Laboratory Services
At Mid Ohio Oncology/Hematology, Inc. we offer
a fully-staffed laboratory on site, utilizing qualified and dedicated
medical technologists and/or medical laboratory technicians under
the direction of a laboratory manager. The Board of Registry
of the American Society of Clinical Pathologists certifies all
of our technologists/technicians; they all have excellent phlebotomy
skills and many years of hematology experience among them.
We have received Clinical Laboratory Improvement
Amendments (CLIA) certification, and are regularly surveyed and
inspected by the Commission on Office Laboratory Accreditation
(COLA). This agency monitors compliance in quality assurance,
personnel, proficiency testing, and policy and procedural guidelines;
our laboratories have won Laboratory Excellence Awards from COLA
for inspection and proficiency testing results.
Our laboratory staff becomes very familiar with our patients
and their families during their visits; they most often will
have lab work drawn before they see the doctor and/or before
they have a chemotherapy treatment.
Frequently Asked Questions:
Do I have to get my blood drawn every time I am here?
The physician
must monitor your blood count as long as you are having chemotherapy
treatments; your white blood count (WBC), red blood count (RBC),
and platelet count can be affected by the drugs that are used.
Depending on these counts, the physician will determine whether
you receive the treatment and how much you will receive. Even
after treatment is over, you will have blood drawn periodically.
Why can’t you stick my finger?
There are some laboratory
tests that require a very small amount of blood that can be obtained
by a finger stick (CBC, PT/INR for example). However, the physician
often wants chemistry tests that require a larger quantity of
blood. In this case, a venipuncture (puncture of a vein through
the skin in order to withdraw blood) must be performed.
My other doctor just drew a blood
sample; why can’t you
use those results?
It depends on the tests that your other physician
ordered and when; most times our doctors need current results
to determine the course of your therapy. If the tests are duplicated,
then we can get copies from the other doctor, or send our results
to your physician to keep you from getting your blood drawn twice
unnecessarily.
How soon will the doctor get the results? When will I know?
The
complete blood count (CBC) is run immediately in each office
so that the physician and/or chemotherapy nurse has the results
before making any therapy decisions. If additional chemistry
tests are ordered, they may be either run in our office or sent
to our reference lab. In this case, the results would be back
within 1-2 days and you would be notified of any abnormal results
once the physician reviews the report.
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