I had a letter in June inviting me to a health check at my surgery. The only check I would like is one with a large sum of money to reimburse for the unnecessary and likely harmful immunotherapy I received in 2020, and for being essentially misdiagnosed regarding my alleged cancer.
Anyway, I have not had one of these before via the surgery. Given that the government website says they started in 2009 I am surprised I wasn’t invited earlier.
Still, the surgery letter says ‘An NHS Heath Check is like a midlife MOT and has the potential to add disease free years to your life.’
There is more information at the following link and I thought I would comment on it. Text in italics from the page unless otherwise stated.
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/nhs-health-check/
NHS Health Check
What is an NHS Health Check?
The NHS Health Check is a free check-up of your overall health.
So it is free. At the point of use of course but they assume you know that. You pay via your taxes. They assume you have forgotten this and will fail to question whether this is good value for money.
It can tell you whether you’re at higher risk of getting certain health problems, such as:
heart disease
diabetes
kidney disease
stroke
During the check-up you’ll discuss how to reduce your risk of these conditions.
If you’re aged over 65, you’ll also be told about symptoms of dementia to look out for.
If you are demented it may be too late. Symptoms of dementia include thinking Joe Biden is a great president and Keir Starmer will do a good job as prime minister.
Who is the NHS Health Check for?
Healthcare professionals to give them employment and taxpayers to reassure them that their money is being wasted well-spent.
The check is for people who are aged 40 to 74…
So midlife goes up to 74 now, that’s nice
…who do not have any of the following pre-existing conditions:
I have assessed myself below.
– heart disease
No
– chronic kidney disease
No
– Diabetes
No
– high blood pressure (hypertension)
No (though my blood pressure might rise in the presence of a stupid healthcare professional)
– atrial fibrillation
No
– transient ischaemic attack
No
– inherited high cholesterol (familial hypercholesterolemia)
No
– heart failure
One would have thought if one had heart failure one would be dead but never mind. Let’s check…..hmm, yes still alive
– peripheral arterial disease
No
– Stroke
No, my wife hasn’t been nice to me for ages…
– currently being prescribed statins to lower cholesterol
No way Jose!
– previous checks have found that you have a 20% or higher risk of getting cardiovascular disease over the next 10 years
No
You should have regular check-ups if you have one of these conditions. Your care team will be able to give you more information about this.
Unless it was in peak COVID 19 when common sense went out the window. It has yet to return in any meaningful way.
How do I get an NHS Health Check?
If you’re aged 40 to 74 and do not have a pre-existing health condition, you should be invited to an NHS Health Check by your GP or local council every 5 years.
The council struggles to mend the roads so why they should be involved I don’t know.
The GP’s struggle to help people heal so why they should be involved I don’t know.
Nowadays they will invite you to be poisoned with a vaccine. This gives them more work to do when you are invited for your health check.
If you think you are eligible but have not been invited, contact your GP surgery to find out if they offer NHS Health Checks or contact your local council to find out where you can get an NHS Health Check in your area.
So not all surgeries offer them??
Some pharmacies also offer NHS Health Checks.
And vaccines and other poisons.
What happens at an NHS Health Check?
Your NHS Health Check will be done by a healthcare professional. This will usually be a nurse, but it could also be a doctor, pharmacist or healthcare assistant.
I see that ‘healthcare professional’ anagrams to ‘er foolish charlatan pees’. This is one of many reasons nowadays not to have confidence in healthcare professionals.
Healthcare assistant probably the cheapest and so this will suit the GP practices who are private businesses.
Healthcare assistant longest single word anagrams is:
– Acanthesthesia
This means
A type of paresthesia characterized by a tingling, numbing sensation as of being pierced by needles, usually caused by the (temporary) clamping of nerves.
From
https://www.wordnik.com/words/acanthesthesia
Pierced by needles eh? They can give vaccines I understand.
Looks like avoiding healthcare assistants highly advisable.
The check takes about 20 to 30 minutes and usually includes:
– measuring your height and weight
I can do that. We have a weighing machine and a tape measure.
– measuring your waist
Big sigh, we still have a tape measure.
– a blood pressure test
Useful up to a point but like the stock market will go up and down. The lady who helps clean the house lent us her battery blood pressure tester so I have checked relatively recently. All normal within the wide range of what is normal.
Surgery letter also mentions taking the pulse. Not sure why this isn’t listed here too.
– a cholesterol test, and possibly a blood sugar level test, which is usually a finger-prick blood test. You may be asked to have a blood test at or before the NHS Health Check
Surgery letter doesn’t mention blood sugar test. The cholesterol test would be the only thing I might have which I cannot do myself.
However, given the serious issues around cholesterol and the misinformation from the medical professional and organisations such as the British Heart Foundation (BHF), I question the benefit of this. See links at the end.
You’ll also be asked some questions about your health including:
– whether any of your close relatives have had any medical conditions
I can imagine the response if someone said ‘Yes, my mother died from the side effects of the COVID 19 vaccine.
– if you smoke, and how much
I am fuming with rage over the incompetent and murderous health professionals who think that vaccines among other poisons are good for people’s well-being.
But I have never smoked tobacco or anything else. I quite like the smell of the barbeque and bonfires though.
When I worked in Brighton I reckon I could smell cannabis in the air at times. This is why people often say ‘Hi’ to each other and the answer is ‘Yes, I guess I am.’
– if you drink alcohol, and how much
I sympathise with those who drink to cover up their despair over the useless NHS and government. Thankfully I have never succumbed to this temptation, I prefer the Holy Spirit!
– how much physical activity you do
Existing is hard work nowadays but I do walk 10-15 minutes round the block and cycle up the hill in the village about a mile there and back.
Swimming twice a week usually after a sauna.
Walk to the loo, dining room, kitchen – my life is one big marathon!
– Your age, gender and ethnicity will also be recorded.
What if people wish to self-identify as something else than one’s actual age, male or female and skin colour/place of birth?
And supposing the next health check comes round and you change your age, gender and ethnicity?
Your NHS Health Check results
You’ll usually be told your NHS Health Check results during the appointment.
The surgery letter says the results are put into a calculator. I assume this is not the mathematical calculator of old but a computer. The algorithm will tell you how at risk you are I suppose.
You are at risk of just being a number.
“I am not a number, I am a free man!”
Cue maniacal laughter.
You’ll be given your cardiovascular risk score of developing a heart or circulation problem, such as heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes or kidney disease, over the next 10 years.
They should ask whether you intend to have vaccines over the period as that will make a big difference.
The healthcare professional may describe this risk score as low, moderate or high.
You might wish to assess if the healthcare professional will be a risk to you, low, moderate or high.
Or if you prefer, ‘arch healer, pointless oaf’, an anagram of ‘healthcare professional’.
Everybody’s cardiovascular risk rises with age, so the next time you have an NHS Health Check your risk score may be higher, even if your test results are the same.
Death risk rises with age, a well-known fact. Except that people forget well-known facts like this.
Doctors’ basic errors are killing 1,000 patients a month
Friday 13 July 2012
There are some things about your risk which you cannot change, such as your age, ethnicity and family history.
But you can change your gender then?
But the most important factors in your risk score (such as smoking, your cholesterol level and blood pressure) can be changed.
They have missed out vaccines, pharmaceuticals and diet.
Your NHS Health Check results should also be broken down into:
– your body mass index (BMI) score
– your blood pressure
– your cholesterol levels
– your alcohol use score
– your physical activity assessment result
– your diabetes risk assessment
At the end of your NHS Health Check, you’ll have the chance to discuss your results and how to improve your scores, including where you can get support.
You might be safer with your builder nowadays. Our builder is now working on the house again after a long gap since last year. My wife is feeling better as a consequence.
This could include talking about how to:
– improve your diet
Now they do mention it, about time.
– increase the amount of exercise you do
– lose weight
If you get a stoke from a vaccine for example you may need a limb amputating. This will make a difference, although if it is your leg you may be hopping mad!
– stop smoking
– reduce the amount of salt in your diet
Mmm…..but what type of salt? Will they mention the chemicals added to table salt?
– reduce your alcohol intake
– reduce your cholesterol
Or not. The Midwestern Doctor does a long article although full access requires paid subscription. However, there is still much to read on what is visible.
You may also be referred to local services, such as stop smoking and physical activity services, to help you make any changes.
Find out more
There are links to these on the NHS webpage.
Alcohol advice
Quit smoking
Physical activity guidelines for adults
Calculate your heart age
How to lower your cholesterol
Benefits of the NHS Health Check
(Apart from keeping NHS employees busy)
The NHS Health Check aims to lower your risk of getting conditions that affect the heart and blood vessels, such as heart disease, stroke and kidney disease.
But will not lower your risk of taking toxic vaccines or medications.
Many of the warning signs for these conditions, such as high blood pressure and high cholesterol, do not have symptoms.
The NHS Health Check helps you find out if you are at risk of getting these conditions so you can take action to improve your health. This could include making lifestyle changes or taking medicines.
I would stick with lifestyle changes and avoid medicines.
The risk factors assessed during the health check are often shared by other conditions, including type 2 diabetes, preventable cancers and respiratory illness. An NHS Health Check could help you to reduce your chance of getting these conditions too.
They will not advise against vaccines causing cancer as big pharma won’t want you to know that.
Dementia and heart disease also share common risk factors.
Including vaccines. Putting what is essentially toxic slurry directly into the body has never been a good idea.
A potential association between COVID-19 vaccination and development of alzheimer’s disease
Published: 28 May 2024
Myocarditis and pericarditis after COVID-19 vaccination: clinical management guidance for healthcare professionals
Updated 9 January 2023
Summary and final thoughts
NHS health check is a substantially a waste of time and money. In the past this sort of thing would be the preserve of the well informed family which knew how to look after its members, but the breakup of family life has made this much less normal.
The health check may help the ignorant reassess their health and keep the staff employed, but the NHS will give with one hand and take away with the other with its promotion of toxic vaccines and medication.
The term MOT has been used to describe the nature of the health check. An MOT is what you do to the car. Putting vaccines and toxic medications into your body is like putting diesel fuel into a petrol car, you will risk losing power to your body as you risk losing power to the car engine.
In days gone by we had family doctors who knew the family and would visit. They would then see the situation and understand more the stresses and strains in the context of the home rather than the antiseptic surgery.
Whilst a visit to the surgery might be entertaining, I can’t see I will gain anything from it. The doctors never looked at my diet, not one GP or specialist yet these health checks were set up in 2009!
Nearly 10 years later when my facial palsy occurred in 2018 yet they never asked. Useless bunch of …………* (insert suitable word)
Health checks are sticking plasters on the ills of UK society, ignoring deeper concerns the mental and spiritual. We cannot expect the State to have real concerns for its people; it is people and families who will truly care.
But God the heavenly Father cares which is why it is written
“For as high as the heavens are above the earth,
so great is His loving devotion for those who fear Him.
As far as the east is from the west,
so far has He removed our transgressions from us.
As a father has compassion on his children,
so the LORD has compassion on those who fear Him.
For He knows our frame;
He is mindful that we are dust.”
Psalm 104 vv. 11-14
P.S. Here is the link from the BHF on cholesterol doing its best to support big pharma and statins.
Here are some of my links for information/ amusement.
“Why vaccines do not work” in a nutshell
British Heart Foundation – what are they saying about Covid 19 and vaccines?
Statins – are they really good for the heart?
The prime cause of my facial palsy.
Sodium nitrite (E250) – the poison in your food and how to remedy it.
For those who like pointless things to do here are some forms. Please feel free to print off and circulate. You could fill in and take to your appointments with a health professional.
This link on salt didn't copy over so rather than add it I paste here and pin.
https://completelynourished.com/2010/09/28/how-to-avoid-anti-caking-agents-in-salt/
Too funny!
I see your sarcasm in just about everything you write.
I'm 70, and gave up my statins after researching the Scamdemic in 2020.
All of the research led me to realize that cholesterol was a hoax as well.
You may remember back in the 70's, that eggs were bad for you...
Absolute bullshit, but many believed.