A whistleblower under the pseudonym Dr. John has accused the government and the National Health Service (NHS) directors of
instructing their staff to let patients die or, in some cases, kill them through the 'End of Life Care' program and falsely label the deaths as due to the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19).
John, who has worked in minor injury and illness centers throughout the pandemic, stated that hospitals were eerily quiet and nearly empty during the first months of lockdown in April 2020. He claimed that patients avoided seeking medical treatment for fear that they would die of COVID-19.
"I used to see an average of 20 patients per day, that dropped to 1-2 patients during the first lockdown. I have even witnessed an elderly lady with horrific broken bones come into the hospital three weeks after her accident as she was too scared of catching coronavirus to visit the hospital sooner. In the end, the pain overcame the fear," John said. (Related:
Murder for money: Whistleblower reveals hospitals get PAID for every COVID patient admitted.)
Moreover, John also argued that the changes in healthcare policies led to inadequate follow-up care, which in turn resulted in negative outcomes for the patient and their families.
"I recall visiting one patient, a female in her 80’s. She’d only had a single face-to-face physio follow-up and a single follow-up via phone call following a hip operation. I found her lying in her mess on incontinence pads, her dignity taken because she was bedbound with a fixed rotated leg, unable to transfer to a commode. Her family were extremely upset," he reminisced.
According to the data from the NHS, there was even a drastic drop in A&E attendance, with a 57 percent decline in April 2020 and a 31 percent drop in the second lockdown in November of that same year compared to April and November 2018 and 2019. Meaning to say, this data has proved John's claims about the real situation in the hospitals back then.
A Care Quality Commission report also supported his claims, revealing that 34 percent of NHS staff were pressured into
placing "Do Not Resuscitate" orders on COVID-19 patients with disabilities and learning difficulties. As a result, the Office for National Statistics recorded that three out of every five COVID-19 deaths were disabled and a person with learning difficulty.
Several documents link the U.K. gov't to the excessive deaths in care homes during the pandemic
"The Death Document," released by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), allegedly links the U.K. government to the mass use of Midazolam injections in care homes in the early months of the pandemic.
According to the US National Library of Medicine,
midazolam injections may cause life-threatening breathing problems such as shallow, slowed or temporarily stopped breathing that may lead to permanent brain injury and death. The library warns hospitals that doctors should only administer these deadly injections in facilities with the necessary life-saving treatment. But that's just not the case, as stated in
The Death Document.
Between March 2 and June 12, 2020, 18,562 care home residents in England died with COVID-19, with almost 40 percent aged 65 and over. During the same period, there were 28,186 “excess deaths” in care homes, a 46 percent increase compared to 2019.
The government was also accused of allegedly conducting mass discharges from hospitals into care homes, blanketing Do Not Attempt Resuscitation (DNAR) orders on residents, and suspending regular oversight procedures for care homes by regulatory bodies. These actions are said to have contributed to the high number of deaths among care home residents.
The Care Quality Commission (CQC), a statutory body, conducted a review of Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR) decisions made during the pandemic and found evidence of unacceptable and inappropriate DNACPR orders. The investigation also revealed that DNACPR notices were applied blanketly without involving the families of their patients.
Furthermore, it is alleged that NICE, despite claiming to be independent, operates under the influence of the Department of Health and Social Care. NICE's guidelines, including NG163, are implemented in hospitals and GP practices, care homes, and community organizations, raising concerns about its independence.
Clare Wills Harrison, a lawyer who has been exposing the Midazolam scandal, discovered NG163 and other relevant documents. She claims that NG163 has directly led to the misuse of a protocol referred to as “the death pathway.”
NG163, published on April 3, 2020, recommended the use of midazolam and Opioids for the treatment of COVID-19 symptoms. Critics argue that NICE could not have gathered sufficient evidence of the effectiveness of these drugs in such a short timeframe. The document notes that Midazolam did not have a U.K. marketing license for use in treating breathlessness or agitation at the time of publication.
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