Friday, March 13, 2026

COVID Is Going To Act Like HPV And Hepatitis. It’s Oncogenic.

🚨 “COVID Is Going To Act Like HPV And Hepatitis. It’s Oncogenic.” | Pharmacist Keith

Every once in a while, a video drops that forces you to rethink the last four years — not emotionally, but biologically. That’s what happened when I heard Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong say this:

“COVID sadly is gonna act like HPV and Hepatitis… it’s oncogenic.”


Let that sink in.

HPV is linked to cervical and throat cancers.
Hepatitis B and C are linked to liver cancer.
And now he’s saying COVID may behave in a similar long-term way.

He didn’t stop there.

He said he’s seeing young children with cancers that historically take decades to develop:

  • Pancreatic cancer in children
  • Colon cancer in children
  • Two pediatric deaths from metastatic pancreatic cancer

That’s not normal.
That’s not “random.”
That’s a signal.

So the question becomes: What changed in the terrain?


🧬 The Natural Killer Cell — Our 450-Million-Year-Old Cancer Defense

Soon-Shiong highlights a cell most people never think about:

The natural killer (NK) cell — “the cell that protects us from cancer.”

And then he says something stunning:

“We’ve been wiping out a cell that’s been evolved for 450 million years.”

If NK cells are exhausted, suppressed, or chronically activated, cancer surveillance drops.
That’s not speculation — that’s Immunology 101.

And this is exactly where the spike protein conversation becomes impossible to ignore.

Natural Killer (NK) cell – our ancient cancer surveillance defender

Natural Killer (NK) cell – our ancient cancer surveillance defender



🩸 Micro-clots, damaged terrain… and my own experience

When I talk about micro-clots and damaged terrain changing how tissues repair and how cells behave, I’m not speaking in abstracts. Many of you have followed my journey on Facebook and my blog — the inflammation, the circulation issues, the nerve involvement, the double vision — all part of my effort to understand and overcome the long-COVID damage I’ve been dealing with.

Those symptoms weren’t isolated.
They were part of a pattern I’ve been researching deeply:

  • Micro-clots impair oxygen delivery
  • Low oxygen stresses tissues
  • Stressed tissues repair abnormally
  • And immune surveillance — including NK cells — becomes sluggish

When the terrain is compromised, everything changes:

  • cells don’t repair normally
  • inflammation stays elevated
  • the immune system gets overwhelmed
  • abnormal cells slip through the cracks

So when Soon-Shiong talks about oncogenic-like behavior and aggressive cancers, it hits close to home. I’ve lived through the vascular side of this. I’ve seen how quickly the terrain can shift.

And that’s why I’ve been so vocal about restoring it.

Illustration of micro-clots in blood vessels – a key factor in impaired tissue oxygenation

Illustration of micro-clots in blood vessels – a key factor in impaired tissue oxygenation


🍔 The Other Side of the Terrain: Chemicals & Ultraprocessed Foods

Now layer something else on top of this:

The modern American diet is chemically dense and nutritionally empty.

For years I’ve been warning that:

  • ultraprocessed foods are loaded with additives, emulsifiers, and industrial oils
  • these chemicals disrupt the gut, immune system, and metabolic pathways
  • the soil is depleted, meaning even “healthy” foods often lack minerals
  • chronic nutrient deficiency weakens the body’s repair mechanisms
  • inflammation becomes the default setting

And when you combine:

  • immune exhaustion
  • micro-clots and vascular injury
  • lingering spike protein from both COVID infection and mRNA vaccination
  • chemical exposure
  • nutrient depletion
  • metabolic dysfunction

…you create the perfect storm for abnormal cell behavior.

This is why cancers are behaving differently.
This is why younger people are being affected.
This is why the terrain matters more than ever.

Ultraprocessed foods loaded with additives and chemicals – disrupting the body's terrain

Ultraprocessed foods loaded with additives and chemicals – disrupting the body's terrain


🧩 Connecting the Dots: COVID, Spike Protein, and Cancer Behavior

In my spike protein presentation, I explained how:

  • spike protein interacts with ACE2 receptors
  • chronic inflammation exhausts NK cells
  • micro-clots impair tissue oxygenation
  • immune dysregulation alters cellular behavior
  • nutrient depletion removes the raw materials for repair

If COVID behaves like an oncogenic virus — even partially — then the terrain matters more than ever.

This isn’t fear.
This is physiology.


🌱 So What Do We Do?

We strengthen the terrain God designed.

That means focusing on:

  • immune resilience
  • NK cell support
  • mitochondrial health
  • reducing chronic inflammation
  • addressing micro-clotting
  • supporting the body’s ability to clear lingering spike protein
  • foundational nutrition — the full 90 essential nutrients
  • avoiding ultraprocessed foods
  • minimizing chemical exposures
  • metabolic strength

This is the foundation of everything I teach.

Nutrient-rich foods supporting immune resilience and overall terrain health

Nutrient-rich foods supporting immune resilience and overall terrain health


💬 Your Thoughts — And a Personal Invitation

If you’re concerned about what all of this means for your own health, or you want to know what I’m personally doing to navigate this environment and support my own recovery from long-COVID damage…

Send me a message. Let’s have a real conversation.

No fear.
No judgment.
Just truth, experience, and practical steps you can take.

— Pharmacist Keith
Empowering you to reclaim your health, faith, and future

Sunday, March 8, 2026

When One Small Chart Error Follows a Patient for Years: A Story a Physician Friend Shared With Me

When One Small Chart Error Follows a Patient for Years: A Story a Physician Friend Shared With Me

Hey everyone—Pharmacist Keith here.

I want to share a story a physician friend of mine recently told me. It stuck with me because it perfectly shows how one tiny mistake in a medical chart can snowball into years of confusion—and why it’s so important that we really listen to patients and double-check what’s in their records.

I’m changing some details here to protect privacy, but the point of the story is spot-on.

A Scary Diagnosis—But the Right One

Years ago, my friend treated a woman—let’s call her Mrs. Smith—who had something called a dural sinus thrombosis.

Let me translate that:

  • Dural sinus thrombosis = A blood clot in one of the veins that drains blood from the brain.

It’s serious, but with treatment, she recovered completely and did great long-term. She sees her doctor every year or two just to check in. No problems. No repeat issues. Life moved on.

The Dog, the Fall, and… the Big Mistake

Then, a few years ago, Mrs. Smith tripped over her dog—yes, it happens more than you’d think—and broke her arm badly enough to need surgery.

She went to the hospital, and before my physician friend even saw her, an admitting provider had already written her “medical history” into the chart.

And here’s where everything went sideways.

They wrote that Mrs. Smith had a subdural hematoma and was taking daily aspirin for it.

Let me translate again:

  • Subdural hematoma = bleeding under one of the layers around the brain (totally different from a clot).
  • Not the same thing.
  • Not even treated the same way.

These are two completely different conditions—like confusing a sprained ankle with a broken arm.

Mrs. Smith told them the correct condition. She knew her history. But somewhere between what she said and what got typed, the message got scrambled.

My friend immediately corrected the mistake in his consult note. He repeated it clearly in every daily note: This patient had a dural sinus thrombosis, not a subdural hematoma.

Problem solved, right?

Not even close.

The Error That Refused to Die

When the hospital sent the discharge summary, my friend glanced at it—and there it was again:

“Subdural hematoma, maintained on daily aspirin.”

They hadn’t read a single one of his notes.

He was annoyed, but not surprised.

And here’s the worst part: Over the next three years, every time Mrs. Smith went to the hospital—for COVID, a fainting spell, another fall—the same wrong diagnosis kept showing up in her chart.

Every. Single. Time.

Finally, Someone Notices… Kind Of

During her most recent visit, a neurologist called my friend and asked why he was treating a “subdural hematoma” with aspirin.

Mrs. Smith again told him her true diagnosis. My friend confirmed it. The neurologist agreed, understood, and wrote the correct information in his note.

But when the final discharge summary came out?

Yep. The same incorrect diagnosis appeared again.

Sometimes you just want to bang your head against the wall.

The Real Problem Isn’t Technology—It’s Us

People love blaming electronic medical records (EMRs). And look, they definitely make copy-and-paste errors easier.

But this problem is older than any computer.

My friend recalled a night decades ago when he was using old-school paper charts at the VA. He opened a patient’s file and the previous doctor had written:

“See old chart.”

That’s not a software issue. That’s a human nature issue.

When people get busy, rushed, or just tired, shortcuts creep in. Instead of asking the patient their history, it’s faster to copy what’s already there—even if it’s wrong.

Why This Matters for Every Patient

Medical decisions depend on accurate information. If the info is wrong, everything that follows can be wrong:

  • The wrong medications may be given.
  • The right medications may be withheld.
  • Precautions may be based on problems the patient never even had.

All because of a single mistake that gets copied over and over.

As I always tell my patients: Shortcuts in healthcare can have real consequences.

A Reminder for All of Us

If you ever notice something in your chart that doesn’t match your actual history, say something—loudly if needed. And keep saying it every time.

And for those of us in healthcare, whether we’re doctors, nurses, pharmacists, or techs, here’s the takeaway:

  • Listen to the patient.
  • Ask questions.
  • Don’t assume the computer is right.

Our decisions are only as good as the information we’re working with.

Stay safe out there, ask questions, and speak up for your own care.
— Pharmacist Keith