Confluence Health Nurse Caught Stapling Ivermectin Info To Patient Discharge Papers
And a petition for help finding 'the rest of the story'
In October 2021, a source reached out to me with a tip about an ER nurse at Wenatchee Valley Hospital & Clinics in Wenatchee who had been stapling directions on how to get and use Ivermectin for the treatment of Covid-19 to discharge papers of patients leaving the emergency room. According to my source, this individual was affiliated with Grace City Church.
So I emailed Confluence Health to ask about it:
“I'm reaching out because a source reached out to me recently and told me that a ‘nurse at the ER was stapling directions on how to take/get Ivermectin to discharge papers as COVID positive patients were being sent home to quarantine. GCC (Grace City Church) affiliated.’ Can you tell me if this is true? And if so, has any disciplinary action been taken against this individual? Thank you for your time.”
Within hours I received a response from Andrew Canning, Confluence Health’s director of communications at the time.
“Hi Dom,
Thanks for reaching out. While we are unable to comment on an individual’s specific employment status, I can tell you Confluence Health moved to address this concern as soon as we were made aware of its happening. Patient safety continues to be our top priority and we remain committed to practicing evidence-based medicine that is consistent with consensus medical guidelines. Although ivermectin is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of some parasitic worms, external parasites and skin conditions, evidence shows it is ineffective against treating the COVID-19 virus. We cannot stress this enough - prevention is the best treatment of an RNA respiratory virus like COVID-19, and we consider the currently authorized vaccines to be your best chance to reduce your risk of severe COVID-19, hospitalization, and death,” Canning wrote.
That’s where I hit a roadblock.
Who was this nurse caught stapling info about Ivermectin to patient discharge papers? Since Confluence is not a public agency I can’t just file public records requests, sift through emails and other documents and find what I’m looking for.
I’ve been noodling on it for months and today while I was swimming I had a thought:
“Why not just go public with what I have and see if someone out there can provide the missing pieces I need to complete the puzzle?”
So that’s what I’m doing.
Confluence Health confirmed that this individual was doing what my source said she was. But what is her name and more importantly, what’s her employment status with Confluence? According to the source who gave me the tip this individual is a female, but I would like to confirm that.
That’s where you come in. A majority of you will not know the answers to these questions, but some might.
The thing about many conspiracy theories that makes them so implausible is the faith the believers in them have in peoples’ abilities to keep secrets.
There’s an old saying attributed to Benjamin Franklin:
“Three may keep a secret, if two of them are dead.”
If the brass at Confluence learned about it, there was probably a good portion of an entire department who had an idea of what she was doing before that. And then you have the patients who went home with the physical proof…
While it’s unlikely to gain additional information through official channels, I have not yet exhausted the unofficial ones. This is just one attempt to glean more information about this angle of the larger story I am writing.
So if you know anything about this email me at wenatcheejournalist@gmail.com.
Having worked there for 33 years, I'd be willing to bet hundreds of employees and valley residents know exactly who it was.
Bizarre. But then religious jihadis regardless their faith believe in all kinds of bizarre beliefs (some of'em call them "miracles" as parting the Red Sea, virgin births and rising to Heaven on a White Stallion et al) that end up killing too many of them and others that may defy their "truths." Man, what fools are we...