May 2023
Research Technician Carly Olafson awarded the ICSH Carol Briggs-Smalley Scholarship
Highest number of award entries for 5 years
The International Council for Standardization in Haematology (ICSH) is pleased to announce Carly Olafson of Canadian Blood Services in Canada has been awarded the ICSH Carol Briggs-Smalley Scholarship.
The title of Carly's Project is "Standardization of Hemolysis Measurement in Red Cell Concentrates" and the ICSH is looking forward to Carly starting her project.
Promoted with the help of its corporate partners, affiliates and Wiley Publishing, and with an increase to £10,000 in value, this year saw the ICSH Carol Briggs-Smalley Award highest number of entires in 5 years.
The Carol Briggs-Smalley Scholarship Award was set-up in 2015 to honour the significant contributions Carol Briggs made to the discipline of laboratory haematology.
Each year the ICSH seeks applications from Medical Technologists and Medical Laboratory Scientists on laboratory haematology projects particularly those that are related to standardization in laboratory haematology.
Projects related to standardization in cellular analysis, haemostasis, flow cytometry, haemoglobinopathies and molecular haematology are all considered to be suitable for the award.
The amount of £10,000 GBP is allocated to the successful applicant for expenses related to the project.
The ICSH Carol Briggs-Smalley Award is one of two annual ICSH scholarship awards, this and the ICSH Sam Machin Award.
ABOUT ICSH
The International Council for Standardization in Haematology (ICSH) was initiated as a standardization committee by the European Society of Haematology (ESH) in 1963 and officially constituted by the International Society of Hematology (ISH) and the ESH in Stockholm in 1964.
The ICSH is a not-for-profit non-governmental organisation that aims to achieve reliable and reproducible results in laboratory analysis in the field of diagnostic haematology.
The ICSH coordinates Working Groups of experts to examine laboratory methods and instruments for haematological analyses, to deliberate on issues of standardization and to stimulate and coordinate scientific work as necessary towards the development of international standardization materials and guidelines.
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