You downloaded the guide. You've seen what the imaging facility side actually knows. The question now is whether your clinic keeps bleeding the same hours every year — or whether you fix it permanently.

The CT Contrast Guide stopped one type of call. The Make Imaging Great Again Program stops all of them.

An older male doctor with gray hair, beard, and glasses, wearing a white coat and stethoscope, sitting at a desk and talking on a landline phone.

Let's be specific about what this is costing your clinic right now.

The average primary care office receives four imaging clarification calls per week. At 12 minutes of provider time per call, that's 41 hours per year. At 30 minutes of office staff time per call, that's 104 hours per year. At $100 per hour for your provider and $20 per hour for your staff, that's a minimum of $6,220 in lost labor every single year.

That number does not include the patient who waited. It does not include the Google review they left because their scan was delayed. It does not include the referral they didn't make because they were frustrated.

It also doesn't include what happens when the federal Appropriate Use Criteria program — currently paused by Congress, not repealed — comes back with enforcement. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has estimated this program saves $700 million per year when properly implemented. When it returns, the clinics that already have their imaging ordering systems correct will sail through it. The ones who don't will face prior authorization requirements, denied claims, and mandatory compliance costs that dwarf this program's price many times over.

THE GUARANTEE:

If your clinic completes this program and continues to receive the same volume of unnecessary imaging clarification calls within 90 days, you receive a full refund. No questions, no process, no negotiation.

We offer this guarantee because in 20 years of performing imaging exams, every clarification call I made was preventable. Every single one. The information to stop them has always existed. This program is what delivers it to your clinic.

THE COMPARISON:

Clinical workflow software — the kind that large hospital systems use to manage imaging ordering — costs between $25,000 and $150,000 per installation, requires an IT department, takes months to implement, and still doesn't train your staff on what to actually say.

This program costs $10,000 once. It takes 90 minutes. It requires nothing from your IT department. And it comes with a guarantee that no software company in the industry offers.

At the rate your clinic is currently losing labor to imaging callbacks, this program pays for itself in under two years. Every year after that, the savings are yours to keep.

The primary care clinics that succeed in the next decade will be the ones that operate with the same clinical precision on the administrative side that they bring to patient care. Imaging orders are clinical documents. They deserve clinical standards.

You already proved that by downloading the guide. You already know something most clinics don't. This program is the next step for the kind of clinic you're building.

See exactly what's included before you decide.

This program is not for every clinic. It's for the ones that have decided that the hours, the stress, and the patient delays caused by imaging callbacks are no longer acceptable. If that's your clinic, this is your solution.

A male doctor wearing glasses and a white coat, with a stethoscope around his neck, sitting at a desk in a bright medical office. He is writing on a clipboard with a pen while looking at a laptop screen. There are files and a lamp on the desk, and a bottle of hand sanitizer is visible in the foreground.

This Hour & a Half Program to Stop Annoying Imaging Facility Calls and Gain Back Hours a Year includes:

  • CT Contrast Guide Video

  • CT Contrast Guide & Allergy Prep Sheet

  • Reasons Why Imaging Facilities Call Video

  • Reasons Why Imaging Facilities Call Sheet

A doctor wearing a face mask interacts with a holographic display showing a human skeleton, a 3D heart model, and various data visualizations, including charts, percentages, and anatomical details.
  • Imaging Wording Guide Video

  • Imaging Wording Guide Sheet

  • X-Ray & CT Coverage Regions Guide Video

  • X-Ray & CT Coverage Regions Guide Sheet

A healthcare professional in a white coat using a smartphone, with digital checklists and medical icons overlayed and floating around, representing healthcare tasks or record management.
  • Redundancy Saves Frustration Video

  • Redundancy Saves Frustration Sheet

  • Office Staff Checklist System

  • Guaranteed to stop unnecessary X-Ray and CT clarification calls.