Showing posts with label Medical Laboratory Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medical Laboratory Technology. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Can Your Laboratory Afford Not to Automate?

In today’s healthcare environment, laboratories must increase productivity and faced substantially reduced operating budgets. We are often pushed to meet our physicians’ demands for timely report that only a staff twice the current size could comfortably handle. For many, laboratory automation will be the key to Achieving this goal, to reduce many of the labour-intensive tasks involving sample preparation and analysis, and dramatically improved the quality and consistency of test results.

Medical errors can originate in the laboratories if patient samples are mislabeled, if results are inaccurate or if information does not reach physicians before they need to make crucial treatment decisions. Laboratories worldwide are now installing functional automation systems and information technology applications to increase capacities, eliminate sources of errors, standardize and speed the processes to help us rid many of the problems in the manual methods. Complete automation of the testing process is the goal of the next generation total laboratory automation. This automation is targeted to include the steps of specimen processing, transport, and loading into instrument systems, as well as the automatic release and distribution of test results. These systems also consolidate tests that were traditionally performed by different sections of a laboratory, providing high-volume broad-menu work stations. With automation, laboratories progressed from labour intensive processes to streamlined efficient processes that produce more results with greater reliability.

Through our technology may be automated and speed complex operations, but in reality, it is not as simple nor eliminated errors. We may only have replaced them with new errors. It then become our responsibilities to ensure the software and instrumentation we buy is going to work correctly and when required, to manually check the test process against what is happening with the software.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Medical Laboratory Technology Programme

Medical Laboratory Technology prepares future Medical Laboratory Technologist for a career in Medical Laboratory Technology. Medical Laboratory Technologists perform laboratory tests and analyses on human blood, body fluids and tissues to assist doctors in the diagnosis and management of diseases. This programme is specially design to equip future Medical Laboratory Technologist s with extensive theoretical knowledge and relevant practical skills to meet the needs of the medical laboratory industry.

The aims of the programme are to produce competent professionals to contribute to the field of laboratory medicine so as to help fulfill the nation’s need for health care. Those who aspire to become clinical scientists, research scientists or academicians can further their studies for a Bachelor’s degree in Biomedical Science, Forensic Science and thereafter, a Master’s degree or PhD degree in related disciplines. Medical Laboratory Technologists have a variety of career opportunities. They can work in public or private hospital laboratories, private clinical laboratories, public health laboratories, universities and research institutions. In order to carry out their role in these aspects, Medical Laboratory Technologists must acquire good knowledge and skill in various branches of medical science disciplines:
Anatomy and Physiology
BiochemistryBa
sic Applied Science
Biology and Human Genetics
Biostatistics
Cytology
Clinical Biochemistry
Immunology and Serology
Haematology
Histopathology
Medical Laboratory Science
Medical Microbiology
Medical Parasitology
Immunohaematology