The covid narrative is a top down approach. It starts with CDC then is disseminated to msm, politicians, corporations, etc. None of this would matter if hospitals didn't follow along.
Doctors get there information from the hospitals that employ them and the CDC.
So who owns the hospitals?
https://www.aha.org/statistics/fast-facts-us-hospitals
There are 6,090 hospitals in the USA. They are broken down into:
- 2,946 Nongovernment not for profit community hospitals
- 1,233 Investor owned for profit hospitals
- 962 State and local government hospitals
- 208 Federal government hospitals
- 625 Non federal psychiatric hospitals
- 116 Other
Expenses Community hospitals $1.056 Trillion All hopsitals $1.16 Trillion
By expenses community hospitals seem to rule the roost.
The non profits for the most part are run by charities and schools. Many of these charities are highly corrupted (assumption), we know how communistic the education system is and the education system controls a massive number of hospitals.
These non profit hospitals are funded through charities and educational systems, but they also receive money in the form of government grants.
The point is they are controlled. Normies have trouble understanding how so many doctors and nurses could push a false narrative. The answer to that is simple, doctors and nurses get there information from the hospital system they work for. Therefore how many people at the top truly have control of the information.
If any other anons are interested in this topic please dive in and do some digging.
Would love to create a flow chart showing how information is disseminated to doctors and nurses in the field.
The largest hospital network in Utah is Intermountain Healthcare. It owns its own insurance company, SelectHealth. The CEO is rumored to have political aspirations, and implements policy for show, under the guise of the organization's motto "helping people love the healthiest lives possible." One of the more bothersome policies that have come from this is his banning of soft drinks that contain sugar, which ignores the needs of certain cancer patients that need calories any way they can get them. Whilst sugar soft drinks are banned, sugar is stocked by the pound for coffee, despite Utah having a large population that does not drink coffee.
The organization on both the hospital side and the administration side is dysfunctional due to a siloed corporate culture that breeds distrust and conflict. Instead of working together, collaboration is viewed as a threat. This is mainly a problem in administration, but spills heavily into medical staff such as nurses and CNAs.
The hospital system is "not for profit", which means that they allow some charity and write-offs. Otherwise, the hospital system is definitely after a heavy profit.
While we're on the topic, did you know that you don't have to pay the full value of your medical bills? Websites like healthcarebluebook.com can tell you the market value for a procedure and help you negotiate your bills down.
Oh, and did you know that "not for profit" medical systems are responsible for attempts to shut down surgical clinics that post their pricing and charge fair market rates to everyone? If I can remember where I saw the video, I'll share it.
I realize this info isn't exactly what you had asked for, but I can keep digging. I hope something here helps.
thanks for the reply, this is good info, none of us will know about every hospital, but providing insight into the one you are aware of is great. Thanks. Hoping we can compile a ton of information here.