This is murder. They didn’t “lose” the blood. They simply didn’t want to use it because they think vaccinated blood is just wonderful, and the parents were being silly.
No, it sounds to me like they were simply incompetent and then tried to cover their asteroids. It happens all the time. They screwed up and lost the blood. Then they were caught with their pants down and convinced everyone it was no big deal and proceeded anyway. They took a chance and they lost bigly.
Hospitals are always looking at the bottom line. They have to in order to stay in business. Therefore, when a fairly expensive procedure is slated and all the players are in place and ready to proceed, they are reluctant to pull the plug and reset - which is exactly what they should have done. As a matter of convenience for the hospital and the providers, the decision was made to use the hospitals generic blood supply. What proceeded from that mistake was the coverup for their blunder. Unfortunately for this family, it cost the life of their child.
This is not only the hospitals fault, but it is also the fault of every provider involved that should have stopped the procedure. Speaking from experience, money and convenience are usually the driving factors for many of these providers that overrule safety and simply doing the right thing. They should have seen that this case had lawsuit written all over it, and in order to protect not only the life of this child and their own professional integrity, they should have stopped the procedure. Being more concerned about rescheduling and receiving the hospitals wrath prompted them to move forward. This is their bad and the buck stops with them. They were the ones ultimately responsible because it was within their power to stop this - and they didn't.
This is not DS. This is just human failure on display. We should be careful when seeing larger conspiracy into situations when incompetence and a lack of ethics can explain it - Occam's Razor. Yes, the institutions are set up by forces wanting to control and can set the stage for bad behavior. But, how the individual operates within that system is entirely their decision and their responsibility. Having worked in this wheelhouse for decades, I can see almost exactly how this sad situation occurred and unfolded. The fault lies with the individual providers involved and not some larger cabal of nefarious actors. If we are ever going to stop this proliferation of bad behavior we must hold individuals accountable for their actions and not allow the blame to be shifted.
Not covering for anyone here fren. We will never take power away from those seeking to destroy us until we take a stand and say no, we do not comply. This tragedy was the result of spineless providers unwilling to do the right thing. The blame rests solely upon them.
to be honest - this wouldnt surprise me one bit - I can never say a good thing about hospitals - literally every time family or i have been in its been a sh1tshow
Having worked in this genre for decades, I have an understanding of how the inside works. The levels of compromise and incompetency for the sake of convenience and profit at times is frightening. To make things worse, staff and providers often go along to get along and never speak up about what they see. I always tell others that need to go in hospital, to have an advocate camped out in the hospital room to monitor everything. If needed, have several that can take shifts. Question everything. READ everything you sign and have hard copy of what you signed. We have to be our own advocates.
Medical institutions are a profit making business and the bottom line matters. Decisions can be made to benefit the bottom line and not the patient. There is very little altruism here. Human beings are simply commodities.
I have taken some massive heat over the years for being a patient advocate and I have lost jobs over taking a stand on behalf of my patient against much larger interests. The entire Covid profit making scam is only the tip of a much bigger iceberg that exists within the system. And just to add some clarity, publicly funded institutions have their own set of problems that do not necessarily equate to better patient outcomes. Private institutions are profit driven, while public institutions are process driven. I have worked both sides of this system.
A healthy bit of skepticism never hurts. Be well and safe fren.
Hospitals are always looking at the bottom line. They have to in order to stay in business.
This is not true for most big hospital systems, as they are very frivolous with spending and giving bonuses to directors and above..even if they're "non profit". They also get bailed out by the government when something goes wrong. Too big to fail and all that.
Not sure where you are getting your information, but hospital systems prior to Covid did not receive bailout money. However, Covid has been a boom for all of these systems. This is why we are seeing the horror shows involving hospitals and Covid care. They saw an opportunity to increase much needed cash flow and they took full advantage of what the taxpayer has been making available to them. Unfortunately, their greed has caused them to seriously bend all manner of ethics and morality to do it. They don't know how long this gravy train is going to last so they are taking it for all it will give them. But under normal circumstances they do not receive government monies beyond regular insurance reimbursement payments for Medicare and Medicaid. Depending on the institution, some may receive grants for particular projects or funds for research. The bulk of their funding comes from private insurance reimbursement. They do not operate like banks that get bailouts when they fail. A failed medical system just goes bankrupt or is bought out by bigger fish.
Most independent hospitals had been on the verge of insolvency and have slowly been bought out and incorporated into larger systems. This has been especially true since the passage of the ACA. Part of the reason the ACA was passed was to address the problem of failing hospitals that could not keep their heads about water. The cost of delivering care was outpacing reimbursement payments. Especially when they had to eat the cost of caring for the uninsured. Corporate medical systems, have an advantage because they consolidate certain aspects of business operations. But, like any other large business structure, they still squeeze the bottom end to pay a few at the top. Patients, staff, supplies, and equipment, are all shortchanged in order to pay for management structure at the top. Cost cutting and saving measures in the trenches are always in play. So I stand by my claim that they are always looking at the bottom line because they are still a private business. Public systems also have their money issues - but that is a discussion for another day. I have worked in both environments so I know something about what I speak.
Unvaxxed blood is at a premium and the blood donation centers know that. It is quite possible that directed donation as it is called was stolen for others' use. Don't for one minute think the blood banks empoyees themselves aren't aware of the mess blood banks are in, accepting what I term "sewage" for blood.
Follow the money, unvaxxed blood and organs at a premium.
This is murder. They didn’t “lose” the blood. They simply didn’t want to use it because they think vaccinated blood is just wonderful, and the parents were being silly.
Lets get some names on here.
I want arrests, trials, convictions.
We're being methodically slaughtered
Or maybe the hospital is hoarding the pure blood? People need to start suing. Class actions are effective.
No, it sounds to me like they were simply incompetent and then tried to cover their asteroids. It happens all the time. They screwed up and lost the blood. Then they were caught with their pants down and convinced everyone it was no big deal and proceeded anyway. They took a chance and they lost bigly.
Hospitals are always looking at the bottom line. They have to in order to stay in business. Therefore, when a fairly expensive procedure is slated and all the players are in place and ready to proceed, they are reluctant to pull the plug and reset - which is exactly what they should have done. As a matter of convenience for the hospital and the providers, the decision was made to use the hospitals generic blood supply. What proceeded from that mistake was the coverup for their blunder. Unfortunately for this family, it cost the life of their child.
This is not only the hospitals fault, but it is also the fault of every provider involved that should have stopped the procedure. Speaking from experience, money and convenience are usually the driving factors for many of these providers that overrule safety and simply doing the right thing. They should have seen that this case had lawsuit written all over it, and in order to protect not only the life of this child and their own professional integrity, they should have stopped the procedure. Being more concerned about rescheduling and receiving the hospitals wrath prompted them to move forward. This is their bad and the buck stops with them. They were the ones ultimately responsible because it was within their power to stop this - and they didn't.
This is not DS. This is just human failure on display. We should be careful when seeing larger conspiracy into situations when incompetence and a lack of ethics can explain it - Occam's Razor. Yes, the institutions are set up by forces wanting to control and can set the stage for bad behavior. But, how the individual operates within that system is entirely their decision and their responsibility. Having worked in this wheelhouse for decades, I can see almost exactly how this sad situation occurred and unfolded. The fault lies with the individual providers involved and not some larger cabal of nefarious actors. If we are ever going to stop this proliferation of bad behavior we must hold individuals accountable for their actions and not allow the blame to be shifted.
Wow, nice cover for the cabal demons trying to kill us all. We know what is going on. This was no accident.
Not covering for anyone here fren. We will never take power away from those seeking to destroy us until we take a stand and say no, we do not comply. This tragedy was the result of spineless providers unwilling to do the right thing. The blame rests solely upon them.
"Simply incompetent." NO.
to be honest - this wouldnt surprise me one bit - I can never say a good thing about hospitals - literally every time family or i have been in its been a sh1tshow
Having worked in this genre for decades, I have an understanding of how the inside works. The levels of compromise and incompetency for the sake of convenience and profit at times is frightening. To make things worse, staff and providers often go along to get along and never speak up about what they see. I always tell others that need to go in hospital, to have an advocate camped out in the hospital room to monitor everything. If needed, have several that can take shifts. Question everything. READ everything you sign and have hard copy of what you signed. We have to be our own advocates.
Medical institutions are a profit making business and the bottom line matters. Decisions can be made to benefit the bottom line and not the patient. There is very little altruism here. Human beings are simply commodities.
I have taken some massive heat over the years for being a patient advocate and I have lost jobs over taking a stand on behalf of my patient against much larger interests. The entire Covid profit making scam is only the tip of a much bigger iceberg that exists within the system. And just to add some clarity, publicly funded institutions have their own set of problems that do not necessarily equate to better patient outcomes. Private institutions are profit driven, while public institutions are process driven. I have worked both sides of this system.
A healthy bit of skepticism never hurts. Be well and safe fren.
This is not true for most big hospital systems, as they are very frivolous with spending and giving bonuses to directors and above..even if they're "non profit". They also get bailed out by the government when something goes wrong. Too big to fail and all that.
Not sure where you are getting your information, but hospital systems prior to Covid did not receive bailout money. However, Covid has been a boom for all of these systems. This is why we are seeing the horror shows involving hospitals and Covid care. They saw an opportunity to increase much needed cash flow and they took full advantage of what the taxpayer has been making available to them. Unfortunately, their greed has caused them to seriously bend all manner of ethics and morality to do it. They don't know how long this gravy train is going to last so they are taking it for all it will give them. But under normal circumstances they do not receive government monies beyond regular insurance reimbursement payments for Medicare and Medicaid. Depending on the institution, some may receive grants for particular projects or funds for research. The bulk of their funding comes from private insurance reimbursement. They do not operate like banks that get bailouts when they fail. A failed medical system just goes bankrupt or is bought out by bigger fish.
Most independent hospitals had been on the verge of insolvency and have slowly been bought out and incorporated into larger systems. This has been especially true since the passage of the ACA. Part of the reason the ACA was passed was to address the problem of failing hospitals that could not keep their heads about water. The cost of delivering care was outpacing reimbursement payments. Especially when they had to eat the cost of caring for the uninsured. Corporate medical systems, have an advantage because they consolidate certain aspects of business operations. But, like any other large business structure, they still squeeze the bottom end to pay a few at the top. Patients, staff, supplies, and equipment, are all shortchanged in order to pay for management structure at the top. Cost cutting and saving measures in the trenches are always in play. So I stand by my claim that they are always looking at the bottom line because they are still a private business. Public systems also have their money issues - but that is a discussion for another day. I have worked in both environments so I know something about what I speak.
*Premeditated.
Premeditated murder.
Executions.
Unvaxxed blood is at a premium and the blood donation centers know that. It is quite possible that directed donation as it is called was stolen for others' use. Don't for one minute think the blood banks empoyees themselves aren't aware of the mess blood banks are in, accepting what I term "sewage" for blood.
Follow the money, unvaxxed blood and organs at a premium.