From the Departments of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine and Paediatrics, University of Calgary/Calgary Laboratory Services, Alberta Children's Hospital, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2019 Jun;143(6):753-762. doi: 10.5858/arpa.2018-0333-HP. Epub 2019 Jan 14.
CONTEXT.—: The use of medical technologists to assist with clinical pathology workload has been common since the 1930s. In stark contrast, most aspects of anatomical pathology have traditionally been considered to be medical work that must be performed by pathologists or residents.
OBJECTIVE.—: To describe the history of the pathologists' assistant profession in North America.
DESIGN.—: Available primary and secondary historical sources were reviewed.
RESULTS.—: The concept of physician assistants, capable of performing delegated medical tasks, was created by Eugene A. Stead Jr, MD, at Duke University in 1965. When this profession began, it was quickly embraced by the American Medical Association, which took ownership related to certification and licensing of practitioners as well as external accreditation of training programs. Because of concerns about pathology manpower in the late 1960s, Thomas D. Kinney, MD, also at Duke University, developed the first training program for pathologists' assistants in 1969. Pathologists' assistants were not immediately accepted by many academic pathologists, especially related to work in the surgical pathology gross room. Organized pathology did not help the new profession develop standards, and so in 1972 pathologists' assistants created their own professional organization, the American Association of Pathologists' Assistants. Although it took several decades, the association was eventually able to forge relationships with the National Accrediting Agency for Clinical Laboratory Sciences for training program accreditation and the American Society for Clinical Pathology for board certification for practitioners. The development of the profession in Canada is also described.
CONCLUSIONS.—: The pathologists' assistant profession is now well established in North America.
自 20 世纪 30 年代以来,医学技术人员协助临床病理学工作负荷的使用已经很常见。相比之下,解剖病理学的大多数方面传统上被认为是必须由病理学家或住院医师完成的医疗工作。
描述北美的病理学家助理职业历史。
回顾了可用的主要和次要历史资料。
杜克大学的 Eugene A. Stead Jr,医学博士于 1965 年创造了能够执行委托医疗任务的医师助理这一概念。该专业成立之初,便很快被美国医学协会接受,该协会负责从业者的认证和许可以及培训计划的外部认证。由于 20 世纪 60 年代末对病理人力的担忧,同样在杜克大学的 Thomas D. Kinney,医学博士于 1969 年开发了第一个病理学家助理培训计划。病理学家助理并没有立即被许多学术病理学家所接受,尤其是在外科病理学标本室的工作方面。有组织的病理学并没有帮助新专业制定标准,因此病理学家助理于 1972 年成立了自己的专业组织,即美国病理学家助理协会。尽管这花费了几十年的时间,但该协会最终能够与国家临床实验室科学认证机构建立培训计划认证关系,并与美国临床病理学会建立从业者委员会认证关系。还描述了加拿大该职业的发展情况。
病理学家助理职业在北美已经得到很好的确立。