Re: [Histonet] Unregistered techs

2012-05-27 Thread David Kemler
Good stuff. In the old days, 36 years ago for me, taking the HT(ASCP) exam it 
was said that you were registered by the ASCP, because the designation HT is 
given by the Board of Registry of the ASCP. Many of the NEW folks use the word 
certified. After a total of 39 years (3 years was training before you were 
eligible) I still only use registered by the ASCP / Licensed by the State of 
Florida and call myself a histologist. 
 
In those days ( long before the Internet), you took your ASCP exam (HT's, MT's, 
CT's, BT's, MLT's) at specially selected medical schools across the US. You 
chose the one giving the exam which was closest to where you lived. If 
you needed to drive 100 miles or further to get to the examining college on 
March 15 OR August 15th, (the only dates it was given) that's what you 
did. Getting into the exam auditorium before you were allowed to sit (that's 
what it was called) for the exam, was a challenge. You had to prove that you 
were who you said you were or you were not getting in. Once those guarded doors 
were closed - they were CLOSED! I saw several folks crying outside the 
auditorium that day n 1975. Chances for cheating were eliminated at every turn. 
Unfortunately, not so today. So you can see why for us older techs, if you 
were HT(ASCP) it really meant something. Unfortunately, not so today. 
 
Yours,
Dave
Histonetters,

I see this subject tends to illicit strong sentiments from
professionals who are impacted or have an impact on HT/HTL's (sort of
everyone on the net)?.

I am still in school, but I want to fully understand how training,
certification, and registration work for HT/HTL’s.  I realize that
ASCP certification is voluntary, and that some States require some
sort of license or certification, but I’ve never heard of a “Registry”
for HT/HTL’s.

-The way I understand through what I’ve been taught at school is that
Histology is the study of tissue, And that...

-To study tissue there is another science that prepares specimens so
they can be studied. And that...

-There is a final sequence “Quality Control” that verifies the science
that prpares specimens is properly done so the tissue can be studied.
And that…

In order for this all to happen successfully and consistently, the
HT/HTL's make sure that during the whole preparation process, safety
is observed, proper adherence to federal and state regulations
maintained, plus train other technicians to do the same, and much
more.

If I understood it all correctly I can’t help but wonder:

If HT/HTL's do all of this crucial preparation work to make sure
specimens are acceptable for precise microscopic identification of
cells, tissue type, diagnosis of disease, and other needs:

Why wouldn't we want to have some method that can gage a set of basic
skills to indicate a level of competency that HT/HTL's should
initially have, in order to enter the field of work that can effect so
many people either directly or indirectly?

And also... Wouldn’t having NAACLS accredited training and ASCP
Certifications serve to gage those basic skills?

And also… Would gaging basic skills have a positive impact on the
quality of patient care and the efficiency of the HT/HTL’s impact on
labs?”

I'm not sure but...this fall… when I complete my NAACLS accredited
degree program, and voluntarily take the ASCP HTL certification exam,
my future employer will be able to expect a certain level of
competency that I hope to have established through training and
certification.

Rick T.

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From: Rick Tiefenauer gonavy2...@gmail.com
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu 
Sent: Saturday, May 26, 2012 12:52 PM
Subject: Re: [Histonet] Unregistered techs

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[Histonet] Renal Core Biopsy

2012-05-27 Thread Wilson A
 
  Hello,
  I would like to know how you guys receive your renal core biopsy. Our 
Pathologists said they were having problem getting the biopsy out of the little 
renal biopsy bottle sent from the Radiology Dept.
   
Thanks,
Wilson
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[Histonet] Embedding

2012-05-27 Thread Amos Brooks
Hi,
 Any chance it is from your reservoir? Sometimes the paraffin is not
filtered very well and there is some junk that collects in the chamber.
(Yes I'm looking at you Paraplast!) Also is the reservoir you keep your
cassettes in prior to embedding clean? Perhaps junk on your tampers?

Amos


On Sat, May 26, 2012 at 1:00 PM,
histonet-requ...@lists.utsouthwestern.eduwrote:

 Message: 1
 Date: Fri, 25 May 2012 13:02:29 -0400 (EDT)
 From: Ann Specian thisis...@aol.com
 Subject: [Histonet] Embedding
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Message-ID: 8cf08af4cf811bc-c74-9...@webmail-m025.sysops.aol.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii


 We are having a problem with floaters in our blocks which occur during
 embedding.  We have multiple forceps which are placed in heated wells and
 each cassette is embedded with a new forcep.  We also wipe with a gauze,
 but we are still getting floaters embedded in the cassette from time to
 time.

 Does anyone do anything else to prevent this?
 Thank you, Ann

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[Histonet] Leitz 1512

2012-05-27 Thread John Smallwood
Does anyone have a resource for parts for this 40 year old microtome ??
Thanks
John Smallwood
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