Secrets of the ER: Physician Stories From Nonthaburi

When Dr. David Dosa published his account of Oscar, the nursing home cat who predicted patient deaths with remarkable accuracy, in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2007, he brought mainstream attention to a phenomenon that veterinary behaviorists and hospice workers had observed for years: animals appear to perceive impending death through senses that humans do not share. In Nonthaburi, Central Thailand, therapy animals in hospital settings have exhibited similar behaviors—gravitating toward specific patients, displaying distress before clinical deterioration becomes apparent, and showing preference for rooms where death is imminent. "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba places these animal behaviors within a broader context of unexplained perception in medical settings, alongside human experiences of anomalous knowing that share the same essential quality: information arriving through channels that science has not yet identified.

The Medical Landscape of Thailand

Thailand's medical tradition encompasses both traditional Thai medicine (TTM) — a system including herbal remedies, Thai massage, and spiritual healing practiced for over 700 years — and a modern healthcare system that has become a global leader in medical tourism. Bumrungrad International Hospital in Bangkok was the first Asian hospital to achieve JCI accreditation and treats over 400,000 international patients annually.

Thailand's universal healthcare coverage, achieved in 2002 through the '30 Baht Scheme,' made it one of the first developing nations to provide healthcare access to all citizens. Thai medical innovations include contributions to tropical medicine, HIV/AIDS treatment protocols, and surgical techniques. Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok, founded in 1888, is Thailand's oldest and largest hospital and houses the fascinating Siriraj Medical Museum.

Ghost Traditions and Supernatural Beliefs in Thailand

Thailand has one of the world's most vibrant and pervasive ghost cultures. The Thai concept of 'phi' (ผี) encompasses a vast taxonomy of spirits that influence daily life. Every Thai child grows up knowing the names and characteristics of dozens of ghost types: Phi Pop (a ghost that possesses people and devours their intestines), Phi Krasue (a floating female head with dangling viscera that hunts at night), Phi Am (a ghost that sits on sleeping people's chests), and Phi Tai Hong (the especially dangerous ghost of someone who died a violent death).

Spirit houses (san phra phum) stand outside virtually every Thai building — from family homes to five-star hotels to office towers — as miniature temples for the guardian spirit of the land. These are not quaint decorations; they receive daily offerings of food, flowers, incense, and red Fanta (believed to be a spirit favorite). When a building is constructed, a Brahmin priest performs a ceremony to invite the displaced spirits into the spirit house.

Thailand's Buddhist culture teaches that ghosts are beings trapped in one of the lower realms of existence due to negative karma. Monks regularly perform ghost-release ceremonies, and temples throughout the country serve as refuge from spiritual disturbance. The annual Phi Ta Khon (Ghost Mask Festival) in Dan Sai, Loei Province, features villagers wearing colorful ghost masks in a joyful celebration that honors the spirits.

Medical Fact

The retina processes 10 million bits of visual information per second — more than any supercomputer in the 1990s could handle.

Miraculous Accounts and Divine Intervention in Thailand

Thailand's miracle traditions center on Buddhist sacred objects and revered monks. Amulets blessed by famous monks are worn by millions of Thais who believe they provide protection from harm — including bulletproofing. The most famous case involves Luang Pho Koon (1923-2015), a forest monk whose blessed amulets were credited with protecting followers in car accidents and natural disasters. Thailand's Jatukham Rammathep amulet craze of 2007 became a national phenomenon. Beyond amulets, Thai temples report cases of spontaneous healing after meditation retreats and blessing ceremonies by revered abbots.

The History of Grief, Loss & Finding Peace in Medicine

Community hospitals near Nonthaburi, Central Thailand 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 Nonthaburi, Central Thailand 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

The human genome contains roughly 3 billion base pairs — if printed, it would fill about 262,000 pages.

Open Questions in Faith and Medicine

The Midwest's tradition of hospital chaplaincy near Nonthaburi, Central Thailand 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 Nonthaburi, Central Thailand—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 Nonthaburi, Central Thailand

The German immigrant communities that settled the Midwest brought poltergeist traditions that manifest in hospitals near Nonthaburi, Central Thailand 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 Nonthaburi, Central Thailand 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 Central Thailand. The land's memory enters the body.

What Physicians Say About Unexplained Medical Phenomena

The work of Dr. Pim van Lommel, a Dutch cardiologist who published his landmark study of near-death experiences in The Lancet in 2001, provides rigorous clinical evidence for the consciousness anomalies described in "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba. Van Lommel's prospective study followed 344 cardiac arrest patients at ten Dutch hospitals, finding that 62 (18%) reported some form of near-death experience. The experiences included out-of-body perceptions that were subsequently verified, encounters with deceased persons, and a sense of consciousness continuing independently of brain function.

Van Lommel's study is particularly significant because it was prospective—patients were enrolled before their cardiac arrests, eliminating the selection bias inherent in retrospective studies—and because it controlled for potential confounders including medication, duration of cardiac arrest, and prior knowledge of NDEs. His conclusion—that current neuroscience cannot explain how complex, coherent conscious experiences occur during a period when the brain shows no measurable activity—has profound implications for the materialist understanding of consciousness. For physicians in Nonthaburi, Central Thailand, van Lommel's work validates the consciousness anomalies that clinicians occasionally witness but rarely report, providing peer-reviewed, Lancet-published evidence that these phenomena are real, measurable, and scientifically inexplicable.

Physicians' Untold Stories documents these phenomena through the most credible witnesses available: the physicians themselves. These are not secondhand accounts or internet folklore. They are firsthand testimonies from doctors with decades of experience, published credentials, and professional reputations that they risk by sharing what they have seen.

The decision to focus on physician witnesses was deliberate on Dr. Kolbaba's part. He recognized that in our culture, physicians occupy a unique position of credibility — their testimony is weighted more heavily than that of any other professional group in matters of life, death, and the human body. By selecting physician witnesses for these extraordinary claims, Kolbaba applied the same evidentiary standard that courts use for expert testimony: the credibility of the claim is inseparable from the credibility of the witness.

Sympathetic phenomena between patients—clinically unrelated individuals whose physiological states appear to synchronize without any known mechanism—constitute one of the most puzzling categories of unexplained events in medical settings. Physicians in Nonthaburi, Central Thailand have reported cases in which patients in adjacent rooms experienced simultaneous cardiac arrests, in which one patient's blood pressure fluctuations precisely mirrored those of a patient in another wing, and in which a patient's pain resolved at the exact moment of another patient's death.

These phenomena challenge the fundamental assumption of clinical medicine that each patient is an independent biological system whose physiology is determined by internal factors and direct external interventions. If patients can influence each other's physiology without any known physical connection, then the concept of the isolated patient may be an abstraction that does not fully correspond to clinical reality. "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba documents several such cases, presenting them alongside the clinical details that make coincidence an unsatisfying explanation. For researchers interested in consciousness, biofield theory, and nonlocal biology, these cases represent natural experiments that could inform our understanding of how biological systems interact at a distance.

Unexplained Medical Phenomena — physician stories near Nonthaburi

Research & Evidence: Unexplained Medical Phenomena

The work of Dr. Michael Persinger at Laurentian University on the "God Helmet"—a device that applies weak, complex magnetic fields to the temporal lobes—has been cited as evidence that spiritual and anomalous experiences are products of electromagnetic stimulation rather than genuine encounters with nonphysical realities. Persinger reported that approximately 80% of subjects wearing the God Helmet experienced a "sensed presence"—the feeling that another person or entity was nearby—and some reported more elaborate mystical experiences including out-of-body sensations and encounters with "divine" beings. These findings have been interpreted by materialists as evidence that anomalous experiences in hospitals and other settings are artifacts of electromagnetic stimulation, produced by the complex electromagnetic environments of clinical settings rather than by genuine nonphysical phenomena. However, the God Helmet research is more equivocal than this interpretation suggests. A Swedish replication attempt by Granqvist and colleagues, published in Neuroscience Letters (2005), found no significant effects of the magnetic fields and attributed Persinger's results to suggestibility and expectation. Persinger responded by identifying methodological differences between the studies. For physicians and researchers in Nonthaburi, Central Thailand, the God Helmet debate illustrates the difficulty of determining whether anomalous experiences are caused by electromagnetic stimulation, mediated by it, or merely correlated with it. "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba documents experiences that share some features with Persinger's laboratory findings—sensing presences, perceiving non-physical realities—but that also include features his experiments cannot replicate: accurate perception of distant events, shared experiences between independent observers, and lasting transformative effects. The God Helmet may tell us something about how the brain processes anomalous experiences, but it does not necessarily tell us whether those experiences have external referents.

The emerging field of 'death studies' — thanatology — has increasingly embraced a multidisciplinary approach that integrates medical, psychological, philosophical, and spiritual perspectives on dying. The International Association for Near-Death Studies (IANDS), the Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC), and the European Association for Palliative Care have all developed research agendas that include unexplained phenomena as legitimate subjects of scientific inquiry. This institutional recognition represents a significant shift from the historical tendency of the medical establishment to ignore or dismiss phenomena that do not fit within the materialist framework. For the medical and academic communities in Nonthaburi, this shift opens opportunities for research, education, and clinical practice that integrate the full range of human experience at the end of life — including the experiences that Dr. Kolbaba's physician witnesses have so courageously documented.

The work of Dr. Michael Persinger at Laurentian University on the "God Helmet"—a device that applies weak, complex magnetic fields to the temporal lobes—has been cited as evidence that spiritual and anomalous experiences are products of electromagnetic stimulation rather than genuine encounters with nonphysical realities. Persinger reported that approximately 80% of subjects wearing the God Helmet experienced a "sensed presence"—the feeling that another person or entity was nearby—and some reported more elaborate mystical experiences including out-of-body sensations and encounters with "divine" beings. These findings have been interpreted by materialists as evidence that anomalous experiences in hospitals and other settings are artifacts of electromagnetic stimulation, produced by the complex electromagnetic environments of clinical settings rather than by genuine nonphysical phenomena. However, the God Helmet research is more equivocal than this interpretation suggests. A Swedish replication attempt by Granqvist and colleagues, published in Neuroscience Letters (2005), found no significant effects of the magnetic fields and attributed Persinger's results to suggestibility and expectation. Persinger responded by identifying methodological differences between the studies. For physicians and researchers in Nonthaburi, Central Thailand, the God Helmet debate illustrates the difficulty of determining whether anomalous experiences are caused by electromagnetic stimulation, mediated by it, or merely correlated with it. "Physicians' Untold Stories" by Dr. Scott Kolbaba documents experiences that share some features with Persinger's laboratory findings—sensing presences, perceiving non-physical realities—but that also include features his experiments cannot replicate: accurate perception of distant events, shared experiences between independent observers, and lasting transformative effects. The God Helmet may tell us something about how the brain processes anomalous experiences, but it does not necessarily tell us whether those experiences have external referents.

Understanding Prophetic Dreams & Premonitions

The 'Global Consciousness Project' at Princeton University, running continuously since 1998, has collected data from a worldwide network of random number generators (RNGs) to test whether global events — particularly events that focus collective human attention, such as terrorist attacks, natural disasters, and mass meditations — correlate with deviations from statistical randomness in the RNGs' output. An analysis of 500 designated events found a cumulative deviation from chance with a probability of approximately 1 in a trillion (p ≈ 10^-12). While the mechanism behind this correlation remains entirely unknown, the finding is consistent with the hypothesis that consciousness — collective or individual — can influence or anticipate physical events. For the premonition accounts in Dr. Kolbaba's book, the Global Consciousness Project data provides indirect support: if consciousness can influence random physical systems, it may also be able to access information about future states.

Research on "thin-slicing"—the ability to make accurate judgments based on very brief exposure to information—provides one partial explanation for medical intuition, but the physician premonitions in Physicians' Untold Stories exceed what thin-slicing can account for. Malcolm Gladwell's "Blink" (2005) popularized the concept, drawing on research by Nalini Ambady and Robert Rosenthal published in Psychological Bulletin, which demonstrated that people could accurately assess personality traits, teaching effectiveness, and relationship quality from brief behavioral samples. In medicine, thin-slicing might explain how a physician can sense that a patient is "sick" before articulating specific signs.

But thin-slicing requires exposure to the relevant stimulus—a brief glimpse, a few seconds of interaction, some sensory input that the unconscious mind can process. The most extraordinary accounts in Dr. Kolbaba's collection involve no stimulus at all: a physician dreams about a patient she hasn't seen in weeks, a nurse feels compelled to check on a patient whose room she hasn't entered, a doctor senses that a call about a specific patient is about to come. These cases go beyond thin-slicing into territory that current cognitive psychology cannot explain. For readers in Nonthaburi, Central Thailand, this distinction is important: it means that some medical premonitions may involve cognitive processes that are not just unconscious but genuinely novel—processes that our current scientific models don't include.

Retirement communities and senior living facilities in Nonthaburi, Central Thailand, are home to individuals who have accumulated a lifetime of experiences—including, potentially, premonitions and intuitive experiences they've never shared. Physicians' Untold Stories can open conversations in these communities that allow residents to share their own stories of knowing before knowing, of dreams that came true, of intuitions that proved prescient. For Nonthaburi's senior community, the book provides validation for experiences that may have been carried in silence for decades.

Understanding Prophetic Dreams & Premonitions near Nonthaburi

How This Book Can Help You

County medical society meetings near Nonthaburi, Central Thailand 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.

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

The human body maintains its temperature at 98.6°F (37°C), but recent studies suggest the average has dropped to about 97.9°F.

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

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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