Posted on 11/29/2021 8:54:44 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Sun Ng, saved from death in a hospital by a wise judge, a doctor, a lawyer and several doses of ivermectin, back home in his daughter’s Illinois home.
Trista Ng asked officials at Edward Hospital again and again. Give my father ivermectin for covid.
“Numerous times” the Naperville, Illinois, hospital told her no, she said. No to an FDA-approved drug. No to her offer to release the hospital of “any liability.”
“The doctors and administration refused,” she wrote in a plea to DuPage County Circuit Court Judge Paul Fullerton, who on November 5 answered with a simple yes, telling hospital administrators, “Step aside.”
Last Saturday, nineteen days after his first of five court-ordered ivermectin doses, Sun Ng, seventy-one, came home: To a joyful wife of forty years, Ying. To a year-old granddaughter, Kaylie. To a son-in-law, Hayden, and a daughter who asked only—after the hospital’s menu of Covid care had failed—to give her father “a fighting chance.”
“My dad is home today,” Trista Ng texted me after her father’s discharge, with a photo of Sun Ng, a retired contractor from Hong Kong who is staying with his daughter, waving tentatively for the camera. This was an elderly man who two weeks before, and five days into his ivermectin treatment, awoke from a medically induced coma and pulled out his endotracheal tube; a man who at that point was confused, weak, and unable to swallow, speak, or walk. He may have a long rehabilitation ahead, but the worst appears to be over.
On Saturday, Ying Ng, also seventy-one, baby in her arms, watched from the window as ambulance attendants carried her husband up the few steps of the family’s townhome in Aurora. “Your grandpa is coming back,” she said excitedly, her daughter recalled, adding, “It was very welcoming.”
During his twenty-five days in a medically induced coma, Sun Ng’s chances of survival dropped along with his health. First, 50 percent, then 30 percent, then, acknowledged in a doctor’s testimony to the court, 10 to 15 percent.
The case appeared to turn on a conversation that Ng’s daughter had with a hospital doctor and that Dr. Ng recounted for the judge in a written statement.
“Dr. Greenhill specifically told me, ‘The situation hasn’t changed. I mean there is nothing, there is nothing different,’” she wrote from notes of their conversation. “Dr. Greenhill specifically told me that my dad ‘has a high risk of dying.’”
“I should be thinking of ‘hospice, transition to comfort care, and end of life care...’” a nurse told Ng’s daughter. She declined that advice.
Instead, on Sunday, a physical therapist visited the Ng home and found the patient stronger than he expected, Dr. Ng said. Her father is lifting his arms and legs and standing momentarily with the help of a walker. She credits the judge’s order.
“I think all the improvement was because of the ivermectin,” she told me. “In three weeks, there was no improvement. They didn’t do anything new. ‘Wait and see,’ those were their words.”
As Sun Ng hovered “at death’s doorstep,” as his daughter put it, the hospital doctor had suggested that the family should also consider that his international insurance had run out.
“(H)e doesn’t have any more insurance to cover further treatments,” said Dr. Greenhill, as quoted in Trista Ng’s statement. “Since he is not a citizen, he is not eligible for nursing home or other facilities.”
Dr. Pierre Kory is president of the Front Line COVIC-19 Critical Care Alliance and a leading advocate of ivermectin; his work was cited in Trista Ng’s plea for court intervention.
I asked what he thought of that statement. “How a physician could bring up a patient’s ability to pay for care while fighting for their life,” Kory wrote in an email, “is another sign of how much of medicine and many doctors have lost their way, intellectually, morally, and ethically.”
Said Trista Ng: “We haven’t got the bill yet, but we expect it to be huge. We will seek charity help on the hospital bill.
“My dad’s recovery is the first priority at the moment.”
Ping for your interest
flr
A Rittenhouse for the savage health mob.
Take them to court and take them down.
Our Medical System has been
Forced into this,
Follow the Money.
God bless this family and their fighting spirit.
BTW.....
PING
In before some corporate medical technician scoffs at the “Ivermectin lovers.”
And, the Big Pharma reps ;-)
At least they can say that’s what their job is. A hangman shouldn’t have to apologize for hanging people. :)
I have similar story someone saved by monoclated antibodies late stage Covid pneumonia and prayer
A rural hospital in Tenneseee.....Maury county general....a Vandy heart outpost agreed to try even though he was Covid pneumonia and in bad shape
They agreed to treat a near death friend who drove from Louisville ....his family brought him off ventilator
O2 was 78% and respiration rates over 23
Imminent death
He started improving in 10 hours
Don’t let anyone tell you it can’t be attempted with low O2
Or some idiot doctor claims no hospital administration tells them what to do
Yeah. That probably depends on whether they are on staff or just have hospital privileges.
The meme, “Step aside” is a rallying cry! Corporate medicine is a socialist hive of health care mercenaries, selling their souls, bodies and talents to totally immoral corporate tyrants willing to withold life saving meds and procedures.
And yet my wife’s ex brother in law got Covid and found a Dr who prescribed Ivermectin. He called continued to get worse. He’s now hospitalized and has now been vented. I’m not sure the treatment routine he’s now on under, but ivermectin wasn’t a wonder drug.
Wouldn’t be easier and faster to show up at an attending physician home with 45 Colt and just say hey this is what your going to do while no one cares or watching. Otherwise I will kill your dog, parents, wife, kids, mailman, and possibly your Amazon delivery man. Joking. Somewhat. But joking.
Sadly, I used to have such respect for this hospital...
I think their actions were despicable!
I will add that Edwards Hospital is affiliated with Elmhurst Hospital.
Some may recall Elmhurst Hospital was in the news a few months ago. A family had to sue them to get Ivermectin for the mom. Almost identical situation. She had been in ICU for nearly a month and put on a vent. Hospital had to be sued. Oh and last I heard, she had improved.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3956376/posts
You wonder why this all feels strangely familiar?
If you’re old enough, you may remember THIS:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=_NELRAz2Xqo
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