
Kaiser Permanente and Murder
Posted Mar 2, 2011 by anonymous | 672 views | 1 comments
According to the Medical Board of California, Physician and Surgeon License Number G36371 was issued to Anne Philomena Brennan on May 1, 1978. Anne Brennan gave me a prescription for a drug named praziquantel. I purchased and ingested that drug in accordance with Dr. Brennan's instructions. I later discovered that Dr. Brennan had lied to me. Praziquantel had NOT been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration as a treatment for strongyloidiasis. This incident illustrates the point that Kaiser Permanente physicians have financial incentives to kill patients who become expensively ill. They can prescribe a useless drug in the hope that an expensively ill patent will die quickly and cheaply of a 'natural cause.' During the initial stages of the AIDS epidemic, pulmonary strongyloidiasis was diagnostic for AIDS and an AIDS patient who died slowly -- over a period of 10 years -- could cost Kaiser Permanente's physicians more than $500,000. Those physicians work under 'capitation contracts' and have financial incentives to eliminate patients who are expansively ill. Those physicians can kill you and then certify that you died of a natural cause. It is very easy for them to get away with murder. They made a mistake in my case. I am NOT infected with the human immunodeficiency virus; I do not have AIDS. In conclusion, if you trust your life to a Kaiser Permanente physician then you are making a potentially lethal mistake. Do not allow them to trick you into taking a useless drug. Sincerely, Scott G. Beach
Commented Aug 5, 2014 by anonymous
dfGySL wow, awesome blog.Thanks Again.