Calgary Laboratory Services

Calgary Laboratory Services provides global hospital and community laboratory services for Calgary and surrounding areas (population 1.4 million) and global academic support for the University of Calgary Cumming School of Medicine. It developed rapidly after the Alberta Provincial Government impleme...

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Main Author: James R. Wright MD, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-12-01
Series:Academic Pathology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374289515619944
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author James R. Wright MD, PhD
author_facet James R. Wright MD, PhD
author_sort James R. Wright MD, PhD
collection DOAJ
description Calgary Laboratory Services provides global hospital and community laboratory services for Calgary and surrounding areas (population 1.4 million) and global academic support for the University of Calgary Cumming School of Medicine. It developed rapidly after the Alberta Provincial Government implemented an austerity program to address rising health care costs and to address Alberta’s debt and deficit in 1994. Over roughly the next year, all hospital and community laboratory test funding within the province was put into a single budget, fee codes for fee-for-service test billing were closed, roughly 40% of the provincial laboratory budget was cut, and roughly 40% of the pathologists left the province of Alberta. In Calgary, in the face of these abrupt changes in the laboratory environment, private laboratories, publicly funded hospital laboratories and the medical school department precipitously and reluctantly merged in 1996. The origin of Calgary Laboratory Services was likened to an “unhappy shotgun marriage” by all parties. Although such a structure could save money by eliminating duplicated services and excess capacity and could provide excellent city-wide clinical service by increasing standardization, it was less clear whether it could provide strong academic support for a medical school. Over the past decade, iterations of the Calgary Laboratory Services model have been implemented or are being considered in other Canadian jurisdictions. This case study analyzes the evolution of Calgary Laboratory Services, provides a metric-based review of academic performance over time, and demonstrates that this model, essentially arising as an unplanned experiment, has merit within a Canadian health care context.
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spelling doaj.art-668866f6fc694d53a29a198002c843802023-02-02T01:28:45ZengElsevierAcademic Pathology2374-28952015-12-01210.1177/237428951561994410.1177_2374289515619944Calgary Laboratory ServicesJames R. Wright MD, PhD0 Department of Paediatrics, University of Calgary Cumming School of Medicine, Calgary, Alberta, CanadaCalgary Laboratory Services provides global hospital and community laboratory services for Calgary and surrounding areas (population 1.4 million) and global academic support for the University of Calgary Cumming School of Medicine. It developed rapidly after the Alberta Provincial Government implemented an austerity program to address rising health care costs and to address Alberta’s debt and deficit in 1994. Over roughly the next year, all hospital and community laboratory test funding within the province was put into a single budget, fee codes for fee-for-service test billing were closed, roughly 40% of the provincial laboratory budget was cut, and roughly 40% of the pathologists left the province of Alberta. In Calgary, in the face of these abrupt changes in the laboratory environment, private laboratories, publicly funded hospital laboratories and the medical school department precipitously and reluctantly merged in 1996. The origin of Calgary Laboratory Services was likened to an “unhappy shotgun marriage” by all parties. Although such a structure could save money by eliminating duplicated services and excess capacity and could provide excellent city-wide clinical service by increasing standardization, it was less clear whether it could provide strong academic support for a medical school. Over the past decade, iterations of the Calgary Laboratory Services model have been implemented or are being considered in other Canadian jurisdictions. This case study analyzes the evolution of Calgary Laboratory Services, provides a metric-based review of academic performance over time, and demonstrates that this model, essentially arising as an unplanned experiment, has merit within a Canadian health care context.https://doi.org/10.1177/2374289515619944
spellingShingle James R. Wright MD, PhD
Calgary Laboratory Services
Academic Pathology
title Calgary Laboratory Services
title_full Calgary Laboratory Services
title_fullStr Calgary Laboratory Services
title_full_unstemmed Calgary Laboratory Services
title_short Calgary Laboratory Services
title_sort calgary laboratory services
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2374289515619944
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