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202
BREAKING NEWS: Care homes in the UK caught using death penalty drugs, was this to artificially bump the COVID numbers up? (thedailybeagle.substack.com) 🔍 Notable
posted 3 years ago by DragonsDontEatSoy 3 years ago by DragonsDontEatSoy +202 / -0
The Death Penalty Drugs Used By Care Homes
The Daily Beagle's Deep Dive Into Deadly Drugs
thedailybeagle.substack.com
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▲ 20 ▼
– propertyofUniverse 20 points 3 years ago +20 / -0

My next door neighbour who had medium dementia died really quickly in a care home in the summer of 2020. He died quickly of pneumonia pretty much over a day. The care home wanted to write it down as covid even though he had had several tests which were all negative. He wasn't a fit person, but he had no specific illnesses that I know of except the dementia. I think it is likely that he was murdered, He was in his mid seventies. I was not expecting him to die.

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– deleted 14 points 3 years ago +14 / -0
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– Rootcause 4 points 3 years ago +4 / -0

Yes "it's all about the $$$$" - For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil, for which some have strayed from the faith in their greediness, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows - 1 Timothy 6:10

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– abstain 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

This is true. Morphine is used to hasten death. It is not "care".

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– deleted 4 points 3 years ago +4 / -0
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– Light1SingleCandle 4 points 3 years ago +4 / -0

First of all, you can refuse any medication you wish to refuse in hospice, although COVID patients were not afforded this basic right in hospitals. Second, any and all meds damage the kidneys and liver to some extent. Third, most patients in hospice don't die from medication-induced kidney failure. The normal stages of death are a process of shutting down the body. The extremities are the first to go - feet, hands, legs, arms - you can see the mottling process as the body shuts down support. The next to go are the reproductive and digestive organs, including the intestines, kidneys, liver, pancreas, stomach, etc. This is why patients start refusing food and water, and they start sleeping more. Their bodies stop processing food and water to preserve resources for the heart, lungs, and brain. For non-cancer patients, morphine helps with the pain, anxiety, and shortness of breath with the last stages as the heart, lungs, and finally the brain shut down. For cancer patients, morphine helps to relieve severe and intractable cancer pain. It is administered orally, and the family and the patient are in charge of administration. They can refuse it at any time.

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– deleted 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0
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– Light1SingleCandle 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Yes, sorry, I meant to address the part about accelerating death and ended up on a tangent. Of course it is possible to overdose and hasten death using morphine, but legitimate practice "should" prevent that. In hospitals or facilities, controlled substances are tightly controlled. The doctor has to order it properly, the pharmacy has to deliver it to the locked cabinet, nurses need to scan it to verify the correct order, administer it, and account for anything they remove from the locked cabinet. Every stage in the process has to verify that the order is correct and the medication/dose/route being given is correct. Nurses are the last line of defense for patient protection from medication errors and they are the ones usually held responsible for them, so they are expected to refuse to administer questionable medication orders. I haven't worked in a facility in several years, so maybe some of that was changed during COVID, and it's also possible that medication dosing guidelines may have been changed amidst the other shenanigans.

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– deleted 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0
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– Delphi373 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0

My father passed in Nov finally of dementia but also heart disease. He was 85. His death for me was very hard to witness.. but he was dying, and couldn't eat or take fluids at the very end. I allowed him to have some morphine at the very end - he was already mottling and hospice really was kind and helped.

My poor Dad had violent outbursts in his last month. He broke down a door. He pushed a patient out of their bed and destroyed his room. We ultimately had to relent to some psych meds just to keep him contained. I really didn't want him on meds but sometimes you just have to use them. It's all about balance, and using drugs wisely.

It was awful to see him like that...and he too got so thin towards the very end. But I researched the dying process and learned about everything you mentioned above. About a week or so before he died, you couldn't get him to eat or even really take fluids - he'd push it away. I learned that if we forced liquids on him he'd aspirate and suffer more. I guess it's about understanding when someone is "actively dying" vs. not - and that was all new to me. I had to learn about this as it's not something most of us even know about!

I was very grateful for the hospice team - they were incredibly kind and helpful. Thanks for your comment too - it's good for people to know the difference between actively dying and a person who isn't dying.

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– Light1SingleCandle 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Thank you. I reserve commenting on the deaths in facilities during COVID, because I've been told there were financial incentives for COVID deaths, and although I hate to think that medical personnel would actively kill someone, I can't say it wasn't done. I found the refusal to allow families to be present and advocate for patients was reprehensible. I was a hospice nurse for several years and found that there are a lot of people who truly believe that hospice nurses are running around killing people with unecessary overdoses of morphine. While I understand that those people may have reasons to believe that, I try to educate people on what in-home hospice care really is.

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– deleted 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0
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– TheVerboten1 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

both my parents died of dementia/alzheimers. At some point they refuse food and medications and become very difficult to arouse. They fade away quickly. In the final stages their bodies tend to stiffen, and any movement was quite painful. Both in hospice and given the order for oral morphine. It was given to keep them out of pain. It is possible it pushed them over the edge, but they were ready to pass, death rattles, etc.

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– Delphi373 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Yes same with my Dad - I just posted my experience above. Same thing - but incredibly hard to witness. hugs

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– TheVerboten1 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

indeed, very difficult.

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– deleted 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0
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– TheVerboten1 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0

A terrible death indeed.

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– abstain 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0

There was no time for kidney damage to take place with my parents.

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– Light1SingleCandle 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Absolutely not true. People in home hospice use morphine for extended periods of time depending on their condition. Nursing visits them in their homes at least 2-3 times per week and monitors the patient, family, and controlled substance use. When used properly, it provides comfort during the last stages of life, when the body is shutting down but the patient is still aware of pain and shortness of breath. When the body shuts down, the patient feels like they are suffocating and they get anxious and panicked. Morphine helps to slow the respiratory rate, suppress cough reflex, and ease pain and discomfort.

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– abstain 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Absolutely true. No one was trying to prolong the lives of my parents so the family could have more time with them. Also, some of these hospice people are absolutely ghoulish. You run in to all kinds.

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– placekicker17 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0

I’ve heard my dad mention this. When hospice comes in, the person is dead soon. Not comfortable. Dead.

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– Light1SingleCandle 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Of course patients in hospice die soon. Only those with a 6-month prognosis are admitted to hospice, and to remain in hospice, they need to show either no improvement or actual decline. Hospice provides in-home care so that dying patients and their families spend their last days together, resolve any past issues, get their affairs in order, etc. They are supported with aides for bathing and personal care, nurses for progress and medication monitoring, social workers, chaplains, and supervising physicians. The patient and family are in charge of medication administration, and they can refuse it at any time. They can revoke hospice any time. Hospice is not assisted euthanasia. There are patients that actually improve on hospice and are then discharged.

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– TheVerboten1 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Generally Hospice does not accept a pt unless they believe death is imminent, usually less than 6 months I believe. If a pt improves, they are removed from hospice care, so I was told by the hospice people.

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– abstain 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Exactly.

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– CQVFEFE 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Yup. Human history has shown clearly that if humans are given a powerful motivation to kill others, plus the physical means, plus a reward for so doing, they can be relied on to kill.

Similarly as right now, the pedos and traitors and other arch criminals running the world need to die, we have the means, and the reward will be Biblically glorious.

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– Hortance 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Yup. The US government has been training/preparing doctors to carry out the killings for decades.

They (Medicare and medicaid plus federal workers health insurance, over half of hospital cash flow) set "protocols" for every treatment.

Feds: "You must try 'a', THEN 'b', THEN 'c', if you want treatment 'x'. If you don't do it IN THAT ORDER, we won't pay you for any of the treatments, not just 'x'.'

There are nurses-in-a-suit in every hospital system that never see a patient, but only check to see that those protocols are being followed. eg, Sending emails to the cardiologist "No surgery 'x' approval from the hospital. You missed the 'b' testing and 'c' therapy. Hurry up and get that done or else 'a', 'b', 'c' and 'x' won't be paid for."

Drs/hospitals learned 15-20 years ago that they must always follow protocols or financial disaster for them. The government also penalizes some government payments to them if the protocols aren't followed on ALL (even private pay) patients.

So when COVID protocols were presented, plus the carrot of EXTRA payments to kill people, the Doc and hospital administrators obeyed without a thought.

The "I'm the doctor, I'LL decide what's best for my patient" ethic was killed long ago. By design.

Somebody put a hell of a lot of thought into weaponizing our medical system, turning medical professionals into sleeper agents, ready to kill on command.

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– Cheesecakecrush 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0

You'd think with the exorbitant rates nursing homes charge it would be more profitable to keep their charges alive

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– deleted 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0
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– Light1SingleCandle 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0

I think this may have happened with the increased financial incentives with COVID, especially in hospitals. Most hospitals discharge patients as soon as possible because insurance will not pay for extended stays, which is why they are discharged to nursing homes or rehab. If they are discharged home, they end up right back in the hospital. Usually nursing homes and rehab make their money while the patient is there, but they may also have received the extra COVID death payments.

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– Biddles 7 points 3 years ago +7 / -0

The rise in prescriptions of midazolam and morphine also coincided with a decrease in prescriptions for antibiotics to treat pneumonia specifically. There was a chart I saw on Dr Yeadon's Telegram channel that put it beautifully, I'll see if I can find it again. There have been some professionals talking about this for a couple of years but they haven't gotten much traction yet. Hopefully it becomes more common knowledge soon.

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– Biddles 6 points 3 years ago +6 / -0

Got it. https://palexander.substack.com/p/devastating-four-4-graphs-in-uk-that

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– propertyofUniverse 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Thank you fren!

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– Wtf_socialismreally 5 points 3 years ago +5 / -0

Dementia does make you very susceptible to that sort of thing though.

It's certainly something that the party of plausible deniability would do, however.

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– propertyofUniverse 5 points 3 years ago +5 / -0

Interestingly, dementia was one of the main risk factors for "covid".

Yes, both effects are probably there, fragility and abuse.

I note that people with dementia cannot protect themselves from abuse or report it.

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– covfefetheordinary 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Yeah. Especially here in the UK all about clearing a bed in the nhs. I thank God that I can afford private health care every day.

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– Light1SingleCandle 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Anyone who died with COVID was listed as dying of COVID regardless of the true cause of death to artificially inflate the death rate. Plus, hospitals and probably nursing homes were paid extra for COVID deaths. None of this was done covertly, either, so there are normies that know this. Yet they didn't question the vaxx.

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– ozthentic 14 points 3 years ago +14 / -0

NOT just care homes. My super fit uncle who suffered a fracture while clearing snow entered hospital and was dead within a month. Coincided with the worst of UK lockdowns ( no visitors ) and the highest death numbers. It was months before my relatives could have his funeral. EVIL

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– Oh_Well_ian 5 points 3 years ago +5 / -0

The tik tok dances were a ritual by the murderous Hospital staff, celebrating the death of tens of thousands of people.

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– HardWorkinPatriot 4 points 3 years ago +4 / -0

I couldn't understand those stupid dance videos. This actually makes sense!

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– deleted 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0
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– platinumbubble 7 points 3 years ago +7 / -0

Along with the midazolam/morphine suppressant which obvs hastens death under the guise of 'end of life care' and does not encourage the immune system to fight back, the other major issue for the vulnerable and elderly is de-hydration. Elderly people who are thin have very little fluid in reserve and would need regular help sipping fluids or an effective drip to survive. Fluids are usually withdrawn when 'end of life care' is prescribed.

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– 4Hope70 4 points 3 years ago +4 / -0

Friend of my husband, who has some short term memory issues, had breathing issues that progressed at home (forgot to finish his antibiotics for a respiratory infection). It rapidly progressed to pneumonia, so bad he had to go to the hospital. Numerous tests for Covid, RSV, were negative. Also negative for bacterial pneumonia (but he had already been on oral antibiotics at home, so who knows if this skewed the results). He was placed on IV antibiotics and albuterol treatments. He wound up in the ICU for about 10 days. They wanted to give him monoclonal antibodies, but his son said know. The hospital rarely got him out of bed. His oxygenation level went down to the low 70’s and it took 2 hours to recover at 4L the one time. After about 3 weeks in the hospital, they decided to send him to a rehab. facility (must be insurance send they would not cover a longer stay because all of a sudden they decided to transfer him). They ambulated him in the hall on 4L oxygen and because one time he stayed in the low 90’s, he was good to go. The problem was that he was now deemed “to healthy” to qualify for rehab., so they wanted him to go to a skilled nursing home. Having worked in a “Deficiency Free” skilled nursing home for a brief stint, I knew the care he would receive with a nurse/patient ratio of 1:25. So I told the family we would take him in (I had skilled/rehab experience, knew how to check oxygen levels, operate oxygen equipment, and a nebulizer machine. Rest, good food, administration of medicine regularly, gradual increase in activity, home PT/OT, and adding oregano oil capsules and Pine Needle tea (added to his regimen with family approval for his respiratory health) all helped him improve. We saw a vast improvement in 48 hours. I forgot to mention the dear hospital discharged him with a bedsore and never told us. That improved in less than 24 hours with a wonderful cream I found doing my research. The hospital tried to dissuade his son from sending him to us instead of the nursing home. I am convinced hospitals get a kick back on referrals. I doubt he would have improved had he gone there because his health was borderline on arrival. He will be leaving us 7 weeks after arrival. He could have left at 4 weeks, but he still needed a lung scan and pulmonologist follow up, before departing for his daughter in New Jersey. None of the family was able or equipped to manage his care because they had two story houses and due to lung capacity could not manage stairs. He is now off oxygen, steroids and down to one albuterol treatment per day for the next week. My point with this long narrative is: beware of placing your family member in even a deficiency free nursing home. They will NOT get the care they need to recover because staffing is very thin (you pay $5000-6000/month) and they will receive suboptimal care. Even hospital staff are not as attentive as they should be in meeting the needs of patients-he should have been out of bed more every day, and ambulated in the hall by physical therapy.

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– praying71 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

$5000-6000/month sounds like 1 full-time employee assigned to 1 patient only (designated).

Costly enough for family members to feel financial “relief” when people die.

Evil uses money to make people complicit in his schemes.

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– 4Hope70 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

Yes. Also figure there are at least 100 patients=$500,000/month. 4 nurses for 3 shifts, 4 aides, 1 DON, 1 receptionist and an OT and PT twice per week, laundry, housekeeping, kitchen workers=about $95,000 in salaries plus benefits/month. They have a nice tidy, profit even charging each patient $5000/month.

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– deleted 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0
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– Tewdryg 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Evil in its purest form. How can these self-identifying care givers executioners be still walking the streets? This is in the UK, but I bet you the same was happening here. The Kirkland, WA nursing home was first epicenter of the so-called US COVID outbreak where 35 elderly people died. This was unprecedented in history and has never occurred before. Of all the places, why did it happen here? The investigation for Kirkland nursing home IMHO was a cover-up and Governor Inslee was complicit in the planning and murder of these elderly people. This event was used to shock the American people and to cause panic. I'd like to see if death penalty drugs were used here.

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– 11823 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Remember when Europe refused to sell these drugs to the US because they were going to be used in executions. Now they’re executing the innocent in favor of the guilty.

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– Oh_Well_ian 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

I FUCKING KNEW IT!!!

During the mass die offs in the nursing homes that were being blamed on ventilators I made the case that fentanyl was being used to exterminate these people. I was widely mocked and discounted. I still, to this day, believe that fentanyl was employed to make certain that Mass die-offs would occur and be blamed on covid.

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– SWOL_of_CINDER 1 point 3 years ago +1 / -0

I mean, these medical professionals were also killing people with the ventalators as well (malpractice), as they weren't really for "covid"

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– covfefetheordinary 3 points 3 years ago +3 / -0

Yeah, my fiancée was made redundant just before covid and took a job in a Catholic care home in Scotland. Our rules were worse than the rest of the UK. Couldn't even visit families at a window. So many midazolam prescriptions and DNR's that the families knew nothing about. She quit after the vaccine rollout. They were just wheeling people with dementia and worse into a room and the vaccine staff were just like do you consent to the covid vaccine and telling them you need this. All staff were offered it she was one of three that didn't take it and was aggressively bullied.

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– HermitAu 2 points 3 years ago +2 / -0

I was expecting a nothingburger here but after reading it.. wow. It's undeniable.

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