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BAGP Newsletter



Forthcoming BAGP Meetings



Recent Meetings and Handouts


 - Role of HPV in Cervical Pathology

 - BAGP Manchester 2008

 - Cervical Adenocarcinoma

 - BAGP Birmingham 2009

 - 2006 Meeting Case Presentation Commentaries

 - Pathology of Gestational Trophoblastic Neoplasia

 - Soft Tissue Neoplasms of the Lower Female Genital Tract

 - Update on the Diagnosis of Vulval Precancerous Lesions

 - Sentinel Node Dissection in Vulval Cancer

 - Management of Trophoblastic Disease


Join the BAGP


 - Application form


National Gynaecological EQA Scheme News


 - Contact Information

 - Slide Circulation Y

 - Slide Circulation Z

 - Slide Circulation A

 - Slide Circulation C

 - Slide Circulation B

 - Slide Circulation D


Links to other Websites


 - International Society of Gynecological Pathologists

 - British Gynaecological Cancer Society

 - Pathological Society of Great Britain & Ireland

 - Royal College of Pathologists

 - Society of Gynecologic Oncologists

 - Association of Clinical Pathologists

 - British Division of the International Academy of Pathology

 - United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology

 - An Immunohistochemical Vade Mecum

 - FIGO

 - Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists

 - European Society of Gynaecological Oncology

 - International Society for the Study of Trophoblastic Disease

 - British Fertility Society

 - European Society of Pathology

 - Birmingham Cytology Training Centre

 - British Society for the Study of Vulval Disease

 - NHS Cervical Screening Programme

 - British Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology

 - British Society for Clinical Cytology


The Constitution of the BAGP


 - Members of Council


Other Pathology Meetings



Case of the Month


 - Case 11 - Dr L Carp

 - Case 12 - Dr M Verma & Prof WG McCluggage

 - Case 13 - Dr E Sheldon

 - Case 14 - Prof WG McCluggage

 - Case 01 - Prof WG McCluggage

 - Case 02 - Dr A Manoharan & Dr R Ganesan

 - Case 03 - Dr A Faruqi

 - Case 04 - Dr K Billington & Dr L Hirschowitz

 - Case 05 - Dr M Scott

 - Case 06 - Dr M Scott

 - Case 07 - Dr L Brown

 - Case 08 - Prof WG McCluggage

 - Case 09 - Dr N Nair & Dr R Ganesan

 - Case 10 - Dr I Nicklaus-Wollenteit

 - Case 15 - Dr E Sheldon

 - Case 16 - Dr J Leake


Membership Directory






Contact information

 

 

 

 

 

 

Home page: www.pathologists.org.uk

The Association of Clinical Pathologists was established in 1927, originally as the British Pathologists Association, and changed to its current name in 1930. In W.D. Forster's 'A Short History of Clinical Pathology' (Livingstone, 1961) S.C Dyke indicated the Association was established for four main reasons:

To improve the conditions of pathology practice and improve the status of clinical pathologists.
To secure clinical pathologists as being equal to other consultants
To encourage and assist medical schools and post-graduate education so that suitably trained doctors could assume charge of   hospital laboratories throughout the United Kingdom.
To establish where members could exchange views on work, research etc.

Today's aims must be very similar. Despite increasing specialization in pathology with the resultant proliferation of societies, which provide a forum for discussion, there is still a need for a multi-disciplinary organization such as the Association. In the current political climate of rationalisation, harmonisation and market testing, the challenges that face all disciplines of pathology are similar. The proposed multi-skilling of our MLSO colleagues and the introduction of modern molecular biology techniques are two forces that are bringing the disciplines back together. The association, with its strong grass-roots support through branches and committees, is in a commanding position to allow it to make its own assessment of situations freely, cogently and convincingly and to convey these to the Department of Health, the Royal College of Pathologists and other important groupings.

 
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