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Dr. Cameron Kyle Seidel, an ER and critical care doctor in New York City, shares his observations after treating COVID-19 patients for 9 days. He believes that the current medical paradigm of treating COVID-19 as a viral pneumonia is incorrect. Instead, he suggests that COVID-19 lung disease resembles a viral-induced condition similar to high altitude sickness. Patients experience a gradual decrease in oxygen levels, leading to anxiety, emotional distress, and a bluish appearance. Dr. Seidel warns that treating COVID-19 as pneumonia may cause harm to patients and urges for a reevaluation of the current approach.

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The Department of Health sent me an email with a link to the CDC, informing me as a physician about changes to death certificates. They stated that if COVID-19 was a contributing condition, it could be listed as a cause of death. However, I disagreed because there is a separate box on death certificates for listing contributing conditions such as emphysema, asthma, or influenza. We were instructed to include COVID-19 as a cause of death, which I found concerning.

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In the past 9 days, I have been working in an intensive care unit for COVID-19 patients. However, I have noticed some unusual medical phenomena that don't align with the expected viral pneumonia. The common understanding is that COVID-19 starts with mild symptoms and progresses to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). But based on what I have seen, I believe we may be treating the wrong disease. This misconception could potentially harm a large number of people in a short period of time. I fear that our current medical paradigm is incorrect and that we need to reevaluate our approach to COVID-19.

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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.

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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.

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It's frustrating that effective treatments used globally aren't considered here. A doctor mentioned that many treatments don't work, and with a high mortality rate, there's little to lose by trying new options. Patients often present with severe breathing difficulties and thick mucus in their lungs, visible on X-rays. Proven treatments exist, like high-dose IV vitamin C, which has shown success in trials, but these are often dismissed. Instead, patients are frequently sedated and placed on ventilators. Despite the historical skepticism surrounding vitamin C, it has potential benefits that are overlooked, leaving many to question the current medical approach.

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Global governments and health authorities are ignoring the data that I see, suggesting a cover-up. I believe the vaccines are the cause, but I'm open to other explanations. This is a massive mistake for humanity, as we have administered this experimental vaccine to 5 billion people without proper human testing. The 28-day trial seems fraudulent, and I suspect data fraud at Pfizer.

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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.

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Dr. Richard Urso, an ophthalmologist and part of America's Frontline Doctors, became involved early in the pandemic because he realized there was treatment available for the virus. With a background in drug development, including repurposing drugs and developing a patented FDA-approved drug, he found it unbelievable that patients were left to die without treatment. According to Dr. Urso, the virus causes infection, inflammation, blood clots, and breathing problems. He asserts that doctors know how to treat each of these issues. Therefore, the idea that there was no treatment from the beginning was "science fiction." Any physician claiming otherwise is being hypocritical and violating the Hippocratic Oath. He then transitions to discussing testing and PCR.

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Patients are dying not from COVID, but from treatments like remdesivir causing organ failure. One person's mother died after being given remdesivir against their wishes, leading to organ shutdown. There was a financial incentive for hospitals to admit patients and put them on ventilators, resulting in unnecessary treatments and deaths.

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I shared a nurse's story about REM medication causing patients to deteriorate rapidly. Patients with high oxygen levels would suddenly crash after receiving REM, leading to organ failure and death. The nurse suspected the combination of multiple medications being administered simultaneously was causing organ failure, not just the virus itself. The nurse raised concerns about the medication's impact on patients' health and the need for further investigation.

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It's frustrating that effective treatments aren't being utilized. A conversation with a doctor revealed that many current treatments aren't working, and there's skepticism about trying new methods. Despite the high mortality rate, some believe it's worth exploring alternatives. Patients often present with severe breathing issues and thick mucus in their lungs, which complicates oxygen transfer. Proven treatments, like high-dose IV vitamin C, have shown success in trials but are dismissed here. Instead, patients are often sedated and placed on ventilators. There's a reluctance to accept these treatments, despite their potential benefits.

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Massive. I didn't know it was possible for a human to die so horrifically and so quickly before they rolled out the mRNA injections. Within hours, patients would die of liver, lung, kidney, all at once failure, respiratory failure. There were patients coming in with seizures like I've never seen before. Days, patients would be seizing, and no medications would stop it. They called it encephalitis or encephalopathy. AHIMA, admitted COVID nineteen associated encephalitis. The clots were insane. Never seen clots like that before. Overnight spinal gangrene. I didn't question the vaccines as much as I should have. I started looking into what it could do. I didn't want anything to do with this experimental mRNA thing. And the doctors were, you know, baffled. They weren't connecting the dots. They would just say it's a stroke. It's a heart attack. It's a blood clot, and they would never connect the two. They would have to kill me. Nothing. Nothing would make me take it.

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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.

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I cannot understand how anyone can recommend the mRNA vaccination and sleep well at night. They seem afraid to admit they were wrong. I want to give you a chance to address your colleagues, fellow pathologists, and medical professionals. My advice is to always question what so-called experts say. You don't need top scientists, you need experienced doctors who think critically. In the past, people died from the flu without it being turned into a pandemic or locking people away.

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The Department of Health sent me an email with a link to the CDC, informing me as a physician about changes to death certificates. They said that if COVID-19 was a contributing condition, it could be listed as the cause of death. However, I disagreed because there is a specific box on death certificates for listing contributing conditions, such as emphysema, asthma, or influenza. We were being instructed to list COVID-19 as a cause of death.

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I was reprimanded for not intubating a COVID patient immediately despite their improving condition. In the US healthcare system, there is pressure to intubate quickly, even if other reversible causes could be addressed first. In graduate medical education, there is no recourse or defense against such reprimands. Unfortunately, the patient did not wake up and could not be taken off the ventilator. This highlights the challenges of trying to do what is best for the patient in this system.

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Doctors, politicians, and even us journalists have made numerous inaccurate or false statements about this virus. We will now attempt to explain why we have been so wrong.

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In China, a strange case of atypical pneumonia is reported by an eye doctor. Within 11 days, the first PCR kits to test for the virus are shipped. The World Health Organization accepts a PCR protocol as the gold standard for testing. A study on clinical symptoms related to COVID is published, followed by a study on asymptomatic transmission. All of these developments occur within a compressed timeframe of just 26 days. The speaker argues that each step was premeditated and false.

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Dr. Cameron Kyle Seidel, an ER and critical care doctor from New York City, shares his observations after treating COVID-19 patients for nine days. He questions the current medical paradigm of treating COVID-19 as a viral pneumonia, as he has witnessed medical phenomena that don't align with this assumption. He believes that COVID-19 lung disease is not a pneumonia but rather a viral-induced condition resembling high altitude sickness. Patients experience a gradual deprivation of oxygen, leading to anxiety and distress. Despite appearing critically ill, they do not exhibit typical pneumonia symptoms. Dr. Seidel expresses concern that treating COVID-19 as pneumonia may cause harm to many people.

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As a Consultant Cardiologist and Public Health campaigner, I feel compelled to inform doctors, patients, and the public that the COVID mRNA vaccine may have contributed to cardiac arrests, heart attacks, strokes, arrhythmias, and heart failure since 2021. However, further evidence is needed to confirm this.

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As a Consultant Cardiologist and Public Health campaigner, I feel compelled to inform doctors, patients, and the public that the COVID mRNA vaccine may have contributed to cardiac arrests, heart attacks, strokes, arrhythmias, and heart failure since 2021. However, further evidence is needed to confirm this.

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In the past 9 days, I have worked in an intensive care unit for COVID-19 patients and witnessed medical phenomena that don't align with the expected symptoms of viral pneumonia. While hospitals are preparing to treat acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), I believe we may be treating the wrong disease. The patients I've seen and the condition of their lungs indicate that COVID-19 is not following the expected pattern. I'm concerned that our current approach may cause significant harm to many people in a short period of time.

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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.

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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.
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