UK HealthCare

#TogetherUKY: A Thank You to UK HealthCare's Clinical Laboratory Employees

On and off campus, the UK community is working to ensure that the university can continue to educate, serve, research and heal.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (April 10, 2020) — On and off campus, members of our UK community are working to ensure that the university can keep its promise to our state — to educate, serve, research and heal. That's why UKNow is launching this new "#TogetherUKY" series to thank some of the UK faculty and staff who are a representation of all our employees who are working hard in numerous areas and departments around our campus. We can't continue our mission without their commitment, resilience and collaborative spirit during this challenging time. We will get through this together.

In this new series, the University of Kentucky thanks the many people it takes to keep the university moving forward in a time of pandemic uncertainty. Today's shoutout goes to UK HealthCare’s clinical laboratory workers, who are working day in and day out to complete the constant flow of COVID-19 tests coming in from UK HealthCare patients. Dr. C. Darrell Jennings, chair of the UK Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, says it’s the latest example of his team giving their best efforts to help keep Kentuckians healthy.

“I am continually impressed and grateful every day for the effort and dedication of the staff of UK Healthcare’s clinical laboratories,” Jennings said. “They are in the lab working to improve the lives of patients 24/7 throughout the year. They routinely handle infectious materials and dangerous pathogens with grace and skill. A good patient outcome depends on the right treatment, and the right treatment depends on the right diagnosis. Most of the time, the correct diagnosis relies on a critical test result that must be accurate and timely. Every day, this lab staff lives our motto: ‘The right test for the right patient at the right time.’ They are UK!”

 

Ben Cobb
Molecular microbiologist Ben Cobb places a plate of COVID-19 samples inside the Abbott M2000 for testing. UK Photo | Mark Cornelison