Parallel Entrepreneurship
Fighting big pharma by marketing and selling prescription medications from big pharma and a few other parallels that can't be overlooked
Recently, Foster Coulson, the founder and chairman of The Wellness Company, expressed strong criticism on X, asserting that he is under attack from individuals lacking ethics and integrity. He argues that individuals who criticize him and his companies are driven by anger, envy, and jealousy. Moreover, he claims that the alleged assailants are essentially bullies who resort to unfair tactics against him and later portray themselves as victims. After all, Foster is a champion of freedom striving to establish an innovative parallel system aimed at challenging big pharma, facilitating healing for individuals, and making a positive contribution to the creation of a parallel economy, isn't he?
The validity of these claims is laughable at best. Making these claims doesn't automatically determine their truth; further investigation and examination of evidence would be needed to assess their merit.
To emphasize the obvious, scrutinizing someone's motives or the legitimacy of their claims and actions doesn't necessarily indicate anger, jealousy, or envy. Instead, it suggests that the individual might possess considerable intellect and is in pursuit of the truth.
Information provided by several critics of the Coulson et al. Wellness camp suggests that the situation might not align entirely with the way Mr. Coulson presents his case as incontestable truth. Indeed, the critiques largely appear to have a few facts that might be substantiated and seems to be justified versus personal attacks or simply bullies throwing sticks and stones.
This is where Jase Medical enters the picture...
Jase Medical was founded in Utah in 2020 (other sites indicate that the company was established in January of 2021) by Dr. Shawn Rowland with the goal of empowering individuals for enhanced medical preparedness.
Through the establishment of Jase Medical, Dr. Rowland collaborated with leading medical experts from “prestigious” institutions including Boston's Children's Hospital, Columbia University, Harvard Medical School, Mayo Clinic, Stanford University, and The University of Utah to create this distinctive medical service.
Jase Medical pioneered the development of the initial medical emergency prescription medication kit available for online ordering through a telehealth platform. Subsequent companies that followed were not introducing a novel or innovative concept but rather imitating Jase Medical and their team of clinical experts linked to “prestigious” universities and hospitals.
How Jase Medical works
Does Jase Medical accept insurance? No. Why not? It does not appear to be about a parallel healthcare system by any means. Insurance companies may be cautious about covering the expenses associated with medical emergency kits for several reasons, so it would seem to be easier to just not do the whole insurance bit. One potential factor for this is the absence of standardized regulations or guidelines governing the inclusion of such kits in coverage. Insurance policies typically adhere to established medical protocols, and if there is no widespread agreement on the necessity or effectiveness of medical emergency kits, insurers may hesitate to offer coverage. Moreover, insurance providers frequently evaluate the cost-effectiveness and medical necessity of various treatments and interventions. In cases where there is insufficient evidence or a lack of consensus within the medical community regarding the effectiveness of medical emergency kits in specific scenarios, insurers may be less willing to include them in coverage.
Jase Medical offers customizable emergency medical kits tailored to individual patient needs. Additionally, they provide the option for patients to include additional prescription medications as add-ons to their kits.
Additional options that can be included to create a distinctive kit filled with prescription pharmaceuticals includes:
Customize your Jase Case with the following medications
Acetaminophen 500mg (OTC)
60-100 (based on country of origin)
US $26 / CA $25 USD
An antipyretic (fever reducer) and analgesic (pain reliever)Acetazolamide 250mg
10 tablets
US $25 / CA $25 USD
Acute Altitude Sickness, Glaucoma (acute angle-closure)Albuterol HFA 90mcg 18gm
1 solution (US only)
US $25
Bronchospasm, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ExacerbationAtovaquone-Proguanil 250/100mg
40 tablets
US $120 / CA $224 USD
Antimalarial medication.Celecoxib 200mg
14 tablets
US $23 / CA $28 USD
Acute Pain (general, menstrual, gout)CiproDex Otic 0.3%/0.1%
1 solution
US $125 / CA $125 USD
Otitis Externa (Swimmer’s Ear)Dexamethasone 4mg
10 tablets
US $27 / CA $33 USD
Inflammation, Acute altitude/mountain sickness (moderate to severe), High-altitude cerebral edema, AsthmaDiphenhydramine (Benadryl) 25mg (OTC)
60-100 tablets (based on country of origin)
US $32 / CA $40 USD
Allergic Reaction, Hives, Insomnia, Motion Sickness, Nausea/VomitingEpiPen Auto Injector 0.3mg
1-2 injectors (based on country of origin)
US $318 / CA $132 USD
Alpha/beta agonist medicationFamotidine (Pepcid) 20mg
60-100 tablets (based on country of origin)
US $42 / CA $70 USD
A histamine H2 blockerFluconazole 150mg
4 tablets (females only)
US $26 / CA $49 USD
Vaginal CandidiasisHydroxyzine 25mg
30 tablets
US $22 / CA $31 USD
Insomnia, Itching, HivesIbuprofen 200mg (OTC)
100 tablets (US only)
US $114 / CA $206 USD
Fever Reduction, Pain ReliefIbuprofen 400mg (OTC)
100 tablets (Canada only)
CA $33 USD
Fever Reduction, Pain ReliefIvermectin 3mg
20 tablets
US $114 / CA $206 USD
Anti-parasitic medication. Enough to treat parasitic infections such as scabies.Ivermectin 3mg
40 tablets
US $210 / CA $399 USD
Anti-parasitic medication. Enough to treat parasitic infections such as scabies.Loperamide 2mg (OTC)
12 tablets
US $24 / CA $23 USD
Diarrhea (Acute, Chronic)Methylprednisoline 4mg
1 pack of 21 tablets (US only)
US $20
CorticosteroidNaloxone HCL 4mg nasal spray
2 pack (US only)
US $99
Opiod overdoseOfloxacin opthalmic 0.3%
1 suspension
US $55 / CA $45 USD
Conjunctivitis (bacterial)Ondansetron 4mg
21 tablets
US $25 / CA $110 USD
Nausea/VomitingOseltamivir 75mg (pack of 10)
1 pack
US $42 / CA $42 USD
InfluenzaPermethrin 5% 30g
1 tube (Canada only)
CA $53 USD
A topical anti-parasitic agentPermethrin 5% 60g
1 tube (US only)
US $42
A topical anti-parasitic agentSalbutomol 100mcg
1 inhaler (Canada only)
CA $25 USD
An inhaled medication that increases air flow to the lungsScopolamine 1mg Patch
4 patches (US only)
US $62
Motion SicknessSilver Sulfadiazine Cream 1% (20g)
1 tube
US $32 / CA $35 USD
A topical antibioticTriamcinolone 0.1% (15g)
1 tube (US only)
US $25
Dermatitis (atopic, contact, seborrheic and vulvar), PsoriasisValacyclovir 500g
60 tablets
US $46 / CA $81 USD
Herpes Simplex (Oral or Genital), Herpes Zoster (Shingles)
EXAMPLES OF INFECTIONS TREATED
Amebiasis
Anaerobic bacterial infections
Anthrax
Bacterial vaginosis
Bartonellosis
Bite wounds
Bone & joint infections
Borrelia recurrentis
Brucellosis
C. diff
Campylobacter
Cat scratch disease
Cellulitis
Chlamydia
Cholera
Chronic bacterial prostatitis
Ear infections
Erysipelas
Gardnerella infection
Genital ulcer disease (chancroid)
Giardiasis
Group A strep
H. influenza
Infectious diarrhea
Intra-abdominal infections
Klebsiella
Lower respiratory tract infections
Lyme disease
Malaria
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Pelvic inflammatory disease
Pharyngitis
Plague
Pneumonia
Prostatitis
Psittacosis (ornithosis)
Pyelonephritis
Q fever
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Salmonella
Sexually transmitted disease
Sinusitis
Skin abscesses
Strep throat
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Tetanus
Tonsillitis
Tooth infections
Traveler’s diarrhea
Trichomoniasis
Tularemia
Urethritis/Cervicitis
The success of the Jase Case Medical Kits led to the company's expansion into Jase Daily, offering patients the option to receive prescriptions for up to twelve months supply of their chronic care medications through the telehealth platform. Will The Wellness Company also be joining this trend?
Jase Medical is available to address any questions or concerns that their patients may have.
The marketing team at Jase Medical distinctly emphasizes the importance of their pharmaceutical models and why they are essential.
Jase Medical leverages affiliate marketing as a strategy to promote and sell their products.
A member of the Jase Medical team can be seen on a TikTok "stitch" with Dr. Rubin, a well-known figure on TikTok and a participant in the United Nations Initiative Team Halo. This initiative aimed to enhance the reach of pro-vaccine messages on social media. This particular stitch appears to employ the fear of medication shortages as a means to encourage the buying of their prescription medication sales.
In what feels like a strange coincidence, Dr. Shawn Rowland, founder of Jase Medical, was also instrumental in responding to the Maui catastrophe that occurred in August, 2023.
Video obtained from public X post
Supposedly, upon learning about the fire in Lahaina and the displacement of thousands, Dr. Shawn Rowland offered his home on Oahu for displaced families. His much publicized act of generosity would supposedly lead him to become involved in the rescue and recovery efforts of the global (another United Nations linked organization) outreach group Aerial Recovery Group. After contacting the group's chief medical officer, Aaron Asay, Dr. Rowland's offer evolved into him serving as the physician for the team deploying to Lahaina. Within two hours, a team was activated and organized. Upon arrival in Lahaina, they collaborated with the Maui chief of police, John Pelletier. Yes. This guy. The police chief who was present at the Las Vegas shootings in 2017, as well as the Maui fires in 2023.
The Aerial Recovery Group, also ex military members who supposedly engage in special anti sex-trafficking operations and disaster relief operations; like with the Lahaina fires operation. How many missing children have still been unaccounted for in Lahaina again? Just curious.
The Aerial Recovery group also partners with Tim Ballard and The SPEAR Fund. Which is also another interesting discovery, especially given the controversy surrounding Tim Ballard.
Britni Turner, the founder of Aerial Recovery Group, is also the owner of a posh private island available for rent (like the whole island), offering individuals the opportunity to book the entire island for recreational purposes. The Aerial BVI serves a dual purpose as a healing center for veterans, so it is all legit, right? Something definitely does not feel right with any of this.
The Aerial BVI (British Virgin Island), AKA Buck Island is a neighboring British Virgin Island of Little St. James. That is right. It is not too far from Epstein Island.
The British Virgin Islands (BVI) are renowned as the Caribbean's privacy hub, boasting exclusive resorts on separate islands. Notably, the 74-acre Necker Island, acquired by Richard Branson, who is alleged to be on the recent Jeffrey Epstein island list, is among the most famous. Supposedly, after the devastation caused by Hurricane Irma four years ago, led to extensive rebuilding, the resorts are reopening. The BVI faced challenges from both the hurricane and the subsequent pandemic. The Aerial, a new addition to the established resorts, is situated on the 43-acre Buck Island, southeast of Tortola, purchased for $25 million by 33-year-old entrepreneur Britnie Turner (the founder of Aerial Recovery). Turner, moved by her first visit with Branson, actively contributed to the BVI's recovery efforts after Hurricane Irma, even residing there for several months to aid relief programs. Bringing it all together, the Aerial island experience is guided by a team of affable staff, several of whom were previously with Richard Branson’s Necker Island staff. Interesting indeed.
In a noteworthy development in 2021, a "resiliency summit" took place on Buck Island as part of a recently established memorandum of understanding between the Department of Disaster Management, a governmental agency in the Virgin Islands, and the U.S.-based emergency management company Aerial Recovery Group. While the specifics of the agreement remain undisclosed, it is designed to enhance the territory's emergency preparedness and response programs. A key aspect involves facilitating connections between the Department of Disaster Management and non-governmental organizations willing to provide assistance, as stated by Britni Turner, the founder of Aerial Recovery Group.
To reiterate, Britni Turner, the founder of Aerial, is also connected to the United Nations.
But let's not digress. Now, let's address the other significant parallel issues at hand.
It appears that The Wellness Company has revamped the already established Jase Medical emergency kit and marketing model, incorporating it into their own marketing strategy centered around freedom fighting, patriotism, and opposition to big pharma. Meanwhile, and this is the really big elephant in the room, they are involved in the sale of prescription pharmaceuticals and use the exact same medical and marketing model as Jase Medical. How is this any different? It is not.
Foster Coulson founded The Wellness Company in approximately September 2022. Jase Medical had already established their company prior to this and were already selling medical emergency kits through a telehealth system.
While there may be subtleties that differentiate The Wellness Company from Jase Medical, their claimed innovative and freedom-fighting parallel healthcare models essentially mirror what Jase Medical and other companies had already established before the inception of Foster Coulson's supposed parallel and novel healthcare model. The uniqueness of Coulson's model appears to be questionable, especially with the focus of this piece, the emergency medical kits (the Wellness Company telehealth visits and seemingly overpriced supplements is a different beast).
The marketing strategies employed by The Wellness Company appear to bare a striking resemblance to those utilized by Jase Medical. Make sure you are prepared for the next big emergency/catastrophe/the sky is falling.
Oh and let’s not forget about the patriotic influencer affiliates…
Instead of utilizing familiar faces from Team Halo’s Tik Tok crew like Jase Medical, somehow Donald Trump, Jr. a major freedom movement influencer, was finagled into this affiliate debauchery for The Wellness Company.
As well as Donald Trump Jr.’s fiancé ( and Gavin Newsom’s ex-wife) Kimberly Guilfoyle.
Much like Jase Medical, The Wellness Company boasts its distinctive combination of renowned doctors and influential team members branded to be patriotic, freedom-fighting patriots (even though they still market big pharma products and advocate their use).
The Wellness Company kits contain prescription pharmaceuticals containing identical medications as those found in the Jase Medical Emergency Kits (although The Wellness Company provides fewer options, and customization of kits is not permitted). The Wellness Company currently provides both the Medical Emergency Kit and the Contagion Emergency Kit, the latter previously known as the COVID Emergency Kit but recently underwent a name change. The medications from both kits are big pharma prescription medications that are being marketed and sold for profit. Selling them does not disrupt big pharma in anyway, other than adding to their profits and the stakeholders of The Wellness Company.
Will The Wellness Company start promoting the Contagion Emergency Kits with infomericals that include Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Hudson, Laurence Fishburne, and Jude Law?
The Wellness Company Medical Emergency Kits:
The Wellness Company Contagion Kits (it’s an attempt to be different from Jase Medical but it’s still big pharma and it’s still a medical kit):
Someone might want to ask Dr. Peter McCullough where he got his “McCullough Protocol” from. Just saying.
Paxlovid? Molnupiravir? Really?!? Might as well add some Remdesivir on there for good measure for this “parallel” healthcare system and the “parallel” protocols.
The process of acquiring a Wellness Medical Emergency or Contagion Kit used to mirror Jase Medical's, involving a telehealth visit with a provider. However, The Wellness Company now seems to have eliminated the need for a telehealth visit with a licensed provider. Instead, customers are only required to make their purchase online, fill out a form that a physician looks over, which can be referred to as an asynchronous visit, and the customer then waits 2-3 weeks for their kits. This raises concerns about safety, as bypassing the synchronous telehealth visit means missing the crucial step where a provider is supposed to verbally discuss medical history, allergies, and address individual questions. Has a doctor-patient relationship been established by law through only the use of an intake form? The question arises: who is providing approval for these prescription medications that typically require a licensed physician's signature after a patient visit either in person, through a telehealth visit, or an asynchronous visit? What are the legal implications of this practice as each state has different regulations? This process appears to be questionable in terms of overall legality as well as safety.
Does The Wellness Company accept insurance for their medical kits? No. But again, this is not necessarily because they truly aim to function as a parallel healthcare system challenging major pharmaceutical companies or regulatory agencies. The decision may also be driven by the complexity of insurance-related processes, including the need for additional staff for claims filing and the intricate nature of reimbursement for medication services as well as telehealth services. AKA it’s a major pain and can be quite costly. Either way, The Wellness Company utilizes the same approach to prescription medication sales and this is not a novel idea.
In similar fashion, The Wellness Company seems to have emulated Jase Medical in response to the Maui catastrophe. Despite Foster Coulson not deploying his parallel healthcare team to the Hawaiian soil, he ensured to publicly highlight his contributions on social media (and plugging his companies simultaneously).
In a remarkably similar and “parallel” manner, The Wellness Company also appears to be associated with military personnel supposedly engaged in global anti sex-trafficking operations (namely Foster Coulson’s who is business partners with ex-military David Lopez who was also involved in Operation Underground Railroad with Tim Ballard and Mission Safe Harbour), and ties to the United Nations and their sustainable development initiatives for nations which includes yet another private island retreat (but this one is in Haiti). However, for an in-depth exploration of these connections, I recommend reading Kristin Elizabeth's comprehensive expose on The Wellness Company and these ties. I have no affiliations or partnerships with Kristin, but acknowledge her amazing work and investigative reporting
The island discussed in Kristen Elizabeth’s expose on substack.
hey, what's wrong with disaster capitalism? you know, free markets
note how coulson frames the criticism of his business model as a false dichotomy. the issue isn't whether he's selling antibiotics (lots of other sources do that) or that he does so at a ridiculous markup. the issue is that his rather byzantine corporate structure is set up to feed customer dna and other biometrics to any number of rogue actors including but not limited to the ccp
this is not about being pharma adjacent, it's about coulson's complicity in the surveillance state
Very good. I appreciate the spotlight on child sex trafficking which was the point of my post connecting DEI to SDG to LBGTQP (of course P is for Pedophilia) to Child Sex Trafficking to Satanic Ritual Abuse. Why is no one else calling out DEI which is diabolically opposed to freedom?
https://peter70x7.substack.com/p/medical-freedom-malfunction
Coulson told me he doesn’t care.
https://palexander.substack.com/p/i-have-decided-to-respond-to-this/comments#comment-47415438