Top doctors warn woke culture is taking over US medical field and pushing physicians to self-censor research and avoid treating white patients out of fear of being perceived as racist
Several top doctors from some of America s top medical institutions spoke anonymously to journalist Katie Herzog in a piece for Bari Weiss Substack blog
Doctors said they are fearful of speaking out against woke dogma that has taken hold in the medical field now dominated by anti-racist thinking
They said younger generation of medical professionals are forcing field to accept shoddy research because it supports flawed diversity initiatives
In some instances, younger doctors are said to be refusing to treat white patients because they probably deserve whatever happened to them
In one swing state, 2016 election was linked with increased risk of irregular heartbeat, study says
AFP via Getty Images
There’s little doubt the 2016 election was stressful. Now a team in North Carolina say they have evidence the tumultuous campaign may have affected people’s hearts.
Their study of 2,500 people living in the swing state of North Carolina shows an uptick in cases of irregular heart rates in October and November of 2016, as voters were inundated with attack ads.
In the two weeks before and four weeks after the 2016 election, researchers found a 77% increase in the risk of cardiac arrhythmia a potentially dangerous irregular heartbeat among people who had underlying heart conditions.
Common Sense with Bari Weiss
What Happens When Doctors Can t Tell the Truth?
Whole areas of research are off-limits. Top physicians treat patients based on their race. An ideological purge is underway in American medicine.
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Several hundred health-care workers protest against police brutality on June 5, 2020, in St Louis. (Michael B. Thomas/Getty Images)
I always thought that if you lived through a revolution it would be obvious to everyone. As it turns out, that’s not true. Revolutions can be bloodless, incremental and subtle. And they don’t require a strongman. They just require a sufficient number of well-positioned true believers and cowards, like those sitting in the C-suite of nearly every major institution in American life.
American Heart Association
Research Highlights:
For some cardiac patients, a pacemaker or implantable cardioverter defibrillator is needed to help keep the heart beating normally.
People who have an implanted cardiac device should not be near electronic devices that have magnets or produce electromagnetic waves because they can interfere with the cardiac device’s functions.
Magnets in the iPhone 12® series, which allow the phones to be charged wirelessly, are stronger than the magnets found in earlier generations of iPhones.
In a small study of different types of pacemakers and implantable cardioverter defibrillators, 11 of 14 cardiac devices experienced interference when an iPhone 12 Max Pro was held close to the cardiac device (within 1.5 cm), even when the device was still in the manufacturer’s sealed package.