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Hematological Pathologist

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

Transportation of blood and tissue specimens from a hospital to a testing lab is tricky business. There are time considerations.

For example, a test tube of blood will not survive for three days (72 hours) without proper cooling. The transport of specimen must be planned in advance. You have to pay attention to its ability to survive the conditions of the move.

You are talking on the phone with Dr. John Wexford. "I need work done on a section of human tissue," he tells you. "I'm aware that transporting the specimen to you will take between nine and 11 hours."

That's correct. He continues: "We usually send such specimens on wet ice. That gives us at least eight hours of 'safe' time. Should we make further preparations to the specimen in case the delivery takes longer?"

Further preparations means having the specimen embedded in a special freezing compound. That means tracking down the supplies and getting approval from your department head. That could take hours.

What do you do?

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