Had a family member spend multiple days in the hospital recently. Luckily wasn’t COVID, still wasn’t good.
Anywho.
One of the nurses was telling the family member—after learning the fam wasn’t vaccinated—that even the doctors at our local hospital are finally starting to question the vaccines and their side effects. At least, amongst themselves and the staff. They aren’t at the point they’re speaking publicly about it yet. They have, however, told the administration there’s no way in hell they’re taking more forced boosters after what they’re seeing.
Apparently the jump in strokes is finally at noticeable levels. And they’re seeing people with weird spinal cord injuries/infections that, apparently, can only be linked to the vaccines.
That's pretty fucking sad. If you see something doesn't work, you try something else. That seems like if it doesn't work, just keep pushing it harder until it does work.
No no no. It means something different in medicine.
“Evidence-based medicine” is the asshole system we have that you can’t try something off-label/you can’t let people just try things if the FDA hasn’t approved it and you haven’t had a double-blind, randomized trial to study something.
It’s also insanity because you’ll have an “evidence-based” study for some new drug that is then given to large swathes of the population while the study itself is based on less than 100 people who fit the narrowest criteria imaginable for the human race. Ie: testing new blood pressure meds but the test patients can’t have MI, must have a very narrow range of HBP, can’t have other issues, etc.
It’s a massive reason functional medicine was created by Dr. Weil—evidence based medicine takes too long to complete and is shitty “evidence” of success when a trial does work.