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Clinical Chemistry 47: 1526-1535, 2001;
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(Clinical Chemistry. 2001;47:1526-1535.)
© 2001 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.


Proceedings of the 24th Arnold O. Beckman Conference

The Total Laboratory Solution: A New Laboratory E-Business Model Based on a Vertical Laboratory Meta-Network

Bruce A. Friedman1

1 Department of Pathology and Clinical Support Information Systems, University of Michigan Medical School and Health System, 1301 Catherine Rd., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0602. Fax 734-764-8333; e-mail bfriedma{at}umich.edu.


Abstract

Major forces are now reshaping all businesses on a global basis, including the healthcare and clinical laboratory industries. One of the major forces at work is information technology (IT), which now provides the opportunity to create a new economic and business model for the clinical laboratory industry based on the creation of an integrated vertical meta-network, referred to here as the "total laboratory solution" (TLS). Participants at the most basic level of such a network would include a hospital-based laboratory, a reference laboratory, a laboratory information system/application service provider/laboratory portal vendor, an in vitro diagnostic manufacturer, and a pharmaceutical/biotechnology manufacturer. It is suggested that each of these participants would add value to the network primarily in its area of core competency. Subvariants of such a network have evolved over recent years, but a TLS comprising all or most of these participants does not exist at this time. Although the TLS, enabled by IT and closely akin to the various e-businesses that are now taking shape, offers many advantages from a theoretical perspective over the current laboratory business model, its success will depend largely on (a) market forces, (b) how the collaborative networks are organized and managed, and (c) whether the network can offer healthcare organizations higher quality testing services at lower cost. If the concept is successful, new demands will be placed on hospital-based laboratory professionals to shift the range of professional services that they offer toward clinical consulting, integration of laboratory information from multiple sources, and laboratory information management. These information management and integration tasks can only increase in complexity in the future as new genomic and proteomics testing modalities are developed and come on-line in clinical laboratories.




The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:


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Clin. Chem.Home page
X. Bossuyt, K. Verweire, and N. Blanckaert
Laboratory Medicine: Challenges and Opportunities
Clin. Chem., October 1, 2007; 53(10): 1730 - 1733.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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