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Members of the Ontario Association of Medical Laboratories
agree:
- To comply with the intent of any and all regulations
or directives pertaining to the practice of laboratory medicine
as may be prescribed from time to time by the Ontario Ministry
of Health & Long Term Care.
- To comply with the intent of the Laboratory and Specimen
Collection Centre Licensing Act.
- To ensure that no practitioner receives a direct or indirect
financial benefit for referring work to the laboratory or
laboratories owned and operated by the member. In the event
the practitioner has an ownership interest in a laboratory
to which work is referred, this ownership interest is to
be disclosed to the patient.
- To make every effort to maintain the quality of laboratory
services by establishing and following an acceptable method
of quality control.
- To make every attempt to inform referring practitioners
of the current and rational use of laboratory services.
Operating Principles and Guidelines
Members of the Ontario Association of Medical Laboratories
agree to conduct their laboratory businesses in accordance
with the principles and guidelines below:
Guiding Principles
- It is a conflict of interest for a laboratory licensee
or operator to convey any benefit, directly or indirectly,
on a practitioner from whom the laboratory receives patients
or specimens.
- It is a conflict of interest for a practitioner to receive
any benefit, directly or indirectly, from a supplier to
whom the practitioner refers patients or specimens.
- No arrangement shall be entered into which may result
in the ordering of unnecessary diagnostic procedures.
Guidelines
- Each member shall maintain a laboratory service that
is administered in accordance with the highest ethical and
professional standards.
- Each member shall comply with all applicable legislation
and regulations pertaining to the practice of laboratory
medicine and operation of diagnostic laboratory facilities.
- No member shall enter into any arrangements with practitioners
from whom the member receives patients or specimens where
the impact of such arrangements is the ordering of diagnostic
procedures that are medically unnecessary.
- Each member shall establish and follow systems of quality
control that ensure the quality of laboratory services meets
or exceeds the standards set by the Quality Management Program
- Laboratory Services.
- Each member shall participate in Board-approved programs.
- It is a conflict of interest for any member to give any
benefit, directly or indirectly to a practitioner or a person
from whom the member receives referrals or specimens, or
to a practitioner whose patients the member in any way provides
with laboratory services.
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