Nursing & Healthcare Exam Prep

Phlebotomy Exam Prep 47, Chain of Custody — Forensic Specimens

3 min · Gestern
Episode Phlebotomy Exam Prep 47, Chain of Custody — Forensic Specimens Cover

Beschreibung

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - The critical requirements for patient identification in forensic specimen collection. - How to properly use tamper-evident seals and packaging to maintain specimen integrity. - The function and correct completion of a chain of custody form, including tracking every handler. - Common exam traps, such as using an alcohol wipe for a blood alcohol test. - How to apply the 'I-D-S-S' mental shortcut (Identify, Document, Seal, Signatures) to chain of custody procedures. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

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Episode Phlebotomy Exam Prep 47, Chain of Custody — Forensic Specimens Cover

Phlebotomy Exam Prep 47, Chain of Custody — Forensic Specimens

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - The critical requirements for patient identification in forensic specimen collection. - How to properly use tamper-evident seals and packaging to maintain specimen integrity. - The function and correct completion of a chain of custody form, including tracking every handler. - Common exam traps, such as using an alcohol wipe for a blood alcohol test. - How to apply the 'I-D-S-S' mental shortcut (Identify, Document, Seal, Signatures) to chain of custody procedures. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

Gestern3 min
Episode Phlebotomy Exam Prep 46, Specimen Aliquoting Best Practices Cover

Phlebotomy Exam Prep 46, Specimen Aliquoting Best Practices

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Why using a transfer pipette is the required standard over pouring to prevent aerosols and ensure specimen accuracy. - The critical importance of labeling every aliquot tube with at least two patient identifiers and the specific specimen type (e.g., serum, EDTA plasma). - That utilizing a splash shield or other protective barriers is a non-negotiable safety step during the aliquoting process. - How specimen stability for sensitive tests, like ammonia or lactic acid, dictates immediate aliquoting and specific temperature controls like refrigeration or freezing. - When and why it is necessary to aliquot a specimen before transport to maintain the integrity of time-sensitive or temperature-sensitive analytes. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

12. Juni 20264 min
Episode Phlebotomy Exam Prep 45, Specimen Rejection Criteria Cover

Phlebotomy Exam Prep 45, Specimen Rejection Criteria

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - Why a mislabeled specimen is a critical error that always requires recollection without exception. - The importance of the nine-to-one blood-to-additive ratio in light blue top tubes and how underfilling falsely prolongs coagulation results. - How hemolysis, the rupture of red blood cells, can falsely elevate analytes such as potassium, leading to inaccurate test results. - The reason clotted EDTA (lavender top) tubes are rejected for hematology tests like the CBC and the importance of proper mixing to prevent it. - The standard lab procedure following a specimen rejection, which involves notifying the provider and recollecting the sample to ensure patient safety and accurate diagnosis. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

11. Juni 20263 min
Episode Phlebotomy Exam Prep 44, Plasma vs Serum — Key Differences Cover

Phlebotomy Exam Prep 44, Plasma vs Serum — Key Differences

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - The fundamental difference: Plasma contains fibrinogen because clotting is prevented with an anticoagulant, while serum lacks fibrinogen because the blood has clotted. - Why plasma from an anticoagulated tube (e.g., green top) is essential for STAT tests to ensure a rapid turnaround time, avoiding the 30-60 minute wait for a serum sample to clot. - How to identify the correct tube for each sample type: Anticoagulant tubes like lavender, green, or light blue tops yield plasma, whereas tubes with clot activators or no additives, such as red or gold SSTs, yield serum. - That specific tests require a specific sample; for example, coagulation studies (PT/INR) must use plasma to measure clotting factors, while other chemistry tests may require serum to avoid anticoagulant interference. - A helpful mnemonic to remember the difference: "Plasma Prevents Clotting, Serum Settles After." For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

10. Juni 20263 min
Episode Phlebotomy Exam Prep 43, Centrifugation Principles and Time Cover

Phlebotomy Exam Prep 43, Centrifugation Principles and Time

This podcast is made by Ran Chen, who holds an EA license, Insurance and Securities licenses (Series 6, 63, 65), and the CFP® designation. He is passionate about opening access to high-quality exam preparation resources and helping learners prepare more effectively for professional certification exams. In this episode you will learn: - The standard centrifugation setting for serum and plasma is 10-15 minutes at a Relative Centrifugal Force (RCF) of 1000 to 1300g. - Why Serum Separator Tubes (SSTs) must be allowed to clot for a full 30 minutes at room temperature before being placed in the centrifuge. - The critical importance of precisely counterbalancing the centrifuge to ensure sample integrity, prevent mechanical damage, and avoid creating biohazardous aerosols. - The absolute rule against re-spinning gel separator tubes and the associated risk of falsely elevated potassium levels. - How using the centrifuge's hard brake can disrupt cellular separation and lead to hemolysis, and why letting it coast to a stop is the correct procedure. For more free exam prep tools, practice questions, and AI-powered explanations, visit https://open-exam-prep.com/ or YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Open-exam-prep

9. Juni 20263 min