Best laboratory medicine books according to redditors

We found 1 Reddit comment discussing the best laboratory medicine books. We ranked the 1 resulting product by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Laboratory Medicine:

u/Major_Small · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

From an older CAP accreditation checklist:
>GEN.20375 Phase II
Does the laboratory have a document control system?


>It is recommended that the laboratory maintain a control log listing all current policies and procedures and the locations of copies (including derivative documents such as card files and summary charts). The control log may contain other information as appropriate, such as dates when policies/procedures were placed in service, schedule of review, identity of reviewer(s), and dates when policies/procedures were discontinued/superceded.

If you want to read deeper, it references Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI). Laboratory Documents:
Development and Control; Approved Guideline—Fifth Edition.
and ISO 15189:2003

Those are old documents and standards though. AFAIK, these now need to be reviewed and signed off on by management on an annual basis. I haven't read through the latest guidelines, but I have definitely noticed a crackdown on what's allowed to hang around lately.