| ST. Louis Nurse Leads Rare, Prospective Study | | Print | |
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I was very moved by how significantly this physician’s life changed the
year following his experience: he became a happier person, he began
enjoying his life, he made significant changes in his family and
personal life, and in his medical practice. Several times he came back
to us, wanting to discuss the experience. At that time, though I had
heard of the near-death experience I really had not read much about it.
So this event stimulated me to go to the library and do a computer
search, trying to find out all I could about the experience, and to
share that with him.
what I was trying to do. For example, one physician in the hospital who’d heard that I’d sent this proposal to the Human Studies Committee said, “Well, I guess you’re not going to hurt anybody.” But the official committee from the very beginning took the research very seriously, and before long gave me total approval to proceed. They were pleased that I had studied all the existing literature in the field; they definitely felt that it would be a worthwhile study. I think it also may have helped that Dr. Weiss and I are wellknown at the hospital; we had already worked there for 12 years, and we took care of a large number of patients. We’re on hospital rounds every day and also have contact with a wide variety of the staff.
VS: So you were already known and credible, and when you proposed something
that stretched your colleagues’ beliefs,
they thought, “Well, we’ll keep listening.” |
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| Last Updated ( Friday, 02 June 2006 ) | |||||||||||||

