Well of course "it was an Accident"
(media.greatawakening.win)
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To kill people and generate fear and panic.
It's not a story, it's my own personal theory.
It's been used in hospitals for years, as a pain management drug. Almost killed my mom in a rehab facility when they gave her an overdose that sent her to ER. But that was years before Covid.
It's effective for killing people, and it provides a lot of deniability for the hospital because death can easily be a heart attack if nobody checks for fentanyl within a small time window. But it doesn't fit the Covid protocols. I think medical staff was awake enough to fentanyl (and their own liability for deaths) such that even they would have balked at giving it in Covid treatment even if protocols told them to.
It’s likely to be given in small doses due to the discomfort of the ventilator unless the vent patients are also given a paralytic to incapacitate their breathing altogether.
Fentanyl is usually a time-release skin patch in a hospital setting, so I'm not worried about dosing. But it's been given as part of Covid protocol at all, it makes the "ignorance defense" less applicable at lower levels than I thought. Disgusting if true.
Oh I’m used to it being given during anesthesia induction in the operating room in a liquid form.
For the hospitals, yes, but what about the nursing homes?
I wasn't arguing about its use or deadliness, I was just trying to figure out the point at which it could be used as part of the Covid treatment. I hope it didn't come across in a different way.
Another responder in this thread wrote that it is used in IV form when placing someone on a ventilator, which I didn't know. So your suspicions could be correct; it could easily be a part of the death protocol at that point.
Wherever it's used it can be deadly. And because it's both addictive and increases sensitivity to pain after it wears off, it leads to increased pain in the medium term and long term with continued increase as it is used more and more anyway, which should discourage its use across the board except in hospice or controlled short-term situations where it's still dangerous. It's a vicious drug wherever it's used.
My theory is based on its availability, effectiveness, and wanting many dead people, very quickly. Remember the home in Washington state where everybody died in 48 hours? It's quite horrible to watch people die on a ventilators. Fentanyl made it easy put them down.