Evidence: Interview Recording
The staff didn't want to interact, touch or care properly
Male nurse was handling her roughly, staff did not attend to her nurse calls, would not help her go to bathroom before catheter.
On September 2, 2021, my mother Patricia Green was murdered by St. Joseph Hospital, in Riverview Florida. She was admitted to the hospital on August 17, with difficulty breathing. Her oxygen was below 70%, at which time her primary care physician instructed her Husband, my Father, to get to the hospital ASAP. At this point she had been Covid positive for 12 days, and this was 19 days after her onset of symptoms. Once under their care they immediately started her on Remdesivir, though she had just been released from another hospital on August 15 and refused that treatment, as well was advised by the physician on duty that if she didn’t take the treatment by the 14th she couldn’t get it as it was out of the 10 day window.
At St. Joseph, our only contact with her was texts and video chats to her directly. While in the hospital she suffered two medical mistakes that happened. First, on August 25th, her original release date, the the respiratory therapist left her oxygen tank empty for 1 hr. Second, on August 30 where the Care Tech left her oxygen line unplugged from the wall for 4 to 5 hours. During this time in the hospital they did not give her any of her meds that she takes for her lupus, hydrocloriquine being one, or her nasal rinses to keep her passages clear. This lead to issues they said with her lungs taking in the oxygen meaning they would have to intubate and put her on a ventilator.
With only minutes to make a decision as they were rushing my father off the phone, and my sister couldn’t get a clear answer from my mom on what she wanted because they already started sedation meds, they consented. And two days later, she died. Before she died we were able to see her and see one, they had been giving her fentanyl, 3 blood pressure meds, and insulin. We noticed her catheter bag, there was little output and it was brown, at that point we knew her kidneys were failing. But she never took insulin and never had any kidney issues.
We have had hard times trying to find a lawyer that will look into her case. We have her medical records and autopsy report. We know that had it not been for 1, the remdesivir, the two the mistakes by her care team, and lack of care (following the treatment plan, and proper hygiene) she would have been released as she was from the other hospital. We have recordings from the hospital line and conversations with her nurse in her final days where he admitted to not doing checks, and checking previous orders from the physician. We need help finding council that will take the case in FL. I have reached out to several lawyers to no avail. Please help us get justice for my mother.
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Testimony Clips 17
The following clips were extracted from Patricia Green's recorded testimony interview. Each captures a key moment relevant to one or more of the 25 documented COVID protocol commonalities.
“"Her life before COVID and before being forced in, to taking these remdesivir treatment... She was generally happy person, joyful. People love to be around her. She was definitely a people person... My mom was a very beautiful soul, and her life was taken too soon.”
“"She's calling. She's pushing the button to call the nurse because she can tell, like, you know, she's not getting the air flow that she needs. They're not coming... [The nurse said] oh, I'm sorry. I, you know, I don't know how I let that happen... like, swollen almost literally like her kidneys are shutting down... they put a catheter in me two days ago because they got tired of me asking them to help me to the bathroom.”
“"I really believe that that's part of the reason why they were so quick to put her on the intubator because they didn't want her to voice these things. They didn't want her to tell these things while she was still alive...”
“"They actually tried to say that, she was going through dementia, and she and she wasn't. She just refused. Like, they ended up, cuffing her to the bed because every time they would try to intubate her, she'd pull it out. Because she was like, I don't I don't want this.”
“"We know, We've read. We've seen other stories of the same similar thing where you go in the hospital, they separate you, isolate you from your family members where they can't see you. They can't advocate on your behalf.”
“"I call my dad. They're not answering... why are they intubating mama? She was just fine talking, alert... I can't tell you anything. Well, they ended up putting her intubating her.”
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