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The experience of near death

Death Education, 1977
Abstract Reported phenomena occurring in people encountering near-death situations have recently stimulated considerable public interest. In an informal survey, few professionals who care for critically ill patients were found to be aware of these occurrences.
S. Kreutziger, M. B. Sabom
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Do “Near Death Experiences” Occur Only Near Death?

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1981
Near deaths experiences are being reported with increasing frequency, but whether the constellation of factors comprising these experiences is unique to near death situations is unknown. This investigation compared near death experiences to other out-of-body experiences to determine if there are unique features associated with near death experiences ...
Glen O. Gabbard   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Near-death experiences.

2004
Near-death experiences are profound psychological events occurring to individuals close to death or facing intense physical or emotional danger. Although the term near-death experience and its acronym NDE were not coined until 1975, accounts of similar events can be found in the folklore and writings of most cultures. The phenomenon was first described
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Distressing Near-Death Experiences

Psychiatry, 1992
Most reported near-death experiences include profound feelings of peace, joy, and cosmic unity. Less familiar are the reports following close brushes with death of experiences that are partially or entirely unpleasant, frightening, or frankly hellish.
Nancy Evans Bush, Bruce Greyson
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The phenomenology of near-death experiences

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1980
The authors studied retrospectively 78 reports of "near-death experiences using subjects narratives and questionnaires, interviews, and medical records. Prior experiences suggestive of transcendence of death were more common among these subjects than among control populations, but prior experiences suggestive of extrasensory phenomena were less common.
Bruce Greyson, Ian Stevenson
openaire   +3 more sources

Childhood Near-Death Experiences

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1986
We nonselectively interviewed 11 patients aged 3 through 16 years who had survived critical illnesses, including cardiac arrests and profound comas. Any memory of a time they were unconscious was considered to be a near-death experience (NDE) and was recorded.
Melvin L. Morse   +4 more
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Near-Death Experiences

2007
Abstract In 1969, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross published On Death and Dying, a manifesto calling for reforms in end-of-life care and translating into a psychological idiom the ancient religious idea of dying as a peregrinatio animae, a pilgrimage of the soul from this world to the next.
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The Psychodynamics of Near-Death Experiences

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1983
Near-death experiences (NDEs), profound transcendental events experienced on the threshold of death, may be interpreted on several levels from the neurophysiological to the eschatological. Independent of other levels of interpretation, a psychological analysis of NDEs produces meaningful and researchable psychodynamic precipitants and sequelae.
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Varieties of Near-Death Experience

Psychiatry, 1993
Near-death experiences are profound subjective events frequently reported by individuals who have come close to death. They are of importance to mental health professionals, not only because they often happen to patients under our care, but because they have been reported to produce widespread and long-lasting changes in values, beliefs, and behavior ...
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