PRISMEDICAL News
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Napa, California - May 1, 2001
/PRNewswire/ -- We are pleased to announce that the company's first product has been identified as a requirement in a $5 million Combat Casualty Care Equipment Upgrade Program approved by the U.S. Marine Corp Systems Command. The requirement is identified in an Operation and Maintenance Program Budget for fiscal year 2002. The expected FDA approval in 2001 and recognition of the company's first product as a requirement in a casualty care program support our expectation of product sales as early as 1Q 2002.
In addition, researchers at the Office of Naval Research (ONR) have identified the PRISMEDICAL approach, which eliminates logistical barriers, as a candidate technology that could solve problems associated with moving fluids to the point-of-need for trauma care. The potential to increase medical mobility of life saving fluids would also effect prehospital casualties for mass civilian populations, due to natural disasters and epidemic outbreaks, by allowing "first responders" to provide critical fluid replacement rather than waiting for conventional preparations to be delivered.
Napa, California - May 1, 2001
/PRNewswire/ -- We are pleased to announce that the company's first product has been identified as a requirement in a $5 million Combat Casualty Care Equipment Upgrade Program approved by the U.S. Marine Corp Systems Command. The requirement is identified in an Operation and Maintenance Program Budget for fiscal year 2002. The expected FDA approval in 2001 and recognition of the company's first product as a requirement in a casualty care program support our expectation of product sales as early as 1Q 2002.
In addition, researchers at the Office of Naval Research (ONR) have identified the PRISMEDICAL approach, which eliminates logistical barriers, as a candidate technology that could solve problems associated with moving fluids to the point-of-need for trauma care. The potential to increase medical mobility of life saving fluids would also effect prehospital casualties for mass civilian populations, due to natural disasters and epidemic outbreaks, by allowing "first responders" to provide critical fluid replacement rather than waiting for conventional preparations to be delivered.