Healthcare Setting & the Lab team
Professionalism & Quality
Legal Foundations
HIPAA & Confidentiality
Consent & Patient Rights
100

What is the basic function of a clinical laboratory in a healthcare facility?

It analyzes specimens to help diagnose, treat and monitor patient conditions

100

Give one example of professional behavior expected of a phlebotomy technican

Any one:  punctuality, appropriate dress/grooming, respectful communication, relatiabilty

100

Define negligence in a healthcare context

Failure to act with the level of care a reasonable person would use in the same situation, resulting in harm

100

What does HIPAA stand for?

Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act

100

What is informed consent?

A patient agreement to a procedure after being given enough information to understand its purpose, risks, and benefits.

200

Name two common healthcare settings where a phlebotomy technician might work

Any two: hospitals, physician offices/clinics, reference labs, long-term care facilities

200

What does QA/QI stand for in a clinical laboratory

Quality Assurance/Quality Improvement

200

What does CLIA regulate?

The Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments regulate lab testing standards and certification to ensure accurate, reliable results.

200

Name one way a phlebotomy technician protects patient privacy during a normal shift

Not discussing patient information in public areas, securing paperwork, logging off shared computers

200

Name one patient right described in the American Hospital Association's Patient Care Partnership

right to respectful care, right to information, right to participate in decisions about their care.

300

Scenario: A patient arrives for routine lab work at a free-standing draw site instead of a hospital.  What type of setting is this?

An outpatient/ambulatory draw station 

300

Scenarion:  A technician feels overwhelmed  by high patient volume and starts to feel anxious mid-shift.  What is one healthy stress-management strategy they could use right then?

Any one:  brief deep breathing, prioritizing the task list, asking a coworker/supervisor for help

300

Scenario:  A technician draws blood without confirming the patient's identity per policy, and the wrong test is collected.  What legal concept does this best illustrate?

Negligence - failure to follow the required standard of care.

300

A technician's friend asks about a mutual acquaintance's lab results.  What should the technician do?

Decline to share

300

A patient refuses a blood draw after the tourniquet has already been applied.  What should the technician do?

Stop immediately and respect the refusal

400

Name two lab departments that commonly process blood specimens, and briefly describe how their roles differ.

Example:  Hematology analyzes blood cells/clotting; Chemistry analyzes chemical and metabolic components.

400

Why is continuing education required for a phlebotomy technician's certification?

To maintain certification/recertification and stay current with evolving practice standards and safety guidelines.

400

What is the key difference between "law" and "ethics"?

Law refers to enforceable rules set by government with legal consequences; ethics are moral principles guiding  behavior that aren't always legally enforced

400

What does PHI stand for, and what does it include?

Protected Health Information - any individually identifiable health information

400

Why must a technician document a patient's refusal of a procedure?

For Legal Protection, accurate medical recordkeeping, and to satisfy facility policy

500

Scenario:  A new phlebotomy technician notices a specimen labeling error after the fact and isn't sure who to tell.  Using the chain-of-command concept, who should be notified first?

Their immediate supervisor/lab manager - follow the facility's chain of command rather than skipping it.

500

Scenario:  A coworker frequently arrives late and dresses unprofessionally, and a patient comments on it.  Why do grooming, punctuality, and professionalism matter for patient care--beyond just following the rules?

They directly affect patient trust and confidence in the care team and reflect on the facility's reputation and quality of care.

500

All healthcare workers are

Mandated reporters

500

A technician accidentally leaves a requisition with a patient's full identifying information on a public counter.  What principle was violated, and what should happen?

A violation of PHI safeguarding under HIPAA; the technician should report it immediately per the facility's privacy/breach protocol

500

"DOUBLE POINTS"

Question asked by another student