NHS call handler who quit claiming she did 'f*** all' during the pandemic' and 'it's a load of b*****ks' claims the government has just 'rebranded the flu' as she films 'empty' A&E in London

 

  • EXCLUSIVE: Louise Hampton resigned from 111 after claiming Covid was a hoax
  • Added doctors and nurses are making pandemic worse by staying silent 
  • Filmed inside two NHS hospitals claiming they were 'empty on a Friday night' 
  • Patients with suspected coronavirus are told call 111 and self-isolate and do not go through A&E

A single mother who went viral when she shared an impromptu Facebook Live back in August declaring the Covid-19 pandemic a 'load of b*****ks', has shared new footage from inside 'empty' London A&E departments. 

Louise Hampton, 37, who was working at the time for Care UK in Southall, west London as an NHS 111 Health Advisor, was livid in the original five-minute rant, filmed in the driver's seat of her car, fuming: 'Apparently, I worked really hard during COVID... Did I b*****ks?' 

Waving the certificate she'd been presented with for all her heard work during, she seethed: 'That's why this is a certificate of b*****ks. Our service was dead! I did f*** all.'

Now, in a new video, the former NHS worker has filmed herself going to NHS A&E departments in London, claiming that they are empty on a Friday night because people are 'afraid to go to hospitals'. 

And in her first interview, she exclusively tells FEMAIL she believes doctors and nurses are making the crisis worse by 'staying silent' and that the government has just 'renamed the flu'.Louise Hampton, a former 111 worker, has claimed NHS workers keeping quiet over coronavirus is 'part of the problem'

Louise Hampton, a former 111 worker, has claimed NHS workers keeping quiet over coronavirus is 'part of the problem' 

The single mother is seen not wearing a mask at an anti-lockdown protest which she regularly attends

The single mother is seen not wearing a mask at an anti-lockdown protest which she regularly attends

In her latest video, Louise shows the inside of a hospital A&E waiting room which is nearly empty, she says it was taken on a Friday night but did not say what time

In her latest video, Louise shows the inside of a hospital A&E waiting room which is nearly empty, she says it was taken on a Friday night but did not say what time 

At the time her first video was released,  a Care UK spokesman responded to the video, saying: 'We are aware of this video, which we consider to be materially inaccurate in a number of ways, and can confirm that a member of staff is subject to investigation.

'We expect all our colleagues and services to support the work of the NHS in giving the public the right information and support during the pandemic.

'Our call centres were, in fact, exceptionally busy, handling a peak of 400% more calls than usual.

'Our teams showed huge commitment and dedication in delivering the service, and we have rightly thanked them for the efforts they have made.''

Are hospitals at risk of becoming overwhelmed? 

Government statistics released last week showed 82 per cent of intensive care beds in Manchester were occupied, mostly with Covid-19 patients. 

The Department of Health warned that NHS services would soon become 'overwhelmed' by cases.

In Liverpool, councillors have warned that NHS intensive care units had reached 95 per cent of their bed capacity.

It's difficult to clarify these statements, as the Government does not release this data.

The 82 per cent figure in Manchester may sound alarming, but at the same point in 2019, 83 per cent of intensive care beds in the area were occupied.

Nationally, there are currently less than half the number of people in UK hospitals with Covid-19, than there were at the peak of the pandemic in April, and hospitals were not overwhelmed then.

Hospital admissions plummeted by up to 90 per cent for some of the deadliest conditions and illnesses during the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic.

While Britons were told to 'Stay Home, Protect the NHS, Save Lives' - a message used at the height of lockdown in April to discourage households from mixing - the number of heart attack checks reduced by almost half.

Heart disease, a major cause of heart attacks, is the UK's leading cause of deaths. Meanwhile, consultations for the most common cancers also dropped by up to two thirds.

The figures, which come from analysis of data published in the Daily Telegraph today, have been described as 'staggering' by experts, some of whom warn the UK could see 35,000 more cancer deaths within a year as a knock of the pandemic.

Others have warned that the government 'must get the messaging right', and urged those in need of medical treatment to speak to their doctor.

The research, by healthcare analysts Dr Foster, shows that during April and May, the height of the first coronavirus wave in the UK, there was a sharp drop in admissions relating to a number of diseases.

The number of admissions for bowel cancer, which is the UK's second biggest cancer killer, dropped by 39 per cent. Normally, 13,488 cases would have been expected, but there were 8,185 cases.

Admissions for prostate cancer, the most common form of cancer in men, also dropped sharply.

The drop took place while the government's initial 'Stay Home, Protect the NHS, Save Lives' was in place

Around 12,850 cases would have been expected, based on a five year average. But the figure dropped by 64 per cent, to 4,640.

Admissions for breast cancer, which is the most common cancer in women , also dropped by a third.

The largest drop was in gastrointestinal disorders admissions, which were down 90 per cent.

The drop took place while the government's initial 'Stay Home, Protect the NHS, Save Lives' was in place.

The slogan was announced as the country entered a national lockdown in March to encourage people to follow the rules, which initially included a ban on households mixing, while people were only allowed to leave their homes for essential journeys.

The message was later changed to 'Stay Alert, Control the Virus, Save Lives,' as the government began to ease restrictions. Within hours of its release, the video had been seen by over 30,000 people. 

Before it was taken down by Facebook for 'breaching Community Standards, it had received more than a million views and tens of thousands of shares.

'I was amazed how quickly it went viral,' says Louise, who lives in Boris Johnson's constituency of Uxbridge. 

'When I made the video, I was genuinely furious that I'd been awarded this certificate for doing bugger all. 

'Not just me – but all those other NHS workers, many of whom had been sitting around twiddling their thumbs and making TikTok dance videos since March. 

'They certainly didn't deserve any kind of award – and nor did I. 

'Those first four months of the "so-called pandemic" were the quietest I'd ever known.'

Once Louise's bosses got wind of her newfound notoriety, they weren't happy. 

'I knew before they contracted me that I'd be sacked for making the video, but by then I didn't care. I didn't want to work for an institution that was lying to the public. 

'I didn't want to be involved in the biggest scam ever to be forced on humanity. So, before they got the chance to fire me, I resigned.'

After she'd sent her email of resignation on September 2nd, her bosses got in touch to tell her that, had she not resigned, they would have dismissed her anyway on the grounds of 'gross misconduct'. 

'I was sad to have lost my job but I couldn't continue living a lie. So many NHS workers are keeping quiet about what's really going on and that makes them part of the problem. 

'I know it's not easy but more of them need to speak out. This situation is never going to end otherwise.'

Since then, Louise has spent all her spare time trying to work out what she believes is the truth about the pandemic.

'I don't rely on hearsay,' she insists. 'I get messages from NHS workers mainly nurses that their hospitals have been empty and that they don't believe this pandemic is as bad as the government is making out.

'I can't say for certain whether there is or isn't a virus – I'm not a doctor or virologist - but the facts are out there for everyone to see. 

'The Covid virus has never been isolated, the PCR tests are known to be unfit for purpose and give a large number of false positives and hospitals appear to be pretty much empty.

'Flu statistics are showing that flu has almost disappeared. 

'It seems to me like they've just rebranded the flu, calling it Covid 19.

'People's freedoms are being eroded; businesses, jobs and livelihoods are being destroyed; cancer patients are not receiving treatment and are dying because of that; the elderly are alone, not allowed visitors and not allowed out from the care homes which have become their prisons; and all for a virus that has over a 99 per cent survival rate. 

'The public need answers and I'm determined to find them.'

Last Friday, she put out a video on her Facebook page, in which she mentions government and media claims about hospital admissions. 

In the video, she claims that many of her nurse and NHS-worker friends have being telling her that, throughout the pandemic, the hospitals they work at have been 'quite empty.' 

After hearing this, Louise decided to check out the A&E departments in two London hospitals.

'I just want to get a true picture,' she says, as she films herself walking along a day-lit street in Gerrards Cross. 

'The media is telling us that our hospitals are overwhelmed with patients, so I'm going to check it out for myself.' 

She also urges her 3000 followers, to send her any footage they might have of other empty hospitals.

'We need to stop the lies,' she adds. 'We need to know what's going on. Together we can do this.'

The video then jumps forward to evening as Louise arrives at the A&E department of Ealing Hospital. 

She later visits Hillingdon Hospital. Neither hospital is busy, with just a few people in the waiting areas and one or two staff spotted as she wanders down unusually empty corridors.The former call operator has shared many pictures saying 'resistance is duty' as well as conspiracy about a 'new world order'

The former call operator has shared many pictures saying 'resistance is duty' as well as conspiracy about a 'new world order' 

'Ealing and Hillingdon are two massive London boroughs,' she states from her sofa, once she's back home. 

'Hillingdon is London's second largest borough, so you'd have thought both hospitals would have been absolutely ram-packed, especially on a Friday night in A&E.

'Obviously, at the moment, all the pubs are closed and sporting events aren't going on, so you're not getting the drunks or sporting injuries, but we're in the midst of a massive global pandemic so you'd have thought there'd have been some very ill people around…'

She wonders aloud where all the other patients are… people who've suffered heart attacks, strokes, burns, sprains and other ailments and injuries. 

'When I attended Ealing Hospital at 9pm on Friday night, there was a handful of people in there. 

'At Hillingdon, at around 10pm, there were two people sitting in A&E. Just two people… And the hospital was eerily quiet. What the hell is going on? Where are all the sick people?'

Louise often shared selfies on a train where she ignores and doesn't wear a mask or any protective face coverings

Louise often shared selfies on a train where she ignores and doesn't wear a mask or any protective face coverings 

The former NHS worker is pictured with Piers Corbyn - also an 'activist' at an anti-lockdown protest in London

The former NHS worker is pictured with Piers Corbyn - also an 'activist' at an anti-lockdown protest in London

Since going viral earlier this year the mother-of-two now has a public Facebook page where shares images from protests

Since going viral earlier this year the mother-of-two now has a public Facebook page where shares images from protests 

'It's obvious to Louise that the majority of the public are too scared to go to hospital. 

'The government and media have done a good job scaring people,' Louise says. 

London was hit hardest and suffered most during the first wave. At the beginning of April, there were almost 5,000 Covid-19 patients in the capital's hospitals. Now official data highlights significant spare capacity in NHS hospitals.

There are currently 1,489 virus patients in London hospitals – under a third of levels seen in spring. Of these, 253 are on ventilators compared to a high of 1,046 on April 13.

She goes on to admit that Covid-19 patients don't go through A&E.  

'When I worked for NHS 111, people would ring up with clear-cut heart attack or stroke symptoms and I'd tell them I would arrange them an ambulance as they needed to get to A&E and they'd say 'I'm not going to A&E because I don't want to catch Covid.' 

'The government have put the fear of God into them. People now think that if they go to hospital, they're going to catch a deadly virus.' 

She's worried that because people are not seeking treatment they may urgently need that many will die unnecessarily at home.

It's not just hospitals she checks out – she's also made videos of empty testing sites and a very desolate-looking Heathrow airport.  

Most of her videos on her personal Facebook timeline but others are shared on the Certificateofbollox page.

She can also be seen at protests – the most recent being one in Bristol - where she's been spotted and filmed marching the streets without a mask, oversized handbag in one hand, mini-megaphone in the other. 

'We do not consent' and 'we are the people, we are the power, we are the 99 per cent' are just two of her regular battle-cries as she and other 'mama bear warriors' attempt to take a stand against the government and fight for the return and retention of our human rights and freedoms.

The former Care UK employee recorded a video criticising a certificate she had been given thanking her for 'making a difference to patients' amid the virus outbreak
In the clip, posted to her Facebook page, she says: 'I'm an actual NHS worker and apparently I worked really hard during Covid. Did I b*****ks. That's why it's a certificate of b*****ks'

The former Care UK employee recorded a video criticising a certificate she had been given thanking her for 'making a difference to patients' amid the virus outbreak

Ms Hampton previously faced backlash for comparing the government to Nazi Germany. She has made a series of posts online about the virus using the hashtags #Covid1984, #NWO, #SaveOurChildren, #Plandemic and #WeWillNotBeMuzzled. The hashtags have been widely used by those who believe that the coronavirus is part of a conspiracy to establish a new world order (NWO) and impose authoritarian measures similar to lockdown on a permanent basis. Ms Hampton also posted a meme which read: 'If you've ever wondered whether you would have complied during 1930s Germany, now you know.'

Ms Hampton previously faced backlash for comparing the government to Nazi Germany. She has made a series of posts online about the virus using the hashtags #Covid1984, #NWO, #SaveOurChildren, #Plandemic and #WeWillNotBeMuzzled. The hashtags have been widely used by those who believe that the coronavirus is part of a conspiracy to establish a new world order (NWO) and impose authoritarian measures similar to lockdown on a permanent basis. Ms Hampton also posted a meme which read: 'If you've ever wondered whether you would have complied during 1930s Germany, now you know.' 

'I've been to two rallies at Trafalgar Square and lots of smaller rallies in London,' she says.

'My kids are in school full-time, so I do my activism during the week during school hours and on Saturdays when they stay with their father.'

It's not been easy for her since she made the fateful video. Losing her job was bad enough but she's also lost friends and family due to her actions and beliefs. 

'A few of my friends who believe the virus is deadly have stopped speaking to me,' she admits. 

'I have two old friends who believe there is something untoward going on and they stand by me. 

The former 111 worker also revealed she believes coronavirus has been rebranded 'as the flu' . Covid-19 has killed three times as many people as influenza and pneumonia this year, official data released in October revealed.

The former 111 worker also revealed she believes coronavirus has been rebranded 'as the flu' . Covid-19 has killed three times as many people as influenza and pneumonia this year, official data released in October revealed.

The UK has recorded a further 12,155 coronavirus cases yesterday, marking a 34 per cent drop on last Sunday's total

The UK has recorded a further 12,155 coronavirus cases yesterday, marking a 34 per cent drop on last Sunday's total

'My family have stopped speaking to me as they believe in the killer virus and think I'm selfish for thinking otherwise. 

'They also think I'm somehow spreading the virus. How can I spread a virus that I don't have and that may not even exist? I wish they would open their eyes and question the government narrative. I am 37-years-old and am entitled to my own thoughts and opinions. If they can't accept that, that's their problem.'

Despite her losses, Louise is not going to give up. 

'I was at a protest last Saturday and I'll be attending the protest at Kings Cross this Saturday (November 28th) and also the one in Newport, Wales at the start of December. 

'This is my work now – one of the most important things I've ever done – and I'm not going to stop until the truth is out.'

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