Right!! I have even heard of people putting this on top of car batteries to eat away the rust. And my kids sit here drinking this stuff like water.
Thank you. I have my son’s case file. The 911 call, the police body cams, scene photos, trial transcripts, police report, witness interviews, witness statements etc… My son found the attorney through the prison law library. We feel confident he is a good attorney. The Innocence Project told me he was a good attorney.
My son will be so appreciate of the prayers.
I won’t…
EDIT 1/14/2021… here we go again with closing threads!
This was a study using for mouth wash and gargle.
Unfortunately the study you show was only one supposed trial. Started with 28 then they excluded 5 of those. There was no medical professional actually seeing the patients. Just using face time. And based on the results 11.5 % of the participants had to be hospitalized. That is a significant percentage.
Oh my goodness, you are taking me back to my early nursing days in a nursing home where several of our patients had G-tubes that clogged. An older nurse showed me the Coke trick and it works amazingly. Probably the best use for Coke.
That’s how I learned it. I was pretty fresh and kind of freaked out when my patient’s GT was clogged. An old nurse said oh don’t worry, walked down to the vending machine, grabbed a coke and said watch this. I was shocked to see that this really worked within minutes and did it the whole rest of my career.
Wow! Just wow…
I assume you don’t like treating lung cancer patients who still smoke?! Or obese patients who still eat junk?!
Sounds like you’ve been around that block a few times, too, since you started. How long have you been a nurse? It’s going on 33 years for me and feels like yesterday.
So, I guess you know more than three of my doctors who have studied this and have never had a patient have to go to the ER for it, when it was diluted according to proper medical specifications? Including myself, many times using it. You sound rather flippant about what people do when you really don’t know that much about what you criticize, so I’ll stick to my doctors’ advice.
I retired from this quite a few years ago. The last few years of that don’t even count much because I had moved on to a nurse liaison position, where I just evaluated patients at hospitals who were ready to move on to sub acute care.
I’m pretty sure I only lasted around 7 or 8 years before getting totally burned out. Administration and family members of my patients were the root cause of it. Neither cared that we were always short of staff and that I was doing the best that I could.
33 years of nursing and you are not burned out. Much respect to you!
I don’t want to speak for Caitlyn, but I will say that she is a very good nurse who takes great care of all of her patients.
She, like so many other nurses, has been catching it for a while. Lots of ERs are short of staff and are completely overwhelmed with what’s going on. The last thing they want to see right now are the tons of people coming in for things that aren’t urgent or people coming in for things they did to themselves. (Not speaking about peroxide specifically, just being very general.)
I don’t work in this field anymore, but thinking back to when I did, I can only imagine how all of this feels at the moment. I don’t know how they do it.
Agreed. Not liking people stuffing up the ERs and people dying in walkways, or people getting covid due to coming to the ER with non emergency reasons doesnt mean they’re not good at their job. It means they are tired. Tired of the last 2 years. Tired of the huge increase of patients and no where to put them, tired of having skeleton staff, etc.
Love and support to all the current nurses and some extra sent to ER and covid nurses
This topic is temporarily closed for at least 96 hours due to a large number of community flags.
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Wow, topic is open again. Wonder how long it will stay that way??
5 minutes so far. LOL
Geez, we’re on a roll here!! lol
LOL!