TAG:
anatomic pathologist
UnitedHealth Sets April 15 to Start Claims Impact of Lab Program
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XXII No. 4 – March 9, 2015 Issue
APRIL 15 IS THE DATE when UnitedHealthcare will begin denying laboratory claims in Florida that do not meet the requirements of its unpopular laboratory benefit management program. The health insurer sent out notices last month to alert physicians and laboratories that it will implement what it call…
Florida Pathologists Critical of UnitedHealth and BeaconLBS
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXII No. 1 – January 5, 2015 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: In a letter to UnitedHealthcare, the Florida Society of Pathologists says UHC’s pilot laboratory management program will have a negative effect on patient care by delaying access to care and timely diagnoses of disease. Signed by more than 120 members…
December 15, 2014 Intelligence: Late-Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XXI No. 17 – December 15, 2014 Issue
In certain respects, the noted physician and healthcare strategist Eric Topol, M.D., of Scripps Healthcare in La Jolla, California, can be considered a gadfly to pathology and the laboratory medicine profession. In his latest pronouncements on patient-centered healthcare, he warned c…
New Threat to Community-based Anatomic Pathology
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XXI No. 10 – July 21, 2014 Issue
THERE IS A NEW DEVELOPMENT that may be off the radar screens of CAP, ASCP, and the various subspecialty pathology associations. It is the requirement for second reviews and subspecialty reviews of certain complex pathology tests as part of the laboratory benefit mana…
UCLA, Centre to Open Lab in China to Offer High Quality Testing
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXI No. 7 – May 19, 2014 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: To fill the unmet demand for quality clinical laboratory testing in China, a partnership between pathologists at UCLA and Centre Testing International Corp. of Shenzen have built and will operate a lab facility in Shanghai. The new lab will open by late September and…
Tennessee BCBS Cuts Lab Fees to 52% of Medicare
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XX, No. 17 – December 23, 2013 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Tennessee has notified physicians that, starting January 1, it will reduce what it pays for lab testing to 52% of Medicare fees. Officials with the state medical association have been unable to get definitive answers to questions about what tests wou…
Coming Soon to Your City: More Hospital Mergers
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XX No.14 – October 21, 2013 Issue
UPON THE COMPLETION OF THEIR MERGER AT THE END OF SEPTEMBER, Baylor Health Care System and Scott & White Healthcare became the largest not-for-profit health system in Texas, boasting $8 billion in assets and annual revenue of about $6 billion. Now known as …
Ottawa Pathology Lab Cuts Turnaround Time By More Than 50%
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XX No.14 – October 21, 2013 Issue
CEO Summary: Pathologists at Ottawa Hospital not only must handle a large volume of specimens regularly, but are experiencing a 14% per year growth in the number of specimens. Last year, when the average turnaround time for a case was nine days, the pathology department embarked …
Changed Medicare Policy Adds to Regulatory Risk
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 13 – September 17, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: When Medicare’s National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) manual took effect on January 1, 2012, it contained a significant change in how prostate biopsy claims are to be coded. This change was widely overlooked by the pathology profession and even dismissed entirely for it…
Lawyer Advises on Risk Of Prostate Biopsy Audits
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 13 – September 17, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: For labs currently processing prostate biopsy cases with five or more cores and for those pathologists interpreting those cases, there is a lack of clarity about new Medicare policies. As one example, risk of an audit is significant because of recent guidance issued by one Me…
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Volume XXXII, No. 6 – April 21, 2025
Now that a federal judge has vacated the FDA’s LDT rule, The Dark Report analyzes the judgement and notes the various steps the FDA could take in response. Also, lab testing at pharmacies is proving to be less successful than was once anticipated.
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