midazolam – Pandemic Timeline https://pandemictimeline.com Chronological Sequence of Events Tue, 15 Oct 2024 04:54:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://pandemictimeline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Covid-150x150.ico midazolam – Pandemic Timeline https://pandemictimeline.com 32 32 Statisticians find increase in prescriptions for powerful sedative https://pandemictimeline.com/2020/07/statisticians-find-increase-in-prescriptions-for-powerful-sedative/ Sat, 11 Jul 2020 00:00:51 +0000 https://pandemictimeline.com/?p=1606 The number of prescriptions for a powerful sedative that can kill the frail doubled at the height of the coronavirus pandemic, raising fears it was used to control elderly residents in stretched care homes – or even to hasten their deaths. Official figures show out-of-hospital prescribing of the drug midazolam increased by more than 100 per cent in…

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The number of prescriptions for a powerful sedative that can kill the frail doubled at the height of the coronavirus pandemic, raising fears it was used to control elderly residents in stretched care homes – or even to hasten their deaths.

Official figures show out-of-hospital prescribing of the drug midazolam increased by more than 100 per cent in April compared to previous months.

An anti-euthanasia campaigner last night said he suspected that the spike was evidence that many people had been put on end-of-life protocols or ‘pathways’.

In a comment:

As a Dementia Nurse, we planned ahead and ordered more Midazolam incase there was an outbreak within our hospital; thankfully there wasn’t.

The comment from the comment stream of the article implies that midazolam was being stockpiled by care homes in case an outbreak struck their facility, so there could be a perfectly good explanation for this.  Some kind of sedation is necessary when someone is put on a respirator.  But it is cause for concern when the sedative being used to calm those suffering from respiratory distress also suppresses the respiratory system.

This sedative is used in execution as well.

Were the prescriptions in the statistics written for individuals or facilities?

Is there a way to determine what prescriptions individuals received?

What percentage of these were on ventilators?

Sources:

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Funeral directors tell their stories https://pandemictimeline.com/2021/07/funeral-directors-tell-their-stories/ Wed, 07 Jul 2021 00:00:57 +0000 https://pandemictimeline.com/?p=1611 These funeral directors claim that their numbers really did not change until the vaccines were released.  2020 was not an exceptional year. Dan Gregory’s guest today is a funeral director with 15 years’ industry experience, who has been running his own family business in Milton Keynes for the last five years. Because of all he…

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These funeral directors claim that their numbers really did not change until the vaccines were released.  2020 was not an exceptional year.

Dan Gregory’s guest today is a funeral director with 15 years’ industry experience, who has been running his own family business in Milton Keynes for the last five years. Because of all he has seen over the last 18 months, John O’Looney is now prepared to take the potential hit on his business by speaking up.

While other funeral directors have refused to wash and dress the deceased, John has continued to provide this service even for those listed as dying from Covid-19. At 53, suffering from asthma, and unable to obtain PPE at the height of the pandemic, John should have been in a vulnerable position. However, he has yet to suffer any consequences from continuing to provide this key service so many families have been denied.

In a YouTube comment that has gone viral despite his account being removed, John said: ‘Last year the death rate was totally normal. In fact, it was a little bit down on 2019 and towards Christmas many of my colleagues were actually turning their fridges off because there was no-one dying. We began vaccinating on January 6 locally and the death rate went through the roof almost immediately — within the same week, and for three months. I’ve never known a death rate like it in 15 years as an undertaker.’

In the interview with Reiner Fuellmich, John O’Looney confirms the testimony of Dr. Bryan Ardis regarding his concerns that the true cause of a great many COVID deaths is Remdesivir.  John O’Looney said that the COVID corpses come in quite bloated, indicative of kidney damage.  Also in this interview, John O’Looney repeated his concerns that many of the 2020 deaths were caused by euthanasia with midazolam, a sedative drug used for palliative care and executions.  He reported an increase in purchases of midazolam prior to the pandemic, as seen in reports received as a result of FOIA requests.

Toward the end of the interview, Reiner Fuellmich and John O’Looney mention the recent resignation of an Australian health official due to discovery that the person accepted millions of dollars.  When I attempted to research that story, the only link I could find on that story returned by the search engine went to the news site’s home page.  The story of the resignation appears to have been scrubbed.  Rest assured that Reiner Fuellmich has the information about that story.  Unfortunately, I have nothing I can use to create a separate post about it.

Sources:

The person interviewed in the first two videos is the same person.

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How to protect you and your loved ones from the hospital https://pandemictimeline.com/2021/09/how-to-protect-you-and-your-loved-ones-from-the-hospital/ Wed, 01 Sep 2021 00:01:23 +0000 https://pandemictimeline.com/?p=5806 It’s a sad day when we need a post like this, but apparently it has come to that. Unfortunately, you’ve got to understand that we’re at a point now that where they’re murdering people.  The lawyers have been rendered in some cases impotent. — Thomas Renz Hospitals receive money when people die.  Unfortunately, there are…

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It’s a sad day when we need a post like this, but apparently it has come to that.

Unfortunately, you’ve got to understand that we’re at a point now that where they’re murdering people.  The lawyers have been rendered in some cases impotent.

— Thomas Renz

Hospitals receive money when people die.  Unfortunately, there are hospital administrators who are willing to let people die to receive the death money.

Time to Free America and Truth for Health Foundation have laid out processes as well.

Generally, try to avoid going to the hospital at all.  Consult your doctor about when it will save your life to go to a hospital.  Early care is essential for avoiding a hospital stay.  A link to FLCCC protocols is included here.

If hospitalization cannot be avoided, then knowing how to advocate for a family member in the hospital is essential in the current medical environment.  This knowledge can save your family member’s life.

These are my notes from the videos below.  Please watch the videos yourself since I may have missed something.  Both of the Dr. Ardis videos below contain essential information for surviving the current medical situation.  Please check the laws in your locality.  State laws may vary.  Please consult your lawyer.

  1. Keep records of your efforts.
  2. Do not sign anything without reading it thoroughly.  Illegal “Do Not Resuscitate” clauses have been found in admission forms, among other adverse statements.
  3. Personally, I am not keen on “paperwork” requiring electronic signatures.  These can be attached to ANYTHING.  Insist on paper documents to sign.
  4. If you have to drop someone off at the hospital, immediately ask for a medical power of attorney form and sign it over to whoever the hard ass in the family is.  It does not matter why the patient is entering the hospital.  All it takes is a positive COVID test for a hospital patient to become a COVID-19 patient, potentially subject to the the standard dangerous COVID-19 protocol. All patients and their families must know the patient bill of rights in their state.
  5. Do not allow the doctors to put your family member onto palliative care until the family is ready for the patient to die.  That is the care that prepares someone for death.
  6. If a problem develops:
    1. Call the unit, ask for the charge nurse, and say, “I am calling to let you know that I am initiating the chain of command.  I am not happy with my family member’s care.  He is not lucid, and I am telling you that he should not be making his own medical decisions.  Nobody is calling me from the medical team for updates or asking for my permission.  I feel that he is being medically neglected because you are not doing everything that you could be doing to make sure he gets better.  I need someone to call me back within an hour to let me know how we are going to rectify the situation.”  Set an alarm.
    2. Call them back if they don’t call.  Say, “It’s been an hour and no one has called me back.  I need to speak to your manager.  I need your manager to call me back within 30 minutes.  Otherwise, I am going to go there, and we are going to do this in person.  I respect that you are busy,  I respect that there are a lot of patients, but right now I am telling you that I don’t feel that my family member is safe, and you are not responding to me.”
    3. If it is during the day on a weekday, the chain of command works one way.  During the off hours, the chain of command works another way.  The chain of command is charge nurse and then nurse manager of the unit, then director, then the administrative office.  Do not let them direct you to the case manager.  The case manager is useless for this purpose.
    4. Ask for a patient advocate.  You can hire a private patient advocate as well.  That is a clue to the hospital that this could become a legal issue with a lawyer involved.
    5. If that does not work, the next step is to hire a lawyer.
    6. If it is the weekend, the chain of command is charge nurse, and then house manager.
  7. Set up a family patient care conference on the phone.  Attendees could include the nurse, the charge nurse, maybe the manager, maybe the social worker, respiratory therapy, at least one of the physicians involved if not two.
  8. You can fire the doctor.
  9. A patient held hostage without visitors is being subjected to “medical kidnapping.”  Patients fare better when they have visitors.  A medical doctor who forbids visitors can be reported to the state medical board.
  10. If you want your loved one to go home and the hospital will not release them, call the police and say that you want to make a kidnapping charge.
  11. According to Thomas Renz, we need to get rid of the PREP Act.  We should be calling our congressmen every day to request that they repeal the PREP Act.  You can find more details about the PREP Act here.
  12. If you tell a doctor that you do not want a certain drug, they must not give it to you.  If the doctor prescribes it for you anyway, call the police, report it as battery (unwanted touching), and ask that those who administered it be arrested.  Insist on making a report.  It is a criminal violation.
  13. If a source of calories is not included in the patient’s care, call the police or adult protective services and report that the patient is being starved to death.  Insist on making a report.  The appointed power of attorney should have access to the medical records to determine this.  The hospital has a legal obligation to care for the patient.  There is no legal justification where starving someone to death is OK.

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