Clia


The Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) was passed by the United States Congress in the year 1988. The aim behind this was to establish standards for quality laboratories, providing diagnostic results and working with human samples. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) regulates the CLIA.
The CLIA’s standards were formulated for ensuring an accurate, reliable and timeliness test results of patients, without any regard as to where the tests were performed.
The accreditation process ensures that patients who undergo DNA testing at the accredited labs will have guaranteed quality services as well as reliable results, and that too in a timely manner. As it is that CLIA standards are very high, but on top of that, individual states may heighten the standards even more. This can be seen in the case of labs in Washington and New York.
The CLIA standards are focused on labs which carry out medical diagnostic testing. Forensic labs are to follow other standards than that of the CLIA. The process to earn a CLIA accreditation includes proficiency testing all the techniques and procedures that a lab carries out every day.
Information on Clia

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