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Clinical/Medical Laboratory Technician

Program Description

Just the Facts

Clinical/Medical Laboratory Technician. A program that prepares individuals, under the supervision of clinical laboratory scientists/medical technologists, to perform routine medical laboratory procedures and tests and to apply preset strategies to record and analyze data. Includes instruction in general laboratory procedures and skills; laboratory mathematics; medical computer applications; interpersonal and communications skills; and the basic principles of hematology, medical microbiology, immunohematology, immunology, clinical chemistry, and urinalysis.

This program is available in these options:

  • Certificate / Diploma
  • Associate degree
  • Bachelor's degree
  • Graduate Certificate
  • Master's degree
  • Doctoral degree

High School Courses

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See the high school courses recommended for programs in this pathway:


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Additional Information

Are you thinking about a career in health care but know, deep down, that you're not a people person? If you've got a knack for science and enjoy a lab environment, consider a medical laboratory science program.

Lab technicians and technologists examine blood and tissue samples to help diagnose disease.

Training programs vary from two years to a four-year bachelor's degree. Programs may be called medical laboratory science, clinical laboratory science or medical laboratory technology.

Jennifer McPhee is the coordinator of medical laboratory sciences (MLS) at a university. At her school, students start with a year of general sciences. "And then they do a year in the basic didactic areas," says McPhee. "So, hematology, clinical chemistry, clinical microbiology [and] transfusion medicine.

"Students have to have a good attention to detail and good dexterity."

Generally, grads of two-year programs become technicians. Grads of three- and four-year programs become technologists.

Technologists usually have a higher salary and more responsibility. They may spend more time in the lab. Technicians may work under technologists. They may spend more time collecting samples from patients than doing lab work.

"The type of individual that chooses clinical laboratory sciences as a career is the type that really loves science, takes a true analytical approach to solving problems and usually wants to help humanity...without direct involvement with patients," says Dorilyn Hitchcock. She is the director of University of Central Florida's clinical laboratory sciences program.

High school students should develop a "good background in the sciences -- biology and chemistry," says Cindy Brown. She is the education coordinator of the clinical laboratory sciences program at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee.

She also suggests that students volunteer at a hospital or laboratory. That isn't always easy. "It's very difficult to volunteer in a lab because there [are] biohazards," says McPhee.

"We will encourage students to receive [the] hepatitis B vaccine. And they will be required to have a box of gloves and a lab coat that stays in our student lab. We actually receive specimens from the clinical labs, so they work with the real thing from the start."

Medical laboratory scientists must become certified through the American Society for Clinical Laboratory Science.


Links

Occupational Outlook Handbook
For more information related to this field, see: Clinical Laboratory Technologists and Technicians

ASCLS Career Center Website
Frequently asked questions about clinical laboratory science careers

Follow That Sample: A Short Lab Tour
Follow the analysis of a blood sample and throat swab from collection to results reporting

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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