ayjay
Bluelighter
Hi Brainiacs,
I have the opportunity to conduct some tests at work on safer injection of unisom gel caps and suboxone strips. These products are commonly injected by our clients and can cause significant vein damage. Given that this practice is unlikely to cease, it behooves us to explore safer injecting options.
In both instances, the injection solution can be of increased viscosity due to inclusion of the gel casing (gel caps) or the gel substrate (film). We are going to play around with a few methods to minimise such inclusion and I'm interested in some rough measures to compare viscosity.
We are a busy needle syringe program so I have good access to needles, syringes, micron filters, cotton, sterifilts and so on. But no lab equipment.
I thought maybe I could do some kind of drip test down an inclined surface (like a glazed tile or similar or sheet of perspex) - comparing the injection solution against a water control. The more viscous the solution, the longer it should take for a drop to traverse the inclined surface.
Would that work? Any other ideas?
I have the opportunity to conduct some tests at work on safer injection of unisom gel caps and suboxone strips. These products are commonly injected by our clients and can cause significant vein damage. Given that this practice is unlikely to cease, it behooves us to explore safer injecting options.
In both instances, the injection solution can be of increased viscosity due to inclusion of the gel casing (gel caps) or the gel substrate (film). We are going to play around with a few methods to minimise such inclusion and I'm interested in some rough measures to compare viscosity.
We are a busy needle syringe program so I have good access to needles, syringes, micron filters, cotton, sterifilts and so on. But no lab equipment.
I thought maybe I could do some kind of drip test down an inclined surface (like a glazed tile or similar or sheet of perspex) - comparing the injection solution against a water control. The more viscous the solution, the longer it should take for a drop to traverse the inclined surface.
Would that work? Any other ideas?
