There’s hospitals still pulling this shit…~TS
The Boston Medical Center is refusing to provide life-saving care to John Doe because he wonât wear a face mask during clinic visits.
By Shawn Fleetwood | The Federalist
While most of the country has moved on from the Covid histrionics of the past three years, some states and medical wards still refuse to live with the virus â and patients in need of life-saving treatments are paying the price.
In Boston, Massachusetts â the city where the Sons of Liberty took a stand against British absolutism in the years preceding the American Revolution â a modern-day patriot is staging his own battle against unjust tyranny. At 43 years old, a man using the pseudonym John Doe is fighting for his life in a legal battle against the Boston Medical Center (BMC), which has denied him access to life-saving medical treatment because he wonât wear a face mask during visits to the clinic.
A born and raised Bostonian, Doe was first diagnosed with HIV in April 2006 and has since been a regular patient at BMCâs Center for Infectious Diseases. As part of his treatment, he undergoes antiretroviral therapy (ART), which includes taking a drug combination tablet once a day and semiannual in-person visits to BMC, where he has his blood drawn for analysis. If Doe doesnât attend his appointments and get his blood analyzed, his pharmacy will not refill his ART prescription.
Despite strict adherence to his treatment protocol and cordial behavior with BMC staff, Doeâs situation took a turn for the worst after the outbreak of Covid. While able to obtain his medication from the pharmacy through telehealth appointments during Massachusettsâ initial lockdown phase, the return to in-person hospital visits proved difficult after Doe chose not to wear a face mask during clinic visits.
During his first post-lockdown appointment in September 2021, Doe was provided and ordered to wear a mask by BMC staff. According to a copy of his legal filing obtained by The Federalist, Doe had previously experienced ânegative medical symptoms from using face masks,â but ultimately complied because he âfelt pressured to agree to put the face mask on his face for fear of being deprived of his ART prescription.â
Doe says that throughout his appointment he experienced myriad negative side effects from wearing the mask, including anxiousness and moments where he felt âas if he was unable to get a full breath of air, his eyes itched, and his airway burned from the nose down to below the throat.â
âWhen I wear a mask, my lips break out where [they start] scabbing and peeling,â Doe told The Federalist. âBasically, I look like I just smoked [or] used drugs. ⊠Itâs really embarrassing.â
During his next visit on Feb. 9, 2022, Doe opted not to wear a mask and was denied entry into BMCâs Infectious Diseases facility. While unable to attend his appointment and get his blood analyzed, Doe managed to negotiate with his doctor and pharmacist for an additional six monthsâ worth of ART prescription refills.
When arriving at BMC for his appointment on Sept. 7, 2022, Doe entered the building without a face mask and proceeded to his doctorâs office without issue. Once there, Doe was confronted by BMC staff, who asked him to put on a mask and alerted security following Doeâs refusal to do so. After an allegedly polite exchange with BMC staff and security, Doe left the facility without undergoing his routine status check.
To date, Massachusetts still requires face masks be worn in certain indoor settings, such as facilities and programs âlicensed or operated by the Commonwealth.â This includes emergency medical services, hospitals, and primary and urgent care centers, among others. The health order does, however, exempt â[p]ersons for whom wearing a mask ⊠creates a health riskâ from the requirement.
Despite Doeâs fulfillment of one of the listed exceptions under the order (âthe face mask or covering affects the personâs ability to breathe safelyâ), BMC has denied him the option of not wearing a face covering during his appointments. BMCâs legal counsel has argued such an accommodation isnât warranted because Doeâs âmedical record does not support such a request.â
Suddenly, itâs ânot âmy body, my choiceâ when choosing not to wear a mask. And as a patient, I have every right to refuse any kind of procedure the hospital tries to impose on me,â Doe said. He also cannot âgo anywhere else in Massachusetts [to receive treatment] because itâs the same emergency order across the board.â
As noted in his legal complaint, Doe ran out of his ART prescription on Oct. 12 and sought care at BMCâs emergency room, which denied him access to the medication because of his decision not to wear a mask. Doe has since been able to locate additional ART tablets, which he previously stored for emergency situations. As of his Jan. 6 interview with The Federalist, Doe had âabout 14 daysâ worth of medicationâ left.
While there currently isnât a complete cure for HIV, ART and other medicines have given HIV-positive individuals the ability to live fairly normal lives. If left untreated, however, the disease can develop into AIDS â the âlate stage of HIV infection that occurs when the bodyâs immune system is badly damaged because of the virus.â Without meds for HIV, people with AIDS are given roughly three years to live.
Doeâs Case for Relief
Filed in the Suffolk County Superior Court last month, the lawsuit against BMC alleges eight counts of illegality, including a violation of Doeâs âconstitutional right to privacy,â as well as several charges related to medical battery. As part of the suit, Doe has asked the court to provide several forms of relief, including an order requiring BMC to give him ART medication and allow him to resume visits to the facility without a face mask.
âThere exists a fundamental right of bodily integrity in common law going back hundreds of years. And basically, no one is allowed to even touch you without your permission or without a clear authority of the law,â Doeâs attorney, Ilya Feoktistov, told The Federalist. âSo, whatever there may have been during the pandemic with [respect to] the governorâs emergency orders, that clear authority doesnât exist and probably didnât exist during the pandemic to overrule that basic common law.â
He noted that âno one can force an unwanted touch unless thereâs clear authority of the lawâ and that âthereâs no mask lawâ passed âby any legislatureâ in Massachusetts or at the federal level that would warrant such a scenario. Like nearly all other mask orders across the United States issued after Covid emerged, Massachusettsâ was issued unilaterally by its governor under an emergency statute that was extended repeatedly over the past few years.
Doeâs request for a preliminary injunction has been denied by the court, which claimed Doe âfailed to demonstrate either irreparable harm or a likelihood of success on the merits of his claims.â
âItâs not about the law or the complex arguments about the law,â Feoktistov said of the courtâs decision. âItâs all about control and a superstitious belief in this face-diaper.â
Feoktistov told The Federalist his legal team will appeal the courtâs ruling.
Doe noted his case is a strong example of the U.S. health care industry prioritizing âCovid over everything else.â The state and health establishment are âmaking it seem like Covid is the deadliest thing in the world, and itâs not,â he said. âIâm hoping this case will start ending the mask mandates and the governmentâs interference with peopleâs lives.â
In addition to its promotion of racially divisive ideologies such as wrongly named âdiversity, equity, and inclusionâ (DEI), BMCâs website is littered with sanctimonious pledges to âcare for all peopleâ and âprovide exceptional care, without exception.â Under its âValuesâ section, for instance, BMC lists several principles it purports to abide by, including one titled, âBuilt on Respect, Powered by Empathy.â
âWe care about our patients, employees, and community â and weâre committed to doing right by them each and every day,â it reads.
The Boston Medical Center did not respond to The Federalistâs request for comment.