Amen & Amen! The last 5 years have wrenched my eyesight viciously open from my naivety about medical practises, procedures and drugs and vaccines. It’s been a terrible awakening and the increasing numbers of people that I know in their 50’s & 60’s dying so young are starting to scare me. I begin to wonder how much, if any of our commonly accepted medical knowledge and practises are truly scientific or the equivalent of witch doctor voodoo?!?!? There are dark, evil and greedy forces corrupting our society. God help us all! 😢
Please coordinate with John Rappaport substack regarding his recent articles on medical error.
Some coding of "cardiac arrest" could be a cover for medical error. For example, used when a person is given an overdose of medication such as painkiller, or that in combination with "fluid restriction" (a current common practice as unscientific as the 1700s blood-letting).
There was not a code for medical error, so that is a further reason to recall/retract all the research papers and conclusions based on the poorly-coded mortality data.
There are tens, if not hundreds, of codes for medical error. There are especially many for wrong medication or dose given. Poisoning by accidental overdose in a hospital setting. That's just one. Others are mistake in surgery et al
Thank you for your comment, John. I will try to do better, and check the information about omitting codes for medical error. My recollection was that, in a past CDC annual summary table for causes of death in the USA, the summary table omitted medical error (over 250,000 per year, the third leading cause), but yet the table somehow (??) managed to make the numbers for all the other causes add up to the total. If true, then any research papers that relied on such table should be flagged and retracted.
I think that if the mortality analysis were done correctly, then medical error would be shown to be the first leading cause of death by far, not the third cause and ranking behind heart disease and cancer. I think most cancer is caused by medical procedures (note that primitive human populations with little medical care also have very little cancer). Maybe most "heart disease" is also caused by medical error and mis-coding. Note also that most strokes occur, not coincidentally, while someone is hospitalized or soon after discharge.
I would like to also correct spelling for name of author Jon Rappoport and give a link to his article about medical error --
His information is not new, and others have also tried to increase awareness and response for the problem of medical error, but maybe he will get some traction where others have not. I hope you will write about this topic.
re: "primitive human populations with little medical care also have very little cancer'...but that could be also because they have very little exposure to manmade electrification. 200 years ago, cancer was extremely rare everywhere.
Here is what the Google AI wrote in response to my question:
"The CDC does not list or rank "medical error" as an official cause of death in its annual mortality reports.
The ranking of medical error as the third leading cause of death—behind heart disease and cancer—comes from an influential 2016 study by Johns Hopkins University researchers published in The BMJ.
Key Conflicts in Reporting
CDC Methodology: The CDC relies on International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes found on death certificates. These codes primarily capture specific diseases or injuries (e.g., respiratory failure or heart attack) but do not have a dedicated category for "human error" or "system failure".
Johns Hopkins Study: Researchers estimated that more than 250,000 deaths per year in the U.S. are due to preventable medical mistakes. They argue that because these errors are not tracked separately, they are "hidden" within other official categories like heart disease or surgical complications.
Controversy: Some experts dispute the "third leading cause" claim, arguing the Johns Hopkins study overestimates errors by including unavoidable complications or failing to account for whether the patient would have died regardless of the error.
While the CDC has acknowledged the research and the importance of patient safety, it has not updated its official ranking system to include medical error as a standalone cause. "
brilliant John, only you meet the devil in the details, ONCE AGAIN. John, is there currently a spike in "cardiac" deaths. Folks around me are dying suddenly in unprecedente numbers, and likewise, unusual number of cardiac issues, quadruple bypasses. aortic valve dysfunction, mini strokes being diagnosed as vertigo...a 57 year old getting a small stomack pain and drops dead. Eating dinner drops dead..no ability to save, massive sudden death. we are talking about in a communty of towns in southern nh...txs
This is an excellent point. Here’s some context: Most deaths are not reported to the Medical Examiner (ME). I assume the majority of deaths occur in hospitals. When I was a resident, death certificates were filled out by house staff, most of whom had no specific training in this.
The mis-attribution of deaths to cardiac causes has undoubtedly helped fill the coffers of the American Heart Association (already overflowing with money from Big Food and Big Pharma).
Great article, but " return all the cut functions to the states" suggests that state governments, which are every bit as corrupt as the federal government (especially in Massachusetts), should assume these functions. But this is NOT where these responsibilities should go. Rather, they need to be removed from government altogether. Let the free market do its thing. Cut tax and cut government spending.
Great article! This is an important clarification. In Hawaii we had one physician putting the same cause of death of every death certificate for his patients which artificially inflated deaths for that category. We had to "re educate" him.
They put these on my late husband’s report. I should have asked for an autopsy. Nothing seemed to make sense of his illness. They said he multiple cardiac events at the hospital but likely due to no one in er or icu watching him. Also kidney failure, but he would have that. If This is heartbreaking 💔 to read but good to read. Ugh!
Excellent. Thank you! Now that we know journal research is suspect, the data support has to be questioned. It's not completely crazy to imagine actuarial tables will be adjusted in time. It's a new day.
Amen & Amen! The last 5 years have wrenched my eyesight viciously open from my naivety about medical practises, procedures and drugs and vaccines. It’s been a terrible awakening and the increasing numbers of people that I know in their 50’s & 60’s dying so young are starting to scare me. I begin to wonder how much, if any of our commonly accepted medical knowledge and practises are truly scientific or the equivalent of witch doctor voodoo?!?!? There are dark, evil and greedy forces corrupting our society. God help us all! 😢
Please coordinate with John Rappaport substack regarding his recent articles on medical error.
Some coding of "cardiac arrest" could be a cover for medical error. For example, used when a person is given an overdose of medication such as painkiller, or that in combination with "fluid restriction" (a current common practice as unscientific as the 1700s blood-letting).
There was not a code for medical error, so that is a further reason to recall/retract all the research papers and conclusions based on the poorly-coded mortality data.
There are tens, if not hundreds, of codes for medical error. There are especially many for wrong medication or dose given. Poisoning by accidental overdose in a hospital setting. That's just one. Others are mistake in surgery et al
Thank you for your comment, John. I will try to do better, and check the information about omitting codes for medical error. My recollection was that, in a past CDC annual summary table for causes of death in the USA, the summary table omitted medical error (over 250,000 per year, the third leading cause), but yet the table somehow (??) managed to make the numbers for all the other causes add up to the total. If true, then any research papers that relied on such table should be flagged and retracted.
I think that if the mortality analysis were done correctly, then medical error would be shown to be the first leading cause of death by far, not the third cause and ranking behind heart disease and cancer. I think most cancer is caused by medical procedures (note that primitive human populations with little medical care also have very little cancer). Maybe most "heart disease" is also caused by medical error and mis-coding. Note also that most strokes occur, not coincidentally, while someone is hospitalized or soon after discharge.
I would like to also correct spelling for name of author Jon Rappoport and give a link to his article about medical error --
https://jonrappoport.substack.com/p/a-covert-op-to-conceal-mass-medical-murder
His information is not new, and others have also tried to increase awareness and response for the problem of medical error, but maybe he will get some traction where others have not. I hope you will write about this topic.
re: "primitive human populations with little medical care also have very little cancer'...but that could be also because they have very little exposure to manmade electrification. 200 years ago, cancer was extremely rare everywhere.
Here is what the Google AI wrote in response to my question:
"The CDC does not list or rank "medical error" as an official cause of death in its annual mortality reports.
The ranking of medical error as the third leading cause of death—behind heart disease and cancer—comes from an influential 2016 study by Johns Hopkins University researchers published in The BMJ.
Key Conflicts in Reporting
CDC Methodology: The CDC relies on International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes found on death certificates. These codes primarily capture specific diseases or injuries (e.g., respiratory failure or heart attack) but do not have a dedicated category for "human error" or "system failure".
Johns Hopkins Study: Researchers estimated that more than 250,000 deaths per year in the U.S. are due to preventable medical mistakes. They argue that because these errors are not tracked separately, they are "hidden" within other official categories like heart disease or surgical complications.
Controversy: Some experts dispute the "third leading cause" claim, arguing the Johns Hopkins study overestimates errors by including unavoidable complications or failing to account for whether the patient would have died regardless of the error.
While the CDC has acknowledged the research and the importance of patient safety, it has not updated its official ranking system to include medical error as a standalone cause. "
[ end of response from Google AI ]
brilliant John, only you meet the devil in the details, ONCE AGAIN. John, is there currently a spike in "cardiac" deaths. Folks around me are dying suddenly in unprecedente numbers, and likewise, unusual number of cardiac issues, quadruple bypasses. aortic valve dysfunction, mini strokes being diagnosed as vertigo...a 57 year old getting a small stomack pain and drops dead. Eating dinner drops dead..no ability to save, massive sudden death. we are talking about in a communty of towns in southern nh...txs
This is an excellent point. Here’s some context: Most deaths are not reported to the Medical Examiner (ME). I assume the majority of deaths occur in hospitals. When I was a resident, death certificates were filled out by house staff, most of whom had no specific training in this.
The mis-attribution of deaths to cardiac causes has undoubtedly helped fill the coffers of the American Heart Association (already overflowing with money from Big Food and Big Pharma).
From decades of vaccines
Great article, but " return all the cut functions to the states" suggests that state governments, which are every bit as corrupt as the federal government (especially in Massachusetts), should assume these functions. But this is NOT where these responsibilities should go. Rather, they need to be removed from government altogether. Let the free market do its thing. Cut tax and cut government spending.
Great article! This is an important clarification. In Hawaii we had one physician putting the same cause of death of every death certificate for his patients which artificially inflated deaths for that category. We had to "re educate" him.
They put these on my late husband’s report. I should have asked for an autopsy. Nothing seemed to make sense of his illness. They said he multiple cardiac events at the hospital but likely due to no one in er or icu watching him. Also kidney failure, but he would have that. If This is heartbreaking 💔 to read but good to read. Ugh!
Excellent. Thank you! Now that we know journal research is suspect, the data support has to be questioned. It's not completely crazy to imagine actuarial tables will be adjusted in time. It's a new day.
The ineptness and lack of decency persist!