Is there a medical fren here who could explain why there would be saline shots in the first place? Is that really a thing? Would they have multiple saline shots? Something seems fishy but I don't know, maybe there is a legitimate reason for them to exist. Thanks.
I’m not in the medical field, but I’ll attempt. Syringes don’t come pre-filled, they have to draw the “vaccine” from a vial before administering. Saline is just a simple salt water solution that is commonly used medically, I think mostly for getting fluids in dehydrated patients intravenously, but it would be readily available at any medical office. So instead of drawing the vaccine solution, they draw a saline solution to administer. It wouldn’t do anything other than slightly hydrating the person. This could be done knowingly by a medical professional, or unknowingly if vaccine vials were intercepted and swapped for harmless saline by the military or other white hats, or sent by the pharma companies to have a control group for their own analytics.
I was just thinking of somebody doing this as a so called mistake. Any time I've received a shot, it's drawn from a very small bottle. I don't know why saline would be stored in such small bottles. The whole thing just seems fishy to me, but not in a white hat way. Shrug. Thanks for answering.
I read that some of the vials have to be mixed with saline, ie they come in 'concentrated' or 'premix' form, and need a certain amount of saline added. (No sauce; just a memory). So maybe the tech(s) mixed up and drew the shot from the saline, not reading the label or something. But we'll never get the real story.
Is there a medical fren here who could explain why there would be saline shots in the first place? Is that really a thing? Would they have multiple saline shots? Something seems fishy but I don't know, maybe there is a legitimate reason for them to exist. Thanks.
I’m not in the medical field, but I’ll attempt. Syringes don’t come pre-filled, they have to draw the “vaccine” from a vial before administering. Saline is just a simple salt water solution that is commonly used medically, I think mostly for getting fluids in dehydrated patients intravenously, but it would be readily available at any medical office. So instead of drawing the vaccine solution, they draw a saline solution to administer. It wouldn’t do anything other than slightly hydrating the person. This could be done knowingly by a medical professional, or unknowingly if vaccine vials were intercepted and swapped for harmless saline by the military or other white hats, or sent by the pharma companies to have a control group for their own analytics.
I was just thinking of somebody doing this as a so called mistake. Any time I've received a shot, it's drawn from a very small bottle. I don't know why saline would be stored in such small bottles. The whole thing just seems fishy to me, but not in a white hat way. Shrug. Thanks for answering.
I don’t think this is the case with these shots, but some meds we use come in a powder form and need reconstituted with saline or equivalent.
I see. Thanks.
I read that some of the vials have to be mixed with saline, ie they come in 'concentrated' or 'premix' form, and need a certain amount of saline added. (No sauce; just a memory). So maybe the tech(s) mixed up and drew the shot from the saline, not reading the label or something. But we'll never get the real story.
Hmm, thanks. Scary to think they could be so careless with something that will be injected. Good thing it was just saline I suppose.