The corruption running though the healthcare system is so deep that financial incentives more often than not outweigh medical ethics. As a result, patients might not get the adequate treatment and end up worse than they were before they got to the hospital — and even dead.
In this interview with The New American, Priscilla Romans, the founder and CEO of Graith Care LLC, details many shortcomings of the medical industrial complex and the ways it harms people. One of the examples is hospitals receiving compensations for sticking to pre-set protocols prescribed by the government or the insurance companies. That is especially on display during the pandemic, when hospitals refuse to treat Covid patients with repurposed drugs such as ivermectin while forcing them to take highly toxic remdesivir and put them on ventilators instead.
Even before the pandemic began, Romans said, she had been observing the decline of compassionate medical care. She started her company to help patients navigate the medical system, help them understand their rights and treatment options, and offer holistic approaches to health and wellbeing – even if they are short on funds and uninsured.
To learn more about Graith Care, please click here.
Veronika is a writer with a passion for holding the powerful accountable, no matter their political affiliation. With a Ph.D. in Political Science from Odessa National University (Ukraine), she brings a sharp analytical eye to domestic and foreign policy, international relations, the economy, and healthcare.
Veronika’s work is driven by a belief that freedom is worth defending, and she is dedicated to keeping the public informed in an era where power often operates without scrutiny.