Quizzes & Puzzles31 mins ago
Medical.Bandage.
Hospitals these days dont use plaster casts to set broken joints. They use a type of bandage that is wet when applied and as it dries out it sets hard like fibre glass. I think it is called BAYCAST bandage. I have been trying to find out where to purchase this, without success. Can anyone help please?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's incorrect to state that hospitals don't use plaster nowadays to set broken joints. They still do for some joints but it depends on the type of fracture involved.
Baycast is a polyester cotton bandage which is impregnated with water activated pre-polymer resins and it does indeed set hard in around 20 minutes or so. Baycast is a registered trademark of Bayer AG and is an innovative product but it's lack of porosity needs to be carefully evaluated before it's used. There is a version of Baycast available for use by veterinary surgeons and this has the name Vetcast.
Now for the bad news. Baycast is one of the many products used in A&E departments that have a closed supply chain. These products go from manufacturer to wholesale hospital supplier and into hospitals with no other company involved. Because of this, they are not listed in the BNF, are not held in stock by community pharmacists and cannot be prescribed by community physicians. This results in these products being virtually impossible to obtain outside a hospital. The same applies to similar products such as
Dynacast XR.
When I read your question earlier, it struck me that Baycast could have some dubious uses too outside a hospital so I checked with a A&E consultant in my uni's medical school. As I suspected, the sale of Baycast is restricted to hospitals, vets, some GP surgeries and some sports injury specialists. It's also very expensive.
If you have a genuine use for it, I'd suggest you have a chat with your local vet.
Baycast is a polyester cotton bandage which is impregnated with water activated pre-polymer resins and it does indeed set hard in around 20 minutes or so. Baycast is a registered trademark of Bayer AG and is an innovative product but it's lack of porosity needs to be carefully evaluated before it's used. There is a version of Baycast available for use by veterinary surgeons and this has the name Vetcast.
Now for the bad news. Baycast is one of the many products used in A&E departments that have a closed supply chain. These products go from manufacturer to wholesale hospital supplier and into hospitals with no other company involved. Because of this, they are not listed in the BNF, are not held in stock by community pharmacists and cannot be prescribed by community physicians. This results in these products being virtually impossible to obtain outside a hospital. The same applies to similar products such as
Dynacast XR.
When I read your question earlier, it struck me that Baycast could have some dubious uses too outside a hospital so I checked with a A&E consultant in my uni's medical school. As I suspected, the sale of Baycast is restricted to hospitals, vets, some GP surgeries and some sports injury specialists. It's also very expensive.
If you have a genuine use for it, I'd suggest you have a chat with your local vet.
Thank you prof for your precise and detailed answer.I should have used The Answer Bank sooner. Instead of wasting an hour on the nett.All I found was clinical tests on the product, no hint whatsoever on any supplier. I want to use it in an engineering application not medical. I shall try the local vet. I am not suprised that it is expensive, it seems most items are that are sold to the NHS.
Thanks again for your answer.
Thanks again for your answer.