my friend-
"Just got back from my yearly visit with my Dr. Needless to say it didn't go well, she ended up walking out on me.
It got nasty when she started telling me how hard it was on the staff when people who refuse the vaccine get covid and then take up all the resources.
That really Pissed me off.
So are you telling me vaccinated aren't getting covid?
she said no they are getting it too.
Well then aren't they taking up resources too?
That's when she got mad and walked out. She never even checked me over. Just got up and walked out. On her way out the door she told me my prescription will be sent to WalMart. lol
I knew then exactly how she would treat me if I ever got Covid. No thank you. I'll be looking for a new doctor."
I have found this to be true. I used to insist I didn’t need statin drugs and she would frown and shake her head. Eventually, she got a heart disease risk calculator on her computer and she typed in my numbers and viola—I had a 5% chance of developing heart disease. She about fell out of her chair. See, I had done research outside of the mainstream medical stuff. It’s just exactly like what we are finding out with Covid. You have to do your own research and advocate for your own health.
Good for you. Those statins are bad news and aren't worth it unless you REALLY need them.
One of my best friends is a doctor and I asked him about the "variants":
Me: (asking about people he brought up who died recently) "Can the current tests determine which variant that they died with?"
Him: "Well none of those ppl were vaccinated. But if a vaccinated person died you just look at their vaccine card to know which they got."
Me: "Sorry, I should've asked it more clearly. Did the test differentiate what variant they died from?"
Him: "Oh I do not know that. I’m guessing there are tests to determine that."
Me: 😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎
IMO most drugs are bad especially the ones they give "in case you need it". Last time I went for a checkup (about six weeks ago), the nurse used a digital BP device, and my BP was freaking high. I had been prescribed meds for it, but for the most part hadn't used them. I asked the nurse to check it with a manual device and it was way, way lower. This didn't surprise me because I'm a nurse and mostly worked in long term care. I occasionally used the digital BP but the readout was nearly always suspiciously high, so I'd revert to the manual one and it was, of course, much lower. So, I asked the nurse why they were using digital and she said she didn't know, but agreed the reading was usually much higher. Of course they use the one that gives a higher reading, then prescribe meds for it. Problem reaction solution in a nutshell.
They also generally check your blood pressure the minute you get in the exam room. This, too, will pretty much guarantee a high BP. Insist they do it at the end of the exam after you've been seated for awhile and have relaxed. A lot of people get "white coat syndrome" from being nervous about seeing the doctor, plus they've rushed around to get to their appointment. Both will raise your BP.
That is SHOCKING. Thank you for letting me know about this.