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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.

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[–] 16 pts

Right there with ya. Medically induced coma. Strap you to the bed and put you on a vent to die. Easy money especially if people think you are trying to save them.

[–] 14 pts

What's more scary is the fact that this didn't happen over night. Hospitals must have been killing people for a while. We've just hit a crescendo where basically all pretense of caring about patients has stopped. The same is true for the drug companies. They didn't just suddenly start poisoning people with FDA and CDC approval. This has been steadily building for a while.

[–] 6 pts

I'm at odds with this observation as well.

I have noticed that the moment people start dealing with hospitals, it won't be long until they are dead. I don't know if it is symptomatic of me noticing the pattern of some humans starting to die before they are dead or if the hospitals are actually causing their death.

I do know people that have had bypasses and similar operations that saved their lives, so it's not like they don't help people.

But I cannot not see that they are obviously killing people system wide.

[–] 11 pts

medical malpractice is #3 on lists of causes of deaths

[–] 4 pts

There are a lot of different motivations within the medical system. To jump off of your bypass example, people who get a bypass typically are on medication for the rest of their life. This motivates a subgroup of doctors to save these patients. There are good doctors and good groups. In a field with a lot of bad apples, the good ones tend to congregation in certain areas and specialties.

I had a neighbor who who traveled a lot for work. He got real bad food poisoning but didn't have the usual cramps, puking, or diarrhea. However, he felt he was going to die and went to the closest doc he could drive to based on google maps. He ended up at a small clinic in a tiny town in Nebraska. The only doc on staff there helped him out and a nurse drove him to a hotel room for the night. When he came back the next day feeling better he ended up talking about other issues he was having with arthritis like issue in his hands and psoriasis. The doc gave him a bunch of recommendations like taking an allergy test and how to taper off of the meds he was using at the time. He kept in contact with the doc and within about a year of following his advice he was off all meds and feeling like he was 20 years old again. It's crazy to think this random happening basically turned around my neighbors health.

There is a lot of sophisticated medicine out there, but it's been so thoroughly corrupted that almost no one has access to it. This is the reason why people like Cheney, Soros, and other very rich people can live to 100, but guys in my neighborhood with no bad habits are suffering in the early 50s.

[–] 2 pts

This is what happens when diversity hiring enters the medical field.

[–] 2 pts

The only patients in hospitals these days are the very old, very sick and those getting surgery so it's not surprising that a lot of them end up dying there. Most people are not capable of dealing with a family member's end of life issues, either medically or emotionally, so most people don't die at home.

[–] 3 pts

How much of it is intentional and at what point can you blame retarded ignorance as intentional? You've got these stupid single women or single mothers "going into nursing" for a short term training, long term career for guaranteed cash free of marriage. They have little to no care about patients, just doing their job right. That means following orders to the best of their mood.

[–] 3 pts

And the ridiculous shifts as well, how are you suppose to do something well, let alone caring for sick people, without enough sleep?

[–] 1 pt

I think a huge part of it is that "do no harm" has been replaced with "order everything their insurance will allow". Many insurance-paid tests are dangerous and offer no benefit or confuse a diagnosis with either too much or incorrectly prepared information.

[–] 1 pt

Yup it's literally death by a thousand cuts. Even drawing blood does a little bit of harm. Tell a doctor you don't want a blood test because you just had one a week ago and they act like you're insane. I've unfortunately had two MRIs in my life. Both times they insisted I take the Gadolinium contrast solution. Both times I said fuck it then I won't get the MRI. Both times they relented and I got the MRI without contrast solution. Both times they could clearly see what they needed to. The first one resulted in a further mis-diagnosis. The second one just confirmed what we already knew wasn't a problem. Exposure to strong magnetic fields in itself is a health risk. Being injected with Gadolinium is way worse. They all said Gadolinium is totally safe and side effects are rare. Funny how much you hear about rare side effects these days. It's also worth noting that the root cause of both problems I was told to get an MRI from were due to side effects from a medication (Cipro). At this point they're giving people side effects to mis-diagnose side effects from previous medical interventions.