Hospitals no longer required to report covid deaths to fed govt | Eastern NC Now

Just in time for midterms

ENCNow

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) officially stopped requiring hospitals to report coronavirus deaths last Wednesday as the death toll approached 900,000.

Initially established in January, the rule change did not go into effect until last Wednesday – the same day the U.K. government announced it would stop requiring hospitals to report coronavirus death tolls by Easter, according to WSWS.

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/02/07/u-s-department-of-health-stops-requiring-hospitals-to-report-coronavirus-deaths-to-federal-government/

All of a sudden covid is over just in time for midterms.  


Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Born at 23 weeks, preemie defies the odds to thrive Rant & Rave, Editorials, Beaufort Observer, Op-Ed & Politics RCMP sabotage heavy equipment on private property


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

The North Carolina House unanimously passed the “Dominique Moody Safety Act,” advancing a child-welfare reform package named for the six-year-old girl whose death exposed repeated failures by Mecklenburg County social services officials to act on reports of abuse and neglect.
Maybe a holiday for Texas, but NOT the nation
government agencies refused to help on fear of being called "racist"

HbAD1

targets data centers and intermittent electricity sources

HbAD2

5 year sentence for failing to cooperate with surveillance of cit citizens
"He is fully fit to carry out all duties of the Commander-in-Chief and Head of State."
illegal alien "asylum seeker" migrants are a crime wave on both sides of the Atlantic
she was actually 86, and says she did not vote in the 51 elections records show

HbAD3

"We are leveraging counterterrorism tools and global partnerships to deter this threat before it metastasizes," an official shared.
The impressions of our youth are indelibly branded in our hearts and minds. As I think of June 6, 1944 (D Day) it always seems that it was my war. I was nine years old.
Not giving our kids their own devices was one of the best parenting decisions my husband and I made.

HbAD4

 
 
Back to Top