GMCTA · Certificate Program
Phlebotomy & Laboratory Technician
Start a fast-moving career in healthcare with hands-on blood collection and lab support skills. Finish in 2–4 weeks with 75 total hours covering venipuncture, specimen handling, safety, and workflow essentials.
Program Overview
This accelerated certificate prepares you for entry-level roles drawing blood and supporting basic laboratory operations. You’ll learn venipuncture techniques, specimen collection and processing, infection control, safety, and professional communication for patient-facing settings.
What You’ll Learn
- Venipuncture & Capillary Collection: order of draw, site selection, patient ID, complication prevention.
- Specimen Handling: labeling, storage, transport, centrifugation, and quality assurance.
- Safety & Infection Control: PPE, sharps safety, exposure response, biohazard handling.
- Laboratory Basics: CLS workflow, requisitions, point-of-care procedures (intro level).
- Professionalism & Communication: patient interaction, ethics, HIPAA awareness, teamwork.
Sample Curriculum
| Module | Topics |
|---|---|
| Foundations of Phlebotomy | Roles, anatomy for phlebotomy, equipment, order of draw |
| Venipuncture & Capillary Skills | Site selection, technique, complications, special collections |
| Specimen Processing | Labeling, storage, transport, centrifuge, quality checks |
| Safety & Infection Control | PPE, sharps, exposure protocols, waste management |
| Professional Practice | Patient communication, ethics, documentation, teamwork |
FAQ
Is there an externship or skills lab?
Skills practice is a critical component of phlebotomy training. GMCTA may help coordinate in-person labs or clinical experiences where available. Availability varies by region and partner site capacity.
How quickly can I finish?
Most learners complete in 2–4 weeks, depending on schedule and access to skills practice.
Does this guarantee certification or employment?
No school can guarantee licensure, certification, or employment. We provide training and preparation; outcomes depend on individual performance and external requirements.
