
When Doctors Near Hickory, Irkutsk Witness the Impossible
The implications of medical premonitions extend far beyond individual patient care. If physicians can sometimes access information about future events—as the accounts in Physicians' Untold Stories suggest—then our understanding of consciousness, time, and the nature of mind may require fundamental revision. In Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia, readers who engage with Dr. Kolbaba's collection are being invited to consider these larger implications, not through philosophical argument but through the accumulation of credible testimony. The book doesn't tell readers what to conclude; it presents the evidence and lets the implications unfold in each reader's mind.

About the Author
Dr. Scott J. Kolbaba, MD is an internist at Northwestern Medicine in Wheaton, Illinois. He interviewed more than 200 physicians about their most extraordinary experiences.

Physicians' Untold Stories
by Scott J. Kolbaba, MD • 4.5 stars (1018 reviews)
Miraculous experiences doctors are hesitant to share with their patients, or ANYONE!
Order on Amazon →Meant to awe, instruct, and inspire — stories that will convince even the harshest skeptic. — From the introduction to Physicians' Untold Stories
Medical Fact
Dr. Jeffrey Long's Near Death Experience Research Foundation (NDERF) has collected over 5,000 NDE accounts in more than 25 languages.
Physician Burnout & Wellness Near Hickory, Irkutsk
Physicians practicing in Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia work at the intersection of modern medicine and experiences that resist explanation. In conversations that rarely leave the break room or the on-call suite, doctors in and around Hickory, Irkutsk have reported encounters with phenomena that their training never prepared them for — from patients who describe verifiable details about events that occurred while they were clinically dead, to deathbed visions shared simultaneously by multiple family members, to recoveries that defy every prognostic model available.
The medical community in Hickory, Irkutsk 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.
Physician Burnout by Specialty
Percentage reporting at least one symptom (Medscape, 2024)
Medical Fact
The human heart beats approximately 100,000 times per day — about 2.5 billion times over a 70-year lifetime.
Faith, Medicine & the Unexplained in Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia
The Midwest's tradition of bedside Bibles near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia—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.
Scandinavian immigrant communities near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia 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.
Medical Fact
The world's oldest known medical text is the Edwin Smith Papyrus from Egypt, dating to approximately 1600 BCE.
Ghost Stories and the Supernatural Near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia
The Dust Bowl drove thousands of Midwesterners from their land, and the hospitals near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia 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 Siberia. The land's memory enters the body.
Prairie isolation has always bred its own kind of ghost story, and hospitals near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia 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.
Did You Know?
The WHO estimates that depression will be the leading cause of disability worldwide by 2030.
Watch Dr. Kolbaba Share These Stories
Did You Know?
Approximately 70% of medical decisions are based on laboratory test results, making pathology a cornerstone of diagnosis.
Near-Death Experiences Reported by Physicians Near Hickory, Irkutsk
Midwest NDE researchers near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia benefit from a regional culture that values common sense over theoretical purity. While East Coast academics debate whether NDEs constitute evidence for consciousness surviving death, Midwest clinicians focus on the practical question: how does this experience affect the patient sitting in front of me? This pragmatic orientation produces research that is less philosophically ambitious but more clinically useful.
The University of Michigan's consciousness research program has produced findings that challenge the assumption that brain death means consciousness death. Physicians near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia who follow this research know that the EEG surge observed in dying brains—a burst of organized electrical activity in the final moments—may represent the physiological correlate of the NDE. The dying brain isn't shutting down; it's lighting up.
Near-Death Experience Features
Percentage reporting each feature (van Lommel et al., 2001)
Did You Know?
The first blood bank was established in 1937 by Dr. Bernard Fantus at Cook County Hospital in Chicago.
How This Book Can Help You
The book's honest treatment of physician doubt near Hickory, Irkutsk, Siberia will resonate with Midwest doctors who've been taught that certainty is a clinical virtue. These accounts reveal that the most important moments in a medical career are often the ones where certainty fails—where the physician must stand in the gap between what they know and what they've witnessed, and choose to speak honestly about both.

About the Book
Dr. Kolbaba has described the book as a bridge between medicine and spirituality — two worlds that rarely communicate.
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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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