There were 38,000,000 flu cases the winter of 2019-2020.
There were only 1,800 flu cases the winter of 2020-2021.
That’s because hospitals got paid $13,000 for every Fauci/China biological warfare virus diagnosis, and $39,000 for every biological warfare virus patient they slapped on a ventilator to kill them.
https://www.factcheck.org/2020/04/hospital-payments-and-the-covid-19-death-count/
Hospitals are rolling in dough from all the money they made on the contract killings. The university hospital in my college town is building multiple new wings.
According to the CDC’s own numbers, the Fauci/China biological warfare virus has a 99.74% survival rate.
75% of the people who died from it had four or more comorbidities.
None of this should have ever happened. It is a crime against humanity that it did.
What has all that to do with Russia’s Covid death count?
Wow. A whole $13,000.
I actually thought the amount for killing patients was $36,000…..must be an inflation increase.
To some people, $39,000 is a tremendous amount of money.
To some people a sudden payment of $39,000 is like winning the lottery.
To other people, mostly in business, or blessed, $39,000 isn’t really huge, nice but not life altering.
To other people, that don’t get their medical education from Blogs or Twitter, they understand that ONE day in an ICU bed could cost anywhere from $20,000-$30,000 and just 36 hours can easily surpass $39,000.
Most, if not all Covid patients in ICU with supplemental breathing, or intubated are there for many days, commonly weeks before they’re moved into a rehab ward/bed.
So using the minimal amount of daily ICU cost of $20,000 X 14 days (2 weeks) comes to $280,000.
If the Hospitals are in it to make money, one would have to be a special kind of stupid to think or believe that they’re going to kill off someone for $39,000 when keeping them alive generates at least $280,000.
The longer they live, the more money they generate.
Then, after they’re off the vent, the patient enters rehab. A specialized ward that also is expensive but not as much as the ICU.