17 Comments

Three more friends with weird physical ailments. One has a swelling below her breast/upper abdomen, so far medics have no idea what it is, another friend suffered severe swelling of one hand and wrist, took himself to the emergency room admitted with suspect sepsis on IV antibiotics, another acquaintance diagnosed with untreatable cancer (she has just lost four members of her family in the past three years). And yet…….they refuse to connect the dots. Blaming everything else but the covid vaxxes for ALL these adverse events and deaths.🥺🥺

Expand full comment

At 9:15 into the Rishi Sunak meeting, Mr Sunak states: 'There is a vaccine compensation scheme...'https://youtu.be/sL6OTbMnsMo?t=551

How will government (or any other construct) "compensate" a destroyed life? The audience in the video should have rushed Mr Sunak and beat him to death with their bare hands.

Expand full comment

Are ANY vaccines "safe" ?

Expand full comment

Rhiannon.: Good question. Answer: No. None of the modern "vaccines" can be trusted, and this has most likely been true for decades. The medical 'profession' has been incompetent and grossly negligent for over 100 years.

Expand full comment

What if you are allergic to the generic Zpac? From what I read, you can't replace with something else as far as an antibiotic. Sometimes one size does not fit all. Otherwise, the medical kit would be great to have available at home.

Appreciate you and thank you.

Expand full comment

Zpak, (azithromycin) has been overprescribed for every little sniffle, resulting in antibiotic resistance. You might remember that the “white lung” mycoplasma pneumonia from a few months ago was resistant to Zpak. Doxycycline is often a better choice, except for young children due to it causing staining of developing teeth. Cipro in a pediatric dose is better for them, however, that can be associated with injury to tendons.

Expand full comment

Thank you for letting others know. My point was, if you can't take azithromycin/Zpac, this medical kit will not do replacements. Thank you

Expand full comment

I know of three young, previously healthy women (Oxford, UK) - all in their late 30s - who have just been diagnosed with advanced cancer, stage III - two breast cancers and one pancreatic. How statistically likely is that...

Expand full comment

How is The Wellness Company getting around the particular legalities involved when a licensed medical doctor signs off on any prescription drug without her/him EVER seeing a patient face-to-face, doing a proper examination, and taking the in-depth medical history on a given "Customer" ?

Will this whole rigmarole depend on which state the Customer lives in? Will the argument be that "we already have telemedicine going on in the United States and it is accepted practice? Are you folks at The Wellness Company depending on legal precedent(s) apparently already in place for prescription drugs like Viagra (my cousin Bud down in Arkansas gets his online .. ... .. ) etc.?

Expand full comment

The entire country, UK now do telemedicine as a matter of course. No doc visits, no physical exam, no history taking. Oh and now pharmacists may treat an array of physical complaints including UTI’s, earache, impetigo, infected insect bites, shingles, sinusitis, sore throat. I can only imagine in this day of serious adverse events post covid vaxx, the problems this may lead to.

Expand full comment

It is what I have said for a long time; it is the cheapening of the healthcare system. Going in for your check up? Used to see your doctor, then it changed to a nurse practitioner. Now you see the PA, who has nothing close to the clinical training and practice a doc

Expand full comment

As a doctor has! I have had my fill of PA's who are way over their head with prescription errors and missed diagnosed issues. I used to be a pharmacy technician and the company decided that it was ok for techs to give the vaccines. I asked how many clinical hours we would have for training. None, just a video! I refused. All for the sake of cost! It's shit!

Expand full comment

You might find that a nurse practitioner obtains a more detailed history and exam than a physician and you might find that the NP is a better listener to your complaints. The NP is more likely to educate the patient about self care. The education of an NP is more than adequate for primary care and what would be basic level in specialties. Research demonstrates that NPs have as good outcomes as physicians. That being said, I, myself as an NP, would prefer to see a physician for things that are less common or more complex. There is no doubt of the greater amount and more advanced level of education that a physician has compared to an NP or PA. Unfortunately, medical and nursing education is frightening when you know what they are teaching in medical and nursing schools now. The NP should know when to refer a patient for consultation. Nowadays, the time allotted to a patient visit is inadequate. This is where much of the problem lies. The amount of documentation and phone calls to insurance companies for prior authorizations is burdensome. Many providers, NPs, PAs and physicians and I have left practice for this very reason, not to mention the changes as a result of the COVID debacle.

Expand full comment

I am old enough to remember when the doctor was the one who did the intake and detailed history. I had one nurse practitioner that was a lot older than I was and she was terrific. She was forced to retire. Her replacement pailed in comparison.

I totally agree that the time spent with a patient is inadequate. Where are you located? Our clinic is not conventional and we are always looking for good docs, NPs and PAs!

Expand full comment

Thanks, Susan. But I haven’t worked since 2019. If I told you that I was working 23 hrs a day, that would not be an exaggeration. Hospital rounds at 2 different hospitals in the AM, office hours at 2 different offices during the day, back to the hospitals after office hours for consultations and urgent care needs, then rounds at the nursing home… Then home to work on finishing documentation while being on-call. Of course, the physician assigned me the task of getting prior authorizations to approve tests and treatments, call backs to patients, interpreting test results and refilling prescriptions. I’m now happy to take care of myself and get the most out of my retirement.

Expand full comment

One does have to fill out a comprehensive medical history to receive TWC emergency kits. I suspect this form of telemedicine is why these kits are soooo expensive. I would like to see ivermectin available in a truly over-the-counter form without a prescription AND without a required consultation with a pharmacist or someone working behind the counter providing the IVM according to some form of standing order from a licensed prescriber. It is safer than acetaminophen (Tylenol).

Expand full comment