From Skeptic to Believer: Physician Awakenings Near Concepción

In Concepción, Santa Cruz, where the pace of modern healthcare often leaves little room for the kind of deep, personal attention that patients crave, "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba serves as a reminder that the most meaningful moments in medicine are often the quietest ones — a physician holding a patient's hand, a prayer whispered in a hospital corridor, a moment of shared silence that acknowledges the gravity of what patient and doctor are facing together. These moments, documented throughout Kolbaba's book, demonstrate that the intersection of faith and medicine is not a policy question or a research agenda but a lived experience — as intimate as the relationship between physician and patient, and as profound as the mystery of healing itself.

The Medical Landscape of Bolivia

Bolivia's medical history is intertwined with its Indigenous healing traditions and the challenges of providing healthcare across extreme geography — from the 4,000-meter Altiplano to the tropical lowlands. Traditional Aymara and Quechua medicine, practiced by kallawayas (itinerant healers from the Charazani region), represents one of the world's most sophisticated Indigenous medical traditions. The Kallawaya system, recognized by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2003, employs over 900 medicinal plant species and incorporates detailed knowledge of anatomy, diagnosis, and treatment that was developed over centuries.

Modern Bolivian medicine developed through institutions such as the Universidad Mayor de San Andrés in La Paz and the Universidad Mayor de San Simón in Cochabamba. Bolivia's medical system faces unique challenges, including extreme altitude affecting patient physiology and healthcare delivery across inaccessible terrain. The country has contributed to research on coca leaf medicine — distinct from cocaine — and altitude physiology. Bolivia's 2009 constitution was notable for recognizing traditional medicine alongside Western medicine as part of the national health system, and the country has established intercultural health programs that integrate Kallawaya and other Indigenous healing practices with conventional medical care.

Ghost Traditions and Supernatural Beliefs in Bolivia

Bolivia's ghost traditions are among the most vibrant in the Americas, rooted in Aymara and Quechua spiritual practices that predate the Inca Empire and persist powerfully alongside Catholicism. The Aymara people of the Altiplano believe in a world animated by spirits — every mountain (apu), lake, rock formation, and river has a spiritual essence. The Pachamama (Earth Mother) is the most revered spiritual entity, requiring regular offerings (ch'allas) of alcohol, coca leaves, and llama fat. The dead are believed to reside in the manqha pacha (inner world) and to return annually during the Fiesta de las Ñatitas and Todos Santos celebrations.

Bolivia's most extraordinary death-related tradition is the Fiesta de las Ñatitas, held on November 8 in La Paz, when devotees bring decorated human skulls (ñatitas) to the Cementerio General. These skulls, believed to be protective spirits, are adorned with flowers, sunglasses, hats, and cigarettes, and are taken to church for blessing. Families care for ñatitas year-round, believing they provide protection, predict the future, and intercede with the spirit world. This tradition represents one of the most literal manifestations of ancestor worship surviving in the Catholic Americas.

Bolivian folklore includes numerous supernatural figures: the kharisiri (or lik'ichiri), a fat-stealing phantom similar to Peru's pishtaco, who attacks travelers at night to extract their body fat; the jukumari, a bear-like creature that kidnaps women; and the anchancho, a malevolent spirit that inhabits mines and caves. Bolivia's mining traditions, particularly in Potosí's Cerro Rico, involve elaborate rituals to appease El Tío — a devil figure worshipped by miners with offerings of coca, alcohol, and cigarettes to ensure safety in the dangerous mines.

Medical Fact

The word "surgery" comes from the Greek "cheirourgos," meaning "hand work."

Miraculous Accounts and Divine Intervention in Bolivia

Bolivia's miracle traditions are centered on the Virgen de Copacabana, whose statue on the shores of Lake Titicaca has been associated with claimed miraculous healings since its creation by Tito Yupanqui in 1583. The Basilica of Our Lady of Copacabana is Bolivia's principal pilgrimage site, with walls lined with offerings and testimonials of claimed healings. The Señor del Gran Poder (Lord of Great Power), a painting of Christ venerated in La Paz, is the focus of one of Bolivia's largest annual festivals and is associated with numerous miracle claims. The Kallawaya healers, who served as physicians to the Inca emperors, are credited with healing feats that blend herbal pharmacology with spiritual ritual — their tradition of "calling back the soul" (a ceremony for those near death) represents a healing practice that operates at the intersection of medicine and miracle. Bolivia's Ñatitas tradition itself is based on the belief that human skulls can perform miraculous acts of protection and healing for those who care for them.

Open Questions in Faith and Medicine

The Midwest's farm crisis of the 1980s drove a generation of rural pastors near Concepción, Santa Cruz to become de facto mental health counselors, treating the depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation that accompanied economic devastation. These pastors—untrained in clinical psychology but deeply trained in compassion—saved lives that the formal mental health system couldn't reach. Their faith-based crisis intervention remains a model for rural mental healthcare.

The Midwest's revivalist tradition near Concepción, Santa Cruz—camp meetings, tent revivals, Chautauqua circuits—created a culture where transformative spiritual experiences are not unusual. When a patient reports a hospital room vision, a near-death encounter with the divine, or a miraculous remission, the Midwest physician is less likely to reach for the psychiatric referral pad than their coastal counterpart. In the heartland, the extraordinary is part of the landscape.

Medical Fact

The Ebers Papyrus, dated to 1550 BCE, contains over 700 magical formulas and remedies used in ancient Egyptian medicine.

Ghost Stories and the Supernatural Near Concepción, Santa Cruz

The Haymarket affair of 1886, a pivotal moment in American labor history, created ghosts that haunt not just Chicago but hospitals throughout the Midwest near Concepción, Santa Cruz. The labor movement's martyrs—workers who died for the eight-hour day—appear in facilities that serve working-class communities, as if checking on the descendants of the workers they fought for. Their presence is never threatening; it's vigilant.

Scandinavian immigrant communities near Concepción, Santa Cruz brought a concept of the 'fylgja'—a spirit double that accompanies each person through life. Midwest nurses of Norwegian and Swedish descent occasionally report seeing a patient's fylgja standing beside the bed, visible only in peripheral vision. When the fylgja departs before the patient does, the nurses know what's coming—and they're rarely wrong.

What Families Near Concepción Should Know About Near-Death Experiences

Sleep researchers at Midwest universities near Concepción, Santa Cruz have identified parallels between REM sleep phenomena and NDE features—particularly the out-of-body sensation, the tunnel experience, and the sense of encountering deceased persons. These parallels don't debunk NDEs; they suggest that the brain's dreaming hardware may be involved in generating or mediating the experience, regardless of its ultimate origin.

Agricultural near-death experiences near Concepción, Santa Cruz—farmers trapped under tractors, caught in grain bins, gored by bulls—produce NDE accounts with a distinctly Midwestern character. The landscape of the NDE mirrors the landscape of the farm: vast fields, open sky, a horizon that goes on forever. Whether this reflects cultural conditioning or some deeper correspondence between the earth and the afterlife remains an open research question.

Where Faith and Medicine Meets Faith and Medicine

The STEP trial (Study of the Therapeutic Effects of Intercessory Prayer), published in 2006, remains the largest and most methodologically rigorous randomized controlled trial of prayer's effects on medical outcomes. Conducted across six hospitals and involving 1,802 coronary artery bypass graft patients, the study assigned patients to one of three groups: those who received intercessory prayer and knew it, those who received prayer but did not know it, and those who did not receive prayer. The results showed no significant benefit of prayer — and a slight increase in complications among patients who knew they were being prayed for, possibly due to performance anxiety.

Dr. Kolbaba's "Physicians' Untold Stories" acknowledges the STEP trial's findings but argues that they do not tell the whole story. The trial studied a specific, standardized form of intercessory prayer for a specific, standardized population. It could not capture the kind of deeply personal, emotionally intense prayer that often accompanies life-threatening illness — the desperate, whole-hearted prayer of a spouse at a bedside, a congregation in vigil, a parent pleading for their child's life. For readers in Concepción, Santa Cruz, Kolbaba's accounts of these intense prayer experiences provide a complement to the clinical trial data, suggesting that prayer's effects may depend on dimensions that clinical trials are not designed to measure.

The Byrd study, published in 1988, found that coronary care unit patients who received intercessory prayer experienced fewer complications than those who did not — a finding that generated both excitement and controversy. The study's strengths included its randomized, double-blind design and its large sample size. Its limitations included questions about the composite outcome measure and the potential for type I error given the number of outcomes assessed. A subsequent study by William Harris at the Mid America Heart Institute largely replicated Byrd's findings, strengthening the case that intercessory prayer may have measurable effects on health outcomes.

Dr. Kolbaba's "Physicians' Untold Stories" adds a clinical dimension to these research findings. While the Byrd and Harris studies provide statistical evidence for prayer's effects, Kolbaba's accounts provide the human stories behind the statistics — the prayers of specific families for specific patients, the moments when recovery coincided with intercession, the physicians who witnessed these coincidences and found them impossible to dismiss. For readers in Concepción, Santa Cruz, these stories bring the research to life, transforming abstract findings into vivid, personal accounts of faith in action.

The philosophical concept of "embodied cognition" — the theory that cognitive processes are deeply rooted in the body's interactions with the world — has important implications for understanding the faith-medicine intersection. Traditional Western philosophy, following Descartes, treated mind and body as separate substances with fundamentally different natures. Embodied cognition rejects this dualism, arguing that thought, emotion, and meaning-making are not exclusively mental processes but involve the entire body — including the immune system, the autonomic nervous system, and the endocrine system.

Dr. Kolbaba's "Physicians' Untold Stories" can be read as clinical evidence for embodied cognition — documentation of cases where changes in patients' meaning-making (spiritual transformation, renewed faith, psychological breakthrough) coincided with changes in their bodies (tumor regression, immune activation, symptom resolution). For philosophers of mind and cognitive scientists in Concepción, Santa Cruz, these cases suggest that the relationship between spiritual experience and physical healing is not mysterious but natural — a consequence of the fact that the mind is not a ghost in the machine but an embodied process that is, by its very nature, inseparable from the body's biological functioning.

The Medical History Behind Comfort, Hope & Healing

The empirical study of near-death experiences (NDEs) has produced a body of peer-reviewed research that provides scientific context for many accounts in "Physicians' Untold Stories." Dr. Pim van Lommel's prospective study, published in The Lancet in 2001, followed 344 cardiac arrest survivors in Dutch hospitals and found that 18 percent reported NDEs—a figure consistent with other prospective studies. Van Lommel's study was notable for its rigorous methodology: patients were interviewed within days of resuscitation using standardized instruments, and follow-up assessments at 2 and 8 years documented lasting life changes among NDE experiencers, including increased empathy, reduced fear of death, and enhanced spiritual sensitivity.

Dr. Sam Parnia's AWARE (AWAreness during REsuscitation) study, published in Resuscitation in 2014, took a different approach: placing hidden visual targets in hospital rooms where cardiac arrests might occur, then testing whether cardiac arrest survivors who reported out-of-body experiences could identify these targets. While the sample of verified out-of-body experiences was too small for definitive conclusions, the study demonstrated that conscious awareness can persist during periods of cardiac arrest when brain function is severely compromised—a finding that challenges materialist models of consciousness. For readers in Concepción, Santa Cruz, these studies provide an empirical foundation for the extraordinary accounts in "Physicians' Untold Stories." Dr. Kolbaba's narratives are not isolated stories but data points in a growing body of evidence that the boundary between life and death may be more complex than conventional medicine assumes—evidence that offers the bereaved legitimate grounds for hope.

The theoretical framework of Terror Management Theory (TMT), developed by Greenberg, Pyszczynski, and Solomon based on the cultural anthropology of Ernest Becker, provides a provocative context for understanding the psychological impact of "Physicians' Untold Stories." TMT posits that awareness of mortality is the fundamental anxiety of human existence, and that culture, self-esteem, and meaning systems function as psychological buffers against death anxiety. When these buffers are disrupted—as they are in bereavement—death anxiety surfaces, producing defensive reactions that can impair psychological functioning and interpersonal relationships.

Research testing TMT predictions has been published in hundreds of studies across journals including Psychological Review, the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Psychological Science. The data consistently show that reminders of mortality (mortality salience) increase adherence to cultural worldviews, boost self-esteem striving, and intensify in-group favoritism—defensive reactions that can be either adaptive or maladaptive. "Physicians' Untold Stories" offers an alternative response to mortality salience. Rather than triggering defensive reactions, Dr. Kolbaba's accounts of the extraordinary at the boundary of death may reduce death anxiety directly by suggesting that death is not absolute annihilation but a transition accompanied by meaningful experiences. For bereaved readers in Concepción, Santa Cruz, whose mortality salience is elevated by their loss, these accounts may function as a form of anxiety reduction that operates not through denial but through the expansion of what the reader considers possible.

For caregivers in Concepción — those caring for aging parents, sick children, or loved ones with chronic illness — the book offers a particular kind of relief. It validates the spiritual dimension of caregiving that medicine often ignores. It says: your prayers matter. Your presence matters. And the love you pour into your caregiving is not lost.

Caregiving is one of the most isolating experiences in modern life. The caregiver's world contracts to the dimensions of a sickroom, and the outside world — with its normal rhythms, its casual conversations, its assumption that everyone is healthy — can feel like a foreign country. Dr. Kolbaba's book reaches into that isolation and offers connection: the voices of physicians who understand what the caregiver is going through, because they live with the same proximity to suffering every day.

The history of Comfort, Hope & Healing near Concepción

Unexplained Medical Phenomena: The Patient Experience

The spiritual direction and pastoral care community in Concepción, Santa Cruz—directors, spiritual companions, and retreat leaders—regularly accompanies individuals through experiences that defy conventional categories. "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba provides these spiritual caregivers with clinical evidence that the boundary experiences their directees describe—encounters with the numinous during illness, inexplicable perceptions, and transformative experiences at the edge of death—are also witnessed by medical professionals. For spiritual directors in Concepción, the book validates their ministry to those navigating the intersection of health, consciousness, and the transcendent.

The night-shift culture at hospitals in Concepción, Santa Cruz has its own informal knowledge base—stories of specific rooms, particular times, and recurring phenomena that experienced staff share with newcomers. "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba legitimizes this informal knowledge by demonstrating that physicians themselves have experienced and documented similar phenomena. For the night-shift staff of Concepción's hospitals, the book provides a bridge between their personal observations and the broader body of physician testimony that confirms these observations are neither imaginary nor unique.

The phenomenon of terminal lucidity—the sudden return of cognitive clarity in patients with severe brain disease shortly before death—has been systematically documented by researchers including Dr. Michael Nahm and Dr. Bruce Greyson. Published cases include patients with advanced Alzheimer's disease, brain tumors, strokes, and meningitis who experienced episodes of coherent communication lasting from minutes to hours before dying. These episodes are medically inexplicable: the underlying brain pathology remained unchanged, yet cognitive function temporarily normalized.

For physicians in Concepción, Santa Cruz, terminal lucidity presents a direct challenge to the assumption that consciousness is entirely a product of brain structure and function. If a brain that has been devastated by Alzheimer's disease can support normal cognition in the hours before death, then the relationship between brain structure and consciousness may be more complex—or more loosely coupled—than neuroscience currently assumes. "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba includes accounts of terminal lucidity witnessed by physicians who describe the experience as deeply disorienting: the patient who hasn't spoken intelligibly in years suddenly has a coherent conversation, recognizes family members, and expresses complex emotions, only to decline and die within hours. These accounts deserve systematic investigation, not as curiosities but as data points that may fundamentally alter our understanding of the mind-brain relationship.

How This Book Can Help You

The Midwest's tradition of making do near Concepción, Santa Cruz—of finding solutions with available resources, of not waiting for perfect conditions to act—applies to how readers engage with this book. They don't need a unified theory of consciousness to find value in these accounts. They need stories that illuminate the edges of their own experience, and this book provides them in abundance.

Physicians' Untold Stories book cover — by Dr. Scott J. Kolbaba, MD
Dr. Scott J. Kolbaba, MD — Author of Physicians' Untold Stories

About the Author

Dr. Scott J. Kolbaba, MD is an internist at Northwestern Medicine. Mayo Clinic trained, he spent three years interviewing 200+ physicians about their most extraordinary experiences.

Medical Fact

Your brain is 73% water — just 2% dehydration can impair attention, memory, and cognitive skills.

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These physician stories resonate in every corner of Concepción. The themes of healing, hope, and the unexplained connect to communities throughout the area.

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Medical Disclaimer: Content on DoctorsAndMiracles.com is personal storytelling and editorial content. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing a medical or mental health emergency, call 911 or the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for medical decisions.
Physicians' Untold Stories by Dr. Scott Kolbaba

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The Stories Medicine Never Told You

Over 200 physicians interviewed. 26 true stories of ghost encounters, near-death experiences, and miraculous recoveries that will change the way you think about life, death, and what lies beyond.

By Dr. Scott J. Kolbaba, MD — 4.3★ from 1,018 ratings on Goodreads