Thirteen Things This Lab Scientist Wishes Every Nurse Knew
To
quote the uncyclopedia’s entry on the medical lab scientist the nurse
is the lab scientist’s “arch-nemesis.” This seems rather strange, seeing
as we actually work hand-in-hand a lot, and we are both concerned for
the patient. However, nurses hate us. And in turn, we are bitter towards
nurses. This isn’t to say that there aren’t good nurses. Actually, in
my experience, there are two types of nurses: 1) those who as you watch
their expertise, skill and abilities, you are in awe of them. They are
perfect superheroes to be frank. 2) Those who you watch and say, “If I
am passed out on the floor, can you please leave me there? I think I
have a better chance of survival if you leave me alone.” There doesn’t
seem to be much middle ground.
But I get it. A main part of a
nurse’s job is to take care of the patient’s pain management and
managing their anxieties. And our main job is to figure out what is
wrong with them, and patient comfort be darned. That isn’t to say we
enjoy when they have to be drawn again or something like that, but in
our perspective, it is more important that they get healed eventually
than them being comfortable now.
However, as many of you may
know, I believe that dislikes generally are rooted in misunderstanding.
So, here are thirteen things that, if nurses knew, I think would
eliminate a lot of contention. I’m sure this goes both ways, but, I
happen to be a lab scientist. I, by definition, do not know the things
nurses wish I knew, and am therefore not equipped to write that post. If any nurse friends want to write it, I will post it, actually.
1. Clotted and Hemolyzed are different
If
a specimen is clotted, that means that the coagulation cascade was
activated, the platelets aggregated and the same is now, essentially,
jello for Edward Cullen. If a specimen is hemolyzed, it means that the
blood cells got shredded—usually on their way out of the vein or into
the needle. They are different. Clotted specimens cannot be read for
some testing, most notably blood cell counts, platelet counts, and
coagulation testing. Hemolyzed specimens can interfere with the reading
of some tests, notably some chemistries (especially Potassium and direct bilirubin), and in
extreme cases, hemoglobin. These are not the same, and a lot of times
I’m having conversations with nurses where it becomes obvious that they
don’t know the difference. I keep thinking of the Studio C characters,
the Good and Well Twins (see below).
For the
record, the main way to avoid clotting is to thoroughly mix the tube
after draw. The main way to avoid hemolysis is by not yanking back on
the syringe (for a line draw or a syringe draw), and not beveling the
side of the vein.
2. Arterial blood can clot
If
I had a dollar for every time a nurse responded to my, “It clotted”
with “Well, that’s impossible, it’s arterial blood.” And that matters
because? Granted, arterial blood is much less likely to clot, mostly
because arterial blood is generally drawn from a line, not by puncture.
However, arterial blood is certainly capable of clotting. If it wasn’t,
every single time you place an arterial line, you would be committing
murder, and arterial lacerations would be deadly. Always. Many times, I
am actually aware that it's arterial. But even if I’m not, it changes nothing. This information does not unclot the sample. If I
am telling you that it’s clotted, I have evidence for that (either there are
little clots that I can see with my microscope, or I pulled a
blood-booger out of the tube). And the fact that it came from an artery,
doesn’t really change my evidence.
3. Things don’t clot because they “sit too long.”
Oh how often I hear, “You let it sit. That’s why it clotted.” Or “Run this fast before it clots!”
Let
me explain how clotting works, and how blood collection tubes work.
When you puncture a vein, two things happen that will cause the body to
respond to the “leak.” First, you go through all the tissue,
releasing tissue factor. This tissue factor then activates the Extrinsic
Pathway, starting with Factor VII. Factor VII activates Factor X. With
the help of Factor V, Factor X activates prothrombin to make thrombin,
dependent upon the presence of calcium. Thrombin changes fibrinogen to
fibrin and you have a clot.
Second, since you
exposed the walls of the vein, the Intrinsic Pathway is also activated.
Factor XII is activated (and Factor VIII), which then activates Factor
XI, which activates Factor IX. Factor IX and Factor VIII team up to
activate Factor X. Factor X, once more, with Factor V, activates
prothrombin to make thrombin, dependent upon the presence of calcium
(the Ca2+ will be important later). Thrombin changes fibrinogen to
fibrin and you have a clot.
If you need a visual for the above concepts, imagine either the Beacon of Gondor from Lord of the Rings, or the scene in Grease where they pass the message down the cars about Rizzo being “knocked up.” (See below). And for your information, yes, I do see science concepts things in everyday life and movies. I also see the Battle of Helm's Deep as the perfect representation of a left shift.
Anyways,
in order to keep blood from clotting, blood collection tubes often have
chemicals that impede these processes. The most common types of tubes
are EDTA tubes, citrate tubes, and heparinized tubes. EDTA and citrate
tubes work in roughly the same way. EDTA and citrate both chelate
calcium, meaning they kind of eat it and hold it in their mouths. If
EDTA and citrate eat the calcium, then Factor X cannot activate
prothrombin to thrombin, and the whole thing is stopped. Heparin, on the
other hand, inhibits thrombin. You can change the prothrombin to
thrombin, but then thrombin gets whacked over the head and forgets what
to do next. So, the key to a tube not clotting is getting the blood to
the ANTI-COAGULANT before it gets to the corresponding step in the
process. If the blood is in the presence of the anti-coagulant, it will
not clot. The blood can sit there for a week, and still not clot. So
long as it got to the anti-coagulant in time.
Granted, it is technically true that if we ran it fast enough, it wouldn’t have clotted. However, in a normal person, the extrinsic pathway takes about 12 seconds once activated (which is pretty much as soon as you start to draw it). The intrinsic pathway, in a normal person, takes about 30 seconds once activated. So, yes, technically, if you got it to the lab in 15 seconds, we could run it before it clotted, even if the anti-coagulant screwed up, but really, 15 seconds?
Granted, it is technically true that if we ran it fast enough, it wouldn’t have clotted. However, in a normal person, the extrinsic pathway takes about 12 seconds once activated (which is pretty much as soon as you start to draw it). The intrinsic pathway, in a normal person, takes about 30 seconds once activated. So, yes, technically, if you got it to the lab in 15 seconds, we could run it before it clotted, even if the anti-coagulant screwed up, but really, 15 seconds?
So
no, in conclusion, no. It was already clotted. If it was a delay
problem, it was that it was in the syringe too long before going into
the vacutainer. Or you didn’t mix the blood after putting it in the
vacutainer and so it was delayed getting to the anti-coagulant, not a
delay getting to testing.
4. We know what we’re doing
I
didn’t just graduate from high school to do this job. I don’t just
press buttons. In fact, where many registered nurses have associates
degrees, every single one of us in our lab has a bachelor’s degree.
There is such a thing as an associate’s in lab science. They are called medical laboratory technicians--and we don't have any full-time ones in our lab, but they exist. We, as laboratory workers, had
to take physics classes, physiology classes, organic and biochemistry,
biology, anatomy, molecular biology, infectious disease, microbiology,
immunology, parasitology, genetics and more, on top of classes in
laboratory technology, clinical technology, blood banking, and technique
classes to do what we’re doing. We are trained in phlebotomy, cellular
analysis, microbiology, chemical testing, laboratory technique, blood
banking, and more. And we sat through a nasty, gross national exam, just
like you did. We know what we’re doing.
5. I don’t tell you how to do patient care. Don't tell me how to do lab work
You
are a nurse. That’s a wonderful thing. There are many things that you
know that I don’t know. But the converse is also true. Don’t be
condescending about lab work, especially when you’re wrong. I wouldn’t
try to tell you how to do patient care. Why do you try to tell me how to
do lab work? Usually when it’s something you don’t know, I don’t think
badly of you. And if you don’t know something, just ask. I’d be happy to
tell you. I sometimes am trying to work something out and have to ask
you, “I’m not familiar with that. Could you explain it to me?” There is
nothing wrong with that. You know patient care. I know lab. And when I
give you the critical value of schistocytes, believe me, most nurses
don’t know what those are, and there’s no shame in asking.
That being said, I won’t shame you for your lack of knowledge, until you try to act like you know more about it than me. I once called a nurse to tell her the coags had clotted. She told me, “That’s impossible. Coag tubes have heparin in them.” I usually wouldn’t care that a nurse doesn’t know that light blue tops have sodium citrate in them (my job to know that, not necessarily the nurse’s), but when you take that tone with me, I won’t hesitate to say, “Actually they have sodium citrate, and I have a big chunk of goop that says otherwise” (politely, of course).
That being said, I won’t shame you for your lack of knowledge, until you try to act like you know more about it than me. I once called a nurse to tell her the coags had clotted. She told me, “That’s impossible. Coag tubes have heparin in them.” I usually wouldn’t care that a nurse doesn’t know that light blue tops have sodium citrate in them (my job to know that, not necessarily the nurse’s), but when you take that tone with me, I won’t hesitate to say, “Actually they have sodium citrate, and I have a big chunk of goop that says otherwise” (politely, of course).
I
couldn’t pass the NCLEX-RN and it would be somewhat entertaining to see
me try. But you know what else would be funny? Seeing you take a crack
at the MLSBOC.
6. Specimen labeling—yeah it is that big of a deal
I
know. It’s inconvenient when you have to come down and relabel a
specimen because the time wasn’t on it. Or because the printer wigged
out and we only have a half a name. Even worse when you have to stab a
child again because you have to redraw the specimen entirely because
there was no label on it at all. And when you were busy in the heat of
the moment, you just plain forgot to put it on. I get that. But yeah, it
is a big deal. And no, I’m not being picky about it. Testing run under
the wrong patient is one of the biggest sources of laboratory-based
medical error. I get that it sucks. But I’m also not going to bend on
this one.
A lot of times when a nurse is being
fussy about this one, I explain it this way and she calms down. Imagine you
were sent some IV meds from the pharmacy. What meds? I don’t know.
Clear ones. It doesn’t matter for the sake of our story, and I don’t
know enough about meds to choose (see item 5). They have no label.
None. No patient label. No label as to what they are. Nothing. You call
the pharmacist and say, “I don’t know who these are for. I don’t know
what they are.” The pharmacist says, “Oh that’s the x for Jane Doe.” Are
you going to give the meds to them? No, you’re probably not going to.
What is the pharmacist says, “Well, I’m really busy. Just give them
those and I won’t forget the label next time.” Will you give them to
them now? No, probably not. What if the pharmacist swears on all that is
holy that those are what they say? Will you give them now? No, probably
not. Are you starting to see my dilemma here? How can you promise me
that this blood belongs to this patient? From my point of view, it looks
like all other blood. And trust me, I see a lot of blood, and I still
can’t tell it apart.
7. No, I can’t give you the result without valid controls
Sometimes
I have to make that stupid phone call of, “I’m sorry. I ran the
testing, but I do not have valid controls for that assay. I will call
you when I have them.” I hate it. You hate it. But I have to do it. A
lot of times, the nurse’s response, “Well what is it?” Did you not just
hear me? I can’t tell you that. I don’t have valid controls. I don’t
know that this result is correct. “I won’t write it down, I just want to
know.” I explain that, well, I can’t promise it’s right, so I don’t
want a patient treated off of it. I have seen failed controls result in
values that are critically low when they’re actually critically high.
“Well, I won’t treat them, I just want to know.” If you’re not going to
write it down, and you’re not going to treat off that value, then why do
you need to know?
8. If that isn’t right, I don’t even want it on the medical record ever
A
lot of times, I look a test result and think, “That can’t be right.” I
call up the nurse because sometimes, they drew it from a line, or above a
line, and there is IV fluid in it, or saline waste, or they left it in
the syringe and it separated and the purple tube ended up with all the
cells, and the green tube with all the plasma. I say, “I think we should
redraw this sample.” A lot of times their response, “Well, just post
the result and then if the doctor questions it, we can redraw it then.”
No, you don’t get it. If the result is wrong, I don’t want it on their
medical record for doctors who don’t know the whole story to try to
interpret their patients’ status. I don’t want that patient charged for
that testing if it was erroneous. And if I put it on their medical
record, it can’t come off. EVER. In the event that you call and tell us that you're doing a redraw, we can put a disclaimer on the value, but we can't EVER take it off of the medical record once it's on. Also, floors rarely tell us that it is a redraw, so if you're going to do this, at least tell us it's a redraw of the last specimen and not a separate check. Then we can put a disclaimer on the value and credit the charges. That being said, I don’t want it there if it’s clearly wrong. If
that’s what they’re honestly running, they’ll still be running it when you
redraw. But before a miscommunication happens and someone doesn’t know that
the lab scientist said, “I don’t think this sample is valid,” they do
something like give insulin to this baby with a glucose of “632” when
that’s all IV fluid, let’s redraw this sample.
9. We are scientists. We are rule-based, evidence-driven, control-loving people
I
think a main source of contention is that we are different types of
people. You are nurses. You are part of medicine. Medicine is a
case-study, anecdotal, experience,
it-worked-once-might-as-well-do-it-again type of discipline. And I don’t
say that in a mean way. That’s just how it is. And there's a hope-giving beauty to that. We are part of medicine,
but we are kind of the illegitimate love child of experimental science
and medicine, and we always liked our experimental science parent best.
We don’t care if it worked once. Did you have control groups? Did you
have reproducibility of results? You didn’t eliminate all the variables
from the equation!? Does this make us make any more sense?
10. It
may seem bureaucratic from your perspective but there's a reason. If you want
to know why, feel free to ask, but don’t assume that there just isn’t a
reason.
We are rule-based people (see item 9). But we
have reasons behind our rules. If you don’t see the reasons for the
rules, feel free to ask. But don’t just roll your eyes and say, “That’s
stupid,” or tell all your student nurses, “There’s not a reason for
that. They just have something up their butts.” (I heard a nurse say
that once at a social when someone was talking about how they had to go
back to a lab for a redraw for some reason…she didn’t know I was a lab
scientist. And she didn’t say butt). Most of our rules were created
after an incident, by the way. So, there is a reason behind every rule
that seems stupid.
11. We won’t lie to you. If we screwed up, we’ll say so
It
has come to my attention that many nurses believe that when we say a
sample is clotted, we actually spilled it. Nothing could be further from
the truth. I have seen samples get spilled. Accidents happen. I’ve also
seen blood get sprayed across the room when the cap opened up (not
pleasant). I’ve seen a tube of blood explode in the centrifuge
(literally explode. It broke and there were plastic shards all over the
inside of the centrifuge). And whenever those things happened, the truth was told.
If we screwed up, we’ll own up
to it. If we aren’t saying, “I screwed up,” then we most likely didn’t.
We’re not afraid to admit it. Partially because the lab’s quality
control system is based on the assumption that if something goes wrong,
the system failed. Not the people. People are, by their definition,
flawed. People make mistakes. That’s why you design a system where
people’s mistakes don’t hurt anyone. So, we aren’t as punitive as
nursing is (from what I hear). Not to say that you can be incompetent
and not get in trouble. But the first question is “What went wrong with
the system?” not “who screwed up?” For this reason, if we’re not saying
we screwed up, chances are, we didn’t
.
.
12. Which is worse: The patient getting poked again, or you treating an erroneous result?
See
Item 8. But basically, if there’s any doubt in my mind about the
sample’s integrity, identity, or validity, I want a redraw. I would much
rather you put a needle in their arm one more time than they die. I
know it’s not fun. And I know nobody likes it. I work in a children’s
hospital. Even less fun. And I don’t want NICU babies bled dry, either.
But another .5 mL of blood, verses death? I think we’re going to go with
.5 mL of blood.
13. We are all on the same team—we’re there for the patients’ best interests
As
I’ve said, we’re dealing with different parts of patient care. But the
fact remains that we’re on the same team. We are arch-nemeses, but we
are like Captain America and Iron Man (by the way, I see us as Captain
America in this equation, but you’re free to see it the other way). We
don’t see things the same way, and we’re constantly bickering. But at
the end of the day, we’re on the same team. We both want the patient
safe, sound, and preferably at home.
Months later edit: This post has gotten a lot more traffic than I ever expected any of my posts to get, due to LabHumor posting it on their facebook page. I appreciate the insight from other laboratory workers. This has brought in some thoughts from people at other labs than my own. They would like to clarify that people who are MLTs are not lesser. I never meant that they are lesser, but am sorry that they felt my words meant that. However, I have to stand by my original to some degree, as I am referring to my lab, in which non-Bachelors MLSs are not present, and our MLTs only take small shifts and cannot serve all of the functions of an MLS. The world is not fair to people with equivalent experience, and I am sure that many of these people are much better lab scientists than I am because of their life experiences, even if I have a bachelor's--I'm twenty-four. It is worth noting that the experience-route to MLS certification has been discontinued by the ASCP , and existing MLS that do not have bachelor's degrees are grandfathered, but it is no longer acceptable. I can only speak to my experiences in a lab. And in my lab, we don't have any of those. I am not naive to their existence, but I am aware that they are not present in my lab.
Months later edit: This post has gotten a lot more traffic than I ever expected any of my posts to get, due to LabHumor posting it on their facebook page. I appreciate the insight from other laboratory workers. This has brought in some thoughts from people at other labs than my own. They would like to clarify that people who are MLTs are not lesser. I never meant that they are lesser, but am sorry that they felt my words meant that. However, I have to stand by my original to some degree, as I am referring to my lab, in which non-Bachelors MLSs are not present, and our MLTs only take small shifts and cannot serve all of the functions of an MLS. The world is not fair to people with equivalent experience, and I am sure that many of these people are much better lab scientists than I am because of their life experiences, even if I have a bachelor's--I'm twenty-four. It is worth noting that the experience-route to MLS certification has been discontinued by the ASCP , and existing MLS that do not have bachelor's degrees are grandfathered, but it is no longer acceptable. I can only speak to my experiences in a lab. And in my lab, we don't have any of those. I am not naive to their existence, but I am aware that they are not present in my lab.
Comments
I think the author would be better reminded that laboratorians with associate's or no degrees can take the BOC for MLS with time in the field by simply stating that.
More and more laboratorians are getting their bachelor's degrees, and more and more jobs are requiring MLS/MT certification instead of MLT. Does this mean we all have to have bachelor's degrees or that they're better? No, but more often you are going to be expected to take the MLS BOC. Which means either getting that bachelor's degree in CLS/MLS/MT, or finding a lab that will hire you as an MLT until you can take the MLS BOC.
I am an MLS, but I was trained by an MLT at my new job. I know their value - and I know that experience matters. I'm sure the author does too, but was trying to prove a point that we are all educated in the laboratory, just like nurses are, since many nurses seem to be amazed when we tell them that we had to go to school for this.
Blogger needs to let us edit posts. -_-
http://www.bls.gov/ooh/healthcare/medical-and-clinical-laboratory-technologists-and-technicians.htm#tab-6
My only criticism of this article is the naked decimals in number 12. ISMP does not approve.
And I will say as a disinterested third party, I did not interpret any of the post's language regarding MLTs to be derogatory in the least.
One other thing I have noticed differently between MLT and MLS/MT is the increased understanding and willingness to aid others with off-the-bench, loathsome-yet-necessary tasks. I wonder that it may have to be in part due to the type of individual who would pursue the additional degree.
I am tempted to tell MLTs who complain about MLS and the perceived superiority complex to go get your bachelors and sit the board for MLS. It is more work to go back through school, but the added wealth of knowledge, pay raise, and sense of having completed a job well done are a few of my personal rewards.
And as an MT I completely get what you are saying. I know you were only speaking from your own lab and there IS a difference between MLS and MLT but both are vital. Our lab does not distinguish between the two and other than pay and I dont really think that is fair to either. Some people will pick a fight about anything though. jeez.
I think it might be a tool for lab week and having tours, and what we might want to touch on for points to make during the tour.
They definately don't under stand purple tops. that is why they try to pour some of it into the gold tops when they have a short draw. I think they think it is all the same and the color tops are just which section of lab it goes to.
Then we wonder why the potassium is >10 and there is no calcium in the specimen......
Here at the VA, we only hire MT.
If you have the time and money, the MT degree just insures you can work anywhere, and that you have opportunies to be promoted. It has nothing to do with intelligence whether you are a MLT or MT. Just time, money, family obligations etc. determine what role you have chosen.
I found this information very interesting and plan to use excerps of it for an upcoming nursing skills day. Interdisciplinary collaboration is an important focus of laboratory accrediation... we all have a part to play in caring for the patient.
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