Thanks everyone for watching and your kind words. Stay Strong! Website: www.suneeldhand.com Dr. Dhand Reverse Diabetes & Prediabetes Free Newsletter: zc.vg/tEMGL General Newsletter Sign-Up: zc.vg/eKQnY Uncensored Awakened Community on Locals: drsuneeldhand.locals.com
@ritapearl-im3wv9 ай бұрын
I wish more doctors were just like you! God bless you!
@OceanFrontVilla39 ай бұрын
I had a hip replacement surgery (anterior method) 6 years ago in Ontario and did not receive Heparin. I went home the following day using crutches.
@AnnaAnnieAnneofGreenGables9 ай бұрын
God bless you
@KimonSheri9 ай бұрын
Sir, we need you. Common sense is in demand, you have it. You speak truth. So sick of paying 50 people, to do one person's job. Yes, they do what the computer says, uneducated, they are sheep.
@kathybuster82349 ай бұрын
Wow! That's great! My mother had knee surgery years ago. When they got her up to walk she almost past out. They all gave her the tou around except for this one special Dr. Daniel Lee. He saved her life. She was allergic to heprin and had blood clots because of it. Dr. Lee saved her life. Thank you Dr Dhand for all your love and honesty❤❤ @@OceanFrontVilla3
@sonjapollon5689 ай бұрын
70 years old, 0 medications, 0 drs visits, 0 tests, no restaurant food, no processed food, no tv. Instead lots of walking, moving, home cooked meals, organic veggie garden as of late , lots of sunshine, fresh air, family close by, energetic puppy. Life is wonderful!
@daisyrenee9 ай бұрын
❤
@AnimichileTV9 ай бұрын
yeah!
@thirstonhowellthebird9 ай бұрын
I’m struggling with high blood pressure. Do you eat meat? If yes, what kind. I’m desperate to get off my blood pressure medicine. I don’t want to be held hostage because to get the refills they make you do blood work and I just don’t trust the community anymore.
@shelley35109 ай бұрын
@@thirstonhowellthebird Red beet root powder works well for me.
@marmeone9 ай бұрын
I think we need to clone this person!
@esecallum9 ай бұрын
I kept following The Science, and found the Money. I kept following The Experts, and found the Money. I kept following the Mainstream Media, and found the Money. So I started following *The Misinformation*, and found The Truth.
@MrYorickJenkins9 ай бұрын
Bravo!
@karenweaver75749 ай бұрын
Beautiful stated thanks.
@Amandajane-freespirit9 ай бұрын
@esecallum I recollect you quoted this yesterday, top comment 💯
@alan4sure9 ай бұрын
And you're still wearing your ridiculous head bandage four years later. Yeah, your observations are undoubtedly mind blowing.😂
@karlabritfeld71049 ай бұрын
Good one
@cynthiabrown83548 ай бұрын
My mother was 92 when she fell and broke her hip. After surgery she was walking the same day. I was there with her helping her go to the bathroom and down the hall. I questioned and documented everything they did and said. When a nurse came galloping in with heparin I refused to let her inject my mother. I told her that an aspirin would be safer and do the same thing. She said I would have to talk to the hospitalist. I told her to send him on down. He never came to face me but did order an aspirin be given. My mother still lives with me at 97 and is not on any meds. She also has had no vaccines since she has lived with me and is doing great.
@MarkSmith-js2pu7 ай бұрын
God bless you and your mom for sharing this.❤️
@EdurtreG5 ай бұрын
So nice you can share life ❤❤
@Kiki-wi7px4 ай бұрын
Keep Her AWAY from Medical Establishment's of ANY Kind.
@smc130Ай бұрын
So no vaccines? She’s at serious risk for Covid. That will probably be how she dies.
@GloriaCote-o1c9 ай бұрын
80 here, no prescription drugs, no doctor visits. Keto/carnivore, fast 19/20 hours daily. Walk every day 30/50 squats daily no knee pain. No colds, flues, headaches, stomach aches. Feel great and love myself.
@Molly-rd6hi9 ай бұрын
Absolutely Fabulous! 👍❤️
@awalls81229 ай бұрын
❤inspiring😊
@elizagoodytwoshoes91409 ай бұрын
Thank you I keep telling people my grandmother took not even a pain killer, had 14 children and lived to 96.
@bornwin-sx9oz9 ай бұрын
They are blessed but that’s not always the case. Sometimes people are born or develop health issues.
@caobita9 ай бұрын
Gorgeous 💖🖒
@324cmac9 ай бұрын
I'm so happy to read these comments about so many people over 60 not on medication. I'm 69 years old and also don't take any medication.
@OhSoddit9 ай бұрын
I'm in my 50's. I had blood pressure 170/105 pulse 90 and allegedly high cholesterol. I took the list of scripts and recommendations from my doctor and put them in the bin. I took MAGNESIUM. (start slowly to avoid diarrhea, bit of trial and error to see what (pills, topical oils, or oral solutions) works best for you). Subsequently had blood pressure 110/60 pulse 60 and "best cholesterol ever" - must be because the "medications are working, and all the work you're doing in the gym". I burst out laughing. Uncontrollably. I'd never taken ANY of the "medications", and I'd never been to the gym :) Haven't gone back to the doctor since, and don't intend to!!
@mcdade74899 ай бұрын
68 yo here, healthy and taking no medications.
@kateoneal42159 ай бұрын
Me too! I'm 73.
@darlenebradley67569 ай бұрын
Me too! We should start a new movement!!!
@marycurcio22749 ай бұрын
72 no meds🙏
@jenlea90959 ай бұрын
This is done in public hospitals in Australia. I was in and out of ER and wards awaiting abdominal surgery for a period and continually hassled to take this even though standing & walking was all I was doing due to laying being extremely painful. I kept refusing to take it because it made no sense to me at all. When in a strong pain relief haze one night I gave in to the nurse who was bullying me just to get rid of her, she injected it into my thigh, 30 mins later I started feeling weird & weak like I was going to pass out and called for her, she ignored my concerns & was "too busy" to have a doctor come check me !! I did pass out, but luckily lived to see another day. Never will I Ever go against my gut feeling when it comes to medications again.
@naca15539 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry!
@esecallum8 ай бұрын
Keep asking why. Why . Why. Why why
@kimlandefeld30059 ай бұрын
We need to CLONE this man immediately. Thousands. Replace our 'healthcare providers' who can't do what is best for the patient, they just do what is best for their SYSTEM.
@joecampbell64869 ай бұрын
TRUE FACTS ❤
@orrichardpo19819 ай бұрын
Their system is : Wealth Care.
@kimlandefeld30059 ай бұрын
@@orrichardpo1981 Yup! Their wealth. For us it’s SICK care.
@OhSoddit9 ай бұрын
Yes, BUT - his "awakening" occurred after (and only after) being "effed" over by his employer with regard to covid vaccinations. To his credit, he is now less focused on being an "internal medicine physician" and more focused on EDUCATING humanity !!!
@kimlandefeld30059 ай бұрын
@@OhSoddit however it happened, the learning had to happen. Glad he has moved from the ‘dark side’ of medicine. We need more doctors telling THE truth and not THEIR truth.
@petramaas85749 ай бұрын
Thank you. It seems that being admitted to a hospital is more dangerous than I already thought. Thank you for your info.
@OhSoddit9 ай бұрын
Yes, being a patient in a hospital is like being an IT helpdesk "ticket" but without the care factor. Surprisingly, hospitals DO actually have survivors.
@PeevyMctweevy9 ай бұрын
Between 90,000 and 100,000 americans die every year from infections picked up in hospitals, you would think that would be big news..
@hoppyrabbit18339 ай бұрын
The only reason I don't like listening to Dr. Dhand is that it makes me wish he were my family physician. Thank you, sir for your medical wisdom!
@jackiemansfield83257 ай бұрын
“Cash in”…It doesn’t look like Suneel is ever going to sell products with his name on online like most do. He is too humble and honest for that.
@daveb84499 ай бұрын
There are some wonderful life-saving drugs out there, but most drugs are unnecessary and simply a profit machine for the drug companies.
@JazzmineOdom9139 ай бұрын
None of them are life-saving, at least not the ones that people take daily. Every med that exists is a profit making machine for pharma companies, pharmacists, and doctors
@drsuneeldhand9 ай бұрын
Agree!
@johnkean68529 ай бұрын
@@drsuneeldhand There has to be a way for them to make their profits without forcing meds on us.
@Hollyucinogen9 ай бұрын
Yeah, I think that the number of vaccinations that we're getting now may be contributing to a rise in autoimmune disorders. When I was growing up in the 90s, it was like, 3 by the age of 18. Now it's 8 within about 6 years. And how many COVID vaccines required for school depends on your location, too. The last time that I checked, schools were encouraging people to have 4, and some hospitals wouldn't even let you enter unless you had a vaccine passport showing that you'd been immunized a certain number of times (seriously). I also think that they're over-diagnosing people and over-prescribing medications. I got prescribed anti-psychotics for being angry that I've been severely abused for the last 4 years. My Dads' girlfriend got given Percocet for a bladder infection a few months ago. When I was growing up, the pills that they prescribed for a bladder infection were antibiotics. What they recommended for anger due to severe abuse was therapy. The whole industry is a profit-machine now. 😒
@esecallum9 ай бұрын
@@Hollyucinogen 289000 killed e ery year by doc and hospitals...look it up
@carylfontaine36409 ай бұрын
I take Berberine daily..I am in the medical field and I research EVERYTHING..you are 100% correct my friend ❤
@margaretblack85389 ай бұрын
What does berberine do?
@HopefulEmpath9 ай бұрын
@@margaretblack8538 I’m all for natural meds but you need to be careful about taking berberine if you have certain conditions or take certain prescriptions. It’s uses vary.
@pegasus52879 ай бұрын
@@margaretblack8538it cured my family member's diabetes, he no longer needs the Rx from the doctor for the oral pill he was taking.
@CJR4349 ай бұрын
It slows blood clotting but its natural.
@mariannaeagle4649 ай бұрын
Berberine gave me diarrhea after taking it for weeks. That's just me.
@margocoleman84329 ай бұрын
When the medical professionals are always saying eat very little salt, want you to be on a low salt diet, then why do they give you injections with sodium in it? Seems hypocritical and ridiculous to me.
@JazzmineOdom9139 ай бұрын
Salt is very hydrating too. It has other health benefits as well.
@whaleoilbeefhooked38929 ай бұрын
Trace elements are in the salt, often not considered.
@LookNook20209 ай бұрын
Good question
@jesusis14599 ай бұрын
My uncles sodium was dangerously low. They couldn't rraise it in the hospital...tells me we need sodium....here I am in my late forties, eating salty, fries, chips, salting everything in sight, drinking diet coke full of sodium and my sodium levels are great😊
@h2oquality20109 ай бұрын
Eat the unrefined salt. Himalayan salt or Sulphur salt. High mineral content. All necessary to regulate blood pressure. The ratio of potassium to magnesium and sodium must be balanced properly, with potassium being the highest, then magnesium, and sodium last. Most people are magnesium deficient.
@gillbailey70198 ай бұрын
I have recently asked my doctor to stop asking me to go for check ups for this , that and whatever , just because im a few days away from 83 , they seem to think i have every complaint under the sun . I dont take any medication at all , dont need it . I still drive , a big heavy car . A classic Volvo . Love it . Sew almost every day . Please let us enjoy what time we have , on this earth . I dont smoke , dont drink , practically live on veg and fish . We 1940's babies are very fit . 🙂
@EdurtreG5 ай бұрын
If the Volvo is an indicator, it will prob outlive you.
@gillbailey70195 ай бұрын
@@EdurtreG Yes im sure it will , great cars , number 6 , love them . This is the biggest one i have ever had , at 83 , no prob driving , got licence back with in 2 weeks . Its a 940 turbo .
@toriwolf59785 ай бұрын
Agreed 100%❤
@smc130Ай бұрын
@@gillbailey7019I loved my 940.
@saltymimi9 ай бұрын
I refused this injection when I was in the hospital for gallbladder surgery and bile duct blockage. I refused it at least 4 times. I finally got snippy with them the last few times and they stopped trying to give it to me. I was getting up to go to the bathroom and moving around. I didn’t need it and frankly, I didn’t trust it. But I had to be quite forceful in rejecting it.
@roshimafair76039 ай бұрын
I've always, refused it in the UK. They didn't like it. I was mobile it's ridiculous
@lindacosby31849 ай бұрын
Its your right to refuse any medication
@louiseanderson15059 ай бұрын
@@lindacosby3184 Absolutely.
@roshimafair76039 ай бұрын
Also both times I was in u hospital (uk) I wasn't asked if I wanted, they just came to me with the injection ready and said you've got to have this. For most people who don't question anything or trust the NHS they would just accept that.
@caobita9 ай бұрын
I had the same surgery in Germany, 20 years ago. I only got one shot the day before surgery and they motivated patients to walk around frequently. I also didn't get my food in the room, but had to walk to a dining area close by on the same floor. That was good care. Have my doubts that it's still like this in Germany. So many things have changed (and not for good)
@velmalgonzales59619 ай бұрын
I was 60 years old, healthy and on no medications. I went in hospital for a hernia operation and I was 3 to 5 percent of patients that is allergic to it. I was in hospital for 5 weeks and almost needed my right arm amputated and developed deep vein thrombopedia and a low platelet disorder. I was so upset the hospital did not give me the option of walking or compression boots, but rather just gave me the fatel dose and I'm damaged goods now for the rest of my life. Velma L Gonzales
@jax93499 ай бұрын
Oh dear, how terrifying, I do wish you well x
@triple999fruitful9 ай бұрын
❤
@TK.0009 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh that's horrible. I'm sorry that happened to you. We trust them to take care of us and when they fail, we are the ones that suffer😞
@zuzuspetals83239 ай бұрын
May God bless and comfort you. 🕊 Awful!
@NancySanders-om4ic9 ай бұрын
My PRAYERS for you,and I understand what you dealt with,and I am TRULY sad,sorry that you hsd to endure that experience.
@gramcracker16169 ай бұрын
I think many of the medical tests and procedures are just plain sadistic.
@kristielynnkw9 ай бұрын
I've been a RN for over 20 years and I been saying that people will look back and say that what we did in "healthcare " was barbaric
@philipthomas39389 ай бұрын
$$$$$$$$$__
@bantiechick29669 ай бұрын
My mother was murdered by the “protocol “ in March of 2022. Unfortunately I had no say in her treatment…barbaric indeed….
@esecallum8 ай бұрын
Makes 💰🤑💰💰
@Maintainingabadtrip7 ай бұрын
It’s not the tests, it’s the healthcare industry. Here’s a fun one. You know that if folks wore masks in the first place there’d of been no need for vaccines. You do see this in hindsight, don’t you? Do any Qanon or MAGA minds realize that? Y’all said we shouldn’t wear masks because Jesus and God. You know how many professionals wear masks to avoid airborne toxins? A lot. Something to consider.
@junelehmensich33866 ай бұрын
THANK YOU DR. YOUR ARE SUCH A GEM. WHY CANT ALL THE DRS BE AS HONEST AS U ARE. A GREAT MAN OF INTEGRITY. GOD BLESS YOU ALWAYS.
@joyyak78659 ай бұрын
72, no meds, BP 120-140/70-84. Active, gardener and preserver, rarely eat out. Retired RN and SO agree with you! Spent years in the field working to reduce patients unnecessary meds. Polypharmacy is an epidemic! Keep spreading your experiences!
@slomo17169 ай бұрын
Growing up we treated Doctors as Gods. My mother (don't recall why she was in hospital) and a sister (hit by a car, pelvis broken in four places) were in hospital and given Heparin. We never questioned anything back then, but with today's caliber of Doctors and medical staff, they no longer believe in the Hippocratic Oath of doing NO HARM. Even the worst student in the class will be called DOCTOR one day. I have been to more lousy doctors than good ones in my life, now so much more aware of health issues. God Bless you Dr. Dhand!!!
@Roadapple9 ай бұрын
The worst student in the class will go to work in government, and tell the best students what to do.
@joywebster26788 ай бұрын
Even in the past the lowest passing student is still a Dr., that has never changed. Many of the lower scorers may be great family Dr's but poor test takers. So its an old wives tale. I'm more concerned about the lowest scoring engineers who build bridges, overpasses that collapse!
@musashi48569 ай бұрын
"Mindlessly following protocols.... " is neglecting one's duty and oath as a medical professional. Medicine is a practice, not a checklist. ✅
@orrichardpo19819 ай бұрын
Their oath changed from the Hippocratic Oath to the Hypocrite Oath many years ago, coinciding with the advent of "modern" medicine.
@hannah52459 ай бұрын
When they probably have to clear patients with a quota , after some time, even they are glazed over in their eyes and sees every patient as a cc of the same , “mindlessly following protocol” until they become as close as anyone can get to being AI.
@kristielynnkw9 ай бұрын
That's all these new doctors know is to mindlessly follow protocols and check the boxes. Hell I've had doctors Google what to do in a code. Pathetic
@musashi48569 ай бұрын
Agreed! NPC doctors should not be trusted.@@kristielynnkw
@debravictoria74529 ай бұрын
Great idea for a Tshirt that should be worn to doctor appointments. Give them a little reminder.
@patsmith80359 ай бұрын
I was hospitalised with pneumonia sepsis in 2014 and refused the injections.My argument was that i would not have had them at home had i followed th GP's advice and rested at home for a week like i was told( i probably would have died) but tgat is another story.I also refused a paracetamol drip too.I have an enzyme deficiency and cannot process it.If you are unlucky enough to be in hospital you have to be an advocate for yourself.
@julygirlsx29 ай бұрын
I was admitted for a micro-perf from diverticulitis. I was in the hospital for 3 days on IV antibiotics & potassium. Morning one I had one nurse give me an injection of Heparin, the second nurse gave it to me in my arm (which I later found out was wrong), and the third nurse broke a needle before giving me my 3rd injection. The 4th nurse I saw told me I could refuse it. I was up walking but the medication was protocol. This nurse actually closed the door so no one would hear her tell me this. Needless to say I was only given a total of 2 shots. I was able to walk around and refused the rest of the Heparin shots.
@willaknotts12989 ай бұрын
I live in Vermont in a senior living apt. One local grocery is paying any one of us $25 to take any vaccination like covid..influenza..pneumonia..shingles. I think its illegal to do that. We should not be induced to take shots with monetary payoff.
@tia9049 ай бұрын
It means they are getting more ?
@juliafox529 ай бұрын
@@tia904Or they are Malthusains.
@juliafox529 ай бұрын
All of those jabs are being made into gene therapy. Vaccines will no longer exist as previously made. At least that was what I read on MedPage. For some bizarre reason, people are not questioning this. They had to redefine vaccine to have gene therapy pass as a vaccine to get liability protection. They are fudging "the science " and the studies are pathetic. At this point, avoiding all such snake oil is healthier than taking part in the sickcare industry.
@donnaleveron57118 ай бұрын
They are slowly phasing out seniors.
@fattoria_di_bastoni9 ай бұрын
I think a lot of people are afraid to say “no.”
@hardy52889 ай бұрын
Because when they say they do not want, or need them, they are then treated with contempt by the doctors.
@julians90709 ай бұрын
@@hardy5288 You got that correct. Too many doctors forget that Healthcare and medicine must be personalised. It is not in their interest to keep anyone healthy.
@lovly2cu7259 ай бұрын
Educate yourself
@lovly2cu7259 ай бұрын
Doctors don't know a thing for the most part.
@julians90709 ай бұрын
@@lovly2cu725 Thank you well said. Many of us are afraid to enter hospitals as patients, as one illness wil very likely in rease to more sickness, and unless you are affluent with the best health insurance cover or a well known celebrity, you will be misdiagnosed too many tie before someone finds out what is the medical conditions really are. That is a dangerous gamble.
@harrieelias57569 ай бұрын
Thank you, one of the few honest doctors, for your integrity honorablity.
@Tom_Bombadil30009 ай бұрын
My gf is 44 yrs old and has been sucked into the health care system because she was experiencing a-fib. Several cardiac ablations and an internal pacemaker placed in 2015 and her health has been declining ever since. They gave her a cardiac stress test MRI and left the settings on the icd to pace her at 93% and it stayed that way for two years and was only put back because I brought it to their attention. This pacing put her into heart failure and now heart failure meds has been added to her beta blockers and blood thinners. I desperately want to get her out of their grips but I fear it may be too late for her. Also the blood thinner she was placed on combined with her heavy mental cycles kept her dangerously anemic for the past 8 years and not a single doctor noticed or did anything about it. I pray you read this comment and have any sort of suggestion for her because I love her and I don’t want them to kill her.
@dalesmith40199 ай бұрын
I had a-fib in the past. Turns out it was an electrolyte imbalance. A potassium tablet fixed me right up. That and drinking more water
@Aimercesttous8 ай бұрын
Antibiotics are the best vitamin for this condition.
@Aimercesttous8 ай бұрын
Sorry yt plăcere my commen t wrongly
@Paragon628 ай бұрын
@@Aimercesttous they are not vitamins.
@Aimercesttous8 ай бұрын
@@Paragon62 it was just a joke, but they are the best sollution, better than vitamins.
@walterbortz3559 ай бұрын
Yes I am a hospital based MD and agree completely with Dr. Dhand. We know the risk factors for blood clots and can usually quickly determine whether a patient should be on blood thinners. He is correct in suggesting that clinicians can be lazy and just thoughtlessly check off the box.
@drsuneeldhand9 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching! Appreciate your comment
@alisonreynolds38449 ай бұрын
Thanks, your comment is appreciated. Controlling managed care is bad for doctors and patients.
@karimaogden38759 ай бұрын
When you say you are a "Hospital based MD", do you mean you are a "Hospitalist"?
@AnneMB9559 ай бұрын
This is so good to know. Used to put myself in doctors’ care. Now I’m doing research, like this, to be better informed.
@chunt46949 ай бұрын
Just spent a month in the hospital due to a fall. I was given heparin every 8 hrs every day for a month!! In was not confined to a bed and was getting physical therapy for 3 hours everyday, walking and using exercise equipment!!
@BeBedabit4 ай бұрын
Love that he informs, and videos are short and to the point. Also love that he displays Marcus Aurelius!
@agreeablegraylife9 ай бұрын
You just described my experience. I was hospitalized a year ago for gastritis. They gave me heparin every 12 hours. Was there 4 days. Came home with bruises on my abdomen, and after the second dose, my belly would start quivering when the nurse walked into the room. It was torture. And it made me bleed from my rectum, which freaked me out. That stopped when I left the building. Just a bit traumatic. Yes, I was completely ambulatory.
@debravictoria74529 ай бұрын
Heparin for gastritis? I'm no doctor, but that just doesn't seem right.
@sherrykent29488 ай бұрын
Love your common sense videos! You get to the point, don’t dance around nonsense everything you say appeals to people with common sense! ❤️
@linm95989 ай бұрын
How I wish I had a dr like Dr Dhand. Someone honest & actually interested & concerned for his patients. I dont trust the medical profession generally any more & hope I dont have to go into hospital. Isnt it sad. I used to trust Dr's implicitly once 🤔🇬🇧
@densershepherd44799 ай бұрын
There is one even more informed (as great as Dr. D hand is). His name is Jesus Christ! (Rapha: To restore or Heal) I have found that natural immunity is God: given fresh air, exercise and sunshine is most profitable. Trust the doctor only as you trust Jesus Christ to work in your life. He should be our FIRST SOURCE for every aspect of our lives. He told us “the love of money is the root of all evil” and it could not be clearer than in the pharmaceutical industry. That being said; I am truly grateful for servants such as Dr. Dhand. The overuse of drugs in any form is a sign of the end times and we must be informed and beware.
@janesmith28349 ай бұрын
Went in hospital for a sudden loss of hearing but otherwise fine. Only reason I was admitted was for oxygen therapy and they don't let you have tanks at home until thoroughly checked for safety reasons. On admittance, the sister said let me look at your tummy and then without any warning jabbed me with heparin. I was shocked and asked what she had just given me and why. Then I told her i was not having any operations and certainly wasn't bed bound in any way. She hadn't checked my notes obviously and I lost a lot of trust that day. This hospital is struggling with a lot of problems and my daughter was offered a job there to sort out their issues but she didn't want it as it was more than she was trained to deal with. They had poor ratings after an inspection and I wasn't surprised.
@sarah-kk4om9 ай бұрын
I will remember this if I am in hospital again.
@DiamanteInfernalis9 ай бұрын
I was forced to be on this med for many years as a child to 'treat' edema and protein losing condition and it eventually began to erode away my bones. This lead to routine bone density scans. It wasnt until they switched me off it that it stopped and my bones started to rebuild. 6 years of bone erosion. It absolutley caused mass brusing all over my arms, thighs and belly and one bruise even began to hemmorage through my belly skin. I wasnt even 10 when that happened... This is not a medication to just prescribe people. Its alot more dangerous than we may think. I 100% agree with you.
@G.G.8GG9 ай бұрын
Thank you, doctor, for common sense recommendations. Time for a complete revolution in Healthcare.
@monkeybusiness19999 ай бұрын
No issues with Heperin after orthopedic surgey but loads of problems with Coumadin. Including near fatal internal hemorrhaging. Blood thinners are dangerous & dosing requires sharp monitoring to work safely. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise, including medical people.
@DebraofSENC9 ай бұрын
If you take multi-vitamins with vitamin K and you stop, the results can be fatal or cause a brain accident (bleed). It happened to my mother while she was in rehab. They did not tell me they stopped her vitamins and the nurse could not figure out why her blood was so thin. She lost all ability to do anything for herself after that incident and lasted one year.
@monkeybusiness19999 ай бұрын
@DebrasBeautifulMusic This is so sad to hear, my condolences to you... I know that eating dark leafy greens (loaded with vitamin K) while taking blood thinners is not advised for the reasons you say. Why the hospital prescribed both VitK & blood thinners at the same time sounds odd. I must be confused.
@joywebster26788 ай бұрын
That's why we now use oral anti coagulation extensively in Canada. This requires no monitoring, they act slower, but prevent clots, strokes from clots. For ortho patients there is a once daily dose, for vascular patients a different pill that is 2x daily. Since starting the Eliquis 2x daily, I've mot had further strokes nor heart attacks. Heparin and Coumadin is not used extensively any longer here.
@monkeybusiness19998 ай бұрын
@joywebster2678 That's good to hear, re the Eliquis. I was taking this too, for clot prevention after orthopedic surgery last year, & had zero issues with it as well. But I made sure to stop taking the stuff within 30 days. (The heparin dosing was very brief, only for a few days after surgery. To be honest, I would've refused it had I known its risks - not much different from Coumadin.)
@elizabethcumberbatch2279 ай бұрын
I say he should be the Surgeon General of America and the total head of all health care professionals over seeing everything and everyone in the medical industry of the United States of America
@nicholaspearson42469 ай бұрын
Great suggestion
@sheilam49649 ай бұрын
👍👍👍👍👍
@ohsweetmystery9 ай бұрын
Can you imagine how wonderful it would be to be his patient? Some very fortunate people get to call him their doctor.
@TheDavecroft9 ай бұрын
Why? Because he says something on a KZbin channel? 🤦
@sheilam49649 ай бұрын
@@TheDavecroft - No. We say this because of what he does about it. He not only says things on YT but has a Website and teaches & counsels people but also runs a medical practice.
@metgirl54299 ай бұрын
Please keep up your great work 🕊 Are we awake now🕊
@dharmaslife9 ай бұрын
$$$$$ I was admitted one time on the floor that had someone just across the hall dealing with psychosis… I don’t know if it was a side-effect to a medication, or if they needed medication but after literally over 24 hours of them yelling non-stop if this if you if your mother FFF - you get the idea, I got sick of the nurses who kept opening my door - I was on monitors and I was doing just fine - I kept asking them to close my door becauseThis point I had a horrendous headache… When she found out I had a headache and the reason why she kept trying to force Ativan on me - first of all I’m allergic to it if she bother to look at my record. Second, this had to be disrupting the entire floor I mean this guy was yelling and screaming at the top of his lungs non-stop for over 24 hours… And I wondered so they’d rather give me out of it and then treat the guy with the actual problem? And Dr. now you have me wondering if this was intentional so they could then give everybody else Ativan and charge all of that money instead of just helping the poor guy across the hall
@esecallum9 ай бұрын
400k killed by dr and hosps every year in usa
@OhSoddit9 ай бұрын
Yeah, I was in hospital once, a patient just across the hall was having very vocal conversations with people that weren't there. After a few days of this, they removed his gall bladder - that calmed him down no end :)
@johnkean68529 ай бұрын
The answer is a very high pitchhed migraine provoking AND a resounding YES.
@carolinemarie449 ай бұрын
It wouldn't surprise me if they paid someone to scream!
@jennybertenshaw76949 ай бұрын
YEP I had hysterical Dutch lady in the next compartment to me after I got admitted for a TIA (caused by the shock of our car meeting a huge 4x4 driving on the wrong side of the road...on a blind bend at well over the speed limit... yes I thought I was going to die) I almost wished I had after SEVEN HOURS of this woman being allowed to scream and wail ,getting ALL the attention... over ? NOTHING ...The doctors were giving me all sorts to get my BP down ( no couldn't leave the hospital until it was..despite my OH saying I had well documented 'white coast syndrome that elevated my BP whever I saw a bl****y doctor . NIGHTMARE
@ithacacomments48119 ай бұрын
I went to the ER with severe vertigo. Yep....hospitalist ordered a blood thinner before any test results came back. REFUSED!
@HopefulEmpath9 ай бұрын
Smart choice! Good for you.
@daisystanley43018 ай бұрын
i'll never forget the painful heparin injection that an incompetent foreign nurse gave me in the leg muscle in Australia....it made me cry.
@michellelogreco33519 ай бұрын
Get up and walk!!!! This is ridiculous.
@Nylak-Otter8 ай бұрын
That's a little hard when you are explicitly instructed not to move for fear of death, or if you are unable to move without crashing headfirst into the hospital floor. I spent years in the hospital in my 20's where alarms would blare if I so much as shifted my weight. I was stubborn and tried to move around anyway, but I incurred a lot of unnecessary physical trauma in the process. Since my blood couldn't clot, I had to waste quite a lot of blood on transfusions from internal bleeding and bruising. Fortunately, because my blood couldn't clot, I didn't require heparin, though. Ha.
@roberterickson98859 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr and God bless Wish I heard this b4 jan...my husband had a stroke, shipped out of our rural area and when I got there a day later (8 hr travel in snow) he had tid for 6 days of heparin Then recently landed in local hosp with RSV and rec'd lovenox yet up in chair, amb to BR. Makes me ill...as a retired RN Thank you for keeping us informed God bless you Judy/Bob 🙏🌞
@scorpgal60879 ай бұрын
When I was in the hospital at 47, the phrase "walking around" was an understatement of my mobility. I rearranged the furniture to block the air conditioning vents! I think I was a textbook case of someone who should not have been given this injection.
@margritprevost70609 ай бұрын
Thank you for speaking up. You are helping me to gradually have faith in some medical professionals again.
@Sand19559 ай бұрын
My husband had a chemo port implanted in his upper left chest back in 1999, after he was diagnosed with rectal cancer. His oncologist wanted to start him on heparin to prevent blood clots in the port. But we had decided his surgeon would be the one calling the shots on his treatment, not the oncologist. So we asked her about the heparin. She asked if my husband had any signs of a clot in the port. We told her no. She then said "why then does the oncologist want to give him heparin?" So we told the oncologist "no" to the heparin. My husband never developed a clot in the port the 3 1/2 years he had it.
@cherylbastow13799 ай бұрын
No more heparin in ports, NS more frequently and with use.
@pst98219 ай бұрын
What's ns
@cherylbastow13799 ай бұрын
Normal saline
@Sand19559 ай бұрын
@@cherylbastow1379 If I remember correctly, before his weekly chemo treatments they flushed the port first with saline. A year after the port was implanted in his chest, he had a chemo port implanted in his abdomen that fed directly to his liver, they alternated each week filling it with chemo and then the following week with saline for that port.
@mystatinfreelife9 ай бұрын
I call it "McMedicine". Note that with statins, the practice often is not "minimum effective dose" but "maximum tolerated dose." 😞
@TheRealPureBlood9 ай бұрын
My doctor is doing his nut at me because I've stopped taking my statins and my cholesterol level has now more than doubled.
@ericrawson29099 ай бұрын
Good observation
@tia9049 ай бұрын
Tested on who ? A 120 lb woman is not the same as 300 lb woman or man. ...
@ar500007 ай бұрын
There is one disadvantage with these drugs in that they have to be withheld before certain tests, but unless a doctor, or nurse specialist tells the general nurses on the ward to withhold the injection, this may not be done. For example: colonoscopies. A patient who has done the correct bowel prep, goes for the test, but is sent straight back to the ward becos the blood thinner has not been withheld for long enough. This wastes an appointment slot, plus the patient has to do the bowel prep again and stay longer in hospital.
@Kiki-wi7px4 ай бұрын
NO ONE SHOULD BE ON STATIN'S !
@darlenebradley67569 ай бұрын
Heparin!!! I guessed it before he got through the first sentence! I have begun to question a LOT of the things being marketed for 'therapeutic anticoagulation'. Unfortunately, insurance companies won't pay for the treatment of a DVT complication, so these interventions are ordered as a knee-jerk, CYA measure "just in case". It's considered a 'best practice' and the doctors are REQUIRED to order anticoagulants, or TED hose, or sequential compression sleeves....I've seen doctors order all three interventions concurrently! It's kind of cray-cray if you ask me. Of course, we rarely allow people out of the bed on their own because of the liability associated with falls. At my facility we are pressured to not allow people to be "up ad lib", unsupervised, and rarely have enough staff to spend time walking with, or otherwise mobilizing the patient. All that immobility (and narcotics) sets the patient up for bowel issues (constipation). So, naturally, they are then ordered all kinds of bowel meds that create diarrhea. That triggers placing the hapless patient in contact isolation and screening for clostridium difficile....one thing leads to another, and another, and another...But at least we're all following the $cience.
@Paragon628 ай бұрын
My dear u won’t allow me out of bed sounds like a prison.
@darlenebradley67568 ай бұрын
@@Paragon62 Yes, it is sort of like prison and I've had plenty of patients make that comment. 🤷♀
@heathercampese54217 ай бұрын
This is EXACTLY what happened to me a couple of months ago. I refused and said I would do laps around the floor first. Had to argue for it with the nurse.
@braxtonbunch9 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. I've worked in several hospitals where all patients were given heparin (usually lovenox.) I can't count how many times I've rattled off to patients the list of reasons they should take it, believing there was evidence behind it. Then, for the last 7 years, I've done most of my nursing on a surgical ship in west Africa, where NONE of our patients get heparin, and we've never had a case of DVT. Why are we doing this to people in the U.S.? I will never take routine heparin if I'm hospitalized.
@Paragon628 ай бұрын
You are a follow never thinking about what your doing shame.
@doreentanner58619 ай бұрын
God bless you for your honesty Doctor. Love and light to you and your family. Please keep safe UK
@kimberleebrackley27939 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dr.Suneel Dhand. I wish all doctors were more like you.
@drsuneeldhand9 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@CSI4269 ай бұрын
Shouldn't insurance companies monitor hospitals' administering services & meds since they're paying the bills? It seems hosp can throw in the bucket many non essential meds to rack up the bill & insurance company is not doing anything about it.
@americafirst91449 ай бұрын
This is what one doctor alone did to me: Crippled me Broke a bone Caused me to get 3 infections Caused me to have numerous operations to fix his error Damaged an organ
@concepcionmenzona-stewart46159 ай бұрын
I’m so saddened you had this done to you😢
@americafirst91449 ай бұрын
@@concepcionmenzona-stewart4615 Thank you. I'm getting by. It makes you strong. Just found out about the organ damage. Hope it doesn't kill me. What a quack he was.
@MsDMary5 ай бұрын
I refused the Heparin shots and several other things in the hospital. The nurse got a bit upset with me, but I just said "Hey, I can take a couple of walks down the hall. It will do the same thing for me, right?" They really hate it when you challenge their thinking.
@smc130Ай бұрын
I’m a retired RN. Keep challenging! Nurses get programmed into following protocols and not “thinking or questioning “.
@donnaw28689 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing this heparin issue to our awareness, Dr. Dhand. If a patient can walk around, this injection need not be given to a patient who does not need this.
@jillefeldme94529 ай бұрын
I’m a family physician and I tell my patients to decline those shots and get up and about as quickly and as much as possible.
@bucii019 ай бұрын
Your work on youtube gave me the knowledge along with two other medical professionals saved my Life from a heart attack. Pushing the medical doctors i have to get an angiogram done bcs i was experiencing so many symptoms for 2.5yrs. They blew me off chalking it up to anxiety, my Knowledge learned from you and my own research exposed a coronary blockage that was a ticking time bomb
@gean48909 ай бұрын
Plenty of hospital ls actually put an alarm on your bed once you're checked in and tell you you're not allowed to get out of bed cause you're a fall risk...
@gypsygem93959 ай бұрын
Probably a ruse to get you to become one - being in bed for days on end isn't good for your legs or mobility
@muzerhythm22429 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr Dhand educating us on this! Thank goodness the last 2 times I was in the hospital for surgery (hysterectomy and more recently cholecystectomy), they used the massaging boots put on my legs.
@JanSmith-w7g9 ай бұрын
May God bless you Dr. Dahnd. You are doing the Lord's work by helping many with every video you post.
@terywetherlow79709 ай бұрын
The last 4 years made me decide to avoid all medical,if possible. At 68 i think they can shove their poisons.....i am going "out" the same way i came in. I appreciate your wisdom Dr.Dhand. Tee in Usa
@faza5539 ай бұрын
Hygienic Autonomy: A Manifesto the liberty to declare myself sick; the liberty to refuse any and all medical treatment at any time; the liberty to take any drug or treatment of my own choosing; the liberty to be treated by the person of my choice, that is, by anyone in the community who feels called to the practice of healing, whether that person be an acupuncturist, a homeopathic physician, a neurosurgeon, an astrologer, a witch doctor or someone else; the liberty to die without diagnosis. BRAVE NEW BIOCRACY: HEALTH CARE FROM WOMB TO TOMB , By: Illich, Ivan
@debravictoria74529 ай бұрын
@@faza553liberty to die without diagnosis? I think that happens more often than we know.
@glendalamadrid55679 ай бұрын
Same here. Since the pandemic, I have not seen any doctor. I got sick with colds only once a year. I'm now 63.
@faza5539 ай бұрын
@@debravictoria7452 Illich walked his talk. As documented in the recently published, 2021, tome: Ivan Illich: An Intellectual Journey by David Cayley
@missylearned98219 ай бұрын
I agree that it’s probably not needed for the vast majority, but I’m grateful I had it given to me after being admitted last month (I went to the ER with chest pain) into the hospital. I have HoFH diagnosed at 21 and have extremely high LDL levels while triglycerides and HDL are all in great ranges, A1C is 5.0 and I’m skinny. Turns out during the catheterization they found 3 of the 4 arteries from my quad bypass 7 years ago are again 100% occluded, but collateral veins have grown. Why am I grateful for the heparin (obviously in my case it was correctly used)? I had 2 ischemic strokes, 1 on each side of my brain about 5 hours after the catheterization was done. God is merciful and I’m here clear headed and able to listen and learn from your videos and write this comment.
@terryclish61779 ай бұрын
Wow!!! I was recently hospitalized and was given a shot of this and I ended up with a bruise on my abdomen. The next day after being able to get up and walk around off and on all day. A nurse came in and said I needed another shot. I asked what it was for and she said it was to prevent me from getting clots. I told her no. Her facial expression was priceless. She said well you need it. I informed her since I was up and about I would not need it. She wasn't happy about that but I stood firm. Thank you for confirming me. I don't have a medical degree but I do have commonsense.
@mtmc8239 ай бұрын
I had Brain surgery delayed 2 days bc I took aspirin (not knowing i had Bilateral Sub Dural hematomas causing headache) a nurse tried to give me Heparin the night before surgery!! I was also ambulatory and refused!
@jjfreedom9219 ай бұрын
Totally agree, went into hospital in my 30s with simple gastritis and soon after being admitted coming in with a heparin shot!! Luckily I'm in healthcare and said no way! Nurse stated but protocol. Ridiculous
@BarbaradeLapeyre6 ай бұрын
Funny, I just copied a post from @sonjapollon 568: 70 years old, 0 medications, 0 drs visits, 0 tests, no restaurant food, no processed food, no tv. Instead lots of walking, moving, home cooked meals, organic veggie garden as of late , lots of sunshine, fresh air, family close by, energetic puppy. Life is wonderful! Thank you Sonja for letting me find you, I thought I was all alone! And of course 'Thank you' to Dr. Dhand for your logic. Love you
@markb39159 ай бұрын
Amazing how Sunny knows more than the entire medical profession put together.
@natalyz809 ай бұрын
I was given an anti blood clothing injection after having my baby. I still got up and moved more than I do when I'm unwell with a bad headache at home. A shame I didn't question it more at the time. But realistically, while I could refuse, I probably wouldn't be getting more information The more I listen the more I learn. It's a big industry, indeed. How did I not think that people are maximising their profits in this business as well
@enidcronin97049 ай бұрын
Before I retired I was a RN in the NHS. Every patient who is admitted has a venous thrombosis assessment and not everyone fitted the criteria for enoxaparin so it was not prescribed. This assessment is repeated weekly whilst an inpatient and the data logged with patient safety.
@Shiny549 ай бұрын
First rule of medicine...Do no harm!
@seth101-hv4st9 ай бұрын
That's the old rule. The new first rule is "Maximize profits at all times!"
@ritabarber92869 ай бұрын
Now. Make money.
@wendyrowland77879 ай бұрын
Not box ticking, arse covering in many cases.
@teresaford45849 ай бұрын
I was in the hospital overnight to have a diverticulitis abcess drained. Had to have shots in my leg. It was so painful.
@drsuneeldhand9 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear!
@VoulaKambouraki9 ай бұрын
We are not even safe in the hospital any more, I pray God 🙏 to keep me safe and healthy every day,
@324cmac9 ай бұрын
We haven't been for a long time. More patients are just now starting to refuse to mindlessly follow what they are told.
@ericrawson29099 ай бұрын
Eat well and exercise. Avoid sugar and vegetable oils
@TheDavecroft9 ай бұрын
You are safer there than anywhere else if you are seriously ill. Too many folks believe stuff like this on KZbin rather than the evidence from hundreds of thousands of qualified doctors all over the world 🤷🤦 But believe God will keep you safe if you like.
@Support_Ad_Blocker9 ай бұрын
which god?
@sundayschwein61629 ай бұрын
@support_Ad_Blocker There is only 1 God. The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
@sheilaphillips22909 ай бұрын
I was in the hospital for abdominal surgery. Hospitalized for 2 days. I was independently walking up and down the halls and they still gave it to me. I had much bruising on my abdomen and a couple injection sites kept oozing blood . That's Mayo for you!
@johnkean68529 ай бұрын
Mayo Clinic?
@christinehoughton85919 ай бұрын
I was in hospital a week but I could walk and did errands for the other patients. I was administered this injection my abdomen was so bruised and sore, took weeks for the bruising to disappear. Thank you for this important information. 👍
@spawnofnamaah9 ай бұрын
I did query it the one time I was in hospital for appendicitis (unavoidable unfortunately). The reaction from the staff mostly seemed to indicate a policy of the hospital wanting to avoid liability due to the risk of blood clotting due to lack of motion while you're bed bound. I was in my early 20's and definitely spent whole weekends less active than that hospital visit, and the only anticoagulant helping me through those weekends was copious amounts of alcohol 😅
@dporrasxtremeLS39 ай бұрын
Right in the Tenders! Ouch! Thanks Dr. Suneel Dhad.
@thrithgolden27489 ай бұрын
We love you Dr. Dhand.. I hope God protects you and gives you more wisdom to understand truth.. ❤
@drsuneeldhand9 ай бұрын
Really appreciate your kind words
@artheemisia9 ай бұрын
I was prescribed the equivalent as a pill, to be taken twice a day for 27 days… They told me that it was very important after a surgery
@eless35439 ай бұрын
In order to make money a business has to sell product (and in the hospital setting typically with a gargantuan mark up on cost). Tick box medicine exactly.
@debravictoria74529 ай бұрын
Had to have a hip replacement in 2008. When I got home, I had to inject myself in the stomach. It really creeped me out. I don't know what I got in the hospital, other than pain shots and two bags of blood. Refused the blood until I felt like I was going to pass out. The prophylactic antibiotic shot on the way to the OR caused my throat to itch and start closing off. I got through to the anesthesiologist who smiled and said I must be sensitive to it. Guess he took care of it because I woke up after surgery.
@twoleftfeet96269 ай бұрын
it isn't given out as widely in the Uk as it was. DVT stockings are used more now
@natalieshicks78809 ай бұрын
After being in a car accident at 18 and having a TBI I was given Heparin every morning at 5;30. My stomach was so bruised and painful. It lasted for a month and a half while in the hospital and rehab.
@mrfreddie04p9 ай бұрын
I just spent 24 hours in the hospital - suspected recurrence of a blood clot. After performing tests that ruled out thrombosis, I was still given an injection of heparin anyway, "just in case":)
@edie43219 ай бұрын
My Mother got a bleed from heparin. She almost died with a hematoma the size of a basketball in her abdomen. She was never the same again. It was all downhill from there.
@moniquecatalina13229 ай бұрын
You're the best Doctor!❤
@MoM-do7js9 ай бұрын
And even more scary, many incompetent nurses give this injection incorrectly, in the arm(also lovenox) with the MD not following up on if they really need it for extremely extended periods of time. The docs here in the states are absolutely negligent in so many ways it’s disgusting 🤬
@sclark77479 ай бұрын
I have a large (size of my palm) bruise on my stomach that is all colors of the rainbow, it’s hard to the touch, the whole nine yards from taking lovenox. I am “high risk” pregnant with TERRIBLE varicose veins and get blood clots really easily so I am told I have to take it while pregnant for sure. The bruises are terrible though. My husband had a comparable bruise after falling out of a tree. I HATE taking it. I am on the move constantly but still am high risk for blood clots. This video was very interesting. Not sure I can stop taking it though.
@tia9049 ай бұрын
Look into baby aspr in, ask your gyn. It's inexpensive but has same effect.
@sclark77479 ай бұрын
Took baby aspirin with two other pregnancies. They tell me it’s insufficient this time around.
@Nylak-Otter8 ай бұрын
Ah, heparin. I was in and out of the hospital for years with multiorgan failure while waiting for a transplant when I was in my 20's. I declined heparin every time because I was still forcing myself to be somewhat active so I didn't become 100% bedbound, which I should have been in my condition. I was instructed not to leave my bed without assistance, which I also ignored. I was basically a terribly uncooperative patient. I think it's ill-advised to refuse heparin if you ARE bedbound. If you don't understand the mechanism of how the medication works, trust your doctor's recommendations. I personally just happened to be quite familiar with the risks involved in my situation, so I was confident enough to avoid it. No one argued with me because I wasn't expected to survive, anyway.
@7hilladelphia7 ай бұрын
Ah hah ! I see ! Still here ! Loitering ? With intent to live ?? How dare thee ❤❤❤❤
@pauletteschiowitz89897 ай бұрын
Mother will be 102 next month, no drs., no meds, no cancer, no heart disease, no replacements, no vax and I will be 78 no meds but ckd stage 3a, ketovore, more energy than ever and btw, my mother has to climb 13 stairs to go to the bathroom, several times a day,
@drsuneeldhand7 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing! My best to you and your mother
@merrybisogna95709 ай бұрын
Thank you for educating me so grateful 🙏
@debrasimanski22249 ай бұрын
My mother is on Eliquis, for AFib. I wonder all the time if this is REALLY necessary. The Eliquis causes her to have nosebleeds and really bad bleeding hemorrhoids at times. We must question everything coming from the medical/sickcare system.
@HopefulEmpath9 ай бұрын
There has to be something else your mother can have, if needed. I had a stent in almost a year ago, and despite not having A-fib, the Dr wanted to put me on Eliquis which I refused. He also tried to put me on a statin which I refused. He was angry with me. I AM on dual anti-platelet therapy and a beta blocker for the year, but the dr said I’m only on 2 of the 4 Pillars of the protocol. That word “protocol” aggravates me Lol!
@hdwarrior88308 ай бұрын
So glad I refused it. I had physical therapy come in to help me walk and do stretches and use the boots if I'm immobile over night
@Nina-wt8ie9 ай бұрын
Thank you for always giving us good information. Doctors like you are very rare these days. I hope we will be getting your good advice for a very long time. 🙂 They don't want to have to get the patients up and moving around so they give them the drugs instead. It's easier for them.
@margiestephens72819 ай бұрын
Thank you for this timely advice, Dr. Dehand. As always, we never know when this would arise in our receiving medical treatment of some kind.