As medical laboratories struggle to reduce costs and squeeze their budgets, it is essential that the lab’s quality assurance/quality control program is run properly to protect and enhance the analytical integrity of lab test results
When does budget cutting in a clinical laboratory begin to undermine the accuracy and analytical integrity of the medical laboratory test results produced by the laboratory?
This question is apparently a subject of much discussion within some lab organizations where aggressive cost reduction programs are shrinking lab staff and reducing funds spent on controls and similar QA/QC resources.
Because patients can be harmed if a clinical laboratory turns out inaccurate test results, cutting costs too deeply is an activity that can have dangerous consequences. It is also a situation that attracts national attention. One example is how the laboratory at Maryland General Hospital in Baltimore reported inaccurate HIV and HCV results on thousands of patients for a period of almost two years, ending with a news report on the lab test errors published in March 2004 by the Baltimore Sun
Medical Laboratory Test Errors Lead to National News Headlines
That episode made the national news. It led to the dismissal of both the laboratory administrator and the pathologist serving as laboratory director. As well, the hospital’s CEO resigned and there were Congressional hearings into how and why this lab’s accrediting bodies had failed to detect these serious problems in lab test accuracy over the years in question.
Maybe that episode is what some readers had in mind when they contacted us in recent weeks following Dark Daily’s publication of two different ebriefings on the trend of cost cutting in the clinical laboratory industry. (See “related information” at the bottom of the page). In response to these stories, a number of readers expressed concerns that cost-cutting in their own laboratories had gone too far.
Reducing Clinical Laboratory Costs Might Affect Accuracy of Test Results
These readers feared that inexperienced or lesser-trained staff are being asked to perform the most complex tests and, as a consequence, that might lessen the quality of results. In some cases, it was pointed out that to save money, lab management had reduced the use of controls from levels that previously exceeded the minimum requirements of federal and state regulations, such as CLIA.
Similarly, some readers noted that—to save money—lab managers were streamlining certain longstanding QA/QC activities that might have gone over and above the minimum statutory requirements.
Question about Effective QA/QC in the Medical Laboratory
A common question asked by some of these readers was: “As our clinical laboratory changes quality assurance and quality control activities, how does it monitor the accuracy and quality of its test results to have confidence that it has not failed to detect errors or erroneous results?”
The answer to that question falls outside the technical expertise of the editorial staff here at Dark Daily. However, experts in this aspect of medical laboratory management and operations will be speaking on this topic at the upcoming Lab Quality Confab, which takes place on October 1-2, 2013, at the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel in New Orleans.
How to Use QA/QC to Ensure Quality While Cutting Lab Budgets
For example, the agenda at Lab Quality Confab includes these three sessions that specifically address how you can combine lab cost-cutting programs with effective QA/QC methods to accurately measure lab test quality:
• Elevating the Analytical Integrity of Your Lab’s Test Results: Why Your QA/QC May Be Sub-optimal and How to Find and Fix those Problems; presented by James O. Westgard, Ph.D., FACB, of Westgard QC
• Reality Check on the True Cost of Recurring Bad Quality in Your Lab: How to Find It. How to Fix It. How to Sustain the Cost Savings! presented by Lucia Berte, MA, MT(ASCP), of Laboratories Made Better!
• Quality Control Based on Risk Management and Its Role in Quality Management Systems for Laboratory Accreditation;
presented by Glen Fine, MS, MBA, CEO, Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute
Even the Medicare program is paying attention to the need for more sophisticated and effective methods of QA/QC in the clinical laboratory. On August 16, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services issued the first details on a “new quality control option based on risk management, IQCP.” The CMS document provides full details of this voluntary option.
IQCP is built around the concepts of quality management systems (QMS). This is an important development and sessions at Lab Quality Confab will provide some of the first public presentations about IQCP and how clinical laboratories can use it to have greater confidence that they have accurately gauged the quality of their testing activities and properly identified the root causes of failures and fixed them.
Juggling the Need to Cut Lab Costs while Protecting Quality
For any clinical lab manager or pathologist seeking to drive out unnecessary costs while sustaining and improving the quality of lab test results and the services they provide to physicians, these quality management sessions are essential learning opportunities. Those interested in attending Lab Quality Confab can visit www.labqualityconfab.com for information on the full program and to register.
As most pathologists and clinical lab administrators know, even tougher financial times lie ahead, not just for the medical laboratory profession, but for all of healthcare. For that reason alone, labs will face even greater financial challenges going forward. The challenge will be for lab managers to more effectively control their costs without undermining the quality and integrity of lab test results produced by their clinical laboratories.
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