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Rolf R.'s Story

Geneva, IL

I am very sad as I believe my wife could have had a chance to get better if she were allowed to take her own medication.

I was prevented from seeing or being with her until the last day.

Denied Treatment

“Delnor Hospital refused to let Sherri take her own medication despite us pleading the case.”

My wife Sherri had breathing difficulties and was administered to Delnor Hospital in Geneva, IL on November 19 via ambulance. I put in Sherri’s purse her own medication as they took her to the hospital. I gave her: Ivermectin 12 mg, 2 daily for 5 Days, then 2x weekly

Hydroxychloroquine, 1 daily for 12 days, Aspirin, pure 44/157, 2 daily up to 650 every 4-6 hours to prevent blood clots.


Delnor Hospital refused to let Sherri take her own medication despite us pleading the case. After a few days in ER care her breathing situation got worse and she was transferred to the ICU department where she died on November 30 due to respiratory failure as a result of Covid pneumonia.


Mistreated Until Death


If Delnor Hospital would have let Sherri take her own medication she might be still alive. My wife complained bitterly that she was lying in a cold ER Room for six hours without anybody attending to her after initial admission. Asking for a glass of water would take 45 minutes. She finally was moved to a room that night but the care didn’t improve much.


She was laying in her own excrement for hours before someone came to change her. As days went on Sherri felt frustrated and eventually gave up and wanted to go home to be with Jesus.

I was prevented from seeing or being with her until the last day on Nov 30th at 11:00AM. I held her hands and comforted Sherri for 12 hours at her bedside while close friend Janet was using oils to massage Sherri’s arms and legs. It was agonizing to see my beloved Sherri struggling until her last breath at 11:37PM. If she needed more Morphium to ease the pain it would take up to 45-60 minutes before a Nurse came back. The same for a glass of water for Janet and me in the room with my wife. Janet needed to use the toilet but was told there was none in the room and if she went outside of the room she couldn’t come back in. Janet then looked around in the room and found a disguise toiled in our room.



Continued Battles

“By refusing her that right Delnor Hospital acted as Judge, Jury and Executioners.”

There are plentiful examples of how the above medication could have helped Sherri including President Trump who took it.


In May, a DuPage County judge ordered Elmhurst Hospital in Elmhurst to give a doctor admitting privileges and let him give a 68-year-old woman ivermectin. She has recovered.


In November, another DuPage judge ordered Edward Hospital in Naperville to give admitting privileges to a doctor and allow him to give Ivermectin to a 71-year-old man. He has recovered.


An appellate court has refused to make an Elgin hospital give the Ivermectin to a COVID-19 patient as a treatment. The 2nd District Appellate Court ruled that Amita Health St. Joseph Hospital does not have to let Sebastian Abbinanti's doctor give the 40-year-old man the drug.


Abbinanti and his wife, Maria, were hospitalized in late November. Their health care agents asked a Kane County judge on Dec. 15 to overrule the hospital. On Dec. 17, Judge Robert Villa refused to do so. Maria died on Dec. 21. According to social media posts, Sebastian Abbinanti remains in the hospital.


"The facts underlying this case are sad indeed," Justice Mary Schostok wrote in the opinion issued by the three-judge appellate panel. But patients do not have a contractual right to force a hospital to give or allow a treatment not approved by the hospital, the panel ruled.


The judges didn't rule on the merits of Ivermectin. "This court is highly sympathetic to the plaintiffs' worthy goal, which is to pursue every possible avenue that could benefit the Abbinantis' health. However, as an appeals court in a sister state has observed, 'judges are not doctors' and 'cannot practice medicine from the bench,'" Schostok wrote.


In September, the company that owns St. Joseph prohibited using oral Ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment. The drug is used to treat some parasitic conditions in humans. Federal authorities have not approved it as a treatment for COVID-19 and urge doctors not to use it off-label.


The St. Joseph case differed in that Dr. Sergei Lipov had hospital admitting privileges. The Abbinanti suit contends the hospital unlawfully interfered with Lipov's ability to treat his patients as he saw fit. But because he is not a party to the lawsuit, Villa and the appellate judges said that didn't apply. Both Villa and the appellate court said Abbinanti does not have a protectable right and that he is not likely to win a lawsuit.


I am very sad as I believe my wife could have had a chance to get better if she were allowed to take her own medication. By refusing her that right Delnor Hospital acted as Judge, Jury and Executioners.




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