Nursing Home Danger
Nursing Home Danger
Introduction and Overview
(0:00 - 0:26)
Hi, this is Dr. Daniels, and welcome to Healing with Dr. Daniels. Today is Sunday, June 21st, 2020, and today's topic is nursing homes, how dangerous. I'm going to take a look at not only nursing home data but also some viral data to get a better handle on the epidemic.
Turpentine and Shilajit Routine
(0:26 - 2:25)
What prompted this topic is that my mother just entered a nursing home about two weeks ago. But first, let's take our turpentine. Yay! We have a spoon, some white sugar, and some turpentine. Always label your turpentine bottle. We're going to scoop up some sugar. Yum, yum, yum. I take half a teaspoon of turpentine most days. There you go. And of course, we have a glass of water. A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, as they say. I'm going to put that aside and take my Shilajit. There it is. I'm going to take just a little bit of the goo. You see it's a little bit bigger there. We're going to put it in the rest of our water and let that dissolve while we chat. I'll either take that at the end or after the show.
Nursing Homes and Viral Data
(2:25 - 4:11)
Alrighty, whoever thought life would come to this in 2020? Terrorized by the thought of a virus. The first mom's case that inspired me. You always hear that nursing homes have a higher death rate than other places. I checked online, and sure enough, if you have Alzheimer's and you enter a nursing home, you have more than a 50% mortality rate in the first year. After that, it drops to a lower level, but they don't really specify. I was like, holy cow, man, that's like darn near extermination. So, my mom calls me and says, "Oh, I fell at home." She went to the hospital, no bones broken, and nothing wrong with her after the x-ray. So, they transfer her to a nursing home in New York for physical therapy. They tell her no fruit, no fresh vegetables, no visitors, and visitors can't even bring food for her to eat. All this because there is a virus. Yes, a virus.
The Reality of Nursing Home Conditions
(4:11 - 6:09)
They give her the virus test and tell her, again, boots on the ground information from New York, straight from New York, less than two weeks old, hot off the press. There's a 50% chance that if the test says she has it, she doesn't really have it, and there's no virus in her system at all. So, she calls me to tell me that the food tastes like it's out-of-date canned food from a food bank, and that the soup they're serving her tastes like dishwater. They're feeding her tap water, and she's getting a little indigestion and heartburn. What can she do? I said, "Ma, you got to get out of there. Your life's in danger. This is not good." I mean, how long would you expect your kids to last if you fed them out-of-date canned food and dish soap for soup, right?
Escaping the Nursing Home
(6:09 - 7:09)
She says, "Well, I think it might be helping me with the physical therapy." I said, "Mom, you have a bruise. It's going to get better in a few days anyway." Immediately, my brother, thank goodness he has time off from work, goes to New York to help her. My daughter, who has some free time as well, goes there to start cooking up a storm to make sure she gets the best healing food available, only to find they will not allow her to receive it at the nursing home. I said, "Mom, you got to check out before they kill you." She says, "Well, I'm going to stay a couple more days." Okay, Mom. We go through the menu and pick the least harmful food on the menu. She calls me back the next day and says, "I'm getting worse. My fingers are tingling. I get a little arthritis in my feet that I've never had. This is just terrible. Who's running this place? Is there someone I should be complaining to?"
The Final Outcome
(7:09 - 8:17)
I said, "Mom, the governor runs the place and he needs higher death numbers for his fake epidemic and is using the nursing home for that purpose. Nothing personal, but Mom, you're sitting in the wrong seat." So, she decides to stay a few more days. My brother and daughter agree that at whatever point she says she wants out, they will do a tactical mission and extract her. The final outcome is Mom did make it home from the nursing home. She does have a new ulcer on her lower leg that she didn't have when she went in, and she's having more pain and feels defeated. We're trying to cheer her up and put her back together, but she got out alive.
The Impact of Nursing Home Conditions
(8:17 - 10:19)
Could you imagine if you were in your home and you were allowed no visitors, could only drink tap water, had stale, spoiled food, and when you had soup, it was made from dish soap, no fresh fruits, and no vegetables, and no one could bring you any food either? Your health might deteriorate as well. This can make a healthy person sick, but this is especially devastating on top of other issues that might make an elderly person weak. These measures might be seen as a finishing move, as they say in the online gaming industry. It seems the virus is not working alone.
Investigating the Virus and Excess Deaths
(10:19 - 12:19)
So, I thought to myself, could there be other evidence that the virus is not working alone? I took a look at my favorite site, which is the CDC. I always try to get my data from the people who have it, right? Data, that's what we're going by. Just to let you know what website this is so you can check it out. You should do a screenshot of it because it changes from week to week. Yeah. Um, cdc.gov forward slash n c h s forward slash n v s s forward slash v s r r forward slash c o v i d one nine forward slash index dot h t m. Yeah, that is it. You can back up a bit and replay it to get the full site. But this is an amazing site. You really need to go to this site to get your numbers.
Analyzing the Numbers
(12:19 - 14:08)
So, I went to this site. What I wanted to know was how many additional deaths are being created by the virus. I'll tell you the topic headings: week, or date in which death occurred, all deaths involving the virus, deaths from all causes, and the percent of expected deaths. This is the percent of deaths compared to a baseline year of two years ago. We're going to take that as we're accepting that all the numbers on this site are accurate. We're not going to question that. We're just going to take a look at what the numbers tell us. This is really a shock. There are three more columns, all of which are irrelevant. All you want to know is how many deaths the virus is contributing to.
Understanding Deaths and the Virus
(14:08 - 16:11)
In order to sort that out, we have to have some assumption as to what is a death. You're going to say, "Oh, Dr. Daniels, that means a person's not breathing." To cause a death, one has to make the death occur earlier. In other words, we're all going to die, but the question is, is there an event in our life that made that death happen, say today, instead of tomorrow, next week, or next year? So, the question is, in how many cases can we say that the virus caused someone to die sooner? In order to do that, we have to say, "Wait a minute, if we're comparing it to the baseline number of deaths in prior years, then if the number of deaths this week is the same as the expected number from two years ago, then there cannot be any new cause of death, such as a virus." So, the virus may be present, but it definitely did not cause a death if there were no increase in deaths.
The Concept of Renaming Diseases
(16:11 - 17:02)
I call that renaming, just take an old disease and rename it. They don't give us a column for increased deaths over last year. So, I had to combine the information from two columns. We took the percent of expected deaths, 106%. Okay, we'll accept that. No question. Accurate. We're going to believe it. That's from all causes, 1.170236 million deaths. You multiply those two together, and you get 66,239 deaths. So, from February 1st, the time this chart is counting from, there were 66,239 more deaths than what was expected based on two years ago. So, I said, aha, okay, we now have a number.
Virus Deaths vs. Excess Deaths
(17:02 - 19:11)
The question is, how many cases do we have where the death was excess more than expected and the individual was positive or tested positive for the virus? In other words, we need the virus present and the death has to be excess. So, we got the excess death by calculating the percent. But now, if we do it week by week, we find something even more shocking. This is a cute one. In the week ending February 29th, there were five deaths for the virus, but there were 576 more deaths than expected. So, even though there were 576 more deaths than expected, at best five would be caused by the virus. So, you see what's going on here. There is a huge mismatch between weeks where you have excess deaths and weeks where you have virus deaths.
Separating Virus Deaths from Other Causes
(19:11 - 20:24)
Now, we've got to figure out how to separate those two, just the overlap. We only want cases where the death was excess and the person had the virus. And even that doesn't give us a cause and effect. It just says these are cases where the virus was present, and the person died who might not have died in a prior year under similar circumstances. So, that's important. At the end of this process, when I get to a bottom number, we will only establish cases where the virus was actually associated with an excess death. Cause and effect, we don't have enough information to decide that.
Setting Boundaries for Analysis
(20:24 - 22:03)
Can we all agree? Whenever you do something, you have to have certain boundaries, like left margin, right margin, top, bottom. Okay. Here's our playing field. We're going to presume that there's something going on, and we're going to presume that whatever degree of human death could be attributed to the virus is substantial and worthy of attention. Let's just leave it at that. The list is just shocking. We only have data for 20 weeks, which is not bad. I don't like crunching these numbers. It took me, I have to tell you, 20 hours of sifting and teasing out these numbers because this table was created to obscure what would have been quickly obvious.
Obscured Data and Reporting Methods
(22:03 - 25:00)
If instead of all cause deaths, which is a huge number of 57,000, they only gave us excess deaths, which is all we needed. The excess deaths were zero. So, if there's zero excess deaths, how can a virus be responsible for zero deaths? It can't be, right? Because of the method of reporting, that is totally obscured. Now, you want to know what else is really obscured. Come down here, woo, around week 11 or 12, we have 16,000, supposedly 16,000 deaths from the virus, but guess what? The number of excess deaths is 20,000. Whoa. What killed the other 4,000 people? There's something else out there lurking in the shadows that is causing death. And so, if we go down each line of this row, we see larger and larger numbers of deaths that are not accounted for by COVID.
Analyzing the Wuhan Experience
(25:00 - 27:47)
Two pieces of information are needed to really get to the bottom of this. First piece, in Wuhan, when they examined all the people who died from the illness, they found that 25% had never been exposed to any virus. There was no testing that showed any viral exposure or whatever. So, we know then that in 25% of people who die from the viral-type symptoms, whatever they are, the virus was absolutely not responsible because undetectable by science. If we're being scientific about this, we've got to believe our tests. We have to say our test is a test that shows something. And so, if the test shows that there is no virus there, then a person might be dead, but the virus could not have been the cause. So, 25% of the deaths involving COVID, which is 104,350. There was no virus present. We know that because of the Wuhan experience.
Examining Test Accuracy and Reporting
(27:47 - 30:02)
The remaining 75% are subject to test, right? So, they're just like the ones that, like mom, we went to the nursing home and they told mom straight up in the horse's mouth, boots on the ground. When the test is positive, only half of the people of those positives actually have the virus present. This means that in this chart, which includes people who were never tested, there's a whole group of people. Whoever had COVID written on their death certificate, that is what is in this chart. So, we know 25% of them had no virus present because it's just our Wuhan epidemiology data. Another 36-37% had no virus present because that's how the test works out. So, if you add the 25 and the 38, you get over 60-65, 66% of the people with the virus on their death certificate, there was no virus present.
Understanding Virus Presence and Deaths
(30:02 - 32:18)
If we're going to be scientific, then we have to realize that if the virus is not present, it could not have caused the death. So, what I did is I arrived at the number of 66%. If we take 66% multiplied by the 104,000, that brings us to 68,871 of these deaths, no virus present. Therefore, they could not possibly have been caused by the virus. That's okay. That leaves us with about 30-35,000 odd deaths. If we take a look again at the 1.170 and some change million who died, and 6% of those, that gives us 66,000. If we do a little bit of math here, and believe me, we've done a whole lot of math already.
Uncovering the Reality of Virus-Related Deaths
(32:18 - 34:47)
Are there times when the virus was present and there were no excess deaths associated with it? The answer is yes. There are actually places in this chart where a large number of viruses are, or deaths are recorded as being due to the virus, and there's no increase in deaths. One example is on March 14th, the weekend in March 14th. There were no excess deaths, and there were 52 virus deaths. But on 3/21, there was a 2% excess death, which is about a thousand excess deaths, but only 548 death certificates with the virus listed as the cause of death. We're seeing a large number of cases where you have a virus, but you don't have death. What about the virus and no death? In the week ending May 30th, there were 4,878 deaths due to the virus and no excess deaths. This indicates an utter lack of causality. The virus and excess death are independent things.
The Implications of Nursing Home Deaths
(34:47 - 36:42)
So, the question then becomes how many deaths were due to the virus being present and it was an excess death. I calculated that to be 32,607. We can divide that by the total excess deaths of 66,240. Only 49% of the excess deaths happened in a person that also had the virus present. What killed the other 51%? Is there a bigger cause of death, a bigger cause of excess death, a bigger threat to the health of the American public that has been overlooked? That's what this chart says. The whole meaning is obscured because it lists the percent of expected deaths, not the percent of excess deaths. The next piece of misrepresentation in the chart is death from all causes. No, that should be the number of increased deaths over prior years, over the baseline year.
The Reality of Government Custody
(36:42 - 38:47)
This has been Healing with Dr. Daniels. We will see you again next week. The website is VITALITYCAPSULES.COM. As always, think happens.