https://estateartistry.com/blog/from-hospital-to-hospice-how-this-happened-so-fast
Draconian policy and procedural changes imposed upon doctors and healthcare workers have reduced all the staff you now find in these places to robots, strictly following absurd protocols that defy all common sense and rational medical training. These are directives that deliberately endanger the health and well being of everyone they come into contact with. Doctors that fail to comply are immediately brought before medical review boards that preemptively suspend and revoke their licenses to practice. Workers that question, object, or deviate from these administrative policies are simply dismissed. The practice of medicine has been reduced to livestock management. It is an understatement to say those who enter this system in the current state it is in are gambling with their lives.
If you find yourself in need of medical care, it has never been more important to know ahead of time, what sort of "care" you can expect to receive.
The people that are complicit, the people that impose and enforce this systemic rot are being paid handsomely to rack up a body count and the blood money being funneled to them directly is coming from both the state and federal government as well as major pharmaceutical companies. Government payments are distributed on a published schedule of flat payments I have already exposed here. Big Pharma, on the other hand, pays out lavish bribes that come disguised in a great many forms.
Fortunately, the law requires all recipients accepting contributions from Pharma in any form, report that income in a publicly accessible data base that is completely searchable by simply entering the name of any doctor or licensed practitioner, Hospital or Educational institution.
IS BEING PAID BY BIG PHARMA
HERE IS HOW TO DO IT: https://www.bitchute.com/video/VsvoKvl7MX5p/?list=subscriptions
Open Payments is a national transparency program that collects and publishes information about financial relationships between the health care industry (i.e. drug and device companies) and providers (i.e. physicians and teaching hospitals). These relationships may involve payments to providers for things such as research, meals, travel, gifts, or speaking fees. One of the ways that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) provides data to the public is through this search tool, which allows the public to search for physicians and teaching hospitals receiving payments, as well as companies that have made payments.
HERE IS THE LINK TO THIS SITE: https://openpaymentsdata.cms.gov/
When you type a name or organization into the search bar, you can view results across all records, or narrow down to physician name, teaching hospital, or pharmaceutical company. You can also apply filters to get more specific data about dates and types of payments.
When reporting and reviewing Open Payments data, it helps to understand the different types of payments that must be reported. The examples below describe various types of financial transactions between reporting entities and covered recipients.
Click on any of the general categories that follow for an expanded definition of what sort of compensation might fall under each, with examples:
- Acquisitions*
- Charitable contribution
- Compensation for non-consulting services (e.g., faculty/speaker at an event other than a continuing education program)
- Compensation for serving as faculty or as a speaker for a medical education program*
- Consulting fee
- Current or prospective ownership or investment interest
- Debt forgiveness*
- Education
- Entertainment
- Food and beverage
- Gift
- Grant
- Honoraria
- Long-term medical supply or device loan*
- Research
- Royalty or license
- Space rental or facility fees
- Travel and lodging
Have you ever wondered about the so-called "experts" that you see peddled out on national news programs to provide you with "educated" opinions and "professional advice"? Try plugging some of those names into this tool and discover just how little you know about many of these people.
Just because an expert in introduced as a "doctor" does not mean you should be listening to them. For example:
- What kind of doctor are they?
- How much experience do they actually have?
- Are they qualified to comment on the subject matter they are being asked about?
- Are they even in active practice?
- Do they actually earn a living as a practitioner, or does the majority of their income come from Pharma?
As rule of thumb, the more payments you see, the more bias they have, especially if they have nothing but praise for whoever signs those checks.
I would love to hear what YOU discover with this, so don't be shy.