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A good friend has cancer. Where can I get one of these to help cure him ?

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
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Med-Bed copy.png
 
I thought they already have it in New Zealand?

sarco-euthanasia-capsule-3.jpg
 
Can use MediSave to buy from Cash Converters ?
 
what he needs is an elysium med bed. cures all diseases and repairs all tissues and bones.
1641526174589.png
 
Maybe get a LingKongJing master to purge all the disease from the patient?
 
i am sorry to hear about your friend.
The source of info of med bed at the moment that i know is skye prince. You can check with her in her youtube or telegram

youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM_Sw2MSIivtZQClAsUssBw

telegram: Skye's Med Bed Room.

The latest youtube video is her saying that they are looking or having people to built centers for healing and med beds. 6-8 month is the time she gave for public access to med bed but i am not confirmed about the timing as it can be changed.
 
i am sorry to hear about your friend.
The source of info of med bed at the moment that i know is skye prince. You can check with her in her youtube or telegram

youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM_Sw2MSIivtZQClAsUssBw

telegram: Skye's Med Bed Room.

The latest youtube video is her saying that they are looking or having people to built centers for healing and med beds. 6-8 month is the time she gave for public access to med bed but i am not confirmed about the timing as it can be changed.


Why is it so hard to get information regarding these devices especially the technical information.

My friend is about to go through very risky surgery which will do nothing to cure the cancer. All it will do is postpone the inevitable by a a few months or a year or so at most.

I wish it wasn't so.
 
Why is it so hard to get information regarding these devices especially the technical information.

My friend is about to go through very risky surgery which will do nothing to cure the cancer. All it will do is postpone the inevitable by a a few months or a year or so at most.

I wish it wasn't so.
According to Skye,

The med beds are heavily guarded by the military. It is to prevent abuse and taken advantage of by not-so-good people. For technical info, i think other sources do reveal that it is using plasma tech. However, i forgot where i read that. if i come across it, i post a link here.

Or you can check out the Q&A in the telegram. I believe someone ask that question before regarding tech info and other stuffs. IT's a loooong Q&A.
 
I thought they already have it in New Zealand?

sarco-euthanasia-capsule-3.jpg
that is a much better option for Boss sam fren,,,,,,especially for those with Cancer

Maker of suicide pod plans to launch in Switzerland​

By Jane Wakefield
Technology reporter

Published9 December 2021
Share
Sarco pod
IMAGE SOURCE,SARCO
Image caption,
The pod can be 3D printed and placed anywhere
The company behind a 3D-printed pod which can help carry out assisted suicide has said it is confident it could be used in Switzerland as early as next year.
Sarco commissioned a Swiss legal expert, who found that the machine did not break any laws in the country.
But other lawyers questioned his findings.
And assisted-suicide organisation Dignitas said it would be unlikely to meet "much acceptance".
Assisted suicide, in which somebody is given the means to end their own life, is legal in Switzerland. About 1,300 people died there in this way in 2020.
Both assisted suicide and euthanasia, in which a doctor ends the life of somebody who wants to die, are illegal in the UK.

Legal debate​

The current method used in Switzerland is to provide the person with a series of liquids that, if ingested, will end the person's life.
By contrast, the pod - which can be placed anywhere - is flooded with nitrogen, reducing the oxygen levels rapidly.
The process would make the person inside lose consciousness and die in approximately 10 minutes.
The suicide pod is activated from the inside and also has an emergency button to exit.
Daniel Huerlimann, a legal expert and assistant professor at the University of St Gallen, was asked by Sarco to explore whether the use of the suicide pod would break any Swiss laws.
He told the BBC that his findings suggested the pod "did not constitute a medical device", so would not be covered by the Swiss Therapeutic Products Act.
He also believed it would not fall foul of laws governing the use of nitrogen, weapons or product safety.
"This means that the pod is not covered by Swiss law," he said.
But Kerstin Noelle Vkinger, a doctor, lawyer and professor at the University of Zurich, told Swiss newspaper Neue Zurcher Zeitung: "Medical devices are regulated because they are supposed to be safer than other products. Just because a product is not beneficial to health does not mean that it is not also affected by these additional safety requirements."
And Dignitas told the BBC: "For 35 years now, through the two Swiss Exit groups and for 23 years also with Dignitas, Switzerland has the practice of professional accompanied suicide with trained staff, in co-operation with physicians.
"In the light of this established, safe and professionally conducted/supported practice, we would not imagine that a technologised capsule for a self-determined end of life will meet much acceptance or interest in Switzerland."

Dr Death​

If the machine gets the go-ahead for use in Switzerland, the pod will not be offered for sale in the conventional way.
Instead, the capsule's creator Dr Philip Nitschke, said he planned to make the blueprints available so anyone could download the design. This will be made available for free.
His aim is to "de-medicalise the dying process", he said in an interview published on the Exit International website, a voluntary assisted dying charity which he founded.
"We want to remove any kind of psychiatric review from the process and allow the individual to control the method themselves."
He has long campaigned for the right to die, earning him the nickname "Dr Death".
Currently there are two prototypes of the Sarco pod, with a third being printed in the Netherlands.
Dr Nitschke has previously faced criticism for the pod, with some saying that its futuristic design glamourises suicide.
 
Why is it so hard to get information regarding these devices especially the technical information.

My friend is about to go through very risky surgery which will do nothing to cure the cancer. All it will do is postpone the inevitable by a a few months or a year or so at most.

I wish it wasn't so.
Imuho you should be contributing to your good friend's hospital treatment and hope for the postponing of the inevitable to match close to what fated to be rather than spending on that. Come to worst you should send him that thing my uncle showed :cautious: be clear minded.
 
Imuho you should be contributing to your good friend's hospital treatment and hope for the postponing of the inevitable to match close to what fated to be rather than spending on that. Come to worst you should send him that thing my uncle showed :cautious: be clear minded.

He does not need financial support he needs new technology.
 
that is a much better option for Boss sam fren,,,,,,especially for those with Cancer

Maker of suicide pod plans to launch in Switzerland​

By Jane Wakefield
Technology reporter

Published9 December 2021
Share
Sarco pod
IMAGE SOURCE,SARCO
Image caption,
The pod can be 3D printed and placed anywhere
The company behind a 3D-printed pod which can help carry out assisted suicide has said it is confident it could be used in Switzerland as early as next year.
Sarco commissioned a Swiss legal expert, who found that the machine did not break any laws in the country.
But other lawyers questioned his findings.
And assisted-suicide organisation Dignitas said it would be unlikely to meet "much acceptance".
Assisted suicide, in which somebody is given the means to end their own life, is legal in Switzerland. About 1,300 people died there in this way in 2020.
Both assisted suicide and euthanasia, in which a doctor ends the life of somebody who wants to die, are illegal in the UK.

Legal debate​

The current method used in Switzerland is to provide the person with a series of liquids that, if ingested, will end the person's life.
By contrast, the pod - which can be placed anywhere - is flooded with nitrogen, reducing the oxygen levels rapidly.
The process would make the person inside lose consciousness and die in approximately 10 minutes.
The suicide pod is activated from the inside and also has an emergency button to exit.
Daniel Huerlimann, a legal expert and assistant professor at the University of St Gallen, was asked by Sarco to explore whether the use of the suicide pod would break any Swiss laws.
He told the BBC that his findings suggested the pod "did not constitute a medical device", so would not be covered by the Swiss Therapeutic Products Act.
He also believed it would not fall foul of laws governing the use of nitrogen, weapons or product safety.
"This means that the pod is not covered by Swiss law," he said.
But Kerstin Noelle Vkinger, a doctor, lawyer and professor at the University of Zurich, told Swiss newspaper Neue Zurcher Zeitung: "Medical devices are regulated because they are supposed to be safer than other products. Just because a product is not beneficial to health does not mean that it is not also affected by these additional safety requirements."
And Dignitas told the BBC: "For 35 years now, through the two Swiss Exit groups and for 23 years also with Dignitas, Switzerland has the practice of professional accompanied suicide with trained staff, in co-operation with physicians.
"In the light of this established, safe and professionally conducted/supported practice, we would not imagine that a technologised capsule for a self-determined end of life will meet much acceptance or interest in Switzerland."

Dr Death​

If the machine gets the go-ahead for use in Switzerland, the pod will not be offered for sale in the conventional way.
Instead, the capsule's creator Dr Philip Nitschke, said he planned to make the blueprints available so anyone could download the design. This will be made available for free.
His aim is to "de-medicalise the dying process", he said in an interview published on the Exit International website, a voluntary assisted dying charity which he founded.
"We want to remove any kind of psychiatric review from the process and allow the individual to control the method themselves."
He has long campaigned for the right to die, earning him the nickname "Dr Death".
Currently there are two prototypes of the Sarco pod, with a third being printed in the Netherlands.
Dr Nitschke has previously faced criticism for the pod, with some saying that its futuristic design glamourises suicide.

Complex for no reason at all. Just get a small cylinder of nitrogen from a welding gas supply store, and a mask (or use a small room at home). Done.

One of my friend's father, who had a terminal illness did exactly this.
 
Complex for no reason at all. Just get a small cylinder of nitrogen from a welding gas supply store, and a mask (or use a small room at home). Done.

One of my friend's father, who had a terminal illness did exactly this.
thanks for the idea...will look it up
 
thanks for the idea...will look it up
It's how I intend to go, if I need to go early. One or two breaths and you're already unconscious, and doesn't cause the panic that CO2 does. My friend's father researched it a lot before doing it. The family was waiting in the other room after saying goodbye.
 
It's how I intend to go, if I need to go early. One or two breaths and you're already unconscious, and doesn't cause the panic that CO2 does. My friend's father researched it a lot before doing it. The family was waiting in the other room after saying goodbye.
Painless and peaceful way to go,,,why not?
 
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