Anatomical Stewardship Group

Frequently asked questions

Answers about our services, fit, boundaries, process, and project types.

What does Anatomical Stewardship Group do?

Anatomical Stewardship Group helps small health-science education programs organize lab materials, compare vendors, plan purchases, and prepare instructor-ready documentation.

Who does Anatomical Stewardship Group work with?

We work with CNA programs, medical assistant programs, phlebotomy programs, nursing skills labs, A&P and biology labs, allied health education programs, and small museums or education centers.

Do you sell lab equipment?

No. We do not sell lab equipment. We provide research, comparison, planning, inventory, and documentation support to help programs make clearer purchasing decisions.

Do you provide medical or clinical advice?

No. Our services are for educational planning and general business communication. They are not medical, clinical, legal, or accreditation advice.

Do you provide legal or accreditation advice?

No. We do not provide legal, accreditation, or regulatory compliance advice. Programs should review final decisions with appropriate institutional, legal, compliance, procurement, and faculty stakeholders.

Can you help set up a CNA skills lab?

We can help CNA programs plan teaching-lab equipment categories, organize consumables, compare vendors, and prepare documentation such as checklists, station cards, and purchasing summaries.

Can you help compare vendors before we request quotes?

Yes. We prepare vendor comparison tables, budget options, equipment category lists, quote-request templates, consumables notes, and purchasing summaries.

Can you organize an existing anatomy or biology teaching collection?

Yes. We can help document models, charts, slides, lab supplies, storage locations, condition, replacement priorities, duplicates, and missing items.

What information should we prepare before contacting you?

Helpful information includes your program type, student cohort size, current lab setup, existing equipment list, budget range, timeline, purchasing constraints, and the main problem you are trying to solve.

How much do projects cost?

Example starting points include vendor research briefs from $750 and procurement comparison packets from $1,500 to $2,500. Larger lab readiness projects are quoted based on scope.

Have a project that needs structure?

Tell us about your lab, program, timeline, and documentation needs.