“Standing Up For Medical Freedom”- Interview With Kimberly Overton RN
Listen to this episode of the Medical Truth Podcast as host James Egidio interviews nurse Kimberly Overton. With more than 26 years in the healthcare industry, Kimberly witnessed the most horrendous patient care among hospital staff and the deaths of patients in 2020 during the COVID pandemic. As Kimberly describes it, most patients were dying in the hospital from the treatment of COVID rather than from COVID itself. www.NurseFreedomNetwork.org
Meet The Host
Episode Transcript
James Egidio:
Hi, I’m James Egidio, your host of the Medical Truth Podcast. The podcast that tells the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about the US healthcare system. Just to put out a disclaimer before we get started and that is this podcast and it’s associated content that is, the website’s articles provides general information and discussions about health related subjects. The information and other content in this podcast, blog, website, or any link materials are not intended and they should not be used or considered as a substitute for medical information, advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Please consult with your personal physician. My guest is a registered nurse in Hendersonville, Tennessee, with a background in critical care. She’s a graduate of Western Kentucky University and has worked in the healthcare industry for over 26 years serving in both clinical and administrative roles. In 2020, she witnessed medical tyranny and changes in the medical industry like no other time. Then in July of 2021, she founded Nurse Freedom Network to stand against the medical tyranny we now face. It is my pleasure, an honor and a blessing to introduce my guest on the Medical Truth Podcast, Ms. Kimberly Overton. Hi Kimberly, how are you?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Hi, I’m doing well. Thank you, James. Thanks so much for having me on today. I appreciate it.
James Egidio:
You’re welcome. Absolutely. Just to share a little bit with the viewers and listeners of the Medical Truth Podcast, a little bit about yourself and your career.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Sure. I have been a registered nurse. I have been in healthcare for 26 years. I’m a registered nurse. My background is in critical care throughout my career. That was mostly all I did was critical care. I worked in the ICU throughout the pandemic. I was directly caring for covid patients. And right from the very beginning, Nothing really made any logical sense. Every new Covid policy that would come down really seemed to fly in the face of everything that we had long known to be true in healthcare. So I started questioning things early on. But as I was working throughout the pandemic, I started to become very uncomfortable with the protocols that they were using, specifically the Remdesevir, which we know it’s harmful, it’s oftentimes deadly to patients. And I started asking questions. I’m like, why are we using this medication that, it’s an antiviral by the time those patients were getting to us in the hospital, they were already typically several days into their symptomatic phase. They’re already out of their replication phase, and in order for an antiviral to be effective, It relies on a form of viral replication, which was no longer occurring. So I, I saw my patients just continually declining and I kept asking like, why are we using this medication? It’s clearly doing more harm than good. And especially why are we using this medication when we know that there is safe and effective repurposed therapeutics that were showing very promising results. So for those reasons, I ended up actually walking away from bedside nursing. Because I just couldn’t watch my patients needlessly die when I knew that there was treatment available.
James Egidio:
Yeah, and What was the rush to using the Remdesevir over, let’s say, other alternative off-label treatments, let’s say like hydroxychloroquine or, even I know a Dr. Bartlett down in Texas basically used what he called the silver bullet treatment with the Pulmicort, which was the Betamethasone nebulized treatment along with a antibiotic like Zpak for what, six days or five. Yeah. So why the Remdesevir and not the hydroxychloroquine?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Yeah, that’s a good question. That, and that was my question. I’m like, why are we continuing to do, to use this medication? At first I didn’t really think that there was anything nefarious going on. I just wondered why we were using this when it didn’t work. And it’s actually been massive global studies that have been done that WHO does not even recommend using Remdesevir because it has little to no impact on hospitalized patients. So it was very interesting to me, and the answer to that question I asked was always the same. It was, it’s the protocol. It’s the protocol. Okay. And I had an issue with that because it didn’t make any sense. And if we’re dealing with this novel virus, then we should be, using and throwing the kitchen sink at it to figure out what is going to work. And they were very rigid. They would not come outside of this protocol. But my bigger question with the Remdesevir, because it didn’t work was, why is the government financially incentivizing its use? That was the bigger question I had..
James Egidio:
Yeah, share with the audience a little bit about the use of Remdesevir. What is it specifically used for? Because you know, a lot of people who are listening and viewing this episode, really don’t know what Remdesevir is used for?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Yeah, it’s it’s an antiviral, so it’ll be used to treat viruses, but the, it’s this, the window of opportunity with an antiviral is very short, right? Same with what is it? Tamiflu, that you have to give it within, I think. 48 hours because that window is so short, all antivirals rely on that form of viral replication in order to be effective. So once you move out of that replication phase of the virus, it’s just, null and void. It’s not going to be effective against Covid or any other virus. So you know it where it may have a place. I personally didn’t think the risk was worth the benefit because if you go back to the Ebola studies of 2008, Remdesevir actually killed 54% of the study participants died. I feel like if, yeah, and I, and this was not an FDA approved medication. It was being used under an emergency use authorization only. And I feel like if we had led with that information about the Ebola trials, people may have reconsidered they’re authorization to use it.
James Egidio:
Yeah. And if I’m not mistaken, the Ebola virus is not an upper respiratory virus, correct?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Correct.
James Egidio:
As opposed to the covid, because I know you, you’ve been practicing nurse for 26 years, so that pretty much puts you back to even as early as 2003 right.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
No, I actually went back to school. I’ve been in healthcare for 26 years, but I actually went back to nursing school later in life, so I was I guess it’s been about eight years now.
James Egidio:
Oh, okay. Yeah. Cause I remember in 2003 when I had the medical house call practice we were seeing patients, an elderly population of patients, and the SARS sudden acute respiratory syndrome broke in the fall of 2003 and four. And it was a covid virus. It was identified as a covid virus, and it was bad. It was a very bad, basically flu season is what they called it, which was what we experienced in 2020. There were no lockdowns. There were no, businesses down. Let’s just pretty much dismantle the entire economy. And I do remember a lot of seniors and a lot of children dying during that time. And we got a memo from the health Department where I was located basically just saying make sure everybody gets their flu shot. And, the flu shot was not, designed for the Covid virus at least. And the whole thing with vaccines as far as I’m concerned is that’s my opinion is like I interviewed Dr. Resnick, is that by time these viruses come out and create these illnesses the vaccines don’t even work.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
No. And then they’re just causing, they’re driving mutations. It’s very interesting and I’ll tell you the last three years have really peeled my eyes wide open as far as the entire vaccine industry. I really didn’t pay much attention to it, to be completely honest with you. And as nurses, we don’t really receive any education on vaccines other than the early, the only education that we do receive as nurses is safe, effective, and necessary, that’s it.
James Egidio:
Yeah. I want to talk to you about that but before we do, I want to ask you a question and that is what were some of the things that you experienced with patients care in the ICU specifically during the covid pandemic?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Yeah. So during the height of the pandemic, we just we started seeing these patients, and I’m telling you, I, I believe we had seen Covid in the hospitals probably as far back as October and November of 2019. Cause we, we just recognized that these patients, there were something different about them. They were getting sicker and sicker despite all of our best efforts. But what was interesting to me is that and what really started me questioning everything was that you know patients weren’t really dying anywhere but our hospitals, right? Like the virus itself, if it were killing people, why were we not pulling bodies out of homes or off of the streets, right? The only place our patients were dying was in the hospital. So again, I really feel like the Remdesevir was playing a role. And we would get these patients on the Remdesevir and a lot of times they would come in, short of breath all of that. They were having respiratory distress, certainly, but they were, for the most part, Very, lucid. And they, they were alert and oriented with a little bit of shortness of breath. And then we would start them on the Remdesevir, which is typically a five day course. And then they would just so rapidly decline. Then they were pushing for early intubation. These patients weren’t in distress, but they were pushing to have these patients intubated in an attempt to contain a virus. Not to help that patient in the bed, but to contain the virus because once you’re on the ventilator’s, that closed circuit system and we know that once we put a patient on a ventilator, there’s about an 80% chance that they’re not coming off of it. So I had a real with that as well. But we would continue to see these patients just rapidly decline. They are placed on the ventilator. They are put on sedatives. They’re put on medications like fentanyl. Which, if they’re already in respiratory distress is going to just further depress their respiration. So I, it was another question I had about that. So it just didn’t seem like anything that we were doing made any logical sense and it didn’t seem to benefit the patients, but we would see them just rapidly decline. Kidneys were shutting down. They were going into multi-organ failure throwing blood clots. All of the things we were seeing them have strokes in the bed. It was just devastating to watch this happen over and over again and again, we’re not seeing that anywhere else but the hospital. So it really started to become clear to me that it wasn’t covid that was killing these patients, but the complete and total medical mismanagement, in the denial of life saving medications.
James Egidio:
Yeah I said that, I said there’s is very nefarious motives when this all started to come out and I said it, and then it became a political issue, right? Both sides, not just one side, but both sides were using as a political football. And I’ve always said that to, to gain the advantage over the other. And my questions were if You have a 98.5% chance of surviving if you get this virus, this upper respiratory virus, this flu virus, then why do you need a vaccine? Why did you need to wear a mask? Why did you need to do all these things with a 98.5% survival rate that if you contracted it, which pretty much every family member of mine did contract it and survived it. I do know personally, three people that died from the vaccine so far a 30 year. A 50 year old and a 65 year old. That was one of the questions that I had. And then the other thing was that most people, I believe that did die. You may or agree or disagree with me on this. They from pneumonia, if they did contract covid secondary to the covid, so they, the is the covid caused the pneumonia and they died from the pneumonia. And the, like you said, the mistreatment of in the hospitals,
Kimberly Overton, RN:
likely the ventilator associated pneumonia. So if they weren’t placed on the ventilator, they likely would’ve never developed that pneumonia to begin with.
James Egidio:
And explain to the audience a little bit about what the ventilator actually does to the patient.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Yeah, so the ventilator is basically it’s breathing for the patient. Then when they’re not able to breathe on their own, it’s able to give them a break so that they don’t have to breathe. And it’s pushing pressure. It’s, positive expiratory pressure. And it’s actually, so it’s ventilating the patients so that they don’t have to breathe on their own. Which sometimes necessary. Sometimes these patients are not able to, they’re in distress and they cannot breathe on their own, so we have to place them. But when I tell you that these doctors, these physicians kept on pushing for early intubation only to contain that virus, which by the way, we’d already all been exposed too. We’d already been exposed to it, but what sense, what logical sense did that ever make? And this is the whole reason that we are donning and doffing our PE when we go in and out of these patient rooms, be exposed to. We never intubated patients just based on exposure issues. So it’s very disturbing to see that this is where healthcare is going. But to go back a little bit to what you were talking about with the vaccines I left bedside in March of 2021, vaccines rolled out in December of 2020.
James Egidio:
That’s what I was gonna ask you. Yeah, go ahead.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
I was already seeing vaccine injury at the bedside very early on. I, from the beginning, listen, I didn’t come into this fight anti-vax. I’ve had all of my vaccines, my child had all of his vaccines, but it made me a little bit skeptical. I was thinking, okay we don’t have any safety data. The 90, it’s like a 98 point some odd number, percentage of survival. I felt if I did get it, I would be perfectly fine. So I was not willing to take the chance of getting this vaccine that wasn’t tested. And early on we start seeing paralysis. We start seeing strokes, we start seeing the myocarditis and young, otherwise healthy individuals that have been vaccinated. And after I left the bedside, I started working at home doing telephone, triage, nursing. And I was getting these phone calls constantly young, like between, I would say 18 and 35 was the greatest number male, predominantly with cardiac issues, post vaccine. And they wanted to start recommending this to children, they wanted me to start recommending it to children. We had a protocol that we would follow that said if somebody called and said, Hey, should I get my child this vaccine? Is it safe and effective? And our, we had a scripted answer that said yes, you should get it, it is safe and effective. Period? We would have no way of knowing that we had no safety data. So right out of the gate, it’s not informed consent. So I had a real issue with that. And I ended up resigning from, I had been exempted as a work from home employee, thank God as I am not vaccinated. But yeah, there was, that was the hill I was dying on. I was not gonna get vaccinated, but it was really great that I was so relieved that I got exempted from the mandate, but then I had to face the choice of, am I gonna recommend this for children? In the absence of safety data, I really feel like that should be criminal. These children had, they’re at negligible risk and they had a 99.985% chance of survival.
James Egidio:
Yeah. It’s so interesting too, because from the very beginning, this whole. COVID thing defied the laws of logic when it came to basic CPR airway, breathing, circulation. So you’re throwing a mask on people. They’re going into the hospital complaining of this upper respiratory distress, right? I’m sure they legitimately may have contracted the virus and got the upper respiratory flu, and then they’re treated with all these, Remdesivir, like you’ve mentioned, instead of Let’s say Pulmicort, which would take the the swelling down on the bronchi and then be placed on a antibiotic to cover them like Dr. Bartlett had recommended, which was a silver bullet treatment. And so it just seems to me that, like I said earlier, is that there was just a lot of nefarious motives Yeah. For this. And then it was like, step one, let’s roll out the virus. And the panic storm. And then phase two is the vaccines. And to this day, They’re still pushing for the vaccine.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
It is unbelievable. It’s unbelievable. My dad was just recently hospitalized and I couldn’t believe it. My mom called me and she told me he, he has COPD and he’s elderly. But my mom called me and she said, I took him to the hospital. I was like, why would you do that? I was like, oh my gosh. I was like, COVID testing? no Remdesivir None of the things. Actually, and when I’m trying to advocate for him in the hospital, the physician actually when I refused all of the Remdesevir and all of The other things he said I don’t wanna get political with you. I’m like, this is not a political position. This is bad medicine. Bad medicine. They wanted to put him on Fentanyl. He had a pain as a two out of 10, and they wanna put him on fentanyl. And he already can’t breathe. So I’m like, this is not political. This is bad medicine. And I have an issue with it. But it’s still happening everywhere. still happening everywhere. We, and we’ve really gotta make an effort to educate and make people aware.
James Egidio:
Yeah. I know. I just interviewed a gentleman by the name of Scott Schara, I’m not sure if you’re familiar with his case. Yeah. Our Amazing Grace, his daughter. And they, the same thing. They, she went in the hospital and her Sats were at like 97-98%. And they told him, a couple days later, a day later that she was going to turn around and we’re gonna, Discharge her from the hospital. And that very same day they start putting her on a bunch of sedatives and they basically depressed her breathing and she passed away. And this is, it’s tragic. It’s tragic. what’s happening it’s criminal.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
It’s absolutely, it’s criminal. They’re murdered Grace there’s no other way to put it. They placed an illegal DNR on her. She was 19 years old. And even when they placed the DNR, even if it were a mistake of some kind. The family was at the bedside and was screaming and yelling. The parents were on FaceTime, the daughter was at the hospital and were yelling for the nurses to come in there and do anything to help her. And they actually were told that we can’t do that. She’s a DNR. That is first of all DNR is. Does not mean do not treat a DNR, as means we do everything we can until that moment where breathing stops or their heart stops, and then we don’t do any heroic measures. But we do everything up until that point, and I’ve never worked at the bedside where a family member has come in and said, do everything where we didn’t turn around and do everything, even when that patient’s wishes were known.
James Egidio:
I know. I just ran across a guy at gym and we were talking and he was sent to the hospital with what he suspected was COVID. And they started treating him right away with Remdesevir on purpose. Yeah. Obviously. And his, he went into kidney and a liver failure. And they had an air Vac to the hospital in Orlando from here. And I know he was even telling me that at one point the nurse at the hospital whispered in his Ear Die Mothereffer.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Oh my God.
James Egidio:
Yeah.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
So nurses, I dunno, was he un, was he unvaccinated or is that why or what was the
James Egidio:
No, he just said that they did pretty much everything to try to kill him. They did give him the vaccination without his, Consent.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
I’ve heard that happening more than once.
James Egidio:
Yeah. Yeah. So there’s just, like I said, there’s a nefarious motives for this, and I, from what I understand too, and I don’t know if you can validate this, but they were talking about hospitals getting financial incentives for everybody that had had passed away from Covid. Is that true?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
That is true, yeah. And there were financial incentives for every bit of these protocols. Like they would have to, and it varied from state to state and on the previous year’s Medicare reimbursement numbers as what dictated the payments as part of the CARE Act the CARES Act and the Prep Act that protects everybody. But if you placed a patient on a ventilator, I believe it was $39,000 if they stayed on that ventilator for 96 hours or more. Then it was double that It may have been even into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The Remdesevir was financially incentive, but you had to adhere to these protocols very strictly. So Remdesevir, ventilator, I like to say Remdesevir, ventilator death is really how it was going. But they would not use. And they wouldn’t do, another thing they wouldn’t do was breathing treatments. That was another thing that I couldn’t believe, and they were saying it was because it disseminated the virus into the air. I’m like, what? What are we doing? We’re denying people treatment because we’re afraid of a virus. I was never afraid of this virus, by the way. No. I was never afraid of it. But, this is what we do. We take care of people. We never knew what we were gonna be exposed to. So when I started seeing people really just, the standard of care in our hospitals was already low. It was already low. Yeah. It’s disgustingly. So at this point and I hate to tell people not to go to a hospital, but I’m at that point where I’m like, it’s, you can help it at all. Please don’t go.
James Egidio:
Yeah, yeah. I think it, to me I call it spiritual warfare, is what this became. Yes. It became good versus evil, and it still is. I actually have a question for you about that, but I have another question. When did you start to see vaccine injuries? After the rollout of the vaccinations? How soon?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Probably, almost immediately. I would say probably January or February. And it may have taken just a minute to correlate what was going on because a lot of it was like, Okay, is this COVID We had our highest covid numbers between December, 2020 and January of 2021. When that was actually pointed out we were on a Twitter space. I have, I host the show Nurses Out Loud on the America Out Loud Talk Radio Network, and we were doing a Twitter space with all of our hosts and one of our kind of opponents, if you will, on the other side of this issue, who is very pro-vaccine. He started pointing out, when I was telling him that we didn’t really have that many COVID cases through the height of the pandemic. He said in December, 2020 and January of 2021, we had the highest numbers ever. I said, yeah, and what else happened between December, 2020 and January, 2021 is the vaccine rollouts. And you know what was happening was people were getting vaccinated then they would proceed to get covid despite that. And they are if it’s more than, I think it’s less than 14 days, they’re not considered fully vaccinated. That’s where you get that ridiculous narrative of the pandemic. Of the unvaccinated. But really it was the vaccine that was causing all of these issues.
James Egidio:
Sure, so you saw early on then, like you say? Yeah. Cause I, when were, they were rolled out again, when were they rolled out the vaccines?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
December of 2020.
James Egidio:
That’s right. December, 2020, and then of course it just steamrolled on and went on. Yeah. From that time on. So let me ask you something. What do you see as a potential threat for both patients and providers in the United States Healthcare system now and in the future? As a nurse or as a former nurse
Kimberly Overton, RN:
in my opinion, this system is completely unsustainable and unfixable at this point. I’m I will not even work in this system. I don’t encourage anybody to, I, I encourage everybody to get as far outside of this traditional mainstream system as you possibly can. So I don’t, to say what’s the threat? The entire system is a threat. The entire system is a threat the way it’s designed, and it’s a threat to us as providers to our licenses because we cannot safely care for patients in this type of environment. We just can’t. Yeah.
James Egidio:
What do you suggest to someone that’s listening and watching this as far as from the patient side of things in terms of care?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
What, when I started, I started Nurse Freedom Network back in July of 2021, and I did that initially just to take a stand against the vaccine mandates. It was more advocacy. Started protesting at local hospitals, but then in October of 2022, I founded remnant nursing services, which is a private membership association. This is the way that we need to go. We need to start going about the business of building anew, we need to completely come out of this system. We are not in the public domain at all. We have a private membership association. It’s a 508 C1A And we are focusing on keeping patients healthy, and out. The hospital system because this system, again, I’ve been a part of it for 26 years. It is a sick care system. It does nothing to keep anyone well. Nothing.
James Egidio:
Yeah. It’s so true. And there’s no even preventative measures that they even in promote.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
No, they don’t. In nutrition, they don’t really look at nutrition. They don’t look at it getting to the root cause of anything any of these diseases. It’s just, slap another bandaid, write another prescription. And most of these doctors, unfortunately, That’s all they know how to do. They only know how they can’t see beyond their prescription pad and it’s really sad. What’s become of medicine, I feel like they have become just glorified drug dealers and so many of these, just glorified drug dealers with degrees. And it’s so unfortunate because I know so many people get into medicine for the right reasons, but sure are just beat down by the system.
James Egidio:
Yeah. I guess the days of Marcus Wellbe are over. Yeah, exactly. Exactly right. As a nurse, where do you envision the state of health, the healthcare system in the US and worldwide, and as far as a year from now, five years from now and 10 years from now, in terms of like on a global scale?
Kimberly Overton, RN:
So as nurses I feel if we don’t step up and step out, which is what I’ve been saying for quite some time now, I really feel that as nurses collectively, we could have stopped this early on if we had stood up and said no. Like the moment that they told us our patients could not have an advocate at their side, we should have stood up and said no, and we would’ve shut so much of this down. But fear, unfortunately, is a very big proponent of what has happened and it has left people just feeling, voiceless. I personally can’t understand putting a paycheck before human life, but that’s been an issue. But I don’t, I think that if we don’t step up and step out of this system, There it’s gonna be catastrophic. It’s already catastrophic. We are seeing the death and devastation that have been caused by these vaccines and by these hospital protocols. I believe that we’ve only scratched the surface. So my biggest. thing is coming out, getting the nurses to stand together, coming out of this system and building something alongside of it where all of us will be able to thrive. Patients, nurses alike, we are not even kind to one another as nurses, right? We need to come out of this environment. We need to start being kind to one another, respectful of one another, and we need to start focusing on keeping ourselves healthy and well. Nurses are not, known to be the healthiest population at all. In fact, there’s study’s done that we are actually among the unhealthiest population that you’ll ever come across
James Egidio:
yeah, I know when I was, I interviewed Jodi O’Malley. I’m sure you’re very familiar with Jodi
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Jodi it Dear Friend, or no, she’s actually am my co-host on Nurses Out Loud yes.
James Egidio:
Yeah, I interviewed Jodi and she was telling me, she made a comment during the interview, she said, she goes, some of her colleagues says something about what are your Trump supporter or something, when she had taken a stand In the end what was right for the patient. Yeah. And like I said, it’s, this is not a political issue. The people that are listening on the other end are the patients. Yeah, and like you said, what’s good for the patient. At the end of the day it’s what benefits the patient, right? And it’s not politics and so many good people such as yourself and being so courageous. And I thank you so much for being as courageous as you are and Jodi and everybody else. To come forward and a lot of people have jeopardized their licenses. They’ve jeopardized their careers. There’s, six figure careers to feed their family to bring out the truth. And that’s why I set this platform up as well. The Medical Truth podcast is to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about the US healthcare system. And I just hope that more people listen to the likes of you and Jodi and Dr. McCullough, and Judy Mikovitz and everybody else that have been in the industry in some capacity to get the word out about the truth. About the truth. This is not about politics. And again, like I said, it’s spiritual warfare and I just think that this is also an indirect attack on faith and family
Kimberly Overton, RN:
I always say all the time, it’s not, it’s truly not a political issue. And it’s really interesting to me. And we all have our political beliefs, right? I’m unapologetically conservative, There are people and there’s, I would say the majority of people in this fight standing shoulder, to shoulder with me are, I’ve never stood shoulder, shoulder with so many like Democrats and liberals. I, but they, there are so many of us. It’s not a left or right issue, it’s an up or down issue. And until we realize that we’re at all in a lot of trouble.
James Egidio:
I know. And I keep emphasizing that this is not a political issue. I interviewed Dr. Scott Jensen about a week ago or two weeks ago, and it’s the same thing we were talking about that it’s getting the word out. But I really appreciate you coming onto the show. I really do. Thank you so much. And again, your website is Go.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Yep. So I’ve got two websites. I’ve got NurseFreedomNetwork.org. That’s where we do most of our advocacy work. And then remnant nursing, it’s www.RemnantNursing.org is for our private membership association for anyone who is seeking care. And we also have educational and an entrepreneurial opportunities for nurses.
James Egidio:
Nice, and I’ll post that as well on the website, the MedicalTruthPodcast.com. That’s MedicalTruthPodcast.com, a link directly to your website. Perfect. Really appreciate it, Kimberly. Thank you so much for joining me on this episode of the Medical Truth Podcast, thanks.
Kimberly Overton, RN:
Thank you.
James Egidio:
All right. God bless
Kimberly Overton, RN:
you as well. Thank you.