Avoiding Silent Warm Spots: How to Develop a Biorepository Temperature Monitoring & Mapping System - a podcast by CAP

from 2019-07-26T15:40:14

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Biorepositories are responsible for maintaining specimen integrity over long periods of time. Ensuring that specimens are stored at temperatures appropriate for their intended use is a critical component to ensuring their quality. While storage units are typically equipped with primary and secondary temperature monitoring probes, these probes often only provide a temperature sampling of one small region within the storage unit. However, variables within the storage unit that impact airflow or the effectiveness of insulation can adversely affect the uniformity of temperature, creating ‘silent’ warm spots that can compromise specimens within.

In this CAPcast, Dr. Erik Zmuda, will share his experience from serving as a Technical Director in the Biospecimen Core Resource at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, by discussing why it’s important for laboratories to develop a method for evaluating temperature uniformity within biorepository storage units and how pathologists and laboratorians can confront the complex task of assembling the tools and methods for running a freezer mapping program on their own.

More information on biorepositories, including the CAP's Biorepository Accreditation Program (BAP), is available on CAP.org: https://capatholo.gy/2LveVSV.

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