Posted on 04/06/2022 10:01:51 AM PDT by nickcarraway
“I thought the same thing, but it appears to be related to metastatic breast cancer cancer:”
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Party pooper!🤦🏼
sadly, yes.
Yep. The Jabs.
She was a Baltimore girl too. I’m wondering about the Vax. My 2nd cousin in the UK is 25 and had a problem with a “brain bleed” a few days ago and have wondered about the same.
Guess it’s too much to hope that folks would express some sympathy and STFU.
“PEDIATRIC CARDIAC ANESTHESIOLOGIST”
Now there’s a specialty for you. Wonder how many childrens’ hearts get operated on.
Well I hate being right all the time.
You know you don’t need to know the cause of everyone’s death.
I hope they have to have a therapist in that profession. It must be tough seeing kids go through that all the times.
Very sad. Another life lost because of the evil ones.
Yes, I suppose, but without an autopsy and results released publicly we’ll just be speculating.
She either died from the cancer or from the jab, but we’ll never know.
Do you think you might be swallowing a carefully-crafted narrative, designed to deceive?
LOL, coffee spray all over the screen.
How many...are you asking about before or after the advent of COVID injections?
No, her death could easily have been the result of a vaccine induced blood clot. My only point is we’ll never know. And she did have metastatic breast cancer. There are many possible complications that can kill you, not only from the disease but also from the chemo, radiation, etc so speculation is fruitless.
““I thought the same thing, but it appears to be related to metastatic breast cancer cancer:””
“...Her death was sudden and unexpected....”
That “sudden and unexpected” cancer.
You’re playing soccer one minute and then you’re dead from sudden and unexpected cancer the next.
No word locally here at Duke either. I’ve been out of town, but will hear the cause of death soon. I knew her to see her, but did not know her well.
“ That “sudden and unexpected” cancer”
Her cancer was diagnosed three years ago. Breast cancer in premenopausal women is often extremely aggressive.
From a November 2020 article:
“Meet Kelly Machovec, M.D., 42, a pediatric anesthesiologist who was diagnosed in 2017
For Kelly Machovec, M.D., a pediatric anesthesiologist at Duke University Hospital in Durham, NC, being diagnosed three years ago with metastatic breast cancer came as an even bigger-than-usual shock. Dr. Machovec not only had no major risk factors or family history, but she also had never had breast cancer before. In fact, the day before her mammogram and breast ultrasound to examine the lump she’d found in the shower, she had just done a 10-mile trail race with her husband.
“My husband and I were turning 40 so we decided to do one running race every month,” she says. “When I found out I had metastatic breast cancer, I had run my best half-marathon ever a few weeks before. I was completely shellshocked to learn that there was cancer in my spine.”
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