I took my youngest son 13, to the ER to check for broken ribs (hockey parent here - just bruised) I'm a father of five and have had plenty of experience in the ER. I have never seen it so busy. Waiting room was filled with young people. One mother and 20 something son were checking in. He had apparently just had a previous blood clot and was now experiencing chest pain and shortness of breath with elevated heart rate. Hours later we were called in. I was expecting to be asked if my son was Vaccinated but instead was asked if we would ever approve blood transfusions! Was this a trick question? I said "Not now. Not since blood is taken from the Vaccinated." Anyone have similar experiences? This has to stop!
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I had to go to the er last night for an injured knee. I was worried about them giving me the vac. There were 3 people there when I signed in. Maybe 10 came in before I got called to the back, that was 1 hour. None of them had injuries that I could visibly tell. No one was over 50? I saw 3 babies. I don't know how many people came in, in the 2 hours I was in back. Lobby had people in it when I left. This was a stand alone er we have in az, not an urgent car (I don't know if other states have those) so it is not at the hospital. I don't know how busy those are. I had to wear a mask but they never said the word vaccine.
are we talking about the same thing here? ER stands for Emergency Room, sometimes called Emergency Department.
How can that be 'stand alone'? the whole point of them is to be in a hospital where they can address any medical emergency.
We have ER's that are in medical centers, not a hospital. The medical center only has doctors offices. No in-patient care what so ever. Been that way for over 40 years.