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Pathology group
A pathology group is an organization of clinical pathologists working on the diagnosis of disease based on laboratory analysis of bodily fluids such as blood and urine, as well as tissues, using the tools of chemistry, clinical microbiology, hematology and molecular pathology. Clinical pathologists work in close collaboration with medical technologists, hospital administrations, and referring physicians.
The business model of a pathology group has traditionally been as a private group practice, including solo practitioner, medical group partnership, professional corporation (PC), limited liability company (LLC), and similar professional business organizations. It is common for pathology groups to have contracts with one or more hospitals to provide anatomic pathology professional services and clinical pathology professional services.
Pathology itself is a significant component of the causal study of disease and a major field in modern medicine and diagnosis. The term pathology may be used broadly to refer to the study of disease in general, incorporating a wide range of bioscience research fields and medical practices, or more narrowly to describe work within the contemporary medical field of “general pathology,” which includes a number of distinct but inter-related medical specialties which diagnose disease mostly through the analysis of tissue, cell, and body fluid samples.
Pathologists in hospital labs and pathology groups practice as consultant physicians, developing and applying knowledge of tissue and laboratory analyses to assist in the diagnosis and treatment of individual patients. As scientists, they use the tools of laboratory science in clinical studies, disease models, and other experimental systems, to advance the understanding and treatment of disease.
Clinical pathologists in a pathology group administer a number of visual and microscopic tests and an especially large variety of tests of the biophysical properties of tissue samples involving automated analyzers and cultures. Sometimes the general term “laboratory medicine specialist” is used to refer to those working in clinical pathology, including medical doctors, PhDs and doctors of pharmacology.
Immunopathology, the study of an organism’s immune response to infection, is sometimes considered to fall within the domain of clinical pathology.
Becoming a pathologist entails one of the lengthiest education and training tracks of all physicians. Requirements include four years of undergraduate study, plus four years of medical school, plus a minimum of four to five years of post-graduate training in pathology residency.
Will Humana’s Sale to Aetna Hurt Smaller Labs?
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XXII No. 10 – July 13, 2015 Issue
FURTHER CONSOLIDATION AMONG THE NATION’S LARGEST HEALTH INSURANCE COMPANIES is expected following the news on July 3, that Aetna, Inc., and Humana, Inc., had entered a sales agreement calling for Aetna to pay $37 billion to acquire Humana. Should the proposed sale take place, the consequences are …
OIG Says It Is Ready to Target Physicians in Kickback Cases
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XXII NO. 9 – June 22, 2015 Issue
PHYSICIANS WHO PARTICIPATE IN schemes that violate anti-kickback and fraud statutes will be at greater risk of prosecution by federal healthcare officials. This development comes following the June 9 release by the OIG of “Fraud Alert: Physician Compensation Arrangements May Result in Significant Li…
Are Clinical Labs and MACs Ready to Implement ICD-10?
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XXII NO. 9 – June 22, 2015 Issue
ARE CLINICAL LABORATORIES and pathology groups prepared for ICD-10? Or, perhaps a better question to ask is this: Are Medicare administrative contractors prepared to switch to ICD-10 on October 1? A recent survey of clinical laboratories and pathology groups by McKesson Corporation showed th…
Deep-Discount Lab Prices to Haunt All California Labs
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XXII NO. 9 – June 22, 2015 Issue
FOR MORE THAN 20 YEARS, THE CLINICAL LAB INDUSTRY been marked by a fundamental schism. On one side of the schism are the public lab companies that have aggressively used deeply-discounted loss-leader pricing practices when negotiating managed care contracts to capture market share. On the other si…
June 22, 2015 Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XXII NO. 9 – June 22, 2015 Issue
Turf wars are breaking out among local pathology groups as consolidation involving hospitals and physicians’ practices continues to reshape many regional healthcare markets. The latest sign of this trend comes from Washington State, where CellNetix of Seattle announced an agreement to provide …
Some Florida Docs Are Not Using BeaconLBS System
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXII NO. 8 – June 1, 2015 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Some physicians in Florida are not complying with UnitedHealthcare’s laboratory benefit management program since the claims impact took effect on April 15. Although officials from UnitedHealthcare and BeaconLBS, a business division of LabCorp, state publicly that the…
LabCorp’s Plans for Docs, Pathologists and Labs
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XXII NO. 8 – June 1, 2015 Issue
WHAT’S IN THE FUTURE FOR PHYSICIANS, PATHOLOGISTS, AND CLINICAL LABORATORIES if Laboratory Corporation of America’s strategy for managing lab test utilization is deployed across the country per the company’s plan? For the nation’s physicians, LabCorp’s BeaconLBS system will be required when …
Labs Have High Interest in Theranos and BeaconLBS
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XXII NO. 7 – May 11, 2015 Issue
WHAT ARE PATHOLOGISTS AND LAB EXECUTIVES TALKING ABOUT when they gather at lab industry conferences? If the hallway chats between sessions and dinner conversations that occurred last week at the 20th annual Executive War College are representative, then the clinical lab profession is closely …
What Labs Need to Do as Payers Audit More Claims
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XXII NO. 7 – May 11, 2015 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Attorneys who advise pathologists and clinical laboratories on compliance issues say the number of audits from the government and third-party payers has increased sharply in recent years. In those audits, payers are looking for recoupment of overpayments. A lab’s fai…
New Lab Industry Trends Require Responses by Labs
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XXII NO. 7 – May 11, 2015 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: One stark difference between the presentations delivered at last year’s Executive War College and this year’s presentations in New Orleans last week was near-unanimous recognition that the era of fee-for-service payment is soon to end! Speaker after speaker urged the…
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