My RN friend is involved with assisting this family ... People are fighting back!
(media.greatawakening.win)
👀 EYES ON! 👀
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I spent 2 weeks in the hospital on oxygen, turned down remdesivir. Heard nurse mention she had 6 dialyses that day, I asked another nurse if they took remdesivir, she said "You don't want to take remdesivir" with the most horrified look on her face. The Nurses know but are not in a position to say anything to stop it. They would be the best to target for their testimony.
Yes. The nurses are the ones who know what's going on. Glad you're better.
Thank you.
As a nurse, one option I have is informing patients of the fact that whether it’s remdesivir, the antibody infusion, or a vaccine, etc., they’re all emergency use authorization... which is a concept totally new to medicines mass-used inside the hospital. Nurses aren’t routinely familiar with this concept. One of the hospitals I work at, there’s a form for the physician to have the patient agree to remdesivir, since it’s EUA, same with antibodies. I’ve had patients refuse even the antibody infusion (which is supposed to be amazing, right? ... ) after I informed them of the EUA, gave them the paperwork that came from the pharmacy for them to read and then answered (as best I could) their questions. I’ve told numerous patients that I’ve tried to do my own research on what the antibodies actually are and it seems to be impossible to get any real information. I tell them I don’t really know what they are other than what the description is. A patient even asked me if I would take them, and I told them honestly I don’t think so. Anyways, once properly informed, people often make the correct decisions. It’s all about what information they’re given.
But to your point, nurses mostly can’t do much, but they know the most!
Years ago nurses were consistently the most trusted professionals. Doctors were several levels lower. I think it's the perception that "this person cares about me." Being honest and saying "this is what I know" and showing your info puts you miles ahead of "I'm the expert." Maybe nudge other nurses.
But they are in a position to stop it. They simply refuse to administer it and if they're fired, they're fired.
Most of us have been put in difficult positions via coercion in the past two years. There is always a choice.
I apologize if I sound cold, but I have no sympathy for any medical professional that chooses their career over doing what's right.
If a nurse follows a doctor's orders knowing it is harmful, they're both liable.
Yes, a nurse can lose her license for following MD order. For example, if an MD gives a lethal order for a medication. The nurse's duty is to know what she's administering and what is a correct dose for every single medication she administers. The nurse's duty is to the patient, not the MD.
I guess it would depend on what the doctor is ordering.
I think many people will be liable for administering the Covid jab. For one thing, they didn't get informed consent. They didn't discuss the risks and benefits of the shot.
They sure threaten it. We have our own laws and I can’t imagine administering the vax without proper consent. They are done.
Good on you for refusing Run-death-is-near
Especially the ones who refused the Vax.