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Associated outcomes?

Admission trends and waiting lists keep going in one direction, even with making allowances for industrial action.

#Baffled

A&E in England has busiest summer ever with 4.6m visits in two months

The NHS in England has had its busiest summer ever in A&E with 4.6m attendances over the past two months, while 1.5m hospital appointments were rescheduled because of the junior doctors’ strikes, according to the latest figures.

The three busiest months for A&E staff in history have been in 2024, with 77,945 attendances a day in May, 76,469 in June and 74,459 in March.

... Prof Stephen Powis, the NHS national medical director, said: “A&E staff are under significant pressure and the NHS is in the middle of what could be its busiest summer ever, with a total of 4.6m attendances in the last two months alone and 2024 now having seen the three busiest months for A&E on record.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/article/2024/aug/08/ae-in-england-has-busiest-summer-ever-with-46m-visits-in-two-months

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Oct 10·edited Oct 10Liked by DoorlessCarp🐭

Hello Dr. I'm very concerned that Japan is about to release the self-amplifying RNA vaccine. Could you please write a scientific review on that, especially on its danger? (will it replicate infinitely...)

(I'm sorry, I know that it's not related to this topic. Please forgive me if this comment seems inappropriate in any way)

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Agreed, and I could, but I would be duplicating excellent work by others.

I wouldn't need to add much to this:

https://danielnagase.substack.com/p/replicon-started-in-tokyo-october?

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Oct 10¡edited Oct 10

thank you. I'm reading the post. I'll have to brace myself, the future looks dark :|

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Oct 8Liked by DoorlessCarp🐭

If you really want to stop this, produce A5/A4 downloadable leaflet with info in layman terms which these gene "therapy" jabs cause. Have a think on how to do it.

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Oct 9¡edited Oct 9Author

I hear you bud, and I've been asked before to draft a one paragraph slide for the layman describing the link with cancer.

The challenge with simplification is that, 4 years on, unless you had your head in a bucket, most people are well aware of the main harms by now, but as a systemic poison via multiple pathways and interactions it defies distilling down to leaflet size.

All we can do is focus on a pathology and take it from there. Jessica Rose takes this approach.

And although we now have about 20 something papers discussing IgG4, very few (apart from ours?) discuss the mechanisms in detail.

Without understanding these and testing your hypothesis experimentally, progress is going to be slow.

Meanwhile, it's not in the interest of complicit parties to know this. Instead they act baffled and resort to gaslighting you.

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Oct 9Liked by DoorlessCarp🐭

I think you're wrong on what people think as many still have no idea. They put their continuous infections down to bad luck, the "turbo" cancer not detected because of lockdown, the new diabetes just one of those things, their sudden joint pain on getting old. With these ailments, their GP then recommends another booster! We need something simple, like Van Tam's "the train has left the station" analogy- Or "Have you recently developed (list of ailments). My neighbour was a sprightly octogenarian who walked daily, regularly swam, very fit. He's now stooped, needs a stick too. His daughter is a nurse. He was telling me about friends dropping dead, his other children's ailments and the one that shocked me most was the nurse's husband, 60's, now unable to walk unaided, legs giving way and in lots of pain. Doctors have no idea what caused it or how to resolve it, he said. They still trust their doc, the NHS and BBC News.

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author

I'm hearing lots of accounts like that, including from personal experience.

Like a boiling frog, at times you do wonder how much pain they will take before doing something about it, or asking questions at least.

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