Testimonials from nurses who worked at hospitals during the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic have revealed that these healthcare institutions willingly subjected patients to deadly protocols and punished whistleblowers who spoke out against hospital treatment protocols.
This is according to author Ken McCarthy, whose book “What the Nurses Saw” investigated what he called the “systemic medical murder” that was taking place in hospitals during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. He noted how government policymakers during COVID-19 “created one of the biggest terror campaigns in the history of mankind.” (Related: HOSPITAL HOMICIDE: New study points to evidence that some COVID-19 patients were euthanized by hospitals.)
McCarthy explained that these deadly protocols came from the National Institutes of Health. Hospital executives who were financially incentivized to implement these policies would then pass on the orders even though many hospital employees were aware of how dangerous and even deadly these policies were.
The biggest reason for many dangerous and deadly encounters at hospitals is the administering of what McCarthy called the “failed drug” remdesivir. He noted how the use of remdesivir was halted in the entire continent of Africa because it caused organ failure.
Among other factors that led to many hospital deaths include the denial of anti-inflammatory medications and inhalable steroids, the use of BiPAP masks – which often caused panic attacks that led to the administering of tranquilizers that further weakened the respiratory system – and the use of ventilators.
All of these factors along with other care policies for COVID-19 patients were a “recipe for disaster,” according to McCarthy.