[ame="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pXVVvADQ2Z0"]Citizen Reporters Hospital In NY Is A Ghosttown During Pandemic! - YouTube[/ame]
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Maybe people have finally had enough of this...
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Shane View PostAnd hydroxychloroquine has a near 100% success rate in treating patients with COVID-19, whether it's been peer reviewed for it or not.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Comment
-
Originally posted by Shane View PostI have multiple friends and clients here in Abilene that are nurses and technicians at the hospitals that are laid off or have had their hours cut in half. The hospitals are near empty. There are numerous reports from every city and every state, including NYC, of the same thing. Hospitals are not overwhelmed. They're losing millions of dollars in revenue each week, because they're basically ghost towns.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by CoolHandLuke View PostCh 2 News talked about it yesterday. They were questioning the reasoning behind the makeshift hospital at NRG since there are still so many open beds at the local hospitals.
I have friends in the medical field who are also telling me most of what the msm is showing is not true. There are empty hospitals and a surplus of respirators.
My wife’s best friend is a triage nurse at a hospital south of Houston. She and the majority of her staff are working from home.
Comment
-
This stuff is just like a court case you watch on TV. The prosecutor calls in their expert witness who says their part. The defense calls in their expert witness who presents a differing testimony.
The rest of us citizens are the jury and we simply are cast with siding with the most convincing or compelling testimony whether it be the defense or prosecution.
I don’t 100% trust either side of the argument because of the vast differences in theories. One thing I believe is indisputable is we will be feeling the impact both socially and economically for a long time.Last edited by StrayDog; 04-08-2020, 02:25 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Man View PostWow thats crazy
Comment
-
Originally posted by deerplanter View PostThere's a testing area in Baytown and it does have several cars lined up to be tested. The thing is you have to be screened on the phone before you can go get tested and they are only doing it at certain hours of the day. I wish these videos would show what time it was. I'm not trying to discount in any way I just find it hard to believe that the entire world was hoaxed.
Comment
-
When you get a flu shot they inject a mild dose of the flu, body fights against it and builds up antibodies. I believe the same here, healthy peoples will be ok and will have built up the antibodies to fight this in the future. Older folks, unhealthy folks, or folks with underlying health risks should stay home and not risk getting the virus.
Comment
-
Originally posted by deerplanter View PostThat's odd as my Daughter is a infectious disease NP and they are admitting 10 to 12 patients a day. Not her personally but the hospitals that she deals with. The hospitals my wife deals with are about 75% full in ICU's, I think that is Galveston UTMB that she told me.
Buddies gf does the traveling nursing thing and her and her entire crew have been laid off because theres not enough work. They have the training to help with ICUs....but theres simply not enough people needing that where she was.
So they came home and tried to go back to work here in Austin
Wait for it...not enough work for them there either. The majority of hospitals arent overwhelmed at all in fact they dont have enough work to even keep their employees working.
Comment
-
Originally posted by CrossTimbers View PostThe whole point of flattening the curve is to give medical staff a chance to keep up so they don't have to triage you or your wife when they don't have enough equipment.
Comment
-
Originally posted by texan4ut View PostWhen you get a flu shot they inject a mild dose of the flu, body fights against it and builds up antibodies. I believe the same here, healthy peoples will be ok and will have built up the antibodies to fight this in the future. Older folks, unhealthy folks, or folks with underlying health risks should stay home and not risk getting the virus.
Comment
-
The report was not a randomized clinical trial—one in which many people are followed to see how their health fares, not simply whether a virus is detectable. And Oz’s “100 percent” interpretation involves conspicuous omissions. According to the study itself, three other patients who received hydroxychloroquine were too sick to be tested for the virus by day six (they were intubated in the ICU). Another had a bad reaction to the drug and stopped taking it. Another was not tested because, by day six, he had died.
Comment
-
Originally posted by deerplanter View PostWhere are you seeing this? My wife and daughter are both in the medical fields and that's not the case in the Houston area.
Hospitals are not hiring in Southeast Texas and Southwest Louisiana, they are letting them go to fatten their pockets. I am tired of seeing overworked nurses complaining they need help, management is looking at the bottom line.
Comment
Comment