Your suggestion that multiple lists are in play is very likely correct!! I hadn't looked at it in terms of 'lists' but the more I consider what you've suggested, the more I think you are correct.
Certainly seems we'll know more when last quarter's 10Q is submitted to the SEC and made public in a few weeks, and especially when this current quarter's financials are published. Those will certainly contain interesting lists for shareholders to consider.
VALIMED 115 Units, allocated for both the national and international markets
CHETRY: Right. Well, bottom line, before we let you go. Thumb's up or thumb's down? Is this something you think more police departments should have?
TUCKER: Absolutely. I think it's going to be a great tool and I think law enforcement across the United States need it to help battle the methamphetamine problem.
CHETRY: And it's a big one as we said. Sheriff Stephen Tucker with the Greenlee County, Arizona Sheriff's Department. Again, Sunny, we had a chance to hear a little bit about what he said. Are any of your concerns allayed by hearing, at least his take on how to use.
SUNNY HOSTIN, AMERICAN MORNING, LEGAL ANALYST: They really are. I loved that I heard that the law enforcement are there to protect our rights and our fourth amendment rights. And so everything that he said is the right thing. He said we're not just scanning people for no reason at all. I'm not going to be walking down the street, you're not going to be walking down the street in Arizona and they're not going to be doing that sort of thing. What they're doing is that if they have a reasonable suspicion that you have meth or they've seen the meth or there is a traffic stop, a legal traffic stop, they're going to use it to confirm that what they have seen is meth. What they have seen in plain view or what they have found. That's a very different scenario than sort of all the scenarios that I've been thinking of that scared the heck out of me.
CHETRY: In a way, he is saying you can confirm it so much faster than the type of testing done before so perhaps people who are innocent aren't going to get any scenario.
HOSTIN: Absolutely. He is saying, you know, instead of law enforcement having to touch and handle methamphetamine, which sometimes for prosecutors is, problematic down the line, they can use this gun. I loved everything that I heard from him today.
“Sunny” Hostin (born 1968) is CNN’s legal analyst for American Morning and a Managing Director at Kroll Inc., a private investigation and security firm.
Jun 11, 2007 ... round of beta testing and prepared the ValiMed™ LVM (a mobile, battery operated fentanyl detector) for beta testing,” said Mr. Philips. ... www.cdex-inc.com/pr/61107.html
"Errors in compounding these types of medications are rare. However, when they occur they can have a significant negative impact on patients and staff," Stevenson said. "We know from having this technology in place we've deterred five errors that might have happened. I really believe having technology like this needs to be the standard around the country."
Software resources The ValiMed Patient Safety Solution provides validation of IV admixtures (including high alert medications) at the time of compounding in the pharmacy.
Improving Medication Safety: Independent 18 Month Study of ValiMed™ Medication Validation System by CDEX Published in American Journal of Health-System Pharmacists ValiMed™ detected five potentially serious medication errors while consistently validating the correct medication solutions during an 18 month study at a major University Hospital.
Tucson, Arizona – January 7, 2008 – CDEX Inc. (OTCBB: CEXI) announces publication of an 18 month independent study of the ValiMed™ Medication Validation System at the C.S. Mott Children's Hospital in the University of Michigan Health System in the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacists. “During the 18 months since [ValiMed] was implemented, five potentially serious medication errors have been detected and avoided,” the report stated. “[ValiMed] consistently validated the correct solution, while dependably detecting as invalid the wrong drug or concentrations that departed substantially from the targeted standard.” (Am J Health-Syst Pharm--Vol 65, pp 49-54, Jan 1, 2008, "Enhanced Photoemission Spectroscopy for Verification of High-Risk IV Medications”).
Yes indeed, I now think it would be reasonable to suspect there are a NUMBER of lists. CDEX is probably checking them twice to see who has been naughty and nice. LOL!
sanddollar, you ask "Is there another list? " I now suspect there are a number of lists. Good question. Thanks!