[Histonet] Using randomly generated anonymizing numbers for internal tracting of specimens

Rene J Buesa rjbuesa at yahoo.com
Tue Aug 25 09:48:29 CDT 2015


As I see it, the only way this system may work is if you have a "code" to determine what those random numbers mean and which samples they belong to which, in itself, will "defeat" the randomization objective.Otherwise this will be "chaos" in any lab, and the bigger the greater the chaos.To me it is the most stupid, although "anonymously correct" proposition that I am sure was designed by a "number pusher" seated in his/her desk and with little to do at the moment and with no actual idea of how a pathology lab works and what would imply mixing up specimens or being unable to be SURE which sample belongs to whom.I would strongly oppose it!René  


     On Tuesday, August 25, 2015 10:18 AM, "Wheelock, Timothy R. via Histonet" <histonet at lists.utsouthwestern.edu> wrote:
   

 Hi Everyone:

It appears that for security and privacy reasons, the NIH wants us to change from an internal specimen tracking system that employees sequential numbers(8634, 8635, 8636 etc.) to a system that uses randomly generated anonymizing number (20487, 71936, 88011 etc.) It seems to me that this invites mistakes and mixing up of cases. (Humans seem to deal better with sequential numbers). This would include everything, from the buckets with formaldehyde in which half brains are fixed, to wax blocks, to slides, to block and slide files, to the images that I take on each case.
                Does anyone have experience using  computer generated random anonymizing tracking numbers in their pathology or tissue banking departments? What system of checks do you employee to  avoid mistakes and make the work go smoothly? Perhaps this system will work fine, once we are used to it.

                Thank you very much for any feedback.

Tim Wheelock
Harvard Brain Bank
McLean Hospital
Belmont, MA


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