Hippocrates | Father of medicine |
Marcelo Malphigi | Father of Modern Anatomic Pathology |
Jean Baptiste van Helmont | Gravimetric testing of urine specimen |
Hans and Zacharias Janssen | 1st compound microscope |
Anton van Leeuwenhoeke | Father of Microscopy |
Robert Hooke | Discovery of cells from cork |
Hermann Von Fehling | First quantitative test for sugar in urine |
Rudolf Virchow | Cell theory and Father of Modern Pathology |
Louis Pasteur | Father of Modern Bacteriology |
Robert Koch | Koch’s Postulate: Proved that microorganisms transmit disease |
Edward Jenner | Father of Immunology |
Alexander Flemming | Invented penicillin from Penicillum notatum |
Paul Ehrlich | Discovered Salvarsan “magic bullet” as a cure for Syphilis |
M. Ruth Williams | Historian who noted that medical technology began during the medieval period |
Vivian Herrick | Historian who discovered ancient writing about intestinal parasites such as Teania and Ascaris |
Dr. William Burdou Sunderson | Initiated the use of laboratory animals for experimentation |
Dr. William H. Welsh | Father of American Pathology |
George Papaniculao | Described the Pap’s staining technique |
Republic Act 5527 | Philippine Medical Technology Act of 1969 |
AABB | American Association of Blood Banks |
CDC | Center for Disease Control and Prevention |
ISO | International Organization for Standardization |
CLSI | Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute |
OSHA | Occupational Safety and Health Administration |
source of danger | Hazard |
exposure to the danger | Risk |
biological substance that poses a threat to the health of living organisms | BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS |
LAI | Laboratory-Acquired Infections |
Ingestion | consumption of a substance by an organism |
Inoculation | act or an instance of introduction of a substance into the body |
Contamination | presence of a minor and unwanted substance or impurity in the skin or mucous membrane |
Inhalation | act of drawing air or other substances into the lungs |
Universal Precautions | approach to infection control to treat all human blood and body fluids as if they were known to be infectious |
alternative to Universal Precautions | Standard Precautions |
recommended to provide additional precautions beyond Standard Precautions to interrupt transmission of pathogens in hospitals | Transmission-Based Precautions |
Measures employed when handling biohazardous materials to avoid infecting oneself, others or the environment | Biosafety |
Measures employed to protect biohazardous materials, with critical relevant information, against the theft or diversion of those who intend to pursue intentional misuse. | Biosecurity |
The principle of holding or be capable of holding or including within a fixed limit or area | Biocontainment |