Kyle Tucker

Kyle is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Dexios. Kyle is best known around the RCM industry as the current President of the Healthcare Business Management Association (HBMA) – the nation’s premier Revenue Cycle Management industry association. In 2020, he received the HBMA’s prestigious J. Dennis Mock Award. Kyle is also known in radiology circles as the “KPI guy.” Kyle led efforts to revamp the Radiology Business Management Association’s (RBMA) annual Accounts Receivable survey, including creating a new metric called The True Cost of Billing. He is a frequent speaker at the RBMA’s national conference, PaRADigm, and the author of many articles about radiology billing. After graduating with a B.S. in Business Administration from the University of Richmond in 1985, Kyle began his career at International Business Machines (IBM) in their IBM Credit Corporation Division in Washington, DC. Within a year, he was promoted to a Client Executive position where he managed the client relationship with companies with under $500M in sales in the Mid-Atlantic. In 1997, Kyle was sent to Harvard University for a yearlong executive MBA-styled training program designed for the top 1% of IBM Client Executives. At the same time, he was promoted to Segment Executive, where he managed a $300M segment of IBM’s business in the Southeastern US. In 1999, Kyle left IBM when he was offered a vice president position at Dominion Medical Management in Richmond, VA. DMM was a billing company with approximately 50 mid-Atlantic clients (80% radiology). Kyle has spent the last 25+ years helping radiology groups turn around their billing as the owner of Dexios Radiology Billing. Dexios has created a wide array of offerings to offer the right solution to solve any radiology billing problem, including traditional outsourcing, cloud billing, consulting, and an Imagine-specific temporary staffing agency.

Blog

Upcoming Webinar: Radiology RCM’s Dirty Little Secret

My father attended Hampden-Sydney College in the 1950s. There was an older man who used to cut wood for the students to keep warm during the cold Virginia winters. He was known as Francis the Axe.



Page 1 of 1
1