Reviewed lab reports and clinical data; contacted sites and
discussed laboratory results and actions necessary to ensure protocol consistency and patient safety.
(1)
Discuss the laboratory results with a certifying scientist to determine if the primary specimen should be tested at another HHS certified laboratory.
Not exact matches
He also has direct access to the head of the testing
laboratory, with whom he
discusses each clinical case before delivering the
results and advising clients on their next steps.
The lab personnel are more than willing to
discuss the
results of our analysis should any company whose products are reported here choose to take issue with our
laboratory procedures, suitability of equipment used, calibration standards, or experience of the
laboratory staff.
(b) As a
laboratory, for a specimen having an invalid
result for one of the reasons outlined in the HHS Mandatory Guidelines, you must contact the MRO to
discuss whether sending the specimen to another HHS certified
laboratory for testing would be useful in being able to report a positive or adulterated
result.
(a) When, as the MRO, you receive a confirmed positive, adulterated, substituted, or invalid test
result from the
laboratory, you must contact the employee directly (i.e., actually talk to the employee), on a confidential basis, to determine whether the employee wants to
discuss the test
result.
The
results of the tests and an interpretation of these
results will be sent to the veterinary surgeon, who will then
discuss the
laboratory report with the owner and advise on any subsequent action, e.g. need for further tests, treatment, etc..
As these findings are
discussed, argued, examined from many angles, and made known through the usual scientific channels —
laboratories around the world, science departments of universities, the National Academy of Sciences, the National Research Council, peer review, replication of
results, etc., etc. — there will be disagreements.
Lab Technician II — TRL Plasma Laboratories — January 2013 — Present • Monitor the heat sealing and aseptic sampling of plasma units; place units of plasma into freezer in timely manner in order to ensure quality of product • Label plasma samples and units properly and store according to policy; manage an average of 50 different plasma units on a regular basis • Evaluate refrigerator and freezer temperatures ad inform supervisor if equipment is malfunctioning • Maintain efficient and clean work environment and ensure inventory is stocked properly; answer phones and answer questions or transfer calls to appropriate departmentLab Technician I — ABC Medical Technologies, Inc. — May 2007 — January 2013 • Operated
laboratory equipment, such as cell counters and microscopes, to analyze urine, blood, and tissue samples; recorded both normal and abnormal findings; had less than a.1 percent margin of error in sample findings • Used computerized instruments and automated equipment to perform multiple tests at one time; maintained calibration and proper function of equipment on a regular basis • Entered data from tests into physician reports;
discussed abnormal
results with supervisor and re-ran tests before logging data into patient's medical record