55 Comments

Nothing will ever bring their precious daughter back from medical Idiocy of the hospital. But The parents certainly have The case for a very strong Wrongful death or neglect lawsuit Against the hospital, which will hopefully help other families in the future. I keep thinking this hospital acted just like so many hospitals during covid by giving different treatment to those who were not vaccinated. This has got to stop. God bless the little girl and her family.

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I hope everyone on the treatment team, all administrators, and the CEO are prosecuted to the full extent of the law and are sued for an enormous amount of money. They are incompetent, malicious, or both.

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Back in November of 2021, my husband was admitted to Hospital for pnuemonia. They did not administer antibiotics until the morning of Day 12 in the Hospital. He died on the 13th. This was after they substantially padded their bank account by declaring he had COVID, giving him Remdesivir, putting him on a Ventilator, and doing various other procedures just to jack up the bill. Murder for Profit Criminals!!

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This is criminal - anyone with common sense knows that pneumonia needs to be treated aggressively with antibiotics. Why on earth would they wait so long? I guess we know the answer - I'm so sorry this happened to you.

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I am so very sorry for your loss.

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This is a scenario experience by many during COVID. I am so sorry for your loss. We must never give up on trying to hold people accountable.

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Sorry for your and your family's loss.

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I had mycoplasma last fall via my son. It was endemic in the US and Europe. I have my own stash of amoxicillin and it did not work, so I thought it could be viral at first but it was not getting better. Then I called my doctor's office, and I got azithromycin without any discussion of the symptoms apart from letting the secretary know that I had resipiratory infection not improved by amoxicillin. My son had been sick off and on (missing school) for a couple of weeks, so then I also got him some azithro to kill it. His pediatrician told me that it was prevalent at the time with many kids hospitalized.

My symptoms were mild fever most of the time but 39C at one point and lot of phlegm coming up.

Conclusion, stock up on azithromycin when you are in a no-prescription developing country.

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Azithromycin in over the counter in many "developing" countries, like Mexico. I have a woke pharmacist at a woke pharmacy (in the U.S.) absolutely refuse to fill a prescription for azithromycin for a 42 y.o. with double pneumonia because he had covid. Fortunately we got a morally correct pharmacist to fill it at another pharmacy. This is the state of medicine in a "developed" country.

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As you found out, antibiotics are not one size fits all. It can be dangerous, even lethal, by delaying appropriate treatment if the wrong antibiotic is selected. Indiscriminate use of antibiotics also increases bacterial resistance, making it harder to treat infections. The specific antibiotic used should be selected based on the specific sensitivity of the bacteria causing the infection. Some antibiotics are broad spectrum, meaning they can be effective for a variety of bacterial infections. Best to seek the advice of a trusted healthcare professional.

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Mycoplasma does not have a cell wall so betalactam antibiotics don't work. You need a macrolide like azithromycin. I had no idea that I had mycoplasma and a typical "medical professional" is not going to test for it. I think this doctor got lucky. I found out later that he prescribes "Z-packs" for anyone with a respiratory condition. I guess that's pretty useful. Convention is that you start with amoxicillin.

It is much better in developing countries where you can take care of the illness yourself. Also, ahole doctors are trained not to give antibiotics, which is stupid and indeed deadly. So people are advised to stock up on azithro when they are in Mexico, Turkey, wherever. Actually, in Turkey they have become a bit restrictive. But they often relent in developing countries after some discussion even when there is a policy.

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After the past 5 years it shouldn't be any wonder that for at least a couple of decades iatrogenesis has been the third leading cause of death. Considering the suppression of better treatments for cancer, suppression of research due to profiteering, and the obviously fraudulent nature of much research as well as clinical trial studies run by the profiteers, I think it can be rather easily argued that it's really the #1 cause of death in this country and probably has been for at least those two decades as well.

One other fact of note, according to the parents, was that they were told the staff would likely drain a lung that had fluid in it if it got worse and yet that was never done. Soon enough their daughter was intubated and put on a vent as she declined-- sounds like the medical murder protocols are staying in place as opposed to the medical administrative state encouraging life-saving treatments.

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The staff told the parents. (Sorry, I'm a grammar Nazi. "The parents was told" if you insist on passive mood.)

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"The parents was told"? LOL And you say you're a 'grammar Nazi'? Learn how to free your mind and you might rehabilitate, or perhaps relegate such activity to those who ask you. SMH. And, by the way, who said that the staff told the parents? It may have been the doctor who told the parents-- quite an assumption and "correcting" grammar with an example of bad grammar means you have no credibility as a 'Nazi', which perhaps you'll recognize as a good thing.

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What got told was "the staff would likely drain a lung". How do parents get told (tolled)? Learn grammar. Or just cite me any instance in the King James version of the Bible where "told" is used in the manner you did.

You sure didn't make your "they" clear! But parsing your ingrammatical statement, supposedly someone (a chatbot?) told the parents, "the staff would likely drain a lung".

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Get a life-- professional hall monitor. Go be a nuisance to someone else.

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Blocked, rude illiterate!

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Thank you John, for exposing so many fakes!

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I’ve read research on the high death count of healthy young military men being due to deadly high doses of aspirin. It was a new treatment & they clearly had no idea what was safe.

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Yes, that explanation seems very plausible to me. I’ve read of doctor’s notes in one patient’s file at the Army base in Kansas that said something along the lines of: ‘in spite of giving him aspirin by the half-handfuls, he worsened and died’ (not an exact quote but it’s the gist of it). The amount of aspirin they were using would liquefy the lungs, exactly what they found in autopsies.

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In her 2009 article, Karen Starko hypothesizes that the cyanosis observed in patients at Camp Funston in Fort Riley, Kansas, was due to the very high levels of aspirin they were prescribed. Sarko's article is behind a paywall, but the abstract states that the patients were prescribed "8.0–31.2 g per day." Not milligrams, grams.

The aspirin I buy from the pharmacy has 325 milligrams of aspirin per tablet. The directions say the maximum dose is 4000 mg (or 4 grams) in a 24-hour period.

For a person to take 30 grams (not milligrams) of aspirin a day, they would need to take around 90 tablets a day.

Karen M. Starko, Salicylates and Pandemic Influenza Mortality, 1918–1919 Pharmacology, Pathology, and Historic Evidence, Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 49, Issue 9, 15 November 2009, Pages 1405–1410, https://doi.org/10.1086/606060

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Okay. Though the aspirin was prescribed to the patients. I rather doubt they were prescribed to the aspirin.

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In terms of Spanish Flu death rates being much higher for 20 somethings, this is almost certainly b/c megadosing aspirin was a new treatment at that time, and we have since learned that that is in fact fatal in many cases. Ergo: much of the Spanish Flu death rate was a case of "the cure being worse than the disease." Here's a peer reviewed paper on this: https://academic.oup.com/cid/article-abstract/49/9/1405/301441?redirectedFrom=fulltext

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"One wonders why there was such a delay"

uh, yeah...

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🎯

Secondary infection, not the flu itself, was and is the issue…

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The initial viral infection and inflammation leaves the lungs vulnerable to colonization by staph and mycoplasma bacteria.

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As a retired Pediatrician, I am astounded by the (lack of) quality of care described. I wonder if she was she treated by a Pediatrician or a Family Practice physician.

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I think initially, and s/he prescribed the cough syrup.

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My 88 year old father was hospitalized in late May of 2021 shortly after his wife had been hospitalized with pneumonia for 3 weeks. She knew he had pneumonia but they said he didn't. After testing him for covid 3 times (all negative) during his 2 week stay, including slam dunking him in the covid ward overnight "just in case" before his third test result was even back. He suddenly took a turn for the worse the very next day and was diagnosed with "the worst possible pneumonia you can get" and passed away two days later. He and my stepmother were both jabbed. My sister and I were the only ones out of all the kids not jabbed so we weren't allowed to go up to the hospital and see him, but we had talked to him on the phone just before he took a turn and he sounded good and positive that he would be coming home and we could visit him there. Wonder what happened?! I have two sister in laws who are RNs and a nephew who is a respiratory therapist assistant, so we know they all encouraged my dad and stepmother to get the Vax, and a few months later he's gone.

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Thank you very much to the parents for releasing the records and making the TRUTH known.

So sorry for your loss. The hospital needs to be sued for malpractice!

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Brillant observation !

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Let me add - Fauci himself:

Predominant Role of Bacterial Pneumonia as a Cause of Death in Pandemic Influenza: Implications for Pandemic Influenza Preparedness

David M Morens, Jeffery K Taubenberger, Anthony S Fauci

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2599911/

J Infect Dis. 2008 Oct 1; 198(7): 962–970.

doi: 10.1086/591708

"Conclusions

The majority of deaths in the 1918–1919 influenza pandemic likely resulted directly from secondary bacterial pneumonia caused by common upper respiratory–tract bacteria. Less substantial data from the subsequent 1957 and 1968 pandemics are consistent with these findings. If severe pandemic influenza is largely a problem of viral-bacterial copathogenesis, pandemic planning needs to go beyond addressing the viral cause alone (e.g., influenza vaccines and antiviral drugs). Prevention, diagnosis, prophylaxis, and treatment of secondary bacterial pneumonia, as well as stockpiling of antibiotics and bacterial vaccines, should also be high priorities for pandemic planning."

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And

Masks, bacterial pneumonia and the “Spanish flu”

https://colleenhuber.substack.com/p/masks-bacterial-pneumonia-and-the

"Let’s take a look at the two eras in which Americans wore masks, 1918-1919 and recently. Then let’s dispense with a misconception. The so-called Spanish flu was neither Spanish nor the flu."

DR. COLLEEN HUBER - 30.08.2023

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In addition:

BREAKING: The mainstream press is lying to you BIG TIME about the Texas child who "died from measles"

https://kirschsubstack.com/p/breaking-the-mainstream-press-is

The child died from medical malpractice, not the measles. By the way, they don't vaccinate in the community due to all the vaccine injuries they've had from "safe and effective" vaccines.

Steve Kirsch - Mar 19, 2025

... incl. two further links

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Let's declare the end of all these lies.

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While I don't just what organisms precipitated the 1918 pandemic, aspirin poisoning and immune suppression seems to have caused most of the deaths.

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Was there some vindictive motive because she was not vaccinated to not treat her mycoplasma infection? Certainly, during covid vindictiveness abounded, where death was wished on the unvaccinated, and denial of organ transplants was the order of the day. Not a stretch to be suspicious.

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Behavior modification of hospital staff over four years, plus the same pandemic treatment protocols still in place in those institutions combined with a visceral hate for the unvaccinated should be considered.

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I also have to comment on the deteriorating knowledge/abilities of the healthcare workforce. My 30+ nephew had a burst appendicitis & after he was recovering in the hospital they offered him food. I was freaking out telling my sister this is wrong as my son 12 years ago had surgery for a burst appendicitis. The recovery was difficult (he was 11yo) as he was not allowed to have food or even sips of water when he brushed his teeth for at least 3 full days. Long story short, my nephew ended up going in & out of the hospital for the next 2 months with complications. They had unnecessary specialists - an infectious disease doctor diagnosed what type of bacteria he had as if he had just arrived from another country of ate tainted food. There was one doctor who seemed to understand the true cause of his worsening health but acted evasive because he could not expose the screw up of giving the patient food. If the medical establishment can’t handle the big stuff anymore then not sure where we go - Canada already comes here.

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I'd probably go to Germany

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