Guest guest Posted August 9, 2009 Report Share Posted August 9, 2009 The 1st part of the question shouldn't be an issue. You can get a perscription for the your lab tests from one of the on-line companies, referring you to a local lab to have your blood drawn. I guess the 2nd part of your question, how to get a copy of the lab results, might not have a solution. I would tell you to leave NY, but with Obama care coming, that might only be a temporary solution. This is no longer the United States of America that my father and uncles fought for in WW II. ________________________________ From: wilfredtr <no_reply > Sent: Sunday, August 9, 2009 12:52:07 PM Subject: New York State lab restrictions: For those of us that are New York State Residents: New York State health law prohibits the testing of specimens collected in or mailed from New York, and prohibits the transmission of data from our laboratory to NY physicians or residents. Therefore, direct receipt of lab results for NY residents is not possible. Any ideas on how to " deal " with this? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 It seems pointless to allow blood test services in NY, NJ, and RI (as limited as they might be) and not permit transmission of results. I contacted PrivateMdlabs.com, who refuse to provide blood testing services (even to the extent of refusing to send blood draw kits) to New York, Rhode Island, and New Jersey residents in light of the draconian restrictions. Lef.org, working through the same lab network as PrivateMdlabs (LabCorp), does provide blood test kits and allows for transmission of lab results. They manage to get around the restriction about results somehow. Or as B Pender said, you could travel to a nearby state for the tests. What a hassle. These restrictions discourage patients from taking a more active role in their own health and treatment. This trend of increased dependence favors corrective care, not prevention, and is far more costly upon the health care system. Despite whatever " good intentions " may have spawned these regulations, they are not in the best interest of Americans. Our group should oppose legislation like this. ~Xian > > The 1st part of the question shouldn't be an issue. You can get a perscription for the your lab tests from one of the on-line companies, referring you to a local lab to have your blood drawn. > > I guess the 2nd part of your question, how to get a copy of the lab results, might not have a solution. I would tell you to leave NY, but with Obama care coming, that might only be a temporary solution. > > This is no longer the United States of America that my father and uncles fought for in WW II. > > > > > > ________________________________ > From: wilfredtr <no_reply > > > Sent: Sunday, August 9, 2009 12:52:07 PM > Subject: New York State lab restrictions: > > > For those of us that are New York State Residents: > > New York State health law prohibits the testing of specimens collected in or mailed from New York, and prohibits the transmission of data from our laboratory to NY physicians or residents. Therefore, direct receipt of lab results for NY residents is not possible. > > Any ideas on how to " deal " with this? > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 > > For those of us that are New York State Residents: > > New York State health law prohibits the testing of specimens collected in or mailed from New York, and prohibits the transmission of data from our laboratory to NY physicians or residents. Therefore, direct receipt of lab results for NY residents is not possible. > > Any ideas on how to " deal " with this? > That statement is not correct, unless I misunderstand what it says. Did a local lab or you send the samples? If it was a local lab where the blood was drawn then that statement is wrong. If you personally sent urine samples then that statement is correct. The law does not allow a patient to get lab work done and sent directly to him without a doctor ordering the lab work. It does not prevent a lab from outside NY to analyze the blood drawn in NY on a doctor's orders. For instance, I have had blood drawn at my local health clinic here in NY. Some of the analysis was done at the local hospital lab and others were sent to and analyzed by Quest labs in PA, VA and CA. When the results were sent back to the hospital lab, they sent out all results to both me and my doctor. This is allowed if the NY doctor specifies it, but most want to tell you personally in case there is a problem. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 Won't be surprised if the NY NJ RI labs lobbyed for these restrictions. And they'ed be afraid of the Attorney Generals of each state should someone rat them out. I do have an idea. If you could get tested locally..and get a code number..then YOU could log onto their servers website and view the results. Or open a lab in another country and do the same thing. There's no Federal Law that I know of. (sorta validates the existence of a state law) In , " d00fu524 " <.> wrote: > > It seems pointless to allow blood test services in NY, NJ, and RI (as limited as they might be) and not permit transmission of results. > > I contacted PrivateMdlabs.com, who refuse to provide blood testing services (even to the extent of refusing to send blood draw kits) to New York, Rhode Island, and New Jersey residents in light of the draconian restrictions. Lef.org, working through the same lab network as PrivateMdlabs (LabCorp), does provide blood test kits and allows for transmission of lab results. They manage to get around the restriction about results somehow. Or as B Pender said, you could travel to a nearby state for the tests. What a hassle. > > These restrictions discourage patients from taking a more active role in their own health and treatment. This trend of increased dependence favors corrective care, not prevention, and is far more costly upon the health care system. Despite whatever " good intentions " may have spawned these regulations, they are not in the best interest of Americans. Our group should oppose legislation like this. > > ~Xian > > > > > > The 1st part of the question shouldn't be an issue. You can get a perscription for the your lab tests from one of the on-line companies, referring you to a local lab to have your blood drawn. > > > > I guess the 2nd part of your question, how to get a copy of the lab results, might not have a solution. I would tell you to leave NY, but with Obama care coming, that might only be a temporary solution. > > > > This is no longer the United States of America that my father and uncles fought for in WW II. > > > > > > > > > > > > ________________________________ > > From: wilfredtr <> > > To: > > Sent: Sunday, August 9, 2009 12:52:07 PM > > Subject: New York State lab restrictions: > > > > > > For those of us that are New York State Residents: > > > > New York State health law prohibits the testing of specimens collected in or mailed from New York, and prohibits the transmission of data from our laboratory to NY physicians or residents. Therefore, direct receipt of lab results for NY residents is not possible. > > > > Any ideas on how to " deal " with this? > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 rverbill wrote: > >> For those of us that are New York State Residents: >> >> New York State health law prohibits the testing of specimens collected in or mailed from New York, and prohibits the transmission of data from our laboratory to NY physicians or residents. Therefore, direct receipt of lab results for NY residents is not possible. >> >> Any ideas on how to " deal " with this? >> > That statement is not correct, unless I misunderstand what it says. Did a local lab or you send the samples? If it was a local lab where the blood was drawn then that statement is wrong. If you personally sent urine samples then that statement is correct. The law does not allow a patient to get lab work done and sent directly to him without a doctor ordering the lab work. It does not prevent a lab from outside NY to analyze the blood drawn in NY on a doctor's orders. > > For instance, I have had blood drawn at my local health clinic here in NY. Some of the analysis was done at the local hospital lab and others were sent to and analyzed by Quest labs in PA, VA and CA. When the results were sent back to the hospital lab, they sent out all results to both me and my doctor. This is allowed if the NY doctor specifies it, but most want to tell you personally in case there is a problem. Life Extension Foundation (lef.org) ordered blood work is ordered by a doctor at LEF on staff. Doctors can provide you copies of your lab work; in fact, they are required by law to do so. Results sent from LEF are effectively being sent by the doctor on staff. Looking at the last LEF blood work I received it has a Physician's name and Physician's ID number on the printouts. When blood work is ordered from LEF, you are given several labs local to you to choose from so the blood draw, urine samples, etc., are don't at a local in-state facility. So, ordering from LEF works in New York State as far as I know and this is true of all blood work you order online. That being said, saliva tests and some blood " spot " tests done at home will not work. Some state labs do saliva tests but I haven't looked into that since I don't have the problem in my state; I can mail lab work out of state and get the results mailed, faxed, and emailed to me. In Nevada, one could show up 2-3 days after having blood work with ID in hand and they would print you off a copy of your results right then and there. That gave me a chance to review any results from blood work the doctor had ordered so I could be prepared for the visit. Where I live now however, they refuse to release blood work to patients without specific requests from the doctor. However, I learned about a prescription notation that should allow the labs to release lab work to me. Have the doctor include the phrase " provide copy of results to patient " or " fax copy of results to patient " on the blood work order. I haven't tried that yet since learning about others doing this. -- Steve - dudescholar4@... " The Problem with Socialism is that eventually you run out of Other People's Money. " --Margaret Thatcher " Mistrust of Government is the Bedrock of American Patriotism " Take World's Smallest Political Quiz at http://www.theadvocates.org/quiz.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 The wording isn't completely clear but I found quite a few websites with this specific restriction. It seems to be targeted when the patient orders the test in NY State, does the drawing him/herself and the lab work is done outside of NY State...regardless of who gets it. The disclaimer is usually at the bottom of the page, or just as you're about to order: http://www.bloodtestathome.com/ http://www.virginiahopkinstestkits.com/myallergytest.html http://womenshealth.com/health-library/57-pharmacy/832-new-york-and-california-s\ tate-restrictions-disclaimer http://www.zrtlab.com/Page.aspx?hid=415 > >> For those of us that are New York State Residents: > >> > >> New York State health law prohibits the testing of specimens collected in or mailed from New York, and prohibits the transmission of data from our laboratory to NY physicians or residents. Therefore, direct receipt of lab results for NY residents is not possible. > >> > >> Any ideas on how to " deal " with this? > >> > > That statement is not correct, unless I misunderstand what it says. Did a local lab or you send the samples? If it was a local lab where the blood was drawn then that statement is wrong. If you personally sent urine samples then that statement is correct. The law does not allow a patient to get lab work done and sent directly to him without a doctor ordering the lab work. It does not prevent a lab from outside NY to analyze the blood drawn in NY on a doctor's orders. > > > > For instance, I have had blood drawn at my local health clinic here in NY. Some of the analysis was done at the local hospital lab and others were sent to and analyzed by Quest labs in PA, VA and CA. When the results were sent back to the hospital lab, they sent out all results to both me and my doctor. This is allowed if the NY doctor specifies it, but most want to tell you personally in case there is a problem. > > Life Extension Foundation (lef.org) ordered blood work is ordered by a > doctor at LEF on staff. Doctors can provide you copies of your lab > work; in fact, they are required by law to do so. Results sent from LEF > are effectively being sent by the doctor on staff. Looking at the last > LEF blood work I received it has a Physician's name and Physician's ID > number on the printouts. When blood work is ordered from LEF, you are > given several labs local to you to choose from so the blood draw, urine > samples, etc., are don't at a local in-state facility. > > So, ordering from LEF works in New York State as far as I know and this > is true of all blood work you order online. That being said, saliva > tests and some blood " spot " tests done at home will not work. Some > state labs do saliva tests but I haven't looked into that since I don't > have the problem in my state; I can mail lab work out of state and get > the results mailed, faxed, and emailed to me. > > In Nevada, one could show up 2-3 days after having blood work with ID in > hand and they would print you off a copy of your results right then and > there. That gave me a chance to review any results from blood work the > doctor had ordered so I could be prepared for the visit. Where I live > now however, they refuse to release blood work to patients without > specific requests from the doctor. However, I learned about a > prescription notation that should allow the labs to release lab work to > me. Have the doctor include the phrase " provide copy of results to > patient " or " fax copy of results to patient " on the blood work order. I > haven't tried that yet since learning about others doing this. > > -- > > Steve - dudescholar4@... > > " The Problem with Socialism is that eventually you > run out of Other People's Money. " --Margaret Thatcher > > " Mistrust of Government is the Bedrock of American Patriotism " > > Take World's Smallest Political Quiz at > http://www.theadvocates.org/quiz.html > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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