Where there is a will, there is a way. Having worked in health care, in a major Cleveland Hospital, I can tell you that just like our government, if you don’t follow their narrative, and do as they say, they will find away to not promote you, or get rid of you. So any business can and will fabricate information about you. They only want someone who is a “yes man.” Most hospitals and businesses have all the major law firms on retainer, so it is difficult to find a good lawyer who will buck the system and refuse to take a bribe from another law firm, whether it is money or the promise to send business their way, should the opportunity arise. So what I am saying is the law is a good step, but won’t necessarily protect the worker.
Same with medical school. They are taught to comply with protocols or anything that comes from established sources - the AMA, FDA, CDC, WHO etc.
I worked in the medical field too. I'm glad I got out before the Covid scam. I would have refused to inject any patient and myself. I would have been fired. During training, I few times I would refute "facts" they were teaching because it didn't make sense. After awhile, they took me aside to ask me if anything was wrong.
I retired 2 months earlier than planned because I warned a patient about breastfeeding post Covid shot. The patient lodged a complaint and I chose to not back down and spout the approved narrative. I am glad to be out of healthcare, and I wanted nothing more than to be a R.N. since 5th grade. So sad what health care has become. Trust no one and ask questions, do your own research.
The hospitals use the “Shared Governance” mantra to brainwash nurses into thinking they really have a say. Then the administration just proceeds with what they had planned to do anyhow, and the brain washed sheep fall in line. I stopped participating in any of it when it was obvious it was just a mind game. The same went for “Pay for Performance”. The evaluations were always a scam. When it came time for yearly raises, you got paid on a bell shape curve, no matter what you did. Nursing was a female profession, until males entered into nursing, viewing it as a stable job and a different perspective than females: care, concern, empathy for those in need. Many males went into areas of nursing that limited engagement with patients, were fast paced and challenging: ER, ICU, OR. Male counterparts often were promoted to leadership roles too, before their female counterparts.
Where there is a will, there is a way. Having worked in health care, in a major Cleveland Hospital, I can tell you that just like our government, if you don’t follow their narrative, and do as they say, they will find away to not promote you, or get rid of you. So any business can and will fabricate information about you. They only want someone who is a “yes man.” Most hospitals and businesses have all the major law firms on retainer, so it is difficult to find a good lawyer who will buck the system and refuse to take a bribe from another law firm, whether it is money or the promise to send business their way, should the opportunity arise. So what I am saying is the law is a good step, but won’t necessarily protect the worker.
Same with medical school. They are taught to comply with protocols or anything that comes from established sources - the AMA, FDA, CDC, WHO etc.
I worked in the medical field too. I'm glad I got out before the Covid scam. I would have refused to inject any patient and myself. I would have been fired. During training, I few times I would refute "facts" they were teaching because it didn't make sense. After awhile, they took me aside to ask me if anything was wrong.
I retired 2 months earlier than planned because I warned a patient about breastfeeding post Covid shot. The patient lodged a complaint and I chose to not back down and spout the approved narrative. I am glad to be out of healthcare, and I wanted nothing more than to be a R.N. since 5th grade. So sad what health care has become. Trust no one and ask questions, do your own research.
Being an RN makes good money, but it's a hard job spiritually. That's why they always have job openings.
The hospitals use the “Shared Governance” mantra to brainwash nurses into thinking they really have a say. Then the administration just proceeds with what they had planned to do anyhow, and the brain washed sheep fall in line. I stopped participating in any of it when it was obvious it was just a mind game. The same went for “Pay for Performance”. The evaluations were always a scam. When it came time for yearly raises, you got paid on a bell shape curve, no matter what you did. Nursing was a female profession, until males entered into nursing, viewing it as a stable job and a different perspective than females: care, concern, empathy for those in need. Many males went into areas of nursing that limited engagement with patients, were fast paced and challenging: ER, ICU, OR. Male counterparts often were promoted to leadership roles too, before their female counterparts.