I knew you had health problems, but this is astonishing! Boy, have you had a hard time!
I sought help from my GP, who said I was too sick to be seen by her and must go to the ER. I went to the ER, which ran some tests and told me they couldn't find anything wrong with me.
So both ends of the "care" are useless. Having better "insurance" would do you no good at all.
Do you think the neurological issues are swine flu vaccine injury?
Have you tried any of the health services cropping up, at least in the US, that do not take insurance and so can offer care that is NOT one-size-fits-all? Your condition is so complicated, I imagine if you could get "care," it would consist of an army of specialists who do not care what your other symptoms are, only those they "treat."
Maybe the Wellness company, https://www.twc.health/, could guide you. They are treating vaccine injuries, as are the frontline doctors here, although I can't get to their website even via a Brave browser search. They do not take insurance, but their fees are quite low.
May 2023 be a much better year for you and your family!
Thanks Owasco!
Yes, I too wonder if I had a vaccine injury from the swine flu shot in 2006. Back then, I wasn't as skeptical of vaccines (not that the Covid shots are real vaccines, of course). I was starting to wake up in a general sense, realizing the wars in the middle East were unjust, that parts of the medical system were mostly for profit and not to help people, that governments lied, etc. But I was part of the system, and still only doing the preliminary research into things. I certainly had no idea vaccines caused major health issues or came with serious risks. When my boss started to lay on the pressure, I kept saying "but I feel fine, and I never get sick, I don't think I need it". She said "you might pass on something to a patient, and get us all in trouble, you have to have the vaccine or you might get fired". Weasel words. She never said I would definitely be let go. But the pressure was real, and I didn't want to be in trouble, so finally I relented. And yeah, sick for 2 weeks, missed work and everything. First time I had been sick in years. I seemed to make a full recovery, but looking back on things now, I can see that I did start to have serious health issues just a few years later. They were transient, and not too disruptive... just things like IBS and a little pain. But within 10 years of the injection I was completely messed up. A lot of doctors pointed at my grandmother's death as the culprit (early 2016), saying "stress and sadness take a real toll on the body". They would point to my anxiety, which was the result of my horrible physical symptoms, as the cause of those symptoms. That just made me more upset... and when I got upset they said "I told you so - you are anxious and stressed, and it manifests as all the symptoms you're complaining about!" Really maddening. Nobody wants to do anything, they just want to blame the patient for everything, literally, and tell you to get therapy or take SSRIs.
Thanks for the TWC link. I'm a fan of the FLCCC and their protocols and research. And the frontline docs, but they are exclusive to the USA. I like paying for things out of pocket when it comes to healthcare. That's not very common here in Canada, but as I've said for years, free healthcare isn't free - and you get what you pay for. The "free" system is essentially useless unless you cut yourself or break a bone. They can't handle complicated and/or chronic issues and you just get bounced around forever. Paying for care directly hurts, when you're on limited income and already paying for the "free" care through taxes, but I find it much more effective. For example, before we moved I had a doctor in the Okanagan who was somewhat awake, unvaxxed, and willing to bend the system rules a bit. She charged $40 a visit to keep the private clinic open, but I was willing to pay, because she actually listened and eventually got me the Holter monitor booked (not that I was able to get it done before we moved). In 2016, I was seeing a naturopath, which also charged per visit because it's not considered real healthcare by the government here, but she was great with supplements and diet, something no standard doctor will ever talk about. I've actually asked doctors if my diet could have anything to do with my health issues, and some LAUGHED at me, or at the very best, said "definitely not". Do they not know diet is at least half of health? Or do they feign ignorance because that's what their employer (Big Pharma / the government) tells them to do? In any case, I find paying for care to be a good thing, even if it cuts into my pocketbook.
A very happy and healthy new years to you and yours :))
Thank you! And to yours!
Western med is not health care, it is poisoning. I'm so sorry you are having these problems. Another option is homeopathy, which I have seen work wonders. The remedies are soooo cheap, and the practitioners generally not obscenely expensive for an hour or more of their time, unlike western doctors for their 30 seconds of attention.
Well, placebos can work for some people. And at least there are no side effects to water! :P
Not a believer I see. It's cool. I have a story to tell about homeopathy though, so here goes:
My eldest, then only 5 or 6, was having super high fevers on a cyclical schedule - every few weeks she'd shoot up to 106 degrees, and we'd run to the ER, where they could find nothing wrong. Cue an endless stream of doctor visits. We finally got a diagnosis of some very rare and dread disease for which there was no known treatment. You can imagine our fright.
So we called a homeopath. He prescribed one dose of a tissue salt (Calc carb I believe, but it was long ago) and she never had a high fever again. Placebo?
Maybe - that's exactly how placebos (sometimes) work. But if you don't know the dosage or even the name of the drug/medicine/compound used, I can't research it. The good news is you don't have to deal with those sudden fevers anymore!
I really like that "Wellness Center" site, and trust McCullough 100%. (Hilarious if you read his wikipedia page... the section on his "covid disinfo" section reads like it's my own blog, LOL) They are clearly evidence-based and anti-big-pharma. Pro-freedom, even... a lot of people are afraid to identify that way for some sad reason. So I checked it out, and seems Canadians are welcome to join, but it may be more expensive, and some parts may not be accessible to me. It's okay, I'm used to that! Everything costs, of course... I'm used to that too. Seems they only accept credit cards. I'm unbanked and always will be, but I can buy prepaid credit cards. Sadly, those work for less and less things nowadays. I can't even buy from Costco online anymore! (And they don't have a location within 500 km of me, so I can't shop there at all now.) I think prepaid credit cards are being phased out completely. We had trouble spending the last one we got... even places like gas stations and grocery stores barely accept them anymore. I wouldn't be able to find out if they accept prepaid cards without buying one and trying, unless their online chat thing works. It's closed for the night but I'll try tomorrow. So if I got through those hurdles, then there's another: "Access The Wellness Company’s services in the palm of your hand!" I am unsmart, and always will be. Seems they require a smart device to access most of the services. Definitely for any kind of consult with a doctor, which I would want. It's their main feature as far as I can tell, other than buying their products. Their products do seem good (gluten free and vegan, made in the USA) but I can get all that locally as far as I know. Just maybe not in a cool bottom with Peter McCullough's name on it! Anyway, I will try to use the chat feature to ask questions tomorrow while the baby's napping. Thanks again for the link :)