PRESQUE ISLE, Maine — Because of the COVID-19 healthcare emergency, students in the Medical Laboratory Technology Program at the University of Maine at Presque Isle and the University of Maine at Augusta have graduated early and are eligible to begin work.
“Medical laboratory technicians play an important role in performing COVID-19 testing,” Leigh Belair, UMPI Assistant Professor and Co-Director of the MLT Program of Maine, said. “Though their work is behind the scenes, it’s incredibly important work, and we’re so pleased that our graduates are able to help.”
According to Belair, students in the MLT program traditionally do their clinical training in the spring at clinical affiliate sites including hospitals, clinics, and laboratories. Due to the physical layout of the state, there are affiliates that UMPI traditionally partners with and those that partner with UMA for student training. However, due to the challenges of COVID-19, hospital administrative policy changes around student internships were implemented and resulted in some student displacements from their training sites.
This resulted in several UMA affiliates stepping in to provide training placements for UMPI students. Co-Directors Belair and Judy Clukey of UMA worked together to address the unexpected policy changes and found placements for all students.
“Our clinical affiliates recognize the role that the MLT Program of Maine plays in the workforce as we provide them with lab professionals that are desperately needed in Maine,” Clukey said. “The lab community in Maine is small and our affiliates went above and beyond to provide training opportunities during the pandemic for our MLT students.”
Following spring break and due to the impacts of COVID-19, modifications to the remaining MLT training schedule were also necessary.
“The practicum schedule was abbreviated, but it still provided our students with an introduction to the remaining departments in their practicums. These changes required a lot of coordination, but it allowed us to balance the health and safety of our students with the academic requirements of the program while meeting the clinical needs of our affiliates,” Belair said.
The students were originally scheduled to finish up on May 15 and be eligible to start work on May 18; instead, they took their last test on May 1 and became eligible to work on May 4.
The MLT Program of Maine is a collaborative program sponsored by UMPI and UMA in cooperation with hospitals across the state that serve as clinical affiliates. The Associate’s degree program prepares students for careers as medical laboratory technicians in settings that include hospitals, clinics, and forensic laboratories. MLT Program of Maine graduates are often hired before they finish their clinical training and the program has an average 3-year graduate placement rate of 97 percent. Currently, 70 percent of the Aroostook County hospital lab workforce are MLT graduates.
Nine students from UMPI and six from UMA graduated from the MLT program, and Belair and Clukey said the majority of them were already committed to work at sites in Maine starting on May 4.
“The laboratory has faced a shortfall of techs for quite some time. Now, with the challenges of COVID-19, there has never been a more important time to get our students working” Belair said. “The laboratory and lab testing are discussed daily in the news, and it makes me proud that our graduates will play a critical role in this effort. With our profession in the spotlight, the students have an opportunity to contribute both now and in the future.”
Submitted by the Community and Media Relations Office of the University of Maine at Presque Isle.