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Biden’s Bounty on Your Life: Hospitals’ Incentive Payments for Fauci Flu Maltreatment and Death


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2021 Nov 23, 10:37pm   9,209 views  74 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   💰tip   ignore  

https://healthimpactnews.com/2021/governments-bounty-on-your-life-hospitals-incentive-payments-for-covid-19-is-about-100k-per-covid-patient/?source=patrick.net


The CARES Act provides incentives for hospitals to use treatments dictated solely by the federal government under the auspices of the NIH. These “bounties” must paid back if not “earned” by making the COVID-19 diagnosis and following the COVID-19 protocol.

The hospital payments include:

A “free” required PCR test in the Emergency Room or upon admission for every patient, with government-paid fee to hospital.
Added bonus payment for each positive COVID-19 diagnosis.
Another bonus for a COVID-19 admission to the hospital.
A 20 percent “boost” bonus payment from Medicare on the entire hospital bill for use of remdesivir instead of medicines such as Ivermectin.
Another and larger bonus payment to the hospital if a COVID-19 patient is mechanically ventilated.
More money to the hospital if cause of death is listed as COVID-19, even if patient did not die directly of COVID-19.
A COVID-19 diagnosis also provides extra payments to coroners.
CMS implemented “value-based” payment programs that track data such as how many workers at a healthcare facility receive a COVID-19 vaccine. Now we see why many hospitals implemented COVID-19 vaccine mandates. They are paid more.

Outside hospitals, physician MIPS quality metrics link doctors’ income to performance-based pay for treating patients with COVID-19 EUA drugs. Failure to report information to CMS can cost the physician 4% of reimbursement.

Because of obfuscation with medical coding and legal jargon, we cannot be certain of the actual amount each hospital receives per COVID-19 patient. But Attorney Thomas Renz and CMS whistleblowers have calculated a total payment of at least $100,000 per patient.



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73   Patrick   2024 Oct 4, 3:01pm  

https://xnumber11x.substack.com/p/breaking-the-oath-to-do-no-harm





What we were not aware of was that she had been picked as one of the COVID-19 fatalities.

And yes, I said picked.

We are most assuredly aware of how you purposefully and intentionally killed her, murdered her, if I may.

She begged for water. She begged to breathe on her own. She begged for care. She begged to have someone who would listen to her.

No one would come into her room when we paged for a nurse or other hospital staff. I, her sister, was there for only two full days at two separate times and saw this firsthand.

She told me she was fearful of you. She expressed she was not being cared for. She told me this. I tried to talk to nurses. I even talked to her doctor directly.

He was East Indian. I cannot recall his name or don't know if he ever tried to even tell me. His bedside manner was horrific.

I told him my concerns. He dismissed me.

I was adamant that I knew of the COVID-19 protocols. I had done my own in-depth research.

I knew that she had asked for Ivermectin at the previous hospital. They refused to give it to her.

They asked her to take Remdesivir, what we all know has a 53% rate of causing death. It is essentially a poison. That has been widely discussed in many articles from the National Health Institutes, and the CDC, and many different media outlets from Europe and other countries....

You picked people to kill, to let die. You singled them out and separated them from their families intentionally.

They laid in agony away from loved ones and eventually began to give up the will to live. No one was there to advocate for them. No one could demand that they be fed, have water, have vitamins, and be given life-saving medication and treatment. ...

My sister was tied down. She was treated like an animal. She was treated with such inhumanity.

You did it intentionally and with extreme malice. There was no need to do that.

Can you imagine doing this to your own loved one? It is barbaric.

We took her hands out to hold them, to show her that we were there to love her, to do what we could. We knew that when we left, the nurse would put them back into the restraint.

Talk about an emotional, overwhelming situation. I was inconsolable when I left her room at the end of visiting hours. To watch someone you would die for be treated like that was inexcusable.

I was terrified that me speaking up or more making a commotion would cause them to do even more harm to her. To neglect her further.

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