CLS Curriculum

As a student in the Clinical Laboratory Sciences program will complete the training in clinical laboratory locations during the day and the didactic coursework at New York Medical College in the day and evening. After one year of coursework and clinical training has been successfully completed, you may be eligible to apply for a New York State limited permit. Upon receipt, this permit will allow employment, within New York, as a clinical laboratory scientist while preparation for the ASCP/NYS licensing exam and studies toward the Master of Science degree in Clinical Laboratory Sciences continue.

You will complete 41.5 academic credits within a single academic year (July through mid-June) as part of the Clinical Laboratory Sciences master’s program. An overall Grade Point Average (GPA) of 3.00 or better is required before a degree can be awarded. Final degree conferral is dependent on the submission of an approved Master's Literature Review or Master's Clinical Capstone Report.

The granting of the M. S. in Clinical Laboratory Sciences is not contingent upon passing an external certification or licensure exam.

It is, in practical terms, not possible to complete all degree requirements (courses, literature review or capstone report) within one calendar year. 

Required CLS Courses

Year 1 Fall Semester

Introduction to CLS (PATM 4010)

  

Credits: 2

Introduction to CLS will prepare students with the basic entry level knowledge required to participate in activities at NYMC and the clinical practicum at assigned internship location.

Clinical Chemistry (PATM 4020)

  

Credits: 2.5

The Clinical Chemistry lecture will discuss the chemistry of the major body systems and their disease states. The topics will include Acid Base balance, Renal functions, Cardiac markers, Liver function, the Endocrine system, Tumor Markers, Immunochemistry and Therapeutic/Toxic drug monitoring. Instrument methods and their limitation will also be discussed.

Clinical Hematology (PATM 4030)

  

Credits: 3

Topics covered in the Clinical Hematology Lecture will include normal and abnormal blood and fluid cell identification in different disease states, principles of hemostasis, and instrumentation methods including Flow Cytometry.

Clinical Immunology/Serology/HLA (PATM 4040)

  

Credits: 2

An intense study of clinical immunology; the student will study the immune system, its cellular reactions, and antigen-antibody reactions and the body’s immune response, with a focus on the immunologic procedures and understanding of the theory and practical considerations involved in precipitation reactions, agglutination reactions, labeled immunoassays, HLA (human leukocyte antigen) identification and molecular techniques.

Clinical Urinalysis and Body Fluids (PATM 4050)

  

Credits: 1

The Clinical Urinalysis Lecture is an intense study of kidney functions and its production of normal and abnormal urine. Urine analysis principles and the understanding of the methods of chemical and microscopic analysis, i.e., identifying elements such as cells, bacteria, crystals, casts found in various disease states will be covered.

Clinical Practicum I (PATM 7410)

  

Credits: 11

Clinical Practicum will prepare the student with the knowledge and techniques required to participate in the Clinical Laboratory Scientist Board of Certification Exam. The clinical rotation will expose the students to the practical aspects of knowledge learned in the didactic classes. In the fall, students will review the test methodologies and instrumentation. Students will receive one on one training in clinical hematology, coagulation, chemistry, immunochemistry, and urinalysis. In the spring, students will receive one on one training in clinical microbiology, virology, immunohematology, transplant immunology, molecular diagnostics, management, and phlebotomy.

Year 1 Spring Semester

CLS Management (PATM 4100)

  

Credits: 0.5

The Clinical Management Lectures will consist of a formal lecture series dealing with government regulations/standards, basic education theory and the five functions of management. The importance of quality control, quality assessment of laboratory tests and performance is reviewed. Statistical principles are presented to understand clinical analysis.

Clinical Immunohematology (PATM 4060)

  

Credits: 1.5

The Clinical Immunohematology Lecture will review the normal and abnormal pathology of blood antigens and antibodies. The significance of blood typing and identification of antibodies for safe transfusion will be reviewed. Topics covered include Lewis system, Kell, Kidd and Duffy; MNS and I , P, Lutheran, Hemolytic Disease of the Newborn and Immune Hemolytic Anemias.

Clinical Microbiology I & II (PATM 4070, 4080)

  

Credits: 4

4070

An intense study of Bacteriology; including pathogenic and opportunistic bacteria and the human disease they cause. The identification of bacteria by appearance, biochemical and immunological methodologies will be discussed.

4080

The Clinical Microbiology II Lecture is an intense study of Parasitology, Mycology and Virology; including normal and abnormal organisms and the diseases they cause in the human body. The identification of these organisms by different methodologies will be discussed.

Clinical Molecular Diagnostics (PATM 4090)

  

Credits: 1

The Clinical Molecular Diagnostics Lecture will prepare the student with the knowledge required participating in the Clinical Laboratory Scientist Board of Certification Exam. This class is an intensive study of molecular diagnostics principles. The molecular technologies and their application to infectious diseases, genetic diseases and cancer will be covered.

Clinical Practicum II (PATM 7420)

  

Credits: 11

Clinical Practicum will prepare the student with the knowledge and techniques required to participate in the Clinical Laboratory Scientist Board of Certification Exam. The clinical rotation will expose the students to the practical aspects of knowledge learned in the didactic classes. In the fall, students will review the test methodologies and instrumentation. Students will receive one on one training in clinical hematology, coagulation, chemistry, immunochemistry, and urinalysis. In the spring, students will receive one on one training in clinical microbiology, virology, immunohematology, transplant immunology, molecular diagnostics, management, and phlebotomy.

Research Design/Journal Club (PATM 4110)

  

Credits: 2

This course will have didactic instruction, student written article review, and class discussion. It is designed to introduce students to the practical tools and training in the reading, analysis, and discussion of scientific journal articles and the preparation of review articles covering a variety of topics.

Year 2 Fall / Spring

Master's Literature Review (PATM 9750)

  

Credits: 0

This course is entered on the student’s transcript when the M.S. Literature Review is approved by the faculty review committee and submitted in final form to the Graduate School. Independent study.

Master's Clinical Capstone Report (PATM 9770)

  

Credits: 0

Following completion of all coursework in the first year of study, students in the CLS M.S. program are to complete the requirement for a M.S. degree requirement through the completion of a scholarly work describing a body of original scientific study conducted by the student. The document should not only report the methods used and the data obtained in the laboratory studies, but should also place the results in the context of the existing scientific literature relevant to the topic of investigation.

Practicum

Clinical Practicum dates are subject to modification based on Clinical Laboratory internship availability. It is possible that internships continue past the end of the spring semester.

The Clinical Laboratory Sciences program is fortunate to have several outstanding clinical partners in the region providing important training opportunities throughout your Clinical Practicum assignments.

Service Work Policy

New York Medical College believes in active learning, not only training the health care professionals of tomorrow in their specialties, but also training them in the communities where they will someday practice. Considering the accelerated nature of the M.S. in Clinical Laboratory Sciences Program, requiring service work in addition to didactic lecture and full-time clinical training would be excessive. Therefore, there is no policy requiring students to complete Service Work as a contingency for the granting of the M.S. in Clinical Laboratory Sciences.

While matriculated in the Clinical Laboratory Sciences Program, the student is not and will not be considered automatically an employee of New York Medical College, its clinical affiliates, any of its subsidiaries or affiliates by virtue of Student’s participation in the clinical learning activities. Also, the students shall not be entitled to any compensation, remuneration or benefits as a result of Student’s participation in the clinical activities.

Students may arrange with a clinical affiliate to perform work with or without compensation outside of hours of academic instruction and clinical assignment.