A couple of months ago, my sister and her whole family got Covid and brought low by it. My brother in law stayed home sick for 2 weeks taking Dayquil until he got to a point where he couldn't breathe. They took him to the ER (in Florida) and they measured his O2 in the low 90s but said it wasn't low enough - gave him some meds and sent him home.
I found out he was sick after his visit (and didn't even know he had gone to the ER). I start telling my sister what she needs to get, who to contact for meds, etc but she is really weak. Then she tells me she is taking him back because he is coughing up blood. His O2 is now in the low 80s.
I told her they are going to push for Remdesivir and ventilator, and that she needed to push for X, Y and Z first, etc. She texts me back the next morning saying they put him on Remdesivir. The next night they threw him on a vent and vented him to the max and blew out his lung. Thirty six hours in his O2 is now in the 60s and they said he would be brain dead. Two and a half days after entering the hospital he was dead.
He was 40 years old and non smoker, 170lbs and no comorbidity. Pneumonia (they called it 'Covid pneumonia') is a real killer folks.
Unfortunately that is hospital protocol now in most states. I'm sure there will be malpractice suits in the future but that won't bring anyone back.
I know a guy from High School that just died this past weekend. He went to the hospital in Colorado and they immediately gave him Remdesivir which caused him to flat line while it was being administered. After that they vented him and he was dead a few days later.
I currently have a relative in the hospital in South Dakota where they gave him Regeneron/Regen-COV and he is on oxygen. Appears to have been through the worst.
Not sure if its a red state/blue state thing? Or just hospital by hospital basis? Either way, I'm convinced that Remdesivir is medical murder at this point.
The new CDC guidance is to not give monoclonals if the patient is after day 10 or needs oxygen.
Idk if there’s any truth to it, as I’m a couch medical article reader and not a full doctor. However, it makes some sense as your viral load peaks by day eight, and you’re dealing with the leftover inflammation by days nine and ten. The antibodies won’t have spike protein to attach to if the viral load is past peak.
Murdered, by the numbers. They have a script and are using it.
If you want a friend or loved one to have a reasonable chance of survival, you must bust them out.
They are deliberately allowing the illness to progress to get the patients tetering on the edge and using vent and Remdesivir to push them over the precipice.
Every hour they go inproperly treated is critical for life and the quality of their recovery.
That is so sad, my heart goes out to you. And this , even in Florida, where the governor is supposedly on top of it all. Apparently the hospital systems are beyond his control. .. so sad
I had a good friend of mine put on Remdesivir also after he was admitted to the hospital. He had checked into the hospital a week after receiving his booster and was diagnosed with covid. Me and my daughter could visit by looking through the glass. We prayed but once they get put on this treatment it's pretty much the same ending which unfortunately for us was the loss of our friend.
Pneumonia is caused by a bacteria. Viral pneumonia is actually really weak sauce
Pneumonia should be IV antibiotics plus a steroid. IVM won't do much to help. Remdesivir does fuck all to help since it is doesn't do anything to begin with, but also because the pneumonia is caused by bacteria
He’s coughing up blood, and his O2 is where people who are dying is (people with COPD can even maintain oxygen saturation’s at 90 percent for years before they die) yet he’s totally fine and the hospital killed him.
As if coughing up blood and oxygen saturation’s at the level dying people experience are normal.
I’ve done hospice and I’ve seen covid.
Hospitals don’t send people home they wish to make money off of with remdesivir.
At some point people need to admit these people are extremely sick by the time they are admitted, and probably would have benefitted from being admitted earlier.
Which is it, you run to a hospital and they kill you, and it’s their fault? Why are you running there without breath? Because you’re gonna be fine? You’d be fine if you hadn’t gone to the hospital despite choking on your own blood.
If only you had stayed home choking on blood without oxygen, you’d still be alive.
As a Christian and a nurse, I know that others like me went into medicine with a clear conscience.
Up until now, we’ve done good work, supporting and caring for people through the aging, sickness and dying process.
Now, for some reason, we are murdering people.
For money I might add. Despite sending people home, so they can recover, they come back and at that point we become hungry for money and viciously murder them despite them choking on blood with a failing oxygenation level.
About 10 years ago, around the H1N1 outbreak I worked with a guy who was a smoker, but otherwise (to my knowledge) healthy 40 year old who got sick (maybe H1N1?) and got pneumonia and admitted to the hospital on a Wednesday and was dead by the weekend. I am sure there are real cases of Covid - I don't subscribe to it all being fake - it was designed in a lab afterall as a weapon.
I think by the time you show up coughing up blood, you are seriously ill. I belive my brother in law's timeline was 2 weeks very sick with Covid - no treatment besides Dayquil/Nyquil. After he was sent home by the ER, a day or two later he got monoclonal treatment, but it was the next day he was coughing up blood so way too late. The time for treatment was 2 weeks before and a simple call to a Dr prescribing a series of meds/treatments early on would have saved his life. By the time you have double lung pneumonia you are really in a dangerous place.
We grew up having our mother's yell at us about dressing warm or you'd catch your death of pneumonia and we'd all shrug it off. As an adult, pneumonia scares me terribly.
In pneumonia, any kind, there is so much inflammation that at this point it is a physical deformity.
Try adding a medication to a car accident mutilation. Will that fix the problematic deformity?
You can’t. There is no airway.
No doctor or hospital is against you seeking your own physician for early treatment.
In fact, we have given vaccine exemptions to staff, and have allowed patients to bring in ivermectin.
If it’s brought up we ignore it.
That has not impacted care, and mostly these people continue to need support. If ivermectin would have prevented hospitalization, it should have.
Case in point:
My admit two days ago. RN, had his own ivermectin prescription by a family doctor. He had been sick for three weeks and taking decadron, ivermectin and a z pack.
Yet, he was feeling dizzy and came in. All prescriptions were over by the day before he came in. So he had a full treatment course yet he was not fully better.
This was week 4 last night. He’s dropping into the low 80s and I’m helping him prone which helps but I keep having to gown up and go in there to increase his O2.
He wanted to go home today and we want him to, because he wants to. The dizzy spells were a heart issue. This after his treatment course.
I suspect he has more ivermectin and has gotten what he’s wanted so far. No remdesivir because he’s refused. We have a large blackboard and it says to ask before bringing in remdesivir because not everyone wants it.
There is no pressure and we do care. We abide patient wishes and are compassionate and caring.
He can go home, with a heart arrhythmia and we would let him. It’s up to him. Yet his lungs don’t have breath sounds and are largely unchanged. It’s wall to wall inflammation and this since he was admitted.
Adding a medication to these changes to his lungs won’t help. His lungs will be full of scar tissue and won’t ever be the same.
If I listen to any other patient I hear breath sounds.
Not covid patients. They have lungs that won’t let air in, full of inflammation. That’s why it takes many weeks and why they get blown out.
Imagine a thumb hit in a door that blows up three sizes. Covid blows the lungs up ten sizes and stays like that for months. When it recedes, the lungs are filled with scar tissue.
A couple of months ago, my sister and her whole family got Covid and brought low by it. My brother in law stayed home sick for 2 weeks taking Dayquil until he got to a point where he couldn't breathe. They took him to the ER (in Florida) and they measured his O2 in the low 90s but said it wasn't low enough - gave him some meds and sent him home.
I found out he was sick after his visit (and didn't even know he had gone to the ER). I start telling my sister what she needs to get, who to contact for meds, etc but she is really weak. Then she tells me she is taking him back because he is coughing up blood. His O2 is now in the low 80s.
I told her they are going to push for Remdesivir and ventilator, and that she needed to push for X, Y and Z first, etc. She texts me back the next morning saying they put him on Remdesivir. The next night they threw him on a vent and vented him to the max and blew out his lung. Thirty six hours in his O2 is now in the 60s and they said he would be brain dead. Two and a half days after entering the hospital he was dead.
He was 40 years old and non smoker, 170lbs and no comorbidity. Pneumonia (they called it 'Covid pneumonia') is a real killer folks.
Unfortunately that is hospital protocol now in most states. I'm sure there will be malpractice suits in the future but that won't bring anyone back.
I know a guy from High School that just died this past weekend. He went to the hospital in Colorado and they immediately gave him Remdesivir which caused him to flat line while it was being administered. After that they vented him and he was dead a few days later.
I currently have a relative in the hospital in South Dakota where they gave him Regeneron/Regen-COV and he is on oxygen. Appears to have been through the worst.
Not sure if its a red state/blue state thing? Or just hospital by hospital basis? Either way, I'm convinced that Remdesivir is medical murder at this point.
The new CDC guidance is to not give monoclonals if the patient is after day 10 or needs oxygen.
Idk if there’s any truth to it, as I’m a couch medical article reader and not a full doctor. However, it makes some sense as your viral load peaks by day eight, and you’re dealing with the leftover inflammation by days nine and ten. The antibodies won’t have spike protein to attach to if the viral load is past peak.
It's always been 10 days for the monoclonal antibodies.
Huh. I thought they were using them after that point before. Guess I was wrong. Thanks for the clarification.
Murdered, by the numbers. They have a script and are using it.
If you want a friend or loved one to have a reasonable chance of survival, you must bust them out.
They are deliberately allowing the illness to progress to get the patients tetering on the edge and using vent and Remdesivir to push them over the precipice.
Every hour they go inproperly treated is critical for life and the quality of their recovery.
That is so sad, my heart goes out to you. And this , even in Florida, where the governor is supposedly on top of it all. Apparently the hospital systems are beyond his control. .. so sad
They are. Many of them are privately held, but some are university hospitals.
I had a good friend of mine put on Remdesivir also after he was admitted to the hospital. He had checked into the hospital a week after receiving his booster and was diagnosed with covid. Me and my daughter could visit by looking through the glass. We prayed but once they get put on this treatment it's pretty much the same ending which unfortunately for us was the loss of our friend.
Pneumonia is caused by a bacteria. Viral pneumonia is actually really weak sauce
Pneumonia should be IV antibiotics plus a steroid. IVM won't do much to help. Remdesivir does fuck all to help since it is doesn't do anything to begin with, but also because the pneumonia is caused by bacteria
He’s coughing up blood, and his O2 is where people who are dying is (people with COPD can even maintain oxygen saturation’s at 90 percent for years before they die) yet he’s totally fine and the hospital killed him.
As if coughing up blood and oxygen saturation’s at the level dying people experience are normal.
I’ve done hospice and I’ve seen covid.
Hospitals don’t send people home they wish to make money off of with remdesivir.
At some point people need to admit these people are extremely sick by the time they are admitted, and probably would have benefitted from being admitted earlier.
Which is it, you run to a hospital and they kill you, and it’s their fault? Why are you running there without breath? Because you’re gonna be fine? You’d be fine if you hadn’t gone to the hospital despite choking on your own blood.
If only you had stayed home choking on blood without oxygen, you’d still be alive.
As a Christian and a nurse, I know that others like me went into medicine with a clear conscience.
Up until now, we’ve done good work, supporting and caring for people through the aging, sickness and dying process.
Now, for some reason, we are murdering people.
For money I might add. Despite sending people home, so they can recover, they come back and at that point we become hungry for money and viciously murder them despite them choking on blood with a failing oxygenation level.
Does ANY of this make sense?
About 10 years ago, around the H1N1 outbreak I worked with a guy who was a smoker, but otherwise (to my knowledge) healthy 40 year old who got sick (maybe H1N1?) and got pneumonia and admitted to the hospital on a Wednesday and was dead by the weekend. I am sure there are real cases of Covid - I don't subscribe to it all being fake - it was designed in a lab afterall as a weapon.
I think by the time you show up coughing up blood, you are seriously ill. I belive my brother in law's timeline was 2 weeks very sick with Covid - no treatment besides Dayquil/Nyquil. After he was sent home by the ER, a day or two later he got monoclonal treatment, but it was the next day he was coughing up blood so way too late. The time for treatment was 2 weeks before and a simple call to a Dr prescribing a series of meds/treatments early on would have saved his life. By the time you have double lung pneumonia you are really in a dangerous place.
We grew up having our mother's yell at us about dressing warm or you'd catch your death of pneumonia and we'd all shrug it off. As an adult, pneumonia scares me terribly.
In pneumonia, any kind, there is so much inflammation that at this point it is a physical deformity.
Try adding a medication to a car accident mutilation. Will that fix the problematic deformity?
You can’t. There is no airway.
No doctor or hospital is against you seeking your own physician for early treatment.
In fact, we have given vaccine exemptions to staff, and have allowed patients to bring in ivermectin.
If it’s brought up we ignore it.
That has not impacted care, and mostly these people continue to need support. If ivermectin would have prevented hospitalization, it should have.
Case in point:
My admit two days ago. RN, had his own ivermectin prescription by a family doctor. He had been sick for three weeks and taking decadron, ivermectin and a z pack.
Yet, he was feeling dizzy and came in. All prescriptions were over by the day before he came in. So he had a full treatment course yet he was not fully better.
This was week 4 last night. He’s dropping into the low 80s and I’m helping him prone which helps but I keep having to gown up and go in there to increase his O2.
He wanted to go home today and we want him to, because he wants to. The dizzy spells were a heart issue. This after his treatment course.
I suspect he has more ivermectin and has gotten what he’s wanted so far. No remdesivir because he’s refused. We have a large blackboard and it says to ask before bringing in remdesivir because not everyone wants it.
There is no pressure and we do care. We abide patient wishes and are compassionate and caring.
He can go home, with a heart arrhythmia and we would let him. It’s up to him. Yet his lungs don’t have breath sounds and are largely unchanged. It’s wall to wall inflammation and this since he was admitted.
Adding a medication to these changes to his lungs won’t help. His lungs will be full of scar tissue and won’t ever be the same.
If I listen to any other patient I hear breath sounds.
Not covid patients. They have lungs that won’t let air in, full of inflammation. That’s why it takes many weeks and why they get blown out.
Imagine a thumb hit in a door that blows up three sizes. Covid blows the lungs up ten sizes and stays like that for months. When it recedes, the lungs are filled with scar tissue.
Pray for them, I do.