Chris Burlingame

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Biologically, I should have died six months into the fifty-ninth year of my life, but I didn’t. Dr. Dombrowski, Dr. Gorin, the hospital staff, and a gallery of odd and brilliant obsessives who pioneered things like blood transfusion and venous catheterization kept that from happening. I was in the first generation in history that could reliably be saved from abdominal hemorrhage.
In My Time of Dying: How I Came Face to Face with the Idea of an Afterlife
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