Craig A Bailey

Florida-licensed Clinical Laboratory Personnel practicing at 1133 US 98, LOT 308, Lorida, FL 33857. License verified through the Florida Department of Health Division of Medical Quality Assurance.

FL DOH VERIFIED

License Details

FL DOH · MQA
Clear
Current Status
Active
None
Board Action
on record
8 yrs
Licensed since
July 18, 2018
August 31, 2026
License Expires
Next renewal cycle
Full nameCraig A Bailey
ProfessionClinical Laboratory Personnel (profession code 6601, rank TN)
License number50451
License statusClear — secondary: Active
Status effective sinceMarch 21, 2025
License originally issuedJuly 18, 2018 (8 years ago)
License expiresAugust 31, 2026
Practice address1133 US 98
LOT 308
Lorida, FL 33857
CountyHighlands County, FL
Birth year (range)50 - 60
Prescribing authorityNo (not authorized to prescribe)
Dispensing authorityNo
Source: Florida Department of Health, Division of Medical Quality Assurance. Public records under Chapter 119, Florida Statutes. Refreshed daily from the official MQA download portal. Contact information (email, phone, mailing address) is intentionally omitted to protect privacy; verify directly at FL DOH Search Services →

About the Clinical Laboratory Personnel Profession in Florida

EDITORIAL

What they do

Clinical Laboratory Personnel in Florida perform the diagnostic tests that physicians rely on to identify, monitor, and treat disease. Their work spans hematology, clinical chemistry, microbiology, immunohematology (blood banking), molecular diagnostics, cytology, histology, andrology, and serology/immunology. They run analyzers, prepare and examine specimens, verify results against quality-control standards, troubleshoot equipment, and consult with physicians when results need clinical context.

Florida licenses clinical laboratory professionals in two main tiers — Technologist (broad supervisory and complex testing authority) and Technician (more focused testing authority under technologist supervision) — as well as Directors and Supervisors of clinical laboratories. Workplaces include hospital laboratories, reference laboratories, physician office laboratories, blood banks, public health labs, and specialty molecular and pathology labs. Their accuracy directly influences patient diagnosis, treatment decisions, and public health surveillance across the state.

Licensing in Florida

To become licensed in Florida, candidates must meet education requirements for their category, complete approved clinical training, and pass a recognized national certifying examination (such as ASCP-BOC) in their specialty. Florida issues category-specific licenses (for example, in hematology, microbiology, or chemistry), and applicants choose their specialties at the time of application. Licenses are renewed every two years with documented continuing education in the licensed specialty. The Florida Board of Clinical Laboratory Personnel oversees licensure and discipline.

How to verify or report

Verify a clinical laboratory license through the Florida MQA license search. To report errors, unlicensed testing, or unsafe lab practice, file through the Florida Department of Health complaint form or call 850-488-0796.

Data Disclaimer — Data sourced from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS): National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES), Open Payments program, Medicare Provider Utilization and Payment Data, and Provider Enrollment & Certification data (PECOS). Published under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). This website is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or authorized by CMS, HHS, or the U.S. Government. Data may contain errors as reported to CMS by providers and reporting entities. Payments from industry are legal and do not indicate wrongdoing. Medicare data reflects only patients aged 65+ or those with qualifying disabilities. For corrections, contact CMS directly. This information does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as the sole basis for choosing a healthcare provider. Procedure descriptions use plain language and do not reference CPT® codes, which are copyrighted by the American Medical Association. Full methodology → · Report a data error → · Privacy policy →