It's crazy to me that we even get excited when a judge "lets" someone's family physician administer Ivermectin. WTF? Are these people prisoners of the state or what? I can't believe how crazy things got and how fast it happened.
And the protocol is in place for reasons of Big Money. Patient has the FLU? Yawn. DIES of the flu? Yawn.
Patient is diagnosed with COVID instead? Whoopie! Patient goes on the Protocol? $$. Patient gets put on the ventilator? $39,000! (Link is from last August; things may have changed since then).
When my brother was in the hospital a few months ago, he was there one day and they said he would be moved to ICU (there for 3 days), given remdesevir and would be put on a vent.
His wife was making those decisions, but thankfully they asked him and he said NO to the vent. One day later he was out of ICU and then one more day and he was sent home. The hospital didn't get their extra pay for using a vent, so they didn't keep him around long after that, but he did get the 5 days of remdesivir before being released with an oxygen machine to take home with him.
This is the protocol set up in all hospitals and this is what is happening. It is crazy that doctors have no say and patients even less say.
It's crazy to me that we even get excited when a judge "lets" someone's family physician administer Ivermectin. WTF? Are these people prisoners of the state or what? I can't believe how crazy things got and how fast it happened.
Yea, if this happened to a loved one, no one is stopping me from giving them ivermectin. I really dare them to try.
And the protocol is in place for reasons of Big Money. Patient has the FLU? Yawn. DIES of the flu? Yawn.
Patient is diagnosed with COVID instead? Whoopie! Patient goes on the Protocol? $$. Patient gets put on the ventilator? $39,000! (Link is from last August; things may have changed since then).
"COVID" is the magic word that unlocks a mountain of cash for a good many industries, actually.
What happened to the RIGHT TO TRY law that Trump signed into law???
I don't think the hospitals care about this.
When my brother was in the hospital a few months ago, he was there one day and they said he would be moved to ICU (there for 3 days), given remdesevir and would be put on a vent.
His wife was making those decisions, but thankfully they asked him and he said NO to the vent. One day later he was out of ICU and then one more day and he was sent home. The hospital didn't get their extra pay for using a vent, so they didn't keep him around long after that, but he did get the 5 days of remdesivir before being released with an oxygen machine to take home with him.
my niece is mad at me that my sister is refusing the vent.
Good to hear that she's refusing the vent.
If my brother hadn't done that, I don't think he would have survived being put on one.
I hope you're sister starts to improve and is able to get home soon.