
What 200 Physicians Near Zwolle Could No Longer Keep Secret
The cultural history of premonitions in healing traditions stretches back millennia. Asklepion temples in ancient Greece used dream incubation for medical purposes; shamanic traditions worldwide incorporate precognitive visions into healing practice; and even in Western medicine's recent history, physicians have privately reported prophetic dreams and clinical intuitions. Physicians' Untold Stories situates its contemporary physician accounts within this long tradition for readers in Zwolle, Overijssel, suggesting that what modern medicine has dismissed as superstition may be an enduring feature of the healing encounter—one that our ancestors understood better than we do.
Near-Death Experience Research in Netherlands
The Netherlands is home to one of the most important near-death experience studies in medical history. Dr. Pim van Lommel, a Dutch cardiologist at Rijnstate Hospital in Arnhem, published a landmark prospective study in The Lancet in 2001, examining 344 cardiac arrest survivors across ten Dutch hospitals. The study found that 18% of patients reported NDEs, and its rigorous methodology — prospective design, standardized interviews, longitudinal follow-up — set a new standard for NDE research. Van Lommel's subsequent book, "Consciousness Beyond Life" (2007, English translation 2010), argued that consciousness may be non-local and not solely produced by the brain, sparking intense scientific debate. His work has made the Netherlands a global center for the scientific study of near-death experiences and has influenced researchers worldwide.
The Medical Landscape of Netherlands
The Netherlands has made landmark contributions to medicine, many stemming from its Golden Age of scientific inquiry. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek of Delft, using microscopes of his own design, became the first person to observe bacteria and protozoa in the 1670s, founding the field of microbiology. Herman Boerhaave, professor at the University of Leiden in the early 18th century, is considered the father of clinical teaching at the bedside and made Leiden the medical capital of Europe in his era.
Willem Einthoven, working at Leiden University, invented the first practical electrocardiogram (ECG) in 1903, earning the Nobel Prize in 1924. Christiaan Eijkman, though he conducted his key research in the Dutch East Indies, demonstrated that beriberi was caused by nutritional deficiency, helping establish the concept of vitamins and earning the Nobel Prize in 1929. The Netherlands today has one of Europe's best healthcare systems, with the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam and the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam among Europe's top hospitals. Dutch euthanasia legislation (2002) made the Netherlands the first country to legalize physician-assisted dying under strict conditions, reflecting the nation's pragmatic approach to end-of-life care.
Medical Fact
The blood-brain barrier is so selective that 98% of small-molecule drugs cannot cross it.
Miraculous Accounts and Divine Intervention in Netherlands
The Netherlands, with its predominantly Protestant and secular culture, has fewer formal miracle claims than Catholic countries, but notable cases exist. The "Miracle of Amsterdam" (Mirakel van Amsterdam, 1345) — in which a communion wafer allegedly survived a fire and was found intact in the embers — established Amsterdam as a Catholic pilgrimage site and is still commemorated annually in the "Stille Omgang" (Silent Procession), a nocturnal walk through the city center held each March. Dutch physicians, working within one of the world's most evidence-based medical traditions, have documented cases of unexplained remissions and recoveries. Dr. Pim van Lommel's cardiac arrest research has itself documented cases where patients demonstrated awareness and accurate perceptions during periods when their brains showed no measurable activity — cases that, while not classified as miracles, challenge conventional medical understanding of consciousness.
The History of Grief, Loss & Finding Peace in Medicine
Farming community resilience near Zwolle, Overijssel is a medical resource that no pharmaceutical company can patent. The farmer who breaks an arm during harvest doesn't have the luxury of rest—and that determined functionality, while medically suboptimal, reflects a spirit that accelerates healing through sheer will. Midwest physicians learn to work with this resilience rather than against it.
The Midwest's public health nurses near Zwolle, Overijssel cover territories measured in counties, not city blocks. These nurses drive hundreds of miles weekly to check on homebound patients, conduct well-baby visits in mobile homes, and administer flu shots in township halls. Their healing isn't dramatic—it's persistent, reliable, and so woven into the community that its absence would be catastrophic.
Medical Fact
A severed fingertip can regrow in children under age 7, complete with nail, skin, and nerve endings.
Open Questions in Faith and Medicine
Scandinavian immigrant communities near Zwolle, Overijssel brought a Lutheran tradition of sisu—a Finnish concept of inner strength and endurance—that shapes how patients approach illness and recovery. The Midwest patient who refuses pain medication, insists on walking the day after surgery, and apologizes for being a burden isn't being difficult. They're practicing a faith-inflected stoicism that their grandparents brought from Helsinki.
Hutterite colonies near Zwolle, Overijssel practice a communal lifestyle that produces remarkable health outcomes: lower rates of stress-related disease, higher life expectancy, and a mental health profile that confounds psychologists. Whether these outcomes reflect the colony's faith, its social structure, or its agricultural diet is unclear—but the data suggests that communal religious life, whatever its mechanism, is good medicine.
Ghost Stories and the Supernatural Near Zwolle, Overijssel
Prairie isolation has always bred its own kind of ghost story, and hospitals near Zwolle, Overijssel carry the loneliness of the Great Plains into their corridors. Night-shift nurses describe a silence so deep it has texture—and into that silence, sounds that shouldn't be there: the creak of a wagon wheel, the whinny of a horse, the footsteps of a homesteader who died alone in a sod house that became a clinic that became a hospital.
The underground railroad routes that crossed the Midwest left traces in hospitals near Zwolle, Overijssel built above former safe houses. Workers in these buildings report the same phenomena across state lines: the sound of hushed voices speaking in code, the creak of a hidden trapdoor, and the overwhelming emotional impression of desperate hope. The enslaved people who passed through sought freedom; their spirits seem to have found it.
Understanding Prophetic Dreams & Premonitions
The role of physiological stress in triggering premonitions is an area where the physician accounts in Physicians' Untold Stories intersect with research on stress physiology and altered states of consciousness. Research by Bruce McEwen at Rockefeller University, published in journals including Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and the New England Journal of Medicine, has detailed how chronic and acute stress alter brain function—modifying neurotransmitter levels, changing connectivity patterns, and shifting the balance between conscious and unconscious processing. Some researchers have speculated that extreme stress may push the brain into modes of processing that enhance access to information normally below the threshold of awareness.
The physician premonitions in Dr. Kolbaba's collection often occurred during periods of high clinical stress—during complex surgeries, busy emergency shifts, or emotional encounters with dying patients. For readers in Zwolle, Overijssel, this stress connection suggests a possible mechanism: the physiological changes induced by clinical stress may create a neurological state in which premonitive information—normally filtered out by the brain's default processing—reaches conscious awareness. This hypothesis is speculative, but it's consistent with both the stress physiology literature and the clinical patterns observed in the book. It also suggests that the current emphasis on reducing physician stress, while important for well-being, might inadvertently reduce premonitive capacity—a trade-off that the medical profession hasn't considered because it hasn't yet acknowledged that premonitive capacity exists.
The phenomenology of physician premonitions in Dr. Kolbaba's book reveals several consistent features. First, the premonitions are typically accompanied by a sense of urgency — a feeling that action must be taken immediately. Second, the information received is specific rather than vague — a particular patient, a particular complication, a particular time. Third, the emotional quality of the premonition is distinctive — described by physicians as qualitatively different from ordinary worry, clinical concern, or anxiety. Fourth, the premonitions often occur during sleep or in the hypnagogic state between waking and sleeping. Fifth, the accuracy of the premonition is confirmed by subsequent events. These phenomenological features are consistent with the 'presentiment' research literature and distinguish physician premonitions from the general category of clinical worry or anxiety-based hypervigilance.
Mental health professionals in Zwolle, Overijssel who treat patients reporting premonitions face a clinical dilemma: distinguishing between pathological delusion and genuine precognitive experience. Dr. Kolbaba's physician accounts provide helpful context for this distinction. The physician premonitions documented in the book are specific, time-limited, and followed by confirmatory events — characteristics that distinguish them from the diffuse, persistent, and unconfirmed beliefs associated with psychiatric disorders.

What Physicians Say About Hospital Ghost Stories
The phenomenon of shared death experiences represents a relatively recent addition to the literature of end-of-life phenomena, and Physicians' Untold Stories includes several compelling accounts. In a shared death experience, a healthy person present at the death of another — often a physician, nurse, or family member — reports sharing some aspect of the dying person's transition: seeing the same light, feeling the same peace, or even briefly leaving their own body to accompany the dying person partway on their journey. These experiences are reported by healthy, lucid individuals with no physiological reason for altered perception.
For physicians in Zwolle, shared death experiences are particularly challenging because they cannot be attributed to the dying person's compromised physiology. The nurse who sees a column of light rise from a patient's body is not hypoxic, not medicated, and not dying. She is simply present, and what she sees changes her forever. Dr. Kolbaba's inclusion of these accounts in Physicians' Untold Stories extends the book's argument beyond the consciousness of the dying to suggest that death itself may have a tangible, perceivable dimension that those nearby can sometimes access. For Zwolle readers, this is perhaps the book's most extraordinary — and most hopeful — claim.
Among the quieter but no less powerful accounts in Physicians' Untold Stories are those involving patients who describe feeling a presence in their room — not a visual apparition, but a felt sense of someone being there. This presence is consistently described as comforting, protective, and deeply familiar, even when the patient cannot identify who it is. Physicians in Zwolle's hospitals have reported patients describing these presences with remarkable calm, often saying simply, "Someone is here with me," or "I'm not alone."
The phenomenon of sensed presence has been documented in various contexts — bereavement, extreme environments, sleep states — but its occurrence in dying patients carries a particular weight. These patients are not grieving or adventuring or dreaming; they are dying, and what they report is a companionship that defies physical explanation. For Zwolle readers who have sat with a dying loved one and felt something similar — an inexplicable sense that the room was more populated than it appeared — Physicians' Untold Stories offers the reassurance that this experience is widely shared among both patients and medical professionals, and that it may reflect something genuinely real about the transition from life to whatever lies beyond.
The stories that emerge from hospitals near Zwolle echo a pattern documented across medical literature worldwide. A veteran receives a final salute from an unseen soldier. A cardiac monitor displays three perfect heartbeats seven minutes after death. A surgeon wakes at 3 AM with the inexplicable certainty that a stable patient is about to die. These are the stories medicine never says out loud — but they happen with a frequency that defies coincidence.
What distinguishes the accounts in Physicians' Untold Stories from generic ghost narratives is their clinical precision. These are physicians who record vital signs, document findings, and think in differential diagnoses. When they describe an experience, they include the time, the setting, the patient's chart status, and the specific sensory details. This clinical rigor transforms anecdote into something approaching evidence — and makes their testimony extraordinarily difficult to dismiss.

Miraculous Recoveries
Physicians' Untold Stories features the well-documented case of Barbara Cummiskey, who experienced a sudden and complete recovery from end-stage multiple sclerosis. Bedridden, with multiple contractures, unable to walk, speak, or eat — she suddenly regained all function and went on to live a normal life. Multiple physicians corroborated this case. There is no medical explanation for the reversal of the structural neurological damage documented on her imaging studies.
The Cummiskey case is particularly significant because of the nature of multiple sclerosis. MS involves the destruction of myelin sheaths — the insulating coating on nerve fibers — and the formation of scar tissue in the central nervous system. This damage is considered irreversible by current medical understanding. Cummiskey's recovery required not just the cessation of disease activity but the regeneration of destroyed tissue — a process that neurologists in Zwolle and worldwide consider impossible with current medical knowledge.
The Institute of Noetic Sciences, founded by Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell, maintains a database of over 3,500 cases of spontaneous remission from medically incurable conditions. These cases, drawn from medical literature spanning more than a century, represent a body of evidence that the mainstream medical community has largely ignored. The database includes cancers that vanished without treatment, autoimmune conditions that spontaneously resolved, and infections that cleared despite the failure of every available antibiotic.
Dr. Scott Kolbaba's "Physicians' Untold Stories" adds living physician testimony to this statistical record. Where the IONS database offers numbers and citations, Kolbaba offers voices — the voices of doctors from communities like Zwolle, Overijssel who watched these events unfold at their patients' bedsides. Together, the database and the book create a picture that the medical profession can no longer afford to ignore: that spontaneous remission is not a freak occurrence but a recurring phenomenon that demands systematic investigation.
The physicians in "Physicians' Untold Stories" uniformly describe their experiences with unexplained recoveries as career-defining moments. Not because the events were dramatic — though they certainly were — but because they forced a confrontation with the limits of medical knowledge. For physicians trained in the certainties of pathophysiology and pharmacology, witnessing an inexplicable recovery is profoundly disorienting. The frameworks that normally organize their understanding of disease and healing suddenly prove inadequate.
Dr. Kolbaba writes about this disorientation with empathy and insight, drawing on his own experience as a physician who witnessed events he could not explain. For medical professionals in Zwolle, Overijssel, his account validates what many have felt but few have articulated: that the practice of medicine, at its deepest level, requires not only expertise but wonder — the willingness to stand before the unknown and acknowledge that some of the most important things happening in our hospitals are things we do not yet understand.
William Coley, a surgeon at Memorial Hospital in New York (now Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), observed in the 1890s that patients who developed post-surgical infections sometimes experienced tumor regression. This observation led him to develop "Coley's toxins" — preparations of killed bacteria that he administered to cancer patients in an effort to induce fever and stimulate an immune response. Over his career, Coley treated over 1,000 patients, with documented response rates that compare favorably to some modern immunotherapies. His work was largely abandoned following the rise of radiation therapy and chemotherapy but has been vindicated by the modern era of cancer immunotherapy, which is based on the same fundamental principle: that the immune system can be activated to destroy tumors.
Dr. Kolbaba's "Physicians' Untold Stories" resonates with Coley's legacy in important ways. Several cases in the book involve recoveries preceded by acute infections or high fevers — observations consistent with Coley's original clinical insight. For cancer researchers in Zwolle, Overijssel, the combination of Coley's historical work and Kolbaba's contemporary accounts suggests a continuous thread in medicine: the recognition that the body possesses powerful self-healing mechanisms that can be activated by triggers we do not fully understand. Understanding these triggers — whether they are infectious, immunological, psychological, or spiritual — remains one of the most important unsolved problems in cancer research.
Recent advances in our understanding of the microbiome — the trillions of bacteria, viruses, and fungi that inhabit the human body — have revealed that these microbial communities play far more significant roles in health and disease than previously imagined. The gut microbiome, in particular, has been shown to influence immune function, inflammation, neurotransmitter production, and even gene expression. Some researchers have proposed that changes in the microbiome may play a role in spontaneous remission — that shifts in microbial community composition could trigger immune responses that destroy established tumors or resolve chronic infections.
While none of the cases in "Physicians' Untold Stories" specifically document microbiome changes, several describe recoveries preceded by acute illnesses or dietary changes that would be expected to alter the gut microbiome significantly. For microbiome researchers in Zwolle, Overijssel, these cases suggest a potentially productive area of investigation. If spontaneous remissions are associated with specific microbiome changes, identifying those changes could lead to probiotic or dietary interventions designed to reproduce them intentionally. Dr. Kolbaba's case documentation, combined with modern microbiome sequencing technologies, provides the foundation for studies that could test this hypothesis.

How This Book Can Help You
The Midwest's church-library tradition near Zwolle, Overijssel—small collections maintained by volunteers in church basements and fellowship halls—has embraced this book with an enthusiasm that reveals its dual appeal. It satisfies the churchgoer's desire for faith-affirming accounts while respecting the scientist's demand for credible witnesses. In the Midwest, a book that can play in both the sanctuary and the laboratory has found its audience.


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
The average person blinks about 15-20 times per minute — roughly 28,000 times per day.
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