There are many different types of pathologists. The least common type of pathologist, but most well-known, thanks to many true-crime TV shows and prime time crime dramas, is the forensic pathologist. The forensic pathologist works in conjunction with police and the coroner's office to solve homicides and mysterious deaths.
Not all pathologists work to solve crimes.Others work in a lab, hospital, or morgue, to help confirm disease diagnoses and causes of illness or death. Another type of pathologist is the dermatopathologist, who analyze skin cell samples to diagnose skin cancers and other skin diseases and disorders. There are also pathologists who specialize in blood analysis, and other subspecialties.
Becoming a pathologist entails one of the lengthiest education and training tracks of all physicians. Requirements include four years of undergraduate study, plus four years of medical school, plus a minimum of four to five years of post-graduate training in pathology residency.
- Medical technologist
- Forensic technician or morturary assistant
- Cytotechnologist
- Medical Lab Technician
- You enjoy anatomy and physiology. For example: as a kid, you played with a toy skeleton instead of a doll or action figure.
- You prefer to work in a lab behind a microscope, than interfacing with patients all day.
- You enjoy solving mysteries or finding answers to the unknown.
- You are drawn to the scientific, analytical, technical aspect of medicine.

