PCOM Georgia to offer new master's degree; Moultrian leads program

Nov. 11—SUWANEE, Ga. — A new master's degree program based at PCOM Georgia has begun accepting students.

The Master of Science in Medical Laboratory Science is designed for students who aspire to work as medical technologists, and for those who are working in the field and want to add to their credentials, according to a press release from the medical school in Suwanee, Ga.. Students with full-time jobs may earn the degree while still working. The program, which has two tracks, will begin in the fall of 2022.

Medical laboratory scientists perform a range of diagnostic tests — reporting results to the healthcare providers who order them. Their role on the healthcare team is essential, as the tests they perform aid in the majority of diagnoses and help in treatment decisions about many conditions and diseases.

The master's degree coursework covers five major disciplines including clinical hematology and coagulation, clinical chemistry, immunohematology (the study of RBC antigens and antibodies associated with blood transfusions), medical microbiology, and urinalysis and body fluids.

Pre-Professional Track

The two-year, hybrid, pre-professional program is designed for students who have a Bachelor of Science degree in biology or chemistry with appropriate prerequisite courses, PCOM Georgia said. As part of the program, students complete monthly campus-based labs on weekends and participate in five clinical rotations. Upon completion of the coursework, students are eligible to take the American Society for Clinical Pathology certification exam.

Post-Professional Track

The three semester, online post-professional program is for students who hold a Bachelor of Science degree in medical or clinical laboratory science and are certified as medical technologists or medical laboratory scientists. If necessary, the program can be taken over the course of two years. Clinical internships are not required.

According to Karen Giddens, MLS, program director, medical laboratory scientists, unlike phlebotomists who collect samples, also perform analysis on the samples they gather.

"COVID-19 has put our profession in the spotlight due to the vast amount of testing and development required over the past two years," Giddens said. She noted that the profession has experienced a shortage in the workforce.

Giddens, who resides in Moultrie, Georgia, holds a master's degree in education technology with a concentration and graduate certification in online education from Boise State University, Boise, Idaho. In addition, she earned a Bachelor of Science in biology and medical technology from Auburn University, Montgomery, Alabama. She also attended the University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, where she earned graduate credit in forensic science, along with a graduate certificate in forensic serology and DNA.

Giddens has worked in numerous positions in the field, some of which include serving as the laboratory director of the Southern Interventional Pain Center, a large, three-clinic operation with centers in Georgia and Florida. In addition, she has worked as an adjunct professor at North Florida Community College, Madison, Florida; as a medical technologist at Colquitt Regional Medical Center, Moultrie, Georgia; as a medical laboratory science program director and assistant professor at Thomas University, Thomasville, Georgia; and as a division chair of math and science at Thomas University.