Anonymous ID: 2b7d14 Sept. 12, 2021, 4:09 p.m. No.14567134   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7137

>>14567120

I think they want control via making the vaxxed dependent on never ending new boosters to nullify the ill effects (including death) of the vax. If the vax causes some significant physical or mental problems in the near future, people will literally be begging and lining up for any “fix” they might come up with, even if it’s temporary and a new “fix” is needed ever so often.

Anonymous ID: 2b7d14 Sept. 12, 2021, 5:01 p.m. No.14567358   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7400 >>7502 >>7737

>>14567207

My wife is an ER nurse at a local hospital. Here’s the deal with hospitals having no available beds or at least very few: COVID positive patients are not being accepted on certain floors. It’s not that they don’t have beds, but they won’t allow these patients in their rooms (e.g. orthopedic floor). What’s currently happening is there are super long waits in the ER, I’m talking 24 hour + wait times. The ER takes whatever, but other floors won’t. Now some floors have been designated as COVID floors but it’s generally not many beds at most hospitals. The rooms are negative pressure rooms and thus prevent COVID from escaping the room. That’s the theory anyway. My wife has what she refers to as “hallway beds” every time she works. Now, if the COVID patients can be in the hall, why does it matter whether or not available open beds are in negative pressure rooms or not? Well, lots of the staff from nurses and doctors to various types of therapists are scared to death of COVID patients. While they really shouldn’t have the option to avoid these patients the fact of the matter is they get by with this. My wife has worked with COVID patients for several months now and comes into contact with multiple COVID positive patients every day she works (works three 12 hour shifts per week). BTW, she is unvaccinated and has had her religious exemption approved. She was ready and willing to lose her job instead of getting vaccinated but, because she’s a good nurse and her direct superiors realize her value, they were more than willing to accommodate her. I think the vax mandate, in a small way, actually serves the hospitals with an easy way to get rid of any lazy and/or problematic employees. Believe it or not, hospitals (prior to the mandates) have had to be very careful when it comes to firing people and the vax mandate makes it much less of a hassle. I still vehemently disagree with the mandates, but I just wanted to point out this small benefit. Anyway, the COVID patients are clogging up the ER and, in severe cases, the ICU and, all the while, beds remain empty in other areas of the hospital. My wife has had COVID patients come into the ER, stay 2-3 days without a bed, and get discharged from the ER waiting room. This is crazy.

 

Another issue is staffing. The hospital supervisors get bonuses when their departments make more $. The more profitable the bigger the bonus. This particular bonus doesn’t get spread around to the floor nurses and other staff. They go only to the supervisors and I’m sure to higher ups in hospital administration as well. As such, supervisors have a monetary incentive to maintain minimal staffing levels because more staff = more overhead costs = less bonus $. Add to this the staffing reductions from the mandates and it’s clear as to why the hospitals are running so inefficiently now.

Anonymous ID: 2b7d14 Sept. 12, 2021, 6:06 p.m. No.14567725   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7742

>>14567534

True, but if you leave against medical advice (AMA), insurance won’t pay and you’re left to foot the bill. I’m life or death situation that doesn’t matter much but people need to know.

Anonymous ID: 2b7d14 Sept. 12, 2021, 6:22 p.m. No.14567797   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14567722

YW. I think it’s just a bit too much to be a coincidence that we see a spike in COVID cases in the summer months. The place isn’t overrun with COVID patients but, as I mentioned, my wife comes into contact with multiple COVID patients every day. There are still people there because of wrecks, accidents, heart attacks, etc. as well as minor nonsensical stuff that they should go to their primary physician for instead the ER. Back to my point though, the ER is a bottleneck and there is an uptick in COVID cases. Viruses thrive in colder weather, not in summer months. So why have we been seeing this uptick in the last 3-4 months? Well my theory is that this directly correlates with the increasing number of people who got vaccinated during and just prior to this time frame. Now my wife and her coworkers have no way of knowing whether or not someone has been vaccinated (yet), so it’s hard to say what percentage of these COVID patients are vaccinated. In any case, I believe the increase in cases directly relates to the increase in vaccinations. Of course, the hospital admins who know the stats (or even if they don’t) will manipulate the numbers to make people believe it’s a pandemic of the unvaccinated. It’s most likely the exact opposite.

Anonymous ID: 2b7d14 Sept. 12, 2021, 6:25 p.m. No.14567824   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14567742

Insurance won’t pay the hospital for any services you received while you were there if you leave AMA. The hospital will then send you the bill. That’s just how it is.

Anonymous ID: 2b7d14 Sept. 12, 2021, 6:41 p.m. No.14567909   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14567764

Lots of people in their last days, especially those that cannot communicate, need morphine to help them rest. They often have difficulty breathing and, those who can’t communicate, tend to have rapid shallow breaths, which makes them panic. They often convulse and moan and twitch because of the severe panic and agitation. Morphine helps them to relax and breathe better. While morphine gets a bad rap for “killing” people, it’s actually quite helpful and merciful. Lots of people just misunderstand the concept. They don’t want to come to grips with the condition of their loved ones and they believe the morphine killed them after they pass. They often don’t realize that their loved one was already about to check out of this life and the morphine actually kept them soothed and calmed in their last waning days and moments.