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Winter 1966


Summer 1989
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Winter 1966
The revolution in clinical pathology at Yale is two-fold. On the
technical side, new methods of testing and data processing developed in
the clinical laboratories are resulting in services of unmatched quality
in numbers sufficient to meet the needs of patients. Last year the laboratories
performed 750,000 tests in clinical chemistry, clinical microscopy, microbiology,
and the blood bank.

A second and perhaps more fundamental change is the emergence of
a new section of clinical pathology, or laboratory medicine, in which
the laboratories and their functions have been integrated in the interests
of improving teaching, research, and patient care. The section has functioned
so successfully that a number of medical schools are using it as a prototype
for establishing departments of clinical pathology.

Last year the laboratory instituted a data logging system that transfers
information from the analytical instruments to a Hollerith card, simultaneously
printing and punching the data to render the report both human-readable
and machine-readable. Machine reading can be done by a simple card sorter
or by a general purpose digital computer which Dr. Seligson hopes to acquire
for the laboratories. As a prelude to the computerization of reports,
he has just this year initiated a cumulative report format whereby a patients
record can be updated each time new information is obtained by the laboratory.
The physician is now able to study the data easily, in serial fashion,
without having to thumb through the patients chart.

Summer 1989
Approximately 700 of the worlds leading geneticists gathered
at the University during the week of June 11 to fit together more pieces
in the complex jigsaw puzzle known as the human genome. Using the latest
computer technology, leaders of the 10th International Workshop of Human
Gene Mapping tabulated extensive new data concerning the position of human
genes on chromosomes. Thus far, the positions of about 1,700 of the estimated
100,000 human genes have been verified. The amount of data concerning
the genome has doubled every three years in the decade-and-a-half since
mapping began.

The workshop was hosted by Frank H. Ruddle, Ph.D., the Sterling
Professor of Biology and Human Genetics, and Kenneth K. Kidd, Ph.D., professor
of human genetics, biology and psychiatry. Professor Ruddle organized
the first such international workshop at Yale in 1973. Since then, the
meetings have been held every other year at different locations around
the world.

The U.S. government has committed $200 million a year for the next
15 years to map the structure of human genes, an effort that already has
helped physicians better understand such inherited diseases as Duchennes
muscular dystrophy, cystic fibrosis and some forms of cancer.

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