Closer to the light : learning from children's near-death by Melvin Morse

By Melvin Morse

Tales of kids, as soon as clinically lifeless, concerning out-of-body commute, telepathic conversation and encounters with lifeless associates and relatives.

summary: tales of youngsters, as soon as clinically useless, related to out-of-body trip, telepathic verbal exchange and encounters with useless acquaintances and relations

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Instead, I interviewed over a ten-year period survivors of cardiac arrest. Doing that prevented children from entering the study who might have made up a story just to be included. I also thoroughly reviewed the medical records of all patients I studied, carefully documenting the drugs they were on, the anesthesia used, the amount of oxygen in their blood, and the results of various laboratory tests. I carefully matched my control patients and those in the study group to make sure they were the same age.

The frightening thing for Cory's attending physician was this: Cory wanted to stop medical treatment. He wanted nature to take its course. His parents supported their son's decision. They were prepared to take him to a cabin in the woods, if need be, to let him have his wish. Cory's doctor didn't know what to do. He felt ethically bound to keep Cory alive for as long as possible. Yet how could he go against the firmly stated wishes of the patient and his family? He asked me to talk to Cory and his family.

Months before my father died, he sat down in my living room and told me that he was going to die soon. Most of my father's intestines had been surgically removed ten years earlier for cancer of the colon, and he had had triple bypass surgery. On top of that he refused to take his heart medicine since it left him impotent. My dad was headstrong, so I wasn't really surprised by his decision. As a physician, I did make sure he knew all the ramifications of not taking his medicine; as his son, I knew that arguing with him was meaningless—he was going to do whatever he wanted.

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Closer to the light : learning from children's near-death by Melvin Morse
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