My Mission:End Palliative/Hospice Care,ILLEGAL Euthanasia,Killing our Loved ones.No Consent,no treatment,denied the right to LIVE.Patients/family's wishes denied,put on P/H unknowingly, against their will.Next mission:End Sepsis and hold Hospitals accountable for patients who contract Sepsis, My husband was denied antibiotics by a P/C APRN and then denied she was responsible,causing my husbands death. Hold on tight to your loved ones and steer clear of this Nashua Hospital if you want to live!
I am Speaking up!!!!!!
Me and My Knight
Sunday, March 17, 2019
2 Years today My Husband was ILLEGALLY, NON-consensually put on Hospice/Palliative Care!
Today is the 2 year Anniversary my Husband was ILLEGALLY, NON-consensually, put on Hospice/Palliative care without our knowledge, AFTER we had already refused, by the Un-ethical, UN-professional piece of shit, so-called Hospitalist/Doctor Amit Chander at St. Joseph Hospital in Nashua, NH. Un-ethical, Un-professional, so-called Dr. Donald McDonah was ILLEGALLY consulted and proceeded to Overdose my Husband with 225 mg.s of Morphine DAILY. MEDICARE FRAUD!!!!!!!!!!!
Is your Hospital or Doctor an A.C.O. Member? If they are Run!
Hospital's and Doctor's who join these Accountable Care Organizations, which is a voluntary Medicare Program, are rewarded for cutting care through the ACO Shared Savings Program.
All Medicare money not spent is partially returned to the provider as a 40% rebate, because they rather spend $40 than $100.
Hold on to your Loved ones. The highest spending groups, people with more than one illness, are the people being targeted for Hospice and ILLEGAL Euthanasia. This is how they save money, by killing off our Loved ones!
Of Four Paths to the End of Life, One Is Far Pricier Than Others
Of Four Paths to the End of Life, One Is Far Pricier Than Others
The findings of a new Medicare study conflict with popular ideas about which patients cost the most health care dollars in the last year of life — and where potential cost savings lie.
Last-ditch, high-tech heroic treatments. Days in the hospital intensive care unit. You might think this is what makes dying in America so expensive — and that it’s where we should focus efforts to spend the nation’s health care dollars more wisely.
But a new study finds that for nearly half of older Americans, the pattern of high spending on health care was already in motion a full year before they died.
That was due to the care they received for multiple chronic health conditions, including many doctor visits and regular hospital stays over the year, not just in their final days.
As a result, the study shows, the last year of life for this large group of seniors costs the Medicare system five times as much as the care received by the much smaller group of seniors who have a sudden burst of very expensive care in their last few weeks of life. The findings have clear implications for efforts to improve care, and contain the growth of costs, at the end of life.
Friday, March 15, 2019
NAEMT and Sepsis Alliance Announce Results of National Sepsis Survey
NAEMT and Sepsis Alliance Announce Results of National Sepsis Survey

In a recent national survey of more than 1,300 EMS providers, the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians (NAEMT) in association with the Sepsis Alliance found that although nearly all respondents (98%) consider sepsis a medical emergency, only about half (51%) feel very confident in their ability to recognize symptoms of sepsis—the body’s life-threatening response to an infection.
Each year, about 1.7 million people in the United States are diagnosed with sepsis, with 270,000 dying, making sepsis a priority public health issue. This is reflected in the 83% of respondents who say that they’ve seen sepsis within the past year.
Fining trusts for patient deaths robs others of better treatment-How about the U.S.?
Fining trusts for patient deaths robs others of better treatment
You would think that the prospect of losing a patient was motivation enough to encourage the most thorough diagnosis and treatment of a sick person. However, from April the government could now impose fines upon hospitals if they do not treat or recognise sepsis (a condition where the body responds poorly to a bacterial infection and attacks its own tissue and organs), early enough.
My comment: This is exactly what the U.S. should be doing, seeing how at least one Nashua, NH Hospital is GUILTY of NOT treating SEPSIS and I'm sure there are many more!
Wednesday, March 13, 2019
New Mexico assisted suicide bill stopped. Thank God!
New Mexico assisted suicide bill stopped.
Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
I have amazing news.
The New Mexico assisted suicide bill (HB 90) has been tabled. I assessed that HB 90 was the most extreme assisted suicide bill that I had ever seen, and even after it was amended, the language of the bill allowed for euthanasia and enabled the practise of the law to expand.
Yesterday, the Arkansas assisted suicide bill also died.
Executive Director - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
I have amazing news.
Yesterday, the Arkansas assisted suicide bill also died.
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
New drug may stop sepsis from reaching major organs
New drug may stop sepsis from reaching major organs
Researchers discover a drug that has the potential to stop sepsis before the condition reaches major organs and becomes fatal.
Sepsis is a life-threatening condition that occurs when an existing infection — such as one that develops in a cut, a respiratory infection, or a urinary tract infection — triggers an immune response that affects the body's tissues and major organs.
Sepsis constitutes a medical emergency because, if a person does not receive treatment, it can lead to death.
In the United States, over 1 million people experience severe sepsis every year, and up to 30 percent of these individuals die as a result.
Worldwide, over 30 million people have sepsis each year, and up to 6 million people die from it. Most commonly, sepsis is caused by Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli.
New research brings much-needed hope for the treatment of sepsis. Researchers at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) — which is located in Dublin — have tested a compound called cilengitide in a preclinical trial. The drug goes by the brand name InnovoSep.
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