TruthArchive.ai - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Nicole Sirotech, registered nurse with critical care and flight experience, and a master’s prepared biochemist, says, "I didn't see a single patient died of COVID. I've seen substantial number of patients die of negligence. And the handicapping of medical professionals doing their job, many of them are not dying from COVID." She laments on the New York front lines, "these people aren't dying from COVID," and adds, "Nobody is listening... I'm literally coming here every day and watching them kill them." She recounts, "Two days ago, I flew out my first 10 year old with a heart attack" and, after a thirty‑minute dispute, forced an EKG revealing "almost a complete STEMI," noting, "he was just vaccinated yesterday. It is very much possible." She says vaccine injuries are misclassified to avoid reimbursement as "anxiety" or "neuropathy" or "Guillain Barre syndrome." She founded American Frontline Nurses, traveled to developing nations, and claims, "Our level of healthcare has been deteriorated to substandard third world nation healthcare." She says nurses report patients "not been bathed, haven't been fed, haven't been given water, haven't been turned" and calls it "a concentration camp. Absolutely it is."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Erin Olszewski, a registered nurse and army combat veteran, speaks in support of the Collier Health Freedom Bill of Rights Ordinance and the Health Freedom Resolution. She shares her experiences working in the COVID ICU in New York and witnessing negligence and mistreatment of patients. Erin describes a lack of liability, threats to silence staff, and financial incentives for admitting patients. She also mentions the banning of autopsies and the high cost of ventilators. Erin urges the commissioners to support the resolution and ordinance to prevent such incidents from happening again. She emphasizes the importance of good nursing care and calls for unity in standing against those who betray trust.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Nicole Sirotek, a registered nurse with expertise in critical care and trauma, shares her experience during the COVID pandemic. She went to New York City to help with the crisis and witnessed gross negligence and medical mismanagement of patients. Poor public health measures and the handicapping of medical professionals have contributed to the current crisis. Sirotek highlights that many patients are not dying from COVID itself, but rather from negligence and medical errors. She questions the lack of interventions like Ibuprofen and steroids, which could have potentially saved lives. Sirotek emphasizes the need for better execution of early intervention strategies to prevent further deaths.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I'm watching patients get murdered. They aren't dying from COVID. They are medically mismanaging patients, and nobody cares. I've seen an anesthesiologist incorrectly intubate a patient, a resident defibrillate a patient with bradycardia, a nurse put an NG tube into someone's lungs, and another nurse give a deadly dose of insulin. Basic standards of care are not being met, like replacing blood in patients who desperately need it. They let patients rot on vents, and residents undo the work of day shifts by maxing out sedation. No one assesses patients properly, and they let them get acidotic until their kidneys shut down. I've seen a doctor rupture a subclavian vein and a patient bleed to death, and another patient choke on his own blood because of an incorrectly placed ET tube. These are minorities in the hood, and nobody cares. I need help to save these people.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I am literally telling you that they're murdering these people, and nobody will listen to me. These people aren't dying from COVID. They don't care what is happening to these people. They don't. I'm literally coming here every day and watching them kill them. It's like going in the fucking twilight zone. Like, everyone here is okay with this. The only way I can kind of put this into context for everybody is an extreme example: He's like, if we were in Nazi Germany and they were taking the Jews to go put them in a gas chamber, I'm the one like, they're saying, hey. This is not good. This is bad. We should not be doing this. And then everyone tells me, hang in there. You're doing a great job. You can't save everybody. But these people aren't dying from COVID. Let me give you several examples here. An anesthesiologist intubated the patient’s right bronchus and of a patient, and they couldn't get the stats up. For about five hours, we were waiting on a chest x-ray to confirm that the placement was wrong. In the meantime, while we're waiting for that, and we've told the anesthesiologist that it was placed wrong because, like, literally only one side of his fucking chest is inflating, he dies. A patient had a heart rate of 40, and the resident starts doing chest compressions on him, which is not what you do. You just externally pace them or you give him some atropine. Then I run in there to stop him from doing chest compressions on somebody with the fucking pulse. And then he decides to push epi. He throws some pads on him to defibrillate the guy in bradycardia. Okay? He has a heart rate of 40 and a stable, you know, bradycardic rhythm. We just need to give him, like, somatropine and pace him. He fucking defibrillates him and kills him. I ran out of the patient’s room to get the director of nursing who was standing out there. And I’m like, can you stop him? He’s going to kill that patient. He’s going to kill that patient if he defibrillates him with bradycardia and a heart rate of 40. The director of nursing just shook his head, and I turned around, and he killed the dude. There was a nurse who placed an NG tube into some guy’s lungs and filled his lungs with tube feeding. There was a nurse who confused a long-acting insulin with a short-acting insulin and gave thirty units of a fast-acting insulin and killed the guy. It’s just here they’re just gonna let them rot on the vent. They’re medically mismanaging these patients. And, like, I’m not a doctor, but there’s basic standards of care. When somebody’s low on blood, literally on the brink of a critical low blood level, we should replace the blood. I asked the residents, and they’re like, does he have internal bleeding? And I said, no. Then they’re like, well, we’re not replacing the blood. In these COVID patients, they all eventually need a blood transfusion. Their blood—if you don’t have enough blood to oxygenate your body, the vent settings don’t fucking matter because you have no oxygen carrying capacity of your blood. We have a nurse who fell asleep at the nurses’ station while we were all in rooms, and her norepinephrine ran out. And the guy had no fucking blood pressure and didn’t perfuse his brain, and I’m pretty sure his brain dead. That same nurse is now running a CRRT machine, a dialysis-like machine, that she has never done before. She said she’ll figure it out. I’m pretty fucking smart, and I figure a lot of shit out, but I would never attempt to try and figure out a CRRT machine on the fly. We are adequately staffed. There’s a shit ton of staff in there, like, and we have a nurse who does CRRT in there. She has a different patient load. We told them, swap these nurses so the one that knows how to work this machine can work this machine, but they didn’t wanna do that. So I’m pretty sure that patient will be dead here in a couple hours. Nobody is listening. They don’t care what is happening to these people. They don’t. I’m literally coming here every day and watching them kill them. I mean, we’re not gonna save everybody. That’s fine. Like, come on, guys. We’re not God. Some of these people are just on sedation to keep them on the vents. Nothing else. I have a lady on a tracheostomy on a vent, and she’s not even fucking cognizant. She’s not even on sedation. You know what we give her every day? I give her breathing treatments, albuterol, and she gets insulin. And that’s it. We’re not treating the COVID, guys. For real, we’re not treating the COVID. You know, every day, we try and get these guys off the vents. Right? Because there’s criteria for weaning. Every day, the day shift nurse will wean them down to minimum sedation. Every night, we come in and we get the same two residents and they fucking max out all the sedation again and undo all the work from the day shift. Then the day shift attending will come in, and they’ll all do rounds. And they’ll be like, he wasn’t synchronizing with the vent. So we had to turn all the sedation on. And I’m like, he wasn’t synchronizing with the vent because it’s in the wrong vent mode. I even tried getting a hold of Black advocacy groups here. They just put me on hold or hang up on me. Tried talking to management. Now I got new units. And someone come up with some type of a solution for me because I’m kind of out of ideas. You know, I try and talk with some of the other nurses here, and they’re like, well, you can’t save everybody. And they all know what’s happening. They all agree with me and they all just shake their heads and I’m like, am I the only one who is not a sociopath to think that this is okay? I mean, guys, they literally don’t even know when they’re dead. Like, how many times have I told you they’ve assigned me a dead person? Like, how long have they been dead? Nobody knows. Like, how is anybody assessing anything without a stethoscope? Normally, we have disposable stethoscopes, but I brought my old chunky one. Nobody has listened to anybody’s lungs as long as I’ve been here. Even with disposable stethoscopes. I keep telling them that, you know, the guys are like, my patient’s going acidosis. We need to do something about this before his kidneys shut down. Then they run five liters of bicarb into a person who’s gained 20 pounds of water weight and completely throw him into heart failure, and he dies several hours later. That was one of my patients. So I let them know. They had me start the bicarb before I left one night. And by the time I came back the next shift, he was dead. And they assigned him to me, and he was already in a body bag. Like, guys, they’re not dying of COVID. I am literally telling you that they’re murdering these people, and nobody will listen to me. My lead at the other hospital warned me I’d have a problem and advocate for the patients too. They moved him to a completely different hospital. I tried reaching out, but he hasn’t texted me. I’m going to the unit. Let’s see how they kill him there. Okay? Stay safe. Stay out of NYC for your health care.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
New York, particularly Elmhurst Hospital, became the epicenter of the COVID-19 crisis, facing overwhelming patient numbers and dwindling supplies. Nurse Erin Olszewski, who worked there, observed troubling practices, including mislabeling patients as COVID-positive despite negative tests and the aggressive use of ventilators on patients who may not have needed them. She noted a high percentage of patients from marginalized communities and highlighted the lack of experienced doctors on the floors. Erin documented her experiences and raised concerns about protocols that seemed driven by financial incentives rather than patient care. She witnessed patients being treated without proper isolation, leading to increased infections. Ultimately, Erin felt compelled to speak out against these practices, believing they contributed to unnecessary patient deaths.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, a nurse named Erin Marie Orzevsky exposes the unethical practices she witnessed at Elmhurst Hospital in New York City during the COVID-19 pandemic. She claims that patients were falsely labeled as COVID-positive for financial gain, unnecessarily put on ventilators, and subjected to inexperienced staff. Orzevsky also alleges that doctors refused to consider alternative treatments and that patients died as a result. Other healthcare workers share similar stories of negligence and mistreatment. The video raises concerns about the manipulation of COVID-19 statistics and the lack of accountability in the healthcare system. It concludes by highlighting the potential dangers of granting the World Health Organization (WHO) ultimate control over global healthcare.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker shares their experience working in the COVID ICU at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, New York. They emphasize that the situation was not limited to New York, but was happening nationwide, including in Florida. They describe witnessing a disturbing assembly line-like process where patients were treated poorly and family members were banned. The speaker criticizes politicians and government interference in the doctor-patient relationship. They mention financial incentives for admitting patients and the neglectful protocols followed. They recount seeing patients with severe bed sores and feces dried on their backs. The speaker reveals that full code patients were not being resuscitated and were ultimately placed in body bags.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Gail McCray, a nurse from the Bay Area of California, shares her experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. She noticed that despite the media reporting hospitals being overwhelmed, her hospital was actually empty. She also questioned the protocols, such as the administration of Remdesivir and the withholding of steroids, which she believed were causing harm to patients. When the COVID-19 vaccines were rolled out, she observed a significant increase in hospital admissions and witnessed patients with unusual symptoms, including blood clots and Guillain-Barre syndrome. Gail and her colleagues faced discrimination for questioning the narrative and were pressured not to report adverse events. She ultimately lost her job for trying to hold her hospital accountable. Gail emphasizes the importance of critical thinking and standing up for what is right.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Nicole Zerotech, registered nurse with critical care and flight nurse experience and a master's biochemist, says: "I didn't see a single patient died of COVID. I've seen substantial number of patients die of negligence. And the handicapping of medical professionals doing their job." On New York front lines, she cites: "Two days ago, I flew out my first 10 year old with a heart attack... And I'm like, well, he was just vaccinated yesterday. It is very much possible." She warns vaccine injuries are misattributed to anxiety or neuropathy to avoid reimbursement: "if they put down that it was a vaccine injury... they actually won't get reimbursed. It gets labeled as anxiety or neuropathy or Guillain Barre syndrome when in actuality, it's very realistically a vaccine injury." She founded American Frontline Nurses and traveled to South America, India, and South Africa; "nowhere in those countries and developing nations do I see these issues that we see here in The United States." She claims U.S. health care is "substandard third world nation health care" and that "you are better off in South America in a field hospital than you are in level one trauma designer hospitals in The United States." She reports nurses' accounts of inadequate care: "I've had patients that haven't been bathed, haven't been fed, haven't been given water, haven't been turned." "And if you ask me, this isn't a hospital. This is a concentration camp. That's right. Absolutely it is."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Many nurses witnessed patients dying not from COVID, but from medical mismanagement like using remdesivir and ventilators. One nurse highlighted the lack of feeding tubes for ventilator patients. Placing patients on ventilators without feeding tubes led to starvation and death. The focus on ventilators instead of proper care caused harm, with many patients not surviving the treatment. Early intubation was pushed to contain the virus, resulting in high mortality rates for ventilated patients. The situation in hospitals was distressing and poorly managed.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Patients are being harmed due to severe medical mismanagement. Despite witnessing numerous instances of negligence, no one seems to care. Examples include incorrect intubations, inappropriate defibrillation of bradycardic patients, and failure to administer necessary blood transfusions. Nurses are overwhelmed, and critical care protocols are ignored, leading to preventable deaths. Even basic assessments, like listening to lung sounds, are neglected. The situation is dire, with patients not receiving proper treatment for COVID and suffering from complications that could have been avoided. Efforts to advocate for better care are met with indifference, and the healthcare environment feels increasingly hopeless. There is a desperate need for intervention to prevent further loss of life.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
ICU nurse Nicole shares important information about COVID treatments and vaccines in this video. She discusses the effectiveness of Ivermectin in treating and preventing COVID, citing studies from Argentina, Mexico, India, and Peru. Nicole also questions the use of Remdesivir and the safety of COVID vaccines, highlighting reports of adverse events and the lack of long-term data. She criticizes vaccine mandates and passports, arguing that they discriminate against certain groups and violate individual rights. Nicole urges people to question the government, media, and pharmaceutical companies, and encourages them to speak out against these measures. She emphasizes the need for informed consent and the importance of alternative treatments.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses their experience as a nurse in New York during the COVID-19 pandemic. They express their belief that there was a mass plan to promote fear and suffering, and to deny early treatment. They witnessed negligence in the treatment of patients and felt that the focus was on using ventilators instead of exploring alternative treatments. The speaker also raises concerns about the safety and efficacy of the COVID-19 vaccines, citing reports of adverse effects and questioning the rush to vaccinate. They criticize the censorship of medical professionals who express differing opinions and emphasize the need for people to wake up to the larger agenda at play.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 2020, during the peak of COVID, a licensed practical nurse recalls being instructed not to give COVID patients Ibuprofen, only Tylenol. She questions this decision, as Ibuprofen is a blood thinner that could have potentially prevented blood clots, a common complication in COVID patients. Despite not being a registered nurse or doctor, she questions the logic behind this protocol and seeks validation from others in the medical field who may have experienced the same situation.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Gail McCray, a nurse from California, shares her experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. She noticed that despite the media's claims of overwhelmed hospitals, her hospital was actually empty during the lockdowns. She also questioned the protocols, such as the administration of Remdesivir and the withholding of steroids, which seemed to go against established medical practices. When the COVID-19 vaccines were rolled out, she observed a significant increase in hospital admissions and witnessed patients with unusual symptoms, including clotting disorders and Guillain-Barre syndrome. Gail and her colleagues faced pressure not to report these adverse events, and she eventually lost her job for trying to hold the hospital accountable. She emphasizes the importance of critical thinking and standing up for what is right.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A nurse describes conversations with colleagues about COVID protocols and says they’re afraid to speak up because they fear peer rejection and job loss. They claim that the protocols were killing people and that patients died in the hospital from the protocols, not from COVID itself. The nurse recalls that in March 2020, one of the most published ICU doctors in the United States, Dr. Pierre Corrie, and a colleague known nationally for intensive care, spoke out publicly. They argued that everyone who has COVID is responding extraordinarily well to high doses of IV steroids, and that this made perfect sense. The nurse, who worked in the ICU for over ten years, notes that COVID caused more inflammation in the human body than any infectious disease they had seen, evidenced by lab measurements. They mention CRP levels as a marker of inflammation, stating that CRP was more than double what they had ever seen, and that the ICU intensivists’ recommendation was to give high-dose steroids because they would immediately reduce the inflammatory response. The nurse emphasizes that steroids are an anti-inflammatory and correct the inflammatory response. This stance, they say, was voiced in March 2020—before vaccines or other interventions were available. The nurse asserts that there was an effective tool for managing the inflammation of COVID, but the CDC and leadership for the health industries in the United States completely shut that down.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I’m witnessing severe medical negligence every day. Patients aren't dying from COVID; they're being killed by poor care. For example, an anesthesiologist improperly intubated a patient, leading to his death, while another patient was defibrillated despite having a stable heart rate. Nurses are making critical mistakes, like placing feeding tubes in lungs and administering incorrect insulin doses. Even when patients are critically low on blood, they aren’t receiving transfusions. Staff are overwhelmed, and management ignores the issues. I've tried advocating for patients, but no one listens. The situation feels hopeless, and I fear for the lives of those in my care. I need help to address this gross negligence before more lives are lost.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Nicole Sirotek, a registered nurse with expertise in critical care trauma, shares her experience during the COVID pandemic. She highlights the poor management and negligence she witnessed while working in New York City. Sirotek emphasizes the importance of early intervention strategies and criticizes the lack of proper measures and execution. She mentions her background in biochemistry and expresses frustration with doctors who disregarded her suggestions. Sirotek believes that many patients did not die from COVID itself, but rather from medical malpractice.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Many nurses witnessed patients dying not from COVID, but from medical mismanagement like using remdesivir and ventilators. One nurse highlighted the lack of feeding tubes alongside ventilators, emphasizing the importance of proper care. Patients were intubated early, leading to high mortality rates. The medical system's focus on COVID treatments caused harm, with nurses bearing the brunt of patient care.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A nurse and a doctor discuss the use of ventilators in hospitals during the pandemic. The nurse reveals that some floors were carrying out actions that other floors refused to do, essentially causing harm to patients. The doctor mentions that ventilators were used to protect healthcare workers, even though they had a high fatality rate for patients. The lack of transparency with patients and families is highlighted, as well as the reluctance to explore alternative treatments like Ivermectin or hydroxychloroquine. The speaker also mentions the incentivization of using certain drugs and protocols that led to unnecessary deaths.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses their experience as a nurse in New York during the COVID-19 pandemic. They express their shock at the lack of treatment and negligence towards patients, leading to unnecessary suffering and death. They also highlight the financial incentives for hospitals to admit COVID-19 patients and put them on ventilators. The speaker criticizes the lack of early treatment options and the focus on vaccines as the only solution. They raise concerns about the safety and efficacy of the vaccines, citing reports of adverse effects and deaths. The speaker emphasizes the importance of informed consent and the need for further investigation into the vaccine's impact. They criticize the censorship and suppression of alternative viewpoints by social media platforms. The speaker concludes by urging people to wake up to the agenda being pushed and the changes happening in society.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker, a nurse, shares their experiences on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic. They express concerns about medical negligence and malfeasance, particularly regarding the use of the drug Remdesivir, which they claim is causing patient deaths. The nurse also mentions the lack of advocacy for marginalized populations and criticizes the isolation and lack of basic care in hospitals. They highlight the importance of nurses as the link between doctors and patients and express gratitude for the opportunity to speak out.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Although I am not a doctor, I’m a nurse. On the front lines we knew what was happening. When we asked for ibuprofen, they said no. When we asked why we weren’t giving steroids, the answer was “we’re just following orders.” Following orders has led to the sheer number of deaths in these hospitals. I didn’t see a single patient die of COVID. I’ve seen a substantial number die of negligence and medical malfeasance. When I was on the front lines of New York, I became globally known as the nurse in the break room sobbing, saying they were murdering my patients. Pharmaceutical companies had gone into those hospitals and decided to practice on the minorities, the disadvantaged, the marginalized populations with no advocates, because the very agencies that should protect them were closed while we were sheltering in place. While I was there, pharmaceutical companies rolled out remdesivir onto a substantial number of patients, which we all saw was killing the patients. And now, it’s the FDA-approved drug that is continuing to kill patients in the United States. As nurses, we’ve collected a descriptive amount of information that you may not get from the doctors. Doctors do quantitative data; we do qualitative data with a humanistic, phenomenological approach in nursing research. We’ve collected data from patients across the country for which we’ve helped patients through the American Front Line Nurses and the advocacy network so nurses could advocate for these patients. This data pool shows that as these patients get remdesivir, they have a less than twenty-five percent chance of survival if they get more than two doses. Now they’re rolling it out on children as well and into nursing homes or skilled nursing facilities as early intervention, even though doctors Pierre Corre and Merrick have demonstrated that there are cost-effective medications out there, and we are going to see the amplification of death across the country. We haven’t even touched on vaccines, which our expert panels have described; I won’t touch on that since many are far superior to me. Two days ago I flew out my first 10-year-old with a heart attack and had to fight the ER doctor because he said, “ten-year-olds don’t have heart attacks.” I argued for thirty minutes to force his hand to get an EKG and found a STEMI; the 12-lead EKG lit up. He said it wasn’t possible, and I said, “was just vaccinated yesterday. It is very much possible.” People contact me and the nurse advocates at American Front Line Nurses to help advocate, because there’s victim shaming—“it’s anxiety,” “it’s this.” But if they acknowledge it as a vaccine injury, the physician, the corporation, the hospital, the clinic may not get reimbursed, so it’s labeled as anxiety, neuropathy, or Guillain–Barré syndrome, when it’s very realistically a vaccine injury. I’ve traveled to South America, India, and South Africa, working in hot zones, stopping the spread of the virus and doing early intervention. Nowhere in developing nations do I see these issues that we see here in the United States. I’m a very proud American citizen from a family of immigrants. Our level of health care has deteriorated to substandard third-world-nation health care. You are better off in South America in a field hospital than in level-one trauma designer hospitals in the United States. As nurses, we are getting reports across the country from American frontline nurses about patients not getting food, water, or basic care. How come a patient hasn’t been fed in nine days? Why do I need a court order to force a hospital to feed a person who isn’t intubated and who would like food? If they’re on a ventilator, they’re not given water or basic care. We’re not allowed to take a BiPAP mask off to help someone eat. I’ve had patients who haven’t been bathed, haven’t been fed, and haven’t been given water, or been turned. This isn’t a hospital; this is a concentration camp. Nowhere in the United States do we isolate people for hundreds of hours with no human contact; it’s not allowed even in prisons. In hospitals, we isolate patients from their families for days, and you have to say goodbye over an iPhone, or you have to shuttle people in to see them. I was fired for sneaking a Hispanic family in to say the last rites to their family. Thank you, Senator Johnson, for giving nurses the opportunity to represent our patients, because we’re not often thought of as leading professionals, though we are the missing link between the doctors and the patients. Thank you for this time. Thank you for being a nurse.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In my 20 years of military and ER experience, I witnessed the challenges of dealing with a novel virus. As healthcare professionals, we made mistakes due to outdated knowledge and assumptions. We intubated patients unnecessarily and didn't consider alternative treatments. Families suffered as they were unable to be with their loved ones during their final moments. I held dying patients' hands, knowing there was little I could do. The government exacerbated the situation by interfering with healthcare decisions and keeping families apart. We shouldn't rely on the government to solve problems it created.
View Full Interactive Feed