Lab professionals will learn more at the upcoming 30th annual edition of the event
Big changes and challenges are coming for the clinical laboratory anatomic pathology industry, and with them a slew of opportunities for lab and pathology practice leaders. At the upcoming 30th Annual Executive War College on Diagnostics, Pathology, and Clinical Laboratory Management, expert speakers and panelists will focus on the three most disruptive forces.
There will be more than 169 presenters at this year’s Executive War College. Those speakers include:
- Richard A. Gibbs, PhD, Wofford Cain chair and professor of molecular and human genetics at Baylor College of Medicine, who will discuss his prolific work in the field of whole genome sequencing.
- David Dexter, MD, clinical and laboratory pathology at M Health Fairview, and Sam Terese, president and CEO at Alverno Laboratories, who will present a strategic case study about the support labs can provide to parent hospitals when navigating new waters.
- Paul Wilder, executive director of CommonWell Health Alliance, who will speak on the effort to improve the transferability and portability of patient and healthcare data in ways that improve the quality of care.
“Since the inception of The Dark Report in 1995 there has been continual change both within the US healthcare system and within the profession of laboratory medicine,” noted Robert L. Michel, Dark Daily’s editor-in-chief and creator of the Executive War College. “Now, three decades later, the following three items are imperatives for all labs: controlling costs; having adequate lab staff across all positions; and having enough capital to acquire and deploy new diagnostic technologies, along with the latest information technologies.”

“Most clinical laboratory managers would agree that many of the same operational pain points faced by labs in the 1990s exist today,” said Robert L. Michel (above), founder of the Executive War College. In an interview with Dark Daily, Michel broke down the nuances of this triad of forces and what participants in the Executive War College can expect. (Photo copyright: LabX.)
Forces at Work in Clinical Labs and Pathology Groups
Here’s a more detailed look at each of the forces that Michel noted.
Force 1: An acute shortage of experienced lab scientists
“When you look at the supply-demand for laboratory personnel in the United States today, it is recognized that demand exceeds supply, and that gap continues to widen,” Michel noted. “For example, in the case of anatomic pathologists, the increased number of case referrals grows faster than medical schools can train new pathologists. Currently, the ability of pathology laboratories large and small to hire and retain an adequate number of pathologists is a challenge.”
Executive War College attendees can expect panelists and speakers to highlight creative problem solving techniques to circumvent the challenges labor shortages cause.
Force 2: New applications of artificial intelligence
“Today every instrument vendor, every automation supplier, every software supplier, every service supplier is telling labs that they have artificial intelligence (AI) baked inside,” Michel observed. “It is important for lab managers to understand that a variety of technologies are used by different AI solutions.”
These include deep learning, neural networks, natural language processing, and machine learning. “The challenge for lab managers today is to understand what specific technology is behind the AI vendors want to sell to them to manage certain processes in their lab.”
Clinical laboratory managers and pathologists interested in acquiring a deeper understanding of where to start with AI in their lab will find numerous sessions on artificial intelligence at this year’s Executive War College. “There will be a number of sessions this year where clinical labs discuss their success deploying various AI solutions,” Michel said.
Force 3: Financial stress across the entire US healthcare system
“It’s recognized that a significant number of US hospitals and integrated delivery networks (IDNs) are struggling to maintain adequate operating margins,” Michel noted. “This obviously impacts the clinical laboratories serving these hospitals. If the hospitals’ cash flows and operating profit margins are being squeezed, typically the administration comes to the lab team and says, ‘Your budget for next year will be x% less than this year.’
“There are many IDNs and hospital labs where budget cuts have happened for multiple years,” Michel continued. “As a consequence, labs in these hospitals must be nimble to maintain a high-quality menu of diagnostic tests. Several years of such budget cuts by the parent hospital can undermine the ability of the clinical lab team to offer competitive salary packages to attract and retain the clinical lab scientists, pathologists, and clinical chemists they need.”
Recognizing Opportunities in Today’s Lab Market
The good news is that—despite the negative forces acting upon the US healthcare system today—clinical laboratories, genetic testing companies, and anatomic pathology groups have a path forward.
“This path forward is informed by two longstanding precepts recognized by innovative managers. One precept is ‘Change creates new winners and losers.’ The other precept is ‘Change creates opportunity,’” Michel said. “Savvy lab leaders recognize the powerful truths in each precept.
“As healthcare has changed over the past four decades, nearly all the regional and national laboratories that were dominant in 1990, for example, don’t exist today!” he noted. “And yet, even as these lab organizations disappeared, new clinical lab organizations emerged that recognized healthcare’s changes and organized themselves to serve the changing needs of hospitals, office-based physicians, payers, and patients.”
All of these critical topics and more will be covered during the 30th Annual Executive War College on Diagnostics, Clinical Laboratory, and Pathology Management on April 29-30, 2025, at the Hyatt Regency in New Orleans. Signup today to bring your lab’s management team by registering at https://www.executivewarcollege.com.
—Ashley Croce