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Well done Michael - hope that's got you where you want to be. Good luck in the next one x
Looks like we're having all of yesterday's action again... within the hour this time. Lol
I'll settle for 20% everyday for 5 days.... not so much a roller coaster as a nice jaunt over the country lanes....
well well well....
bought on the vague promise of re-direction in mid feb. Missed the opportunity to sell on some mad peak on 19th. Bagged today (first ever :) ). As ever I guess - wish I had more lol. more in Arb than here - hope that can get some go soon!
Mr India. It's partly because the NHS doesn't buy tests, it buys covid testing services through NHS Test and Trace - therefore what you need is a karge covid testing service provider who will manage everything from swabbing to phoning results through and managing data, to decide they want to use GDR tests.
The other problem is that large scientific partly publicly funded institutions have released methods of doing PCR tests that work out cheaper for centralised testing systems.
Ctrl + f... "bead" appears 4 times. 3 bead based products for the RAN extraction step.... Which incidentally is the same process the paragraph referring to beads in the Denmark doc was talking about.
Shall we try and make sure the next high is based on facts and is not full of hot air?
I can't say either way.
But it seems the connected institution has some reasonably high end academic caliber and back in March 2020 appears to have developed it's own solution to the shortage of reagents.
https://en.ssi.dk/news/news/2020/03-ssi--solves-essential-covid19-testing-deficiency-problem
Back then many of the institutions in the UK were also developing and publishing methods of PCR testing for covid that work out an awful lot cheaper than GDR. That's why these national based testing systems are unlikely to use us - we need private labs where the cost pressure doesn't fall on the taxpayer really.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-56556806
Human Errors and some liquid handling robots.
I work in Hospital, we're putting together plans for what we need this financial year, we're sending staff to all the conferences, we have strategic development plans.... last year was a write off - it's a new normal this year and it can't include leaving kids to go deaf.... I tell you what - I'll find the person responsible at our place and make sure they know about this test and the guidance
The nice thing here is the huge cost advantage to health systems. Caring for deaf people for a lifetime is expensive!! And do the test represents really excellent potential for long term cost savings. The covid test doesn't really hit the right notes for heavily centralised systems but the AIHL test absolutely does.
Antibiotic Induced Hearing Loss, the clue is in the title. It is proposed the test is given to all babies who are about to be prescribed the antibiotic, which last year amounted to 80,000 in the UK. The test is a genetic test for the mutation/gene sequence that is responsive for the onset of deafness after the antibiotic course. The test allows for alternative antibiotics to be used appropriately. The market size for UK,EU and US was said to be 30M to 50M at the presentation.
Hi, I've been looking into publicly available import and export data for countries around the world. Some of you might have seen that I posted a link to the UK webpage a few days ago, which lists all of Genedrives imports and exports with about a 2 month delay (I think Jan 21 was published March 12th). The US data isn't available free, but does seem to be package specific and include descriptors of contents. I was just having a quick look for Thai equivalent data too. I just wondered if anyone else had tried this? I can imagine for trading type compaines it's a very useful resource to get data in between financial updates etc. You can't expect an RNS for every shipment for ever.
Spain to demand negative test at French border
From next Tuesday, people crossing the land border from France into Spain will have to present a negative PCR test taken in the last 72 hours, the Spanish government has announced.
From bbc. Good news for better virus control, and testing providers. Very unlikely to be state funded or organised.
I had to turn off after the presentation - too much dross and stupidity here - looks like there's been a good chat this eve though. I hope a good break is had by all and in the coming weeks the true value is built from these undervalued scraps. It's an excellent company in my mind. Xx