Monday, June 3, 2024

KIMBERLY OVERTON: The only place anybody was dying was in our hospitals. And it's because they were dying of the treatments.

Her name is Kimberly Overton

"It was not COVID that was killing...patients, it was the complete...medical mismanagement of COVID. It was the remdesivir, ventilator, death—wash, rinse, repeat."

"The only place anybody was dying was in our hospitals. And it's because they were dying of the treatments." Critical Care RN, whistleblower, and Founder/Executive Director of Nurse Freedom Network Kimberly Overton () describes for Peter Santilli () how it was not COVID killing people in hospitals, but rather the (federally distributed) treatment protocols themselves. "They kept telling us all of our patients were dying of COVID—it was not COVID that was killing any of these patients, it was the complete and total medical mismanagement of COVID. It was the remdesivir, ventilator, death, wash, rinse, repeat," Overton says. The critical care RN adds, "This is what we were seeing over and over happen in these hospitals and I'm far from the only nurse that can tell you this." "Listen," Overton says, "if they were dying of the virus alone, why weren't we pulling bodies from homes? Why weren't we pulling bodies from off of the streets? ...The only place anybody was dying was in our hospitals. And it's because they were dying of the treatments." The whistleblower adds: "The remdesivir was poisoning people. We were shutting down their organs, we were placing them on ventilators, then they kept getting secondary bacterial infections, and they [were] succumbing to those. They [were] getting blood clots because they [were] not being ambulated properly." "We couldn't even get doctors and PT [physical therapists] up on the floor to ambulate patients," Overton says. "People were too afraid, it was mostly just the nurses. And then the doctors would...come and look through the glass windows of the ICU and take the nurse's report..." (Note that ambulate means to move a patient around, or have them walk around.) "We were intubating patients not because they were in distress, but in an effort to contain the virus," Overton adds. "They were pushing for early intubation knowing that...80% or more of those patients that were placed on a ventilator never made it off."

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