Posted on 10/14/2021 5:08:18 AM PDT by Roman_War_Criminal
An Emergency Room nurse fired for not taking the shot after his religious exemption was denied has spoken candidly to LifeSiteNews about what he saw on the so-called frontlines during the COVID-19 crisis.
In a video interview published yesterday, former Valley Health System nurse Brad McDowell spoke to LifeSite correspondent Jim Hale about the contrast between what he has witnessed and the story being told by the media regarding the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The narrative that we’re being told didn’t really line up with reality,” McDowell stated. “Most people of working age aren’t of a risk [for contracting COVID].”
Addressing the COVID vaccine lobby’s position that receiving the experimental jab is doing your obligatory part “for humanity,” McDowell said that the potential benefits don’t outweigh the risks associated with receiving the injections.
“I have a family,” he said. “And what good am I to my family if I get injured from a vaccine?”
(Excerpt) Read more at lifesitenews.com ...
The COVID hospitals are getting stuck with patients who can't return to nursing homes or rehabilitation facilities until they're cleared.
It's not a bed shortage problem, it's a government intrusion problem.
Sounds like the whistle blower was shot form the headline.
Where were all these whistleblowers way back when? Where were all those brave souls and heroes back when a lot of these horror stories were all over the news? Wanted to keep their jobs. Now when they know these “vaccines” are not good and not necessary, they are starting to speak up. After they already lost their jobs.
If you walk through an ICU that has say theoretically 25 rooms with beds in them and then you have 15 qualified ICU Nurses available to work, then you have 15 ‘Beds,’ not 25.
That is how it works in my hospital. A bed is not a bed unless there is a Nurse to tend to any Patient in it.
Exactly.
During the pandemic we saw people who couldn’t pass high school math become statisticians.
We saw people who have visited hospitals become bed managers.
And we saw people who had a cold, once…become virologists.
+1
I worked for a local hospital system and helped to implement their bed management systems. There was a formula they used for capacity that was directly correlated to staffing. They could not report capacity on total number of beds but on number of available nurses. Those numbers changed day-to-day. I’m curious how those numbers look now.
A relative of mine with Covid was in a 200+ bed hospital last month in the Twin Cities and was told she was one of five persons in the hospital with Covid. After treatment with Rdesivir she was released in three days.
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