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Anatomic pathology
Anatomic pathology is about diagnosing disease through the examination of organs and tissue samples by using a microscope, or through molecular, biochemical or immunological means.
It differs from clinical pathology, where diseases are diagnosed through analyzing bodily fluids in a lab.
In anatomic pathology, a physician trained in pathology examines surgical specimens (e.g., from a biopsy). This contrasts from clinical pathology, where blood, throat cultures, and urine as sent to a lab for analysis to determine whether a patient either has or is at risk for several biological diseases.
The American Board of Pathology is one of the primary certification organizations for anatomic pathologists. To be certified in anatomic pathology, a physician must complete four years of medical school and three years of residency. To be certified in both anatomic and clinical pathology, a physician must do four years of residency.
Anatomic pathologists typically work in hospitals, and pathology in general is most times practiced in hospitals and academic medical centers, where research is being conducted.
To Stay Afloat, Dallas AP Group Cut Staff, Payroll
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXVII No. 7 – May 11, 2020 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: As early cases of COVID-19 spread in some states, pathologists at the 50-member ProPath group in Dallas prepared for a widespread outbreak by preserving cash and working with bankers and other advisors to apply for federal stimulus funding. Executives also fur…
Companies Saw Big Drop in Lab Revenue from Mid-March
By Joseph Burns
This is an excerpt of a 2,083-word article in the April 20, 2020 issue of THE DARK REPORT (TDR). The full article is available to members of The Dark Intelligence Group. CEO SUMMARY: In response to the coronavirus outbreak, patients stopped seeing their doctors for routine c…
From Mid-March, Labs Saw Big Drop in Revenue
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXVII No. 6 – April 20, 2020 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: In response to the coronavirus outbreak, patients stopped seeing their doctors for routine care and hospitals ceased doing elective services. With fewer test referrals, clinical labs and pathology groups were hit with a substantial decline in revenue. One of t…
Labs May Qualify for Relief Under New Federal Laws
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXVII No. 6 – April 20, 2020 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: After routine testing and specimen volume declined last month, so too did the associated revenue. In response, clinical laboratories and anatomic pathology groups want to bolster their finances quickly or risk incurring more financial damage to already-fragile…
Italy’s SARS-CoV-2 Outbreak Brings Out Best in Clinical Labs
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXVII No. 6 – April 20, 2020 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Italy was one of the first countries outside of China to experience an explosive outbreak of COVID-19 and its northern provinces were hit hardest by this novel coronavirus. In this exclusive interview with THE DARK REPORT,…
DOJ Says Georgia Man Got Kickbacks for COVID-19 Tests
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXVII No. 6 – April 20, 2020 Issue
JUST WEEKS AFTER THE FIRST CASES OF SARS-CoV-2 appeared in the United States, federal prosecutors filed criminal charges in a COVID-19 lab test fraud scheme. Erik Santos, 49, of Braselton, Ga., was charged with conspiracy to defraud federal and private healthcare programs by submitting fraudule…
Healthcare, Lab Market Trends Central Focus at Executive War College
By Kristen Noonan | From the Volume XXVII No. 4 – March 9, 2020 Issue
Powerful forces are at work transforming the U.S. healthcare system and the clinical laboratories that serve it. These forces will be identified and discussed at the upcoming 25th annual Executive War College…
Labs Get Less Revenue as Billing Shifts Offshore
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXVII No. 2 – January 27, 2020 Issue
>CEO SUMMARY:In …
Is Health Price Transparency at Its Tipping Point?
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XXVI No. 17 – December 16, 2019 Issue
Is it a coincidence that a number of uninsured consumers filed separate lawsuits in federal courts against Laboratory Corporation of America and Quest Diagnostics—alleging, in both cases, that they were overcharged for clinical…
Converting Paper Requisitions to Digital Cut Lab’s Costs
By Joseph Burns
CEO SUMMARY: Health Network Laboratories cut costs and shortened lab test turnaround time by converting paper requisitions to digital data. It did so by scanning paper requisitions and having a vendor do the required data entry. This helped the lab reduce errors in its patient data. Using…
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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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