Thousands of White Patients Struck Off by Their Doctors to Make Room for Foreign Parasites

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 30, 2014

    Dr. Peter Swinyard, chairman of the Family Doctor Association, says "This is people just basically saying, “We are not coping.” They are completely overstretched and struggling to find the medical staff to look after the patients."
Dr. Peter Swinyard, chairman of the Family Doctor Association, says “This is people just basically saying, “We are not coping.” They are completely overstretched and struggling to find the medical staff to look after the patients.”

Doctors in the most heavily infested areas of Britain are being forced to strike thousands of ethnic British people from their lists to make way for the new counterfeit Britons.

Elderly widows, amputees, young mothers and – in one case – all the residents of a care home are now struggling to get by without a doctor thanks to the modern day invasion of Britain.

At least 25 surgeries have had to reduce their catchment area due to the influx of freeloaders demanding to be treated by the NHS, with ten more having applied to do so.

Daily Mail:

GPs say they are in the grip of a recruitment crisis and cannot provide safe care for the rising numbers of people moving to their areas. Some of the worst-affected surgeries are where the population is soaring due to migrants and elderly couples who need many appointments.On top of this, many GPs are retiring, moving overseas or quitting altogether and there is a shortage of new doctors entering the profession.

Figures from NHS England – obtained by GP trade magazine Pulse – show that 15 practices were granted approval to shrink their catchment areas in 2013/14 and another ten so far this year since April. Officials would not identify individual surgeries but they are in areas including Surrey, Sussex, Greater Manchester, Leicester, Lincolnshire, Herefordshire and Worcestershire.

Dr Maureen Baker, the chairman of the Royal College of General Practitioners, said: ‘This is an extremely distressing situation for patients and for GPs. Every patient should be able to see their family doctor when they need to, and GPs want to provide the best possible access and care for all their patients.

If the population of Britain had not seen an unnatural increase of 20%, there would be no shortage of Doctor’s places.

The answer is not to stop treating our own people, but to send all the parasites back home to be treated by their own health service.

DRC
Scenes like this one outside a health centre in the Congo will soon regularly be seen in Britain if the invasion is not stopped.