In recent months, MLO has been quietly celebrating its 40th birthday. But I am keen on birthdays and sing "Happy Birthday" out loud on anybody's birthday, sometimes even over the phone long distance. Without birthdays, we would not be here, right? I do not regret growing older. Aging is a privilege denied to many. Besides, wrinkles do not hurt.
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Recent guest editors have noted the magazine's relationships within the medical laboratory community throughout its history: the late Daniel M. Baer, MD; Ray Gambino, MD; NIU's Dean Shirley Richmond of the College of Health and Human Sciences; and James O. Westgard, PhD--just a few of the esteemed physicians and educators who over those 40 years have mapped out the clinical lab's territory on MLO's pages as well as those of other respected publications.
As I pondered who to invite as "birthday" guest editors, the thought came to me: Search industry professional organizations for candidates. As I made a list of groups to contact, I wondered how old they were in comparison to MLO. When were they "born"? Since we are headed to Chicago's McCormick Place Convention Center this month, I decided to look first at the AACC. AACC hosts the world's largest lab conference with up to 19,000 registrants from more than 100 countries. (My feet ache at the mere thought of walking that convention floor!) AACC, 61 this year, was founded in 1948.
The "granddaddy" of them all, the American Society of Microbiologists, was initiated in 1899 when 59 scientists met and has grown to 43,000 members today, representing 26 disciplines of microbiological specialization.
AABB beats AACC by one year at 62, having been founded in 1947, and has active members in all 50 states and 80 countries, and more than 30 committees of volunteer professionals. The CLMA is a whippersnapper at 33, arriving on the scene in 1976. Its international members number 4,000 and promote leadership among them through education, networking, and advocacy.
The American Society of Hematology showed up in 1958, 51 years ago. Its first meeting in Atlantic City, NJ, welcomed more than 300 hematologists who discussed ethical and research matters related to blood and blood diseases. Today, the organization publishes its journal Blood, which is the most cited peer-reviewed publication in the field.
Consider the American Society of Clinical Pathologists (ASCP), which, in 1922, formed to unite pathologists and lab professionals, with the mission to provide excellence in education, certification, and advocacy on behalf of its members, as well as patients. In 1945, ASCP suggested forming a separate "academy of pathology," thus, in 1946, the College of American Pathologists came into being.
Other medical lab organizations (unnamed here) successfully exist. Their individual and collective contributions combined with those listed give professionals who have similar interests the grand opportunity to become more involved in learning, teaching, volunteering, discovering, solving, inventing, and designing.
As MLO shares a bit of medical lab birthday history, it seems that such occasions are the culmination of enthusiasm for a cause. MLO's cause has been to educate lab professionals with peer-reviewed articles that provide continuing education. At 40, the MLO staff continues to be enthused about that challenge. As Henry David Thoreau once said: "None are so old as those who have outlived enthusiasm." So, sing out loud ... and, yes, a little off-key is fine.
cbersch@nelsonpub.com
Note: Formation dates and other information about various organizations was taken from their websites.




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