Key Industry Challenges in 2026
Reimbursement Pressure Continues
Payers continue tightening reimbursement policies with increased scrutiny on medical necessity, prior authorization requirements, diagnosis validation, and documentation support.
Many laboratories are seeing:
Successful laboratories are focusing on:
The Growing Importance of LIS Integration
A modern Laboratory Information System is no longer simply a reporting platform.
Today’s LIS must support:
- Full billing integration
- Electronic ordering
- EMR interoperability
- Compliance tracking
- Real-time analytics
- Automation workflows
Laboratories operating on outdated or disconnected systems often struggle with claim delays, missing documentation, manual errors, and lost revenue opportunities.
Over the years, I’ve worked with laboratories ranging from small physician-office labs to large reference laboratories. One consistent lesson remains true: operational efficiency begins with accurate data flow between the LIS and billing systems.
Denials Are No Longer “Back Office Problems”
Denial management has become one of the largest revenue risks in laboratory operations. Laboratories that simply “rebill and hope” are losing significant revenue every month.
The most successful organizations now treat denials as:
- Operational intelligence
- Payer behavior tracking
- Compliance indicators
- Workflow improvement opportunities
Experienced billing teams understand that resolving denials requires:
- Deep payer knowledge
- Accurate coding review
- Documentation analysis
- Persistent follow-up
- Strong appeal strategies
Special Addition Vendor Spot Light
During my tenure at ADS RCM, I have worked with many laboratories utilizing the TrueMed LIS platform. One of the consistent strengths of the system has been how easy it is to interface for billing and revenue cycle management.
From clean demographic and insurance data to reliable test mapping and integration flexibility, TrueMed LIS helps create a smoother workflow between laboratory operations and the billing process — reducing manual work, improving claims accuracy, and supporting stronger overall revenue cycle performance.
Read more about TruMed LIS here.
Jim O’Neill
ADS
VP Laboratory Divis
AI and Automation Are Changing Laboratory Operations
- Revenue cycle analytics
- Claims prioritization
- Denial prediction
- Workflow automation
- Management reporting
However, technology alone is not the answer. AI is most effective when combined with experienced management teams who understand laboratory operations, payer behavior, and compliance requirements.
The laboratories achieving the best financial performance today are combining:
Fraud Investigations Continue to Impact the Industry
Recent fraud investigations within the laboratory and genetic testing sectors continue to create increased regulatory scrutiny across the industry. Unfortunately, fraud hurts the laboratories that play by the rules.
Compliance, documentation integrity, and proper billing practices are more important than ever. Laboratories must maintain:
- Accurate ordering documentation
- Medical necessity validation
- Proper test utilization controls
- Internal audit procedures
- Strong compliance programs
Looking Ahead
The laboratory industry remains one of the most important components of healthcare delivery. Despite reimbursement challenges and operational pressures, laboratories that focus on technology integration, compliance, strong revenue cycle management, and customer service will continue to succeed.
After 40 years in this business, one thing remains clear: laboratories that combine operational discipline with experienced leadership consistently outperform those relying on short-term fixes or outdated systems.
Thank you for reading Laboratory Business Insights, a complimentary newsletter dedicated to helping laboratories improve operations, maximize collections, strengthen compliance, and better understand the business side of laboratory medicine.