Pathology Today

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Pathology Today, December 10, 2014

Study spotlights high prices of medical lab tests charged by California hospitals
Dark Daily
Clinical laboratories owned by hospitals and health systems should take note of a public study of hospital laboratory test prices that was conducted by researchers at the University of California at San Francisco. It was published this summer and showed a remarkable range of prices for medical laboratory tests charged by California hospitals. How about a charge of $10,169 for a routine blood cholesterol test? This was one finding a study discussed in the August 2014 issue of the British Medical Journal Open blog. 

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Pathology Today, November 26, 2014

Real-time genome sequencing helps control hospital outbreak
Medical Xpress
Pioneering use of whole genome sequencing in real time to help control a hospital outbreak is reported in an article published in the open access journal Genome Medicine. The research corroborates the use of the technique as a rapid and cost-effective way of tracking and controlling the spread of drug-resistant hospital pathogens.

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Pathology Today, November 12, 2014

New business model for medical billing companies
By Mick Raich
The key in any industry is to make a margin — that difference between cost and revenue, the part you get to take home every two weeks so little Tommy can have a new iPad. As change takes place, companies that fall short of this margin inevitably fail. They may leverage themselves with loans or lower their costs by decreasing output, but sooner or later the bills have to be paid. In the medical billing industry, companies have literally searched far and wide for this margin. Over the past 10 years we have seen considerable use of Business Process Outsourcing firms that handle various parts of the billing process overseas.  

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Pathology Today, October 29, 2014

'Genetic Testing Handbook' provides pathologists, lab managers with comprehensive reference for clinical genome and exome sequencing
Dark Daily
Clinical use of gene sequencing information has advanced to the point where a team of genetic experts has compiled and issued the Genetic Testing Handbook. The goal of the clinical genome and exome sequencing (CGES) handbook is to provide clinicians — including pathologists and clinical laboratory scientists — with a useful reference tool. 

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Pathology Today, October 15, 2014

You are invited to FSP's 41st Annual Anatomic Pathology Conference
FSP
It will be another Sensational program featuring presentations on cutting edge pathology topics. Click here for more information and to register. 

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Pathology Today, October 1, 2014

To find patients at highest risk, hospitals combine consumer data with clinical information
Dark Daily
Big data is all the rage in healthcare these days. However, one interesting development in this field is how hospitals are integrating consumer data with clinical data to identify patients at high risk. For example, if the post-surgical heart patient buys a package of cigarettes, some hospitals say they want to know. This is a trend with interesting implications for clinical laboratories. 

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Pathology Today, September 17, 2014

A fast-growing medical lab tests anti-kickback law
The Wall Street Journal
A fast-growing Virginia laboratory has collected hundreds of millions of dollars from Medicare while using a strategy that is now under regulatory scrutiny: It paid doctors who sent it patients' blood for testing. Health Diagnostic Laboratory Inc. transformed itself from a startup incorporated in late 2008 into a major lab with $383 million in 2013 revenues, 41 percent of that from Medicare.

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Pathology Today, September 3, 2014

Study: Many patients don't understand electronic lab results
EHR Intelligence
More and more patients may be accessing their personal health information online through patient portals thanks to stage 2 of meaningful use, but only slightly more than half of patients, on average, were able to decipher electronic lab test results on their own, says a study from the University of Michigan. Patients who scored on the lower end of numerical and health literacy tests were twice as likely to express confusion when shown a hypothetical blood glucose test result, said study author Brian Zikmund-Fisher, associate professor of health behavior and health education at the U-M School of Public Health. 

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Pathology Today, August 20, 2014

Study: 5 percent of patients in outpatient settings misdiagnosed, offering pathologists opportunity to provide more consultations to doctors
Dark Daily
Publication of new peer-reviewed clinical studies indicates that, within the United States, more than 5 percent of outpatients, or 12 million people, are misdiagnosed annually. Few pathologists and clinical laboratory scientists would dispute this number because every day they see the best and the worst of how physicians use medical laboratory tests. 

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Pathology Today, August 6, 2014

Gov. Scott: Fee reductions for healthcare professionals
Florida Governor's Press Office
Governor Rick Scott announced fee reductions for the licensing of certain healthcare professionals. Due to efficiencies found and the streamlining of processes, both the Florida Board of Medicine and Florida Board of Nursing identified excess fees and are passing this on as a cost savings to licensees.

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