The medical profession used to fight the grim reaper; now they welcome him with open arms as they hasten death! |
The other day I did a post about the medical murder of Sr. Phillip Marie Burle who was deliberately over medicated, declared incompetent, and then killed by Mount Carmel Senior Living in St. Charles, MO. Reading her case reminded me so much of the murders of Hugh Finn and Terri Schiavo and, more recently, teenager Grace Scharra. She was hospitalized with COVID and killed while doctors lied to her family that she was improving. Meanwhile they administered an increasingly lethal drug cocktail.
Sr. Burle's friend and doctor, Sr. Dede Byrne, is working with a documentary film maker on a movie about this tragic case which is expected to be released in November. Recently Michael Hichborn of the Lepanto Institute interviewed Sr. Dede about the work she is doing and the film which she hopes will shine the spotlight on the death peddlers and warn people what is happening.
Please share this information. More and more people are being murdered in nursing and homes, hospitals, and hospice programs through the "third path" to euthanasia. (I explain the "third path" here.) A facebook group has formed called "Murdered by Hospice." Hundreds of people are sharing their stories of loved ones who died almost immediately after being admitted to residential hospice programs or in hospitals and nursing homes.
When my parents were dying we used home hospice, but kept total control over the medications and treatment. Both programs we used, one in Maryland and one in Virginia, were fine, but that was 40 and 20 years ago. Today, I would never put a loved one in a residential hospice. The standard of care these days is no care, dehydration, and drug overdose to hasten death.
One of the best things we can do is help those dealing with the pain and suffering of a dying loved one, especially if they are keeping them at home. Make a meal. Give them a break by sitting with their loved one. Run errands for them. No one should have to face these challenges alone. May God give us all wisdom and grace to know how to help those in need.
Hey its the based Nordic blonde guy meme on a hospital wall.
ReplyDeleteThis video states that (90 year old) Sr. Burle was "chronically ill," but at 1:01:58 the picture shown of right leg and foot seems to indicate that amputation might be required--not sure what date the photo was taken or if the condition of the leg deteriorated. I raise this issue because during early days of Covid hysteria in April 2020 my brother-in-law's diabetic mother's (in her 80s living in a nursing home in Hawaii) was told the doctors wanted to amputate her foot. When she refused, they placed her on hospice. None of the family could visit and she died within a few days. It seems without people being aware, certain treatment protocols have been put in place by the government and the medical profession follows them or will get in trouble from the government/insurance.
ReplyDeleteI think if elderly in nursing homes were diagnosed with Covid during the "national emergency", they were immediately placed on hospice (palliative care) in many states due to national emergency having been declared which triggered triage protocols. In 2008, nursing home staff kept repeating to me "failure to thrive." I was working for Catholic Charities in the early 1980s when they first began emphasizing 'quality of life.' I didn't realize at the time that this was going to be used to eliminate 'quantity of life' for those these people (social workers) deemed didn't have enough 'quality of life' to justify the (astronomical) medicare/medicaid/insurance bill.
"A celebration of life for Sister Philip Marie Burle, CPPS, was held June 4 at St. Raymond Maronite Cathedral in St. Louis. Sister Philip Marie died April 4. She was 90 years old...
In the late 1960s, Sr. Philip Marie became active in the charismatic prayer movement, leading prayer groups and retreats. She co-authored the book, “You Will Receive Power, A Holy Spirit Seminar.” She also authored “Praying the Scriptures of the Rosary and the Way of the Cross,” “Praying the Scriptures of the Rosary of the Mysteries of Light and Parallel,” and “Following Jesus on Pilgrimage in the Holy Land: Guide and Journal.”
https://www.archstl.org/obituary-sister-philip-marie-burle-cpps-7663
Should age matter in COVID-19 triage? A deliberative study (UK)
ReplyDeletehttps://jme.bmj.com/content/47/5/291
Guidelines for triage plans from NIH:
Save the greatest number of people:
Maximizing net benefit: Maximization of benefits can be understood as saving the most individual lives or as saving the most life-years by giving priority to patients likely to survive the longest
Protect the most vulnerable:
Equal access:
Life cycle principle: This means that younger individuals should have a right to the same number of years to live as an older person has already had
First come, first served: This principle violates the duty to steward resources, the duty to plan, and the distributive justice standards (74). It should not be applied in a pandemic public health emergency.
Instrumental value:
Lottery:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7927504/
"Each protocol we have reviewed states that age is not an exclusionary factor for receiving critical care. However, in some protocols age actually becomes a factor through “tie breaker” determinations. Certain protocols state that in situations involving a priority score “tie” between two (or more) patients, age becomes the deciding factor for which of them receives critical care. The terminology varies in different protocols (“life-cycle principle,” “saving the most life-years,” “experience life-stages,” “cycles of life,” or “equal opportunity to pass through the stages of life”), but the operative principle is the same: decisions about who will, and will not, receive critical care are based on age.
WITHDRAWING CRITICAL CARE INTERVENTIONS
Various protocols state that physicians can withdraw critical care from patients who they believe have no chance at survival regardless of the patient’s or the surrogate’s wishes.
https://www.ncbcenter.org/resources-and-statements-cms/ethical-concerns-with-covid-19-triage-protocols
In practice: On March 30, 2020, our triage clinician became available to assess all patients ≥70 years...From April 7, 2020 to May 22, 2020, the triage clinician assessed 40 patients ...The patients were mostly English-speaking (28 patients; 70.0%), female (21 patients; 52.5%), and living at home prior to hospitalization (20 patients; 50.0%)... The largest proportion of patients were triaged to palliative care (23 patients; 57.5%), followed by usual care (8 patients; 20.0%) and geriatric co-management (6 patients; 15.0%); the remaining 3 patients (7.5%) were triaged to both palliative care and geriatric co-management...For the 26 patients who survived their hospital stay, the median time to discharge was 8 days...For the 14 patients who died in the hospital, the mean time to death was 5.4 ± 3.5 days. ...The mortality rate was 35.0% (14 of 40 patients) at 30 days and 45.0% (18 of 40 patients) at 90 days ...Our novel framework, in which the CFS was used to triage older adult patients in the ED with confirmed or suspected Covid-19, was successful in rapidly directing limited palliative care and geriatric resources [!it's geriatric and palliative care not Covid19 care that is limited!] to the patients most in need...If APPLIED TO the GENERAL POPulation of frail OLDER ADULTS, opportunities to provide such patients with EARLY and targeted ACCESS TO geriatric and PALLIATIVE care resources may potentially decrease downstream complications such as delirium, may reduce unnecessary or costly testing, and may facilitate the provision of goal-concordant care. [Under "Outcomes" see the chart of "Code Status at Presentation, at Discharge, and at Death" (Full Code, DNR/DNI, Not on File (none were discharged w/out a code status), Comfort (all dead))]
https://catalyst.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/CAT.20.0552