Papers

3

Total Citations

34

H-Index

2

About

William Godolphin is a clinical laboratory scientist whose research has focused on the automation and technological advancement of laboratory medicine, particularly in the areas of blood sample handling, central processing systems, and robotic applications in clinical settings. His most notable contribution, the 1990 paper "Automated Blood-Sample Handling in the Clinical Laboratory," earned 30 citations and addressed a striking gap in clinical practice — that despite 25 years passing, the only meaningful innovations in blood collection had been the disposable needle and evacuated blood-drawing tube. Godolphin advocated for systemic modernization, including barcode-based sample tracking to replace error-prone handwritten labeling and to reduce occupational hazards associated with specimen handling. Building on this foundation, his 1993 work explored automation and simulation in central laboratory processing, and his later contribution to a 2011 handbook chapter on clinical laboratory robotics demonstrated his sustained commitment to this evolving field over more than two decades. Though his citation counts are modest, Godolphin's work reflects early and prescient thinking about laboratory automation at a time when such ideas were far from mainstream, laying conceptual groundwork for the highly automated clinical laboratories that are standard today.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

2
H-Index
3
Papers
34
Total Citations
11
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Automated blood-sample handling in the clinical laboratory
30 citations · 1990
📈 Most Prolific Year: 1990 (1 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 3
🏛 Institutions: Vancouver General Hospital, University of British Columbia

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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