Lab Technologist Blueprint PDF
Lab Technologist Blueprint PDF
Saudi Laboratory
Saudi LaboratorySpecialist Licensure
Licensure Examination
Examination (SLLE)
EXAMINATION CONTENT GUIDELINE
CONTENT GUIDELINE - DRAFT
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May
Jan2018
2020
EXAMINATION MODEL
General Rules
The examination shall contain recall questions that test knowledge and questions with
scenarios that test other skills (interpretation, analysis, decision making, reasoning and
problem solving). Examination questions are related to the subtest areas (outlined in Appendix
A), may be both theoretical and procedural. Theoretical questions measure skills necessary to
apply knowledge, calculate results, and correlate patient results to disease states. Procedural
questions measure skills necessary to perform laboratory techniques, evaluate laboratory
data, and follow quality assurance protocol.
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A test blueprint is a document that reflects the content of your specialty licensure
examination. The blueprint is the plan used for “building” the exam. The purpose of the
blueprint is to ensure including questions related to what you are expected to know.
Examination Sections:
The SLLE questions encompass different sections within the area of Medical/Clinical
Laboratory Science: Blood Banking, Urinalysis and Other Body Fluids, Clinical Chemistry,
Hematology, Immunology, Microbiology, and Laboratory Operations. Each of these sections
comprises a specific percentage of the overall 200 questions licensure examination. The SLLE
sections are described in the following table:
Exam
Subjects Description
Percentages
Blood Group Systems and HLA system, Antibody Screen & Identification,
Antibody Titration, Pre-Warm Technique Crossmatch.DAT,
BLOOD BANK Elution/Adsorption, Blood Donation(Whole blood and Apheresis), Blood 15-20%
Component, Transfusion Therapy, Autoimmune hemolytic Anemias,
Transfusion Reactions, HDFN, Phenotyping/Genotyping (molecular testing)
URINALYSIS AND Physical, Chemical & Microscopic Urinalysis and Body Fluid Analysis (CSF,
5-10%
OTHER BODY FLUIDS Amniotic, Synovial, Serous, Semen & Feces)
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1. For a more specific overview of the areas on the SLLE, please refer to the CONTENT OUTLINE See Appendix
A & B .
2. Examination outlines adapted from:
‐ SCFHS Laboratory Specialist Licensure Examination
‐ ASCP Board of Certification
‐ American Medical Technologist Certification
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4. Blood Donation, Transfusion Therapy, Transfusion Reactions and Hemolytic Disease of the Fetus
and Newborn (HDFN)
A. Blood Donation and Components Preparation
1)Types of Donations (Whole blood and Apheresis donation)
2) Special Donor Categories (Autologous and Directed blood donation)
3) Donor selection and Qualification
4) Donor testing, Transfusion Transmitted diseases and Re-entry
5) Components Preparation and storage
B. Transfusion Therapy
1) RBC
2) PLT
3) FFP
4) Cryoprecipitated AHF
5) Granulocyte
C. Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemias
D. Blood bank role in Stem Cell and Solid Organ Transplant
E. Transfusion Reactions
F. Hemolytic Disease of the Fetus and the Newborn (HDFN)
1) Types (ABO and Non-ABO HDFN)
2) Antenatal and Postnatal Testing
3) Intrauterine transfusion (IUT)
4) Neonatal Exchange Transfusion
5) Cord blood testing and Rh Immunoglobulin (RhIG) eligibility
6) Rosette and Kleihauer-Betke Test
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IV. HEMATOLOGY (15 – 20% of total exam)
1. Sampling and acceptance criteria
A. Types of tubes used
B. Adequacy (EDITA-Sodium citrate)
C. Integrity of samples (clotted-hemolytic-lipemic)
2. Erythrocytes, Leukocytes & PLT
A. Red Blood Cells and Indices
1) RBC count
2) Hemoglobin, hematocrit and indices
3) Histograms interpretation on instrument (Normo-Macro-Micro)
B. White Blood Cells
1) WBC count
2) Differential (Neut, Mono, Lymph, Eos & Baso)
3) Histograms interpretation on instrument (Lobularity Vs Mononucleated cells distributions)
C. Platelet count
1) PLT count
2) Histograms interpretation on instrument (PLT clump)
3. Other Tests
A. Reticulocyte Count
B. ESR
C. Tests for Hemoglobin Defects
1) Sickle cell tests
2) Hemoglobin electrophoresis
D. RBC enzymes (e.g. G-6PD)
4. Morphology and Differentials
A. Red Blood Cell Morphology
1) RBC shape, size & color (normal Vs abnormal)
2) RBC inclusions
3) RBC parasite (Plasmodium sp. Babesia, Microfilaria & Trypanosomes)
B. White Blood Cell Morphology
1) WBC differential linage (Mature Vs Immature)
2) WBC inclusions
C. Platelet Morphology
1) Manual estimation (Adequate Vs Thrombocytopenia)
2) recognize PLT clumping (pseudothrombocytopenia)
5. Flow cytometry & Cytogenetics & Molecular Biology
A. Flow Cytometry
1) Basic knowledge of principle
2) Main CD markers (Blast, Myeloid & Lymphoid)
B. Cytogenetics & Molecular Biology (JAK2 - Philadelphia chromosome – BCR-ABL)
6. Coagulation & Hemostasis
1) PT, INR & ISI(calculated using establish normal population with each new lot#), aPTT, TT
2) Fibrinogen, D-dimer (calibration with new lot#)
3) Factor assays (intrinsic-extrinsic pathways)
4) Inhibitors anticoagulants (lupus)
5) Mixing studies
6) Anticoagulant therapy Vs prophylaxis and their effect on the patient result (warfarin & HMWH
Vs aspirin, LMWH, apixaban & enoxaparin)
7) Hypercoagulability tests (protein C & S)
8) Disease correlation (most common, DIC, Sepsis, Liver disease, Hemophilia, Christmas
disease, ext)
Note: General understanding of normal reference range, critical values & correlation of patient`s previous
result
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3. Mycology:
A. Yeast (e.g., Candida, Cryptococcus, Geotrichum, Malassezia)
B. Dimorphic fungi (e.g., Blastomyces, Coccidioides, Histoplasma, Sporothrix)
C. Dermatophytes (e.g., Epidermophyton, Microsporum, Trichophyton)
D. Zygomycetes (e.g., Absidia, Mucor, Rhizopus)
E. Opportunistic molds/septate hyaline molds (e.g., Aspergillus, Penicillium)
F. Dematiaceous molds
G. Pneumocystis
4. Virology:
A. Viruses in human disease (e.g., B19 Virus, Papillomavirus, Adenovirus, Heptitis A - E viruses,
Herpesvirus, Poxvirus, Poliovirus, Rotavirus, Norovirus, Dengue Virus, Rubella virus, HIV, HTLV,
Influenza virus, Measles virus, mumps virus, RSV, Rabies virus, Ebola virus and Coronavirus
and similar related viruses)
5. Parasitology:
A. Blood and tissue protozoa (e.g., Plasmodium, Trypanosoma, and similar parasites)
B. Intestinal and urogenital protozoa (e.g., Cryptosporidium, Entamoeba, Giardia, Trichomonas
and similar parasites)
C. Intestinal and tissue helminths (e.g., Ascaris, Enterobius, hookworm, Schistosoma,
Strongyloides, Taenia, Trichinella, Trichuris, filarial worms and similar helminths)
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1. See the SCFHS website for the most up‐to‐date information.
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For the laboratory areas of Body Fluids, Blood Bank, Clinical Chemistry, Hematology, Immunology and
Microbiology, the following competencies are tested:
APPLIES KNOWLEDGE OF
• theory and principles related to:
– anatomy (Body Fluids) – biochemistry (Chemistry and Hematology)
– education – genetics (Blood Bank)
– growth characteristics/diagnostic and infective forms (Microbiology)
– immunology (Blood Bank and Immunology)
– laboratory information systems
– physiology (Body Fluids, Chemistry, Hematology, Immunology)
• data security/patient confidentiality
• fundamental biological characteristics related to laboratory testing
• medical terminology • principles of performing basic/special laboratory procedures
• sources of error in laboratory testing • standard operating procedures
• theory and practice related to laboratory operations(management/safety/education/R&D)
SELECTS APPROPRIATE
• controls for test performed
• course of action
• instruments for new laboratory procedures
• instruments to perform requested test
• quality control procedures
• reagents/media/blood products
• routine/special procedures to verify test results
• type of sample and method for test requested
PREPARES / PROCESSES
• controls
• equipment and instruments
CALCULATES RESULTS
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EVALUATES
• appropriate actions and methods
• corrective actions • patient-related requirements
• possible sources of error or inconsistencies
• quality control procedures
• specimen-related requirements
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Appendix C: References
Subjects Reference
Harmening D.M.(2012). Modern Blood Banking & Transfusion Practices.6th
Ed.Philadelphia, PA: F.A.Davis Company
BLOOD BANK
Fung M.K., Eder A.F., Spitalnik S. L., Westhoff C. M.(2017). Technical Manual. 19th Ed.
Bethesda, MD: AABB Press
Ging, P. M., & R. O. (2009). The biochemistry of body fluids. (4th ed.). ACBI Scientific
URINALYSIS AND OTHER
Committee Guidelines.
BODY FLUIDS
Brunzel, N. A. (2013). Fundamentals of urine and body fluid analysis (4th ed.). Elsevier.
Marshall, W. J., Lapsley, M., & Day, A. (2016). Clinical Chemistry (8th ed.).
Bishop, M. L., Fody, E. P., & Schoeff, L. E. (2010). Clinical Chemistry: Techniques,
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
principles, correlation (6th ed.). Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Clinical Biochemistry (1st ed.). (2016). Charles University.
Keohane, E., Smith, L., & Walenga, J. (n.d.). Rodak's Hematology (5th ed.). Elsevier.
HEMATOLOGY
Rodak, B. F., & Carr, J. H. (n.d.). Clinical Hematology Atlas (5th ed.). Elsevier.
Tille, P. (2013). Bailey & Scott's Diagnostic Microbiology (13th ed.). Mosby.
MICROBIOLOGY (MICR) Procop, G. W., & Koneman, E. W. (2016). Koneman's Color Atlas and Textbook of
Diagnostic Microbiology (7th or latest ed.). LWW.
Landsverk, M. L., & Wong, L. C. (n.d.). Clinical Molecular Diagnostic Techniques: A Brief
LABORATORY
Review.
OPERATIONS (LO)
Laboratory Quality Management System Handbook WHO
(Link) وثيقة حقوق ومسؤوليات المرضى
PATIENT SAFETY AND
(Link) الالئحة التنفيذية لنظام مزاولة المھن الصحية
PROFESSIONALISM
(Link) المعايير الوطنية للمختبرات وبنوك الدم
Note: This list is intended for use as a study aid only. SCFHS does not intend the list to imply
endorsement of these specific references, nor are the exam questions necessarily taken from
these sources.
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