Overwhelmed Intensive Care Units
The narrative of overwhelmed ICUs has building up over a long time, as shown by these Guardian headlines. | |
Date | March 2020 - Present |
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Description | From the beginning of the COVID-19 deep event came a drumroll of messages of overwhelmed Intensive Care Units (ICUs). In the large majority of cases, this was a lie. Revealingly, most countries have not increased number of ICU beds |
"Overwhelmed Intensive Care Units" at hospitals has been a mantra from the beginning of the COVID-19 deep event. In the large majority of cases, this was a direct lie. Hospitals, especially in the US, received large financial incentives to put people in ICUs.
Revealingly, most countries have not increased number of ICU beds since March 2020 at all, and many have reduced them. By October 2021 he "overwhelmed ICUs" was used as a pretext for denial of access to health services, directed against no recipients of the experimental "COVID vaccines".
Germany
At the beginning of the event in March 2020, there were around 28,000 intensive care beds in Germany. Politicians spoke gravely of the issue and gave almost 700 million euros to the hospitals for 13,700 additional beds[1]. So theoretically it should be 41,700 intensive care beds available by November 2021. In reality there were only 22,230 beds and, according to the intensive care register, only 2,439 of them are free. The beds were paid for by the taxpayer and are physically there - mostly still in their original packaging in the basement.[2]
Australia
In April 2020 the Premier of the state of Victoria, which went hard on the Corona-narrative, announced the creation of 4000 new ICU beds, in addition to the existing 450-500. By August 2021, the actual number had been reduced to 437.[3]
References
- ↑ https://www.aerzteblatt.de/archiv/220623/Intensivbetten-Aufklaerung-ueber-13-700-Betten
- ↑ https://www.nachdenkseiten.de/?p=78143
- ↑ https://www.news.com.au/national/victoria/politics/questions-raised-over-victorian-premiers-promise-of-13-billion-for-4000-icu-beds-in-april-2020/news-story/2e65cabf621fc0be65a84476238256a4