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CASE STUDIES
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Saving Lives in the Sky
One Passive Thermal Solution Revolutionizes Air Med-Evac
Extreme weather conditions. Nearly inaccessible locales. Long-distance transport. Few medical scenarios are as perilous and demanding as helicopter med-evac operations. For Lafayette, La.-based PHI, a leader in air medical transport, the company’s mission has long been to carry out these highly critical emergency evacuations with the highest level of safety, both for their crews and their patients. A key component to accomplishing that mission has been to equip their crews with the absolute best, most reliable medical technology available.
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Saving Lives, Saving Money, Saving Face
Customized MTS Products and Services Make All the Difference in One Tissue Company’s Operations
In the highly competitive world of medical products transport, image is everything. Customers and business partners must have faith that your organization’s practices are stable, reliable and, most important, safe. Nowhere is this truer than in the extremely critical human tissue transport industry. It’s a lesson New Jersey-based LifeCell learned firsthand. The company partners with more than 50 tissue recovery sites around the nation and regularly transports high-value, temperature sensitive tissue. For years, their primary means of thermally controlling these shipments was conventional foam coupled with ice.
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Taking Pharmaceuticals Off the Beaten Path
Fisher BioServices Finds the Solution for Logistics Nightmares
With literally millions of research-and-development dollars on the line, transporting temperature-sensitive materials for pharmaceutical clinical trials demands the absolute best in thermally controlled packaging. For this reason, medical shipping experts Fisher BioServices utilized CredoTM containers for a recent international flu vaccine trial.
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From Germany with Love
Critical, Perishable Meds Come Halfway Around the World in Perfect Condition
When Elizabeth Taylor found out there was a medication that would help a family member with a serious degenerative illness, she did what anyone would do: she looked for a way to get her hands on it. There was just one problem. Though the drug was FDA approved, it was no longer sold in the United States.
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