RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Evidence from Consultation Defines the Difference Between Clinical Doctorates and the Ph.D. in Clinical Laboratory Science JF American Society for Clinical Laboratory Science JO Clin Lab Sci FD American Society of Chemistry and Laboratory Science SP ascls.119.001503 DO 10.29074/ascls.119.001503 A1 Nadine Fydryszewski YR 2019 UL http://hwmaint.clsjournal.ascls.org/content/early/2019/04/15/ascls.119.001503.abstract AB Since the inception of the doctorate in clinical laboratory science (DCLS), universities sponsoring educational programs for this new practitioner have struggled with its academic placement. The PhD is considered the highest achievement level and oriented toward research. Practice doctorates are considered applied though still at the doctoral level and classified as terminal degrees for many healthcare professions. Rutgers University, the first to offer the DCLS, opted to launch the educational program for this new practitioner as an advanced practice clinical doctorate, conceiving the practice to be applied and patient/consumer focused. During completion of the first DCLS curriculum, evidence emerged describing an additional curriculum need to augment competencies in clinical research equivalent to competencies associated with the Ph.D. During the DCLS residency year, the Consultation Model was implemented in four clinical settings: Consumer Information (CI), a national consultation network; Diagnostic Management Intervention (DMI), laboratory consultation; Patient Care Intervention (PCI)**, clinical service consultation; and Utilization Review (UR), EHR and LIS review consultation. Data were collected on multiple variables: provider type, diagnosis, diagnostic question, testing cycle phase, treatment phase, and complexity (hand-offs and/or logic steps). Analyses of the consultation variables indicated the need for additional clinical research competencies, particularly data analytics associated with data warehouses built from EHR/LIS elements, and development of diagnostic algorithms supporting treatment paths. Adding these additional research competencies to the DCLS curriculum is underway which will result in a dual degree option, DCLS/Ph.D. Doctoral students will be accepted into either program but must demonstrate aptitude in clinical research to progress to the Ph.D.