Sunday, September 19, 2021

ICUs use morphine . . . that paralyzes the diaphragm and stops your loved one from breathing. Morphine paralyzes the heart’s ability to beat, and your loved one will die

UPDATE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 2023  

The video embedded here has been removed from YouTube, and when I first tried to relocate it I couldn't find it and so thought that it was gone for good.  But that's not true.  Someone else uploaded it.  Here is that video from Vokalnow.  But what I did do with the original is that I did transcribe much of Dr. Ardis' and Michelle Rowton's conversation that you can see and read below.  She has a healthcare provider for children, kind of neat, called wmwsanctuary.  Check it out.  

Dr. Ardis has a site here.  At the beginning of the interview, he referenced this site, called myfreedoctor.com.  

You’ll see them put you on a feeding tube or an IV and people will think that with the IV their loved one is getting what you need.  Except that you’re not getting any calories in that IV.  If you’re not getting any calories, you’re not eating.  If they don’t have a feeding tube in or calories through the IV, you’re not being fed.  So they’re starving you to death.

And if your body is too weak from no nutrients, you know this, all my doctors are telling me this, if you don’t eat, you’re weak.  And if you’re weak and you’re sick, well, you’re going to die.  Really one of the most egregious things ever.

Palliative care.  They’ll take someone who’s still got a chance of turning it around and they’ll put you on palliative care.  Palliative care in a hospital means they’re preparing you for death.  If you let them put you on palliative care, it basically means they’re going to quit treating your loved one in any shape or form and they’re just going to prepare them to die.  So once you put them on palliative care, the odds of you turning them around are roughly zero.

So you’ve got to advocate for your loved ones in the hospital.  They’re killing people right and left.  And they’re doing it because Fauci and his crew of monsters, these garbage scumbags at NIH and CDC they’re pushing these protocols for hospitals to murder people.  Because then they can drive up the death numbers from what is essentially the flu.  Don’t let them lie to you: palliative care is going to make your sister, brother, mother better.  it’s we’re going to get them ready to die comfortably.

10:15  Palliative care is “we’re going to put your loved one on hospice.  We’re just going to let them go peacefully, attend to them once or twice a day, etc. . . .

“You need to consider putting him on a morphine drip which reduces his pain and . . . ."

ICUs use morphine, not as palliative care, this is how they kill and murder your loved ones because morphine, an opioid that paralyzes the diaphragm and stops your loved one from breathing, and over time, say a 2 to 4 hour period, the length of a morphine drip, that morphine is going to paralyze the heart’s ability to beat, and you will die.  This is what their palliative care is. 11:43  It’s not palliative care.  If you’re annoying enough, they’ll want to kill you to get rid of you from the hospital because you’ve become annoying.  There’s no bigger time for you to become annoying if you’ve watched my show on September 1st with Michelle Rowton.  She had to fight to get her dad out of the hospital during COVID.  She drove an hour and a half to Dallas and the night-time supervisor told her “Can we just wait until the morning to get your dad out of here?”

What kind of mentality do you have to have to get the hospitals to listen to you?  

She said, “I had to be a raging bitch.”  You need to become a defender of that loved one’s life. 

Michelle Rowton is excellent, particularly her listing out the sequence of steps to advocate for your loved one at a hospital.  I'd wished I'd known these steps almost 12 years ago when my mother passed.  Her stories about advocacy are priceless and start at the 58-minute mark.  If this video gets removed, the title of it is "Dr. Ardis interviews Michelle Rowton, MS, Neonatal Practioner, and Patient Advocate."  


HOSPITAL CHAIN OF COMMAND

The first thing--ask for the Charge Nurse.  Tell her that you are not okay with your loved one being alone.  We ARE going to have a visitor in her room 24 hours a day, and I need you to contact your next chain of command and get back to me in 40 minutes.  It's easy to deal with people not in person.  Start with the Charge Nurse.  


Next up the chain of command is the Nursing Manager.  Above her is the Director.  Above him is the Administration.  So you just keep going up the chain of command. 


At night or on weekends, it goes: 

Charge Nurse > House Supervisor [the busiest person in the hospital at all times] (because there's no Nursing Manager there), then to Administration.  Offer a 12 to 24-hour turnover for visitors.  


USE THESE APPROPRIATE WORDS

"I am uncomfortable.  My father is not safe in your facility.  You have committed medical kidnapping.  And I am not getting informed consent for medical procedures because nobody is calling me or if they are, I haven't actually been with this person to give informed consent because informed consent also involves eyes and we all know that, and if we can't get this taken care of in the next couple of hours I have already contacted my family's team of lawyers to help me handle this for me."  


Hospitals actually have PATIENT ADVOCATES, and they are required to post a phone number, a contact number around the hospital that you can call so that if you feel like you're being bullied or you're not having good medical care or that you're not being listened to, they have to provide you with a private patient advocate.  


Well, why would I even bother with that if they're hired by the hospital to begin with?  


Her answer is this: most people don't know that that exists.  So just by asking for that makes everybody perk up especially to legal consequences.  Because anytime you have somebody actually requesting a patient advocate from the hospital, you have a very high chance that this situation is going to go to litigation if you don't get it chilled out quick.  And at that point, I tell them, "If all of this does not work, I have hired my own private advocate.  This is her name.  And so we will do this by conference, but she is also willing to come by the hospital as well."  She says she's only had to go up to a hospital NICU twice in 8 years.  IF they get down to the nitty-gritty and say I've hired Michelle Rowton as my patient advocate, 


It took her 56 hours to get her dad out of the hospital.  65% of that hospital was empty.  

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