overgrowth
- 12 May 2005 22:21
Mediwatch is a small
company destined to become a much bigger fish by the time this year is
out.
Mediwatch are already a market leader in urological medical diagnostics
equipement and are currently exporting their products throughout the UK,
Canada, Europe, India and Japan.
That doesn't leave much of the globe left for them to capture - until
you remember the good ol' US and China.
These are the two massive markets which are destined to be added to MDW's
export client portfolio by the end of 2005.
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The company is currently
heavily undervalued. This is probably because Mediwatch's speciality is
not a very glamourous business to be in as their equipment is used extensively
to diagnose prostate cancer in men and other nasty urological conditions
affecting both men and women. However, don't let that put you off investing
in these guys. This is big business and is growing at an exponential rate
as more and more people globally become health-aware as they get older.
Mediwatch normally
supply their products through to global markets via distribution agreements.
They already have the best of distribution partners in the well known
US medical distributor CR Bard who supply Canada and Europe and GE Medical
who supply Japan. The UK business is handled by Mediwatch's own dedicated
sales team.
US FDA approval was
gained for MDW's products at the start of last year, however a whole year
of US legal wrangling meant that they were unable to seek a suitable partner
for the crucial distribution agreement until the start of this year. This
distribution agreement is expected by the board to have a "significant
effect" on the share price so they are reluctant to give any clues
as to when it will be signed, sealed and delivered. The general consensus
is that this US distribution agreement will be announced in July/August.
In China and Hong Kong, MDW have done things the other way round. They
have set up distribution agreements with major Asian medical equipment
distributors and have stock already out there waiting to sell into the
markets - all they are waiting for is SDA approval (which is a "rubber
stamp") from the Chinese authorities - this can take anything up
to 12 months to come through and MDW applied during Autumn 2004 - so even
more good news coming soon this year.
Epidemiological data from British Association of Urology conference last year: On average 30-45% of all men between the age of 50 and 70 have at least one PSA test per year in the US / Italy / Australia.
If that's not enough
to convince you to invest a few hard earned coppers in MDW, they are also
developing a PSA stick test product (PSAWatch) which is revolutionary and causing
some excitement in medical circles. This product can also be adapted (at
very low cost) for a whole spectrum of medical disciplines from Cardiology
to Veterinary Practice! This product is likely to be released in the next
few weeks. Philip Stimpson the CEO has said that this product is going
to be their "gold mine" - I'm sure it will prove to be ours
too.
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banjomick
- 01 Sep 2005 17:07
- 595 of 1497
Does'nt take much for this one to rise (said the vicar.....),another good day.
banjomick
- 01 Sep 2005 21:33
- 596 of 1497
Very interesting article:
'But D'Amico has already gone out on a limb by advising that all men get PSA tests at age 35 to establish a benchmark.'
***********************************************
Think the above is the way forward....Early testing twice a year (IMHO)build up a chart.What ever level you are at at 35 then getting regular checks would then,maybe,point to possible problems or call for more frequent checks.
The more checks you have the more accurate view of a persons PSA activity will be seen.
Full article:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/08/17/opinion/snpsa.php
banjomick
- 01 Sep 2005 21:47
- 597 of 1497
From the great Dr T.Ming Chu
http://www.azcentral.com/health/men/articles/0807prostate-CR.html
banjomick
- 02 Sep 2005 01:08
- 598 of 1497
Well I thought it was interesting!
banjomick
- 02 Sep 2005 01:10
- 599 of 1497
So in conclusion (over my posts from the last few weeks/months):
It can be seen that the PSA test is not the perfect answer for direct diagnosis for cancer of the prostate but it is all we have got and probably for the next ten years.
It also can be seen that a lot of work is being done in refining PSA results to pick up other cancers.
There is growing debate on testing for PSA levels at a younger age,to enable a chart to be built up,so that any peaks/troughs can be observed and action taken.
Due to the ever ageing population and through medical advances,people,when correctly diagnosed with cancer of the prostate,are being treated at an older age limit(there was a lower cut off age when an operation would be declined)
There are more accurate tests for cancer of the prostate but they involve a hospital visit(WD could give more details)
At the present time if you want a PSA test you go to your GP give a blood sample and off it goes to the lab. up to a week later you hopefully get YOUR results back.
If you have had the operation.. you still have to go for regular PSA checks....and await your results.
The PSAwatch along with the BioScan will enable the GP to carry out PSA tests and give results within near normal surgery times!
This will be a big saving and enable more frequent tests to be carried out at the GP's discretion at a fraction of the cost.
The BioScan has the ability to send information to a central database!!
Loads more to say but the wife is calling me,won't tell you what she is calling me though -lol
moneyplus
- 02 Sep 2005 12:14
- 601 of 1497
hope so--I'm holding on to mine should we be looking at up to a year for this one to really take off?
moneyplus
- 02 Sep 2005 14:40
- 603 of 1497
cheers OG-I'll hold and look forward to it.
banjomick
- 05 Sep 2005 23:03
- 604 of 1497
og post 602-verisimilitude
banjomick
- 12 Sep 2005 00:38
- 605 of 1497
At least the Scottish are on the ball:
CONCLUSION
Future trends in prostate cancer will depend greatly on the uptake of PSA testing. This will, if high, in turn identify more men with early disease, for whom radical surgical or other treatments will be considered, and this could have a major impact on urology and oncology services. Clinical trial data, both on the value of PSA testing and the benefits of treatment will have a major impact on these trends. It is likely, whatever the true outcome, that the optimum management of prostate cancer will require more resources, and designated services dedicated to its treatment
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/library3/health/csatp-15.asp
scotinvestor
- 12 Sep 2005 06:08
- 606 of 1497
Us Scottish are always on the ball.............did you all see us last week beating Norway in norway. We also just drew with the mighty Italy.
Happy days are coming again.................that is until we play Faroes Island, haha
banjomick
- 12 Sep 2005 20:40
- 607 of 1497
scot,yes i actually watched it in a pub in edinburgh while waiting to see Alison Krauss at the playhouse.Didn't know we got beat until next day...was a good day-lol
MDW anyone got any news??
banjomick
- 22 Sep 2005 12:28
- 608 of 1497
Good to see a bit of recovery after the last few weeks.
banjomick
- 22 Sep 2005 14:59
- 610 of 1497
og,
Regarding the USA deal,I think it's quite possibe the FDA approval will be sooner than you think.
The PSA test as a test has already got FDA approval and according to the FDA website the average time for approval is 9 months,do you know when or if they applied to FDA?
"(another research opportunity for you!)."....cheers matey,fed up now regarding reading about PSA testing,I should have been awarded a degree in the subject by now :-))
Good post by the way og-cheers
banjomick
- 22 Sep 2005 19:37
- 611 of 1497
A bit of fun as we are now heading back up:
http://www.laserp.com/dueling_banjos.htm
banjomick
- 03 Oct 2005 23:23
- 612 of 1497
here we see again that small + volume can cause a tick up,great share to watch and own.
Treblewide
- 04 Oct 2005 01:24
- 613 of 1497
still got huge concerns over the cash position...and a deal that has taken 18 months to negotiate...now i run a sales team of 8 sales folk...if one of them had a deal that had not closed in this long...i would think it is nonsense, if something does not close in 18 months it will never close....remember it took Oracle only 14 months to buy Peoplesoft via the monopolies and mergers commisson and against a hugely resilient board....makes you wonder what they are still talking about
cash runs out in 9 months, if we get a close below 9p i will dump what i have left, which looks like being soon
T
chocolat
- 04 Oct 2005 02:15
- 614 of 1497
Ok mcmardypants - gonna stick my neck out and say I think it's all north from here :)
I fully expect to be squelched if I'm wrong :S