Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 6:08 p.m. No.18184757   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5311 >>5360

https://mobile.twitter.com/Hold2LLC/status/1616478467683491841

 

Hold2

@Hold2LLC

U.S. flu hospitalizations lowest in 10 years (pre-CoV2), officials don’t say.

 

H/T

@kerpen

Quote Tweet

Reuters

@Reuters

·

Nov 4, 2022

U.S. flu hospitalizations highest in 10 years, officials say http://reut.rs/3Uaw58m

Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 6:25 p.m. No.18184883   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4902

>>18184854

>who enforces the law?

no one, clearly.

only with the coordination, protection, and participation of local, federal, and international LEO and intel can human trafficking, organ harvesting, insider trading, money laundering, shell companies, extortion, bribery, blackmail, and genocide occur.

Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 6:34 p.m. No.18184950   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4954 >>4963 >>4984 >>4999 >>5233 >>5311 >>5360

Canada performing more organ transplants from MAID donors than any country in the world

 

https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/canada-performing-more-organ-transplants-from-maid-donors-than-any-country-in-the-world-1.6234133

 

A growing number of patients who request medical assistance in dying are asking to donate their organs for transplant, says an international review that found that Canada is performing the most organ transplants from MAID patients among the four countries studied that offer this practice.

 

The report is the first-ever review of the growing use of this new practice around the world. The review was conducted in 2021 and the results were formally published in December 2022.

 

“We saw everyone is working in different directions. And then we said ‘OK, well, let's start an international (discussion) of all the countries involved,’” said Dr. Johannes Mulder, a physician and MAID provider in Zwolle, Netherlands, in an interview with CTV News.

 

Data collected for the paper shows that in Canada, Belgium, the Netherlands and Spain, combined, 286 assisted-death recipients provide lifesaving organs for transplant to 837 patients in the years up to and including 2021.

 

Doctors in Canada, where medical assistance in dying (MAID) was decriminalized in 2016, performed almost half of the world’s organ transplants after MAID for that period (136), according to the publication.

 

Data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information confirms this new source of transplant organs accounted accounts for six per cent of all transplants from deceased donors in Canada in 2021. Some transplants, like those for kidneys and livers, can be done with patients who are alive.

 

“I was rather proud that Canada has done so well in terms of organ donation by MAID patients,” said Arthur Schafer, director of the Centre for Professional and Applied Ethics at the University of Manitoba, in an interview with CTV News.

 

With more than 4,000 Canadians waiting for organ transplants, some of whom are dying, he says Canada’s numbers show a strong move to turn death into a win-win.

 

“So I say, 'Good on us.' It’s a wonderful opportunity for someone facing death to make something significant out of the end of their life,” said Schafer.

 

PATIENT-DRIVEN TREND

The international review on this new practice has been overwhelmingly driven by patients who are suffering from irreversible degenerative diseases, like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Parkinson’s.

 

“If this body has deserted me, I could do something good,” is how Mulder says patients frame their decision.

 

Canadian ALS patient Sharron Demchuk donated her kidneys and lungs after her medically assisted death in September of 2021. Her family says she herself pushed her doctors to consider a way she could help people after she died, becoming the first in New Brunswick to do so.

 

“She kept doing follow-ups, kept pushing and even though she wasn’t able to speak, she would make notes for my dad. ‘Here’s what I want you to ask them. Here’s what I want you to say,’” her daughter, Darlene Demchuk, told CTV News last year.

 

One of the goals of the international report, says Mulder, was to share information openly on how countries are managing this controversial and evolving new practice, including the tricky ethical and logistical issues of consent from vulnerable patients.

 

“What should you do, or what shouldn't you do? And how to keep the whole project completely voluntary,” he said of some of the concerns, noting that patients should never be pressured to choose MAID to increase the availability of donor organs.

 

That is a worry shared by Trudo Lemmens, a professor in health law and policy at the University of Toronto.

 

He points to statistics showing more than 35 per cent of Canadians who died by MAID in 2021 felt they were "a burden on family, friends or caregivers” according to a Health Canada report.

 

“I am concerned that people who struggle with a lack of self-esteem and self-worth may be pushed to see this as an opportunity to mean something,” said Lemmens in an email comment to CTV News.

 

With other countries like Australia eyeing medical assistance in dying along with organ donations, Mulder says public trust in this new medical practice must be developed and maintained.

 

“That’s why guidelines are necessary and should also be strict,”’ the doctor said.

 

p1

Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 6:35 p.m. No.18184954   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4963 >>5311 >>5360

>>18184950

One Ontario study of kidney recipients found that eight of nine kidneys from MAID donors began working normally almost immediately after transplant, with patients avoiding the need for even temporary dialysis.

 

“Some of the functions of these organs were almost as good as living donor organs,” said Dr. Patrick Luke, the study author and co-director of the Multi-organ Transplant Program at the London Health Sciences.

 

“As far as our transplant patients, so far, it's all been very positive,” he told CTV News.

 

Studies of lung transplants have shown similar success, with scientists now investigating the potential use of other tissue, including islet cells to treat people with severe diabetes.

 

HOME TO HOSPITAL

Canada is also at the forefront of another emerging trend.

 

Until recently, only those who agreed to have a medically assisted death in hospital could donate their organs. It was easier and safer for surgeons for retrieval and transplantation.

 

According to Health Canada data, 44.2% of MAID provisions in Canada took place at home.

 

The report shows there are now eight documented cases in the world where providers offered assisted death in the patient’s home. Five of these were in Canada.

 

The MAID recipient is given the medications in their home, and then transported by ambulance to a nearby hospital to have the procedure completed and organs harvested.

 

Dr. Shemie described the case of a patient in Ontario, saying that "with a lot of help from paramedics in the fire department …we were able to facilitate that.”

 

But there is variation among countries on how to do this and what medications to use.

 

In fact, Canada is currently updating its protocol, now submitted for publication to the Canadian Medical Association Journal, and Dr. Shemie says it will be shared with other countries considering expanding assisted dying and organ transplantation.

 

It’s the kind of openness and transparency Dr. Mulder envisions.

 

“These are all reasons why we wanted to have this paper out now, and hope every hospital and every jurisdiction take this as a starting point to write ethically sound protocols,” he said.

 

2 of 2

Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 6:37 p.m. No.18184975   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4993 >>5129

https://twitter.com/Alex_Oloyede2/status/1616595004801040386

 

Spetsnaℤ 007 🚫ꖦ

@Alex_Oloyede2

Reminds me of the Jack and Jill rhymes. But this buddy didn't go up the hills😅.

 

Sorry Mr Abrams. The snow ain't your thing.

Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 6:52 p.m. No.18185079   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5090 >>5162

>>18184978

Please explain how good coexists with bad and remains 'good' to you?

 

We must have different understanding of good.

 

Morally good? not if they ignore and or assist in bad behavior.

 

Professionally good? not if they are unable to recognize the bad amongst theemselves.

Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 7 p.m. No.18185145   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18185090

Deflectiion. Please answer.

My answer:

whenever anon has the opportunity to reveal criminality anon does. In the workplace, in society, in family. Anon turned in in-laws for investing in Central America illegally. Anon has called 'police' and federal authorities on apparent illegal immigration violations witnessed. Anon has notified hospital staff and federal authorities of known human trafficking and rape of a minor by undocumented trespassers. Anon does not coexist with evil/bad without doing everything 'legal' to expose and end it. If anon is aware, it will be broadcast.

 

Anon's father and father-in-law are retired LEO. MANAY MANY stories of corruption that neither ever reported… To anon, they then are COMPLICIT.

Anonymous ID: da1135 Jan. 20, 2023, 7:28 p.m. No.18185321   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5328 >>5363

>>18185162

>cops are bad

agreed

>law is broken

agreed

>Trump is bad guy for vaxx

his continued support of it and lack of full disclosure of the dangers of MRNA has caused damage to those who received it as advise and being 'safe'

 

we are not all the same, and having the above positions are not paid for (ie.shill) in many cases, including this anon's.

 

Is it a fact that there are anons here that

  1. do not support police

  2. do not vote

  3. do not trust any politricksters, including trump