
What Science Cannot Explain Near Pleasant View, Bohol
In Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas, families who have accompanied a loved one through terminal illness often emerge from the experience with stories they cannot quite articulate—moments at the deathbed that seemed to belong to another order of reality. The patient who suddenly spoke lucidly after days of unconsciousness. The room that seemed to fill with an inexplicable warmth. The dying person who smiled at something invisible and called it beautiful. These experiences are profoundly comforting but also disorienting, and families may wonder whether what they witnessed was real or wishful thinking. "Physicians' Untold Stories" validates these experiences. Dr. Kolbaba's accounts, drawn from medical professionals trained in objective observation, confirm that deathbed phenomena are widely reported, consistently described, and experienced as genuine by the physicians who witness them. For Pleasant View, Bohol's families, this validation is itself a form of healing.
Medical Fact
The record for the most surgeries survived by a single patient is 970, held by Charles Jensen over 60 years.
Physician Burnout & Wellness Near Pleasant View, Bohol
The medical community in Pleasant View, Bohol includes physicians across every stage of their careers — residents navigating the exhaustion of training, mid-career practitioners balancing clinical demands with family life, and veteran physicians carrying decades of experiences that challenge the boundaries of conventional medicine. Burnout touches all of them differently, but a common thread runs through: the desire to remember why they chose medicine in the first place, and the rare but profound moments that remind them.
Pleasant View, Bohol's healthcare landscape reflects broader patterns in Visayas's medical system — the pressures of modern practice, the isolation that comes from witnessing extraordinary events without a framework to discuss them, and the gradual erosion of meaning that drives so many physicians toward burnout. Yet it is precisely in communities like Pleasant View, Bohol that the unexplained tends to surface most vividly, in moments that practicing physicians remember for the rest of their careers.
Medical Fact
The average patient in the U.S. waits 18 minutes to see a doctor during an office visit.
Faith, Medicine & the Unexplained in Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas
Mennonite and Amish communities near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas practice a form of mutual aid that functions as faith-based health insurance. When a community member falls ill, the congregation covers the medical bills—no premiums, no deductibles, no bureaucracy. This system works because the community's faith commitment ensures compliance: you care for your neighbor because God requires it, and because your neighbor will care for you.
Medical missionaries from Midwest churches near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas have established healthcare infrastructure in some of the world's most underserved communities. These missionaries—physicians, nurses, dentists, and public health workers—carry a faith conviction that their medical skills are divine gifts meant to be shared. Whether this conviction produces better or merely different medicine is debatable, but the facilities they've built are unambiguously saving lives.
Medical Fact
Music therapy in hospitals has been associated with reduced need for pain medication by 25% in post-surgical patients.
Ghost Stories and the Supernatural Near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas
Tornado-related supernatural accounts near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas emerge from the Midwest's unique relationship with the sky. Survivors pulled from demolished homes describe entities in the funnel—some hostile, some protective—that guided them to safety. Hospital staff who treat these survivors notice that the most extraordinary accounts come from patients with the most severe injuries, as if proximity to death amplified whatever the tornado contained.
Prohibition-era speakeasies sometimes occupied the same buildings as Midwest medical offices near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas, creating a layered history of healing and revelry. Hospital workers in these repurposed buildings report the unmistakable sound of jazz piano at 2 AM, the clink of glasses in empty rooms, and the sweet smell of bootleg whiskey—a festive haunting that provides comic relief in an otherwise somber genre.
Types of Phenomena in the Book
Distribution across 26 physician accounts
Did You Know?
Dr. Kolbaba noted that oncologists were among the physicians most likely to report deathbed phenomena in their patients.

About Dr. Scott Kolbaba
Internist at Northwestern Medicine. Mayo Clinic trained. Interviewed 200+ physicians for this Amazon bestseller.
"Chicken Soup for Doctor's Souls." — Mary Ellen M.
Did You Know?
The word "nurse" derives from the Latin "nutrire," meaning "to nourish."
Watch the Stories
Did You Know?
The human body has about 100,000 miles of nerves — enough to wrap around the Earth four times.
Near-Death Experiences Reported by Physicians Near Pleasant View, Bohol
Midwest teaching hospitals near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas host grand rounds presentations where NDE cases are discussed with the same rigor applied to any unusual clinical finding. The format is deliberately clinical: presenting complaint, history of present illness, physical examination, laboratory data, and then—the patient's report of an experience that occurred during documented cardiac arrest. The NDE enters the medical record not as an oddity but as a finding.
Amish communities near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas occasionally produce NDE accounts that challenge researchers' assumptions about cultural influence on the experience. Amish NDEs contain elements—technological imagery, encounters with strangers, visits to unfamiliar landscapes—that are inconsistent with the experiencer's extremely limited exposure to media, pop culture, and mainstream religious imagery. If NDEs are cultural projections, the Amish cases are difficult to explain.
About the Book
Dr. Kolbaba selected the final 26 stories from over 200 interviews, choosing the most compelling and best-documented accounts.
How This Book Can Help You
Book clubs in Midwest communities near Pleasant View, Bohol, Visayas that choose this book will find it generates conversation across the usual social boundaries. The farmer and the professor, the nurse and the pastor, the skeptic and the believer—all find points of entry into a discussion that is ultimately about the most fundamental question any community faces: what happens when we die?

About the Book
Dr. Kolbaba often reminds audiences that the physicians in the book are not mystics or seekers — they are mainstream medical professionals.

Read the Stories That Changed Everything
Over 200 physicians interviewed. 26 stories that will challenge what you believe about life, death, and everything in between.
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Discover the Stories Medicine Never Says Out Loud
Physicians' Untold Stories by Scott J. Kolbaba, MD — 4.5 stars from 1018 readers.
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