Hey Steve
I think that the three month period for stabilisation is about right.
Personally I think testing weekly is quite sufficient, I only test more frequently when I have a research goal in mind (such as observing how quickly one responds to changes in dose.
Just because something is "done that way" does not make it right. It took decades to stop doctors treating gunshot wounds with boiling oil to cauterize the wound. One of the early studies revealed at such treatment was strongly correlated to gangreen and then amputation.
The half life of warfarin is some thing like 20 hours, but it is a range not a fixed number. This means that in person X it may be 18 hours and in person Y it may be 40 hours. It depends on your genetics (well published and well understood for over 10 years now).
Change does not come quickly to the medical world and slower it seems in the minds of the general patient population. People seem to love to "know things" but seldom explore personally instead just repeating "common knowledge"
From mims
The effective half-life ranges from 20 to 60 hours with a mean of about 40 hours
If one were to think about this question of dose and speed of reaction logically then since adding vitamin K can restore coagulation in a few hours it would be logical that warfarin can disrupt it nearly as quickly.
PS: From the Australian Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis
https://www.mja.com.au/journal/2004/...c71e2c6214dc5d
The effective half-life of warfarin ranges from 20 to 60 hours, with a mean of about 40 hours. The duration of effect is 2–5 days.5 The drug is completely absorbed after oral administration, and peak concentrations occur within 4 hours. The elimination of warfarin is almost entirely by metabolism, with very little excreted unchanged in the urine and bile. Metabolism occurs mainly in the liver, involving the cytochrome P450, and in particular the CYP2C9, isoenzyme
Initial increases in international normalised ratio (INR) are typically noted 24–36 hours after giving the first dose of warfarin
so it seems my observations fit within well known (published) understandings of the kinetics of warfarin