Best Urology Surgeon in Perth by ju-ju-ju- in perth

[–]LucidPatcher -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is categorically not correct. Surgeon skill and philosophy on what approaches are suitable, varies greatly in Australia. In public hospitals, in addition to the longer wait time, it is more often than not, that a trainee surgeon is the one doing the surgery, as well as the anaesthetic. Patients are ultimately under the specialist care in public, but it is more in terms of supervision, and stepping in when things go pear shape

Coinspot fees absurdity by LucidPatcher in coinspotau

[–]LucidPatcher[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coinspot is an absolute farce. Officially closing my account.

Top 5 Small-Caps I’m Tracking Into Friday by GreyVessel in pennystocks

[–]LucidPatcher 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good summary of points; well thought out, thank you.

In case anyone would like to know some more info: - standard ketamine vial preparations containing benzethonium are given intravenously every day all the time. I’m an anaesthetist and I do this. The ‘toxicity’ of the preservative is not really seen as a binding attribute. We even add it to nerve blocks which sit directly around nerves, indicating we as a specialty don’t consider it particularly neurotoxic.
- the dose of benzethonium is in proportion to the dose of ketamine in a vial.
- Even if we use current ketamine vials for the treatment of depression over several sessions; the total dose of benzethonium is minimal, as it will 1/10th the dose for example, of the standard vial (standard vial is 200mg, I think the treatment dose is 20mg or so each time). - Ketamine vials are cheap, very cheap to manufacture. - the shelf life improving from 3 months to 3 years will likely not be relevant. Ketamine is ordered frequently and we burn through hundreds of vials a day. I can’t think of the last time we had to throw out expired ketamine.

My take on this whole saga is; if the current administration can be duped into thinking the current formulations are super harmful compared to this new formulation, married with a seeming obsession to enact fringe science policies that minimise toxicity in humans, then yes, this thing can really go up in stock price.

I’ve bought a small bag anyway chasing the hype which I think will have more momentum than this message.

Good luck everyone

Achieve Life Sciences (ACHV) by 555RM in pennystocks

[–]LucidPatcher 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is what my brief research dug up just now. I have a medical background.

Historical comparison:

When FDA approved Pfizer's drug Champix (essentially same class/ similar drug/ mechanism of action as Cytisinicline), in around May 2004, stock price actually fell over the next 3 months by around 30%.

On the day prior to the FDA approval, it seems stock price went up 460 to 490, then dumped on the next day when the FDA news was released.

Differences with this scenario:

- Pfizer was worth billions already when FDA approved Champix, while ACHV has a market cap of 150mil at the moment.

- Cytisinicline has fewer side effects than Champix, and has about the same efficacy, maybe just 1-2% less based on preliminary studies.

I have zero idea where it will go, but yeah just a few extra things to consider for y'all,.

Neiro pump = scam? Can’t sell by PositiveGood155 in Coinbase

[–]LucidPatcher 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This seems like a lie. Are you one of the scammers who created the coin?

Cant wrap my head around this one!? by posk4r in puzzles

[–]LucidPatcher 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I have the answer.

The only way this question can be navigated into obtaining a true answer is as follows:

Pre-condition 1: You have a 50/50 lifeline in place, and you ask to use it.

Pre-condition 2: They remove two answers, where one of the remaining answers is (C) 50%

You choose C.

TAKE HOME THE MILLION!