Cardiology Nurse Reports Demographic Changes in Heart Patients
Professional Observation from a Cardiology Nurse
I was a nurse working in cardiology in a large NZ hospital. My usual admissions typically were older people whose hearts were slowly failing due to old age and younger people whose eating and lifestyle choices had significant impact on their heart health. I’d been there a few years and the pattern rarely deviated.
Post roll out of the vaccine, I began to see highly unusual concentrations of admissions from very different demographics. Skinny Asians, people with no history of heart problems, younger fitter people, including a 27 yo NZDF member whose heart efficacy was 5% and in need of a transplant. As Covid had largely been contained within the country, I couldn’t put it down to previous infection; however all of them did have recent vaccination in common.
Based upon my own observations I decided not to take the vaccine and was mandated out of a job after the normal process of removal and attempts at persuasion. We were fortunate enough not to need my income, so I haven’t worked since, but it has considerably changed both our lives and come at personal cost. However we both feel that whatever the struggles we’ve had since, she took the right decision. We both remain unjabbed and have never had Covid, despite spending a lot of time with family and friends and in the wider community. Looking at the Oxford University analysis of our chances of contracting the virus and the even lower risk of becoming seriously ill from it, we both decided early on that it was not necessary to be particularly fearful, and the inability of vaccines to prevent infection or transmission meant that the benefits of taking did not outweigh the potential risk that my wife had seen firsthand in her work.
I thought I’d let you know that my wife is now at work on a similar ward in a UK hospital and is seeing crazy numbers of people coming in who have just collapsed. This did not use to be the way with most heart cases – usually it was failing health over a longer timeframe, but now there is a significant proportion who are suddenly experiencing problems with no previous history or symptoms.
Unlike NZ, where their vaccination status is recorded on their medical file, here it is not. So even attempting to understand or examine if there is a correlation is not possible, and no effort is put in to any examination of causality. This allows great scope for not only plausible deniability, but worse maintaining ignorance by means of silence. Heart attack is not only sudden, but it is also seemingly random and affects individuals and families who are unable to grasp much more than their own reality and rarely a bigger picture. In that it is a much less dangerous way for swathes of the population to be culled without the need for mass events or death camps etc.
Wife came back from night shift with more stories of patients with aortic dissection. Used to be very rare. Her colleague could not understand where they are all coming from.
In one night shift this week when she was looking after 13 patients, 3 had Aortic Dissection.