Will it be high protein? Can it meet more than one need for dialysis patients? We have very specific diet needs - high protein, low phosphorous, low potassium. We're not supposed to have high phos foods, so high phos chocolate and peanut butter flavors would be an obvious choice - things we want and aren't supposed to have.
It doesn't have to be prescription - many patients use regular Tums as their binders. If the granola bar used the same binder formula as basic tums, there would be no need to make it a prescription product.
Are you picturing this product as a "safe" snack that comes with enough binder to cover only the granola bar itself, or are you planning on it being a substitute for taking a binder, so it can be eaten as dessert or an appetizer with every meal?
The thought is that having different options to consume a binder would make it easier to keep to the recommended dosages and schedule. There is a specific program being introduced by Shire Pharmaceuticals called 'On-Track' that has that specific objective in mind. This would be considered part of a larger offering to help people get where they need to be.
I don't understand this - there isn't a schedule for taking binders. You have to take them every time you eat, period. If you don't eat, you don't need a binder. There is no set dose per day or per week - it all depends on how much and how often you eat.