https://www.katedalleyshow.com/

My husband WALKED out of the ICU in just 3 1/2 days. Fastest ICU patient in history of Cov. What we did. What to tell others. It’s not “blovid”- the protocol is what is killing people in the ICU. Here is what to do and how to do it. What to demand. What treatment. Please Share This! More at katedalleyradio.com in show notes on entire story. My husband had 4 major “risk” categories- so by their “blovid” standards, should be dead. We changed THEIR protocol and saved his life. This is how we did it. ( I look puffy and terrible here on vid because I was brought to tears on the air on my syndicated radio show.)

By FOS-SA

4 thoughts on “Our First Hand ICU Story – What is ACTUALLY Killing People In The Hospital”
  1. You are so right. I’m currently in the hospital with covid pneumonia x5 weeks. I’ve been an ER nurse for. 35 years. I did not have an advocate nor did the hospital. I am a single woman with no family here and 1 friend that could visit for 1 hour each day and they did. I was not SOA (short of air) when I went to the ER. I had no resp difficulty at all. I went because I had covid and was not getting fluids down like I should. When they saw my sats everything went into high drive and suddenly I was transferred to another hospital on 100 high flow and for 4 four days in ICU they constantly asked me when I will consent to a vent. I wouldn’t. I was in the ICU 10 days…interesting. It’s quite a story and I paid the price of not knowing about high dose vit c, d and zinc. I had them order vit c, d and zinc. But they gave it oral and only 400mg of vit d and I was below normal levels 2 weeks prior and taking 1000mg at home. I caught it after 6 days and ask them to change it. Didn’t everyone agree vit d was a tx with covid? During this journey, I like you, realized there is no common sense or health in some of their policies and practices. They do not practice health with medicine. We have lost our way in the healthcare system. Im not one of those nurses that was 35 years away from the bedside. I left the ER bedside 2 years ago due to its toxicity on my health and lack of resources to give care. I left my shift everyday knowing I only could give the bare minimum to my patients due to the lack of support and resources for the front line.

  2. I was in with Covid. High oxygen but every day I had a multi vitamin. Vitamin C vitamin D3 and Zinc plus my regular meds I had.

  3. Stay on that regime. Plus tell them you want ivermenic or hydrochloridquin
    Make them give to you or have someone being it.
    It works.

  4. They make it difficult for you to fight for your loved ones treatment because they put them isolation due to Covid and family can’t visit so it’s difficult to know what’s really going on with their treatment and they don’t give you opportunity for input or to ask many questions. They wouldn’t even let me go into the ER with my husband and due to his low oxygen levels he wasn’t thinking very clearly and I’m sure not answering their questions correctly. I asked about ivermectin and they nurses reply was the “horse treatment” and went on to tell me they didn’t do it because it is not FDA approved for treatment of Covid. After being in the hospital 11 days, he had his best day so far but by the next day he was on ventilator because in the middle of the night he removed his Bipap mask, his levels oxygen levels dropped into the 50s which made him critical so they had to take action and put him on vent to save his life (is what I was told). I got the call after it was done. Now two days later they are starting dialysis because of problems with kidney function. He’s sedated so doesn’t know what’s going on and I can’t visit him, just about 2 phone calls that I make per day to the nurses for updates, so I don’t really know what’s going on either. Very sad situation and I’m fearful he won’t make it out of there alive but feel helpless.

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