To: semimojo
Medical records are private. You know, HIPAA and all that. There’s no chance an embalmer has this information for most bodies. You’ve made a sweeping claim. Can you prove it?
I’m pretty sure cause of death is on the death certificate, and last I heard the death certificate is provided with the body when the mortician receives it. Does HIPAA even apply to deceased people? How does it apply to funeral homes?
27 posted on
02/15/2022 6:51:18 AM PST by
no-s
(Jabonera, urna, jurado, cartucho ... ya sabes cómo va...)
To: semimojo
oops! I realized you meant vaccination status, not cause of death. However your claim doesn’t invalidate reports of an increase in odd clots coinciding with an increase of vaccination. Of course those clots could form post-mortem and thus lack direct relevance to death.
I read Kirsch daily and some of the material is dubious. However the official data is full of crap too and tends to dismiss concerns out of hand without the due diligence of serious consideration.
29 posted on
02/15/2022 7:01:06 AM PST by
no-s
(Jabonera, urna, jurado, cartucho ... ya sabes cómo va...)
To: no-s
I’m pretty sure cause of death is on the death certificate, and last I heard the death certificate is provided with the body when the mortician receives it...It is, but it's not going to say anything about vaccination status.
...Does HIPAA even apply to deceased people? How does it apply to funeral homes?
It applies for 50 years after death and there's an exception for funeral directors to process the death certificate - so I answered my own question there.
32 posted on
02/15/2022 8:06:39 AM PST by
semimojo
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