If they were told that the virus was killing them, they are correct to deny it:
The treatment protocols kill patients.
Due to an offensive on the free exchange of information and 1A, those patients lack the knowledge to demand adequate care and also lack knowledge of their rights to a medical advocate when sequestered within a corporate or state medical facility under ‘covid guidelines’.
Is the Medical Advocate the same as a Medical Power of Attorney, or is it a lawyer whose specialty is medical issues?
IIRC Medical Power of Attorney is only for the case where someone can’t speak for themselves, so the MPOA person follows the patients wishes, per the legally executed documents drawn up beforehand.
And those docs are provided to the doctors and hospital.
What I’d like to know is, can specific treatments and procedures be put on the advance directive legal documents (ex: no O2 tube, no remdesivir, yes to nose & face O2, yes to monoclonal antibodies, yes to HCQ/Ivermectin + azithromax/doxycycline + zinc, yes to vitamins C and D)?