Nurses Describe 'Brutal' COVID-19 Treatment Protocols
Nurses who witnessed "brutal" hospital COVID-19
(
https://bit.ly/3QRzXcl) treatment protocols kill patients paint
a bleak picture of what is taking place in state and federally
funded health care systems.
"They're horrific, and they're all in lockstep," Staci Kay, a nurse
practitioner with the North Carolina Physicians for Freedom who
left the hospital system to start her own early treatment private
practice, told The Epoch Times. "They will not consider protocols
outside of what's given to them by the CDC (Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention) and the NIH (National Institute of Health).
And nobody is asking why."
Fueled by cognitive dissonance amid an array of red flags, Kay said
hospital staff is ignoring blatantly problematic treatments that
performed poorly in clinical trials, such as remdesivir, and
protocols such as keeping the patient isolated, just to adhere to
the federal canon.
"I've seen people die with their family watching via iPad on
Facetime," Kay said. "It was brutal."
As a former nurse in intensive care, Kay said she had seen her share
of tragedy, but how she saw COVID patients being treated "had me
waking up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat with chest
pains."
"I hated my job," Kay said. "I hated going to work. I was stressed in
a way I've never been before in my entire life."
Keeping families isolated was especially difficult, she said, because
people couldn't come to say goodbye to their loved ones.
Kay was looking for other options when she found an inpatient
protocol designed Dr. Paul Marik, founding member of Front Line
COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, which purported to have a 94
percent success rate.
However, after Kay pitched it to the head of the pulmonary critical
care department, she was dismissed, and the physician boasted that
the hospital had a 66 percent survival rate at the time.
"I told him, 'I feel like we can do better,' but I was very quickly
shut down," Kay said. "I became very angry because I'm watching
people die and I knew we could have been doing better."
It was as if formerly smart people had become brainwashed, "and
then just dumb," Kay said, lacking the mental wherewithal to discern
true from false.