smartcooky
Penultimate Amazing
I have worked in a lab, and there is zero risk of cross contamination if you follow a protocol. Furthermore, you split your sample before you do anything, keeping as much of the original as you can and test only from a fraction. That way, you can and will retest before submitting a positive result, as well as leave enough for someone else to repeat the test.
If you need to rush things, you can mix fractions of all samples, and test the mixture - if that doesn't match, you only have to do that one test to get a negative.
Ok, but if you want to be sure that something like the subject of this thread doesn't happen, then surely you would have to ensure that any testing of a second split from the remaining sample MUST be done by a different lab tech.
I still think the best option with the fewest questions is to send a second sample to a different lab for parallel testing. That means a different lab tech, and different equipment, and it is certainly cheaper than testing four samples at the same lab.