HEALTH: If you have a loved one sent to the hospital, … …

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/what-makes-hospitals-so-deadly-and

What Makes Hospitals So Deadly and How Can We Fix It?
November’s Open Thread
A Midwestern Doctor
Nov 24, 2024

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In this month’s open thread, I’ll share my thoughts on a question many have asked me since Trump and RFK Jr. won the election and an actual window has been created to change healthcare policies in America—what could be done to increase the survival rates in our hospitals and how can you protect a loved one that’s hospitalized?

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Overall, the remarkable illustration of this corruption was the fact that families eventually began suing hospitals to allow the use of ivermectin for a relative who was expected to die even after being subjected to Fauci’s hospital COVID protocols. Remarkably, because there was so much money on the line, the hospitals chose to fight these lawsuits in court rather than just give ivermectin to the patients. In turn, of the 80 lawsuits filed by lawyer Ralph Lorigo, in 40 the judge sided with the family, and in 40 with the hospital, and of those, in the 40 where patients received ivermectin, 38 survived, whereas of the 40 who did not, 2 survived—in essence making suing a hospital arguably the most effective medical intervention in history. Yet, rather than take this data into consideration, the profit-focused hospitals banded together to develop an effective apparatus to dismiss further lawsuits.

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Sadly, while this is quite depressing, it’s simply illustrative of a few more toxic trends that have taken over medicine.

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So maybe “doctors” have to wear sponsors’ logos on their white coats like race car drivers.  Ditto for politicians and bureaucrats!

Personally when my sainted wife was in the hospital, I “babysat” like a mother hen documenting everything.  And I mean EVERY THING.  Like who came in and what if anything was, or was not done.  Meds were logged and when I found a mistake I raised holy hell.  

One time, I even called the local fire department when she was put in an overcrowd ward with fellow who was on oxygen and smoking.  (It was fun when the firetrucks showed up and the Fire Marshall was literally yelling at everyone in “management”.  He shut the ER down for 12 hours while they brought everything up to code.)

I’m not a fan of “medical care” and especially when there is an obvious financial conflict of interest.

If you have a loved one sent to the hospital, then I urge you to monitor their care 24 by 7 by 365,

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HEALTHCARE: I don’t know what I don’t know, but I do know that what we are “told” may be absoultely wrong

Thursday, January 18, 2024

https://www.midwesterndoctor.com/p/how-do-we-navigate-uncertainty-in-49e?utm_source=substack&utm_campaign=post_embed&utm_medium=email

How Do We Navigate Uncertainty In These Perilous Times?

  • Investigating the Mysteries of the mRNA Vaccines

A Midwestern Doctor  —  Jan 5, 2024

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One of the great challenges in life is that many of the dilemmas we face have no clear cut answer, and frequently, diametrically opposed solutions to those dilemmas emerge which are both arguably correct but also arguably incorrect.

For instance, I know of more cases than I can count of someone “trusting” someone else they thought they had every reason to trust then get taken advantage of by that individual. Conversely, I know many people who have have been scammed in the past and are hence so distrustful they close the door to immensely beneficial opportunities that periodically come their way and greatly set themselves back in life by doing so.

Much of my life has revolved around a fascination over what constitutes “the truth,” and in this, I find a similar issue emerges. If you are too trusting of the sources you come across, you will inevitably come to believe falsehoods, whereas if you are too skeptical of the sources you encounter, you will inevitably fail to recognize critical truths.

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Ultimately, there is no correct solution to this dilemma, as no matter how hard you try to calibrate yourself, you will either be too skeptical or too trusting of some of the information you come across. This in turn has led many to adopt the wise words “trust, but verify.”

My own solution to all of this has essentially been to do both. A third of my mind entertains and considers a lot of ideas which are quite out there, another third of my mind sees reason after reason to doubt everything I come across (and effectively debates those ideas with the first third of my mind), while the final third acts like a “judge” and tries to weigh which side is more correct.

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I have grown more cynical over the last decade than ever before in my life.  I remember hearing that “FDR knew about the Pearl Harbor attack before it happened” from my maternal uncles and again by several of the Christina Brothers that taught me in grammar school who were vets.  I never thought much about that fact and how that assertion differed from the common “knowledge”.  How stupid was I?  Later when I read Robert Stinnett’s book Day of Deceit: The Truth About FDR and Pearl Harbor. I re;ized that what teyhy told me was true.  Decades later, I know wonder how much else I “learned” was not true either.  Go down the list of Conspiracy Theories and be amazed at how many were really true.  The Federal Reserve System enables the Gooferment spend on “guns and butter”.  The Gulf of Tonkin attack on American ships.  The Japanese American’s internment.  The slaughter of the buffalos and the American Indians.  Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.  The Covid pandemic.  The Military Industrial Complex’s forever wars.  Big Pharma and reulgatory capture. The FDA, CDC, and the Medical Establishment. And, on and on.

There’s a joke that goes around social media that “I Need New Conspiracy Theories All My Old Ones Came True”.  Unfortunately, that is NOT a joke.

Long complicated read, BUT maybe the “smoking gun” as to how the Jab is killing and maining people.  I found it “interesting”.   I’m not a doctor but as fat old white guy injineer I found it completely plausible within my experience and whatever expertise I have collected over the years. 

Argh!

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