Health information technologists and medical registrars
Most of the workflow is automatable. Human judgment remains for exceptions, clients, or ambiguity.
SOC 29-9021 · Healthcare
Signal composition
how the 0-100 score is assembled
By seniority
multiplicative adjustment from category curve
Entry-level roles carry the brunt because they concentrate the most automatable subset of tasks. Senior work is insulated by judgment, relationships, and accountability.
Task-level analysis
scored 0-100 for current-generation AI feasibility, weighted by BLS-stated importance
Assign classification codes to represent diagnosis and treatment
Medical coding AI systems already demonstrate high accuracy in assigning ICD-10, CPT, and other classification codes from clinical documentation. These systems handle routine cases autonomously with human review for complex or ambiguous diagnoses, substantially reducing labor content.
BLS evidence: Cancer registrars assign classification codes to represent the diagnosis and treatment of cancers and benign tumors.
Compile data and generate reports for disease registry or treatment
AI excels at compiling structured data, generating standardized reports, calculating registry statistics, and producing visualizations. Current systems can autonomously create most routine disease registry and treatment reports with minimal human intervention beyond final review and distribution.
BLS evidence: Health information technologists and medical registrars compile data and generate reports, such as for disease registry or treatment.
Abstract, collect, and analyze clinical data related to medical treatment and outcomes
AI can extract clinical data from structured and semi-structured sources, perform statistical analysis, and identify outcome patterns with high accuracy. Current NLP and analytics tools handle most abstraction and analysis tasks, requiring human review primarily for ambiguous cases and final interpretation.
BLS evidence: They abstract, collect, and analyze clinical data related to medical treatment, followup, and results to support the delivery and improvement of patient care.
Organize and update information in clinical databases or registries
AI excels at structured data organization, updating records according to schemas, and maintaining database consistency. Modern systems can handle most routine updates autonomously with batch human review for exceptions, though complex clinical judgment calls still require oversight.
BLS evidence: Medical registrars create and maintain databases of information, such as those used to track a particular disease or condition.
Track patient outcomes for quality assessment
AI can monitor patient outcomes against defined metrics, flag deviations, and generate quality indicators from structured data. Automated tracking systems handle most routine surveillance, though interpreting clinical significance and determining appropriate interventions requires human oversight.
BLS evidence: Health information technologists and medical registrars track patient outcomes for quality assessment and track treatment, survival, and recovery.
Validate the integrity of patient data
AI can detect data inconsistencies, missing values, format errors, and logical contradictions across patient records efficiently. Validation rules and anomaly detection are well-suited to automation, though complex edge cases and resolution of conflicting information still benefit from human judgment.
BLS evidence: Health information technologists and medical registrars validate the integrity of patient data, and cancer registrars review patients' records and pathology reports to verify completeness and accuracy.
Ensure privacy, security, and confidentiality of patients' health information
AI can monitor access logs, detect anomalous data access patterns, and enforce privacy rules, but ensuring comprehensive HIPAA compliance requires human judgment about policy interpretation, breach assessment, and balancing data utility with privacy in novel situations that exceed automated rule-based systems.
BLS evidence: Health information technologists and medical registrars ensure privacy, security, and confidentiality of patients' health information, as required by law.
Help determine requirements for computerized healthcare systems
AI can analyze workflow patterns and suggest system requirements based on data, but determining requirements for healthcare IT systems requires extensive stakeholder consultation, understanding clinical workflows in context, and navigating competing priorities that demand human facilitation and judgment.
BLS evidence: Health information technologists and medical registrars help to determine requirements for computerized healthcare systems.
Evaluate and support implementation of health information systems
AI can analyze system requirements and generate implementation recommendations, but evaluating fit for specific clinical workflows and supporting actual deployment requires human judgment about organizational context, stakeholder needs, and change management that AI cannot fully navigate autonomously.
BLS evidence: Health information technologists help to design and develop electronic healthcare systems and may specialize in implementing the systems and educating staff on their use.
Task heatmap
automation score by task, sorted by weighted contribution
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External signals and sources
category-level priors and BLS fields that feed the four non-task signals
- Karpathy/BLS Digital AI Exposure (0-10 scale rescaled to 0-100)
- BLS projected outlook: Much faster than average (15%)
- Indeed demand signal (monthly refresh pending)
- BLS typical entry-level education: Associate's degree
- Credential trend signal (annual refresh)
Related in Healthcare
closest AOI neighbors in the same category