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Biotech / Medical : Chromatics Color Sciences International. Inc; CCSI
CCSI 28.71-2.4%Nov 4 3:59 PM EST

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To: Gurupup who wrote (1402)3/17/1998 3:31:00 PM
From: Gurupup  Read Replies (1) of 5736
 
I am taking the liberty of posting some of the responses I have received from lurkers, who also happen to be in the medical profession, and I thought they might be of interest.

Quick comment regarding the e-mail you have received from physicians:
In my opinion, the need to monitor bilirubin levels in newborns who
are jaundiced will always be there. We need to monitor more than once
daily on those that are close to dangerous levels, but we are always
reluctant for extra heel pricks and lab time. This is a definite
market. Once you know if hyperbilirubinemia is conjugated or
unconjugated, you don't continue to fractionate it even when drawing
blood. You follow the total bilirubin because it is faster, cheaper,
and tells you which direction you are headed. This will not limit the
ccsi device in it's role to monitor elevated levels. There are also
adult patients in the ICU who need bili levels monitored closely, but
this is a much smaller market, probably insignificant compared to the
newborns. I also don't think that having the same DRG or diagnostic
code used when ordering the test has anything to do with expected
reimbursement rates. If we can beat blood sticks on the basis of
labor cost alone, I think even a slightly higher cost for new
technology replacing manhours would be expected. This is America. If
we have the cheapest test (based on true cost-based accounting
including manhours), then we get to charge more. When this stops,
there will be no new technology introduced. Just my opinions, but
food for thought. By the way, why in the hell would new (or old)
short sellers jump in so strong today when we are expecting to hear
good news soon.
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