Beth & Atlas
Member Since 2010
Looks like I'm an early bird on this board! Well, today should be an interesting day as I've got 3 pet sits to do this morning, the Cat Commitee Chairperson visiting around 1:00, and I still have a Moen faucet Cartridge that needs replaced...plus my Atlas!
Boy has he been cranky the past few days. Swatting and nipping at everybody! Poor MudCat is being hunted down, Krueger gave him a hiss to knock it off, and even I had to toss a blanket over my head in bed to keep from being nipped! Don't know if the lantus is causing this and he just feel this bad as his sugars are riding too high or what?
I happened to trip across an interesting blog article and a question I had as well: http://www.diabetesmine.com/2008/07/hum ... works.html
Human Guinea Pigs: How to Tell if Your Insulin Still Works
With all the talk these days of the price of things in health care, I think it is a valid question. It is interesting that these human diabetics often have the same doubts and questions regarding potency & effectiveness.
I know when I worked in the field doing hazmat remediation many of our field test kits were a plain simple yes or no hit. A positive hit was positive for the presence of the chemical. A negative could be a false negative. So when you got a negative you immediately tested a second time. Two negatives it was most likely clean (98% of the time) meaning levels were not there or too low to be regulated. A negative & positive was a positive. So a sample had to been sent out for evaluation by a lab.
So in my thinking, why couldn't a field test be developed to test for the decomposition products? Like the PCB test I used to field test for, anything over a certain amount is a definite throw it out. At what point would that be and would it be cost effective to the consumer? 10%, 15%, 25%?
viewtopic.php?f=9&t=24061
Boy has he been cranky the past few days. Swatting and nipping at everybody! Poor MudCat is being hunted down, Krueger gave him a hiss to knock it off, and even I had to toss a blanket over my head in bed to keep from being nipped! Don't know if the lantus is causing this and he just feel this bad as his sugars are riding too high or what?
I happened to trip across an interesting blog article and a question I had as well: http://www.diabetesmine.com/2008/07/hum ... works.html
Human Guinea Pigs: How to Tell if Your Insulin Still Works
With all the talk these days of the price of things in health care, I think it is a valid question. It is interesting that these human diabetics often have the same doubts and questions regarding potency & effectiveness.
I know when I worked in the field doing hazmat remediation many of our field test kits were a plain simple yes or no hit. A positive hit was positive for the presence of the chemical. A negative could be a false negative. So when you got a negative you immediately tested a second time. Two negatives it was most likely clean (98% of the time) meaning levels were not there or too low to be regulated. A negative & positive was a positive. So a sample had to been sent out for evaluation by a lab.
So in my thinking, why couldn't a field test be developed to test for the decomposition products? Like the PCB test I used to field test for, anything over a certain amount is a definite throw it out. At what point would that be and would it be cost effective to the consumer? 10%, 15%, 25%?
viewtopic.php?f=9&t=24061