Home
Login Register
EFH Ltd    Last:0.045   -

BIO PHARMA company do research on MEDICAL DISEASES

 Post Reply 61-80 of 4174
 
LZLOmega
    20-Oct-2021 10:55  
Contact    Quote!
Gg,

noobnub      ( Date: 01-Oct-2021 13:09) Posted:

bought 215 try my luck

 
 
LZLOmega
    19-Oct-2021 17:13  
Contact    Quote!
why drop leh
 
 
niteowl68
    18-Oct-2021 11:07  
Contact    Quote!
Chart looks like in the next wave up... ride the trend.. 
 

 
niteowl68
    18-Oct-2021 10:14  
Contact    Quote!
Correction over.. can consider buying now.. lots of potential for this counter, huat ah.. 
Dyodd
 
 
Mystic_D_001
    14-Oct-2021 13:35  
Contact    Quote!
205 mouth to come ? Watch for it.
DYODD
 
 
shk363
    12-Oct-2021 12:22  
Contact    Quote!
more non PCR testing required as travelling restarts
 

 
Mystic_D_001
    12-Oct-2021 11:49  
Contact    Quote!
$0.20 safe price to collect this one.
Can sense the players flushing and collecting at this price.

Good luck. DYODD. Will collect too
 
 
noobnub
    01-Oct-2021 13:09  
Contact    Quote!
bought 215 try my luck
 
 
tedlim
    29-Sep-2021 08:16  
Contact    Quote!

Some wealthy Americans count antibodies ' like calories'
  Medical concierge services are offering coronavirus antibody tests as a perk, despite caveats about their usefulness.

PUBLISHEDSEP 28, 2021, 3:00 PM SGT
FACEBOOKTWITTER
NEW YORK (NYTIMES) - Before Ms Juhi Singh, 46, who owns a high-end wellness centre on New York City' s Upper East Side, jetted off to the Amalfi Coast last month, she packed her bathing suits and left her 10-year-old son with his grandmother.

Her driver took her to Sollis Healthcare, a medical concierge service in Manhattan, to measure her antibodies for the coronavirus. She had received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in February and wanted to see if her immunity was still robust before joining friends at a five-star resort overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

" I wouldn' t go on a trip without my antibodies," Ms Singh said. " It' s nerve-racking, but my numbers have been good."


An e-mail arrived 24 hours later with her results: 14.8 arbitrary units per millilitre. Although medical experts warn that an antibody count cannot tell if somebody is protected against the virus, patients have been reading into the numbers anyway.

" Mine have dipped a little bit, but I know my vaccine is still working and I am still protected," Ms Singh said.

Antibody testing on a monthly or regular basis has become a common practice among certain members of the nervous affluent class.


" A lot of my patients and some of my friends are counting their antibodies," Ms Singh said. " It' s the Upper East Side, the Hamptons circles. It' s like dinner conversation at this point. It almost feels like counting calories."

Medical concierge services, including Sollis, have started offering antibody tests as a perk to clients. " I check them for people daily," said Dr Scott Braunstein, the medical director of Sollis' office in Los Angeles.

My Concierge MD, an upscale healthcare practice in Beverly Hills, California, has set up a drive-through service where clients, including celebrities and Hollywood executives, can be tested without getting out of their G-Wagons and Teslas.

" We do it with a finger prick," said Dr David Nazarian, who runs the practice. " Let' s just say with the Delta variant, the test sites are busy right now."


But Professor Arthur Caplan, a bioethics expert at New York University' s (NYU) Grossman School of Medicine, is concerned about the overuse of antibody tests.

" The doctors who are promoting them are not promoting good science," he said. " I think they are putting their patient at risk because there are no agreed-upon antibody levels."

Some people check their antibodies because they are immunocompromised or living with high-risk individuals. (Ms Singh is the caretaker for her 91-year-old grandmother.) Others do it for peace of mind before taking an international flight or attending a gala.

And there are those who just want to be armed with more information about their medical status, something that has become normalised in the era of health monitoring apps.

" Our patients are very analytical," said Dr Alan Viglione, who runs Montecito Concierge Medicine, a private healthcare provider in Montecito, California. " We have a lot of patients who want to know their numbers. It' s become a new trend to know what your antibodies are."

MORE ON THIS TOPIC

Britain to begin offering Covid-19 antibody testing to general public
Some neutralising antibodies may worsen Covid-19: Scientists
Patients who get a low antibody count may decide to change their behaviours or " life choices" , Dr Braunstein said. " They might decide to skip that wedding. They might take extra precautions."

Some may opt to get a booster shot. Although the United States' Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorised booster shots only for those who are immunocompromised, there is some evidence that more than a million Americans have already received unauthorised third doses.

One medical concierge service has even encouraged high-risk patients to check their antibody levels before getting a booster shot - something that no public health agency has recommended.

Getting an antibody test - also known as a serology test - is a relatively easy procedure. Blood, drawn through a finger prick or vein, is screened for antibody proteins created by the immune system to fight infection or after vaccination. Antibody tests do not check for the virus itself and cannot be used to diagnose whether someone has Covid-19.

" It' s a simple blood test and we see the results the next day because there are a number of large labs across the country doing it," Dr Braunstein said. " It isn' t overly expensive. Most insurances will cover it, but if they don' t, it' s about US$100 (S$135) to $200."

But the results offer limited information. Current tests look only for antibodies for Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, and not for T cells, which play an important role in the body' s immune response.


Getting an antibody test - also known as a serology test - is a relatively easy procedure. PHOTO: AFP
It is also not clear what the antibody count means. For starters, different tests measure the strength of the antibodies differently. A person tested by Sollis, for example, may get a count of 20 or higher, while a different laboratory may give a result of 270 or higher. A person without antibodies would get a negative result. However, a higher number may not necessarily confer great immunity.

" We don' t have exact data on what a four means versus a 15," Dr Braunstein said. " You can' t specifically say that you are a nine and I am an eight, so you are more protected than me."

Indeed, the FDA does not recommend that people use antibody tests to gauge immunity and, in fact, warns of its potential risk. People who receive a high antibody count may take fewer precautions, such as mask wearing, that could result in infection or spread. (Dr Braunstein said " all of our patients are informed of this recommendation and advised to follow all CDC recommended safety measures, regardless of the test result" .)

" It can give you a false sense of security," said Prof Caplan, who also leads NYU' s division of medical ethics. " They might say, ' I got my antibody test, so I am not going to wear a mask or I am going to that concert, because I know I' m immune' which, in fact, they don' t know."

He is also concerned that people might use their antibody count as an excuse to skip a booster shot when the time comes. " Even if you have antibodies, it doesn' t mean you have enough to fight off new variants," he said.

Still, antibody counting has become a practice among the wealthy who regard their health as a full-time undertaking, where no medical test is too insignificant and no medical resource too expensive.

MORE ON THIS TOPIC

Did these billionaires, celebrities jump the Covid-19 vaccine queue?
UK' s $1.7 trillion Covid-19 wealth gain went mostly to the rich
" People read articles and get on the Internet and do research and want to do tests," Prof Caplan said. " But it is up to the doctor to filter that and calm me down, so I don' t spend money on useless or harmful things."

Medical concierge services, he argues, often do the opposite - that is, cater to their patients' wishes. " The problem is when you are a concierge practice, you have to honour what they want because they are paying you money to do what they want."

The poor, he said, often avoid medical tests because they are scared they will lose their health insurance or job if they get a bad result. " If it turns out you have low antibodies, all of a sudden, you might think, ' I can' t tell anybody about this, because my boss won' t let me come into work' ," Prof Caplan said. " The penalties for knowing more about bad health are not problems the rich face."

As fears mount, concierge doctors are offering other ways to gauge immunity. Sollis now offers a commercially available test for US$200 that checks for T cells.

" The test is much more difficult because there are only a few labs in the country doing this," Dr Braunstein said. " There is a seven-day turnaround with results, but we think it' s worth it."

" I have had two or three clients ask for T cell tests," added Dr Viglione of Montecito. " Right now, only speciality labs will do it, but in a month or so, I think it will be much more common. It' s trendy to have a lot of personal data."
 
 
Sibehboeng
    28-Sep-2021 17:33  
Contact    Quote!
Got go up will also go down. Means tomorrow will go up? Lol

TheMatrix      ( Date: 28-Sep-2021 16:17) Posted:

This stock omif goes up better don't chase unless the volume ultra high. Always a bull trap. How many retailer got stuck?

 

 
Starship
    28-Sep-2021 16:50  
Contact    Quote!


TheMatrix      ( Date: 28-Sep-2021 16:17) Posted:

This stock omif goes up better don't chase unless the volume ultra high. Always a bull trap. How many retailer got stuck?

 
 
TheMatrix
    28-Sep-2021 16:17  
Contact    Quote!
This stock omif goes up better don't chase unless the volume ultra high. Always a bull trap. How many retailer got stuck?
 
 
GGTTAANN
    28-Sep-2021 13:27  
Contact    Quote!
After lunch, hope got strength to climb up to 0.27 for today ! keep my finger X .
 

xKaiseRx      ( Date: 28-Sep-2021 08:46) Posted:

oh no... got feel it might retrace...

xKaiseRx      ( Date: 28-Sep-2021 08:10) Posted:

Agree on your 26 for today.. anything more is bonus... Fingers crosse


 
 
AnthonyWoodPeck
    28-Sep-2021 12:59  
Contact    Quote!

Nice pick on Biolidics at $0.187 by Mystic D. right before the big run up yesterday to close $0.240.

Medicals looks to be in play with cases going higher.

For investors, can watch the below closely.
- Asian Healthcare ($0.172/$0.173)
- Hyphens Pharma ($0.305/$0.310)

DYODD

Credits:
sgxpennystockstradingplan tele channel
 
 
xKaiseRx
    28-Sep-2021 11:45  
Contact    Quote!
Overwritten by Oilies today

tritonyeah6666      ( Date: 28-Sep-2021 09:50) Posted:

This counter has been pretty volatile

 

 
tritonyeah6666
    28-Sep-2021 09:50  
Contact    Quote!
This counter has been pretty volatile
 
 
xKaiseRx
    28-Sep-2021 09:40  
Contact    Quote!
dont keep say trap la.. u see hatten land first.

TheMatrix      ( Date: 28-Sep-2021 09:34) Posted:

So its another bull trap.. 

 
 
xKaiseRx
    28-Sep-2021 09:39  
Contact    Quote!
by right it shld be quite stale today... maybe try to hold 230 - 235 lor.. see if sentiment change then pushhhhhh
 
 
TheMatrix
    28-Sep-2021 09:34  
Contact    Quote!
So its another bull trap.. 
 
 
xKaiseRx
    28-Sep-2021 09:04  
Contact    Quote!
wah hard sia today
 
Important: Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy .