Donald Penner and the origin of the Pathologists' Assistant profession in Canada/Donald Penner et l'origine de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada

This article describes the beginning of the pathologists' assistant profession in Canada. Pathologists' assistants perform delegated medical tasks in the surgical pathology gross room and the autopsy suite under the supervision of a licensed pathologist. Donald W. Penner at the Winnipeg Ge...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of pathology 2021-05, Vol.13 (2), p.42
Hauptverfasser: Gartner, John G, Wright, James R, Orr, F. William
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description This article describes the beginning of the pathologists' assistant profession in Canada. Pathologists' assistants perform delegated medical tasks in the surgical pathology gross room and the autopsy suite under the supervision of a licensed pathologist. Donald W. Penner at the Winnipeg General Hospital hired 20-year-old Larry Bluhm in 1966; Penner and his colleagues trained him, and later David Maughan and others, to gross surgical pathology specimens. Penner's innovation, which simultaneously improved and standardized the handling of surgical pathology cases in the gross room as well as addressed pathologist workload issues, predated the first American university-based training program for pathologists' assistants at Duke University, which opened in 1969. Penner initially called these gross room assistants "tissue dieners." In August 1969, Penner hired 25-year-old Peter Stewart, who had an undergraduate degree from University of Manitoba, to work in his autopsy room. Stewart was hired as a pathologists' assistant and not as a tissue diener, likely so that there could be no confusion between his role and those of the WGH autopsy dieners who were already performing eviscerations and cleaning bodies. Stewart's role was to assist various pathologists performing roughly 1,300 medico-legal autopsies per year. He functioned semi-autonomously, including reviewing histories, performing autopsies and drafting preliminary autopsy reports, all under the supervision of an attending pathologist. In 2003, the University of Manitoba pathology department started the first university-based pathologists' assistant training program in Canada. All of these historical events are described based upon eyewitness accounts. Le present article decrit les debuts de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada. Les assistants en pathologie effectuent des taches medicales dans les salles d'examen macroscopique et d'autopsie, sous la supervision d'un pathologiste autorise. En 1966, Donald W. Penner de l'Hopital general de Winnipeg a embauche Larry Bluhm, alors age de 20 ans. Le Dr Penner et ses collegues ont enseigne a M. Bluhm, puis a David Maughan et a d'autres, a faire l'examen macroscopique d'echantillons de pathologie chirurgicale. Cette innovation, qui a simultanement permis d'ameliorer et de normaliser la gestion des cas de pathologie chirurgicale dans la salle d'examen macroscopique, en plus de reduire la charge de travail des pathologistes, remonte a avant l'ouverture du
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William</creator><creatorcontrib>Gartner, John G ; Wright, James R ; Orr, F. William</creatorcontrib><description>This article describes the beginning of the pathologists' assistant profession in Canada. Pathologists' assistants perform delegated medical tasks in the surgical pathology gross room and the autopsy suite under the supervision of a licensed pathologist. Donald W. Penner at the Winnipeg General Hospital hired 20-year-old Larry Bluhm in 1966; Penner and his colleagues trained him, and later David Maughan and others, to gross surgical pathology specimens. Penner's innovation, which simultaneously improved and standardized the handling of surgical pathology cases in the gross room as well as addressed pathologist workload issues, predated the first American university-based training program for pathologists' assistants at Duke University, which opened in 1969. Penner initially called these gross room assistants "tissue dieners." In August 1969, Penner hired 25-year-old Peter Stewart, who had an undergraduate degree from University of Manitoba, to work in his autopsy room. Stewart was hired as a pathologists' assistant and not as a tissue diener, likely so that there could be no confusion between his role and those of the WGH autopsy dieners who were already performing eviscerations and cleaning bodies. Stewart's role was to assist various pathologists performing roughly 1,300 medico-legal autopsies per year. He functioned semi-autonomously, including reviewing histories, performing autopsies and drafting preliminary autopsy reports, all under the supervision of an attending pathologist. In 2003, the University of Manitoba pathology department started the first university-based pathologists' assistant training program in Canada. All of these historical events are described based upon eyewitness accounts. Le present article decrit les debuts de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada. Les assistants en pathologie effectuent des taches medicales dans les salles d'examen macroscopique et d'autopsie, sous la supervision d'un pathologiste autorise. En 1966, Donald W. Penner de l'Hopital general de Winnipeg a embauche Larry Bluhm, alors age de 20 ans. Le Dr Penner et ses collegues ont enseigne a M. Bluhm, puis a David Maughan et a d'autres, a faire l'examen macroscopique d'echantillons de pathologie chirurgicale. Cette innovation, qui a simultanement permis d'ameliorer et de normaliser la gestion des cas de pathologie chirurgicale dans la salle d'examen macroscopique, en plus de reduire la charge de travail des pathologistes, remonte a avant l'ouverture du tout premier programme universitaire americain qui visait a former des assistants en pathologie (1969, a l'Universite Duke, en Caroline du Nord). Au depart, le Dr Penner qualifiait ces assistants de &lt;&lt; preposes a la morgue &gt;&gt;. Puis, en aout 1969, il a pris a son service Peter Stewart (25 ans), qui etait titulaire d'un diplome de premier cycle de l'Universite du Manitoba, pour travailler en salle d'autopsie. Le titre officiel de M. Stewart etait &lt;&lt; assistant en pathologie &gt;&gt; (et non prepose a la morgue). Il ne pouvait donc y avoir aucune confusion entre son role et celui des techniciens en autopsie de l'Hopital general de Winnipeg, qui procedaient deja a l'evisceration et au nettoyage des corps. M. Stewart, qui realisait pres de 1 300 autopsies medico-legales par annee, assistait divers pathologistes. Il travaillait de facon semi-autonome; toujours sous la supervision du pathologiste de garde, il passait en revue les antecedents des patients, pratiquait des autopsies et redigeait l'ebauche des rapports d'autopsie preliminaires. En 2003, le Departement de pathologie de l'Universite du Manitoba a lance le premier programme universitaire au Canada visant a former des assistants en pathologie. Toutes les descriptions d'evenements historiques contenues dans cet article sont basees sur les recits de temoins. Keywords: Medical history, pathology, pathologists' assistants, Donald Penner, Winnipeg General Hospital, University of Manitoba, Canada.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1918-915X</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Canadian Association of Pathologists</publisher><ispartof>Canadian journal of pathology, 2021-05, Vol.13 (2), p.42</ispartof><rights>COPYRIGHT 2021 Canadian Association of Pathologists</rights><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>314,777,781</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Gartner, John G</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Wright, James R</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Orr, F. William</creatorcontrib><title>Donald Penner and the origin of the Pathologists' Assistant profession in Canada/Donald Penner et l'origine de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada</title><title>Canadian journal of pathology</title><description>This article describes the beginning of the pathologists' assistant profession in Canada. Pathologists' assistants perform delegated medical tasks in the surgical pathology gross room and the autopsy suite under the supervision of a licensed pathologist. Donald W. Penner at the Winnipeg General Hospital hired 20-year-old Larry Bluhm in 1966; Penner and his colleagues trained him, and later David Maughan and others, to gross surgical pathology specimens. Penner's innovation, which simultaneously improved and standardized the handling of surgical pathology cases in the gross room as well as addressed pathologist workload issues, predated the first American university-based training program for pathologists' assistants at Duke University, which opened in 1969. Penner initially called these gross room assistants "tissue dieners." In August 1969, Penner hired 25-year-old Peter Stewart, who had an undergraduate degree from University of Manitoba, to work in his autopsy room. Stewart was hired as a pathologists' assistant and not as a tissue diener, likely so that there could be no confusion between his role and those of the WGH autopsy dieners who were already performing eviscerations and cleaning bodies. Stewart's role was to assist various pathologists performing roughly 1,300 medico-legal autopsies per year. He functioned semi-autonomously, including reviewing histories, performing autopsies and drafting preliminary autopsy reports, all under the supervision of an attending pathologist. In 2003, the University of Manitoba pathology department started the first university-based pathologists' assistant training program in Canada. All of these historical events are described based upon eyewitness accounts. Le present article decrit les debuts de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada. Les assistants en pathologie effectuent des taches medicales dans les salles d'examen macroscopique et d'autopsie, sous la supervision d'un pathologiste autorise. En 1966, Donald W. Penner de l'Hopital general de Winnipeg a embauche Larry Bluhm, alors age de 20 ans. Le Dr Penner et ses collegues ont enseigne a M. Bluhm, puis a David Maughan et a d'autres, a faire l'examen macroscopique d'echantillons de pathologie chirurgicale. Cette innovation, qui a simultanement permis d'ameliorer et de normaliser la gestion des cas de pathologie chirurgicale dans la salle d'examen macroscopique, en plus de reduire la charge de travail des pathologistes, remonte a avant l'ouverture du tout premier programme universitaire americain qui visait a former des assistants en pathologie (1969, a l'Universite Duke, en Caroline du Nord). Au depart, le Dr Penner qualifiait ces assistants de &lt;&lt; preposes a la morgue &gt;&gt;. Puis, en aout 1969, il a pris a son service Peter Stewart (25 ans), qui etait titulaire d'un diplome de premier cycle de l'Universite du Manitoba, pour travailler en salle d'autopsie. Le titre officiel de M. Stewart etait &lt;&lt; assistant en pathologie &gt;&gt; (et non prepose a la morgue). Il ne pouvait donc y avoir aucune confusion entre son role et celui des techniciens en autopsie de l'Hopital general de Winnipeg, qui procedaient deja a l'evisceration et au nettoyage des corps. M. Stewart, qui realisait pres de 1 300 autopsies medico-legales par annee, assistait divers pathologistes. Il travaillait de facon semi-autonome; toujours sous la supervision du pathologiste de garde, il passait en revue les antecedents des patients, pratiquait des autopsies et redigeait l'ebauche des rapports d'autopsie preliminaires. En 2003, le Departement de pathologie de l'Universite du Manitoba a lance le premier programme universitaire au Canada visant a former des assistants en pathologie. Toutes les descriptions d'evenements historiques contenues dans cet article sont basees sur les recits de temoins. 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William</creator><general>Canadian Association of Pathologists</general><scope/></search><sort><creationdate>20210501</creationdate><title>Donald Penner and the origin of the Pathologists' Assistant profession in Canada/Donald Penner et l'origine de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada</title><author>Gartner, John G ; Wright, James R ; Orr, F. William</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-g709-4c0b3672b7dc69f7cc0710aac74237402976a915653707bd3c7d2b769d4bda23</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2021</creationdate><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Gartner, John G</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Wright, James R</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Orr, F. William</creatorcontrib><jtitle>Canadian journal of pathology</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Gartner, John G</au><au>Wright, James R</au><au>Orr, F. William</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Donald Penner and the origin of the Pathologists' Assistant profession in Canada/Donald Penner et l'origine de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada</atitle><jtitle>Canadian journal of pathology</jtitle><date>2021-05-01</date><risdate>2021</risdate><volume>13</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>42</spage><pages>42-</pages><issn>1918-915X</issn><abstract>This article describes the beginning of the pathologists' assistant profession in Canada. Pathologists' assistants perform delegated medical tasks in the surgical pathology gross room and the autopsy suite under the supervision of a licensed pathologist. Donald W. Penner at the Winnipeg General Hospital hired 20-year-old Larry Bluhm in 1966; Penner and his colleagues trained him, and later David Maughan and others, to gross surgical pathology specimens. Penner's innovation, which simultaneously improved and standardized the handling of surgical pathology cases in the gross room as well as addressed pathologist workload issues, predated the first American university-based training program for pathologists' assistants at Duke University, which opened in 1969. Penner initially called these gross room assistants "tissue dieners." In August 1969, Penner hired 25-year-old Peter Stewart, who had an undergraduate degree from University of Manitoba, to work in his autopsy room. Stewart was hired as a pathologists' assistant and not as a tissue diener, likely so that there could be no confusion between his role and those of the WGH autopsy dieners who were already performing eviscerations and cleaning bodies. Stewart's role was to assist various pathologists performing roughly 1,300 medico-legal autopsies per year. He functioned semi-autonomously, including reviewing histories, performing autopsies and drafting preliminary autopsy reports, all under the supervision of an attending pathologist. In 2003, the University of Manitoba pathology department started the first university-based pathologists' assistant training program in Canada. All of these historical events are described based upon eyewitness accounts. Le present article decrit les debuts de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada. Les assistants en pathologie effectuent des taches medicales dans les salles d'examen macroscopique et d'autopsie, sous la supervision d'un pathologiste autorise. En 1966, Donald W. Penner de l'Hopital general de Winnipeg a embauche Larry Bluhm, alors age de 20 ans. Le Dr Penner et ses collegues ont enseigne a M. Bluhm, puis a David Maughan et a d'autres, a faire l'examen macroscopique d'echantillons de pathologie chirurgicale. Cette innovation, qui a simultanement permis d'ameliorer et de normaliser la gestion des cas de pathologie chirurgicale dans la salle d'examen macroscopique, en plus de reduire la charge de travail des pathologistes, remonte a avant l'ouverture du tout premier programme universitaire americain qui visait a former des assistants en pathologie (1969, a l'Universite Duke, en Caroline du Nord). Au depart, le Dr Penner qualifiait ces assistants de &lt;&lt; preposes a la morgue &gt;&gt;. Puis, en aout 1969, il a pris a son service Peter Stewart (25 ans), qui etait titulaire d'un diplome de premier cycle de l'Universite du Manitoba, pour travailler en salle d'autopsie. Le titre officiel de M. Stewart etait &lt;&lt; assistant en pathologie &gt;&gt; (et non prepose a la morgue). Il ne pouvait donc y avoir aucune confusion entre son role et celui des techniciens en autopsie de l'Hopital general de Winnipeg, qui procedaient deja a l'evisceration et au nettoyage des corps. M. Stewart, qui realisait pres de 1 300 autopsies medico-legales par annee, assistait divers pathologistes. Il travaillait de facon semi-autonome; toujours sous la supervision du pathologiste de garde, il passait en revue les antecedents des patients, pratiquait des autopsies et redigeait l'ebauche des rapports d'autopsie preliminaires. En 2003, le Departement de pathologie de l'Universite du Manitoba a lance le premier programme universitaire au Canada visant a former des assistants en pathologie. Toutes les descriptions d'evenements historiques contenues dans cet article sont basees sur les recits de temoins. Keywords: Medical history, pathology, pathologists' assistants, Donald Penner, Winnipeg General Hospital, University of Manitoba, Canada.</abstract><pub>Canadian Association of Pathologists</pub></addata></record>
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title Donald Penner and the origin of the Pathologists' Assistant profession in Canada/Donald Penner et l'origine de la profession d'assistant en pathologie au Canada
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