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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy and Human 
Resources, Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT: 
Tuesday, June 27, 2006: 

Clinical Labs: 

CMS and Survey Organization Oversight Is Not Sufficient to Ensure Lab 
Quality: 

Statement of Leslie G. Aronovitz: 
Director, Health Care: 

GAO-06-879T: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-06-879T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Criminal Justice, Drug Policy and Human Resources, Committee on 
Government Reform, House of Representatives 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Today’s hearing focuses on oversight of clinical labs. The Clinical 
Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA) strengthened quality 
requirements for labs that perform tests to diagnose or treat disease. 
About 36,000 labs that perform certain complex tests must be surveyed 
biennially by a state survey agency, a state CLIA-exempt program, or a 
private accrediting organization. CMS oversees implementation of CLIA 
requirements, which includes determining the CLIA equivalency of the 
inspection requirements used by exempt states and accrediting 
organizations. GAO was asked to discuss (1) the quality of lab testing 
and (2) the adequacy of CLIA oversight. To examine these issues, GAO 
analyzed data on lab performance and reviewed the procedures used by 
CMS and survey organizations to implement CLIA and oversee lab 
performance. This testimony is based on the GAO report, Clinical Lab 
Quality: CMS and Survey Organization Oversight Should Be Strengthened, 
GAO-06-416 (June 16, 2006). 

What GAO Found: 

In summary, insufficient data exist to identify the extent of serious 
quality problems at labs. When CMS implemented revised CLIA survey 
requirements in 2004, it modified historical state survey agency 
findings and, as a result, data prior to 2004 no longer reflect key 
survey requirements in effect at the time of those surveys. The limited 
data available suggest that state survey agency inspections do not 
identify all serious deficiencies. In addition, the lack of a 
straightforward method to link similar requirements across survey 
organizations makes it virtually impossible to assess lab quality in a 
standardized manner. Furthermore, CMS does not effectively use 
available data, such as the proportion of labs with serious 
deficiencies or proficiency testing results, to monitor lab quality. 
Proficiency testing is an objective measurement of a lab’s ability to 
consistently produce accurate test results. GAO’s analysis of 
proficiency testing data suggests that lab quality may not have 
improved at hospital labs in recent years. 

Oversight of clinical lab quality is not adequate to ensure that labs 
are meeting CLIA requirements. Weaknesses in five areas mask real and 
potential quality problems at labs. First, the balance struck between 
the CLIA program’s educational and regulatory goals is sometimes 
inappropriately skewed toward education, which may result in 
understatement of survey findings. For example, even though the initial 
test failure rates were high, CMS instructed state survey agencies not 
to cite deficiencies during the first two years of required Pap smear 
proficiency testing, to allow labs and their staff to become familiar 
with the program. Second, the manner in which one accrediting 
organization structures its survey teams raised concerns about 
appropriate levels of training and the appearance of a conflict of 
interest that could undermine the integrity of the survey process. 
Third, concerns about anonymity and lab workers’ lack of familiarity 
with how to file a complaint suggests that some quality problems are 
not being reported. Fourth, based on the large number of labs with 
proposed sanctions from 1998 through 2004 that were never imposed—even 
for labs with the same serious deficiencies on consecutive surveys—it 
is unclear how effective CMS’s enforcement process is at motivating 
labs to consistently comply with CLIA requirements. Finally, CMS is not 
meeting its requirement to determine in a timely manner the continued 
equivalency of accrediting organization and exempt-state program 
inspection requirements and processes, nor has the agency reviewed 
changes to accrediting organization and exempt-state program inspection 
requirements before implementation. 

What GAO Recommends: 

In a report released today, GAO made numerous recommendations to the 
CMS Administrator that would strengthen program oversight. CMS noted 
that the report provided insights into areas where it can improve 
oversight and said that it would implement 11 of GAO’s 13 
recommendations. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-879T]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Leslie G. Aronovitz at 
(312) 220-7600 or aronovitzl@gao.gov. 

[End of Section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I am pleased to be here today as you discuss oversight of the quality 
of testing performed by the nation's clinical laboratories. Clinical 
lab tests are one of the most frequently billed Medicare procedures 
and, according to the American Clinical Laboratory Association, affect 
an estimated 70 percent of medical decisions.[Footnote 1] Ensuring 
accurate and reliable lab test results is critical because erroneous 
results may lead to improper treatment, unnecessary mental and physical 
anguish for patients, and higher health care costs. Concerns about the 
quality of lab testing resulted in enactment of the Clinical Laboratory 
Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA).[Footnote 2] In recent years, 
despite CLIA, lab quality problems in several states have raised 
questions about the adequacy of lab oversight. 

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is responsible for 
overseeing compliance with clinical lab testing requirements. As of 
December 2005, there were approximately 193,000 labs nationwide ranging 
from very small physician office labs that conduct fewer than 2,000 
tests annually, to hospital labs that conduct millions of tests each 
year. Most clinical labs regulated under CLIA must obtain a certificate 
from CMS, but only about 19 percent--those that conduct moderate-to 
high-complexity tests--undergo biennial inspections, which are also 
referred to as surveys. During the surveys, inspectors assess lab 
compliance with mandated personnel and testing standards. In addition, 
surveyed labs must participate in proficiency testing, a program that 
requires them to test samples with unknown characteristics that are 
then graded by an external party. Labs with serious deficiencies may be 
sanctioned. Labs may choose to be surveyed by (1) their state survey 
agency, under contract with CMS; (2) their state CLIA-exempt program 
for labs in New York and Washington; or (3) one of six private 
accrediting organizations. State survey agency inspections use CLIA 
requirements that are intended to help ensure valid and reliable lab 
tests; the two state CLIA-exempt programs and six accrediting 
organizations survey labs using their own requirements that CMS has 
determined to be at least equivalent to CLIA's. Each survey 
organization is also responsible for investigating complaints about lab 
quality.[Footnote 3] 

My remarks today will focus on (1) the quality of lab testing and (2) 
the effectiveness of CMS and survey organization oversight of the CLIA 
program. My testimony summarizes the findings of a report we released 
today that examines these issues in more detail and includes numerous 
recommendations to the CMS Administrator for improving the quality of 
laboratory testing through closer oversight of clinical labs and the 
administration of CLIA standards. 

To determine what is known about the quality of lab testing, we 
analyzed data on serious deficiencies identified during surveys by 
state survey agencies using CMS's On-Line Survey, Certification, and 
Reporting system (OSCAR). We requested comparable data on serious 
deficiencies from state CLIA-exempt programs and the three largest 
accrediting organizations--the College of American Pathologists (CAP), 
COLA, and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare 
Organizations (JCAHO)--which together survey about 97 percent of 
accredited labs.[Footnote 4] We also analyzed proficiency testing data-
-another indicator of a lab's ability to produce accurate test results. 
To evaluate the effectiveness of CLIA program oversight, we reviewed 
the processes used to ensure the quality of clinical lab testing and 
analyzed available data related to these issues. Based on our review 
and discussions with CMS and survey organization officials, we focused 
on several key issues: (1) the balance struck between the regulatory 
and educational goals of lab surveys, (2) the implications of CAP's use 
of volunteer surveyors from neighboring labs to conduct inspections, 
(3) how survey organizations facilitate the filing of complaints, (4) 
the use of sanctions to encourage compliance, (5) CMS's process for 
determining that the standards used by state CLIA-exempt programs and 
accrediting organizations are at least equivalent to those of CLIA, and 
(6) the results of validation reviews that are intended to assess the 
adequacy of inspections by survey organizations. In addition, we 
interviewed officials from CMS, three CMS regional offices,[Footnote 5] 
10 state survey agencies,[Footnote 6] the New York and Washington CLIA- 
exempt programs, and the three largest accrediting organizations. We 
conducted our work from January 2005 through May 2006 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. 

In summary, insufficient data exist to identify the extent of serious 
quality problems at labs. When CMS implemented revised CLIA survey 
requirements in 2004, it modified historical state survey agency 
findings stored in its OSCAR database and, as a result, data prior to 
2004 no longer reflect key survey requirements in effect at the time of 
those surveys. The limited data available suggest that state survey 
agency inspections do not identify all serious deficiencies. In 
addition, the lack of a straightforward method to link similar 
requirements across survey organizations makes it virtually impossible 
to assess lab quality in a standardized manner, such as identifying the 
proportion of labs with condition-level deficiencies, which indicate 
serious or systemic quality problems. Furthermore, CMS does not 
effectively use available data--such as the proportion of labs with 
serious deficiencies or proficiency testing results--to monitor lab 
quality. Proficiency testing is the one available data source that can 
be used to uniformly compare lab quality across survey organizations. 
Although CMS noted that proficiency testing trend data show a decrease 
in failures for labs as a whole, we found that the data suggest that 
quality may not have improved at hospital labs in recent years. Despite 
the importance of, and the statutory requirement for, quarterly 
proficiency testing, CMS requires proficiency testing for almost all 
laboratory tests only three times a year. 

Regarding oversight of clinical lab quality, we found that it is 
inadequate to ensure that labs are meeting CLIA requirements. 
Weaknesses in six areas mask real and potential quality problems at 
labs. First, the balance struck between the CLIA program's educational 
and regulatory goals is sometimes inappropriately skewed toward 
education, which may result in understatement of survey findings. In 
one instance, CMS instructed state survey agencies not to cite 
deficiencies for Pap smear proficiency test results during the first 
two years of required testing, to allow labs and their staff to become 
familiar with the program. Second, the way one accrediting organization 
structures its volunteer survey teams raised concerns about appropriate 
levels of training and the appearance of a conflict of interest. Third, 
although few labs were the subject of a complaint each year from 2002 
through 2004--significantly less than one complaint per lab per year-- 
concerns about anonymity and lab workers' lack of familiarity with how 
to file a complaint suggest that some quality problems may not be 
reported. Fourth, based on the large number of labs with proposed 
sanctions from 1998 through 2004 that were never imposed--even for labs 
with the same serious, condition-level deficiencies on consecutive 
surveys--it is unclear how effective CMS's enforcement process is at 
motivating labs to consistently comply with CLIA requirements. Fifth, 
CMS is not meeting its requirement to determine in a timely manner the 
continued equivalency of accrediting organization and exempt-state 
inspection requirements and processes. For example, New York's and 
COLA's reviews were about 4 years and 3 years past due, respectively, 
as of December 2005. Moreover, CMS allows the implementation of changes 
to accrediting organization and exempt-state program inspection 
requirements between periodic equivalency determinations before it 
reviews the proposed changes. CMS attributed these delays to having 
insufficient staff. Finally, validation reviews--one of CMS's most 
important oversight tools--do not provide an independent assessment of 
the extent to which surveys identify all serious deficiencies because 
many are performed simultaneously with such surveys. 

Accordingly, in the report we released today, we made specific 
recommendations to the CMS Administrator to standardize survey findings 
across survey organizations in order to make meaningful comparisons; 
strengthen survey, complaint, and enforcement processes; and improve 
oversight of the CLIA program. In its comments on a draft of our 
report, CMS endorsed our overall conclusion that quality assurance for 
the nation's clinical labs should be strengthened and said that it 
would take action in response to 11 of our 13 recommendations. CMS 
provided an alternative assessment of lab quality, and disagreed with 
our recommendations concerning the frequency of proficiency testing and 
the extent of simultaneous accrediting organization validation reviews. 
CMS also expressed concern about identifying and sanctioning labs with 
repeat condition level deficiencies. After considering CMS's comments, 
we believe that implementing our recommendations is necessary to 
improve oversight of labs and accrediting organizations. 

Background: 

A clinical lab is generally defined as a facility that examines 
specimens derived from humans for the purpose of disease diagnosis, 
prevention, and treatment, or health assessment of individuals. Labs 
conduct a wide range of tests that are categorized as waived tests or 
as moderate-or high-complexity tests. Approximately 81 percent of all 
labs (about 157,000) are not subject to routine biennial surveys 
because they perform (1) "waived" tests, which are generally simple 
tests that have an insignificant risk of erroneous results, such as 
those approved for home use[Footnote 7] or (2) tests performed during 
the course of a patient visit with a microscope on specimens that are 
not easily transportable. CLIA establishes more stringent requirements 
for the 19 percent (about 36,000) of labs performing moderate-or high- 
complexity testing, including the requirement for a survey and 
participation in routine proficiency testing. Surveys examine lab 
compliance with CLIA program requirements in several areas including: 
personnel qualifications, proficiency testing,[Footnote 8] quality 
control, quality assurance, and recordkeeping. 

Survey Organizations: 

In general, labs have a choice of who conducts their surveys--state 
survey agencies using CLIA inspection requirements or other survey 
organizations that use requirements CMS has determined to be at least 
equivalent to CLIA's. CMS contracts with state survey agencies in most 
states to inspect labs against CLIA requirements.[Footnote 9] CLIA 
established an approval process to allow states and private accrediting 
organizations to use their own requirements to survey labs. As noted 
earlier, New York and Washington operate CLIA-exempt programs and CMS 
has approved six private, nonprofit accrediting organizations to survey 
labs--the American Association of Blood Banks (AABB), the American 
Osteopathic Association (AOA), the American Society of 
Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics (ASHI), CAP, COLA, and JCAHO. The 
requirements of both state CLIA-exempt programs and accrediting 
organizations must be reviewed by CMS at least every 6 years to ensure 
CLIA equivalency, but may be more stringent than those of CLIA. Figure 
1 lists the three types of survey organizations and indicates whether 
they survey labs under CLIA requirements, or use their own CLIA- 
equivalent requirements. It also shows the percentage of labs 
performing moderate-to high-complexity testing surveyed by each type of 
organization. In general, state survey agencies, COLA, and Washington's 
CLIA-exempt program survey physician office labs, while New York's CLIA-
exempt program, CAP, and JCAHO survey hospital labs. 

Figure 1: Types of Survey Organizations, Requirements Used to Survey 
Labs, and Percentage of Labs Surveyed by Each Organization, as of 
December 2005: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO.

[A] Washington is not included as it has only a CLIA-exempt program. 

[B] New York uses CLIA-equivalent requirements to inspect larger 
hospital labs under the state's CLIA-exempt program and CLIA 
requirements to inspect smaller labs, including physician office labs. 
Only the labs in the CLIA-exempt program are counted here. 

[C] Some labs are counted more than once because labs may be accredited 
by more than one organization. While some labs in New York may be 
accredited, they are still subject to biennial surveys by the state 
survey agency or the state CLIA-exempt program, because New York does 
not authorize accreditation as the basis for lab licensure. 

[End of Figure]

Surveys and Complaint Investigations: 

Survey organizations (1) conduct surveys and complaint investigations 
and (2) monitor proficiency test results submitted by surveyed labs 
three times a year. Surveys are typically conducted by former or 
current lab workers, who assess lab compliance with CLIA or CLIA- 
equivalent requirements. Generally, surveyors verify that lab personnel 
are appropriately qualified to conduct testing, evaluate proficiency 
test records, check equipment and calibration to ensure that 
appropriate quality control measures are in place, and determine 
whether the lab has a quality assurance plan and uses it to, among 
other things, appropriately identify and resolve problems affecting 
testing quality. Surveys also include an educational component to 
assist labs in understanding how to comply with CLIA requirements. 

Lab survey requirements are classified as either "standard-" or 
"condition-" level. Deficiencies are also characterized as standard-or 
condition-level based on the requirement in which the deficiency 
occurs. Standard-level deficiencies denote problems that generally are 
not serious, while condition-level deficiencies are cited when the 
problems are serious or systemic in nature. When deficiencies are found 
during surveys or complaint investigations, labs are required to submit 
a plan of correction, detailing how and when they will address the 
deficiencies. Additionally, CMS can impose principal or alternative 
sanctions, or both. Principal sanctions include revocation of a CLIA 
certificate, cancellation of the right to receive Medicare payments, or 
limits on testing. Alternative sanctions, authorized by Congress to 
give CMS more flexibility to achieve lab compliance, are less severe 
and include civil money penalties or on-site monitoring. For condition- 
level deficiencies that do not involve an imminent and serious threat 
to patient health and a significant hazard to public health, labs have 
an opportunity to correct the deficiencies, which we refer to as a 
grace period, before the sanctions are imposed. If a lab is unable to 
correct a deficiency during this grace period, CMS determines whether 
to impose sanctions. 

CMS Oversight: 

CMS, including its 10 regional offices, oversees state and accrediting 
organization survey activities. CMS reviews and approves initial and 
subsequent applications from exempt-state programs and accrediting 
organizations to ensure CLIA equivalency. Validation reviews are one of 
CMS's primary oversight tools. Federal surveyors in CMS regional 
offices are responsible for conducting validation reviews of state 
survey agency and exempt-state program inspections, but state survey 
agency staff conduct the validation reviews of accrediting organization 
inspections.[Footnote 10] An objective of these reviews is to determine 
if all condition-level deficiencies were identified. These reviews are 
conducted within 60 days of a state's, or 90 days of an accrediting 
organization's, survey of a lab. 

Insufficient Data Exist to Identify Extent of Serious Lab Quality 
Problems: 

The extent of serious quality problems at labs is unclear because CMS 
has incomplete data on condition-level deficiencies identified by state 
survey agencies prior to 2004. Survey results for 2004 show substantial 
variability across states, which suggests that state survey agencies do 
not conduct surveys in a consistent manner. We also found that the lack 
of a straightforward linkage between CLIA requirements and the CLIA- 
equivalent requirements of some survey organizations makes it virtually 
impossible to assess lab quality in a standardized manner. CMS does not 
effectively use available data, such as the results of surveys and 
proficiency testing, to monitor and assess lab quality. Although CMS 
noted that proficiency testing trend data show a decrease in failures 
for labs as a whole, the data suggest that quality may not have 
improved at hospital labs for the period 1999 through 2003. 

Limited Quality Data for Labs Inspected by State Survey Agencies 
Suggest Survey Inconsistencies: 

CMS's OSCAR database contains limited data on the quality of labs 
inspected by state survey agencies and, as a result, it is not possible 
to analyze changes in the quality of lab testing over time. In January 
2004, CMS implemented revised CLIA survey requirements and modified the 
existing OSCAR data--state survey agency findings--to reflect the 
changes. The revisions affected approximately two-thirds of the CLIA 
condition-level requirements.[Footnote 11] As a result of the data 
modifications, the findings for surveys conducted prior to 2004 no 
longer reflect all key condition-level requirements in effect at the 
time of those surveys. 

Based on the available 2004 OSCAR data (which represent about one half 
of all labs surveyed by state survey agencies), we found that 6.3 
percent of labs had condition-level deficiencies. However, variability 
in the OSCAR data suggests that labs are not surveyed in a consistent 
manner. In 2004, the percentage of labs that were reported to have 
condition-level deficiencies varied considerably by state, ranging from 
none in 6 states to about 25 percent of labs in South Carolina. Based 
on interviews with CMS and 10 state survey agencies, it appears that at 
least some of this variability is due to differences in states' 
approaches to conducting their surveys as opposed to true differences 
in lab quality. For example, CMS told us that, because there is not a 
prescriptive checklist to guide the survey process, the reliance on 
state surveyor judgment results in variations in the citing of 
deficiencies. In fact, officials in several states said that there are 
circumstances under which condition-level deficiencies would not be 
cited, such as if the lab staff were new or if the lab had a good 
history of compliance. As a result, available data likely understate 
the extent of serious quality problems at labs. 

Quality of Labs Inspected by Survey Organizations Is Very Difficult to 
Measure in a Standardized Manner: 

Differences in the inspection requirements used by survey organizations 
make it virtually impossible to measure lab quality in a standardized 
manner. Because exempt-state programs and accrediting organizations do 
not classify inspection requirements and related deficiencies with the 
same criteria used by state survey agencies--as either standard-or 
condition-level--they cannot easily identify the proportion of surveyed 
labs with condition-level deficiencies.[Footnote 12] 

We asked exempt-state programs and accrediting organizations what 
percentage of their requirements, and any deficiencies cited for 
failure to meet those requirements, indicated serious problems that 
were equivalent to CLIA condition-level deficiencies. CAP and COLA 
crosswalked their recent survey findings to CLIA condition-level 
requirements. Although their analysis suggested that from about 56 to 
68 percent of labs surveyed during 2004 had a deficiency in at least 
one condition-level requirement, they acknowledged that these 
proportions overstated the subset of labs with serious problems. JCAHO 
did not crosswalk its inspection requirements to those of CLIA because 
staff would have had to manually review each survey report to determine 
which deficiencies were equivalent to deficiencies in CLIA condition- 
level requirements.[Footnote 13] 

Despite the difficulty of identifying CLIA equivalent condition-level 
deficiencies, two of the three accrediting organizations we reviewed 
have systems to identify labs they survey that have serious quality 
problems. COLA estimated that about 9 percent of labs it surveyed in 
2004 were subject to closer scrutiny because of the seriousness of the 
problems identified. According to JCAHO, about 5 percent of the labs it 
surveyed in 2004 were not in compliance with a significant number of 
requirements. The third accrediting organization, CAP, has criteria for 
identifying labs that warrant greater scrutiny, but CAP officials told 
us that identifying such labs had to be accomplished on a case by case 
basis, rather than through a database inquiry.[Footnote 14] 

CMS Use of Data for Monitoring Lab Quality Is Limited: 

CMS does not effectively use available data, such as the results of 
surveys and proficiency testing data, to monitor and assess lab 
quality. Although CMS tracks the most frequently cited deficiencies at 
labs in an effort to improve quality, it does not routinely track the 
proportion of labs, by state, in which state survey agencies identify 
condition-level deficiencies--those that denote serious or systemic 
problems. As noted earlier, variability in survey findings suggests 
inconsistencies in how surveys are conducted. CMS also does not require 
exempt-state programs and accrediting organizations to routinely submit 
data on serious deficiencies identified at the labs they inspect, 
unless the deficiencies pose immediate jeopardy to the public or an 
individual's health. 

We also found that CMS does not effectively use proficiency testing 
data to assess clinical lab quality. Proficiency testing is an 
important indicator of lab quality because it is an objective 
assessment of a lab's ability to produce accurate test results and is 
conducted more frequently than surveys--three times a year versus once 
every 2 years. In the absence of comparable survey data, proficiency 
testing results provide a uniform way to assess the quality of lab 
testing across survey organizations. Although CMS's analysis of 
proficiency testing data showed improvements over time, our analysis of 
proficiency testing data for 1999 through 2003 suggests that there has 
been an increase in proficiency testing failures for labs inspected by 
CAP and JCAHO, which generally inspect hospital labs, and a decrease in 
such failures for labs surveyed by state survey agencies and COLA, 
which tend to inspect physician office labs. 

Importantly, CMS's decision to require proficiency testing for almost 
all laboratory tests only three times a year is inconsistent with the 
statutory requirement. CLIA requires that proficiency testing be 
conducted "on a quarterly basis, except where the Secretary determines 
for technical and scientific reasons that a particular examination or 
procedure may be tested less frequently (but not less often than twice 
per year)."[Footnote 15] In CMS's 1992 rule implementing CLIA, the 
agency provided a rationale for reducing the frequency of proficiency 
testing, but did not provide a technical and scientific basis for 
reducing the frequency for particular procedures or tests.[Footnote 16] 
CMS told us that officials from CMS and the Centers for Disease Control 
and Prevention had together determined that the reduced frequency was 
based on technical and scientific grounds and supplied a brief, undated 
narrative which it attributed to the Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention. However, the narrative focused on the relative costs and 
benefits of proficiency testing at various intervals and did not 
include an analysis of the technical and scientific considerations with 
regard to particular tests that presented a basis for reducing the 
frequency. 

CLIA Program Oversight Is Inadequate: 

Oversight by CMS and survey organizations is not adequate to ensure 
that labs meet CLIA requirements. For example, the goal of educating 
lab workers during surveys takes precedence over the identification and 
reporting of deficiencies, while the use of volunteer rather than staff 
surveyors by one accrediting organization raises questions about 
appropriate levels of training and the appearance of a conflict of 
interest. The significant increase in complaints since CAP took steps 
to help ensure that lab workers know how to file a complaint suggests 
that some quality problems at labs inspected by some survey 
organizations may not be reported. In addition, sanctions are not being 
used effectively as an enforcement tool to promote labs' compliance 
with CLIA requirements, as evidenced by the relatively few labs with 
repeat condition-level deficiencies on consecutive surveys from 1998 
through 2004 that had sanctions imposed. Furthermore, CMS is not 
meeting its responsibility to determine that accrediting organization 
and exempt-state program requirements and processes continue to be at 
least equivalent to CLIA's. Finally, ongoing CMS validation reviews do 
not provide an independent assessment of the extent to which surveys 
identify all condition-level deficiencies--primarily due to their 
timing. 

Balance Between Educational and Regulatory Roles by CMS and Survey 
Organizations Appears to Be Inappropriate: 

The goal of educating lab workers sometimes takes precedence over, or 
precludes, the identification and reporting of deficiencies that affect 
the quality of lab testing.[Footnote 17] For example, surveyors from 
one state survey agency told us they do not cite condition-level 
deficiencies when lab workers are new but prefer to educate the new 
staff. As a result, data on the quality of lab testing and trends in 
quality over time may be misleading. CMS also appears to be 
inappropriately stressing education over regulation. For instance, in 
its 2005 implementation of proficiency testing for lab technicians who 
interpret Pap smears, a test for cervical cancer, CMS instructed state 
surveyors to refrain from citing deficiencies at labs whose staff fail 
the tests in 2005 or 2006. According to CMS, this educational focus 
allows labs and their staff to become familiar with the proficiency 
testing program; however, it is important to note that there was about 
a 13-year time lag between the 1992 regulations that implemented CLIA 
and the 2005 implementation of Pap smear proficiency testing.[Footnote 
18] In addition, CMS noted that it was concerned about some of the high 
initial Pap smear proficiency testing failure rates. An inappropriate 
balance between the educational and regulatory roles is also evident in 
some accrediting organization practices. For instance, for COLA, the 
process of educating labs begins even prior to a survey, when labs are 
encouraged to complete a self-assessment to identify COLA requirements 
with which they are not in compliance. A CAP surveyor we interviewed 
with over 30 years of lab experience estimated that the majority of 
pathologists--individuals who generally serve as CAP survey team 
leaders--view surveys as educational, rather than as assessments of 
compliance with lab requirements. 

Use of Volunteer Surveyors by CAP Raises Concerns: 

The use of volunteer inspectors by CAP raises concerns about 
appropriate levels of training and the appearance of a conflict of 
interest. Although state survey agencies, exempt-state programs, COLA, 
and JCAHO employ dedicated staff surveyors, CAP relies primarily on 
volunteer teams consisting of lab workers from other CAP-inspected labs 
to conduct surveys.[Footnote 19] In contrast to the mandatory training 
and continuing education programs in place for the staff surveyors of 
other survey organizations, training for CAP's volunteer surveyors is 
currently optional.[Footnote 20] According to data provided by CAP, two-
thirds of volunteer surveyors who had recently participated in a survey 
had no formal training in the 3 to 5 years preceding the survey. While 
full-time surveyors employed by other survey organizations conduct from 
30 to about 200 surveys per year, CAP volunteer surveyors have much 
less experience conducting surveys because they only survey about one 
lab each year. CAP officials told us they plan to establish a mandatory 
training program for survey team leaders beginning in mid- 
2006.[Footnote 21] However, the required training will take only 1 or 2 
days. In contrast, state survey agency inspectors must complete 5 days 
of basic training, while COLA staff inspectors participate in a 5-week 
orientation program and an annual 20 hours of continuing education. 

CAP's method for staffing survey teams also raises concerns about the 
appearance of a conflict of interest. Typically, inspection team 
leaders are pathologists who direct other labs in the community, and 
the inspection team is comprised of several employees from the team 
leader's lab. In the event of differing opinions about survey findings, 
team members who are subordinates to the team leader may feel that they 
have no other recourse than to follow the team leader's instructions-- 
such as downgrading the record of an inspection finding to a less 
serious category. Recognizing that team members' objectivity may be 
compromised in this situation, CAP's revised conflict of interest 
policy instructs all parties to be cautious to retain objectivity in 
fact finding throughout the inspection process. 

Lab Workers Who File Complaints About Quality Problems in Lab Testing 
Not Afforded Whistle-blower Protections: 

Some lab workers may not be filing complaints about quality problems at 
their labs because of anonymity concerns or because they may not be 
familiar with filing procedures. Based on OSCAR data and data obtained 
from exempt-state programs and accrediting organizations for 2002 
through 2004, few complaints were received about lab testing relative 
to the number of labs--significantly less than one complaint per lab 
per year.[Footnote 22] We found that lab workers may not know how to 
file a complaint. CAP experienced a significant increase in the number 
of complaints it received since October 2004 when it began requiring 
CAP-inspected labs to display posters on how to file complaints. 
Specifically, from October through December 2004, CAP received an 
average of 22 complaints per month, compared to an average of 11 
complaints per month in the 9 months preceding the poster 
requirement.[Footnote 23] 

Because of the difficulty of protecting the anonymity of lab workers 
who file complaints, whistle-blower protections for such individuals 
are particularly important. Two of the three accrediting organizations 
we interviewed have whistle-blower protections--CAP and JCAHO.[Footnote 
24] While officials from New York and Washington's exempt-state 
programs told us that whistle-blower laws in their states provide some 
protection for lab workers who file complaints, officials in most of 
the other 10 states we interviewed told us that they did not have any 
whistle-blower protections or were unable to identify specific 
protections that applied to lab workers in their state. Although there 
are no federal whistle-blower protections specifically for workers in 
labs covered by CLIA, legislation was introduced in 2005 to provide 
such protections.[Footnote 25] 

Lab Sanctions Are Rarely Imposed: 

Few labs were sanctioned by CMS from 1998 through 2004--even those with 
the same condition-level deficiencies on consecutive surveys--because 
many proposed sanctions are never imposed. Our analysis of CMS 
enforcement data from 1998 through 2004 found that while over 9,000 
labs had sanctions proposed during these years, only 501 labs were 
sanctioned.[Footnote 26] This equates to less than 3 percent of the 
approximately 19,700 labs inspected by state survey agencies. Before 
sanctions go into effect, labs are given a grace period to correct 
condition-level deficiencies, unless the deficiencies involve an 
imminent and serious threat to patient health and a significant hazard 
to public health. Most labs correct the deficiencies within the grace 
period. CMS officials told us that it was appropriate to give labs an 
opportunity to correct such deficiencies within a prescribed time frame 
and thus avoid sanctions. 

However, the number of labs with the same repeat condition-level 
deficiencies from one survey to the next also raises questions about 
the overall effectiveness of the CLIA enforcement process. From 1998 
through 2004, 274 labs surveyed by state survey agencies had the same 
condition-level deficiency cited on consecutive surveys and 24 of these 
labs had the same condition-level deficiency cited on more than two 
surveys.[Footnote 27] This analysis may understate the percentage of 
labs with repeat condition-level deficiencies because OSCAR data prior 
to 2004 no longer reflect about two-thirds of condition-level 
requirements and associated deficiencies at the time of those surveys. 
We found that only 30 of the 274 labs with repeat condition-level 
deficiencies had sanctions imposed--either principal, alternative, or 
both. With respect to accredited labs, from 1998 through 2004, less 
than 1 percent of accredited labs (81) lost their accreditation; few of 
these labs were subsequently sanctioned by CMS and many still 
participate in the CLIA program. Moreover, CMS did not sanction 3 labs 
that COLA concluded had cheated on proficiency testing by referring the 
samples to another lab to be tested.[Footnote 28] By statute, the 
intentional referral of samples to another lab for proficiency testing 
is a serious deficiency that should result in automatic revocation of a 
lab's CLIA certificate for at least 1 year.[Footnote 29] Based on our 
interviews, we found that the 3 labs were allowed to continue testing 
because they had initiated corrective actions; in effect, these labs 
were given an opportunity to correct a deficiency that appears to have 
required a loss of their CLIA certificate for at least 1 year. 

CMS Is Late in Ensuring CLIA Equivalency of Exempt States' and 
Accrediting Organizations' Inspection Requirements and Processes: 

We found that CMS has been late in determining that exempt states' and 
accrediting organizations' inspection requirements and processes are at 
least equivalent to CLIA's. Because CMS has not completed its 
equivalency reviews within required time frames, accrediting 
organizations and exempt state programs have continued to operate 
without proper approval.[Footnote 30] Equivalency reviews for CAP, 
COLA, JCAHO, and Washington due to be completed between November 1, 
1997, and April 30, 2001, were an average of about 40 months late. In 
August 1995, CMS determined that New York's next equivalency review 
should be completed by June 30, 2001, but was over 4 years past due as 
of December 2005. Similarly, COLA's equivalency review was about 3 
years past due. Furthermore, although federal regulations require CMS 
to review equivalency when an accrediting organization or exempt-state 
program adopts new requirements, CMS has not reviewed changes in the 
inspection requirements prior to use by these entities.[Footnote 31] As 
a result, such survey organizations may introduce changes that are 
inconsistent with CLIA requirements. For example, JCAHO made a 
significant change to its inspection requirements in January 2004; CMS 
did not begin an in-depth review of JCAHO's revised requirements until 
early 2005--over a year after they were implemented by JCAHO. According 
to CMS, its review has identified several critical areas where JCAHO 
standards are less stringent than those of CLIA. JCAHO acknowledged the 
need to make some adjustments to its revised requirements. 

CMS officials attributed delays in making equivalency determinations 
and reviewing interim changes to having too few staff. The CLIA 
program, located in CMS's Center for Medicaid and State Operations 
(CMSO), currently has approximately 21 full-time-equivalent positions 
compared to a peak of 29 such positions several years ago. As required 
by statute, the CLIA program is funded by lab fees and since its 
inception the program's fees have exceeded expenses. As of September 
30, 2005, the CLIA program had a carryover balance of about $70 
million--far more than required to hire an additional six to seven 
staff members. However, CMS officials told us that because the CLIA 
program staff are part of CMSO, they are subject to the personnel 
limits established for CMSO, regardless of whether or not the program 
has sufficient funds to hire more staff. 

CMS Validation Reviews Skip Some State Survey Agencies and Many Lack 
Independence: 

CMS validation reviews that are intended to evaluate lab surveys 
conducted by both states and accrediting organizations do not provide 
CMS with an independent assessment of the extent to which surveys 
identify all serious--that is, condition-level or condition-level 
equivalent--deficiencies. CMS requires its regional offices to conduct 
validation reviews of 1 percent of labs inspected by state survey 
agencies in a year.[Footnote 32] However, CMS does not specifically 
require that validations occur in each state. As a result, from 1999 
through 2003, there were 11 states in which no validation reviews were 
conducted in multiple years. Without validating at least some surveys 
in each state, CMS is unable to determine if the states are 
appropriately identifying deficiencies. 

Many validation reviews occur at the same time a survey organization 
conducts its inspection and, in our view, the collaboration among the 
two teams during these simultaneous surveys prevents an independent 
evaluation. Seventy-five percent of validations of state lab surveys 
were conducted simultaneously from fiscal years 1999 through 
2003.[Footnote 33] According to CMS officials, the large proportion of 
simultaneous validation reviews provides an opportunity for federal 
surveyors to share information with state surveyors, monitor their 
conformance with CLIA inspection requirements, and identify training 
and technical assistance needs. However, we found that such reviews do 
not provide an accurate assessment of state surveyors' ability to 
identify condition-level deficiencies. Of the 13 validation reviews 
that identified missed condition-level deficiencies, only 1 was a 
simultaneous review. Regarding validation reviews of accrediting 
organization's survey of labs, CMS officials were unable to tell us how 
many of the roughly 275 validation reviews conducted each year from 
fiscal year 1999 through fiscal year 2003 were simultaneous.[Footnote 
34] However, JCAHO estimated that 33 percent of its validation reviews 
were conducted simultaneously. CMS officials told us that the agency's 
intent in instituting simultaneous reviews was for state and 
accrediting organization surveyors to share best practices, to promote 
understanding of each other's programs, and to foster accrediting 
organization improvement. In contrast, most of the state survey agency 
officials we interviewed told us that simultaneous validation reviews 
do not provide a realistic evaluation of the adequacy of accrediting 
organizations' inspection processes. 

Concluding Observations: 

Clinical labs play a pivotal role in the nation's health care system by 
diagnosing many diseases, including potentially life-threatening 
diseases, so that individuals receive appropriate medical care. Given 
this important role, lab tests must be accurate and reliable. Our work 
demonstrated that the oversight of clinical labs needs to be 
strengthened in several areas. Without standardized survey findings 
across all survey organizations, CMS cannot tell whether the quality of 
lab testing has improved or worsened over time or whether deficiencies 
are being appropriately identified. Using data to analyze activities 
across survey organizations can be a powerful tool in improving CMS 
oversight of the CLIA program, yet CMS has not taken the lead in 
ensuring the availability and use of data from survey organizations to 
help it monitor their performance. Furthermore, the agency is not 
requiring that labs participate in proficiency testing on a quarterly 
basis, as required by CLIA. More broadly, CMS and survey organization 
oversight of the lab survey process is not adequate to enforce CLIA 
requirements. Educating labs to ensure high-quality testing should 
complement but not replace the enforcement of CLIA inspection 
requirements. Labs with the same serious deficiencies on consecutive 
surveys often escape sanctions, even though Congress authorized 
alternative sanctions to give CMS more flexibility to achieve lab 
compliance. Without the threat of real consequences, labs may not be 
sufficiently motivated to comply with CLIA inspection requirements. By 
allowing validation reviews to occur simultaneously with surveys and 
permitting some states to go without validation reviews over a period 
of several years, CMS is not making full use of this oversight tool. 
Moreover, independent validation reviews of accrediting organization 
surveys are critical because CMS has not conducted equivalency reviews 
within the time frames it established. The recommendations we have made 
would help CMS to consistently identify and address lab quality 
problems. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared remarks. I would be happy to 
answer any questions that you or other Members of the Subcommittee may 
have. 

Contact and Acknowledgments: 

For further information regarding this statement, please contact Leslie 
G. Aronovitz at (312) 220-7600 or aronovitzl@gao.gov. Contact points 
for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be 
found in the last page of this statement. Walter Ochinko, Assistant 
Director; Jenny Grover; Kevin Milne; and Michelle Rosenberg contributed 
to this statement. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] Medicare is a federal health care program serving elderly and 
certain disabled individuals. 

[2] Pub. L. No. 100-578, 102 Stat. 2903. 

[3] We use the term "survey organizations" when referring collectively 
to state survey agencies, the two state CLIA-exempt programs, and 
accrediting organizations. 

[4] COLA was formerly known as the Commission on Office Laboratory 
Accreditation. 

[5] New York, Philadelphia, and Seattle. 

[6] California, Colorado, Connecticut, Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan, 
Nebraska, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina. 

[7] Pregnancy and blood sugar screenings are examples of such tests. 

[8] Surveyed labs must participate in an approved external proficiency 
testing program, which evaluates the accuracy of laboratory testing. 
Under this requirement, a lab purchases samples with unknown 
characteristics several times each year from an approved proficiency 
testing provider. The lab is required to test the samples with its 
routine patient testing, and the results are returned to the testing 
provider to be graded. A proficiency testing failure is defined as 
unsatisfactory performance on two consecutive or two out of three 
testing events. 

[9] CMS contracts with state survey agencies in the District of 
Columbia and 49 states (including New York but not Washington) to 
survey labs under CLIA requirements. 

[10] Unlike validation reviews of accrediting organization surveys, CMS 
refers to the validation of state surveys as Federal Monitoring 
Surveys. Because of their similar objective, we refer to all such 
surveys as validation reviews in this testimony. We refer to validation 
reviews that occur at the same time as the lab survey as simultaneous. 
Conversely, validation reviews that occur after the lab survey are 
referred to as independent validations. 

[11] For example, some condition-level requirements were reorganized 
and some were consolidated. 

[12] Although CMS reviews the requirements of exempt-state programs and 
accrediting organizations to ensure that they are at least equivalent 
to CLIA's, there is not necessarily a one-to-one match with CLIA 
requirements. Thus, one CLIA condition-level requirement may equal 
several accrediting organization requirements or vice versa. For 
example, CMS's condition-level requirement for successful lab 
participation in approved proficiency testing corresponds to at least 
19 CAP, 3 COLA, and 4 JCAHO requirements. 

[13] However, JCAHO officials noted that in 2004, about 90 percent of 
the labs it surveyed had a deficiency in at least one requirement. 
JCAHO classifies all of its requirements as serious. 

[14] As a result, CAP plans to spend in excess of $9 million during 
2006 and 2007 to develop an integrated data system that pulls together 
multiple factors--survey results, complaints, proficiency testing, 
findings of other inspection bodies, and changes in lab directors--to 
enable it to readily identify problem labs. 

[15] Pub. L. No. 100-578, § 2, 102 Stat. 2903, 2907-08, 42 U.S.C. § 
263a(f)(3)(2000). 

[16] In its rationale, CMS noted that experts were divided on the 
appropriate frequency of proficiency testing and further justified the 
change by explaining that fewer events of proficiency testing would 
give laboratories more time to analyze the causes of test failures, 
thus enhancing the value of proficiency testing as an educational tool. 

[17] Although CLIA neither requires nor precludes an educational role 
for surveyors, the preamble to CMS's implementing regulation noted that 
surveys are intended, in part, to provide an opportunity for on-site 
education regarding accepted laboratory procedures. 

[18] Because of lab testing errors that led to women's deaths, Congress 
required a specific type of proficiency testing for individuals who 
interpret the results of Pap smear tests, which requires examining 
glass slides under a microscope. Although CLIA was enacted in 1988, CMS 
told us that cost, the inability to find a national testing provider, 
and other technical issues delayed establishing a Pap smear proficiency 
testing program until 2005. 

[19] As of November 2005, CAP also employed 11 full-time surveyors. 

[20] Currently, CAP volunteer surveyors are encouraged to participate 
in surveyor training at least once every 3 years. 

[21] Mandatory training for survey team members is targeted to begin in 
2007. 

[22] Information about complaints is from OSCAR data and data obtained 
from exempt-state programs and accrediting organizations for 2002 
through 2004. The modifications to OSCAR did not affect data on the 
number of complaints. The complaint information in OSCAR excludes 
complaints that do not require an on-site survey. 

[23] In September 2005, COLA also began requiring labs to display a 
complaints poster similar to CAP's. Neither CMS nor JCAHO plan to 
require a similar complaints poster. Effective July 2005, JCAHO 
required labs to educate staff on how to report concerns about lab 
quality to the Joint Commission but does not specify use of a poster to 
do so. 

[24] COLA does not have a formal whistle-blower policy. COLA officials 
told us that they promptly investigate all complaints, many of them 
from former lab employees, and keep the identity of the complainants 
anonymous. 

[25] H.R. 686, 109th Cong. (2005). 

[26] Since CMS data list only the number of labs with proposed 
sanctions by year, this number may double-count labs that had proposed 
sanctions in multiple years. 

[27] Thirty-three states and the District of Columbia had at least one 
lab with the same repeat condition-level deficiency. 

[28] A fourth lab was ultimately sanctioned for proficiency testing 
cheating by CMS but was allowed to continue testing for almost 2 years 
after having its accreditation revoked. 

[29] Pub. L. No. 100-578, § 2, 102 Stat. at 2911, codified at 42 U.S.C. 
§ 263a(i)(4)(2000). 

[30] CMS must verify the equivalency of accrediting organizations and 
exempt-state programs, and by regulation, CMS requires such survey 
organizations to seek reapproval at least once every 6 years, or more 
frequently if deemed necessary. CMS establishes the time frames for 
when the next reapproval should occur, which have ranged from about 15 
months to about 6 years. 

[31] See 42 C.F.R. § 493.573(a)(3)(2005). 

[32] In contrast, validation reviews of 5 percent of labs inspected by 
accrediting organizations during a year are conducted by state survey 
agency personnel. 

[33] These validation reviews include both exempt-state and state 
survey agency lab surveys. 

[34] CMS did not begin tracking this information until August 2003.

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