I always tell my students if you can cut, you can get a job. It appears that 
you school did not properly prepare you for the demands of an average histology 
job.
You need to take every opportunity to work on your craft and the major focus of 
histology is cutting. With 6 to 7 years of experience you are expected to know 
the basics and cutting is basic.

-----Original Message-----
From: histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
[mailto:histonet-boun...@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of Alpha Histotech
Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2014 3:35 PM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] Should I leave histology world

Hi everyone,

I wouldn't give too much detail information as the histology world is very 
small and everyone knows everyone.

I am in a dilemma. I have been a histotech (ASCP HT) for almost 6-7 yrs. I went 
to a NAACLS school and have a Associate in Science in Histology. In the 6-7 yrs 
I have changed jobs 3 times. All the jobs were graveyard shifts. The first 
place I worked for was Quest Diagnostics and I did a good 3 yrs. The other 2 
places I won't mention and I currently still have a histology job. My problem 
is all the places I worked were factory style lab work and they all did derm 
work. In my career I really only embedded most of the time. I did occasional 
other stuff like special stains both by hand and using Dako Artisan and other 
things like cytology cytospin. But I never got to develop in cutting. My first 
job in quest..I maybe cutted one time for 2 or 3 weeks before they yanked me 
and put me back to embed. My 2nd job put me to cut the last 2 months (full 
8hrs) I was working there. My current job I have been cutting since April 2014 
( but only 2-3hrs in the day and then I embed, I have been here now 1 yr, I was 
embedding most of the time before th cutting started). I was told by my 
director I need to speed up in cutting because corporate is asking why I am not 
increasing in speed. And if I don't speed up eventually then they will have to 
demote me to a lab aid and give me a pay cut. (where I work and the state I 
work in they have lab aids doing alot of stuff without being certified, it 
wasn't like that in the other state I am original from as you have to be state 
licensed and ascp) I sometimes laugh inside my head because before my director 
hired me I told him I don't have alot experience in cutting. 

Now everywhere I have gone...speed is the name of the game. They say they care 
about quality but in the end if you can't put up then you will be put out!  So 
I am just thinking I should just get out of histology world all together. Every 
where I have worked unfortunately have management who believe quantity over 
quality. OR Do you guys think I need more time cutting to develop speed? 
Beforehand I did need a little learning curve to cut and I have gotten through 
that now. It's just the speed that is killing me. And I also see if anyone at 
my work detours me for any reason like for example data entry person from front 
desk ask for missing gross dictation, then that lost time is very hard to 
recover as I am not soooo fast to recover. I feel I may have to become very 
rude(not help) with everyone I work around in order to stay glued to my seat 
when I am cutting my blocks. One thing I want to say also...until this day I 
never been written up for quality issues and I never lost any tissue while 
embedding. Embedding I am fast as most histotech (1 block a min or most times 
30-45 secs 1 block) with proper embedding techniques demonstrated (tissue on 
same plane, tissue embedded with proper orientation and follow any other 
necessary embedding instructions. ) I just feel I haven't done my time in 
cutting as I did in embedding to become a fast cutter. I don't know if its 
because of working in a derm lab that management won't wait too long for you to 
develop like maybe a hospital lab may do. I was also thinking to find another 
histo job but not mention any of my experience so expectation won't be so high 
and I can get more time to develop. All of this also causes alot of stress and 
anxiety as it gets hard to coop with.  What do you guys think and how I should 
go about with this. I am also not limited to histology. I have expertise in 2 
other major fields that I wont mention because I don't want to be identified.  
I am also in my late 20's. Thanks for reading my post and I await your opinions 
as some of you all are veterans in the field of histology.

Thank you
Alpha Histotech (ASCP HT)


                                          
_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

______________________________________________________________________
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
 The information in this e-mail may be confidential and/or
 privileged.  If you are not the intended recipient or an
 authorized representative of the intended recipient, you
 are hereby notified that any review, dissemination, or
 copying of this e-mail and its attachments, if any, or
 the information contained herein is prohibited.  If you
 have received this e-mail in error, please immediately
 notify the sender by return e-mail and delete this e-mail
 from your computer system.  Thank you.
______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet

Reply via email to