Pandemic Timeline

Minnesota state representative Erik Mortensen conducts town hall meeting with healthcare workers

These nurses confirm that the use of VAERS is being discouraged by hospital administrators.  The EUAs mandate reporting, and yet it is mostly not being done.  One nurse said that anything reported in VAERS holds more weight with her because someone had to take 30 minutes out of their day to make that report.

The nurses said that typically when someone died following a vaccine, the doctors would attribute it to something else.  If they died without a vaccine, they would attribute the death to COVID even if the patient was there on hospice for another reason.  This affects statistics.  This means that death statistics need to be multiplied by factors to get the real values.  The problem is, we don’t know what those factors are.

An IT worker thought portions of the data were being ignored.

Hospital capacity is determined by availability of staff.  Where staff is limited, beds may need to go empty.  Operating rooms may not be available due to lack of staff.

One nurse expressed concern that COVID wards were understaffed.  In one instance, she said that there were only two nurses for 45 COVID-19 patients.  “They are dying alone.  I don’t honestly think all of these people die from COVID.  They die from loneliness and other conditions.”  Other nurses in the room nod in agreement.

Other nurses talked about the lack of talk about standard preventative care such as diet and proper sleep and also the lack of specific prophylaxis other than vaccines.

The nurses at the meeting were saying that the vaccines are NOT safe and effective, as the media has touted.  The injured continue to suffer, and there are many of them.

The topic of admission testing came up and how that impacts the admission and care.  Someone who tests positive for COVID-19 may not get the care they originally intended when they went to the hospital.

Testing affects case counts.  Each test is a new case.  One patient may test positive every three days for a total of 30 times.  Those tests will be reported as 30 cases.  This inflates the case count.

One nurse explained how the media is actually lying by stating that most of the healthcare workers are now fully vaccinated for COVID-19. She said this wasn’t true, and that she knew of departments that were only about 20% vaccinated, and that ER workers had an especially low percentage of workers who were fully vaccinated for COVID-19. “Why aren’t people asking the nurses why they don’t want to take the shots?” she asked. “That should be a huge, huge red flag. … We are seeing it [serious injuries and deaths caused by the inoculations], and they’re not listening.” She said she ran an ER department, and that it was tragic that they were seeing so many heart attacks and strokes, and that it is blatantly obvious that they are related to the COVID-19 shots.  Her staff stay late after work to report to VAERS.

Meanwhile, the comments of the nurses give the impression that vaccinating the employees is a marketing tactic for the hospital administrators.

The nurses also highlighted in their comments the danger of discrimination against the unvaccinated.

As more and more health care workers lose their jobs and no longer feel any need for loyalty to their ex-employers, we will see more testimonies like these.

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