Clinical Laboratory Specialist
Duties and Responsibilities: Clinical Laboratory Specialists include both Clinical
Laboratory Technicians and Clinical Technologists. These professions are
also referred to as Medical Laboratory Technicians or Medical
Technologists.
Both technicians and technologists perform laboratory work to identify, diagnose, and treat diseases.
Both technicians and technologists perform laboratory work to identify, diagnose, and treat diseases.
Clinical laboratory
technicians use microscopes, laboratory equipment, chemicals and computers to
perform laboratory procedures. They also collect blood specimens and
prepare culture media. They conduct tests and prepare reports for
clinical technologists or physicians.
Clinical technologists
perform more complex laboratory tests and procedures than technicians.
They also supervise technicians, confirm their tests, and manage laboratory
quality control programs.
Most of them work in
hospitals, but can also work in private practices, medical groups, research
laboratories, pharmaceutical companies, and universities.
Average Salary:
$20,000- $28,000
Clinical Laboratory Technicians)
$25,000- $40,000
Clinical Technologists
Educational Requirements:
Students
should take the most challenging high school courses in, science, math, and
English.
An
associate's degree in the field or completion of a specialized in-house
training program is required to become a clinical laboratory technician.
A
bachelor's degree in the field is normally required to become a clinical technologist;
however some employers accept an associate's degree and extensive clinical
experience as a substitute. Many technologists pursue additional graduate
education or specialized training to advance their careers in clinical
chemistry, blood banking, and microbiology.
Reflection: I would not like to be one because the career doesn't interest me.
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