How do near-death experiences affect people? Scientists studied 19 patients who had returned from the brink of death…what they discovered may shock you. yeah
- Researchers found that 15% of the patients sampled had a near-death experience
- Participants who had a near-death experience had no difference in quality of life
- The research team said more studies are needed to confirm the results
Near-death experiences are often described as life-changing events that change the patient’s outlook on life.
But a new study finds that, contrary to popular belief, patients who return from the brink of death remain exactly the same after a year.
In what is believed to be one of the first studies of its kind, experts monitored 19 people after having a near-death experience in the intensive care unit (ICU). They then followed him up 12 months later.
A study published in the journal Critical Care found that 15% of patients surveyed had a near-death experience.
Researchers who published their findings in the journal Critical Care – Initially, we studied 126 patients who stayed for more than 1 week in 5 ICUs at the University of Liège, Belgium.
Patients were admitted to the ICU for a variety of reasons, including respiratory, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, renal, neurological, and metabolic diseases. The majority of surveyed participants were hospitalized for surgical reasons.
Fifteen percent of them, or 19, were found to have had a near-death experience. These patients were then studied further.
They were interviewed 3 to 7 days after discharge from the hospital and asked about their dissociative experiences, such as forgetting who they were or feeling disconnected from themselves. They were also asked about their spiritual, religious and personal beliefs.
When patients were first interviewed, those who had near-death experiences were more likely to have dissociative symptoms.
These include feeling detached from yourself, feeling little or no pain, feeling insecure about who you are, and improving your mental and personal well-being. bottom.
Researchers contacted them again a year later to measure their quality of life.
After that period, despite the fact that near-death experiences (near-death experiences) are “usually reported as transformative and may be associated with negative emotions,” there was no significant impact on quality of life. No relationship was found.
Dr. Bruce Greyson, who developed the NDE scale the researchers used in this study, found that 10 to 20% of people who have cardiac arrest experience NDE.
This corresponds to 5% of the total population.
Grayson is defined NDE is “a highly vivid and often life-changing experience that often occurs under extreme physiological conditions such as life-threatening trauma, cardiac arrest, or deep anesthesia.”
The Critical Care results differ from previous studies conducted during the last year.
2022 Research conducted by Grayson Participants found significant differences in quality of life, even 20 years after the first event.
The researchers at Critical Care Findings wrote that more research is needed to confirm these findings.