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I’m a nurse in a psychiatric facility and I posted last month that another fellow nurse and colleague of mine caught the rona, went to the hospital, and died. She was 65 and a smoker. Ok I get it. Greater risk. However, last night, we found out that another nurse in our facility caught it, went to the hospital(which he was very much against) and died. He was in his mid 40s, unvaccinated and overall pretty healthy. No underlying conditions that we were aware of. He was very anti mask, anti covid vax and establishment. As most of us are. I am actually very in shock that they took HIM out. This just doesn’t make any sense.

I’m a nurse in a psychiatric facility and I posted last month that another fellow nurse and colleague of mine caught the rona, went to the hospital, and died. She was 65 and a smoker. Ok I get it. Greater risk. However, last night, we found out that another nurse in our facility caught it, went to the hospital(which he was very much against) and died. He was in his mid 40s, unvaccinated and overall pretty healthy. No underlying conditions that we were aware of. He was very anti mask, anti covid vax and establishment. As most of us are. I am actually very in shock that they took HIM out. This just doesn’t make any sense.

(post is archived)

[–] 11 pts

medical malpractice is #3 on lists of causes of deaths

[–] 4 pts

Are #1 and #2 accepted excuses used to cover up incidences of #3?

[–] 1 pt

Yes but that number includes all properly prescribed medicine that interact badly and other things. More importantly, that number is from what the doctors doing it 'report'. They control the report, do they implicate themselves or state another cause of death? They admit around 200k per year. It could really be as high as 800k to 1 million making "going to the doctor" the #1 cause of death.

[–] 1 pt

so are the most terrifying words now "I'm from the hospital and I'm here to help"