Webinars and Sponsored Roundtables — Register Now

Tuesday, July 21, 2026, 11:00-11:30 AM CT

Learning Objectives:
  • Explain how transparency and manufacturer partnerships improve quality, consistency, and decision-making confidence in specimen management.
  • Evaluate blood collection tubes beyond cost and commodity assumptions, incorporating clinical impact and risk into decision-making.
  • Assess the potential risk points when using a blood collection device that has not been cleared for a specific purpose.

Roundtable presenters Nick Fingland, PhD, PMP, Senior Director, R&D Operations and Science, BD, and Chris Farnsworth, PhD, D(ABCC), Section Head of Clinical Chemistry, Professor of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine.

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

Wednesday, July 29, 2026, 1:00-2:00 PM ET
Learn about digital pathology technology that is future-ready, yet practical for today’s
laboratory needs.

Webinar presenters Scott Hammond, Senior Systems Consultant, Digital Pathology Division, Wexner Medical Center, Department of Pathology, and Ursula Hofer, Imaging Technologist, Pathology Digital Imaging Lab, Wexner Medical Center, Department of Pathology, and Sandra Banky, PA(ASCP), Director of Operations, Wexner Medical Center, Department of Pathology.

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

Subspecialties

Interactive Product Guides

Newsbytes

Newsbytes

August 2022—Transfusion medicine specialists at Phoenix Children’s Hospital may be used to trending laboratory biomarkers for sickle cell disease patients in their heads, but a dashboard supporting red blood cell exchange procedures for such patients eases the burden on their cerebral cortices.

Newsbytes

July 2022—If a machine-learning algorithm is trained to help detect cancer in whole slide images at one health care location, shouldn’t the same algorithm work on digital slides from a similar patient population at another site?

Newsbytes

June 2022—Laboratories seeking a means to query their repository of archival anatomic pathology reports would do well to follow the advice of former tennis star Arthur Ashe: “Start where you are, use what you have, do what you can.”

Newsbytes

May 2022—If the pandemic proved nothing else, it proved that necessity is the mother of invention. And invention was top of mind when two like-minded employees from different institutions tackled education and training in blood banking and transfusion medicine during the past two years.

Newsbytes

April 2022—Michelle Stoffel, MD, PhD, supports the use of Excel spreadsheets in some areas of laboratory medicine, but not necessarily as a laboratory workflow tool. It’s a realization she came to when, as a clinical informatics fellow at the University of Washington School of Medicine, she led the charge to revamp the workflow for the immunology laboratory’s Merkel cell antibody panel.

Newsbytes

March 2022—Medical professionals and, more importantly, patients at Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center are benefitting from a synoptic reporting system that allows the pathology lab to assess the quality of all bone marrow specimens that it receives.

Newsbytes

February 2022—Ask TRUU-Lab founder Ila Singh, MD, PhD, what’s in a name and she will provide an answer that differs greatly from that of Shakespeare’s Juliet Capulet. According to Dr. Singh, the answer can be too much information, not enough information, or ambiguous terminology—when referring to lab test names, that is.

Newsbytes

One pathologist’s foray into 3D printing
January 2022—The use of three-dimensional printing in the pathology lab may still be in its infancy, but pathologist Danielle Lameirinhas Vieira Maracaja, MD, and her anesthesiologist husband have been affirming its value to pathologists, and the medical community in general, for years. Dr. Danielle Maracaja, a pathologist at Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, Winston-Salem, NC, and assistant professor of pathology at Wake Forest School of Medicine, has been working alongside her husband, Luiz Maracaja, MD, associate professor of anesthesiology at the same hospital and medical school, in designing and producing medical tools using 3D-printing technology for more than five years. They took on one of their largest projects in early 2020, when Dr. Danielle Maracaja was a pathology fellow at Yale University School of Medicine and COVID-19 cases were spiking.

Newsbytes

December 2021—Like death and taxes, cyberattacks targeting health care organizations are a certainty, but taking proactive breach mitigation measures and developing a thorough response plan can lessen, or even prevent, a devastating blow.

Newsbytes

November 2021—The following is an edited excerpt of the article “Attention-based deep multiple instance learning,” written by Jonathan Glaser, a recent graduate of the computer science and biotechnology master of science degree programs at New York University Tandon School of Engineering, in Brooklyn. The excerpt delves into how aspects of artificial intelligence can transform health care, and pathology in particular. To read the full article, go to https://tinyurl.com/AI-based-learning.