When the plandemic first broke I sat in on some Zoom roundtables from a few major hospitals around the country. Like everyone else, we were scrambling at trying to get our heads around what was happening and how to deal with it. It was very apparent after just a couple of weeks into this that there was something very wrong. A narrative regarding treatment, or lack of it, had already been developed and any opinions outside of that narrative were immediately discredited and shot down. Vents were killing people and no other treatment was being offered. Any attempts at trying to understand the mechanisms of this illness and possible treatments were attacked. All critical thinking and coming together to actually solve the problem was taken off the table. The power of the hospitalists/intensivists was in full view. (A discussion for another day.) I had never seen anything like it before. You are right. They were abandoning their patients and clinicians were being stripped of any input.
Hats off for hanging in there. I had to bow out. I would have lost my license if I didn't and I was already thinking of retiring anyway. The Rona just pushed up my decision. I am still thinking at some point of jumping back into the fray when some of this madness is over and real clinicians can operate.
I helped connect covid patients with doctors who would prescribe the IVM, HCQ, steroids, antibiotic, etc. Then I connected the patients with the few pharmacies who would fill the scripts. Outside doctors treated the hospitalized patients secretly. (The outside docs would prescribe the meds, then the families would sneak the IVM and HCQ with zinc to the patients.)
The patients always got better, if they were refusing Remdesivir and the ventilator! It made the doctors very upset when the patients refused the hospital protocol...and baffled when the patients would recover enough to be discharged within 3 to 4 days.
You could be someone to whom we refer patients to get their prescriptions to treat covid or to heal (as much as possible) from the jab. Do you have any desire to be on the list?
Thank you for the offer. I will keep it in mind should I decide to get back into the fight. At the moment I am not practicing. God bless you for doing this. It restores my faith in those that got into medicine to help people.
I bowed out too. You are not alone. For us, Money, could NEVER be enough to breach Ethics, because we have confidence in knowing that we have but one soul in all eternity. The wrenching decision to stay in or bow out was pivital. In my mind, this was a hard test of character and faith. Those who bowed out- you and me and the others, we passed the test.
Salute o7. It has not been easy. But, money was not a reason to do the wrong thing. I have always believed that our integrity and soul are the only things in life that cannot be taken from us - we voluntarily give them away. That was a choice I was unwilling to make - no matter the pressure or coercion. Nice to be in good company. God bless you.
Good luck. It has not been easy financially making the decision that I did. But, I could not bring myself to be actively engaged in knowingly harming my patients and I could not remain silent. I had been on a tightrope over vaxxines for years and already on the fringe with regards to my colleagues. I was fighting influenza vaxxine mandates when they were being implemented. The handwriting was already on the wall and I knew where this was all headed. I was involved in incorporating the Influenza Pandemic protocols into infection control policies. It was all there for anyone willing to take a look at it. They have been planning this for a long time. The narrative over treatment protocols seemed to have come together immediately and out of nowhere - but in reality the details had already been written. Every place was operating with the very same protocols of non treatment. Coincidence? I think not.
Glad to have another HCP on our side. Good nurses will be critical in rebuilding the system. God bless.
I’ve worked in and out of hospitals for decades now — I’ll never go back. I’m still in healthcare (corporate no less) but I can’t make myself go back to hands on with the mandates and the lack of actual patient care.
Unfortunately- those who will Buck the system are few and far between. If you can stay - awesome because we need more. If not — totally understandable At the moment I don’t have the battle. I fought the mandate and would have simply walked away if it was pushed. Now I use the ability to advocate and translate medical speak for friends and family.
You are complicit if taking part in outright murder. Can you live with yourself if your patients died because you carried out unlawful orders? Putting money before lives will not wash.
My husband had a heart attack August 2020. If all the nurses and doctors left medicine because of COVID protocols, who would have saved my husband? Ivermectin does not treat heart attacks. And yes, ivermectin is used in my family and not ONE person, young or very old, died of COVID.
I am so happy to hear your husband recovered and that your family is safe.
My thought is that if the hospital protocols were not carried out, because nurses learned of their danger and refused to comply, then the hospitals would have had no choice but to reverse their protocols. (They couldn't operate without nurses.) It would have been a quick game of "chicken"...even quicker if the brave doctors and nurses became whistle-blowers early on, getting media attention however possible.
If it took longer, then I am sure visiting nurses would have filled the gap on other floors...or nurses not working the covid floor would still be there, anyway.
Eventually, we need doctor-owned hospitals to be re-established. Those facilities are safer, because the doctors actually work for the well-being of the patients
When the plandemic first broke I sat in on some Zoom roundtables from a few major hospitals around the country. Like everyone else, we were scrambling at trying to get our heads around what was happening and how to deal with it. It was very apparent after just a couple of weeks into this that there was something very wrong. A narrative regarding treatment, or lack of it, had already been developed and any opinions outside of that narrative were immediately discredited and shot down. Vents were killing people and no other treatment was being offered. Any attempts at trying to understand the mechanisms of this illness and possible treatments were attacked. All critical thinking and coming together to actually solve the problem was taken off the table. The power of the hospitalists/intensivists was in full view. (A discussion for another day.) I had never seen anything like it before. You are right. They were abandoning their patients and clinicians were being stripped of any input.
Hats off for hanging in there. I had to bow out. I would have lost my license if I didn't and I was already thinking of retiring anyway. The Rona just pushed up my decision. I am still thinking at some point of jumping back into the fray when some of this madness is over and real clinicians can operate.
I helped connect covid patients with doctors who would prescribe the IVM, HCQ, steroids, antibiotic, etc. Then I connected the patients with the few pharmacies who would fill the scripts. Outside doctors treated the hospitalized patients secretly. (The outside docs would prescribe the meds, then the families would sneak the IVM and HCQ with zinc to the patients.)
The patients always got better, if they were refusing Remdesivir and the ventilator! It made the doctors very upset when the patients refused the hospital protocol...and baffled when the patients would recover enough to be discharged within 3 to 4 days.
You could be someone to whom we refer patients to get their prescriptions to treat covid or to heal (as much as possible) from the jab. Do you have any desire to be on the list?
Thank you for the offer. I will keep it in mind should I decide to get back into the fight. At the moment I am not practicing. God bless you for doing this. It restores my faith in those that got into medicine to help people.
God bless you, too, for being a digital soldier. I am sure you make a big impact because of your credentials.
I bowed out too. You are not alone. For us, Money, could NEVER be enough to breach Ethics, because we have confidence in knowing that we have but one soul in all eternity. The wrenching decision to stay in or bow out was pivital. In my mind, this was a hard test of character and faith. Those who bowed out- you and me and the others, we passed the test.
Salute o7. It has not been easy. But, money was not a reason to do the wrong thing. I have always believed that our integrity and soul are the only things in life that cannot be taken from us - we voluntarily give them away. That was a choice I was unwilling to make - no matter the pressure or coercion. Nice to be in good company. God bless you.
Good luck. It has not been easy financially making the decision that I did. But, I could not bring myself to be actively engaged in knowingly harming my patients and I could not remain silent. I had been on a tightrope over vaxxines for years and already on the fringe with regards to my colleagues. I was fighting influenza vaxxine mandates when they were being implemented. The handwriting was already on the wall and I knew where this was all headed. I was involved in incorporating the Influenza Pandemic protocols into infection control policies. It was all there for anyone willing to take a look at it. They have been planning this for a long time. The narrative over treatment protocols seemed to have come together immediately and out of nowhere - but in reality the details had already been written. Every place was operating with the very same protocols of non treatment. Coincidence? I think not.
Glad to have another HCP on our side. Good nurses will be critical in rebuilding the system. God bless.
All the respect in the world to you.
I’ve worked in and out of hospitals for decades now — I’ll never go back. I’m still in healthcare (corporate no less) but I can’t make myself go back to hands on with the mandates and the lack of actual patient care.
Unfortunately- those who will Buck the system are few and far between. If you can stay - awesome because we need more. If not — totally understandable At the moment I don’t have the battle. I fought the mandate and would have simply walked away if it was pushed. Now I use the ability to advocate and translate medical speak for friends and family.
God Bless You and Keep You Safe! Thanks for what you are doing! You are a Warrior!
Wow. You are brave, and making such a difference. You never know how far the information you teach will spread.
You are complicit if taking part in outright murder. Can you live with yourself if your patients died because you carried out unlawful orders? Putting money before lives will not wash.
My husband had a heart attack August 2020. If all the nurses and doctors left medicine because of COVID protocols, who would have saved my husband? Ivermectin does not treat heart attacks. And yes, ivermectin is used in my family and not ONE person, young or very old, died of COVID.
I am so happy to hear your husband recovered and that your family is safe.
My thought is that if the hospital protocols were not carried out, because nurses learned of their danger and refused to comply, then the hospitals would have had no choice but to reverse their protocols. (They couldn't operate without nurses.) It would have been a quick game of "chicken"...even quicker if the brave doctors and nurses became whistle-blowers early on, getting media attention however possible.
If it took longer, then I am sure visiting nurses would have filled the gap on other floors...or nurses not working the covid floor would still be there, anyway.
Eventually, we need doctor-owned hospitals to be re-established. Those facilities are safer, because the doctors actually work for the well-being of the patients