This is the glossary of terms used on the web site
Each sequential participant in the act of collecting and transporting a specimen from the patient to the laboratory. The effective documentation of this chain provides a valid audit trail for the specimen for accreditation or litigation purposes.
In the context of this manual - ‘Clinical Laboratory Services’, or Division 4 Group A.
The removal of blood from a vein using a needle, also known as venepuncture (although this may also indicate part of the process to inject into a vein) and sometimes venesection or venotomy (although these latter may also indicate surgical incision into a vein). Phlebotomy may be used to obtain blood for the purposes of diagnostic tests or as a treatment in itself for certain conditions.
Patient Identification.
Requiring immediate action or attention. It is important that if a specimen requires urgent analysis that this status is effectively conveyed to the participants in the ‘chain of custody’ from specimen collection to the laboratory. The abuse or overuse of this status overloads the process and devalues the term when there is a truly urgent situation; it should not be used lightly.
Specimen and sample are often used interchangeably. However:
sent to the laboratory for analysis.
Producing a specimen from a patient for laboratory analysis.
The process of labelling, manipulating and storing of a collected patient’s specimen or packaging prior to transportation.
The process of transporting the collected, labelled, and packaged patient’s specimen to the Clinical Laboratory Services for analysis.