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Triangulating Dynamic of Clinical Laboratory Testing

Authors :
Susan Evans
Charles S. Eby
Norman Moore
Harvey W. Kaufman
Nader Rifai
Edward R. Ashwood
Kerri Weinert
Peter Gyorda
Source :
Clinical Chemistry. 61:1320-1327
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2015.

Abstract

Over the past 20 years, there has been a continuous shift in decentralizing clinical laboratory testing in the US. Historically, testing was conducted almost exclusively in centralized laboratories in hospitals. However, at present, approximately 53% of testing is performed in hospitals (including some near-patient testing in settings such as critical care and emergency rooms), 34% in commercial clinical laboratories (50% of which is done in Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp), and the remaining in physician office laboratories and other settings as well as directly by consumers using over-the-counter devices. These numbers vary depending on the state. For example, in New York State 368 million tests in chemistry were performed in 2014, 73% of which were processed in hospital laboratories and 23% in independent (commercial) laboratories (data courtesy of Dr. Robert Rej). There are many drivers for this triangulating dynamic shift, including cost reduction, convenience to patients and clinicians, quality improvement (when the frequency of performing a particular test in the hospital laboratory is low), and the use of novel technologies such as nanotechnology, microfluidics, electrical impedance, reflectance, and time-resolved fluorescence, which enabled the miniaturization of devices and the proliferation of point-of-care (POC)8 testing. Improvement in information technology has been instrumental in the process of decentralizing testing and providing clinicians with patient results; this is, however, not a trivial matter and the cost of the interface is not always justifiable. Regulatory requirements in terms of assuring competency of those performing testing, getting patient laboratory results into the medical records, billing appropriately, and providing patients with their test findings are only few of the challenges of decentralized testing. How is the testing dynamic shift in this $56 billion industry going to evolve over the next 5 and 10 years? What will be the impact of technology, reimbursement, and confidentiality in shaping this …

Details

ISSN :
15308561 and 00099147
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........199f0046b9bd6fd2e0671095a06c5ecd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1373/clinchem.2015.248112