RE: Not My Meme! #949
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Your conflating arguments here. That link refers to adverse medical events but seems to mostly refer to things that happen in hospitals, not vaccinations which aren't even mentioned. If a patient has made it to a hospital, then the insurance company is already out a boatload of money regardless of whether or not the patient ultimately dies.
To the best of my knowledge, the kinds of vaccines that were being paid for as referred to by the OP don't lead to a lot of insta-death.
Also, while I don't see it affecting insurance companies much, "preventable adverse events" sounds like a recipe for malpractice lawsuits which I would think would be something hospitals would try to avoid. Since the study linked seems to be decades old at this point, a more interesting piece of information would be whether or not hospitals have improved in that regard since then.
https://www.bitchute.com/video/xTmeq33bMK58/
Probably shouldn't take medical advice from someone that makes more money when you are sick, or dead.™