The Health Care Catastrophe is Here

My father-in-law sees a different doctor at the same practice that I used to go to, the one where my doctor left due to the vaccine mandate. Last week he told me that everyone has quit there except for his doctor and now his doctor is doing the work of all the previous doctors too.

I looked at their web page and sure enough, it’s just that doctor and the practice manager listed as personnel. Previously there were those two plus two other doctors and a Physician Assistant.

The Physician Assistant is the more surprising one. She was a fixture at my previous doctor’s office prior to it being transitioned to a practice owned by a hospital. She stayed even though he retired maybe a year after the transition and became a fixture at the current office. A look at her LinkedIn profile says she had been a PA for my previous doctor since 2002 until it became the current office in 2011 and that she was a PA for this office since then. So, 20 years of experience treating the local population gone just like that. She’s not of retirement age, either.

Meanwhile, social media is riddled with posts like this:

This falls in line with what the November 2021 Hospital IQ survey said:

Nurses considering leaving: 90 percent are considering leaving the nursing profession in the next year, with 71 percent of RNs that have over 15 years’ experience thinking about leaving as soon as possible or within the next few months.

I’m sure my old doctor’s office isn’t the only one like this and other hospitals and health care offices have clearly been understaffed for a while now. Thus, the health care catastrophe that was looming at the beginning of this year is now fully realized. Normies don’t understand that a democide of western nations is occurring, so the average person doesn’t stand a chance at fully understanding the fallout from this.

Update 05/18/22 – I received a long letter from my hospital system that had my previous primary care doctor with a subject of why their emergency departments are overloaded. I didn’t read it. Who would’ve thunk that running out your primary care physicians, nurses and others, then adding vaccine-injured and immunocompromised individuals into the mix would cause emergency departments to be overloaded?