In the other thread about returning unused ammo , some side discussions took place about medicals . Out of respect for those still focused on the original subject, I thought to shift my remarks about products and their unintednded used , and newly disovered properties to a seperate thread.
My main point was that a medical substance shouln't be thrown because we cannot fully understand it potential positive or negative proeperties . So, throwing something may be harmful to fish or birds because we really don't know the effects of these meds on those creatures. And even if we understood what the med was intended for , there are still other features or reactions that may pop up in the future.
I gave an exanple of Aspirin which was used for headaches, then was found out that it was good for the heart.
Bob said
I believe it’s good for your heart for the same reason it helps headaches, it thins the blood allowing your blood to flow better. It’s not doing anything different to your heart, it’s original job is the same, (thinning blood) it just happens that your heart benefits from what it always did. It’s not really a valid argument that it’s doing something new to your heart.
Here is my comment:
That is not the point Bob. The point is that reagardless of the mechanism, new uses or misuses will be found or occur. Lets take "thinning of the blood" as an example. If we throw a box of aspirin somewhere and it (somehow) gets in the blood system of someone with excessive bleeding, it may make his/her case worse.
Aspirin was just an example of some product that was thought to do something, then it was found out to be doing something else as well.
Here is another unrelated example.
A good many years ago, I was in college and the professor asked us to try something on our HP-45 calculators (Press shift + #7 + #8 ) and the calculator became a stopwatch. He said that even the manufacturer hasn't intended or realized that this could have been done with the calculator. This feature was discovered AFTER the calculator was marketed and sold.