Dr Pierre Kory has a long post, with technicalities, discussing the rise of medical errors among medical practitioners since the Covid vax rollout. Errors, and death from medical mistakes have always been large among this group, but as documented in the article, have been on the increase. The Covid vax has been known to not only result in neurological conditions, but to more frequently produce brain fog and cloudiness of thinking. This group of professionals is the most highly vaccinated in society, and the jab was, and still is, in most jurisdictions, mandatory for medical professionals in hospitals. As well, the rate of Covid vax injuries and deaths is high in this group.
Overall, this raises the prospects over the longer term of a radical decline in medical quality. As I said before, do your uttermost, not to get sick!
https://pierrekorymedicalmusings.com/p/are-medical-errors-on-the-rise-due
"As the title of this post reflects, I recently developed a growing concern that health care providers are "not as sharp" as they used to be and, as you will learn from the cases I will present below, that may be putting it mildly.
Why would I hypothesize about a sudden deterioration in the cognitive and technical abilities of health care providers? Couple of reasons;
1.The most mRNA vaccinated sub-population in the United States are almost certainly our health care providers. They make up the entire class of employees mandated by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the agency that governs the two federal/state health insurance plans for the elderly and poor. Recall that 25 states fought back against CMS by issuing injunctions against the mandate until the Supreme Court granted CMS the authority to do so. Which meant that all CMS facility employees (every hospital, nursing home, and home health agency employee in the country) had to get the mRNA vaccine otherwise they would not be eligible for reimbursement for their services from those entities. That does not make for a valuable employee.
2.The mRNA "vaccine," like Covid itself, causes immense amounts of cognitive dysfunction, i.e. "brain fog" and worse. In my Leading Edge Clinic specialty practice where we treat Long Covid/Long Vax (70% are Long Vax) of the almost 1500 chronically ill patients we have encountered, the vast majority report new-onset cognitive dysfunction.
The real tragedy is that the mandate from CMS specified that "accommodations" (i.e. exemptions) should be offered by the involved health care facilities, however, as we well know, in the vast majority of facilities, exemptions were nearly impossible to obtain. Numerous lawsuits are ongoing to address the horrific negative consequences of the mass firings that resulted. The bright side is that I am hearing from my Covid litigation experts that these cases are now being regularly won .
However, the behavior of the many corporate health systems around the country effectively "weeded out" all unvaccinated employees. Although a number of centers apparently now welcome back their former unvaccinated employees, it appears that not many as hoped wanted to return to a former employer that treated them that way. Thus, I maintain that the vast majority of those currently working in the system are vaccinated, and heavily vaccinated at that.
So, if they are so heavily vaccinated, what is the probability that they are suffering cognitive issues? Well, from my recent (surprisingly popular) post about the goings on at Ohio State Medical Center, apparently numerous docs were retiring or going out on disability due to "neurological issues."
The "anecdotes" I cited in that post are further supported by two recent papers out of South Korea which found shocking negative impacts on cognitive abilities in those who underwent mRNA vaccination. A Midwestern Doctor did an excellent job in not only analyzing that paper but also putting the Korean studies into the context of what we already know about the cognitive impacts of the mRNA platform. I am going to bullet some of the numerous data points AMD cited, beginning with the South Korea studies which analyzed a large database of the inhabitants of Seoul where vaccination status was accurately recorded. It's not good:
1.One of their papers published in Nature (one of the top medical journals) found a 68% increase in depression, a 44% increase in anxiety, dissociative, stress-related, and somatoform disorders, a 93.4% increase in sleep disorders, a 77% decrease in schizophrenia, and a 32.8% decrease in bipolar disorder.
2.Another of their analyses was published by the senior author, again in a mainstream journal. It analyzed individuals over 65 and found COVID vaccination increased the risk of mild cognitive impairment 138% and the risk of Alzheimer's by 23%, and a smaller increase in vascular dementia and Parkinson's disease the authors did not deem to be significant.
In line with the above, I will include a couple of "anecdotes" written as subscriber comments to AMD's article which I found unsurprising and in keeping with my own professional experience and the data above:
Thank you for confirming what many of us have known for years. Within a few months of the jab, my mother developed severe cognitive issues. I personally labeled it 'sudden onset dementia.' The doctors have not diagnosed her issues as dementia but I worked on an Alzheimer's/Dementia unit years ago and the patients exhibited similar symptoms.
And another one:
Can confirm cognitive impairment is real. Nearly lost my job because my short term memory was severely impaired. Could not remember the 6 digit code generated by a crypto card used for signing on to computer systems. I had to enter 1 number, look down at the card again, enter 1 number, look again. This was just one of the manifestations. More complex equations, calculations and datasets were jumbled strings of nonsense. Finally got the info to go see a FLCCC affiliated physician and they started me on the very long road to some form of normalcy and productivity. I still have episodes of brain fog and multi-hour stretches where I'm unable to concentrate on complex topics, but the productive hours greatly outnumber those in deficit.
I myself had a close colleague who, in 2021, had to stop rounding in the ICU for several months after the mRNA vaccine because they couldn't remember critical details. Another colleague, Dr. Robert Jackson in Missouri, is a truly brilliant rheumatologist who has helped me develop and refine my therapeutic approaches in my Long Covid/Long Vax practice. He relayed to me that when he got Covid in late 2020, he developed "brain fog" that was somewhat manageable, but then after his vaccine in Feb. 2021, the cognitive deficits were greatly amplified (think spike in brain). The symptoms became so pronounced that he thought he was going to have to retire. He told me he would stare off into space, could not remember critical details, could not process or organize tasks etc. Luckily he found therapies which reversed this issue and he did not have to retire.
FURTHER EVIDENCE OF COGNITIVE HARMS
Lets go through some more of the evidence of cognitive harm, some of which I compiled myself, but I also liberally borrowed from AMD's comprehensive review titled, "We Now Have Proof The COVID Vaccines Damage Cognition."
I will bullet some of the major data sources they found:
- VAERS detected a massive spike in cognitive issues being reported to it after the COVID vaccines hit the market.
- Admissions to a nursing home significantly increased, shown by this large data set from the Netherlands.
- Ed Dowd has repeatedly documented a large increase in physical and cognitive disability throughout the adult population, beginning with the onset of the mRNA campaign:
- Steve Kirsch was contacted by a whistleblower who reported there had been a 25 fold increase in sudden dementia at the nursing home where she works.
- From Igor Chudov's article on the topic:
I own a small business and deal with many people and other small businesses. Most provided reliable service, would remember appointments, followed up on issues, and so on. I noticed that lately, some people have become less capable cognitively. They forget essential appointments, cannot concentrate, make crazy-stupid mistakes, and so on.
Igor's anecdote above was also supported by one of my best and oldest friends who is the mayor of a village of over 3,000 inhabitants. He reported to me that he finds he has to do a lot more tasks at town hall because things he used to be able to delegate kept not getting done or got done incorrectly.
- Igor Chudov also identified another dataset from the Netherlands which further corroborated a massive cognitive decline:
In the first quarter of 2023, there was a 24% increase in GP [general practioner] visits related to memory and concentration problems among adults (age 25 years and older) compared to the same period in 2020. This is evidenced by the latest quarterly research update from the GOR Network.
More specifically they found:
•No increase was observed in adults under 25 years old.
•A 31% increase was observed in those 24-44 years old.
•A 40% increase was observed in those 45-74 years old.
•A 18% increase was observed in those over 75 years old.
Now, although I have not yet presented the anecdotes of the medical errors reported to me yet, I initially questioned whether they were "Vaxxidents." One of the reasons I used the word "Vaxxident" is that I have been aware for a while now that motor vehicle accidents greatly increased during the pandemic. Since they started to increase in 2020 before the jabs, obviously that suggests that Long Covid may be a significant contributor, but the greater increases in 2021 suggest the jabs may have compounded the issue, almost like the case of Dr. Robert Jackson above.
The above chart [see the post] and the below comments are taken from the Substack of the brilliant actuary Mary Pat Campbell from her posts on the rise in motor vehicle accidents. Note that she hypothesizes that the rise was largely due to less people on roads and thus faster speeds, but, as you can tell, my hypothesis is a bit different. Anyway, she wrote:
The low for the period above occurred in February 2010, when there was only an average of 77.9 motor vehicle accident deaths per day.
Before that, the local high had been in July 2007, at a high of 141.6 deaths/day. The most recent high occurred in October 2022, at 144.6 deaths/day. Interesting it took 15 years to get back to that level… and that's not a good thing.
Then I picked out January 2022 — it was a low point for 2022, and January tends to be a low point for most years.
But I picked it out specifically so you could compare it against the rates in 2018 and 2019. That low in 2022 is only a few percentage points below the high from the pre-pandemic rates.
Also, per Brave Browser AI: "Record high in 2022: Fatal car crashes reached a record high in early 2022, with road safety experts attributing this to pandemic-fueled risky driving behaviors such as fewer seat belts, more speeding, and impaired driving."
If you look at the full historical data on traffic fatalities in Wikipedia, one data point jumped out at me, which is that in 2021 there was an 11.1% increase in per capita traffic fatalities compared to 2020. Not since 1945 has there been a double digit percent increase in this metric from one year to the next.
AMD's post even included a quote from me, which I will include (thus I am citing someone who is citing myself - weird :)
In my practice of treating vaccine injuries, one of the three most common symptoms I see is brain fog. So many of my patients had been in the prime of their lives, can now barely function, have significant cognitive impairment and need a lot of help from our nurses to carry out their treatment plans. I never imagined I would see any of this in people far younger than me and instead I see it every day. I bear witness to an immense amount of suffering on a daily basis that is hard to put into words."