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2021-08-06

We are all familiar with the first spike of the pandemic in March / April 2020, when many people in care institutions died, supposedly because they were infected by Covid as people were discharged from the NHS to release beds.

Now it is reported that this may not have been the full story.

"In 2016 the NHS drew up plans to withdraw hospital care for nursing home residents in the event of a pandemic"

"The confidential NHS documents clearly show that the elderly and vulnerable were to be denied treatment and put on the end of life pathway in response to a pandemic, and the evidence clearly shows this was put into practice"

"Having a learning difficulty and being in care doesn’t mean you are more likely to die of Covid-19. What it means is that you are much more likely to have a DNR order placed on you without informing yourself or your family, which Carers / NHS staff then use as permission to put you on end of life care"

Now it is undoubtedly true that in the event that the NHS would be overwhelmed by a real pandemic, it would be necessary to triage patients and to prioritize treatment, and I would expect that few would disagree that in that event, the young with most of their life before them would be prioritized over the elderly whose life expectancy would be short.

Nonetheless, according to this report it would appear that a pandemic which did not overwhelm the NHS may have been used as an excuse to put the elderly and others on an inappropriate pathway of drugs and opiates that would result in needless deaths, deaths which were then allegedly attributed to the pandemic - no investigations or autopsies possible. All that would have been needed would be a positive PCR test, without which there would have been no reason to deny them normal support as residents of the institution.

And we now know from the WHO that the PCR test is not reliable per se to diagnose infection, let alone sickness.

The Daily Expose reports.


The following video shows supporting footage reportedly from the House of Commons April 2020 inquiry into COVID-19:

 

Like / Dislike this video here.

More associated reporting here.