The courses listed below are offered by the hospital schools of Medical
Technology and are not a part of Washburn University's curriculum. The
variation in credit hours is due to unique differences between hospital
programs.
Clinical Microbiology (6-8)
The theory and laboratory study of pathogenic bacteria, viruses, richettsiae,
fungi and parasites. Includes morphology, physiology, taxonomy, and
medical significance.
Clinical Chemistry (6-8)
Theory and laboratory study of analytical biochemistry, incorporating
both routine and special chemical procedures.
Clinical Hematology (4-6)
Study of blood cell derivation, maturation and function, principles
of hemostasis and blood coagulation. Methodology used in routine and
special hematology studies.
Clinical Immunology (2-6)
Includes immunohematology, the study of fundamentals of antigenantibody
reactions, blood groups and types, crossmatches, blood components and
the laboratory methods used in immunohematology studies; and serology,
the theory of immunologic responses and procedures used in determination
of serological studies.
Topics in Medical Technology
(2-4) Includes basic principles and practices of the medical laboratory,
techniques and special projects.