The Department of Laboratories, referred to by most doctors
simply as the “Central Laboratory,” is an ancillary department
of the PGH located on the second floor of the Left Central Block (LCB)
Building. From its humble beginnings in 1913 as a unit of the Department
of Pathology and Bacteriology tasked to perform the simplest of laboratory
tests – blood counts, stool and urine analyses – in a small
room in Ward 15, the laboratory became independent in 1926 and through
the years gradually evolved to become one of the largest and most sophisticated
diagnostic centers in the country, housing a variety of state-of-the-art
machines which perform more than 2 million laboratory exams a year.
The laboratory is composed of 7 sections, namely the
Blood Bank, Hematology,
Clinical Microscopy,
Clinical Chemistry,
Surgical Pathology,
Microbiology, and Immunopathology
sections. Each section is headed by a consultant pathologist or specialist
assisted by a Med Tech supervisor. There is also a Receiving and Information
Section where specimens like blood, urine, feces, sputum, and tissues
are received and where laboratory results are released to the different
hospital units. The laboratory caters to PGH patients in the Emergency
Room Complex, Charity and Pay wards, Outpatients, Outpay referrals, and
UP Health Service referrals.
Aside from the Chairman’s complex where the consultant
staff and department of secretaries hold office, the department has a
conference and a microscope room, a cutting room for surgical pathology
specimens, a residents’ lounge, and a stockroom for reagents, chemicals,
and supplies. The department also maintains a laboratory for outpatient
on the second floor of the OPD building. In conjunction with the Department
of Pathology of the UP College of Medicine, autopsies on PGH patients
are performed in the college morgue while fine needle aspiration biopsies
(FNAB’s) are channeled to its Section of Fine Needle Aspiration
Cytology.
Cognizant of the fact that the laboratory plays a pivotal
role in the diagnosis and therapeutic regimen of clinicians, the department
maintains the highest level of accuracy and precision of its examination
results by regularly implementing appropriate quality assurance programs
to ensure the generation of quality lab values. In the Section of Clinical
Chemistry, for instance, several internal and external quality control
programs are in place through the use of controls, standards, blanks,
blind samples, and performance of duplicate determinations.
The department is presently chaired by Dr. Ariel M. Vergel
de Dios and is staffed by a roster of 23 medical specialists, 16 resident
physicians, 107 medical technologists, 11 medical technology externs,
15 clerks, and 12 institutional workers. Its residency training program,
a four-year combined course in anatomic and clinical pathology, is the
biggest in the Philippines and currently has 16 resident physicians in
its roll. There is also a Medical Technology Postgraduate Externship Program,
offered twice a year, where 11 medtech externs are presently undergoing
a six-month training course in all sections of the laboratory.
Aware of the dynamic nature of laboratory medicine and
exploiting its advantage of catering to a large patient population, the
department strongly encourages the conduct of researches, especially case
reports and case series in a variety of topics. A Residents’ Research
Forum is organized yearly to showcase and give recognition to the outstanding
Future Directions
With the rapid evolution of laboratory medicine and emergence
of newer and superior technology, the department realizes the need to
constantly upgrade its service capability. The Section of Hematology plans
to acquire a Flow Cytometry machine as well as to expand its coagulation
studies to include D-dimer, fibin degradation products (FDP), and fibrinogen
assays. The Section of Immunopathology will soon offer immunoflourescence
examinations. The Section of Clinical Chemistry will initiate therapeutic
drug monitoring while the Section of Surgical Pathology will perform immunohistochemical
staining procedures. The Section of Microbiology plans to conduct testing
on multiple drug-resistant organisms.
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