Best medical technology books according to redditors

We found 55 Reddit comments discussing the best medical technology books. We ranked the 23 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Medical Technology:

u/Major_Small · 5 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

Not digital, unless you buy the kindle version, but I've found an earlier version of the Clinical Hematology Atlas helpful in school.

Usually I just look for a few simple rules:

  • Seg: Filamented nucleus
  • Band: No filaments or folds in nucleus, but is indented >50% of width (C or S shape)
  • Meta: Nucleus indented <50% of width (Kidney bean shape)
  • Myelo: Round/Oval nucleus, few/no primary granules
  • Promy: Many primary granules
  • Blast: Larger, scant basophilic cytoplasm and multiple nucleoli

    Just remember to look at both the nucleus and cytoplasm. If you're off by a stage, it's generally not going to matter very much. If you're unsure, go with the more mature stage. Keep in mind that it's a gradual process. The cell doesn't instantly change from one stage to the next.

    The LabCE White Blood Cell Differential Simulator came out a little later than would have been useful to me, but it looks like one of the best resources out there, and my experience with their exam simulator gives me great confidence in it.
u/redle6635 · 3 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

Medical Parasitology: A Self-Instructional Text https://www.amazon.com/dp/080362543X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_LGXXzb35E1MP3

u/lis_sing · 3 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

Questions in the BOC book were harder than what I had in my test. Had the Harr book but didn't use it since I didn't like the format of the book

For study materials, I definitely recommend:

SUCCESS! in Clinical Laboratory Science

This has a lot of outline reviews that I found extremely helpful

Clinical Laboratory Science Review: A Bottom Line Approach

This book has a lot of tables, graphics, and charts to help you remember all this info

u/Manleather · 3 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

I had to take a course for my program. The information was given just as fast as all the rest, and I feel like I did more relevant math work as part of my general statistics class; the laboratory billing aspect was maybe two lectures, LIS another one to two. A bigger focus was quality management and generating/interpreting Levy-Jennings charts- probably because every laboratory worker will find value in that. It wasn't a bad class if that's what I'm accidentally portraying, it was just a general overview of the topics involved that you would see as a lab manager, without too much depth in any one topic.

I do know we covered break-even points and spent some time on billables, but I also remember the lecturer saying that some people do an entire degree's worth of study on the topic in the form of an MBA, which may be overkill for your situation, but also might be worth considering if your career is heading that direction (and if your employer does tuition reimbursement).

The book I used, while a touch dry, was actually helpful in going a little bit more into depth in those billing, reimbursement, and LIS aspects. It might be a good jumping off point, maybe a little more cost-effective and a better time investment, given that my entire course might only have an hour or two of class lecture on the topics you're interested in.

https://www.amazon.com/Laboratory-Management-Principles-Processes-Third/dp/0943903122

u/jens572 · 3 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

I'm not aware of any textbook that contains all the subjects in one, and isn't test prep (question and answer format). That said, I only used ASCP's book (BOC Study Guide), which was not that helpful. These are probably too much information, but if she already knows enough about the clinical laboratory to navigate them, they may be helpful. Particularly if you can find cheap used ones a few editions old. These are the books I used for my clinical theory classes:

Hematology

Hematology Atlas

Clinical Chemistry

Clinical Microbiology

Parasitology

Blood Banking

She may also need one for Urinalysis & Body Fluids, though I have not used this one, just picked it from Amazon.

If nothing else the blood banking one is cheap! Good luck!

u/MissingNebula · 3 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

I am a student in the University of Wisconsin system. Graduated from UW Madison a few years ago, but came back to another system school (uw oshkosh) for a second degree in clinical lab science, as well as picking up some minors in chemistry and microbiology along the way. Something interesting about my university is we have the first anaerobic dry biodigester in the United States (and they never let us forget that in our microbiology courses lol).

I am currently in my last year, which is my internship/clinical rotations year at the hospital, as well as attending normal class. Something I really need is this immunology/serology textbook (used condition of course), because I have been able to buy all of my textbooks I need so far except for this one. Class started back in July (I'm on a short 2 week vaca right now before starting back up, woohoo!) and I'll need this book shortly. Thanks for the contest, and welcome back.

u/mechadrum · 3 pointsr/BMET

Introduction to Biomedical Equipment Technology https://www.amazon.com/dp/8177588834/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_zeKVCb1R9MMX1

This is the best biomed book, but unfortunately it is out of print and not usable for programs anymore. I highly recommend it.

u/nnoe2011 · 3 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

I'm in my first semester of pre-reqs. To get a feel, I ordered this book and also did a lot of internet research. May you find success in this field!

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1435448146/ref=cm\_sw\_em\_r\_mt\_dp\_U\_MkuQDb2578QK4

u/ms_emerika · 3 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

Overall, I think it was my instructor who really got me prepared for the exam. She's been doing it for so many years, she has it down to a science. But as far as what I did to prepare I used this book to do review. My classmates and I called it the cartoon book because it has some pictures to try and help you remember key things. But it has a nice run down of the main things you need to know. I feel like it helped a lot.

u/bassgirl_07 · 3 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

I love these cards. They are fantastic Quick Review Cards for Medical Laboratory Science https://www.amazon.com/dp/0803629567/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_hIOQDb7NH0867

u/femanonette · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

I second every single one of those recommendations (with special emphasis placed on the blood bank and micro texts), but I do want to recommend a different text for Hematology/Hemostasis.

To fill in some other gaps:

This is what we used for Immunology/Serology.

Mycology and Parasitology. Virology was covered using online materials. I honestly found all of those materials a bit underwhelming. Abbott provides a pretty decent PDF on the Hepatitis Virus though.

BioChemistry. Though, the only reason I don't necessarily recommend it over the initial suggestion is because this book is so loaded with information it's honestly overwhelming; however, very very thorough.

Finally, I don't know what other review books people used for the ASCP, but this book's^^[1] publisher^^[2] guarantees you'll pass or your money back. I'm not sure if that information is actually listed on their website or not, it's just something to look into.

u/LabGeekYo · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

Took and passed the ASCP exam in October.

Harr is most representative of the difficulty IMO.

The Bottom Line book is great. SUCCESS is okay, but super dense.

Polansky flash cards: not like the typical flash cards. Just a bunch of information on every card. I used these, Harr, and the bottom line book.

http://www.amazon.com/Quick-Review-Medical-Laboratory-Science/dp/0803629567/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top

u/Talkahuano · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

Learn the characteristics of each cell.

I keep this in my lab:

Heme Notes: A Pocket Atlas of Cell Morphology https://www.amazon.com/dp/0803619022/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_jBhkDbT3FF9C4

u/saraithegeek · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

I used the Bottom Line Approach book with LabCE exam prep. I also had bought the BOC study guide book but didn't find it very helpful.

u/JBLA · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

LabCE, Success in Clinical Lab Science, and the BOC book. I also had this book from Louisiana State University. It's very bare bones, but it's written in a way that helps you remember key information. I found it very useful.

u/justjess1223 · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0803628285?pc_redir=1397702281&robot_redir=1

This is the only book I used. It was highly recommend by my professors and it was all we used to study for college exams too. It's great in that not only does it tell you the correct answer, it tells you why the others are wrong. I always recommend this book to the students we get. It also comes with a cd with even more questions.

u/praxeologue · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

No problem. Since that list is pretty long, I could even narrow it down a bit.

Microbiology

Transfusion Medicine

Clinical Chemistry

Histotechnology

Hematology

Urinalysis

Molecular Diagnostics

Specimen Procurement

Some of these you can even find free PDFs of online, if you're savvy.

u/izrapse · 2 pointsr/medicine

I used these two:

http://www.amazon.com/SUCCESS-Clinical-Laboratory-Science-Edition/dp/0135126487/
This one has fairly detailed outlines for each subsection with plenty of questions.

http://www.amazon.com/Medical-Laboratory-Science-Review-Robert/dp/0803628285/
This one only contains questions, but it comes with a CD that has pictures as well.

Get plenty of practice and good luck!

u/Woodymadera11 · 2 pointsr/medicine

http://www.ascp.org/Board-of-Certification/Exam-Preparation

I also used this book:http://www.amazon.com/Concise-Review-Clinical-Laboratory-Science/dp/0781782023

The best way to study for any standardized exam is to do as many practice questions as you can get your hands on. Good luck

u/shicken684 · 2 pointsr/medlabprofessionals

I did the labce adaptive learning exams. They mimicked the boc pretty well. Just don't get discouraged when you score a 40 or 50% on it. They give you really tough questions. Learn from them. For study guides I really liked the lsu book. It's usually cheaper on the school's website than Amazon.


Clinical Laboratory Science Review: A Bottom Line Approach https://www.amazon.com/dp/0967043425/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fRMWAbK16XCT1

u/MightyMidwest · 2 pointsr/pathology

Currently doing BB/TM fellowship. Hopefully your program has copies of the AABB technical manual floating around you can borrow. I wouldn't buy it now, as there will definitely be a new edition before you would be a fellow. I'm liking this book a lot:

https://www.amazon.com/Modern-Blood-Banking-Transfusion-Practices/dp/0803668880/ref=dp_ob_title_bk

It's geared toward training medical lab scientists, which is actually an appropriate level for most pathology residents. You can grasp the principles pretty easily, and understand what your techs are doing/thinking (important for a potential medical director!).

​

As for hemepath, WHO is useful for classification/report writing, whereas a textbook like Jaffe will have more background--depends what you're looking for.

u/Labbies · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals
u/convolute · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

This was what I used as well as my professor's notes! Good luck. As for anyone else taking the exam a piece of advice would be to not wait too long after graduating to take it. I had friends who were kicking themselves for waiting so long. I took it three months after I graduated which gave me time to study. I think the ASCP web site also has a list of guidelines on what to study. I will see if I can dig it up for you.

u/Shadow1ane · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

I got one of these prior to my clinicals and it is enormously helpful. Even the older techs snagged it once in awhile to double check something!

https://www.amazon.com/Heme-Notes-Pocket-Atlas-Morphology/dp/0803619022/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1526121388&sr=8-1&keywords=heme+notes

u/bookgook · 1 pointr/textbookrequest

Simple question: why can't you keep using the 4th?

Also it's nice to include the amazon link for people:

https://smile.amazon.com/x/dp/1111138362

u/Vpicone · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

I really like the Harmening book. Her heme book is great as well.

u/Lang_Zai · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals
  1. The ASCPi is such a new thing I have no idea how a lab manager would perceive it. If anything the ASCPi is used internationally as an ASCP outside of America, not the other way around. If anything the lab manager will probably ask the interviewee what the ASCPi is. There is no definitive answer on this.

    2 and 3. This is an INCREDIBLY broad question. The test is VERY difficult and inclusive of the full range of the MLS profession. The can ask you what disease state and ANA stain indicates and then which of these bacteria are urease positive the next.

    There is no ONE book that will go over everything.

    This one looks good to start off with and not that expensive.
u/Gecko99 · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

Clinical Laboratory Science Review: A Bottom Line Approach is a good review book with a lot of helpful tips on remembering difficult-to-memorize facts that you'll need to know.

u/oregon_lab_rat · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

Like most people are saying below, the labCE questions are harder, but it's nice to practice how the actual test will be (the questions get harder and harder as you go, if you are answering correctly).
Also, as hamstercar11 said below, get the review book "Clinical Laboratory Science: A bottom line approach." (https://www.amazon.com/Clinical-Laboratory-Science-Review-Approach/dp/0967043425) I literally read that book cover to cover twice and did LabCE for the 2 weeks right before my exam and it was very helpful.

u/Psychadous · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

Assuming my phone formats correctly, here's the Amazon link:

https://www.amazon.com/Quick-Review-Medical-Laboratory-Science/dp/0803629567

u/Lifebox02 · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

If you're a member of CSMLS/ASCP usually they have free general refresher courses.

Also another option is to invest in the Quick Review Cards They will cost you $60 but will cover everything you need to know in case you switch departments again.

u/pooticlesparkle · 1 pointr/medlabprofessionals

If you are talking about this book, we use ours on the bench all the time. I would say this is the one text that was worth every penny to me.

u/nathan_w · 1 pointr/medicalschool

I used Frieda Carson's Histotechnology: A Self-Instructional Text when I was studying from my Histotech exam. I did not like the book very much. You could tell that different chapters where written by different people people and that gets a little annoying. There were some text mistakes, for example my and a friend had the same edition (4th) and his said a Sudan Black should be red and mine correctly said black. This being said, the other books I looked at were worse.