October 2021—Neither pathologists nor laboratories should panic over the new 21st Century Cures Act rules making laboratory results immediately accessible to patients, pathology leaders agree. Most laboratories already release results to electronic health records and those results are made available in patient portals, and the Cures Act will require little change in how labs send results to EHR systems. But the rules, which took effect April 5, do come with some complexities to navigate. By passing the Cures Act in 2016, Congress aimed broadly to increase interoperability across EHR platforms and to ensure that patients have full, portable, and cost-free access to their health care information. Of most direct relevance to pathology is the Cures Act’s information blocking or open notes rule, mandating that lab report narratives and pathology report narratives, along with six other categories of clinical notes, be available without delay to patients in different electronic formats, including smartphones and secure online portals.
Read More »Congress mitigates Medicare cuts at 11th hour
January 2021—Hanging over the publication of the 2021 Medicare physician fee schedule on Dec. 1 was an overall decrease of nine percent to pathology services and similar cuts to other specialty physicians. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in 2019 announced these payment cuts would offset increases to evaluation and management services, which are typically billed during physician office visits. The CAP through its advocacy opposed the cuts to pathologists and sought to stop them from taking effect.
Read More »Checklist, CLIA line up on COVID reporting
November 2020—It’s been well understood since the Ten Commandments that rules that appear simple in theory can be fiendishly complex or even impossible to execute. The pandemic is providing a perfect example of that in the laboratory world, but with added twists, at least for now.
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