[Histonet] Tracking of blocks onto processors

Willis, Donna G Donna.Willis at BSWHealth.org
Wed Mar 22 07:29:06 CDT 2023


Chris,
We have been tracking blocks since we went live with Vantage over 10 years ago.  Roche (Ventana then) built a custom program for us to use at that time because they had not yet implemented it into Vantage.  In the past 2 years Roche has updated their software to allow documenting this information.  There are several options of how the scanning is performed.  For our lab we scan before we place the block into the formalin holding tanks, right after the PA/Resident/Grossing Tech have placed the tissue into the block.  I prefer it done there because I do not want my technicians exposed an extra time to formalin if the scanning is done right before the baskets are placed on the processors.  We have a manual log that is used to document the time the cassette are placed in and taken out of the processors.  We also track our blocks and slides into storage.  I hope this helps.  

Donna Willis
Anatomic Pathology Manager
Baylor Scott&White Health
Baylor University Medical Center
3500 Gaston Ave|Dallas, Texas 75246
214-820-2465 office|214-725-6184 mobile



-----Original Message-----
From: Hagon, Christopher (Health) via Histonet <histonet at lists.utsouthwestern.edu> 
Sent: Tuesday, March 21, 2023 5:17 PM
To: histonet at lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: {EXTERNAL} [Histonet] Tracking of blocks onto processors


CAUTION:  This email originated outside of BSWH. The actual sender is  (histonet-bounces at lists.utsouthwestern.edu) which may be different from the display address in the From: field. Avoid action unless you know the content is safe. Report suspicious emails using the PhishAlarm button located in your Outlook ribbon.

UNOFFICIAL

Hi Histonetters,

Just wondering if or how others are tracking/scanning racks of blocks onto processors. In this day and age of traceability with barcodes, we scan each block in each rack before loading onto a processor and recording which processor that rack went on to. Has anyone got a more efficient way of doing this? Assigning at grossing/cut-up is an option, but is an extra step for the PA/registrar and relies on knowing which processor is in use that day.

Looking in the crystal ball, will next gen processors automatically scan blocks as the first step? Load blocks, start the run and it produces a report of the blocks on that run? Interested to hear peoples thoughts.

Cheers,

Chris Hagon - Pathology
Digital Solutions Division, ACT Health Directorate


-----------------------------------------------------------------------
This email, and any attachments, may be confidential and also privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender and delete all copies of this transmission along with any attachments immediately. You should not copy or use it for any purpose, nor disclose its contents to any other person.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
Histonet at lists.utsouthwestern.edu
https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet__;!!JA_k2roV-A!D9KQ_WYXlaKyGu0_GWULeJZiOiQNKYW9LvDtdi3_5IZkKU3jPn3dc11ipwa621HHvBQFcIpyS0RPtErYJaRQNf_GiX-6SwOw$ 

**********************************************************************
The information contained in this e-mail may be privileged, confidential, and/or protected from disclosure. If you are the intended recipient, further disclosures are prohibited without proper authorization. If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this e-mail in error) please notify the sender immediately and destroy this e-mail. Any unauthorized copying, disclosure or distribution of the material in this e-mail is strictly prohibited and no waiver of any attorney-client, work product, or other privilege is intended. No binding agreement on behalf of Baylor Scott & White Health, or any affiliated entity, is permitted by e-mail without express written confirmation by a duly authorized representative of Baylor Scott & White Health.


More information about the Histonet mailing list