Run, Death Is Near: Murder in a Michigan Hospital
Two Nightmarish Case Summaries of the Remdesivir Hospital Protocols. Guest Post by nymusicdaily
By nymusicdaily
Early on in the plandemic, Michigan labor and delivery RN Sarah Mitchell already had her eye on the ball.
She was well aware that Remdesivir - the failed Gilead Sciences Ebola antiviral drug that Anthony Fauci had dragged from the scrap heap to the approved CDC Covid protocol in 2020 - was "a recipe for disaster."
Del Bigtree interviewed Ms. Mitchell on The Highwire, linked below. I have provided time codes for corresponding portions of this summary.
https://thehighwire.com/videos/episode-291-deadly-protocols/ 1:23:31
Covid Diagnosis, Ivermectin Refusal, and the Fateful Trip to Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, MI
On November 7, 2021, Sarah’s husband Kyle was under the weather. The Mitchell's local urgent care outpost diagnosed him with Covid, but refused to give him Ivermectin. Nor would their local pharmacy.
The two made another trip to urgent care where Kyle's oxygen levels appeared to be slightly low, so Sarah drove him to Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan.
Beaumont is where the sinister nightmare really began.
Although the suburban Detroit Beaumont hospital chain had been buoyed by CARES money and had increased its reserves by an additional $1 billion in 2020, the Royal Oak facility was in crisis.
Staff were leaving, and those who remained appeared to be in open revolt against the cost-cutting and the perceived mismanagement of its president, John Fox. Although Royal Oak has for years been one of the nation's busiest surgical centers, word on the street was that the quality of care there had slipped precipitously.
Fox didn't help his own cause by commuting from his Atlanta home rather than getting to know his new Michigan neighbors. He then golden parachuted himself out this past January, having engineered a merger with the Grand Rapids-based Spectrum hospital system. An earlier attempt to merge with an Akron chain had failed, as had other widely criticized attempts to raise the Beaumont profile.
Fox was still president when Kyle Mitchell was admitted.
Within 24 hours, Mitchell was being pressured by doctors and nurses to allow them to hook him up to a remdesivir IV. With his wife barred from seeing him, Kyle’s symptoms worsened and he finally acquiesced.
Sarah details that within a couple of weeks, Kyle had been placed on a ventilator and his kidney function had decreased to critical range.
“Rundeathisnear”
Remdesivir, or "rundeathisnear" as it's commonly known in the medical world, proved so lethal in the initial human trials that it was withdrawn. Bigtree points out that in this study remdesivir turned out to be more dangerous than Ebola itself.
https://thehighwire.com/videos/episode-291-deadly-protocols/ 1:26:17
Former Gilead CEO John C. Martin, who ran the company in 2016 when remdesivir was developed, later dismissed the drug as a failure in a 2020 interview.
Within a year, he was dead after a suspicious fall on the sidewalk.
Despite all the warning signs, the CDC gave hospitals hundreds of thousands of dollars in incentives for deploying remdesivir on patients diagnosed with Covid.
Note that in the CDC approval meeting which resulted in remdesivir being given emergency use authorization, nine NIH panelists were represented.
All nine NIH panel representatives were receiving money from Gilead.
https://thehighwire.com/videos/episode-291-deadly-protocols/ 1:55:30
According to attorneys Michael Hamilton and Dan Watkins, who are suing a California hospital on behalf of fourteen families who lost loved ones to the remdesivir protocol, hospitals there are receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars per patients for administering remdesivir per the CDC standards, in addition to another $147,000 for every Covid diagnosed cause of death. Incentives vary from state to state: in Michigan, a Covid diagnosis nets a hospital $44,000 for starters.
“I think he had a target on his back the moment he walked into that hospital.”
"Nobody makes it this long," a nurse told Sarah Mitchell as they finally stopped trying to resuscitate her husband after Christmas. "He fought as long as he could."
Kyle Mitchell was 39.
"I never realized that they would kick me out for 21 days," Sarah recalled. "I was met with a lot of resistance, I felt betrayed, isolated." Beaumont Royal Oak refused to use any other drugs despite Sarah Mitchell's many requests.
“I think he had a target on his back the moment he walked into that hospital.”
Beaumont, Dearborn: Another Sinister Remdesivir Protocol Death
At the Beaumont branch in Dearborn, it gets even worse.
That same month, another Michigan woman, Stacy Ograyensek took her husband Ryan there for steroid treatment since he was having trouble breathing. On the way there, she warned him: "I'm worried that if they put you on a Covid protocol, I might not be able to get you back out of there."
"I know not to take remdesivir, I know not to let them put me on a ventilator, I'm an American, I have rights," she remembers him saying.
The hospital diagnosed him with pneumonia, and in a matter of minutes they were pushing remdesivir on him. He and his wife resisted.
The next day he woke up with a IV in his arm.
After a few days, his kidneys began to fail. When Stacy confronted a series of doctors, over the phone, they pleaded ignorance. She had to trick a nurse into admitting that he'd been given remdesivir.
After a week, he was on dialysis. But when he no longer required an oxygen mask, hospital staff put two surgical masks on him.
Then the doctors started calling Stacy and trying to persuade her to put Ryan on a ventilator. And a nurse was also pressuring him, even though his oxygen levels were normal. When pressure didn't work, the hospital resorted to force.
Stacy was kept out of Ryan's room until afterward: "As soon as my husband was vented and couldn't talk for himself and say what happened, then I could be on a Covid floor for 12 hours a day," Stacy remembers.
He was placed on high-dose propofol and fentanyl - both of which depress natural respiration.
Stacy resorted to the courts, but the judge refused to allow her to force the hospital to change the treatment. Finally, a doctor there was willing to order a switch to ivermectin. In 24 hours, Ryan's oxygen levels had returned to normal.
But on day four, Stacy says that two infectious disease doctors - Hanady A. Daas and James C. Sunstrum - came into his room.
Stacy asserts that Dr. Daas revoked Ryan's ivermectin on the grounds that it was a veterinary medicine. He died unconscious as Stacy held his hand.
She says the doctor who advocated for Ryan and helped him get the ivermectin cried along with them. He told them Ryan was the victim of a medical turf war, whose winners just wanted to follow orders and keep their paychecks.
But Stacy has the text messages and receipts. She also discovered that every Covid patient on the floor had been given remdesivir. And she says she that her research revealed that the head of infectious diseases at Beaumont Dearborn was on the Gilead payroll.
Both Sarah and Stacy are pursuing civil cases against Beaumont.
More on remdesivir:
I've known for a few years that hospitals are where you go to die. Now that I'm an old guy, I won't go near one, or any clinical setting where you can be injected with drugs.
I trust Jesus for my health and have since I came to FAITH in Him 12 years ago. If He wants to stop my heart and take me home to be with Him in pleasures forever, I don't need some cadre of vaxxed godless death merchants hovering around and making decisions for me, including whether I live or die. That power belongs to Jesus Christ, not to anyone else.
From Frederick Burton author of "This is God's World" on Substack
May Jesus Blessings be upon all who trust in Him
Man this stuff makes my blood boil. It’s both sad and infuriating.
Thank you SH and nymusicdaily 🙏🏽