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  • Advice Pool - How You Can Really Read A Smile

    It’s often said that when Life, or The Universe, has something to teach you, it keeps putting that lesson in front of you until you finally get it.

    (Equally, you could argue that someti
    According to USFDA, a combination product is one composed of any combination of a drug and device; biological product and device; drug and biological product
    mes you miss something the first zillion times, because you’re not programmed to notice it. So you keep attracting it in the first place because you don’t see it coming.)

    Still, event
    ; or drug, device, and biological product and fixed dose combination would include two or more combinations of drug.

    Examples of combination products may in
    ually, the sheer weight of repetition brings it to your attention. Even if it’s something you’ve automatically accepted since as far back as you can remember, at some point you finally
    lude drug-coated devices, drugs packaged with delivery devices in medical kits, and drugs and devices packaged separately but intended to be used together.

    cotton onto the idea that it’s time to revise your views.

    My mother was a great one for lecturing me on the value of a smile; usually when I was feeling thoroughly miserable or peeved,
    here is enormous increase in the number of combination products entering the market in the recent years. Combination products have proven advantages but fixe
    as a small child. “People won’t like you if you don’t smile”, she’d say, baring her teeth in a smile that stopped at the corners of her lips.

    As ever, in one sense she was right. Not
    d dose combinations are still in the process of convincing regulatory authority on their advantages over the single ingredient formulations.

    Combination pro
    least because the opposite is true: people tend to be better disposed to people who smile.

    It’s a reflex thing. A smile can be very reassuring. It can be like waving a white flag, or l
    ucts have become life saving products for the pharmaceutical companies who doesn’t have many innovative molecules in their product pipeline and have been inc
    ike the sun coming out after a storm. Anyone who has ever experienced an abusive relationship becomes expert at watching the abuser’s face for the hint of the smile signifying that, for
    easingly used in the product life cycle management. Even the companies having product patents are trying to extend their product life cycle through the combi
    the time being, the explosion is over.

    How often do we take a smile as meaning that things are more right, than wrong, with our world? that the person smiling is friendly, rather than
    nation products and maximize the revenues. But the companies involved in this practice are overlooking that they are burdening the patients both economically
    hostile?

    Over the past four weeks, I’ve had several intimations that I need to be less careless about the value I habitually ascribe to a smile.

    Now this is not to say that I’m in favo
    and physically. They need to rightly judge the benefits of the combination products and they have to even look at the risks involved when combining the produ
    ur of meeting smiles with suspicion. A smile, as the clich? goes, really can brighten your day.

    Most people smile to convey a degree of genuine warmth and friendliness. Some don’t. Th
    ts. Some of the combination products were well accepted by physicians while others suffered. Companies involved in development of combination products are fi
    is is why a smile should not automatically outweigh whatever accompanies it.

    Frankly, for me a smile often has. Not that I was aware of it before. I’ve interpreted a smile in the same
    ding difficulty in defining their combination products and facing various challenges from selecting a combination to marketing it.

    Following aspects would a
    way as the wagging tail of a dog: friendly intentions. I’ve done so even when the words issuing from the person’s lips have been quite savage. Especially if they’ve laughed mid-senten
    dd to the challenges in developing combination products:

    Which markets to tap where the combination products can do fairly well?
    Which combination prod
    ce. The sting in the words must have been unintentional, if they were smiling and laughing.

    Not so. There are some calculating people who deliberately use a smile to disarm. Why shou
    cts are meaningful and rational?
    Which therapeutic categories to select?
    Which Combinations can address unmet needs of the patients?
    Do combin
    ld we presume to understand a person’s intentions better than the person him (or her) self?

    People may not always choose their words altogether consciously, but they do choose them accu
    tions increase the patient compliance?
    What would be the developing cost?
    How to tackle the risks encountered during combination product developmen
    rately.

    Much as they may make some effort to mislead as to their real intentions, they tend not to work too hard at it. They’re unlikely to conceal all the clues.

    After a few experien
    t?

    As combination products don't fit into the traditional categories of drugs, medical devices, or biological products, the USFDA is in the process of devel
    ces in the past month when a smile has been used to mask hostility, I’ve resolved to be… not less trusting so much as more aware.

    I’ve started to assess what I experience in a more meth
    ping new procedures for reviewing their safety, efficacy and quality.

    Professional from academic institutions, pharmaceutical industries, health care indust
    odical way, by looking at the words, the smile and the left side of the person’s face, especially the left eye.

    The overall view that you get of a face comes from the right, or public,
    y and representatives from various regulatory agencies are working out to design the regulatory requirements for manufacture and sale of combination products
    side. The left side, when you start to look at it, may be quite different. The left eye may look colder than you might expect. Now, admittedly I'm not a professional Face Reader; it's
    .

    As there is an increasing trend of the combination products companies manufacturing such products should be able to tackle the problems involved in the de
    not my sphere of expertise. But you don’t need to be a Face Reader to see the expression of an eye; you only have to look.

    Three criteria have to be better than one. Abuse comes in
    elopment. They need to be wiser in analyzing the market trends and the regulatory requirements.

    Companies that provide selfless information through particip
    a vast range of gradations. Learning to pick up small scale, preliminary abuse can only help you to put more effective defences in place against all future abuse.

    (C) 2006 Annie Kaszin


    tion in industry events and feedback to regulatory authorities would be able to face the challenges and will be successful in developing combination products

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