Late Breaking Lab News
September 10, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
News that a laboratory’s courier truck was high-jacked in broad daylight with patient specimens aboard puts the spotlight on whether the security practices labs use to protect drivers, vehicles, and the patient specimens they may be carrying are adequate. On Aug. 3 in Durham, N.C., a driver of a c…
August 20, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
There is a new sector in the clinical laboratory industry. It is called “global direct-to-consumer (DTC) genetic health testing” by Kalorama Information, a market research firm based in Rockville, Md. In a recent report, Kalorama says this sector is comprised of the direct-to-co…
July 30, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
Clinical labs and physicians can soon say goodbye to “meaningful use.” Federal officials are proposing a significant change to the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive program for certified EHRs that has been in existence since 2011. In a press release issued last spring, the Centers for M…
July 9, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center of Wake Forest, N.C., has been notified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), in a letter dated June 15, that it is back in compliance with Medicare Conditions of Participation. Earlier this year, following inspe…
June 18, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
In New Jersey last week, David Nicoll, 44, the former owner of Biodiagnostic Laboratory Services (BLS) of Parsippany, N.J. was sentenced to 72 months in a federal prison. On the same day, his brother, Scott Nicoll, 37, who also worked at BLS, was sentenced to 43 months in prison. Bo…
May 29, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
Ireland is dealing with a cervical cancer screening scandal that reaches back to laboratories in the United States. In recent months, the Irish public has learned that more than 200 women wrongly got negative Pap test results over a multi-year period. Many of these women did not learn of the erroneo…
May 7, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
In Sebastopol, Calif., the financially-troubled Sonoma West Medical Center (SWMC) dropped a controversial drugs-of-abuse testing program. The following month, without the revenue from the drug testing program, 37-bed SWMC lost $1.4 million. In 2017, the hospital entered into a pass-t…
April 16, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
Add Estonia to the growing list of nations that will now provide genetic information to its citizens. On March 20, the government rolled out an initiative that, in its first phase, will generate genetic information for 100,000 of its 1.3 million residents. This data will address an individual’s ge…
March 26, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
On March 6, one of the lab industry’s long-serving executives and consultants, Jack Mattice, PhD, of Vancouver, Wash., died from flu complications. He was 77 years old. Mattice earned a PhD in medical microbiology from University of Oregon. Within a few years, he was handling mark…
March 5, 2018 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume X No. 9 – July 7, 2003 Issue
“More people took genetic ancestry tests last year than in all previous years combined,” declared Senior Editor Antonio Regalado in a story published on Feb. 18 by MIT Technology Review. He wrote that, just in 2017, the number of people who had their DNA analyzed with direct-to-consumer genetic g…
CURRENT ISSUE
Volume XXXIII, No. 4 – March 23, 2026
A federal court ruling has established a safe harbor for clinical labs when they run tests ordered by physicians. Lab leaders should examine this briefing for pitfalls. Also, it turns out that providers may be ordering inappropriate vitamin D tests, according to one expert.
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