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MN Senator and Dr. Reveals HHS Document Coached Him on How to Overcount COVID-19 Cases — WITH COPY OF DOCUMENT (VIDEO)
By Cristina Laila
Published April 8, 2020 at 3:50pm
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Dr. Scott Jensen, a Minnesota physician and Republican state senator said he received a 7-page document coaching him to fill out death certificates with a COVID-19 diagnosis without a lab test to confirm the patient actually had the virus.
“Last Friday I received a 7-page document that told me if I had an 86-year-old patient that had pneumonia but was never tested for COVID-19 but some time after she came down with pneumonia we learned that she had been exposed to her son who had no symptoms but later on was identified with COVID-19, then it would be appropriate to diagnose on the death certificate COVID-19,” Dr. Scott Jensen said.
Dr. Jensen explained that this is not a normal procedure.
Dr.. Jensen said for example if the same patient had pneumonia during flu season and he didn’t have a test confirming the patient also had influenza, he would never diagnose the patient with influenza on the death certificate.
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Chris Berg
@chrisbergPOVNOW
SHOCKING: MN Sen & Dr. @drscottjensen said that he received a 7 pg doc from @mnhealth to fill out death certificates with a diagnosis of #COVID-19 whether the person actually died from COVID-19 or not.
Why is #MN inflating COVID-19 death numbers?
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The Gateway Pundit has a copy of the HHS letter sent out to doctors across the country on counting COVID-19 victims.
The document is here.
US HHS Document to Doctors … by Jim Hoft on Scribd
Vital Statistics Reporting Guidance
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention • National Center for Health Statistics • National Vital Statistics System6
Scenario III: An 86-year-old female with an unconfirmed case of COVID–19
An 86-year-old female passed away at home. Her husband reported that she was non-ambulatory after suffering an ischemic stroke 3 years ago. He stated that 5 days prior, she developed a high fever and severe cough after being exposed to an ill family member who subsequently was diagnosed with COVID–19.Despite his urging, she refused to go to the hospital, even when her breathing became more labored and temperature escalated. She was unresponsive that morning and her husband phoned emergency medical services (EMS). Upon EMS arrival, the patient was pulseless and apneic. Her husband stated that he and his wife had advanced directives and that she was not to be resuscitated. After consulting with medical command, she was pronounced dead and the coroner was notified.
Comment:
Although no testing was done, the coroner determined that the likely UCOD was COVID–19 given the patient’s symptoms and exposure to an infected individual. Therefore, COVID–19 was reported on the lowest line used in Part I. Her ischemic stroke was considered a factor that contributed to her death but was not a part of the direct causal sequence in Part I, so it was reported in Part II.
CAUSE OF DEATH (See instructions and examples)
32.
PART I.
Enter the chain of events–diseases, injuries, or complications–that directly caused the death. DO NOT enter terminal events such as cardiac arrest, respiratory arrest, or ventricular fibrillation without showing the etiology. DO NOT ABBREVIATE. Enter only one cause on a line. Add additional lines if necessary. IMMEDIATE CAUSE (Final disease or condition
———>
a._____________________________________________________________________________________________________________resulting in death) Due to (or as a consequence of):Sequentially list conditions, b._____________________________________________________________________________________________________________if any, leading to the cause Due to (or as a consequence of):listed on line a. Enter the
UNDERLYING CAUSE
c._____________________________________________________________________________________________________________(disease or injury that Due to (or as a consequence of):initiated the events resultingin death)
LAST
d._____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Approximate interval:Onset to death _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________33. WAS AN AUTOPSY PERFORMED?Yes No
PART II.
Enter other significant conditions contributing to death but not resulting in the underlying cause given in PART I34. WERE AUTOPSY FINDINGS AVAILABLE TOCOMPLETE THE CAUSE OF DEATH? Yes No35. DID TOBACCO USE CONTRIBUTETO DEATH? Yes Probably No Unknown36. IF FEMALE: Not pregnant within past year Pregnant at time of death Not pregnant, but pregnant within 42 days of death Not pregnant, but pregnant 43 days to 1 year before death Unknown if pregnant within the past year37. MANNER OF DEATH Natural Homicide Accident Pending Investigation. Suicide Could not be determined
Acute respiratory illness1 day5 days Probable COVID-19Ischemic stroke
Scenario III