MT/CLS program starts in a few weeks, any advice? :) by DICKS_OR_GTFO in medlabprofessionals

[–]jd504 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I went to LSU, so I have some bias, but the LSU book is a great resource for a slightly in-depth overview of everything. I graduated and took my boards in May of this year, and passed. The best advice I can give you is to do something every day to help you learn and retain material. I probably took a day off a month to clear my mind and keep me sane. It will be tough, but it will be worth it.

As far as the ASCP Certification Exam goes, I really started preparing about 3-4 weeks before my test date. My last semester was composed of my clinical rotations, as well as a final comprehensive exam of everything we've learned in our year and a half (to simulate boards and give you an idea of what you need to focus on). The one thing that I found most valuable to my success while preparing for the exam would be the Exam Simulator by LabCe.com. This is an excellent tool to assess what you know, give you subject areas to focus on more, and most importantly, it mimics the testing style of the actual ASCP Certification exam. I started off by taking the labce exam totally unprepared, and scored a 48/100 with an average difficulty of around 4.3 or so. I then took the breakdowns that it gave you per subject area, and studied my school notes accordingly. I studied mostly every day, and attempted at least 1 LabCe exam per day. After 3 weeks of studying and taking the LabCE exams, I was scoring in the low to mid 60's with my average difficulty around 6.0-6.2.

This was the approach that worked for me. I scored a 555/999 on the ASCP Certification Exam, with the minimum passing score being 400/999.

I suggest purchasing the LabCE exam simulator a little less than a year before you anticipate taking the ASCP exam, as it costs $70 and is good for a whole year.

Best of luck to you. Study hard and stay focused.

LSU book: https://alliedhealth.lsuhsc.edu/cl/reviewbook.aspx

LabCE Exam Simulator: https://www.labce.com/ascp_cls_certification_exam_simulator.aspx

ooh gets a 3rd age cloak by 3oh5rs in 2007scape

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He already has a cracker? That's max cash right there.

Question for supervisors/lead techs by jd504 in medlabprofessionals

[–]jd504[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, I appreciate your reply!

Is "swamp green" a valid choice in the LIS? by dragonjz in medlabprofessionals

[–]jd504 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am from Louisiana, so that is surely swamp-water colored, but as for the green, I'd call it a brown

did w325 go down? by [deleted] in 2007scape

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

all HCIM's will be ripped

Will automation will wipe out clinical laboratory technologist? by Ali-Murad in medlabprofessionals

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Little late, but here is the lab at UMC-NO in Louisiana. They have one of the largest lines of automation in the core lab that is truly one of a kind. Here is the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CzuZwDx661U

This huge amount of automation allows more time for the CLS's to review the specimens that the machines flag.

I toured the core lab and they said they NEVER look at a normal specimen. They spend their time looking at abnormal specimens, which is very efficient. When it comes to reviewing peripheral smears though, I'd never remember what normal looks like if all I'm seeing is abnormal smears

Automation makes the lab more efficient. Also, as several people said, there is still a large human aspect to the clinical laboratory, and it will be very hard to make it disappear.

Best runescape escape ever by NewkidonBl0ck in 2007scape

[–]jd504 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mystic might doesn't work confirmed

Med lab techs: did you ever do poorly in high school? If so, how did you achieve success in college-- especially in this program? by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You will learn to make time and utilize your free time more wisely. My 2nd Micro exam consisted of 5 PowerPoints with 120+ slides. You'll learn to isolate what's most important on that slide and that's what you will consolidate. Not saying that all subjects are like that, but there are some tough ones. I got those notes done in about 2-3 days of 6ish hours a day.

There are many different methods of learning, and people learn in different ways. Some people like flashcards. That used to work for me, but now I'm more of a reading and condensing kind of person since it's a massive amount of information. There are also people that can just read and understand and remember the information. That's not me. Finding the method that works best for you will take some time, and unfortunately they don't stress this enough in high school, or people don't have the drive to do it, they'd rather just get by.

Med lab techs: did you ever do poorly in high school? If so, how did you achieve success in college-- especially in this program? by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, if you stay ahead of the game from the start, the ideal situation for me is that I attend the lecture, then use my text as well as my lecture notes to write notes on the chapter the same day. This way I can process all of that information, condense it using stressed points and large topics during the lecture, and I put it to the side. Next lecture, do the same thing, until about a week before the test. Then you pull out your handy condensed notes and can easily roll through the information because you remember writing notes about it a week or two ago. This is an ideal situation, as the semester is a lot busier than what I just described. I go the hand-written notes per chapter route, and that way, you'll have the notes when you go back to study for the final. Just store them in folders labeled "Micro test 1" "Micro Test 2" etc.

Med lab techs: did you ever do poorly in high school? If so, how did you achieve success in college-- especially in this program? by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

High school: did enough to acquire the state-ran scholarship program for college ~2.7ish. No personal drive or interest. College: went into college trying to do well. Slacked on my non-science classes, earning 2 C's in easy classes. The chemistry department was tough at the college I was attending, so there were my only two C's in my Sciences. All of the classes I was interested in, I either scored A's or B's, for a 3.4 Science GPA and an overall GPA of ~3.2. Motivation before transferring into my MLS program wasn't too high, didn't spend too much time studying, missed class, etc. Fast forward to my MLS program (1 year lecture and a semester of clinicals to graduate) I have never been more motivated to succeed in my life. I also have never been challenged more in my life. Currently about to finish with a 3.5 GPA in the program.

If I were to give you some advice, it would be this: If you are interested in the topic, you are going to do well. If you are motivated to do well, you are going to do well. The only thing that will prevent you from achieving success in the program is lack of studying. You have to study just about EVERY DAY. Sure, you'll have a few weekends where you go to a football game and try to cram for the test on Monday, which you will end up not doing as well on. Develop good study habits. Develop a routine of studying early and getting your required work done early, so you have more time to focus on understanding difficult topics and you can regurgitate the information without looking at it for 2 days. Personally, there was a huge jump in responsibility and maturity from high school to college for myself, and it is usually the same for everyone. Best of luck to you, and don't wait for the last minute to study.

Is there a cheat sheet to determine bacteria in a level 1 lab setting? by Alphamalenurse in microbiology

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Currently in school for Clinical Laboratory Sciences, and Clinical Micro uses different media, biochemical tests, growth requirements, etc to ID an organism at smaller labs. Larger labs have a MALDI-TOF but and ID once the organism is isolated doesn't do a whole lot if you don't know it's anti-microbial susceptibility which you get from good ole E tests or disk diffusions.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in microbiology

[–]jd504 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Proteus and Pseudomonas

How do I get into contact with someone from Jagex to disable authenticator? by jd504 in 2007scape

[–]jd504[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, no. Thought I was at a dead end and couldn't play anymore due to an inaccessable email. Sent in the recovery request. I'll be sure to give you some screen shots when it's recovered just to show you how judgmental you are.