I avoid doctors and hospitals as if they were concentration torture camps. You don’t get that “caring” feeling anymore. You get treated like a “product on an assembly line”. You walk in, sign in, pay the copay, sit, wait, get weighed, speak to a nurse, then speak to most likely a P.A., that rushes you, and then you are shoved out wondering what just happened.
The emergency room and hospitals are like prison instead of compassionate care facilities.
I saw the system first hand back in 2019 when my best friend had to stay in the hospital for almost 4 months. I literally heard hospital staff talk to each other about the patients as if they were scum, calling them all sorts of profane names, and even saying things like “I hope she dies”!
If you pay attention you know that it is all about profit over care. They keep us sick so they can keep making money. A “cured” person is no money for them. I am responsible for my own health, not some person with a title that does not care about my health, only how much money they can make out of me.
Here is a short video showing a few nurses that have seem to awakened to what is really going on.
Nurses Say Something Is Seriously Wrong In America’s Hospitals
Here are some viewers comments:
The Healthcare system NO LONGER CARES. FORMER RN
HOSPITALS HAVE BECOME DANGERIOUS AND DEADLY !
The entire society, including healthcare, is being eroded by corruption, incompetence, inefficiency, and maybe most important lack of accountability.
Unfortunately, Healthcare is no longer about hippocratic oath and care for patients. It’s about metrics and profits.
A cured patient is a lost customer.
I’m a nurse and when I was in class with a fellow nursing student she explained her reason for being in RN school: “I want a second nice car in the driveway”.
Now watch Seth, from “Man In America”, go through the history of what made the healthcare system go from caring and affordable to evil and made for profit.
“In 1971, Nixon’s domestic policy adviser told him on tape that the new American health care model worked like this: the less care patients get, the more money the plans make. Nixon said one word. “Fine.” What followed over the next fifty years, the 50,000 dollar one-night hospital stays, the nonprofit CEOs making millions a year, the prior authorization denials, all of it flows from that single design decision. This episode walks you through the exact sequence, with the documents, the dates, and the receipts.”
