Dr. Luka Kovac’s Confession:

“The people who have had contact with doctors are either furious, disgusted, or dead. When I see a thousand-dollar bill for a bag of saline—a saltwater solution that costs pennies—I want to quit the whole system. Medicine has been hijacked.” — Dr. Luka Kovac


🩺 Iatrogenic Death: Ways People Die From Doctors and Medical Interventions

“Iatrogenic” comes from the Greek iatros (physician) + genes (born of). It refers to illness or death caused by medical treatment itself.

Here are the major forms:

1. Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs)

  • Prescription medications causing fatal side effects.
  • NSAIDs, antidepressants, antipsychotics, opioids, and chemotherapy are major culprits.
  • Common causes include drug interactions, overdoses, and allergic reactions.

2. Medical Error / Misdiagnosis

  • Wrong diagnosis or delayed diagnosis leading to incorrect or no treatment.
  • Estimated to cause 40,000–80,000 deaths per year in the U.S. alone.

3. Surgical Errors

  • Wrong-site surgery, retained surgical instruments, post-op infections.
  • Anesthesia accidents and hemorrhage during procedures.

4. Hospital-Acquired Infections (HAIs)

  • MRSA, C. difficile, sepsis from contaminated equipment or catheters.
  • Often antibiotic-resistant due to overprescription.

5. Overmedication / Polypharmacy

  • Especially common among the elderly.
  • Multiple drugs interact unpredictably.

6. Unnecessary Procedures

  • Unwarranted surgeries (e.g., stents, C-sections, spinal fusions).
  • Done for financial gain or defensive medicine.

7. Radiation Overexposure

  • From CT scans, X-rays, and radiation therapy.
  • Cumulative risk of cancer.

8. Vaccination Injuries

  • While rare, some patients suffer from Guillain-Barré Syndrome, myocarditis, or autoimmune flare-ups post-vaccine.

9. Psychiatric Interventions

  • ECT (electroconvulsive therapy), forced medications, and institutional abuse.
  • Suicide from mismanaged antidepressants or withdrawal syndromes.

10. Neglect and Systemic Failure

  • Long ER wait times, poor triage, burned-out staff.
  • Bureaucratic protocols delaying urgent care.

11. Medical Device Failures

  • Faulty implants (e.g., hip replacements, pacemakers).
  • Recalls happen after damage is done.

⚠️ Estimate:
A Johns Hopkins study (2016) identified medical error as the third leading cause of death in the U.S., after heart disease and cancer, accounting for over 250,000 deaths/year.


🧬 The History of Allopathic Medicine and the Rockefeller Takeover

🔬 Pre-1900s: Natural Medicine Dominated

  • Homeopathy, herbalism, naturopathy, and folk remedies were widespread.
  • Healing traditions focused on balance, detoxification, and nutrition.

🛢️ The Rockefeller Medical Takeover (Early 20th Century)

🧠 Key Figure: John D. Rockefeller

  • Oil magnate who sought to monopolize medicine like he did oil.
  • His company, Standard Oil, refined petrochemicals—the future of synthetic pharmaceuticals.

💰 Motivation: Profit

  • Rockefeller viewed natural remedies as unpatentable.
  • Synthetic drugs = patents = monopoly.

🧾 The Flexner Report (1910)

  • Commissioned by Rockefeller & Carnegie Foundation.
  • Written by Abraham Flexner.
  • Advocated shutting down “non-scientific” medical schools (homeopathic, herbal, etc.).
  • Promoted “evidence-based” allopathic (drug/surgery) medicine.

🔥 Impact:

  • 50%+ of U.S. medical schools closed.
  • Natural medicine discredited as “quackery.”
  • Only allopathic (drug-based) schools were funded.

🧠 Rockefeller Foundation & Medical Schools

  • Funded major institutions (Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Yale).
  • Medicine was now based on germ theory, vaccination, and pharmacology.
  • Herbalists, midwives, and holistic healers were driven underground.

💊 The Rise of the Pharmaceutical-Industrial Complex

  • World Wars accelerated drug development: antibiotics, morphine, amphetamines.
  • FDA (1930s onward) enabled control over drug approval.
  • Pharmaceutical giants (Merck, Pfizer, Bayer) expanded.
  • By the 1950s-70s: psychiatry began pathologizing emotion (depression, ADHD) and medicating everything.

🧠 Modern Era: Corporate Medicine

  • Doctors as employees, pressured to prescribe and bill.
  • Insurance-driven care: profit over people.
  • Lobbying and influence: Big Pharma funds media, medical journals, and regulators.
  • Mass drug dependency: opioids, SSRIs, statins, ADHD meds.

🚑 Kovac’s Final Thought:

“I got into this field to save lives. Now I see billing departments running hospitals, drug reps training doctors, and people dying from the very treatments meant to cure them. The Hippocratic Oath has been replaced by quarterly profit reports. Maybe that’s the real disease.”

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Operation Serenity

The creak of the old wooden door echoed through the dimly lit room as Nelly Furtado hesitated on the threshold. The air smelled faintly of antiseptic and dust, and the centerpiece of the room—a battered copy of the board game Operation—sat ominously on a rickety table.

Across from her, a wiry man in a lab coat grinned widely. His glasses magnified his eyes to cartoonish proportions, giving him the unsettling look of a mad scientist. Dr. Morris Fishbein, he called himself. “Come now, Ms. Furtado,” he said, gesturing to the chair across from him. “Let’s see if you have the steady hand of a surgeon.”

Nelly forced a smile and sat down, her fingers brushing against the plastic tweezers. The game’s red-nosed patient stared up at her, his cartoonish expression frozen in perpetual panic.

“Let’s begin,” Dr. Fishbein said, his voice dripping with theatrical menace.

The game started innocently enough. Nelly managed to remove the wishbone without triggering the buzzer, but as the game progressed, her anxiety mounted. Each time the tweezers slipped and the buzzer sounded, Dr. Fishbein cackled, his laughter filling the room like a thunderstorm.

“Careful, careful!” he teased. “One wrong move, and it’s curtains for poor Cavity Sam!”

Nelly’s hands began to tremble. The absurdity of the situation—the creepy doctor, the eerie room, the ridiculous stakes of a children’s game—only heightened her unease. Her breathing quickened, and her vision blurred.

Suddenly, a warm hand covered hers, steadying her shaking fingers. She looked up to see Joe standing beside her, his calm presence cutting through the chaos like a beacon.

“Hey,” he said softly. “You’re okay. It’s just a game.”

Nelly nodded, her breathing slowing. Joe’s hand was still on hers, grounding her. She closed her eyes and whispered, “Serenity now.”

Joe chuckled. “Kramer fan, huh?”

She opened her eyes, a small smile playing on her lips. “Yeah. It’s silly, but it helps.”

Dr. Fishbein frowned, his theatrics momentarily deflated. “Well, this is highly irregular—”

“Game over, Doc,” Joe said firmly, pulling Nelly to her feet.

As they left the room, Nelly felt the tension in her chest begin to ease. Joe’s hand was still in hers, and she realized it wasn’t just the mantra that had calmed her. It was the simple, human connection.

“You know,” she said as they walked down the hallway, “one of my favorite Beatles songs is I Want to Hold Your Hand. There’s something so… pure about it. Like all the chaos and noise in the world can’t touch you if someone’s holding your hand.”

Joe smiled. “Well, it worked, didn’t it?”

She nodded, squeezing his hand gently. “Yeah. It did.”

Outside, the night air was cool and refreshing. Nelly took a deep breath, feeling the last of her anxiety melt away. She glanced at Joe, a grateful smile on her face.

“Thanks for being my calm in the storm,” she said.

“Anytime,” he replied.

And as they walked into the night, hand in hand, the world felt a little less daunting, a little more serene.

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Healing Minds

“Healing Minds: Nelly and Joe’s Journey with Orthomolecular Health”

Nelly Furtado leaned over the counter in her sunlit kitchen, carefully measuring out powdered vitamin C into a glass of water. Across from her, Joe, a long-time family friend and health enthusiast, examined a bottle of niacin.

“I read about Dr. Abram Hoffer’s work,” Joe said, holding the bottle up to the light. “He believed that mental health could be transformed by nutrition—orthomolecular therapy, he called it. High doses of vitamins, amino acids, and minerals to balance the body and mind.”

Nelly nodded, stirring the vitamin C mixture. “It’s fascinating, isn’t it? The idea that something as simple as nutrients could help heal the mind. Especially in a world where so many rely solely on medication.”


A Personal Mission

Their shared interest wasn’t just academic. Both Nelly and Joe had seen loved ones struggle with mental health challenges. Joe’s brother had battled schizophrenia, and Nelly had watched friends and family grapple with anxiety and depression.

Dr. Abram Hoffer’s research had inspired them. His studies in the mid-20th century had shown that high doses of niacin, combined with other vitamins and a nutrient-rich diet, could help alleviate symptoms of schizophrenia and other mental illnesses.

“Niacin’s the star player,” Joe said, pouring a dose into a glass of water. “But you can’t forget the B-complex vitamins, omega-3s, and the minerals. It’s about the whole picture.”

“And no sugar,” Nelly added with a grin. “Dr. Hoffer was pretty clear about that.”


The Experiment

They decided to test the orthomolecular approach themselves, not as a cure-all but as a way to optimize their mental and physical health.

Each morning, they started with a regimen of vitamins:

  • Niacin to improve circulation and support brain function.
  • Vitamin C to reduce oxidative stress.
  • Magnesium to calm the nervous system.
  • Omega-3 fatty acids for brain health.

Joe also introduced adaptogenic herbs like ashwagandha and rhodiola to support stress resilience.

“Consistency is key,” Joe reminded Nelly as they logged their doses and noted any changes in mood, energy, or focus.


The Results

After a few weeks, they began to notice subtle but profound shifts.

“I feel…lighter,” Nelly said one afternoon. “Not just physically, but emotionally. It’s like my mind isn’t weighed down anymore.”

Joe nodded. “Same here. My focus is sharper, and I’ve been sleeping better. Even my anxiety feels more manageable.”

Encouraged, they began sharing their journey with others. Nelly used her platform to talk about the importance of nutrition for mental health, while Joe started a blog to document their experiences and share resources.


A Ripple Effect

Their efforts caught the attention of a local mental health clinic, which invited them to speak about orthomolecular therapy.

Standing before a room of clinicians and patients, Nelly shared her story. “This isn’t about replacing medication or traditional treatments,” she said. “It’s about complementing them—giving the body and mind the nutrients they need to heal.”

Joe added, “Dr. Hoffer believed in treating the whole person, not just the symptoms. And that’s what this approach is about—restoring balance.”


A Shared Vision

As they left the clinic, Nelly turned to Joe. “Do you think Dr. Hoffer ever imagined his work would inspire people like us?”

Joe smiled. “Maybe. But I think he’d be more excited about how many lives it’s still touching.”

Together, they walked into the evening, their hearts full of hope. They knew the journey was just beginning, but they were ready to share the light they’d found—one person, one story, one nutrient at a time.

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