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Specimen Handling, Transportation, and Processing for the Phlebotomist
Credentials in Phlebotomy demonstrate the development of skills for healthcare professionals who collect blood, urine, fecal specimens, seminal fluid, sputum, and other body specimens. They collect, label, package, transport, use lab equipment to test, enter data into computers, report on, and store body fluid specimen. Phlebotomists are employed in general medical and surgical hospitals, specialty hospitals, medical and diagnostic laboratories, ambulatory health care services, physicians offices, insurance carriers, state government offices, home health care services, blood donation facilities, and other facilities. Specifically, this badge demonstrates the earner's ability to explain proper procedures for handling, transporting, and processing blood specimens.
Arterial, Intravenous, and Special Collection Procedures for the Phlebotomist
Credentials in Phlebotomy demonstrate the development of skills for healthcare professionals who collect blood, urine, fecal specimens, seminal fluid, sputum, and other body specimens. They collect, label, package, transport, use lab equipment to test, enter data into computers, report on, and store body fluid specimen. Phlebotomists are employed in general medical and surgical hospitals, specialty hospitals, medical and diagnostic laboratories, ambulatory health care services, physicians offices, insurance carriers, state government offices, home health care services, blood donation facilities, and other facilities. Specifically, this badge demonstrates the earner's ability to describe the procedures and precautions for special blood collection purposes (blood culture, glucose tolerance testing, lactose tolerance testing, arterial blood gases, therapeutic drug monitoring, IV line collections, etc.).
Mass Spectrometry, Infrared Spectroscopy, and Ultraviolet/ Visible Spectroscopy
Many different professionals who work in science, education, and health industries require a foundational knowledge of organic chemistry concepts to understand and perform tasks in their daily responsibilities.. Specifically, this badge demonstrates the earner's ability to explain how the structures of organic compounds are determined using mass spectrometry, infrared spectroscopy, and ultraviolet/visible spectroscopy.
CPT Coding: Urinary and Male Reproductive System, Female Reproductive System, Materinity Care, and Delivery Procedures (50,000 Series)
This credential documents competencies including reading medical charts, coding diagnoses using ICD-10-CM, coding medical procedures using CPT, and having familiarity with HCPCS Level II and ICD-10-PCS coding requirements. A general understanding of medical insurance and the medical billing process is also required. Basic knowledge of anatomy and physiology and medical terminology are important to this field. This credential documents the essential skills for a medical coder working in various health settings. The successful medical coder will demonstrate proficiency with coding manuals and have the ability to extract coding information from medical documentation. The medical coder also needs thorough knowledge of anatomy and physiology and medical terminology.
Actions Based On Reasonable Suspicion, Administrative Justification, and Consent

The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from unreasonable search and seizure, and courts have ruled extensively on what constitutes a reasonable search using the probable cause standard. The appellate courts have also determined that search and seizure may be conducted under lesser standards in certain circumstances, such as to protect officer safety or to ensure compliance with administrative regulations. Actions conducted under reasonable suspicion, administrative justification, and consent include investigative detention, checkpoints, and inspections.

This resource provides instruction for users to:

  • Explain stops and frisks, including the requirements for a valid stop and a valid frisk, the Supreme Court's view on the proper duration of stops, and the scope of a proper frisk
  • Discuss how the Terry v. Ohio decision has led to an expansion of the stop-and-frisk exception to the Fourth Amendment's probable cause requirement
  • Identify characteristics exhibited by drug couriers and discuss important Supreme Court decisions concerning drug courier profiling
  • Distinguish between an investigative detention and a stop and describe the requirements for a valid investigative detention
  • Describe two types of inventory searches and several types of inspection
  • Offer several examples of checkpoints and explain when checkpoints become unconstitutional
  • Summarize the Supreme Court's view concerning school disciplinary searches and searches of government employee offices
  • Summarize the Supreme Court's view on drug and alcohol testing
  • Explain the Supreme Court's view on searches of probationers and explain how California's courts have decided differently than the Supreme Court with respect to searches of probationers
  • Summarize the requirements for a valid consent search and the rules for obtaining third-party consent
  • Explain "knock and talk"