Remember that before Covid, an average of 100,000 people died from medical malpractice in the USA each year. I have not seen a mass of doctors forced out of the profession because of this. As an anecdote, I have seen older people in my circle die at a higher rate than before. Many had health issues common to people of advanced years that can lead to death in time, but it seemed to me that the medical profession accelerated the deaths of older people that I knew. This includes my mother, her sister, and my wife’s uncle, the last two dying shortly after receiving the jab. Another anecdote is my GP retired suddenly at an earlier than normal age. He is in good health, and I tried to interview him and ask him why, but he has shut himself away from his old practice.
Please share your opinions and any relevant stories on this topic.
More like there are a lot of sheep in medicine as everywhere else and many pressures to conform not only in opinion but down to every physical action being spelled out for a "standard of care." Deviate and be sued for malpractice. And standards of care evolve as some turn out to not be the best idea. As to the many iatrogenic errors, very few are someone deliberately trying to hurt someone, they are the result of carelessness and stupidity and bad communication. For some reason it seems like all the wonderful electronic record schemes to prevent med errors and overlooked problems can't do it all.