Phenomena

EpiPen in Action

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Researchers are hard at work developing needle-free alternatives to injection, but devices like the EpiPen — used in anaphylactic emergencies for food and insect allergies — aren’t going anywhere yet. In this Slow Mo Guys video, they show what happens when an EpiPen fires into ballistic gel.

An EpiPen’s needle is extremely narrow and about 15 millimeters long. It enters the gel (and presumably the human body) at a modest speed of ~6 m/s, releases the medication, and retracts. Despite its relatively slow speed, the needle is visibly blunted after use (and, no, the EpiPen is not reusable, for this and other reasons).

Injections like this may be tough for some people to see, but as Dan’s mother attests, they’re absolutely life-saving for the patients that need them. (Video and image credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

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