WEBVTT
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Any health related information on the following show provides general
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information only. Content presented on any show by any host
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or guest should not be substituted for a doctor's advice.
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Always consult your physician before beginning any new diet, exercise,
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or treatment program.
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It's time to stand up, speak out, get involved, and
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let's speak intention.
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Hello and welcome to Intentional. I am your host, Nick
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me Ol. Thank you for joining me here right here
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on W four HC dot com. Forward slash shows, Forward
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slash Intentional. Hey, if you happen to catch a show afterwards,
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don't worry, just subscribe, like, share in comment everywhere that
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you find intentional. We are very grateful for you and
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your support. Now, are you ready, because it is time
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for us to stand up, speak out, get involved, and
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let's be intentional, Ladies and gentlemen. I worked for twenty
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eight years within the healthcare system as a nurse and
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witnessed first hand and the transformational shift of an industry
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that went from patient centric care with a duty to
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do no harm to its current status, which is a
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captured industry controlled by government agencies like the FDA and
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the CDC, guided by profits, diversity, equity, and inclusion and
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manipulated by invisible rulers, those that serve the interests of
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big pharma. My heart beats for patient advocacy and defending
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medical freedom. So in twenty twenty two, my podcast began
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with a goal to not just expose, but to take
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action against the COVID criminal enterprise and encouraged those within
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the community to do the same thing. Now, let's speak truth.
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COVID was a.
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Bioweapon released upon the world. The use of the COVID
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hospital protocols are the reason for the mass deaths, not COVID.
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People are still going into the hospitals unaware that these
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protocols are in use, or that these protocols were the
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catalysts used to push the mRNA injections that are not safe,
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not effective, and these injections were deployed to make money,
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gain power and control intentionally. I have interviewed anyone who
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was an eyewitness to what has happened in our healthcare system, physicians, nurses, whistleblowers,
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doesn't matter. Many hours has been spent highlighting families who
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lost their loved ones to the COVID hospital protocols and
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people who survived the hospital protocols but are now suffering
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long term effects like kidney failure. Today I have two
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very special guest with me, Brad and Gail Siler. Gail
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is a COVID hospital protocol survivor who was treated at
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Medical City of Plano Hospital, where she spent twelve days
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suffering abuse, neglect, and discrimination at the hands of healthcare
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professionals that should have been following the two greatest ethical
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principles beneficence which is the ethical principle of doing good
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and promoting well being, and non male feasance, which is
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the ethical principle of avoiding and preventing or minimizing harm.
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These two principles guide healthcare professionals in their decision making
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in actions. Her husband, Brad, is a devoted husband, a
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former US Army captain and RN. When his wife Gail
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was trapped at Medical City and was subject to the
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deadly COVID pro to calls, Brad took decisive action, refusing
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to let the doctors continue their lethal treatment. He stormed
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the ICU, he rescued Gail, and he brought her home,
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saving her life. Now he is facing persecution for his
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heroic stand. Welcome with me, Gail and Brad Seiler. Hi, guys,
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thanks for going Hello, Hello, thanks for coming on. Guys.
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It is it's really great to be with you all.
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I mean, I know we're friends, right, but today I
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want to talk about your story and I want to
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focus on you both. We're going to do a two
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parter here, so everybody pay attention. There'll be a quiz afterwards.
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There's a lot to unpack here. So we're going to
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do part one where we focus on the twelve days
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that you spend in the hospital and that experience, and
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then we're going to do part two, which will air
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on Thursday, and that's going to focus on what really
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happened after the Great escape and this pending persecution. So, Pail,
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we know each other. You and I have spoken many times.
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We you know, both are are passionate about those who
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have lost their loved ones to the egregious COVID hospital
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protocols and those who survived the starvation, the dehydration, the isolation,
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the lack of informed consent, that the discrimination based on
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back status is almost too much. But your situation is
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unique because first of all, not only were you coerced
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to take remdesvere, but you and your husband endured a
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multi hour standoff with police just to be able to
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bring you home. So I want you to share your
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story with us, and I'm going to throw this to
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you and uh and just tell us what happened.
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Sure can Yeah, So you know, and of course we're
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friends because of the fight. We've met through the fight
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and became friends. We became battle buddies through all that.
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So but you know, my story starts in the plandemic
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of the unvaccinated, as Joe Biden called it, you know,
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the dark, dark winter of death. And so we got
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sick after Thanksgiving of twenty twenty one. We had a
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lot of we actually had a lot of vaccinated people
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over So I am one sure now that we got
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sick from from the shedding and I started to not
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feel good. Brad got sick couple days after me, and
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I kind of thought, you know, I would be able
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to kick it with some vitamins. And we were trying
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trying to get the ivermactin in the hydroxychloroquin And if
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you recall back in September or October, I think it
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was September of twenty twenty one, the Biden administration had
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started taking control of the monoclonal antibodies, and Texas and
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Florida had come up with their own agreements, and then
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those were canceled by the government, so we even those
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were scarce by December. And I mentioned that because it's
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such a commonality in our in our stories from that timeframe.
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But I started to decline, you know, I was trying
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to I was getting worse and worse. And Brad Bean,
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a former nurse, was nursing me, you know, he was
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monitoring my oxygen and my breathing.
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I had a pulse acimeter, which is a finger device
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that you can monitor heart rate and two level oxygen
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saturation levels. And she was having her main complaint with
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shortness of breath, malaise. Didn't feel well and couldn't catch
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a breath upon exertion. And so, you know, we we
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had talked about we'd gone through the Reawakened conference here
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in North Texas, and we were aware of COVID and
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you know, the medicaid, the things that would work, and
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we knew.
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I knew that.
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The breathing was you know, the lungs were just a
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part of what was going on. But I would monitor
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her oxygen level, her neurological status. Mainly I would evaluate
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her cognition and her ability to carry on a conversation. No, no,
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you know, know where she was, what was going on,
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and you know she was dipping down. You know, first
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it was nineties, and then it was eighties, and then
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we were down to seventy seven, and everything neurologically seemed fine.
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But I started to get concerned because the medications that
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we had ordered weren't showing.
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Up, and we were denied the monoclone, and she.
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Was denied the monoclone a lot of bodies because she
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couldn't support her oxygen level above ninety two percent on
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room air. So that was a disqualifier.
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Like we had a plan, you know, we knew the
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right medications to take, but they were hard to get.
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Pharmacies wouldn't fill them, and you know, we just we
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couldn't get them in time, and so he we we
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did not I did not want to go to the hospital,
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but we didn't. I mean, we didn't have a choice.
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We didn't have oxygen, We didn't know when the medications
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were going to arrive via the mail, couldn't find any
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place to fill them. We didn't know at that time,
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about the compounding pharmacies that were in the area that
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would do that. So so we we had to make
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the decision to go to the hospital, and we chose
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Plano City, Plano City in our medical city in Plano,
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because Colonel Allen West and his wife had gone there
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and they had gotten the frontline doctor protocol.
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We had talked about this while we were you know, waiting.
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You know, Colonel Allen West had had pretty much just
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walked out of the hospital after receiving treatment. I believe
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his wife may have stayed for a little bit, but
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we knew that this hospital had given the preferred are
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preferred treatment.
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The treatment that works and so and and you know,
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we'd been part of the medical freedom movement, so we
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were no strangers to you know, fight the mandate and
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all that.
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We got the emergency room, it was busy, but it
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was it was your typical emergency room. You know, I'm
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a critical I was a critical care nurse, worked in
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the emergency room, and it was your typical you know,
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patients that you would find in the emergency room, you know,
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shortness of breast, sickle cell crisis, you know, broken bones,
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you name it. That was there and I pushed her
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up to the triage window, and there was employees behind
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the window, but they were kind of just milling about,
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you know, nobody was really manning the desk. And somebody
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came to the window finally and said can I help you?
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I said, yeah, I need to check my wife in.
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They proceeded to hand me the clipboard with the triage notes,
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and I took her over and we sat down and
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I started filling it out, and you know, I put
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down all the indicators that would indicate a serious condition
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to an emergency room staff. And about this time, she
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was about seventy seven seventy six, and I took the
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clipboard up and they just told me to slide it
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into the window. And we sat there and I thought
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for sure somebody would come and take her for an
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X ray or assessor or something, and we just sat.
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There, maybe put some oxygen on her.
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Some intervention that would help with shortness of bread, chest pain,
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LO two sat and nothing. You know, I put on
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their seventy I think I put seventy seven as her
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O two set didn't alarm anybody. And so we sat
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there and I continued to monitor her. Then finally we
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heard somebody call her name. And so we were kind
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of sitting in a little children's play area that they'd
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stacked all the furniture up in. And we came out
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and we went to the back and I asked the
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nurse if they did the frontline doctor protocol, and she said, oh, yeah,
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we do that here. And so she started taking Gail's
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vital signs and saw that her saturation was indeed low,
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and she immediately told me I had to leave the
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emergency room, even though I had been with her the
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whole time, all of a sudden, I had to leave
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the emergency room. And I said, well, we want this protocol.
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Here's a copy for the hospital, and I made sure
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Gail had a copy, and she said, yeah, we do
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that here. And I left, thinking that I was leaving
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her in competent hands to take care of her needs.
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And that just began the nightmare, the nightmare that we experienced.
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And you know, I was I was sick as well.
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I wasn't deteriorating as quickly as she was, but you know,
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I certainly went home to try to rest and get
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my strength.
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I got some tile and all for the fever. I
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got the you know, oxygen. The oxygen they were increasing.
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I was in the emergency room for about thirty six hours,
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and so I know my daughter was advocating from there
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and like, why doesn't she have a room? I was like,
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they told me that they couldn't open up and I see,
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you unit unless they had like six patients, like it
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had to be over five patients because it didn't it
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wasn't cost effective to pull in a team and all
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this crud.
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Yeah, they didn't have an ice you open at all.
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They didn't have one open at all.
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They had they had one open, but they were only
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opening them as they got got additional patient loads.
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Yeah, so so they didn't so I couldn't. So I went.
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I went up. After thirty six hours, they brought me
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up and so I didn't really have so I thought,
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well they must be.
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If you were just mainly on oxygen. That was.
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No water, no food, couldn't have any of that. I couldn't.
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Even they weren't even letting me go to the bathroom.
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They had me use that pure period per the one system,
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which was weird. But they were like, no, you can't
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get up to go to the bathroom because of your oxygen.
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So I was in this her up on this journey.
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But when they pulled me up, when they brought me
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up to the ICU, you know how they like have
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to back the bed in, Well, they pulled me forward
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and I could I could see that the woman in
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the room, I think it was a woman. There was
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somebody in there crying. And this person was on a
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vent already and on her way of passing. And so
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that startled me a little bit. And so then they
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pulled me into the room and I got in the
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bed and they wouldn't let me like get up and walk.
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I just like had to roll in or whatever and
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dive into it. It was very weird. But so I
242
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got settled in that bed and I met doctor Watch.
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Doctor Watch was a hospital list. This is doctor gang Quatch.