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Inspectors are coming! Inspectors are coming!

Inspectors are coming! Inspectors are coming!

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Episode: The Inspection Is Coming: Now What? Release Date: February 9, 2026   When inspectors are on the calendar, anxiety rises fast — but inspections aren’t really about last-minute fixes or perfect binders. In this episode, Dr. Chris Zahner and Dr. Aakash reframe inspections for what they actually are: a stress test of laboratory systems, leadership, and documentation alignment. With rising Medicare scrutiny, new administrative requirements, and advance inspection notice now possible in many settings, this episode sets the foundation for how labs should think about inspection readiness in 2026. This Week’s Highlights Medicare Part B Lab Spending Is Rising $8.4 billion in 2024 lab spending, up 5% year over year 43% of all Part B lab dollars now concentrated in genetic testing Spending concentration increases oversight, validation expectations, and inspection intensity — especially for high-dollar testing CLIA Goes Fully Paperless (March 1, 2026) No more paper CLIA certificates or fee coupons Labs must manage certificates, payments, and notices electronically Inspection risk shifts from “lost paperwork” to missed emails and outdated contacts What Inspectors Actually Cite Most Often  Top CLIA deficiencies are not dramatic failures — they’re system hygiene issues: Storage conditions not clearly defined or monitored Competency assessment gaps SOPs not available or not followed Expired or improperly controlled reagents Inspections With Advance Notice (Up to 14 Days) CAP and The Joint Commission now allow advance notice for some scheduled inspections Complaint and follow-up inspections remain unannounced Knowing inspectors are coming reframes the question: what does being ready actually mean? Deep Dive — Inspectors Are Coming: Now What? What inspections are really testing  Inspections don’t evaluate how well you panic or how fast you rewrite SOPs. They assess: System stability Process consistency Leadership accountability Whether documentation reflects reality The Four Inspection “Gravity Wells”  Based on CMS deficiency data, inspection findings cluster around: Storage & environmental controls Competency systems SOP availability and adherence Proficiency testing & director oversight What the 14-day notice actually changes Standards don’t change Inspector authority doesn’t change Excuses disappear  Advance notice doesn’t fix culture — it exposes whether it already exists. Why good labs still panic Overcorrection Rewriting systems instead of fixing them Treating findings as personal failure rather than feedback What “inspection-ready” really looks like Boring, accurate documentation Systems that work the same on inspection day as any other Tuesday Minor findings treated as signals, not catastrophes

Show Notes

Episode: The Inspection Is Coming: Now What?

Release Date: February 9, 2026
 

When inspectors are on the calendar, anxiety rises fast — but inspections aren’t really about last-minute fixes or perfect binders. In this episode, Dr. Chris Zahner and Dr. Aakash reframe inspections for what they actually are: a stress test of laboratory systems, leadership, and documentation alignment.

With rising Medicare scrutiny, new administrative requirements, and advance inspection notice now possible in many settings, this episode sets the foundation for how labs should think about inspection readiness in 2026.


This Week’s Highlights

Medicare Part B Lab Spending Is Rising

  • $8.4 billion in 2024 lab spending, up 5% year over year
  • 43% of all Part B lab dollars now concentrated in genetic testing
  • Spending concentration increases oversight, validation expectations, and inspection intensity — especially for high-dollar testing

CLIA Goes Fully Paperless (March 1, 2026)

  • No more paper CLIA certificates or fee coupons
  • Labs must manage certificates, payments, and notices electronically
  • Inspection risk shifts from “lost paperwork” to missed emails and outdated contacts

What Inspectors Actually Cite Most Often
 Top CLIA deficiencies are not dramatic failures — they’re system hygiene issues:

  • Storage conditions not clearly defined or monitored
  • Competency assessment gaps
  • SOPs not available or not followed
  • Expired or improperly controlled reagents

Inspections With Advance Notice (Up to 14 Days)

  • CAP and The Joint Commission now allow advance notice for some scheduled inspections
  • Complaint and follow-up inspections remain unannounced
  • Knowing inspectors are coming reframes the question: what does being ready actually mean?

Deep Dive — Inspectors Are Coming: Now What?

What inspections are really testing
 Inspections don’t evaluate how well you panic or how fast you rewrite SOPs. They assess:

  • System stability
  • Process consistency
  • Leadership accountability
  • Whether documentation reflects reality

The Four Inspection “Gravity Wells”
 Based on CMS deficiency data, inspection findings cluster around:

  1. Storage & environmental controls
  2. Competency systems
  3. SOP availability and adherence
  4. Proficiency testing & director oversight


What the 14-day notice actually changes

  • Standards don’t change
  • Inspector authority doesn’t change
  • Excuses disappear
     Advance notice doesn’t fix culture — it exposes whether it already exists.

Why good labs still panic

  • Overcorrection
  • Rewriting systems instead of fixing them
  • Treating findings as personal failure rather than feedback

What “inspection-ready” really looks like

  • Boring, accurate documentation
  • Systems that work the same on inspection day as any other Tuesday
  • Minor findings treated as signals, not catastrophes