Reliable Business Intelligence News About Clinical Laboratories, Pathology Groups, & Laboratory
Diagnostics Since 1995

Issues Archive

The most complete archive of clinical and pathology lab industry news available, including issues from 1997 to the present.

Volume XX No. 2 February 11, 2013

In this issue:

A RECENT REPORT by a consulting firm that tracks the ACO industry indicates that, as of the end of 2012, ACOs of all types involved—in some manner—between 25 and 31 million patients. Moreover, Medicare and private ACOs are located in regions where 45% of the population of the United States lives. These facts confirm that it would be timely for local clinical laboratories and pathology groups to develop appropriate strategies for serving the ACOs in their communities.

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Volume XX No. 1 – January 22, 2013

In this issue:

WHEN PATHOLOGY LABS DISCOVER instances of a misidentified or contaminated tissue specimen, there’s a new service that allows them to retrospectively use DNA to properly match that specimen to the correct patient. In part two of our series, we look at how some pathology labs are using the Know Error service to catch these errors before the lab report is issued to physicians and patients. Also, four Massachusetts labs and a billing company pay a $140,000 fine in a HIPAA case.

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Volume XIX No. 18 – December 31, 2012

In this issue:

THE DARK REPORT’S “Top Ten Lab Stories of 2012” have more lows than highs, including the end of the TC grandfather clause, new policies for prostate biopsy billing, and a dramatic 52% cut to 88305-TC fees. The common link to many of these news stories is a reduction in what government and private health plans will pay for lab tests. Going forward into 2013, a steep cut in the 88305 CPT code means anatomic pathology laboratories can expect cuts in the payment from Medicare for molecular and prostate biopsy testing.

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Volume XIX No. 17 – December 10, 2012

In this issue:

STRAND DIAGNOSTICS’ Know Error system is designed to reduce or eliminate errors involving tissue specimen misidentification. In this first part of our two-part series, we provide information about the diagnostic or “prospective” use of this system by physicians. Also, four California labs have sued Quest and three insurers, alleging anticompetitive practices that violate certain California and federal laws.

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Volume XIX No. 16 – November 19, 2012

In this issue:

IN HOUSTON, Memorial Hermann Healthcare System has put together a health information exchange (HIE) to serve the Houston market. This HIE not only gives physicians immediate access to a wide variety of patient data, but also supports the type of workflow required for Memorial Hermann’s new accountable care organization to succeed. Also, early-adopter labs are finding success with with Lean & QMS.

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Volume XIX No. 15 – October 29, 2012

In this issue:

UNABLE TO OVERCOME PROBLEMS at a rural hospital laboratory caused by the parent hospital’s financial problems and the inability of the hospital to recruit adequate numbers of lab staff, the laboratory director resigned and notified the New York State Department of Health about the situation. NY state lab regulators found additional deficiencies, eventually revoked the lab’s license and the hospital closed. Also, a Louisiana pathology group is finding success as a robust laboratory consulting business.

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Volume XIX No. – October 8, 2012

In this issue:

WITH THE CURRENT unprecedented growth rates for molecular testing, pathology groups and clinical labs will need to beef up their information systems if they want to capitalize on this trend. They will also need to recruit lab staff who are skilled in interpreting molecular and genetic test data expressly to advise and consult with referring physicians. Also, in the wake of a recent IOM report, a new byword coming to healthcare in the US is the “continuously-learning healthcare system.”

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Volume XIX No. 13 – September 17, 2012

In this issue:

LABORATORIES AROUND THE COUNTRY are up in arms about Medicare’s policy shift on prostate biopsy billing, with those who have submitted for more than five cores at increased risk for auditing, and most unsure how to bill for those five or more tests, with answers and solutions to the problem still nonexistent. Also, a new study urges Medicare to consider — again — the idea of competitive bidding for Part B clinical lab testing.

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Volume XIX No. 12 – August 27, 2012

In this issue:

IN PART 2 OF THE SERIES, we report on how pathologists at the medical schools of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China, and the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) are exchanging cases and sharing knowledge. During the first 18 months of this unique relationship, the volume of cases shared via digital pathology has grown steadily. Also, a new under-the-radar Medicare policy change will impact prostate biopsy claims.

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Volume XIX No. 11 – August 6, 2012

In this issue:

FOR MANY IN THE CLINICAL LAB PROFESSION, this issue of THE DARK REPORT will be their first news about the situation at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center (OSUWMC), where CLIA officials have sent notice that the laboratory’s Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) license could be revoked. The sanction is the result of the unintended referral of proficiency testing specimens, a situation that the OSUWMC lab self-reported to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). The complex problem is examined in depth in this issue. At the same time, two bills proposed in Congress would give CMS more discretion in how it interprets the language in CLIA.

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