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‘I recorded them murdering patients’: The terrible testimony of a nurse at a New York hospital
She also had the opportunity to work in two hospitals, one located in New York and the other in Florida, gaining two very different perspectives on the deadly problem.
As an Army veteran, she wanted to be on the front line of care and danger, so she volunteered to travel to New York, the epicenter of the virus's greatest impact at the time, since there was no great medical urgency in Florida.
To her surprise, she "sat around for three days with nothing to do," and was told that before her other nurses had been "sitting around for 21 days or an entire month getting paid $10,000 a week," without being allowed to work saving lives.
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“Patients were alone in the rooms on ventilators [with] no family allowed in [to advocate for them]. People were just dying from gross negligence, medical malpractice, [and] mismanagement,” Olzewski recounted.
She added, “For me, that was really difficult to swallow. Everything made sense to me at that moment of why there were so many deaths in New York.”
...One of the most significant differences she saw was in the medical treatment because “they were banning alternative treatments like hydroxychloroquine. The only thing they could do was to put people on ventilators.”
Whereas “[In Florida] we treated our patients with hydroxychloroquine, zinc … sent them home and they were fine.”
Worse, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) financial incentives further increased unnecessary patient deaths.
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