300 mg of asirin taken in the early stages of a heart attack has a significant impact on mortality i.e. it saves lives. Putting a tablet in an everpresent keyring with the instructions 'in the event of central crushing chest pain, break open swallow tablet and dial 999' (that's 911 to the Americans) would be a lifesaver.
You can't do someone much harm with a single asirin and it is an over-the-counter drug so no great problems with selling it.-- clowntriggerfish, May 04 2005 Psst <sp> aspirin.-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, May 04 2005 Perhaps ear-rings that double as defibbrilator padds would be the next logical step.-- hidden truths, May 04 2005 Sorry, doktors dont make spellas.-- clowntriggerfish, May 05 2005 We (USA) have keychains for carrying pills in (usually nitro). They are made of stainless steel, have a screw top lid and a rubber O ring.
They come in multiple sizes, with or without a medic alert symbol.
I have a friend that carries one with Allegra, Motrin, and gout attack pills in it.-- 37PiecesOf Flair, May 05 2005 There is nothing new under the sun I guess. To really get publicity you could put a 'morning after pill' in a key chain. To up the stakes further you would do one with HIV post-exposure prophlaxis.-- clowntriggerfish, May 07 2005 Don't worry Doc, they laughed at my idea to have a soup bowl double as a mind control ray deflecting helmet. <= - ) (Just teasing, bun for you.)-- doctorremulac3, May 07 2005 The Aspi-ring should be pirate-themed as well.-- hippo, May 07 2005 Too low-tech. I'd prefer a membranous container, implanted into your stomach, that holds an aspirin pill in it. When you have a heart attack, press your belly button and the membrane pops and releases the pill internally.-- phundug, May 08 2005 I agree phundug. I was thinking something similar, yet not as cool. Do HIV post-exposure [prophylaxes] work? I've heard or such things in my personal "avoid aids at all costs" research.-- SpocksEyebrow, May 08 2005 HIV Post-exposure prophlaxis 'almost certainly' works but that is as definate an answer as you are likely to get from a doctor.-- clowntriggerfish, May 09 2005 Why not keep the tablet in a little locked box on the keyring? Then have the keyring monitor your heart rate so whenever something goes wrong, the keyring could unlock the tablet and allow access to it?-- CombatChuck, May 09 2005 random, halfbakery