I emailed them with no answer so far.No, I have not gotten an answer either.
[citation needed]for a great part of tinnitus sufferers the tinnitus subsides or goes away after the first few months.
No wonder Kratos is always angry. He has tinnitus.[citation needed]
I'd carry it on as iPod. Seriously. It plays music through headphones from a white rectangle. It's also not for resale. I really think our agents are looking for other things. Alternatively, mail to yourself separately.People travelling from the US, how are you planning on bringing the device back? Since it costs more than $800, you have to declare it just from the point of view of paying duty; since you have to declare it, you either have to be completely up front that it is a medical device that's not approved in the US, or you're playing games with one of the scarier police forces in the country.
I am not a doctor but my take on the FDA page is that bringing an unapproved device into the US is possible, generally requires the cooperation of a doctor here, and some bureaucratic headaches.
If I was going to spend ten thousand dollars to spend three months in Ireland I believe I would take the trouble to do it the hard way. The risks of just bringing it back in a carry-on might be pretty low, but the stakes if you get caught seem unreasonably high to me; confiscation is one obvious scenario, but more dire things are possible depending on what effort is made to deceive or lie to border control.
Separate the parts and pretend it's an MP3. Walk through customs with the headphones around your neck like a dude. Pretend the tongue device is a tongue scraper.People travelling from the US, how are you planning on bringing the device back? Since it costs more than $800, you have to declare it just from the point of view of paying duty; since you have to declare it, you either have to be completely up front that it is a medical device that's not approved in the US, or you're playing games with one of the scarier police forces in the country.
I am not a doctor but my take on the FDA page is that bringing an unapproved device into the US is possible, generally requires the cooperation of a doctor here, and some bureaucratic headaches.
If I was going to spend ten thousand dollars to spend three months in Ireland I believe I would take the trouble to do it the hard way. The risks of just bringing it back in a carry-on might be pretty low, but the stakes if you get caught seem unreasonably high to me; confiscation is one obvious scenario, but more dire things are possible depending on what effort is made to deceive or lie to border control.
Or you just don't declare it and throw away the box? Put the headphones on. Same way you buy laptops or watches and take them through unwrapped. They don't check that much.People travelling from the US, how are you planning on bringing the device back? Since it costs more than $800, you have to declare it just from the point of view of paying duty; since you have to declare it, you either have to be completely up front that it is a medical device that's not approved in the US, or you're playing games with one of the scarier police forces in the country.
I am not a doctor but my take on the FDA page is that bringing an unapproved device into the US is possible, generally requires the cooperation of a doctor here, and some bureaucratic headaches.
If I was going to spend ten thousand dollars to spend three months in Ireland I believe I would take the trouble to do it the hard way. The risks of just bringing it back in a carry-on might be pretty low, but the stakes if you get caught seem unreasonably high to me; confiscation is one obvious scenario, but more dire things are possible depending on what effort is made to deceive or lie to border control.
Hope this doesn't fall in the hands of GAES. That hideous company charges €7000 for its outrageous TRT therapy. How is that going to compete against a way more promising €2500 device, compadre?I wonder if one day there will be a clinic in Spain offering this treatment? It's not a big deal considering flying from Barcelona to Dublin is probably 30€ per flight, but it would be convenient having a clinic a little bit closer and at the same time make the trip a little bit cheaper...
(No hotels would be a bonus).
I remember reading someone said that you can do installment payments of 400 dollarsPeople travelling from the US, how are you planning on bringing the device back? Since it costs more than $800, you have to declare it just from the point of view of paying duty; since you have to declare it, you either have to be completely up front that it is a medical device that's not approved in the US, or you're playing games with one of the scarier police forces in the country.
I am not a doctor but my take on the FDA page is that bringing an unapproved device into the US is possible, generally requires the cooperation of a doctor here, and some bureaucratic headaches.
If I was going to spend ten thousand dollars to spend three months in Ireland I believe I would take the trouble to do it the hard way. The risks of just bringing it back in a carry-on might be pretty low, but the stakes if you get caught seem unreasonably high to me; confiscation is one obvious scenario, but more dire things are possible depending on what effort is made to deceive or lie to border control.
Well, it looks like an mp3 player, so sneaking it in shouldn't be a problem, right? Just get an Apple logo sticker and slap that bad boy on it.People travelling from the US, how are you planning on bringing the device back? Since it costs more than $800, you have to declare it just from the point of view of paying duty; since you have to declare it, you either have to be completely up front that it is a medical device that's not approved in the US, or you're playing games with one of the scarier police forces in the country.
I am not a doctor but my take on the FDA page is that bringing an unapproved device into the US is possible, generally requires the cooperation of a doctor here, and some bureaucratic headaches.
If I was going to spend ten thousand dollars to spend three months in Ireland I believe I would take the trouble to do it the hard way. The risks of just bringing it back in a carry-on might be pretty low, but the stakes if you get caught seem unreasonably high to me; confiscation is one obvious scenario, but more dire things are possible depending on what effort is made to deceive or lie to border control.
Yeah pack it in with your toothbrushes.Pretend the tongue device is a tongue scraper.
If this device is the real deal, GAES will have to accept that their days being a bunch of thieves are over. If it does end up in their hands and they charge more, well it's just a case of going somewhere else. I doubt very much though it's going to affect them that much considering they mainly specialize in hearing loss and not tinnitus... Spain is such a corrupt country, full of opportunists, everyone has a price tag... We just have to keep our eyes open.Hope this doesn't fall in the hands of GAES. That hideous company charges €7000 for its outrageous TRT therapy. How is that going to compete against a way more promising €2500 device, compadre?
I basically agree and the Apple sticker is a funny idea.Well, it looks like an mp3 player, so sneaking it in shouldn't be a problem, right? Just get an Apple logo sticker and slap that bad boy on it.
this is relatively low on my list of priorities at least until we have more data including some longitudinal outcomes.
Have people said this?this thing is cheaply made and gives tongue burns" comments.
I would assume it wouldn't cost that much to make. Majority of the cost will be to cover the visits, R&D and clinical trials.Have people said this?
Not yet. People are making things up to kill time right now.Have people said this?
I remember hearing from someone that the tonguetip is a little flimsy but that's about it.Have people said this?
It is only natural to have doubts. Look at TRT 26 years later they say it is ineffective! What a shame!starting to doubt everything.
If you read my quote in context, I was not making anything up, I was providing a caricature of possible outcomes to explain my hesitancy to commit resources.Not yet. People are making things up to kill time right now.