15 Comments
⭠ Return to thread

I'd be interested in a poll: Pre-2020, was anyone you knew who was hospitalized w/ breathing difficulty given (a) steroid (like prednisone or budesonide) or (b) ventilator? Before 2020, I had never heard of a person w/ breathing difficulty being put on a ventilator. Ventilators were for people in comas, etc. Any family member or friend who was hospitalized w/ trouble breathing was given a steroid and maybe an oxygen concentrator. It is truly bizarre that this kid was put on a ventilator.

Expand full comment

Always a nebuliser with steroids.Never a ventilator. The doctor who ordered the ventilator should be sued .MD

Expand full comment

Hospitals under the emergency covid measures got paid more $$ for each patient who died on a ventilator.

Expand full comment

and for putting them on remdes.

Expand full comment

They use ventilators because they want to protect themselves from aerosol contamination which is ridiculous IF their vaccines were foolproof as they claim! None of them are critical thinkers! May God shine His graces on this young grieving family. 🙏🏻

Expand full comment

They are critical money makers. And the ventilator was the advice of the chinese dealing with it, and with old people.

Expand full comment

No they don't. From a nurse in the hospital for 40 years. Don't make stuff up

Expand full comment

TOB they were being medically kidnapped and killed. There are lots of stories that went public. The story of Benjamin Gordon is particularly interesting because HE ESCAPED.

Here is his story:

https://www.bitchute.com/video/QcvSaC3o5udX/

Here is a follow up interview:

https://www.bitchute.com/video/ePwfO09hXidW/

Attorney Todd Callender in his Open Secrets interview section 4, titled '2008: Public Health & Law Enforcement Merger' gets into his personal experiences trying to and sometimes failing to rescue people from being medically killed.

Video and Transcript

https://ratical.org/PandemicParallaxView/ToddCallender-CCsession97-032522.html

Expand full comment

Well, those first two videos are about a guy who was in a car accident. I'm not saying being put on a ventilator is good medicine in that situation, but I'm talking about someone who has a hard time breathing. I never heard of someone who was having a hard time breathing being put on a ventilator before corona. Breathing drugs, oxygen concentrator, I've seen BIPAP offered (although the patient improved before that was tried), but never ventilator, before 2020 and corona patients.

(I'm not weighing in at all on other "bad medicine" situations... Just noting the bizarre normalization of venting someone who would probably improve on the lesser intervention of steroids. I have a family member who was hospitalized for more than a week w/ difficulty breathing & low O2 sat, and ventilator was never mentioned even as a remote possibility. Prednisone was the first line of treatment.)

Expand full comment

I also made a comment about venting. I find it odd they vented this young girl. I think venting was a major contributor to her death. I think VSRF should do a show about this subject. It’s just like Covid. Let her pneumonia get worse then put her on a vent $$$$.

Expand full comment

TOB even the guy in the car accident was put on a vent as part of the COVID protocols. The hospitals are getting big money from the government to vent people etc.. I believe it answers your question as to why they are venting people. I have an article somewhere breaking down how much hospitals were getting for each procedure but I think you get the idea.

Special Report | Nursing Facilities Have Received Billions of Dollars in Direct Financial and Non-Financial Support During Coronavirus Pandemic

https://medicareadvocacy.org/report-snf-financial-support-during-covid/

Expand full comment

Seems that in many instances hospitals don't want to use budesonide. It's cheap and it works. Not good for the bottom line.

Expand full comment

They dont want you to have it at CVS either.

Expand full comment

Triamcinolone acetonide is cheap and available OTC - Nasacort. But hospitals want to inject everything.

Expand full comment

glad I have some and an inhaler

Expand full comment