English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

i graduated in 2004 was ashamed of my results and shied away from sciences, go involved in retail banking and moved up fast. i want to return to heamatology. i am aware of "training programs", which are likley to be the route. i dont know where to go for a more detailed route. . i would truly appreciate your support

2006-10-09 13:47:59 · 5 answers · asked by joi 1 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

thank you for your responses so far, i appologise for my spelling, it has been a major struggle particularly as i was recently diagnosed dyslexic, i now know its an area i ought to focus on correcting.

2006-10-10 00:06:57 · update #1

5 answers

A true Hematologist is a physician. So you could try to get in med school first, then you can try to get in hematology/oncology residency to see and treat patients. Or after med school, you can try Pathology Residency. You can even then subspecialize in Hematopathology. You then can either do research or work/run in a lab looking at blood and bone marrow as well as lab tests in Hematology.
Best of luck.

2006-10-12 03:11:29 · answer #1 · answered by Totsakan 6 · 0 0

I was a biomedical scientist in clinical biochemistry with the NHS for 3 years and considered becomming a clinical scientist myself. Generally they require at least a masters degree (or equivalent) in the subject you wish to be a clinical scientist in, though many are favouring PhDs now. The best bet is to find a hosp advertising the job in for example the new scientist or nature jobs (both online) and read the requirements, if you're still not sure give them a ring... oh a learning the spell the job title would really help.

2006-10-09 22:32:49 · answer #2 · answered by blue_cabbage 2 · 1 0

presumably your spelling indicates you are from the states (america) but in England they have something called Open University which maybe they might do OutPatients courses for the people like you..i have just finished a degree in Pschopathetic Analysis but only makes me unhappy..I would rather have rather been a beach bum in Australia...

2006-10-09 16:47:23 · answer #3 · answered by mark b 2 · 0 0

Start in an outpatient lab doing phlebotomy or better yet try contacting a dialysis center or mobile blood unit, you can always move up from there.

2006-10-09 13:53:09 · answer #4 · answered by infernal_seamonkey 4 · 0 0

You could always try learning to spell haematology. I bet your applications are all going to the wrong department. lol.

2006-10-09 13:59:11 · answer #5 · answered by micksmixxx 7 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers