Making impact in POCT amongst the Andes
Well into spring, during a sunny November day in Santiago, Chile, Association for Diagnostics & Laboratory (ADLM) Latin America Subcommittee members Juan David Garcia, DCLS, MBA, and Alejandro Molinelli, PhD, NRCC-CC, FADLM, met Carolina Prieto, MD, during the Roche-sponsored ADLM point-of-care testing (POCT) workshop.
Prieto is a clinical laboratory specialist who works at a hospital in Santiago as medical director. Motivated by point-of-care (POC), she also serves as POC pilot representative in an active aging program in the south of Chile. She’s deeply committed to improving access to high quality diagnostic services – especially in rural areas.

Carolina Prieto, MD, posing for a picture at the workshop.
A city amongst the Andes

      View of Santiago, Chile from Cerro San Cristobal.Â
A quest for more

One thing on Prieto’s to-do list was wanting “to ensure that the systems [they] promote truly benefit the patient and [are] also supported by strong quality framework and competent professionals.” She hoped that the workshop would answer this question and touch on the other setbacks that her and her colleagues face. She emphasized that many laboratory specialists need to be involved in facilitating positive change.

The workshop

Juan David Garcia, DCLS, MBA, presenting.Â
While the workshop left Prieto inspired, she knew that much work remained ahead. And energized by the information, she returned to her hospital.

       Garcia helping with practical exercises.
Making home a better place
Prieto worked to apply the new thinking in an archipelago 600 miles south of Santiago named Chiloe. This region of Chile is rural and ideal for the integration of POC applications. Since the workshop, Prieto reached out to a vendor in Chiloe to train staff to lead application of the ideas in her hospital. She has further plans to meet with leaders at one of Chiloe’s healthcare systems to discuss increasing the use of POCT on the islands.
In workshops like these, exchange goes both directions. Prieto and her colleagues were able to involve the ADLM speakers in discussions that would affect their profession. By luck, the day after the event was the Chilean Society of Clinical Laboratory Medicine’s (SMLC’s) annual congress and Garcia and Molinelli were able to attend. They met other leaders in the field and learned about the country’s successes and challenges and ongoing efforts in laboratory medicine.

Boats onshore on Chiloe, an archipelago off the west coast of Chile.Â
One main goal

      Prieto asking a question at the workshop.

The sun setting over Chiloe.
