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Systemic Euthanasia
#31
Our troubles with midazolam: a story of death, dying and a powerful drug

 
Quote:Although midazolam has no analgesic properties, it was repeatedly described to us as a “breakthrough drug”, implying that it was being used to suppress spikes in pain above the level the prescribed doses of painkillers could handle. We believe this terminology is highly misleading.
Quote:According to one recent article in the UK Daily Mail, whistleblowers have claimed they were told to administer the drug to stop confused patients wandering. The article also reports that: “Retired neurologist Professor Patrick Pullicino, who was instrumental in raising concerns a decade ago that the Liverpool Care Pathway was bringing forward patients’ deaths, believes the jump indicated something similar had happened. He said: ‘Midazolam depresses respiration and it hastens death. It changes end-of-life care into euthanasia.’”
Quote:About a week before my father died in a private hospital from aggressive cancer, he complained that he had been administered a “nightmare drug”.
He said nursing staff had told him they had tried something new with his medication, a “breakthrough medicine”, but it hadn’t worked. He was told he had experienced a bad reaction.
The “nightmare drug”, he said, had robbed him of any power over his body. He was quite traumatized while telling us about it
 
Quote:Dad said the worst effect of the drug was that he was unable to tell the nursing staff he was in pain. He had become used to telling them when the pain level rose above the capacity of the morphine he was on to control, and we had become familiar with the term “breakthrough drug” to refer to top-ups of painkiller. Because of the “nightmare drug” he had lain for some hours unable to move or speak, but suffering serious pain until it wore off enough for him to be able to speak again.
Quote:I spoke to the nursing staff about this. They named the drug as midazolam. I was told it was used to deal with “breakthrough pain”, but clearly it didn’t work in Dad’s case. Only later did I discover that midazolam has no analgesic properties. Not only that: it may actually increase perceptions of pain.
Quote:Now I wonder if his ability to communicate his pain was suppressed by sedatives. I wonder if he died in pain, after all, but that he was unable to tell us about the pain because he was sedated with midazolam. I wonder whether I let him down by not understanding what was happening.
 
Quote:But the more we read, the more we feared that midazolam, by rendering patients inert and uncommunicative, might even hasten death without reducing suffering. We believe it can reduce the ability of patients to communicate important facts about their pain and other aspects of their condition. We believe it is misleading to assert that the inert state which can be induced by doses of Midazolam, is a natural part of the process of dying.
Quote:Nurses and doctors directly involved in these cases and in facilities where the drug is often used were anxious to assure me that midazolam is a “breakthrough drug” used to quash pain that spikes above the opiate painkillers. When I observed that this was not a very accurate picture to paint, since it is known and accepted worldwide that the drug has zero analgesic properties, they said it was used along with painkillers to alleviate distress.
Quote:Professor David Henry is a clinical pharmacologist with a worldwide reputation. I had interviewed him often in a professional capacity and I knew him to be honest, compassionate and ethical.
After a short search I located him at Bond University in Queensland, and told him our stories. I asked him whether I was barking up the wrong tree by harbouring concerns about the use of midazolam in the palliative care setting. I honestly hoped he would convince me I was wrong to be concerned.
Asking hard questionsInstead he said he knew exactly what I was talking about and he told me that he had personally insisted that no such sedatives be used on his mother when she was dying. He encouraged me to ask the hard questions and to ask them publicly.
Quote:midazolam actually increased the acuity of perception of cold, heat and pain, “contrary to the belief of many clinicians that sedative drugs will reduce pain perception”. The paper goes on to describe the belief on the part of many practitioners that adding a sedative like midazolam is a solution when pain relief medications aren’t quite achieving the desired level of relief. It suggests this belief is mistaken. Our personal experiences would lead us to agree.
Quote:Even the Wikipedia entry for midazolam states that the drug should be used with “additional caution in the elderly as they are more sensitive to the pharmacological effects of benzodiazepines, metabolise them more slowly, and are more prone to adverse effects, including drowsiness, amnesia (especially anterograde amnesia), ataxia, hangover effects, confusion, and falls”. Also: “Additional caution is required in critically ill patients, as accumulation of midazolam and its active metabolites may occur. Kidney or liver impairments may slow down the elimination of midazolam leading to prolonged and enhanced effects.”
Quote:We asked Professor Pullicino (quoted early in this post) to comment on our accounts. This is what he wrote:
 
“Midazolam should not be being used in the situation of those who are thought to be at risk of dying, as guidelines clearly state. it should not be used in those that are debilitated or elderly. It should never be given to treat confusion as the way to treat this is to withdraw all sedatives or hypnotics. We must do all we can to make the use of this drug illegal as an end of life “care” agent which it is not. It is an anxiolytic with strong quick effects and should only be used for conscious sedation under supervision by an anaesthetist or by buccal or rectal route for seizures.”
A number of people we have spoken to informally about our experiences have described similar situations and we believe a widespread and serious issue may exist.


A drug causes conscious sedation , wont reduce pain , prevents patient communicate enough , and may simply cause death . A drug from hell . It shows what todays " care " can be.... It should be illegal in any normal use, nurse homes...
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#32
(04-12-2024, 06:26 AM)ArMaP Wrote: PS: one question, are you in favour or against the death penalty?

That's not a yes or no question.

The death penalty is the ultimate punishment, and once carried out cannot be corrected. Therefore, it must be applied only in cases where no doubt exists whatsoever about guilt. where there are no extenuating circumstances, and only for the most severe crimes. That's how Alabama operates: capital charges can only be brought where there was either multiple murders or where a murder was committed during another violent felony. Still, most cases that could be charged with capital punishment are not.

There is also a mandatory review process all the way to the Alabama Supreme Court, then the Governor has to set an execution date (meaning she could easily "pocket veto" any capital conviction since the execution order has a date). However, given those tight restrictions, yes, I do support capital punishment. There are simply people in this world who can never be released into society, some who are even dangerous to other prisoners serving terms and the correction officers! I see no reasonable solution when someone has regressed to the point that they have zero respect for the lives of others.

TheRedneck
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#33
John Campbell made recently video about same topic .


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#34
More about the horrendous practise in UK .





Alternativve video link :  Rumble


Playing God: An Investigation Into Medical Democide in the UK
Quote:Story at-a-glance
  • "Playing God: An Investigation into Medical Democide in the UK" is a documentary film investigating allegations of harmful medical practices and policies in the U.K. health care system
  • The film critically examines the unethical and potentially deadly use of medical protocols and medications in the National Health Service (NHS), suggesting they have led to patient harm and deaths under the guise of government policies
  • The documentary features testimonials from families affected by these dangerous practices, as well as analyses from medical professionals and legal experts
  • “Medical democide,” — death or harm caused by government policies or health care practices — appears widespread in the NHS
  • The film suggests that systemic issues deeply ingrained in NHS protocols hinder the delivery of humane care, from birth to the end of life
Quote:NHS Has Become a ‘Killing Machine’“In the last 30 years,” says Kevin Corbett, Ph.D., in the film, “you can see good evidence that the National Health Service has become the killing machine.”[sup]1[/sup] He explains:[sup]2[/sup]
Quote:“Toward the end of the 1980s, in medical, nursing and health care practice, the development of evidence-based medicine was seen as very positive. And evidence-based medicine sounded really good, because the idea was doctors, nurses and health care practitioners are not basing their clinical practice on much evidence or the best evidence or any evidence.
Quote:So, hey, let’s make some evidence, let’s look at what really works and apply it. It sounds so believable and so benign.
Quote: And, hey, presto, by the 1990s, doctors, nurses and all health care professionals practice was being geared by protocols and shaped by protocols. And once those protocols were instituted, it became very difficult for doctors, nurses and other health care professionals to use their own clinical acumen with patients.
Quote:The had to follow protocols, and in those protocols you’ve seen the administration of drugs like midazolam in dosages that are potentially lethal.”
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