Here's an example of what's due today

Analyze chronic trends

Mon, Oct 19, 2026 · Week 9 · Principles of Biomedical Technology (Principles of Biomedical Science)

Today's goal: Interpret bloodwork trends against normal ranges with a CER and evaluate data limits.

Learn first

What a finished product looks like

This is a model of the work you should turn in today. Use it to check your own: match the structure and the level of detail, do not copy it. Your data and wording should be your own.

Worked CER on a parallel case
Completes: A parallel claim-evidence-reasoning model on a different bloodwork trend (blood pressure), showing how to read a time-series against a normal range and why a trend outweighs one reading, without arguing the glucose case students must argue today.

Note: This is a worked model on a parallel case (blood pressure), not today's answer. Study the structure and depth, then build your own CER for the glucose question.\n\nClaim: Patient B's blood pressure control is worsening across the six-month monitoring period.\n\nEvidence: From the time-series graph, systolic blood pressure rose from 128 mmHg at Month 0 to 148 mmHg at Month 5, and the last four readings all sat above the 120 mmHg upper edge of the normal band. Diastolic pressure showed the same upward direction, climbing from 82 to 94 mmHg over the same window.\n\nReasoning: The trend matters more than any single point. One high reading could come from stress, caffeine, or a cuff that was sized wrong, but four consecutive rising values above the normal band describe a real upward direction, which signals a chronic blood-pressure regulation problem rather than one stressful visit. Two variables that affect a blood pressure reading are physical activity and sodium intake in the hours before the measurement. A limitation is that a single home cuff is not always calibrated to clinical standards, so a clinician would confirm the pattern with repeated in-office measurements, and possibly 24-hour monitoring, before diagnosing hypertension or changing treatment.

Also due today: Upload the CER to the tracker or hand in the written copy by end of class.

Check yourself

WebXam problem for today's skill

One exam-style question that uses exactly what you practiced today. Try it before you reveal the answer, then read why each choice is right or wrong.

WebXam-style domain: Biotechnology Research and ExperimentsSelf-check skill: Explaining why a trend is more reliable than a single reading
A patient has one glucose reading of 150 mg/dL after lunch, but six months of fasting readings that are all normal. What is the best clinical interpretation?

Tap an answer to see the full explanation. Nothing is recorded or graded.