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Jan. 11, 2024

800: The COVID Awakening - When Doctors Started Asking Questions

After witnessing concerning medical reactions to COVID protocols and vaccines firsthand, Richelle Voth resigned from hospital care to open an integrative clinic helping patients reclaim their health through creative, personalized solutions.

What if everything we were told about COVID-19 was wrong? Today's guest is blowing the lid off the COVID narrative.

 

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When COVID-19 first emerged, the medical community scrambled to understand this mysterious new virus. As a hospitalist working on the frontlines, Richelle Voth witnessed firsthand how protocols like Remdesivir failed to improve patient outcomes. After researching alternative therapies, she began utilizing repurposed drugs like Ivermectin with great success. However, she faced pushback for questioning official narratives.

In this interview, Voth details how COVID-19 and its "accepted" treatments caused a disturbing array of neurological, cardiac, and other adverse reactions in her patients. She recounts one remarkable recovery where Ivermectin resolved acute psychosis in a patient with no other explanation. As more patients shared similar stories, Voth could no longer ignore the correlations. She explains her journey of overcoming fear to "Follow the Science".

Voth provides glimmers of hope amongst the grim research emerging about COVID treatments. At her functional medicine clinic, Meehan MD, her team takes an individualized, root-cause approach to restore health in those suffering post-COVID/treatment complications. She discusses innovative lab testing and novel treatments personalized to each patient. Even for complex cases, creative medical detectives like Voth help patients reclaim their vitality.

Host Brian Nichols explores why public trust in health institutions has eroded after years of shifting narratives, goalpost moving, and vilification of dissenting experts. Voth explains how physicians can rebuild trust through transparency, patient autonomy, and reclaiming the sacred patient-doctor relationship. She believes we can create positive change by giving patients ownership in their care.

If you've felt gaslit by official COVID responses or are struggling with lingering symptoms, don't miss this empowering conversation.

Richelle Voth brings integrity, clinical wisdom, and hope that recovery is possible, even from adverse treatment reactions. Together, we can re-envision a new era of medicine that honors the sovereignty of both patient and physician!

 

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Transcript

Brian Nichols  0:00  
To. Discover how to reclaim your health after a COVID infection plus the dirty secrets that the big science Big Pharma folks don't want you to know. Yeah, let's talk about that. Instead of focusing on winning arguments, we're teaching the basic fundamentals of sales and marketing and how we can use them to win in the world of politics, teaching you how to meet people where they're at on the issues they care about. Welcome to The Brian Nichols Show. Oil Hey there, folks, Brian Nichols, here on The Brian Nichols Show. And thank you for joining us on of course, another fun filled episode. I am as always your humble host joining me live from our cardio miracle Studios here in lovely Eastern Indiana. Folks, I've said it once, I'm gonna say it again, the cardio miracle difference is in fact real. I say that as someone who's been using cardio miracle now for about six months. And I gotta tell you, I'm seeing the results firsthand whether it's sleeping better at night, watching my blood pressure, plummet, which my doctor says Good work, Brian, plus a bunch of other amazing benefits like feeling more pumped up at the gym having more energy throughout the day, and more. So if you want to join the 10s of 1000s of other folks out there who are experiencing the cardio miracle difference for themselves will go to the Brian Nichols show.com forward slash heart secure your cardio miracle order today. And if you use code TBNS at checkout, you get an exclusive 15% off that's available to all Brian Nichols show listeners. And by the way, there's a 100% money back guarantee. So you quite literally have nothing to lose except those sleepless nights, the high blood pressure and all those tired days that you have. So if you're watching us on the YouTubes head below in the show notes here in the description link is right there. Otherwise, head to the homepage, the Brian Nichols show.com. And it should pop up right there for you cardio miracle, yes, the best heart health supplement in the world. So yes, go ahead improve your ticker. And also if you're looking to improve other areas of your life, namely, let's say you are one of the quite literally millions of other folks who experienced COVID Over the past three, four years, which I'm pretty sure all of us at some point have at this, this moment of time. So with that I'm sure you are probably dealing with or have dealt with some of those long term lasting impacts of COVID. or, dare I say the Jabby jabs so we're gonna discuss all of that and more to help me discuss that in detail. Joining us today is Rochelle Voss from me and Andy, welcome to The Brian Nichols Show.

Richelle Voth  2:52  
Hey, Brian, it's good to meet you. Thanks for having me on today. You have a wonderful announcer voice or MC voice if I can say that, if Thank

Brian Nichols  2:59  
you. I appreciate that. I guess. Doing the show for six years has helped out a little Richelle do us a favor as we get things started today. Introduce yourself to The Brian Nichols Show audience and why are we having this conversation today? Focusing on reclaiming our health in a post COVID world? It's

Richelle Voth  3:17  
a great way to say it. Thank you. Yes, my name is Michelle both I'm based in Tulsa, Oklahoma. I work with me hit MD and Dr. Jim Meaghan who was an MD, but also a functional medicine physician. So we combined the best of both worlds. My pedigree and background was about eight years of hospitalist medicine. And during the acute COVID crisis, I was working in an L tak facility, which is a long term acute care facility for people who need 25 days or more of inpatient criteria. So I was helping wean people off events after they had been placed on the traditional protocols. And during that experience, I started noticing some things that just didn't make sense, medically to me. And then after the jabs rolled out, or if you want to call them the vaccinations, again, I saw some things that just didn't quite add up medically to me. And so I ended up resigning and transitioning out into outpatient medicine, I like to joke I joined the offensive team instead of defensive line. And I've been trying to help people mitigate any effects that they've been having post COVID, either infection or injection because we recognize that this is a space that needs some creative solutions, has a lot of hope, but that there isn't a well spoken or well versed yet. Routine platform for in terms of answers. And so we're in the wheelhouse of creative solutions here and trying to make that magic happen for people that have really been affected in our first ways. Well, Rochelle,

Brian Nichols  4:39  
if you have creative solutions, I think you came to the right podcast because that's what we focus on here at The Brian Nichols Show we talk about not just the problems, but actually the solutions we bring to the table right trying to actually help make people's lives better versus just pointing out problems and saying bad so yes, thank you for actually addressing that. Now let's dig into Um, let's dig into this whole craziness that has been COVID. Right? The past four years, it seems like everybody has been on high, a high alert, high intensity, because this big unknown this big question mark, which was COVID. Scary. I remember when COVID first started hit, I lived in a big city of a tie in Philadelphia. And it got weird, right? Like, we also had government officials determining who was considered essential versus non essential borders being closed down to go to work over in New Jersey, like all of a sudden, the city itself looked like we're in the middle of a zombie apocalypse. And fast forward like three and a half, four years later, Michelle, and unfortunately, a lot of those cities really haven't seemingly learned anything. And frankly, a lot of people in these big blue areas don't seem to have really learned anything as well. And on the flip side, right, there's a lot of folks out there who I would say we're more in the conspiracy world when it comes to addressing the COVID 19 pandemic. We're not, we're not saying that, you know, everything was done perfectly. As a matter of fact, we went to leading voices in our world, talking about all the negative things that were taking place. But you know, it's not going down the rabbit hole, as have been outlined in many other podcasts, not here on The Brian Nichols Show, of course, but other podcasts, you know, going through that, or am I trying to corral everybody? So when you're talking about a very concerned, and fearful public, people are willing, I mean, those the sales fears, one of the most compelling motivators can be to make a buying decision. And that means a good decision, or more often than not a bad decision. So let's kind of walk through that Rachele fear as a motivator. Yeah, what were some of the main things you saw folks do both red team and blue team or no team at all? So regardless, right, during the COVID, 19 pandemic, and thereafter, that just was completely silly and out to lunch?

Richelle Voth  6:48  
Yeah, you know, it's interesting, because when it first hit, none of us had any idea about what it was actually, at that time. In retrospect, we think that we might have had two patients on our floor about a week or two before we officially knew it was in the building, you know, that had this weird Acute Respiratory Syndrome. And they did compromise very quickly, and that we had no you know, swab or blood tests that pop positive for anything. And so our first experience was, we're all in this together, we have no idea what this is, right? And as we're going through that, to be honest, I remember going through medicals or excuse me PA school training, and being fitted for respirator masks during that time and thinking to myself, Why in the heck am I ever going to need this, you know, we're not in third world countries, we don't have pandemics epidemics, you know, here in the US. And then sure enough, it comes, you know, 2019 2020, and all of a sudden, we're having to suit up and mask, or buy PPE in the garage parking lot from an out of state supplier, because it's every person for themselves, the hospitals didn't have enough in store hands. So to your to your point, there was an element of fear, right, because none of us were equipped with the readiness of the information that we now have three years retrospectively. And so I think really, truly in the beginning of the pandemic physicians providers, we really tried to do our best with the limited information that we had. And at that time, that type of information had been sourced without any abuse of trust from our government agencies. But as we started utilizing certain tools, and certain rhythms and methods, you know, people did not get better. And then I had a personal experience where I got COVID, myself in that delta variant season, which is a particularly hard strain to fight off. And I quickly realized how unprepared the outpatient space still was because at this time, I had only been inpatient for about a year and a half, then I get COVID myself, and I literally was told by my primary care physician, once you don't cough anymore, you can come see me. And I thought, well, you know, um, since when do I say to somebody who has the flu, hey, don't come in the office today. I don't want to see you. You know, I just we don't do that physicians, pas mid levels and MPs. You treat the sick, not just the well, and so that just alarmingly threw into my face this understanding of oh, I didn't realize outpatient medicine doesn't still have a model or treatment out of algorithms or pathways I had heard at that time of ivermectin. But to be very honest, I thought, Oh, that's too simple. I'm not familiar with it. I've never used it as a clinician. And so a little bit of pry mixed with a little bit of fear also of nobody else is using ivermectin, you know, and like community. Kind of, you know, put me in the backseat of not utilizing it. But then as I started seeing us put people on remdesivir saw our little map toaster loosened up, and you know, healthy 35 year olds decompensating being put on event and then three weeks to three months of weaning. after that. I scratched my head and I said something's not right here either Kovats big, bad scary and we're still not getting it, or our drugs are not the right treatment pathway. And so that was part of my awakening of reversal of stepping out of the fear zone into Okay, now I've seen this long enough. I've had a personal experience with it. That was pretty horrible. And I'm starting To recognize that some patterns and, you know, medical experience with these patients them, you know, trying to revive back to health doesn't quite add up and I'm might be deviating a little bit from your original topic, but in how do we deal with the fear at that point, if I can say it myself, I started becoming a little bit more my own investigator investigator research. Yeah, I did my own research. And to be thankful I have a physician friend who's an anesthesiologist here in town, and she, at that time, was also asking the same questions. And so we would at night, you know, send each other some papers, or did you hear this speaker talk about this, you know, and that's at the time where I kind of came into the knowledge of the frontline Critical Care Alliance, and the physicians like Dr. Pierre quarry, and Dr. Moving siete, and stuff of that nature and started looking at their theories and what they were doing. And then comes these, you know, vaccinations, this new technology platform, and just out of the, you know, reasonable, reasonable, plausible scientific method that we should adhere to. I have questions, you know, and I kept it in the background in my head is a differential diagnosis anytime somebody came into my care that had had one of these vaccinations, and I started seeing things that didn't add up, I started seeing neurological conditions that were refractory to traditional treatments, you know, I saw them have more repetitive infections of respiratory nature. That didn't make sense, or I saw a resurgence of cancer if they had been formally treated and in remission, but now it was full blown again, where did that come from? And so a lot of those questions were merited. And but there was still again, no scientific method for treatment at that time, until I kept growing with the FLCC. And I did have a patient actually who was acutely psychotic on haemodialysis, her family has authorized me to tell her story. All of those symptoms manifested themselves three days after her fourth vaccine, it was a booster. And we treated her with ivermectin after two months, you know, progression of ruling out everything under the sun. And within three days, she cleared up in her mentation. She's back to her normal self. She did not recover functionally from a renal dysfunction significantly, but permutation was back. I mean, she was previously not able to feed herself, she was not able to participate in physical therapy. She didn't know who I was, who her husband was, etc. And so when that happened, and when I treated her with something as simple as ivermectin, and I saw a proportional decrease in their antibody response from the COVID shots, I said, okay, something's in the water, we got to do something about this. And that's kind of where we are today. So I think I deviated from your original question. But I gave a little bit of the highlights of my journey to explain that I went we went from a story of fear to having to figure out and be involved in you know, the diagnosis the workup with not just trusting a blindly, you know, an organization that we rightfully should be able to trust, but at this point cannot and having to do their own homework. And truly, I think the real heroes of the medical model today, are the physicians with the FLCC are people like Dr. Peter McCullough. You know, Dr. William MCIS, and things of that nature. So So,

Brian Nichols  13:04  
Rochelle, I gotta be that guy now, because we heard this over the past three years, right? Who are you, Rochelle? Why are you trusting the experts? Mark, you're trusting this science? Who you think you're you think you're the science? I know first man. That that's Dr. Anthony Fauci he signs so whoever shall obviously yeah, I'm tongue in cheek right here, right. But like, that must have been and I'm sure still is really uncomfortable, because this is not at all medically, you know, conclusive one side or the other in terms of how the medical professionals are going to deal with COVID and also deal with the after effects of the COVID vaccine. So like, this is still something that is making people butt heads and I saw you know, in my personal friend group, heck I had, groomsmen disowned me because I didn't trust the science, but you're actually in the world. You're in the world of medicine, and I'm sure it must have been as bad dare I say, if not worse on your was your personal experience.

Richelle Voth  14:04  
Yeah. You know, in the hospital world, maybe regrettably, I was not as vocal about that. And the treatment of patients, I was really more observant at that time. And the cornerstone case became when I actually did do something I went to infectious disease, the nephrologist on the case, the internal medicine physician involved with that patient but the acute psychosis and the renal failure. And I showed them the research from FLC CC and I made the case for ivermectin and I went to the pharmacist and gave them the literature that I had, that was contrary to, you know, the CDC HHS general opinion. And because that was in some ways a Hail Mary Case, they were willing to accept it, thankfully, and we had a favorable outcome, but you know, moving out of that space and into the world of outpatient medicine, there is a reason for doing that, because inpatient what it still is a difficult environment for the change of thought exist also, you know, there are there are certain guidelines and restrictions, physicians don't have complete ownership in the way that they really should to be able to make autonomous decisions for the best health of their patients. Furthermore, there's a lot of stress and a lot of burden on this physicians currently in a hospitalist position in terms of numbers and patient load, and you know, it doesn't allow for time for you to do your own research, regrettably. So stepping into the outpatient world was a big change for me to be able to provide an excuse me to provide different care and then to be able to have the time to do the research that we needed to. But yeah, it's, it's an everyday growing. You know, we always use the word investigation already, but you're always learning something new. Okay, because I'm treating people a different way that let's say I a rheumatologist is in Missouri that I know who uses you know, exosomes and IV peptide therapies, while I'm using oral peptide therapies or sublingual or nasal sprays or repurposed pharmacological drugs. If you go to Dr. Jordan Vaughn in Alabama, he is doing triple therapy, which is aspirin, Plavix, and Eliquis. To help degrade micro clots. Some people believe that's the best strategy. So we're still all in this together and a think tank way. There are still some really creative physicians out there trying to provide realistic solutions. But that conversation is ever evolving. If I can say one more thing without being as we go along monologue. For example, I have one patient who, you know, marathon runner, and all of a sudden can't walk up the stairs, what changed? young, healthy, vibrant female. And, you know, the only thing that really truly changed the timeline of the differential of loci, maybe she has heart failure, maybe she had lung condition was the vaccine has done every cardiology tests under the sun. And we actually found evidence that the mitochondria of their heart had been impacted and turned off, which is kind of interesting. And so when that happened, I

Brian Nichols  17:04  
run a Wireshark because I remember from bio class that the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell.

Richelle Voth  17:09  
Absolutely. Bad. Patient. Look at me. Yeah, battery packs, they truly are. And so you know, for some people, we get the methylene blue, which is helpful. It's like the sparkplug back to the battery of their mitochondria. There are other ways to do that to your affiliate, a pomegranate, extract, etc. But when, because I was concurrently treating her and then working with the cardiologist cardiologist said, Well, hey, whatever that other person's doing, and it seems to be working for you, can we connect, because I'm seeing more and more of this? So you know, some of it is just the product of what's happening with our patients. Other physicians are asking questions, I had some teenagers and I'm working with who have pot syndrome. And this cardiologist has pediatric cardiologist who said, I'm having two cases a week, I used to only see two cases a year. And they said to the mother of one of my patients, if this works for you with this, quote, specialist, which is our team, would you let me know what they're doing? Because I'd love to know. So I think that this setting has been set for, you know, physicians wanting to know, different modalities curiosities to answers that we're not being able to solve in a traditional medical way. So I don't think we're not wanting to see answers and people get well, I just think like you said, the the back and forth between where's the information coming from how do we know it's met? It's, you know, vetted, merited. That's still on the table. We all

Brian Nichols  18:34  
in this kind of opens up the Pandora's box for the future shell and that is, Can Can we trust our medical professionals at a large scale? Level? Sure. rarely ever again, right? Because we saw firsthand and in our, as much as COVID was awful, and don't get me wrong, it was easily the most terrible thing that collectively we as a planet have experienced in recent memory, right, like, like everybody was impacted in some way, shape, or form. And, and to see this collectivized approach from all of these governments just come together, toeing the same line and regurgitating the same narrative. Even though this is the part that just pisses me off so much, even though there was others folks like you when Dr. Mercola, like Dr. Malone, who not only have done research, but were vocally speaking out against a lot of what they were seeing take place, and were ostracized from polite and acceptable society. You weren't allowed to question Dr. Anthony Fauci and him being the science trademark, we're allowed to actually ask questions, and that for me, was terrifying because not only was it scary to see how quickly all these official representations of government and science and the expertise He's that we're supposed to rely on in lockstep. But this the part that really scared me Rochelle is how quickly the populace followed suit. As soon as they saw enough of those people. I mean, goodness, this is I hate to make the comparison. But this is gobbles Nazi Germany stuff all over again get enough people in government to regurgitate the exact same light. And soon enough, people just start to accept it as fact and truth. And that terrifies me, Michelle, because I don't know. How do we earn as a we this case is if you are a medical professional, how do you earn the public's trust back? How do our institutions earned the public's trust back now for three four years are more or less flipping them, the burden slapped him in the face?

Richelle Voth  20:43  
Right? Well, personally, I would love to see Dr. McCulloh or somebody like Dr. Meaghan become the face of the CDC instead, you know, the people that have been vetted and true that knew what they were doing during the COVID experience, and had the right outcomes, you know, Dr. Meehan himself, we treated 1000s of patients before I came on, so he treated 1000s of patients, I should say, you know, with zero negative outcomes, no deaths, using repurposed pharmacological drugs, part of the part of what Dr. Mean, and I do, what we love about seeing our patients in this way is we give them the research of the reasons why we're doing what we do. So if there's a study that I've read, and you know, to the best that we can, you know, dumb it down, I don't mean that in a rude way, but just bring it to somebody in a level that they can understand and interpret it, because some of that gets very scientific and heavy up here, that even I don't understand. But we like to give them at least the resources that it came from, or, you know, the anecdotal story that correlates with it, so that not only do they have the research for themselves to read, but that they can present it to people in their family, or to other medical providers that they come into contact with throughout their journey. So part of it is just being humble part of it is being very open. And being a collaboration of care and saying to patients, hey, I actually trust you as your own clinician, as well to be a part of this process. Because it really truly is, you have the autonomy of your independent choice to choose whether or not you want to take this methylene blue or this ivermectin, you know, from our care. But here's the research behind it, here's why we think it works. But we're open to saying that it might not as well. And I think as long as we can keep that type of a framework in the patient provider relationship, we should see better outcomes. And then sometimes, you know, the proof is in the public isn't put away is in the pudding. But what I'm trying to say. So, you know, with people that we get, well, what are they going to say to that they're probably going to say, okay, it worked, you know, or I trust you now, because I have evidence for the first time. I mean, I can't tell you how many people we've worked with who have been expelled $200,000 and seen 20 providers, right. And then they come to our doorstep, and within 60 days, they're back on track. And I can't promise that for everybody. I'm not saying we are in the you know the wheelhouse of miracles here. But we are in the middle house of restoration and having answers and solutions that not every primary care is aware of right now. The not the hospitalist community is certainly, you know, terribly well versed in at this time. I think we'll get there, I really truly do. And maybe that's the goodness of my heart, wanting it to be that way

Brian Nichols  23:15  
out there working, hoping and praying right things kind of get back to I hate to use the word some sense of normalcy, but like, when people could just kind of live life I don't know, everything got weird after 2019 You want to like CERN decided to increase their their testing out there in Europe and maybe just like destroyed everything. And we didn't even realize it but a different conversation for a different day. Rochelle, we are going toward the tail end of the episode here we do a little segment called Final thoughts. I'll kick things off, and I'll turn things over to you and you ended up what actually kind of it was where I was already going for my final final thoughts but I'll just maybe put a nice bow on it is that you mentioned the the one to one doctor patient relationship. And I think you're right like that that will be the has to be the way we reclaim some sense of of trust in our medical professionals. And I think what we saw happen over COVID was really this collectivization of treatment, where somehow everybody is all of a sudden the exact same Medically speaking, biologically speaking, and everybody all of a sudden needs to have the exact same remedy for whatever in this case virus it is right. And you know, I'm, I'm not the smartest guy in the room. But I am smarter than your average bear. And when I start to look at it when I was first seeing this, I was like not everybody is the same. I'm a six foot five 265 pounds, like former football player, and like Michelle I'm gonna guess you're not a six foot five pound former football player. So I would dare to reason that my meta Gold needs and what I would need from, you know, my health and wellness standpoint is probably gonna be a little bit different than yours. And that's okay. And yet, we saw this prescription pushed down not just on the American populace, but the entire freaking planet where everybody is supposed to get this exact same treatment. And just by that very, like declaration, my red flags went up, my spidey senses were tingling. I'm saying this doesn't seem right. Much like when you were looking at the therapeutics and the approach that you're supposed to take, as you were told by the quote unquote, experts all sudden, not really doing what I'm supposed to do. So then that trust starts to get broken. And to that point, how do we reclaim it? I think yes, going back, first of all, finding folks like you, Rochelle, who you can actually feel that you're getting care from the actual care and not just a new either pharmacy sales rep, which sorry, that's reality in some cases, or just someone who's afraid of speaking truth, and that part right there. Like, I'm thinking, we're seeing a change. Michelle, I'm hoping you're seeing it in your your circles as well, more and more doctors starting to wake up to what's happened over the past four years, like, you can't unsee this stuff. And I think more and more folks are starting to acknowledge that ginormous elephant in the room. That's my final thoughts for today. Michelle, what do you got for us on your end?

Richelle Voth  26:23  
Those are good final thoughts. A lot of them they're in a very well said spoken way. You know, my final thoughts are that there is hope. Because I think so often we focus on the negative Nancy, and all of this. And to be fair, there's a lot of negative that's coming out in the research world, surrounding the COVID shots, you know, specifically the modified RNA ones. But what I want to tell people truly is that there is hope, not every case is the same, like you said, we're not all six, five football players, I'm a five two ballerina, okay, our testosterone levels are gonna be very different. But when you take into that account, and you find a provider, like Dr. Meehan and I, we try and put the time value back in the relationships, our appointments are always starting off 35 to 45 minutes to an hour long. So that we really get to know you as a person. And we get to discuss the wide span algorithm of who you are, and the best ways we can advance your care. And so here at MI, Han MD, we have different varieties of appointments, we do this COVID restoration program to help people get well either infection or injection. And we'll be very frank with you, if we don't think it's related to either of those as well. We don't want to waste anybody's money or time. But we also do functional medicine consults here, and we do hormonal rebalancing. And so that's kind of the breadth and the depth of who we are. We also have a novel blood test called the gallery, which helps screen and detect for 50 plus different types of cancers that not everywhere in the US has right now as an available resource. So we're a little unique in that world. So I just want to let people know there is hope. There is recovery out there. And if we don't have it, we will have the connections I can guarantee you of who does or who might. Because like I said, I don't have the IV capabilities right here right now. But I do know who does over in Alabama, or who does in Washington, etc. And because we're within that network of freedom fighters and medical hope, searchers and solution creative thinkers, we're, you know, going to find something for you that will get you on the right track. And that's kind of our promise to the public there.

Brian Nichols  28:20  
Love it, Rochelle. And the best part even though you're based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and you have folks all over the world, yes, you can do this via tele med. Tell us about that. So, insurance, the other pocket, what does that look like? We

Richelle Voth  28:33  
are cash pay. So we're not insurance based mainly because if insurance gets involved, our hands start getting restricted at what we can and cannot do. For example, I tried to send ivermectin script through I don't know if I can say Express Scripts. And they said, sure not if it's for COVID. Related, you can't do that. Whoo hoo. So you know, we have to work around those things. So we're cash paid for that reason. But we are licensed in 35 states, if you go to our website, Nihan. And D, that's m is a mom Diaz and dad.com. Me and md.com, we have a map up there of all the 35 states that were licensed to provide care, prescriptions and treatment, and we'd love to see you. And

Brian Nichols  29:08  
you have a minus wellness shop, which is exclusive listeners, The Brian Nichols Show can get 10% off with first 10. So thank you, thank you very much for shelf for that, that nice discount code for my audience. So folks, we will include those links in the show notes. Go ahead. Use your exclusive offer because those types of offers don't come around too often. So yes, no, Michelle, this has been an absolutely fantastic conversation. I know for a fact, my audience got some value from this today. And with that being said, audience, please go ahead and give today's episode a share when you do tag yours truly at Facebook and on Twitter slash x at B Nichols. Liberty Rochelle, where can folks go ahead and find you if they want to continue the conversation?

Richelle Voth  29:51  
Thank you. Yes, again, just median and d.com is our are their flagship site. We're on Facebook to Dr. James Meaghan is the one you should be looking for. As routinely or I believe his instagram handle, which doesn't give out as much, but we have quite a few followers there James me, him or doc me, I think it's doc me and DSC and e ha. And you can find us on all those modalities. fan

Brian Nichols  30:12  
tastic. Rochelle, this has been a great conversation. So folks, if you enjoyed it as much as I did, which I again, I know you do, please and beyond going ahead and giving it a share, please go ahead and support the show. How can you do that? Well, you can make a one time donation over at Brian Nichols show.com. Forward slash support, or you can support the show by supporting those who also support the show. So support our sponsors like cardio miracle eagles, blood of tyrants, liquid freedom, BNC, technology advisors, and more. All these amazing organizations help us keep the lights on so I'm going to ask you to help keep their lights on. Please support our awesome sponsors. And of course US Code TV and s we'll make sure you get a special little discount whenever you order their services or products. Now, with that being said, if you enjoyed today's episode, and you want to make sure other folks can find the episode well, you can find us wherever it is you consume your podcasts or video content podcasts, Apple podcasts, YouTube, Music, Spotify, wherever it is you consume your podcasts, just hit that subscribe button, download all unplayed episodes, we're just around 800 episodes in total here for The Brian Nichols Show. So I guarantee you have a plethora of episodes in the archives to dig through that will leave you educated, enlightened and informed. If you want the video version of the show, you can go to your favorites like YouTube, Rumble Ben swans sovereign spelled s o v r, e n, and we also are uploading our episodes in their entirety to x.com. So if you want to go ahead and check us out over on Twitter, you can do that as well. And by the way, if you are joining us over on Ben Swann and sovereign, it is spelled s o v r e n, and you're seeing today's episode before anybody else because that is your sovereign exclusive. That's all I have for you guys. I'm tired, I'm ready to go to bed. And hopefully you are as well because now we know that there are folks out there like Rochelle who are actually fighting the good fight and letting us have a little bit more, I guess, happy thoughts going as we drift off to sleep knowing that there are people like Rochelle who are in fact trying to fight the good fight and give us a better tomorrow today. So with that being said, Brian co signing off. You're on The Brian Nichols Show for Rachele vote. We'll see you next time.

Transcribed by https://otter.ai

Richelle Voth, PA-CProfile Photo

Richelle Voth, PA-C

Richelle Voth is a cerƟfied Physician Assistant with eight years of hospitalist, internal medicine & criƟcal
care (ICU). Over the last three years, she specifically treated paƟents with acute COVID, long-haul COVID,
and COVID-vaccine injuries. Working through the pandemic and its aŌermath opened her eyes to novel
medical community challenges. RestricƟons to early treatment of outpaƟent COVID-19 therapies, the
uƟlizaƟon of disadvantageous inpaƟent COVID-19 treatments, and the missed diagnoses of post-COVID
vaccine injuries grew apparent. PaƟents needed easier access to outpaƟent medical care, criƟcal thinking
provider-paƟent conversaƟons & integraƟve wellness strategies that extended beyond prescribing a “pill
for every ill.”
Seeking to align herself with a medical team dedicated to remedying these challenges, Richelle came to
join MeehanMD. She now provides targeted therapies & holisƟc wellness strategies to MeehanMD
paƟents in 34+ states who suffer physically from either COVID sequelae and/or COVID vaccine adverse
events. Using re-purposed pharmaceuƟcals, nutraceuƟcals, and lifestyle modality techniques, Richelle
equips paƟents with immune-supporƟve therapies to restore their opƟmal health. She and the
MeehanMD team believe that by honoring their paƟents’ innate scienƟfic design and upholding the
ethics of paƟent-centered care, they will conƟnue to offer innovaƟve & integraƟve scienƟfic soluƟons
addressing our modern-day health challenges.
An ongoing learner, Richelle is pursuing an addiƟonal… Read More