DNR at 38 years of age

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Published 2024-05-20
Unnecessary deaths are a tragedy in themselves, but also distorted the covid fatality data.

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Witness statements:

Lianne Menzies- www.covid19inquiry.scot/sites/default/files/ev-doc…

DNACPR (DNR)
44. They asked Jamie five times to sign a DNR, a do not resuscitate document and he kept telling them no.

The following day (28th March) they asked him again and
it was five times in total that they asked him to sign a DNR.

There were two other occasions and he repeatedly said they would need to speak to me.

46. Jamie got upset enough about this that he called me; he wanted me to reassure him that I wouldn't agree to it. He was terrified.

He never signed one and there were never any conversations about DNR before.

They eventually tested him for Covid. Jamie was initially told that the result was negative but then the doctor came round to see him later that day and said he had tested positive. He said the doctor thought he was over the worst of it.

My friend works in the hospital, and she said that there had been e-mails and a leaflet sent out to say who would and wouldn't get treatment so I knew Jamie wouldn't get it.

53. On 4th April Jamie facetimed me; he looked really well. He was up and dressed. Jamie's oxygen must have been reduced because I had no trouble hearing him. He was laughing and joking away. I thought he must have been getting better and I would get him home soon. I asked if he was getting out and he said he would ask the doctor.

Bereavement.

57. She asked if I understood that Jamie was
going to die. I said absolutely not as he was sitting up in bed joking yesterday.

60. They gave Jamie midazolam to help him sleep. I went home but asked them to phone me and I would come straight back as I didn't want him to be alone.

61. I got a call the next morning (8th April 2020) to ask me to go back to the hospital. They said, 'it was time.' When I arrived, there were five nurses in the room with him in case I didn't arrive in time.

62. Jamie was in and out of consciousness most of that day; he was scared because he was having trouble breathing. He kept grabbing onto the bed rails frantically and shouting to me as he struggled to breath.

The palliative care team came in and asked if I would like them to give him something to make him more comfortable; I agreed. They rotated the midazolam with morphine.

63. Jamie passed away at 11.29pm that night. Before Jamie passed away, we got married. He had been asking me and up until he became really ill, I had always said no not until you are better. I thought it was the last thing I could have done for him. He knew what was going on, a nurse took a video, and they got rings from the lost and found.

64. My mum got the chaplain, and we were able to get married in the hospital.

All Comments (21)
  • @hear.no.evil.
    My mother died alone in a care home whilst we her children were forced to wait in the next room for the results of a lateral flow test. She could have seen us, we could have held her hand. What the state and the NHS did to us is beyond disgusting. To deny a dying woman the right to say goodbye.
  • @MrGlennjones
    "Help him sleep"- yeah, the big sleep. Murder plain and simple
  • @terrymartin4329
    An elderly friend of mine aged 81 fell at hoime and hurt his arm. In my humble opinion his wrist and lower arm was badly bruised, but his brother insisted that he should go to hospital for an X ray. When he arrived at Antrim Area Hospital, he was taken off for an X ray which showed that he had no broken bones, but he was diagnosed with covid and admitted to a ward. He had no breathing problems and had shown no signs of covid, but within a few hours, he was put on a ventilator and by midnight he had died. In my humble opinion, the Hospital murdered him for the COVID bounty. Nice little earner for the trust, eh?
  • @dilwich
    Governments and the pharma industry need to be on trial . . . .
  • @ianhassall3757
    We must never ever have a situation when people are banned from visiting sick people in hospital. Sick people need an advocate to protect them.
  • @captindo
    He was murdered. That’s a crime punishable by imprisonment. Many doctors if not all are complicit with this nightmare.
  • @montanagal6958
    I'm a hospital RN and refused to sign a DNR recently when I had to "be a patient". DNR has become a license to kill.
  • @rubyred8845
    And yet these evil nursing staff and doctors are still working with your loved ones.
  • @123lodge8
    My husbands grandmother, 90, was in the hospital years ago with the flu. They didn’t feed her for 5 days and she naturally started to decline. They asked my father in law to convince her to sign a DNR. Instead he insisted they FEED her. With food, she immediately perked up and went home 3 days later.
  • @johndewever1322
    These jabbing nurses and others have shown themselves to be monsters
  • @scofair5551
    MPs under WEF, don't want a proper enquiry. This speaks louder than words as they depart from the Commons when Andrew Bridgen raises the subject.
  • @Phi-hz9xj
    Now I know how they killed my mother in hospital Jan 2021. Same pressure to agree to DNR 4-5 times in one night.
  • @jolyons7370
    Disgraceful, this man was only 38 years old. It’s so difficult to grasp the evilness of it all.
  • He was murdered. No other explanation, murdered. The public outcry should be deafening, nothing but SILENCE.
  • Horrible, horrable treatment. He could have gone home. Instead, he was put to sleep. I call that, murder.
  • @rebeccar1036
    This was done by the very same healthcare professionals for which people ridiculously stood outside and gave a standing ovation. Not only criminal but immoral.
  • @Brittlane9660
    My mother was killed in a hospital in the U.S. She was talking on her phone and doing well enough that the nurse told me “She’s got a pretty mild case”. They gave her Remdesivir and within 24 hours her vitals started to tank.