Under the Wire Special Edition -
A Nurse Whistleblower speaks
https://rumble.com/vhn2ux-under-the-wire-special-edition-a-nurse-whistleblower-speaks.html
~85mins
An Australian nurse who has worked around the world in many developing countries and was employed in the UK from the beginning of the plandemic, discusses what she saw. She witnessed the terrible treatment of the sick and elderly during that time, potentially leading to unnecessary deaths and great misery.
On her return to Australia, she experienced and witnessed similar traumatic practices.
Her career at risk, she has taken the brave action of going public to warn others and to also hopefully encourage more health professionals to break the wall of silence imposed on them by their profession.
Has been a nurse for 40 years.
Nurses used to be patient advocates; now they are told what to think, what to believe. She finds this hard to take: "nursing comes from the heart, not from the head." Talks about people leaving the profession because of these changes.
Re Covid care:
Jan-Feb 2020
UK wards were overflowing (prior to Covid), whatever their illness, they all had pneumonia (Covid?).
Staff were furloughed if they were immunocompromised (1/3 of all workers); also black people (they were considered to be at greater risk than white - she doesn't know why). Result: labor shortage.
They put many people from hospitals into nursing care homes or hospital. Many people who were moved died. From Covid? Unclear. Then the entire country closed down, people were scared. The gov't took control.
Also, there was no PPE. Why? "It's been bled dry. There's nothing left."
(much better in Australia)
Wards: Many people in hospital were anti-biotics or fluids; marked DNR
[just Covid patients or everyone who was gravely ill? unclear but clear that this was a disaster]
She spoke up when others wouldn't. People were too scared - of getting this "dread disease" or losing their jobs. There was a lot of people sick but wasn't really different than flu deaths.
When family can't be in hospital, care does not get monitored. Family makes sure family members gets treated properly. No visiting was allowed.
[more]