‘It’s the Vaccines. It Has to Be’: Adverse Reactions to Covid Jabs Likely to Blame for Hospitals Suddenly Being Flooded Across the Globe
“We’ve had discussions amongst ourselves, but nobody is willing to take our concerns to the admins,” a doctor in Maine told me during a Zoom interview this weekend. “About half of us think it’s the vaccines while the other half says it’s a combination of factors. All we know is we’ve never seen the constant flow of heart and lung conditions hitting our ER, not like this, not every single day and night.”
The doctor, who chose halfway through our interview to remain anonymous for fear of repercussions at their hospital, was referring to the sharp increase in emergency room visits they’ve seen in recent weeks. It’s a nonstop flow of serious medical issues that often have no clear reason for occurring. Heart attacks in particular have gone from one or two per week to daily entries in the ER logs.
“It’s funny because I’m telling you this, annoyed at my peers for not speaking out, and even now I’m having second thoughts about talking to you,” the doctor said. “I can’t believe that we’re not allowed to ask the most basic scientific questions or follow the most obvious trail that could lead us to an
inconvenient solution.”That solution, of course, is to halt vaccinations for most if not all. After further discussion with the doctor, we decided to move forward with the interview for the purpose of writing the article but not to use the doctor’s name. It was disappointing, but I understand the desire to not put their career at risk unnecessarily. Besides, the data is clear enough that even a layman can and should start asking questions.
Across the nation and around the world, hospitals are reporting jam-packed emergency rooms with no beds available and treatments taking place in hallways. Reports are coming in from every developed nation and it seems to be the same basic story across the board: Emergency rooms filling up, it’s not Covid-19, and nobody knows why.
“It’s the vaccines. It has to be,” our doctor said. “I can understand other departments getting surges because people are coming in for procedures that have been holding off, but ER is ER. You can’t convince me that so many people are coming in with cardiac arrests and blood clots and it’s not the vaccines that are causing it.”
We first reported on the spike in hospital visits last week in Australia:
In Australia, Hospitals Are Being Overrun and Nobody Is Mentioning the Most Obvious Possible Reason
Western Australia can’t explain why their hospitals are full. It’s not Covid-19; the tyrannical nation has done a fine job of keeping the disease and people’s freedoms thoroughly in check. Nevertheless, the hospitals are overloaded and nobody in the government seems to have an answer as to why.
According to a Twitter thread by Justin Clarke:
Generally when we’re dealing with adverse reactions from the Covid-19 “vaccines,” we know definitively based on the timeframe. If someone is perfectly healthy and then suddenly develops myocarditis within days or weeks after their jabs, it’s the injections that did it. In this case, we can’t know for sure what’s causing the hospitals to fill up because we have no data regarding the timeframe between vaccination and ailments.
My original assessment was that it was “likely” the Covid vaccines causing this. After researching further, I realize that this is happening in every part of the world and across the United States. It’s also conspicuous that a large chunk of the ailments driving people to the hospital could be directly attributed to spike proteins in their blood system. As our doctor noted, it can’t be a coincidence that it’s all happening now just a few months after the spike in vaccinations of otherwise young and healthy people.
Despite the phenomenon being so widespread, nobody that we’ve seen has put all the stories together to point to a widespread trend. Even independent news sites (those that the mainstream likes to call “fringe” sites) seem to have only barely noticed. But a quick scan of recent local articles tells us this phenomenon is not isolated. Here are three of the stories I found in a two minute search; I found 14 from local news outlets
Wait times increase significantly at Rochester area emergency departments
Michele Gill of Greece was on her way to get her cancer treatments — just as she was last week — when her doctor decided to send her to the emergency department at Unity Hospital because of a complication of her condition.
“They literally wheeled me over there 2:30 in the afternoon, where I sat in the hallway, amongst 50 other people and I sat for 12 hours,” she said. Michele says as the hours passed, she became more and more frustrated, sitting in a hallway.
“Nobody came out and asked if anybody wants water, you know?” she said. “Didn’t address anybody in the hallway. So basically I was there for 12 hours without anything.
“In the emergency waiting room, in the hallway where I had wheeled in, I was in a wheelchair and I wheeled myself as far away from everybody as I could because being, you know, a cancer patient and going through treatments, I wanted to be far away from anybody that might have possible COVID.”
UPHS hospitals’ emergency departments currently busy and overwhelmed
“There are patients that don’t really understand how to manage their respiratory illness or other acute symptoms,” Hoenke explained, “and don’t think they can access their primary physicians offices or other access points to the health system.”
While people experiencing non-severe symptoms are asked to talk to their primary doctor or physician, Hoenke says common misconceptions lead patients to the E.R. instead.
“I think some people think they are going to be seen more quickly there,” he said. “And honestly, much of the time, that is not going to be the case right now because of the volumes.
“If you have something else going on that’s causing these symptoms,” he continued, “you’re not going to get as easily diagnosed if you’re phoning our office.”
Packed ERs create longer wait times, nurse fatigue
BALTIMORE (WMAR) — Emergency rooms are packed, busier so far this fall than they were at the peak of COVID-19 hospitalizations. It’s causing a strain on hospital staff and increasing wait times.
“We have nowhere to put anyone,” said Baltimore ER nurse Lena Sutch. It’s a mixture of COVID-19, RSV and the flu, which is only just beginning.
“Marylanders are back on the move and they are getting hurt and they are ill,” said Dr. Ted Delbridge. There are more patients during a nursing shortage that means longer wait times.
“Across the state, there are no inpatient beds in our hospitals. When we can’t move people out, we keep them in the ER and there’s no closing the doors to an ER so we can have 30-40 more patients in the waiting room,” said Sutch.
So as not to make it tedious, feel free to read some of the other stories listed below. Some claim it’s the relieved bottleneck following Covid-19, though this doesn’t jibe with the fact that in most of the areas listed there were no restrictions to health access. Others say it’s just the flu combined with Covid and other ailments. Staffing shortages are clearly a problem that can increase wait times, but they should have no effect on total volume of patients which is going up dramatically. One story even blamed Medicare expansion despite that happening seven years ago. None of them pointed to the increased vaccination levels, particularly among young people.
- Columbus ER wait times high as hospitals balance COVID patients with other health emergencies
- Spectrum Health Lakeland emergency room stretched thin
- ‘We need help’: Local hospital talks emergency room overflows across the region
- Patients flood emergency rooms at Chicago area children’s hospitals, causing long wait times
- Upstate University Hospital Wait Time Rises to Five Hours as Staffing Shortage Continues
- Doctors Say There Are Multiple Reasons For Spike In Pittsburgh Emergency Room Wait Times
- ‘Some of the worst I’ve seen’: Local emergency rooms face longer wait times, crowded conditions
- Long wait times at Syracuse emergency rooms lead hospitals to divert patients
- Michigan emergency room patients left on stretchers, then recliners, in swamped wards
- Local Springfield emergency rooms see increased wait times
- I-Team finds surge in wait times at local emergency rooms
There was a good roundup post on Infowars yesterday, but otherwise the story seems to have flown under the radar. The sources cited by Infowars weren’t exactly “fringe” sites. One story by NPR, produced by Kaiser Health, did the standard head-scratching while offering lukewarm reasons for the sharp increase in emergency room visits. According to the story:
ERs Are Swamped With Seriously Ill Patients, Although Many Don’t Have Covid
Inside the emergency department at Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, Michigan, staff members are struggling to care for patients showing up much sicker than they’ve ever seen. Tiffani Dusang, the ER’s nursing director, practically vibrates with pent-up anxiety, looking at patients lying on a long line of stretchers pushed up against the beige walls of the hospital hallways. “It’s hard to watch,” she said in a warm Texas twang.
But there’s nothing she can do. The ER’s 72 rooms are already filled.
“I always feel very, very bad when I walk down the hallway and see that people are in pain, or needing to sleep, or needing quiet. But they have to be in the hallway with, as you can see, 10 or 15 people walking by every minute,” Dusang said.
The scene is a stark contrast to where this emergency department — and thousands of others — were at the start of the pandemic. Except for initial hot spots like New York City, in spring 2020 many ERs across the country were often eerily empty. Terrified of contracting covid-19, people who were sick with other things did their best to stay away from hospitals. Visits to emergency rooms dropped to half their typical levels, according to the Epic Health Research Network, and didn’t fully rebound until this summer.
Again, nobody is looking to the vaccines as even a possible reason for the ubiquitous spike. It’s baffling unless we consider that the stranglehold over anything that could support “anti-vaxxer” sentiment is so solid, even mentioning a clear correlation with vaccination levels of those suffering from unexplainable ailments is anathema. Our doctor seemed to think that’s the case.
“Some of us talk about it and think if we go public together they won’t fire us all,” the doctor said. “Then, we come to our senses. Of course they’ll fire us all. They’re so heavily invested in the vaccine push that they’d rather suffer through worse staff shortages than risk a group of doctors and nurses bursting their bubble.
“Look, I’m, I’m very much pro-vaccine,” the doctor continued. “I was one of the first to get fully inoculated at the hospital, and I didn’t suffer an adverse reaction. But I’ve treated many who have, and it’s not as rare as they want us to pretend. Now I’d say, I mean it seems the real adverse reactions are starting to pop up months after people are getting vaccinated.
“It’s the prevalence of heart conditions that gets me most concerned. It’s the same story every time, ‘Nope, never had a problem before,” they say. With no bacterial infections to explain it and no other circumstances that should cause this sudden burst of heart and lung conditions, I’d be shocked if it wasn’t the vaccines doing the damage.”
Free West Media posted a story supporting this premise:
Hospital emergency rooms swamped by patients with ‘heart conditions’
In one hospital in the US state of Michigan, patients are flooding into emergency rooms with “respiratory problems”, “blood clots” and… “heart conditions”.
While the number of Covid cases in the US have been falling, hospitals struggle to cope with seriously ill non-Covid patients. In the ER department at Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, Michigan, all 72 rooms are filled and patients on stretchers are lining up in the corridors.
In Sweden, the emergency rooms in Jönköping and Värnamo are overflowing with patients, and both clinics have noticed that the cases are much more serious than usual. Johan Björk is head of operations in the emergency room at Ryhov County Hospital in Jönköping spoke to Swedish Radio noting the increase in seriously ill people in the emergency room. But no one knows why this has been happening.
“It will be interesting to look at what this is about. Research will certainly be done on this,” said Björk.
The rise in heart attacks from blocked arteries in Scotland has public health experts “baffled”. Recent mortality data for England and Wales shows that young people, particularly in the 15 to 19 age group, are dying in significantly greater numbers, with excess deaths between 16 percent and 47 percent above expected levels between May and September, 2021.
In India, the Hindu Times reported on the rise of heart attacks among young people after the sudden demise of celebrity Puneeth Rajkumar, who died of a heart attack at age 46.
“But it’s not Covid….”…bullshit article.
ReplyDeleteThese so called “vaccines” are doing what they were intended to do: depopulation. Consider that the driving force behind the global mandates consists of the World Economic Forum and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Both of these entities have been very vocal about climate change being the world’s biggest problem and population control as the solution. The actual mortality rate from Covid is extremely low and emergency use authorization for experimental mRNA injections was never justified. This is a global propaganda campaign by the world’s wealthiest people. Using Covid and the great reset, they plan to greatly reduce the population and enslave survivors under global communism. Prepare accordingly.
ReplyDelete+1,000,000!!
DeleteEverything is going according to the plan.
ReplyDeletehttps://swprs.org/the-wef-and-the-pandemic/
Bill Gates proposes that vaccines and abortion can be used to reduce the world’s population by 15 percent (1.2 billion+ deaths) to reduce global warming.👇
ReplyDeletehttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-UMu1z2tdFA
If this is true, why were the rich and famous first in line for vaccines? Suicidal?
DeleteThey were filmed getting injections of some sort as part of the global propaganda campaign to convince the common people that the injections were safe. Does that seem normal to you?
DeleteIts not a vaccine!!!
ReplyDeleteWhy is Congress and their staff exempt??????
ReplyDelete42% of Illinois COVID-19 deaths last week were fully vaccinated people
ReplyDeletehttps://newschannel20.com/news/local/42-of-covid-19-deaths-in-illinois-last-week-were-fully-vaccinated
Those that are very old and frail, and those with certain cancers and autoimmune diseases are still at risk. Colin Powell was a prime example. Fully vaccinated and afflicted with Multiple Myeloma. Don't fall for misinformation. The fruneral parlors are making a killing burying unvaccinated people who thought they knew better.
DeleteTotal BS. No overflow at funeral homes, just regular business. There is no pandemic.
DeleteNotice how there isn't a shortage of coffins or burial vaults.
The former Pfizer VP of research disagrees with you. He warns that the “vaccines” will cause far more deaths than the virus. Open your eyes.
Deletehttps://www.bitchute.com/video/9Ci2jK1yFoOd/