"The fourth issue of VOICES features stories from people who have had near-death experiences (NDEs). These NDEs occurred when the individuals had lost circulation, respiration, and meaningful electrical brain activity, and normally, would have lost consciousness. These experiences frequently involve a feeling of peace, a bright light, and a separation of consciousness from the body. Though difficult to explain scientifically, these experiences often leave individuals profoundly changed for the remainder of their life: stripping them of a fear of death and reorganizing their priorities. Most healthcare providers receive no training on how to respond to a patient’s report of an NDE. Yet, how they treat patients following these experiences can have long-term impacts. Patients’ self-reports are often ignored, disregarded as non-factual or misdiagnosed as a hallucination or mental illness, creating a “Gap of Care” that causes patients to lose confidence in talking about their experience in the future out of fear that they will be stigmatized. The authors of the symposium stories describe feelings of frustration and hesitation in conveying their experiences to medical providers and family. We hope that the collection of stories might serve as an educational resource to patients, families, and healthcare providers on how to navigate an often hidden experience that is far more common than most people imagine."
Healthcare After a Near-Death Experience
"The fourth issue of VOICES features stories from people who have had near-death experiences (NDEs). These NDEs occurred when the individuals had lost circulation, respiration, and meaningful electrical brain activity, and normally, would have lost consciousness. These experiences frequently involve a feeling of peace, a bright light, and a separation of consciousness from the body. Though difficult to explain scientifically, these experiences often leave individuals profoundly changed for the remainder of their life: stripping them of a fear of death and reorganizing their priorities. Most healthcare providers receive no training on how to respond to a patient’s report of an NDE. Yet, how they treat patients following these experiences can have long-term impacts. Patients’ self-reports are often ignored, disregarded as non-factual or misdiagnosed as a hallucination or mental illness, creating a “Gap of Care” that causes patients to lose confidence in talking about their experience in the future out of fear that they will be stigmatized. The authors of the symposium stories describe feelings of frustration and hesitation in conveying their experiences to medical providers and family. We hope that the collection of stories might serve as an educational resource to patients, families, and healthcare providers on how to navigate an often hidden experience that is far more common than most people imagine."
https://nibjournal.org/voices/healthcareafternde/
Wanna bet this is intentional? Can't let people know that there is an afterlife...and by extension, that God actually exists.