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kvenne

08/23/17 4:35 PM

#112770 RE: ralphey #112766

Sorry but you cannot answer that for sure. Did you spend the previous 12 hours with the patient to be sure he didn't have a week twinkie moment. I bet not.

Since we are on a public forum hiding many realities nothing is for sure or real here.

Many on this board have talked with cardiologists and the like and have there own RWE data. They have done there research on Jelis and the many medical research papers and watching the scripts grow and know that is speaks volumes more than your anonymous posts here.

Again I am not attacking you as you are entitled to your opinion I am just pointing out the fact that no one on this board should be or is making investment decisions on what they read here alone. Yet you come across as an expert expecting us to only use your posts as to how we should invest. That is what is rubbing people the wrong way. FYI.

Call us canary haters or to blind to see the wondrous truths you bring us just know this we are not swayed from our research by your posts on this anonymous message board.

Again best of luck to you in your practice and future investments.

Webster_iam

08/23/17 5:36 PM

#112778 RE: ralphey #112766

Ralphy,

You keep shooting your eye out.....Get it? A Christmas Story? Anyway, first to have amassed 8000 patients you must live in a booming metropolis and have a thriving practice, which must mean a good reputation, spending an adequate amount of time with you patients and be a relatively thorough doc "First do no harm" right? You say you don't have the resources or time to look into why a proven medication isn't working on a high percentage of your patients?!! Most Docs RX a drug, then schedule a follow up in a month or so to evaluate the effectiveness of said RX. After labs, bad results, they will inquire about dosing, the RX brand name on the RX bottle, etc. That's just basic patient care. Many pharmacists will steer a patient to an OTC or supplement if available, but you don't seem to know that. You just DC the med because some random visit in the future with said patient reveals a lack of desired results.
You're an idiot and your canary analogy is very indicative of the archaic medicine you practice.

Webster