
Secrets of the ER: Physician Stories From Victoria Island
Larry Dossey, MD, has argued that premonitions represent "nonlocal mind"—the hypothesis that consciousness extends beyond the brain and can access information across time and space. Whether or not you accept that hypothesis, the physician premonitions documented in Physicians' Untold Stories demand some explanation. In Victoria Island, Lagos, readers are grappling with accounts that resist conventional interpretation: a physician who dreamed of a patient's rare diagnosis before any symptoms appeared, a nurse who felt an overwhelming urge to return to a patient's room moments before a code, a surgeon whose inexplicable unease about a procedure led to the discovery of an unsuspected complication. These are not ghost stories; they are clinical reports from credible witnesses.
The Medical Landscape of Nigeria
Nigeria's medical history reflects the intersection of one of Africa's most sophisticated traditional healing systems with the introduction of Western medicine during the colonial period. The country's traditional medical practices — including Yoruba herbalism (agbo), Igbo traditional medicine (ogwu), and Hausa-Fulani healing traditions — have been practiced for centuries and remain widely used alongside modern medicine. The University of Ibadan's College of Medicine, established in 1948, was one of the first Western-style medical schools in West Africa and has produced generations of physicians who have contributed to global medicine. Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), founded in 1962, is one of the largest tertiary hospitals in Africa.
Nigeria has also been at the forefront of fighting tropical diseases, with notable contributions to the global eradication of Guinea worm disease and pioneering work in sickle cell disease research. The country's healthcare challenges, including one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world, have driven innovation in community health worker programs and mobile health technology. Nigerian physicians in the diaspora have made significant contributions to medicine worldwide, and the country continues to produce world-class medical researchers and practitioners.
Ghost Traditions and Supernatural Beliefs in Nigeria
Nigeria's spirit traditions are as diverse as its more than 250 ethnic groups, but certain beliefs about the supernatural world are deeply woven into the national consciousness. Among the Yoruba of southwestern Nigeria, the spirit world is populated by the orisha — divine beings who serve as intermediaries between the supreme creator Olodumare and humanity. The orisha include powerful figures such as Sango (god of thunder and lightning), Ogun (god of iron and warfare), Yemoja (goddess of rivers and motherhood), and Oya (goddess of winds, storms, and death). The egungun masquerades, in which costumed figures represent returning ancestral spirits, remain among the most spectacular spiritual ceremonies in West Africa, particularly in cities like Oyo and Abeokuta. During these festivals, the egungun are believed to be actual vessels for the spirits of the dead, who return to bless, advise, and sometimes discipline the living.
Among the Igbo of southeastern Nigeria, belief in reincarnation (ilo uwa) is a cornerstone of spiritual life. The ogbanje — a spirit child who is believed to die and be reborn repeatedly to the same mother, causing the family perpetual grief — is one of the most feared entities in Igbo cosmology. Families would sometimes make identifying marks on the body of a deceased child, then look for the same marks on subsequent newborns to determine whether the ogbanje had returned. Chinua Achebe's novel Things Fall Apart brought the ogbanje concept to international attention, but the belief continues to influence how some Igbo families understand childhood illness and death.
The Hausa-Fulani of northern Nigeria, predominantly Muslim, hold strong beliefs in djinn (iskoki in Hausa) — invisible beings created from smokeless fire who can be either benevolent or malevolent. The bori spirit possession cult, practiced primarily by Hausa women, involves elaborate rituals in which practitioners are possessed by specific spirits, each with its own personality, preferences, and demands. Despite being officially discouraged by Islamic authorities, bori remains widely practiced as a means of addressing illness, infertility, and other misfortunes attributed to spiritual causes.
Medical Fact
The term "vital signs" — temperature, pulse, respiration, and blood pressure — was coined in the early 20th century.
Miraculous Accounts and Divine Intervention in Nigeria
Nigeria is one of the world's most active centers of faith healing and reported miraculous recoveries. The country's massive Pentecostal and charismatic Christian movements — led by figures such as the late T.B. Joshua of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) in Lagos, and Pastor Enoch Adeboye of the Redeemed Christian Church of God — regularly report healings of conditions ranging from blindness and paralysis to HIV and cancer. These healing services draw participants from across Africa and the world. The intersection of Christian faith healing with traditional Yoruba and Igbo spiritual healing creates a complex landscape where miraculous recoveries are frequently claimed and widely believed. While medical documentation of these claims is often limited, the sheer volume of reported cases and the cultural significance of faith healing make Nigeria a uniquely important location for studying the relationship between belief and physical recovery.
The History of Grief, Loss & Finding Peace in Medicine
Community hospitals near Victoria Island, Lagos anchor their towns the way churches and schools do, providing not just medical care but economic stability, community identity, and a gathering place for shared purpose. When a rural hospital closes—as hundreds have across the Midwest—the community doesn't just lose healthcare. It loses a piece of its soul. The hospital is the town's immune system, and its absence is felt in every metric of community health.
Hospital gardens near Victoria Island, Lagos planted by volunteers from the Master Gardener program provide healing spaces that cost almost nothing but deliver measurable benefits. Patients who spend time in these gardens show lower blood pressure, reduced pain medication needs, and shorter hospital stays. The Midwest's agricultural expertise, applied to hospital landscaping, produces therapeutic landscapes that pharmaceutical companies cannot replicate.
Medical Fact
Humans share about 60% of their DNA with bananas and 98.7% with chimpanzees.
Open Questions in Faith and Medicine
The Midwest's tradition of hospital chaplaincy near Victoria Island, Lagos reflects the region's religious diversity: Lutheran chaplains serve alongside Catholic priests, Methodist ministers, and occasionally Sikh granthis and Buddhist monks. This diversity, far from creating confusion, enriches the spiritual care available to patients. A dying farmer who says 'I'm not sure what I believe' can explore that uncertainty with a chaplain trained to listen rather than preach.
The Midwest's tradition of bedside Bibles near Victoria Island, Lagos—placed by the Gideons in hotel rooms and hospital nightstands since 1899—represents a passive faith-medicine intervention whose impact is impossible to quantify. The patient who opens a Gideon Bible at 3 AM during a sleepless, pain-filled night and finds comfort in the Psalms is receiving spiritual care delivered by a book placed there by a stranger who believed it would matter.
Ghost Stories and the Supernatural Near Victoria Island, Lagos
The German immigrant communities that settled the Midwest brought poltergeist traditions that manifest in hospitals near Victoria Island, Lagos as unexplained object movements. Surgical instruments rearranging themselves, bed rails lowering without anyone touching them, IV poles rolling across rooms on level floors—these phenomena, dismissed as coincidence individually, form a pattern that Midwest hospital workers recognize with weary familiarity.
The Dust Bowl drove thousands of Midwesterners from their land, and the hospitals near Victoria Island, Lagos that treated dust pneumonia patients carry the memory of that exodus. Respiratory therapists in the region describe occasional patients who cough up dust that shouldn't be in their lungs—fine, red-brown Oklahoma topsoil in the airway of a patient who has never left Lagos. The land's memory enters the body.
What Physicians Say About Prophetic Dreams & Premonitions
The phenomenon of prophetic dreams in medicine—a central theme in Physicians' Untold Stories—has a surprisingly robust history in medical literature. Case reports of physicians whose dreams provided clinical insights appear in journals dating back to the 19th century, and anthropological research has documented dream-based healing practices across cultures worldwide. For readers in Victoria Island, Lagos, this historical context is important because it demonstrates that the physician dream accounts in Dr. Kolbaba's collection are not modern anomalies—they are contemporary instances of a phenomenon that has been associated with healing for millennia.
The dreams described in the book share several characteristic features: they are vivid and emotionally intense; they contain specific clinical information (a diagnosis, a complication, a patient's identity); and they compel the dreamer to take action upon waking. These features distinguish prophetic medical dreams from ordinary anxiety dreams about work—a distinction that the physicians in the collection are careful to make. For readers in Victoria Island, the specificity and clinical accuracy of these dream reports are what elevate them from curiosities to phenomena worthy of serious consideration.
The institutional silence around medical premonitions is beginning to crack. Academic journals including EXPLORE, the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, and the Journal of Scientific Exploration have published research on precognitive phenomena, and medical schools are beginning to acknowledge the role of intuition in clinical practice. Physicians' Untold Stories accelerates this institutional shift for readers in Victoria Island, Lagos, by providing a published, commercially successful, well-reviewed collection that demonstrates public appetite for this conversation.
The book's 4.3-star Amazon rating and over 1,000 reviews represent more than consumer satisfaction; they represent a cultural mandate for medicine to take premonitive phenomena seriously. When over a thousand readers respond positively to physician accounts of premonitions, the medical profession can no longer pretend that these experiences are too rare, too marginal, or too embarrassing to discuss. Dr. Kolbaba's collection has created a public platform for a conversation that was previously confined to whispered exchanges between trusted colleagues—and readers in Victoria Island are participants in that conversation.
Our interactive Premonition Assessment tool can help you evaluate whether your experiences match the patterns described by physicians in the book. For readers in Victoria Island who have had unusual dreams or foreknowledge of events, this tool offers a structured way to reflect on what you experienced.
The tool draws on the research of Dr. Dean Radin at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, whose meta-analyses of precognition research have found small but statistically significant evidence that humans can perceive information about future events. Radin's work, published in peer-reviewed journals including Frontiers in Human Neuroscience and Explore: The Journal of Science & Healing, provides a scientific foundation for taking premonition experiences seriously while maintaining appropriate skepticism about their interpretation.

Research & Evidence: Prophetic Dreams & Premonitions
The concept of "cognitive readiness"—the state of mental preparedness that allows rapid, accurate decision-making in high-stakes situations—has been studied extensively in military and aviation contexts and is increasingly being applied to medicine. Research published in Military Psychology, the International Journal of Aviation Psychology, and Academic Emergency Medicine has identified factors that enhance cognitive readiness: expertise, situational awareness, stress inoculation, and—significantly—the ability to integrate intuitive and analytical processing. The physician premonitions in Physicians' Untold Stories can be understood as an extreme expression of cognitive readiness: a state of preparedness so profound that it extends into the future.
For readers in Victoria Island, Lagos, this framework connects the premonition accounts in Dr. Kolbaba's collection to a well-established research tradition. Cognitive readiness research has shown that the most effective decision-makers in high-stakes environments are those who can seamlessly integrate intuitive "System 1" processing with analytical "System 2" processing. The physicians in the book who acted on premonitions were exercising this integration at its most demanding level—trusting intuitive knowledge that had no analytical support, in situations where the consequences of being wrong were severe. Their success suggests that genuine premonition may represent the outer boundary of cognitive readiness—a boundary that current research has not yet explored.
The 'Daryl Bem' controversy in academic psychology illustrates both the potential and the peril of precognition research. Bem, a social psychologist at Cornell University, published nine experiments in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology in 2011 suggesting that humans can be influenced by events that have not yet occurred. The paper sparked intense debate, with critics questioning Bem's methodology, statistical approach, and interpretation of results. Multiple replication attempts produced mixed results. However, a subsequent meta-analysis of 90 experiments from 33 laboratories (Bem, Tressoldi, Rabeyron, & Duggan, 2015), published in PLOS ONE, found a significant overall effect (Hedges' g = 0.09, p = 1.2 × 10^-10). The controversy continues, but the meta-analytic evidence suggests that precognition effects, while small, are robust and replicable. For physicians in Victoria Island whose premonitions exceed the small effect sizes found in laboratory research, the Bem controversy provides a cautionary tale about the gap between what controlled experiments can detect and what clinical experience reveals.
The philosophical implications of medical premonitions—if genuine—are staggering, and Physicians' Untold Stories forces readers in Victoria Island, Lagos, to confront them. The standard model of time in Western philosophy and physics treats the future as indeterminate—not yet existent, not yet decided, and therefore not yet knowable. If physicians can access specific information about future events (as the accounts in Dr. Kolbaba's collection suggest), then either the future already exists in some form (the "block universe" model of Einstein and Minkowski) or information can travel backward in time (the "retrocausal" model explored by physicists including Yakir Aharonov and Jeff Tollaksen).
Both possibilities have support within theoretical physics. Einstein's special relativity treats time as a fourth dimension in which past, present, and future coexist simultaneously—a framework that is mathematically consistent with precognition. The retrocausal model, developed within the transactional interpretation of quantum mechanics by John Cramer, proposes that quantum interactions involve "offer waves" traveling forward in time and "confirmation waves" traveling backward. For readers in Victoria Island who enjoy the intersection of physics and philosophy, the physician premonitions in the book provide empirical puzzles that these theoretical frameworks might eventually help resolve—suggesting that the answers to medicine's most mysterious experiences may ultimately lie in the deepest questions of physics.
Understanding Hospital Ghost Stories
The phenomenon of veridical perception during deathbed experiences — in which patients accurately perceive information they could not have obtained through normal sensory channels — constitutes some of the strongest evidence in Physicians' Untold Stories. Veridical perception cases include patients who describe seeing deceased relatives they did not know had died, patients who accurately describe events occurring in other parts of the hospital during their deaths, and patients who identify individuals in family photographs they have never seen. These cases are particularly important because they provide a mechanism for empirical verification: the patient's perception either matches the facts or it doesn't. When it does, the implications are profound. The neurochemical hypothesis — that deathbed visions are hallucinations produced by a dying brain — predicts that the content of these visions should be unrelated to external reality, much as ordinary dreams are. Veridical perception directly contradicts this prediction. For Victoria Island readers who approach these topics with scientific rigor, the veridical perception cases in Physicians' Untold Stories represent a category of evidence that is difficult to dismiss and that demands further investigation by the research community.
The neurological hypothesis for hospital ghost experiences — that fatigue, stress, and proximity to death create conditions favorable for hallucination — has been examined and found inadequate by several researchers. A study published in Mortality found that while fatigue and emotional stress are indeed associated with anomalous perceptual experiences, the specific characteristics of hospital ghost encounters — their consistency across observers, their correlation with specific patient events, and their informational content — cannot be explained by fatigue-induced hallucination alone. Dr. Kolbaba noted that many of the most striking encounters occurred to physicians who were well-rested, emotionally stable, and had no personal connection to the deceased patient. The neurological hypothesis may explain some experiences, but it does not explain all of them — and the unexplained remainder is what makes these stories so compelling.
Victoria Island, Lagos is a community built on practical values — hard work, family, and faith in things that endure. For residents of Victoria Island, the physician ghost stories in Dr. Kolbaba's book resonate not because they are sensational, but because they confirm something the community has always quietly believed: that the bonds between people are not severed by death, and that the places where we care for one another absorb something of that care.

How This Book Can Help You
County medical society meetings near Victoria Island, Lagos that discuss this book will find it generates the kind of collegial conversation that these societies were founded to promote. When physicians share their extraordinary experiences with peers who understand the professional stakes of such disclosure, the conversation achieves a depth and honesty that no other forum permits. This book is an invitation to that conversation.


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
Dr. Virginia Apgar developed the Apgar score in 1952 — it remains the standard assessment for newborn health.
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Neighborhoods in Victoria Island
These physician stories resonate in every corner of Victoria Island. The themes of healing, hope, and the unexplained connect to communities throughout the area.
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