solutions for administrative, billing and patient engagement functions.
While not a replacement for clinical staff, these models allow practices to reduce overhead and reallocate resources toward growth initiatives.
Leadership structure is another pressure point. Vigario argued that inherited or insular management models often limit innovation, noting that “what makes a person an expert at one skill doesn’t necessarily translate to the other.”
Instead, it urges practitioners to partner with experienced operators whose skills complement clinical expertise.
From an outsourcing industry perspective, these shifts signal expanding demand for healthcare-focused support services, particularly in markets facing labor shortages and cost inflation.
As practices balance automation with offshore talent, outsourcing providers are becoming strategic partners rather than back-office vendors — a trend likely to accelerate as healthcare businesses align efficiency with long-term growth in 2026 and beyond.

Independent




