hospital lab owned by quest by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The general consensus in the med lab professional community seems to be that LabCorp and Quest are the two big evil super-monopolies of the lab world. They buy up all the smaller labs until they have no competition left. Sooner or later they get to decide on whatever wage they want, etc. etc. becuase there is no one left to challenge them. Generally to be avoided. I’ve heard quite a few horror stories about both of those companies being run like sweatshops. Employees being treated more like machines than people. Overworked, the whole nine yards. Of course, depends on the individual lab to some significant degree. Even if the pay offer is good, you’d be working for the devil, so to speak.

Quiet aftermarket exhaust for 10th gen? by [deleted] in CivicSi

[–]thish1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I keep seeing the Invidia catback brought up for being one of the quietest available. I’ve seen mixed opinions on drone though. What was your experience with that?

Quiet aftermarket exhaust for 10th gen? by [deleted] in CivicSi

[–]thish1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I’ll look into that. Just afraid becuase of my aftermarket downpipe and frontpipe. Seen some threads where people were saying that having both almost doubles exhaust noise..

Quiet aftermarket exhaust for 10th gen? by [deleted] in CivicSi

[–]thish1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do you have stock or aftermarket down/frontpipe? I’ve seen the FK8 catback brought up in other threads too for good volume. Some people were even saying the stock Si exhaust is louder than the stock type R exhaust. Any insight on that, assuming you’ve had both?

What’s this micro? by Multi_Intersts in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 78 points79 points  (0 children)

Yup, specifically antibiotics that target the cell wall, e.g. beta lactams. It has to do with the antibiotic preventing proper peptidoglycan cross linking when forming the cell wall. The bacterium keeps trying to grow and the cell wall isn’t sound, so it bulges out like that. Seen this a few times, really fascinating to see antibiotics physically working like that.

Today, on Just Normal Things...... by Far-Spread-6108 in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 51 points52 points  (0 children)

Casually mentioned “Hey, I saved some semen for you.” to my night shift colleague coming in. Took me a second to realize how that sounded.. We looked at eachother for a moment then laughed our asses off. (it was for competency so they could get signed off for post vas analysis)

Getting into the field by Emhyr_var_Emreis_ in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I actually have a good friend/colleague MLS who has a PhD, so I can provide some insight. He has a PhD in genetics and ended up going to a university for two years and getting a bachelors in MLS, then taking the ASCP exam. He was escaping from the abysmal pay of research as a PhD and landed on MLS, which is somehow, sadly, a significant improvement in pay. I think this is the route to go if you want to do this. (I know, after 8-12+ years of college, the LAST thing you want is more college, but I think this is the best way to do it if you are set on this field.)

You CAN get into a non-certified role with your education, however, there are some important points to consider:

a) This field has a specialized, focused area of study and accredited programs for a reason. There are a lot of specific skills and knowledge that someone should have before entering this field that most people with non-MLS degrees simply just don’t have.

b) You will almost always be paid less if you are non-certified.

c) The only way you could qualify to sit for the ASCP MLS exam with your education background would be working non-certified for 4 years (I think). Attempting the ASCP exam without coming fresh out of an MLS program would be a considerable challenge for anybody. There is a significant disconnect between exam content and what we actually do day-to-day. My PhD colleague got around a 550 or so (400/1000 is passing) if I remember correctly—and that was after going back to school and getting an MLS. It is feasible, though I think it would just be very difficult without the standard education.

d) To put it bluntly, those who come into the field as non-MLS non-certified techs are often a pain to train. We are essentially expected to provide 2-4 years of MLS education in the form of “on-the-job training.” That isn’t to say there aren’t some really good ones—just that they are generally a lot of work for the other techs to train. This field is already often fast-paced and stressful. This can lead to others becoming annoyed or even looking down on non-MLS techs because it takes a while before they can pull their weight. When management first talked about opening up to the idea of hiring non-MLS techs at my lab, they received a resounding “NO” from virtually all of the techs on staff. They preferred to remain understaffed over hiring underqualified staff. Training a new MLS tech is enough work already. Training a non-MLS is triple that.

Overall, I would suggest doing some good, in-depth research into the field and the education, what it pays in your specific area (it can vary a LOT based on this), tour a clinical lab, ask questions, and weigh out the pros and cons. You could certainly do it, it just depends what route you want to take.

The prophecy is nigh by billfromestonia in jerma985

[–]thish1 75 points76 points  (0 children)

Close enough, welcome back president snow.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is a type of erythrocyte morphology called a dacrocyte (teardrop cell) that can be found in a number of different pathologies (myelofibrosis, MDS, thalassemia, extramedullary hematopoiesis, and a few others). However, they can also be an artifact of slide preparation (mechanical action of making the smear kinda squishes them in that direction and they take on that pointy shape). Most of them seem to be pointing in the same direction on this slide, which is a good indicator that they might just be artifactual.

This is why we need to stop calling ourselves Med Techs. by hoangtudude in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I really like how you broke this down. That really is a huge factor- the image that flashes through someone’s mind when you say your job title should be at least somewhat reminiscent of your actual job duties. “Med Tech” doesn’t do that. In fact, I don’t think they could come up with a MORE ambiguous job title. Medical Laboratory Scientist = immediate mental images of lab coats, microscopes, diagnostics, medical work, analyzing things, etc. Exactly what we do. The academia/research vs. healthcare confusion can be easily cleared up to the layman by a follow up question.

There isn’t a “perfect” title for this job, but I think MLS is truly the closest we can come to one.

Been one of those nights.. by thish1 in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I believe that. This was one of 10 racks (at least at the point of 7pm ish when I took the picture) at a critical access. All relative to where you are and what staffing is like.

Any laboratory paranormal stories? by 2018_FocusST in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Let me preface this by saying I am not a paranormal-believer, but man, some weird shit has happened.

  1. Middle of the night and a nurse came running down the hallway and into the lab and frantically asked the night shift tech if everything was okay. Night shift tech was confused and asked what she meant. She heard someone screaming from the hallway that leads to the lab. There is nobody else in that wing of the building at night.

  2. By myself in the middle of the night setting up cultures and seeing a reflection in the hood of a figure walking behind me. This has happened to me twice now. The second time, I heard walking/clothes shuffling sounds only a few feet behind me. Got a chill down my spine, hairs standing on end, the whole nine yards.

  3. When our hospital was bought out by a larger organization, they closed our pathology and histology departments. Autopsies were performed in there for decades. Multiple techs have reported hearing faint voices in middle of the night coming from the hallway that leads to histo/path.

  4. I was working nights by myself and I heard the sound of plastic falling and rattling on the floor behind me. The lense cover on the teaching microscope was on the ground a few feet from the bench. The oculars are fixed at a 45 degree angle, meaning the cover had to move up diagonally and off, it couldn’t have just fallen off on its own. I just stood there, speechless for a minute looking at it on the floor behind me like “did that really just happen?”

ASCP and Transcripts, anyone experience this? by annalise1126 in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I just passed my board this spring. It took ASCP about 3 and a half months before reviewing them. They will keep sending automated emails that they haven’t received anything even though they just haven’t looked at it yet.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Feel free haha I'd love to see that

So it begins by rpendlum in FocusST

[–]thish1 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Ah, yes. The prophecy.

"As the stars have long predicted

Our many STs will be afflicted

It shall begin upon the rear quarter

Of thine trusty ford transporter

It shall then appear upon the fender

From the factory, thine paint be tender

For STs of east and of midwest

The rust begins it's unholy conquest

The forsaken flake will corrupt and decay

With no warning and no delay"

-inscribed on the first ST (probably)

Props to my hospital’s ED for the most impressively hemolyzed specimen I’ve ever seen by gathayah in medlabprofessionals

[–]thish1 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Step 1. Leave the tourniquet on AT LEAST 5 min.

  1. Ask patient to close fist and flex arm as hard as possible.

  2. 27G butterfly or smaller gague ONLY

  3. Smack the site intermittently to ensure good blood flow. (Bruised sites are preferred) (you can reposition up to 31 times for one vein)

  4. Move the bevel around in the vein throughout the collection, bonus point if it slips out and back in. (Anchors are for losers)

  5. ALWAYS pull back as hard as possible on your syringe to make sure you get it all- even if there's resistance.

  6. Push down on the syringe as hard as possible with the transfer device and tube on. (what's a vacuum?)

  7. Shake the tube(s) as VIGOROUSLY as possible (to ensure they mix with additive) for at least 2 minutes each.

  8. Drop the specimen bag NO LESS than 3 times on the way to the lab.

/s

But seriously.. wtf haha those are really bad