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by Paul Bernstein, Ph.D.
Nurse Janet Schwaninger, coordinator of cardiology care at
Barnes-Jewish Hospital, a teaching venue of the Washington University
medical school (St. Louis, Missouri), this summer saw her three year
study of near-death experiencers published in the Journal of Near-Death Studies.
Her research is only the third prospective* study of cardiac-arrest
neardeath experiencers published in the US, and the fifth ever in the
world. Vital Signs is delighted to have had the opportunity to
interview Nurse Schwaninger, to gain from her an inside view of the
practical rigors of designing, conducting, and publishing such valuable
research.
Photo by Linda Jacquin
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Barnes Hospital
Cardiovascular Coordinator
—and NDE researcher—
Janet Schwaninger, RN, BSN
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VS: What started you in this work?
JS: In 1989 I witnessed the cardiac arrest of a medical
colleague, during his recovery after a heart-valve replacement. Many
hospital personnel knew this physician, and a number of us were present
at the time of his arrest. It took seven defibrillations before he was
revived.
When he became conscious, he told us he had witnessed the entire
arrest, from a vantage point to the left in the upper corner of the
room. He described everything that we’d done, and knew exactly how many
times we had defibrillated him. Then he told us that there was a
spiritual entity with him during the entire arrest who was very
reassuring to him, telling him that everything would be okay, no matter
how things turned out—which surprised him very much. He had never heard
of an NDE before. “I felt totally conscious and totally aware, and yet
I know that medically I was virtually dead because you defibrillated me
seven times.”
*Interviewing all revived patients in a hospital unit, before knowing which ones have had an NDE.
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