TAG:
the laboratory
New Business Helps Reduce Pathology Specimen ID Errors
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 17 – December 10, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Prevention of diagnostic testing errors is getting more attention by both physicians and pathology labs because patients are less tolerant of potentially life-changing errors. Strand Diagnostics’ Know Error system is designed to reduce or eliminate errors involving tissue s…
Pathologists Benefit from Hospital Lab Consulting
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 17 – December 10, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Deteriorating finances at many rural hospitals and smaller community hospitals is a growing trend. It is also a new consulting opportunity for local pathologists because financially-strapped hospitals often give their labs inadequate working capital and lack the staff needed …
More Medicare Auditors Are Targeting Clinical Labs
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 16 – November 19, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: For labs and all healthcare providers, the risk of an audit is growing because the number of auditors seeking overpayments is rising. In their efforts to eliminate waste and make the Medicare and state Medicaid programs more efficient, federal officials have introduced severa…
Memorial Hermann’s Health Info Exchange Helps Lab Outreach
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 16 – November 19, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: In Houston, Memorial Hermann Healthcare System has put together a health information exchange (HIE) to serve the Houston market. By design, this HIE not only gives physicians immediate access to a wide variety of patient data, but also supports the type of workflow required f…
First-Mover Labs Reveal Success with Lean & QMS
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XIX No. 16 – November 19, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: There is good news for those clinical labs and pathology groups currently operating robust Lean, Six Sigma, and process improvement programs. The Institute of Medicine’s new report calls for all healthcare providers to rapidly transform themselves into ‘continuously learn…
NY Lab Director Resigns, Cites Lack of Support
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 15 – October 29, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: When the lab director resigned from his post at a clinical lab in a hospital in rural New York, the resignation letter was sent to the hospital administration and copy went to the New York State Department of Health. In the letter, the lab director outlined eight reasons for …
Lab Director Blows Whistle, NY Closes Hospital Lab
By Joseph Burns | From the Volume XIX No. 15 – October 29, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: 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 terminated his agreement with the hospital and notified the New …
NY Hospital Closed Due to Deficiencies in Lab
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XIX No. 15 – October 29, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: Lab executives and pathologists have long read about the deteriorating finances at many rural hospitals, along with their struggles to recruit and retain enough skilled laboratory staff. Now the closure of the laboratory at 37-bed E.J. Noble Hospital in Gouverneur, N…
Rural Hospital Labs and their Lab Directors
By R. Lewis Dark | From the Volume XIX No. 15 – October 29, 2012 Issue
FROM TWO DIFFERENT STATES, WE PRESENT INTELLIGENCE BRIEFINGS that have a common element: laboratories in many rural hospitals are struggling. We consider these stories, when taken together, to be persuasive evidence that some significant number of rural hospital laboratories are experiencing ongoing …
Med Tech Finds “Grace” Aboard Lab of Mercy Ship
By Robert Michel | From the Volume XIX No. 15 – October 29, 2012 Issue
CEO SUMMARY: One intrepid medical technologist has spent almost two decades in volunteer service working in the clinical laboratories of hospital ships operated by Mercy Ships International. As the world’s largest hospital ship, the Africa Mercy contains six operating rooms, a 78-bed IC…
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Volume XXXII, No. 14 – October 6, 2025
The Dark Report examines increasing healthcare costs for employers and how clinical labs can help those employers. Also, an in-depth case study shows how one hospital system regained its outreach program after originally ceding it to a national lab company, adding millions to the system’s bottom line.
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