- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Let's go Brandon!
Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:50 am to Klark Kent
Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:50 am to Klark Kent
Maybe you can provide some advice for the OP here that makes perfect sense. Give it a go. Let's see who you blame it on.
Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:51 am to Sao
The company who makes the instrument we do this type of testing on has proprietary rights to the reagents and consumables needed. Again, other labs running the same tests on different instruments are having the same issues. Unprecedented in the 25 plus years I've been doing this.
Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:53 am to Mr Personality
Would have been a good stopping point...
Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:53 am to tigerbaiter
Soon it won't matter that you can't get reagents, because we are also running out of tubes to collect samples in. No samples no need for reagent.
This should be fun times to be a tech
This should be fun times to be a tech

Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:54 am to tigerbaiter
quote:
Unprecedented in the 25 plus years I've been doing this.
You think? Seems like a contingency plan since Q1 2020 would have been discussed.
2020.
Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:54 am to tigerbaiter
quote:
Would have been a good stopping point...


Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:57 am to Sao
Hard to come up with a plan for something that has never happened before. And there's really no solution when all possible alternatives are having the same issues. or worse.
Posted on 2/22/22 at 10:59 am to tigerbaiter
quote:
Covid
People still care about this crap?
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:01 am to East Coast Band
quote:
65 posts in 16 years?
How I know you are a gay? By your criticism being too low of a post count on a message board rather than any substantive critique of the actual post.
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:05 am to tigerbaiter
Supply chain issues have been around for quite some time
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:11 am to tigerbaiter
this is not even remotely new
we've been having arm wrestling matches for racks of 10uL pipette tips since like 2 years ago
we've been having arm wrestling matches for racks of 10uL pipette tips since like 2 years ago
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:11 am to tigerbaiter
quote:
Hard to come up with a plan for something that has never happened before. And there's really no solution when all possible alternatives are having the same issues. or worse.
Mmhmm. But hey, good luck with your sourcing, sincerely. Sorry Brandon did this to you.
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:13 am to tigerbaiter
quote:
Hard to come up with a plan for something that has never happened before. And there's really no solution when all possible alternatives are having the same issues. or worse.
have you been cryogenically frozen or did you recently emerge from an underground bunker or something?
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:14 am to tigerbaiter
quote:
The company who makes the instrument we do this type of testing on has proprietary rights to the reagents and consumables needed. Again, other labs running the same tests on different instruments are having the same issues. Unprecedented in the 25 plus years I've been doing this.
How do they do this?
Do they store it in a cartridge like printer ink with a chip so they know if it has been tampered or refilled unauthorized?
I am pretty sure anyone willing could produce alternatives, but if the solutions are locked down with chips then you are fricked.
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:21 am to Tarps99
quote:
Do they store it in a cartridge like printer ink with a chip so they know if it has been tampered or refilled unauthorized?
no idea what assays/platforms OP is using, but it's likely way more than just cracking something open to see how it works... reagents could be biological and be very difficult to characterize much less reproduce
Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:24 am to tigerbaiter
Jason Sutherland, the national sales and marketing manager of the life science supplier Celtic Molecular Diagnostics in Mowbray, South Africa, writes to The Scientist in an email. “Every plastic consumable that is required to run RT-PCR tests such as plates and pipette tips are being used in abundance and many of the suppliers are battling to keep up with the demand.”
Lab gloves can be particularly hard to come by, adds Sutherland. For more than a year, his company has been unable to procure any from its regular supplier in Germany as the country has stopped exporting them to prioritize domestic needs.
Even when products are available on the global market, the pandemic is stalling their delivery. A general drop in air traffic as well as a global shortage of shipping containers have meant both delays and inflated delivery prices. Staff shortages at ports and a congestion of container ships may have exacerbated the issue in New Zealand
Basant Giri of the Kathmandu Institute of Applied Sciences who specializes in developing low-cost analytical technology, says he worries that this could have long-term effects on lab supplies. During a four-month lockdown that ended in July 2020, air traffic stalled. He’s had to wait months for specific reagents for enzyme assays or standard reference materials for drug and antibiotic testing
Tuberculosis researcher André Loxton of Stellenbosch University and the South Africa Medical Research Council’s Centre for Tuberculosis Research was able to source some items from colleagues. But he’s been waiting weeks for other products
“It would be nice if some of the big biotech and pharma supply companies would start having more backups in terms of warehouses or stockpiles better distributed around the world,” adds Hwa, “so we’re not waiting for every single thing to come all the way from Europe or all the way from China.”
Labs Worldwide Still Struggling Amid Broken Supply Chains - May 21, 2021
Lab gloves can be particularly hard to come by, adds Sutherland. For more than a year, his company has been unable to procure any from its regular supplier in Germany as the country has stopped exporting them to prioritize domestic needs.
Even when products are available on the global market, the pandemic is stalling their delivery. A general drop in air traffic as well as a global shortage of shipping containers have meant both delays and inflated delivery prices. Staff shortages at ports and a congestion of container ships may have exacerbated the issue in New Zealand
Basant Giri of the Kathmandu Institute of Applied Sciences who specializes in developing low-cost analytical technology, says he worries that this could have long-term effects on lab supplies. During a four-month lockdown that ended in July 2020, air traffic stalled. He’s had to wait months for specific reagents for enzyme assays or standard reference materials for drug and antibiotic testing
Tuberculosis researcher André Loxton of Stellenbosch University and the South Africa Medical Research Council’s Centre for Tuberculosis Research was able to source some items from colleagues. But he’s been waiting weeks for other products
“It would be nice if some of the big biotech and pharma supply companies would start having more backups in terms of warehouses or stockpiles better distributed around the world,” adds Hwa, “so we’re not waiting for every single thing to come all the way from Europe or all the way from China.”
Labs Worldwide Still Struggling Amid Broken Supply Chains - May 21, 2021

Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:33 am to Midget Death Squad
quote:
How I know you are a gay? By your criticism being too low of a post count
Is that really a well known tendency of gay people? That's very helpful!

Posted on 2/22/22 at 11:36 am to tigerbaiter
I don't care about the reagents so much, but more concerned with why a company would go out of it's way to ramp up production of Covid tests. What do they know? Will Covid tests even be effective for a next strain? They are certain, it seems, that another wave is coming.
Popular
Back to top
