On January 26, I noticed, in a front page article in the local Herald-Times, which included info that Indiana Medicaid family caregiver costs, especially for disabled children, had quintupled since July 2020. I remember being startled, and wondered if anyone was going to take up this statistic as a possible (probable?) alarm bell for pediatric and adult disabilities stemming from covid, and especially the covid jab. Question: how many of these (newly?) disabled people were jabbed, and how many times jabbed?
So now, today, thank goodness, this subject has surged to the surface again, but this time only warranting a page 2 story in the print version of the H-T. Here it is, on-line. Still no connection to covid or the jab. Are we surprised?
Lt. Gov Suzanne Crouch Calls on FSSA to pause changes in family care giving program
This article included a twitter post that spells out the huge increase graphically.
FSSA sharing more details on the growth in cost and enrollment in its family caregiver program, which it's proposing cutting. These graphs go from July 2020 to Dec. 2023. The sharp increase in July 2023 coincides with a rate increase. Background: https://t.co/CDRTHy9S7v pic.twitter.com/mi2SzFAhTm
— Kayla Dwyer (@kayla_dwyer17) January 29, 2024
Rearing back to 40,000 foot view, this:
Let’s start to voice our astonishment at the timing of this sudden and unexpected quintuple surge in disabilities, shall we?
Let’s start to take back our individual sovereignty.
Let’s do that here, now, locally.