TAG:
pathology image
Growing Role for Digital Image Analysis in Pathology
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVII No. 15 – October 25, 2010 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: For more than three years, pathologists at Washington University in St. Louis have worked with several different scanning products and digital pathology systems. Step-by-step, the Pathology Department has learned important lessons in how to capture digital images, ar…
October 4, 2010 “Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News”
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVII No. 14 – October 4, 2010 Issue
In Hawaii, two competing clinical laboratory companies have joined forces to save a medical technologist (MT) training program from closure. Together, Clinical Laboratories of Hawaii, LLP (CLH–owned by Sonic Healthcare), and Diagnostic Laboratory Services, …
Preparing for New Lab Role In Personalized Medicine
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVII No. 4 – March 8, 2010 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Laboratory medicine is about to find itself between the two jaws of a powerful vise. One jaw is pending major legislative overhaul of the entire healthcare system, along with dwindling reimbursement as Medicare and Medicaid runs out of money. The other jaw is personalized med…
Multispectral Tests Use “Smart” Systems To Analyze Tissue
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVII No. 3 – February 15, 2010 Issue
CEO Summary: Pathologists at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania are using a new system that combines image analysis software and algorithms to evaluate images containing numerous stains and biomarkers. Pathologists teach the system to identify tumor cells and distinguish them …
FDA Advisory Panel Convenes To Assess Whole Slide Imaging
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVI No. 15 – November 02, 2009 Issue
Editor’s Note: Guest writer Martin Perry attended the FDA’s advisory panel on digital pathology conducted earlier this month. He is CEO of The Perry Group and has extensive experience in imaging and healthcare. He offers his insights from the FDA proceedings on digital pathology imaging….
Scripps’ Tumor Board Finds Value in Digital Imaging of Slides
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVI No. 14 – October 12, 2009 Issue
CEO Summary: When the Pathology Department at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, California, was considering the purchase of a digital imaging system, it gained unlikely allies. Non-pathologist physicians participating in the department’s tumor boards advocated for the purchase afte…
Using Cellphones Like Microscopes To Help Lesser-Developed Countries
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVI No. 7 – May 18, 2009 Issue
LAB PROFESSIONALS WHO HAVE worked in regions like Africa know that the infrastructure in developing countries is limited or nonexistent. This makes it challenging to provide clinical laboratory testing services that are up to the standards common in developed countries. For example, it can be diffic…
April 6, 2009 “Intelligence: Late Breaking Lab News”
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XVI No. 5 – April 6, 2009 Issue
Effective May, 1, 2009, Laboratory Corporation of America will no longer be a contract provider for Regence BlueShield, head-quartered in Seattle, Washington. Regence notified physicians that it was ending its relationship with LabCorp “as a result of rising co…
Pathology Boot Camp to Address Three Trends
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XV No. 14 – October 20, 2008 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Anatomic pathology groups across the nation must develop effective strategies to address challenges in pricing, intensifying competition, and expensive new technologies. That’s the assertion of three pathology practice administrators who have organized a boot camp in Dallas…
iTunes Business Model For Digital Path Scans
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XV No. 13 – September 29, 2008 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: If BioImagene’s CEO is to be believed, the company is ready to deliver a digital pathology system that is robust and affordable, even in settings with just two or three pathologists. One key to the BioImagene strategy is “per scan” pricing that avoids the need for upfro…
CURRENT ISSUE
Volume XXXII, No. 1 – January 6, 2025
The Dark Report examines how AI is being used to predict the outcomes of FDA LDT lawsuits. Also, this issue is Part Two of a series about boosting pathology compensation in different settings, including hospitals. Two experienced pathology consultants identify the most effective approaches when negotiating Part A pathology agreements with hospitals and health systems, along with how to use data to bolster these negotiations.
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