Official Course
Description: MCCCD Approval:
12-8-2009 |
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HCE110AA
2010 Fall – 2011 Summer II |
LAB 1.0 Credit(s) 2.0 Period(s) 0.0 Load Occ |
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Practicum: Basic Phlebotomy: Training for Law
Enforcement Officers |
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Application of basic phlebotomy techniques in a clinical laboratory setting or health care environment for law enforcement purposes. Prerequisites: Certified Law Enforcement Officer. Corequisites: HCE108. |
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Go to Competencies Go to Outline
MCCCD Official Course Competencies: |
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HCE110AA 2010 Fall – 2011 Summer II |
Basic Phlebotomy:
Training for Law Enforcement Officers |
1. Apply
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) guidelines for infection
control, first aid, and safety in the clinical setting. (I)
2. Demonstrate
basic understanding of the anatomy and physiology of the hand and arm. (II)
3. Apply
quality assurance standards in blood specimen collection. (III)
4. Use
basic equipment for blood specimen collection. (IV)
5. Complete
100 successful venipunctures using proper blood
collection procedures. (V)
6. Apply
blood specimen collection techniques to non-traditional collection settings.
(V)
7. Follow
the health care facility's policies. (VI)
Go to Description Go to top of
Competencies
MCCCD Official Course Outline: |
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HCE110AA 2010 Fall – 2011 Summer II |
Basic Phlebotomy:
Training for Law Enforcement Officers |
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I. OSHA Guidelines A. Infection control B. First aid C. Safety D. Personal protective equipment (PPE) II. Anatomy and Physiology A. Hand B. Arm III. Quality Assurance Standards A. Client identification B. Equipment selection C. Phlebotomy techniques D. Labeling E. Processing F. Transporting G. Storage IV. Blood Collection Equipment A. Types 1. Evacuated tube system (ETS) 2. Syringe B. Supplies 1. Tourniquet 2. Adapters/syringes 3. ETS tubes 4. Needles 5. Disinfectant pads 6. Protective gloves 7. Cotton balls 8. Band-aids/adhesive tape 9. Other V. Blood Collection Procedure A. Test request 1. Types 2. Required information B. Client 1. Contact 2. Identification 3. Preparation C. Equipment selection 1. Types a. Evacuated tube system (ETS) b. Syringe 2. Appropriate tubes D. Specimen collection 1. Routine 2. Failure to obtain specimen 3. Client complications 4. Procedural errors E. Labeling F. Processing G. Transporting H. Storage VI. Facility's Policies A. Policy and procedure manual B. Safety procedures |