Heck, it wasn’t uncommon in the last 50 years. Just because technology has advanced doesn’t mean we’ve a measurement for every subtle little sign of life.
In fact… (warning: incomcing anecdote) my grandmother “died” when my dad was 13. She had a massive stroke and by all measurements of the time (early '50s), she was dead: no heartbeat, no respiration, etc. So she was pronounced dead and sent to the morgue. There, some unfortunate hospital worker was going about his morgue business when he noticed twitching under my grandmother’s sheet. (Fuh-REAKY!) Yup–she was still alive…and she still is today. She’s the Energizer Bunny of the family–2 strokes, 3 heart attacks, quadruple bypass…yet here she is, as spunky and self-sustaining as ever.
I would imagine that such events are highly unlikely with today’s modern medicine and technologies in the most advanced of countries. However, in less developed countries I’m sure it’s still a regular (though likely not common) occurrence.
I believe that millions of people have prayed to the Virgin of Lourdes (and many indeed travelled there).
Practically all receive no benefit.
Obviously this family are emotionally aroused, but this is not significant support for a theory that a supernatural force saves people from death if those people want to be a priest.
Indeed one might wonder why the Deity nearly killed the child in the first place…
For some reason I am not allowed to edit my own post to remove the copyrighted portion (sorry).
I find plausible the hypothesis that Chile’s facilities aren’t “modern”. As someone who lived in Brazil for a
long time, Chile always seemed to me as “first world” by comparison. But I think this hypothesis answers my question in a satisfactory way.
I agree with Glee that this is not strong evidence for supernatural claims, as simpler explanations exist.
It was decided that allowing Members to edit their own post would cause more problems than it solved. So edit was disabled for Members
You may paraphrase or post excerpts from copyrighted articles, but you may not post an entire article. Since you have a link, I deleted the entire article from your OP.
Suggested guidelines:
[list=A]
[li]If you are going to quote something from an article, quote less than 5% of the source. Include a link to the article if the article is available online.[/li][li]Only quote directly in very rare circumstances. Instead of repeating a source word-for-word, read the article, attempt to understand it, and rephrase what it says in your own words. Again, include a link to the source if the source is available online. Otherwise indicate a reference to the source (e.g. Science News, issue x, pages yy-zz).[/list=A] [/li][/QUOTE]
“In 1994, 86-year-old Mildred C. Clarke spent ninety minutes in a body bag in the morgue at the Albany Medical Center Hospital before an attendant noticed the bag was breathing”
It’s not common but it does happen even in advanced first world societies. Not everyone dies at a hospital and even there, deep coma can go undetected by well trained, experienced medical professionals without specialized equipment. Case in point. On Jan 26, 2001 a woman in Ashland, MA was found alive in a body bag at a funeral home. Here’s the AP report, Victim of apparent suicide comes to in body bag in funeral home.