... listing various unpronouncable ingredients but including aspirin, which is one of mine in low doses. The NHS standard advice:
Low-dose aspirin helps to prevent heart attacks and strokes in people who are at high risk of them. Aspirin is also known as acetylsalicylic acid. Your doctor may suggest that you take a daily low dose if you have had a stroke or a heart attack to help stop you having another one.However, this one has long been contra-indicated, if on heart meds ...
Ibuprofen is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that is used to relieve pain, fever, and inflammationAnd the texted advice said:
How on earth is the average bear supposed to know even a fraction of that? Evidence Based Medicine which allows a mass of WHO approved literature has much on drugs but again ... how's the average tik-tok (Chinese) dancing nurse to know which drugs to prescribe, which not?
So back to the blood pressure medication IYE opened with ... this was from the article ...
Potassium Chloride eh? This Potassium Chloride ...?
In the United States, potassium chloride is used as the final drug in the three injection sequence of lethal injection as a form of capital punishment. It induces cardiac arrest, ultimately killing the inmate.Now, clearly, you're not to blindly panic on the say-so of some non-medical blogger on a freedom site (moi) who may just have it a***-end around ... so WHOse say-so can you accept? Someone sending a text, no bona fides stated?
All right ... a GP? Good luck finding one at the clinic's "press one for ... press two for" disembodied or script reading telephone answerer. Medical qualification? Level of nonWoke education, if under 35 years of age? Or even to 50 years of age now?
So what we have here is a cascading conglomeration of factors piling up, inc. NHS woes, plus the WEF and WHO necessity for the culling of the ageing population ... the Agenda. That was partly what the plandemic was about, 2015 to 2019.
WHO ya gonna call? Ghostbusters?
Ask the Pharmacist who gives you the stuff. Tha's their business
ReplyDeleteAgreed. I have long held the belief that the GP should diagnose and the pharmacist should prescribe. A friend of mine, who is a pharmacist, heard me say this and got quite excited. On many occasions he had to call the GP to question a prescription and suggest an alternative.
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