If he’s competent to make his own medical decisions, then HE decides which interventions and treatments he is willing to receive. He may decline and and all of them. If he truly doesn’t want this fight, it’s up to him to say so to the doctors, and to consider an alternative such as hospice care.
If he isn’t competent to make his own decisions, then it’s more complicated.
My dad died earlier this year of cancer. He made the decision not to fight it - wisely, in my opinion. It is very difficult for everyone involved.
Kate Dalley’s husband had ordinary pneumonia for about 7 days before going to the hospital for oxygen, at which the medical establishment turned it into ‘Covid pneumonia’.
...
Her husband (56, overweight, unvaccinated, diabetic) had been taking Ivermectin but she said, in hindsight, since the dose is based on bodyweight, if they had upped the dose, she believes they may have been able to bypass going into the hospital.
Do I understand her correctly that her husband never had Covid at all, yet he was taking Ivermectin? Does Ivermectin cure ordinary pneumonia?
Shows this snowflake publisher, ‘the consumer is king!’
Yes, it's a great idea to reward the snowflake publisher that made this ridiculous decision with massive sales. They're making more money than ever! What lesson, exactly, do you expect them to learn from this?
That's not quite true. When he realized it wasn't playing well that he bugged out off to Cancun, he lied. Then he lied again. Then he lied some more. That was wrong.
Interesting. I find it almost counter-intuitive...
No, it makes sense. What woman would want to get the coronavirus - or take a brand-new rushed out vaccine - while she's pregnant? I suspect a lot of women got very careful about birth control when the pandemic news started coming out.