Lab Mastery: CBC & CMP Interpretation for Clinicians (Live Webinar)
Webinar/Online
Saturday, January 10, 2026 at 10:00am CT - 2:00pm CT
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Info
Topic
This educational activity is designed for students and early-career clinicians who want to build confidence interpreting common laboratory studies in clinical practice. The session focuses on a structured, efficient, and repeatable approach to interpreting Complete Blood Counts (CBCs) and Comprehensive Metabolic Panels (CMPs), emphasizing clinically meaningful patterns rather than isolated reference values. Through case-based learning and step-by-step clinical reasoning, participants will practice evaluating common abnormalities and applying laboratory findings to clinical assessment and decision-making. This training supports nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and students seeking a practical framework for interpreting labs with greater clarity and confidence.
Additional Information
Live, case-based webinar designed to help students and early-career clinicians build confidence interpreting CBC and CMP results. Learn a structured, step-by-step approach to lab interpretation that can be applied in everyday clinical practice.
Speakers
Physician Assistant
Lead Clinical Instructor
Founder - Elevate Clinical Skills
Eric Gordon has been a practicing physician assistant since 2016, with clinical experience in emergency medicine, geriatrics, and wound care. Based in Fort Worth, Texas, Eric has served in leadership roles focused on delivering high-quality, patient-centered care—often directly in patients' homes. Over the years, he’s seen firsthand how vital procedural confidence is in clinical settings. Eric has developed and delivered clinical education content for PAs and NPs, particularly in emergency medicine. He’s known for his approachable teaching style and ability to break down complex procedures into clear, actionable steps. He founded Elevate Clinical Skills to fill a gap he noticed in the healthcare world: a need for hands-on, real-world procedural training that feels accessible, practical, and confidence-building. His goal is to help fellow clinicians feel better prepared at the bedside—because confident providers deliver better care.