Yes, the typical protocol for a person who goes to the hospital -first morphine and propofol to slow the breathing, then remdesivir (run-death-is near) to destroy the kidneys, then intubate to destroy the lungs. 2-3 weeks later DEATH BY HOSPITAL.
And not treating anything early. I had a friend die (get killed) by one false positive test. He had pneumonia, that should have been treated with an antibiotic and some breathing treatments... but the first thing they did at the Dr.'s office was a CV19 test that came back positive. They sent him home without testing anything else or any other treatments.... told him to take Tylenol and drink fluids. After 5 days at home of not eating or drinking (he was diabetic, so this was even worst on him), they rushed him to the emergency room - he was basically hallucinating at this point and had extremely low blood ox. 5 negative tests at the hospital and they STILL put him on the CV protocol - ventilator & remdesivir. Hospital didn't even test his sugar level for over 24 hours. His sugar was way out of whack, he was extremely dehydrated, and very low oxygen levels.... wouldn't you know, a few days later, his kidneys were shutting down and he was dead within a week of being admitted. And of course the family was not allowed to see him during this. This was complete malpractice, they killed him. And there is 0 recourse the family can take because muh covid. RIP Joe :/
I’ve been SCUBA. Diving for over 40 years, and one thing drummed into your head is that you always dive with a buddy. I think in this day and age we need to have a buddy system for the medical industry. Never go in alone, and always have your buddy advocate for you!
What's even sadder about the whole thing, is his daughter works in that hospital and told the mom/wife not to bring him there or he would die there. She was later forced to quit (quit or be fired and end her career) for trying to pull her dad's medical records after all this had happened.
But at the time (late summer of 2020), once you were labeled at CV positive, the hospital really didn't let family/visitors in. You just had to go by what was being reported to you by the drs & nurses. They put the patients on that protocol and that is it.... it would basically take a court order to have any say in their treatment options. The nurse daughter would have definitely been a great advocate for him, but she was not allowed (in her own hospital!).
I can't even imagine how many lives were taken by this evil protocol, most families probably don't even realize it - they think it was CV19. Funny (not really) how no one died at home from it... it was all hospital deaths.
Yes, the typical protocol for a person who goes to the hospital -first morphine and propofol to slow the breathing, then remdesivir (run-death-is near) to destroy the kidneys, then intubate to destroy the lungs. 2-3 weeks later DEATH BY HOSPITAL.
And not treating anything early. I had a friend die (get killed) by one false positive test. He had pneumonia, that should have been treated with an antibiotic and some breathing treatments... but the first thing they did at the Dr.'s office was a CV19 test that came back positive. They sent him home without testing anything else or any other treatments.... told him to take Tylenol and drink fluids. After 5 days at home of not eating or drinking (he was diabetic, so this was even worst on him), they rushed him to the emergency room - he was basically hallucinating at this point and had extremely low blood ox. 5 negative tests at the hospital and they STILL put him on the CV protocol - ventilator & remdesivir. Hospital didn't even test his sugar level for over 24 hours. His sugar was way out of whack, he was extremely dehydrated, and very low oxygen levels.... wouldn't you know, a few days later, his kidneys were shutting down and he was dead within a week of being admitted. And of course the family was not allowed to see him during this. This was complete malpractice, they killed him. And there is 0 recourse the family can take because muh covid. RIP Joe :/
I’ve been SCUBA. Diving for over 40 years, and one thing drummed into your head is that you always dive with a buddy. I think in this day and age we need to have a buddy system for the medical industry. Never go in alone, and always have your buddy advocate for you!
What's even sadder about the whole thing, is his daughter works in that hospital and told the mom/wife not to bring him there or he would die there. She was later forced to quit (quit or be fired and end her career) for trying to pull her dad's medical records after all this had happened.
But at the time (late summer of 2020), once you were labeled at CV positive, the hospital really didn't let family/visitors in. You just had to go by what was being reported to you by the drs & nurses. They put the patients on that protocol and that is it.... it would basically take a court order to have any say in their treatment options. The nurse daughter would have definitely been a great advocate for him, but she was not allowed (in her own hospital!).
I can't even imagine how many lives were taken by this evil protocol, most families probably don't even realize it - they think it was CV19. Funny (not really) how no one died at home from it... it was all hospital deaths.
In other words murder, in other words crimes against humanity, in other words betrayed by those you trust the most.