Discovering what ails you is what fuels us.

A medical laboratory scientist impacts patient care at the basic level and determines the presence, extent or absence of disease by analyzing blood, other body fluids, and tissues.

Essentially, finding a treatment for a patient starts with identifying the problem, and medical laboratory scientists do just that.

More than 70% of a patient’s treatment is based on the discovery work of a medical laboratory scientist.

Who You Are

You are the detective of the healthcare team, connecting patient to prognosis to treatment options via the doctor. You can specialize in two areas.

Histotechnologists prepare human, animal and plant tissues for analysis. As a histotechnologist, you might discover cancerous cells in a biopsy.

Clinical laboratory scientists analyze and perform laboratory tests on blood and other body fluids. As a clinical laboratory scientist, you might find cancerous cells on a blood smear indicating leukemia.

Starting salaries average around $50,000 per year with an undergraduate degree.

What You Do

Medical laboratory scientists perform lab tests, interpret data, analyze results, and communicate with other members of the health care team.

You work in hospitals, clinics, or labs including pharmaceutical companies, forensics labs, veterinary clinics, and other laboratory environments.

100% In 2018, WVU’s job placement rate for the graduating class was 100 precent.

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Leading the Way in Research

WVU is one of only 115 higher education institutions in the U.S. to receive the Carnegie R1 designation for the level of scientific activity and graduate education on campus.

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