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❄️:padoru: SantaSnekFriend :padoru:❄️ (supersnekfriend@poa.st)'s status on Wednesday, 28-Aug-2024 11:19:10 JST ❄️:padoru: SantaSnekFriend :padoru:❄️ @HockeyDoxie
EFIC is not a program. It's a law from the 90's that allows soyentists to experiment on certain terminal or comatose patients without consent of them, their family, or any other legal representative:
med.umn.edu/emergency-med/research/efic
fda.gov/regulatory-information/search-fda-guidance-documents/exception-informed-consent-requirements-emergency-research
That being said, soyentists, doctors, and nurses probably and truly are administering ketamine and fentanyl to trauma patients, probably to act as another kind of addictive pain killer like morphine and other opioids.- Woggy's Zeonic Frolicks likes this.
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HockeyDoxie (hockeydoxie@nicecrew.digital)'s status on Wednesday, 28-Aug-2024 11:19:11 JST HockeyDoxie 👀
"A new program out of the Department of Defense and approved by the FDA called EFIC is now
administering fentanyl and ketamine involuntarily to unconscious patients, like those injured in a car
wreck. They are calling this a study, but what are they studying? How many people they can addict to
these drugs in this way? And why is this coming out of the Department of Defense? What does trying
to cause addiction in people have to do with national defense?"
https://mileswmathis.com/govpusher.pdf