Whistleblower: US Military Refusing Treatment to Unvaxxed COVID Patients

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140410-N-CC789-034 PASCAGOULA, Miss. (April 10, 2014) More than 900 Sailors and Marines assigned to the amphibious assault ship Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) America (LHA 6) march to the ship to take custody of it. The U.S. Navy officially accepted delivery of the amphibious assault ship from Huntington Ingalls Industries during a custody transfer ceremony in Pascagoula, Miss. America is the first ship of its class, replacing the Tarawa-class of amphibious assault ships and is scheduled to be commissioned in late 2014 in San Francisco. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Vladimir Ramos/Released)

A young and healthy naval officer who wishes to remain anonymous decided to forgo the COVID vaccine despite immense pressure from his superiors and was made an example for others in the service who refuse to comply. 

Unfortunately, having not previously suffered the natural infection in 2020, he became ill with SARS-CoV-2 while on base this summer, presumably the Delta variant. 

He was quarantined in an isolation room and told he could not leave unless it was an emergency; he went to the ER three times in hopes of treatment. No X-rays or CT scans were taken. 

The medical provider on base gave him very little advice or interventions for treatment despite his worsening clinical status which included chest pain, weakness, days of unrelieved fever and chills, and coughing up blood. 

The officer repeatedly asked for medications widely used by community physicians to treat early outpatient COVID such as breathing treatments, steroids, ivermectin, azithromycin, and vitamins to augment the natural immune system. 

Instead, he was given codeine for the cough. Codeine is a narcotic that actually suppresses the cough reflex and even more, it depresses the respiratory drive.  

He reached out to his wife who lived in their home several states away who was able to help him get a second-opinion telemedicine appointment and he was then prescribed several of the above mentioned early outpatient treatment medications for COVID-19.  

The only problem is that the base medical doctor would not dispense the drug, nor was his wife allowed to bring them to him nor was anyone else allowed to take him medications.

Essentially, he was denied access to medications that could have improved his symptoms. He was told to drive to another pharmacy to pick it up: drive a motor vehicle while taking a narcotic, with underlying fatigue and fever and chills. 

Fortunately, after a harrowing two weeks alone without the ability to seek proper treatment, a nearly 10 pound weight loss, and extreme fatigue, he progressed to the convalescent phase.

After making it through all that, he was given a prescription for two anti-coagulants “to prevent clots”.