Doctors often describe patients who have received CPR after sudden death as "near death" and those who have successfully performed CPR as "saved from the brink of death." In this regard, the American scholar Professor Parnia has a different view, he thinksThese patients are not "on the verge of death", they are actually dead and then come back from the dead
That being the caseA person will definitely have certain feelings in the process of "coming back from the dead", and this is the death experience。There are very few large studies on the exact experience of death. Not long ago, the journal Resuscitation published the results of a study (pictured above). In the study, 53 of the 567 cardiac arrest patients from 25 medical centers in the United States and the United Kingdom were survivors, and 11 of them were surveyed and talked about how they felt during CPR after sudden death. The researchers divided these feelings into four types of scenarios: (1) looking back at the experience of death – I heard my grandmother say that you need to go back; (2) Feelings during the awakening process - "I remember when I woke up, they put those two electrodes on my chest, and I remember getting an electric shock. (3) Feeling after waking up - "I heard my wife talking, and I heard my son calling me mom"; (4) Dream-like experience – "It felt like someone was holding my hand." It was dark and I couldn't see anything." There were also a few patients who recounted a more terrifying experience: "I heard my name being called over and over again. I'm surrounded by devils and monsters. It felt like they were trying to tear my body apart."
It can be seen that people will have a variety of feelings in the experience of death, and most of them do not seem to be as terrible as imagined.
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Fang Junjie, director of the Department of Neurosurgery in Fujian, carries out a comprehensive study of various neurological diseases, and welcomes relevant patients to come for consultation!