We drive

With Labor Day upon us, it seems appropriate to share another playlist. This one is called “Automobile.” The driving theme seems appropriate because so many people take advantage of this three-day weekend to take driving trips. Unfortunately, the song that inspired the title — John’s Prine’s “Automobile” — is not available on Spotify. Here’s Prine playing it live in a 1980 televised concert. Song starts about 1 minute, 40 seconds in.

Anyhow, here’s the rest of the playlist. I had to make a couple of substitutions, again due to Spotify: a Bluegrass version of “Cut Every Corner” from The Simpsons, and John Hartford doing “Turn Your Radio On” instead of Grandpa Jones.

Labs grapple with handing results directly to patients

Time is running short for laboratories to figure out how they will comply with a federal regulation that for the first time requires all U.S. labs to give patients their test reports within 30 days of request.

With the Oct. 6 deadline for complying with the mandate fast approaching, leaders at two laboratories shared how they are wrestling with the regulation during a July 31 webinar hosted by G2 Intelligence.

A process that at first blush may seem fairly straightforward—patient requests test results, lab hands them over—gets complicated fast. How does a patient request the test reports? How does the lab that conducted the test verify the identity of a patient, or of a patient proxy, who may live in another state? And how should labs handle patients’ access to sensitive test results relating to sexually transmitted infections, or life-changing diagnoses?

My latest in CAP TODAY’s Put It on the Board section. Read the whole shebang.

Where smart labs go when the money’s gone

Payment rates declining. Bad debt rising. Test orders falling. Diagnostic equipment manufacturers checking in on test-volume commitments. A wrenching transition from fee-for-service care to population-based medicine. These are a few of the trends that laboratories across the country are seeing and that keep lab directors up at night, heavy lidded, checking their email, illuminated by the glow of their smartphones.

Strategies that once reliably yielded success in the laboratory business are no longer sufficient, says W. Stanley Schofield. He is president of NorDx, which operates 11 labs and 23 patient service centers and is owned by the MaineHealth system, also affiliated with four other health care organizations in the state. Schofield is cofounder and managing principal of the Compass Group, a 501(c)(6) business league whose 24 lab members represent more than 300 of the nation’s most prestigious hospitals and health systems.

Labs are being called upon to simultaneously add value, cut costs, and improve the quality of the work they do, Schofield says. Moreover, the pressure is on for laboratories to show how their performance compares with that of their peers.

“Today, labs are known for, and their value is seen to be in, delivering accurate test results in a timely fashion,” Schofield tells CAP TODAY. “In the future, the value of the laboratory is that it will help manage that the right test was done on the right patient for the right reason, and that the right cost will be available. And that they manage the data, rather than just report the data. That is one of the huge transitions that labs have to go through right now, and that we are preparing for.”

My cover story in the August issue. Read the whole shebang.