Midazolam can cause serious or life-threatening breathing problems such
as shallow, slowed, or temporarily stopped breathing that may lead to
permanent brain injury or death, and UK regulators state that you should
only receive midazolam in a hospital or doctor’s office that has the
equipment that is needed to monitor your heart and lungs and to provide
life-saving medical treatment quickly if your breathing slows or stops.
The
drug, which is criminally used in palliative care in the United Kingdom
despite not being on the WHO’s list of essential palliative care
medicines, should also be used with extreme caution in elderly patients.
But despite this, Matt Hancock and the Department of Health
ordered two years worth of Midazolam in March 2020 in response to the
introduction of the first lockdown. A two year supply that was depleted
by October of the same year.
The reason being that the elderly
and vulnerable were denied treatment by the NHS; a policy that was part
of a pandemic response four years in the planning, and instead put on
end of life care which involved withdrawing their medication, depriving
them of food and water, and pumping them full of midazolam and morphine
until they died of starvation and dehydration.
Evidence suggests
that the drug midazolam was used to prematurely end the lives of
thousands upon thousands of people in the United Kingdom who you were
told had died of Covid-19, and this can be clearly seen from the data on
out of hospital prescribing for midazolam coinciding with the waves of
all cause deaths and Covid-19 deaths in the UK, as well as the Amnesty
and CQC reports which found the blanket use of Do Not Resuscitate
orders being used in care homes without informing the residents or their
families....<<<Read More>>>....