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Pathologist

A pathologist is a physician who specializes in pathology, the branch of medicine that studies disease. Pathologists diagnose disease by examining tissues, cells, and bodily fluids, and by interpreting laboratory tests. They provide information that informs diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. Pathology is divided into anatomical pathology, which analyzes tissue samples and postmortem material, and clinical pathology, which focuses on laboratory analysis of specimens and the operation of diagnostic laboratories. Forensic pathology applies to medicolegal investigations of death in some cases.

Becoming a pathologist requires medical school, a residency in pathology, and board certification, typically through national

Duties in anatomical pathology include examining surgical specimens, biopsies, and autopsies; preparing tissue slides, evaluating under

Work settings include hospital laboratories, academic medical centers, private diagnostic laboratories, and public health or medicolegal

boards
such
as
the
American
Board
of
Pathology
or
equivalent.
Subspecialties
include
surgical
pathology,
cytopathology,
dermatopathology,
hematopathology,
molecular
pathology,
neuropathology,
and
transplant
pathology.
a
microscope,
and
using
immunohistochemistry
and
molecular
testing
to
establish
a
diagnosis.
Clinical
pathologists
oversee
laboratory
testing
across
disciplines
such
as
chemistry,
hematology,
microbiology,
transfusion
medicine,
and
molecular
diagnostics;
they
validate
tests
and
provide
interpretive
guidance.
Pathologists
often
collaborate
with
clinicians
and
participate
in
tumor
boards
and
quality
programs.
institutes.
The
work
is
essential
for
cancer
diagnosis
and
staging,
infectious
disease
detection
and
monitoring,
transplantation
assessment,
and
guiding
treatment
decisions.
Pathologists
follow
biosafety
and
ethical
guidelines
to
minimize
risk
in
the
laboratory.