Extra Anormal Podcast
Extra Anormal Podcast
April 13, 2026

El lado PARANORMAL de los HOSPITALES | Relatos Siniestros de MÉDICOS

Quick Read

Medical professionals share chilling, unexplainable paranormal encounters within hospitals, from haunted rooms and spectral doctors to possessed patients and a cursed ventriloquist dummy.
Hospitals, due to intense emotions and frequent deaths, are perceived as hotspots for paranormal activity, with staff reporting unexplained phenomena.
Objects and rooms can become 'charged' with supernatural energy, leading to recurring hauntings or even influencing patient outcomes.
Some medical professionals, despite their scientific training, encounter events that defy rational explanation, forcing them to consider spiritual dimensions.

Summary

This episode delves into the paranormal occurrences reported by doctors, nurses, and hospital staff. The hosts, Paco Arías and 'El Doc' (a medical professional who conceals his identity), recount several disturbing stories. These include a hospital room where patients experience inexplicable phenomena and often die, a deceased doctor who continues to attend to patients, a ventriloquist dummy that seems to be supernaturally bound to a doctor's family, and a rosary given by a phantom nurse that possesses healing power. The episode culminates with 'El Doc' sharing his personal experience with a child patient exhibiting signs of demonic possession, leading to a discussion on spiritual warfare within medical settings.
The episode presents a compelling collection of firsthand accounts from medical environments, challenging conventional scientific understanding with narratives of the supernatural. It highlights the emotional and spiritual intensity of hospitals as places of life and death, suggesting that these energies can manifest in profound and unsettling ways, impacting both patients and staff. For those interested in the intersection of science, spirituality, and the unknown, these stories offer unique perspectives on human vulnerability and resilience in the face of inexplicable phenomena.

Takeaways

  • Hospitals are considered more sinister than cemeteries because 'the dead don't rest' there, according to the hosts.
  • Medical staff frequently report unexplained phenomena like moving gurneys, apparitions of children, and 'cursed' rooms where patients consistently die.
  • One doctor recounted a patient's death by asphyxiation, with hair found in her trachea, mirroring hair removed from her intestines during surgery, suggesting a supernatural cause.
  • A doctor encountered the ghost of a colleague who died violently in the hospital, still performing rounds and checking on patients.
  • A doctor received his childhood ventriloquist dummy, 'Lalo,' as a gift from a child patient, realizing it was the same doll that had terrorized him, suggesting a persistent supernatural attachment.
  • A doctor received a rosary from a deceased street vendor, which seemed to protect him from workplace harassment and illness, highlighting the power of 'objects of power.'
  • A mother received a 'healing' rosary from a phantom nurse, which she claims brings supernatural recovery to those she prays for.
  • A child patient exhibited signs of demonic possession, speaking with an unnatural voice, revealing personal secrets of staff, and displaying superhuman strength, which medical interventions could not explain or control.

Insights

1The Entity of Room Seven: A Hospital's Cursed Chamber

A surgeon recounts a specific hospital room (Room 07) where patients consistently experience inexplicable phenomena, including crying, shadows, and a pervasive sense of dread. The room's haunting began after a young patient, Gretel, died there following a complex surgery to remove large quantities of hair and small lizards from her intestines. During her surgery, a mysterious woman (later identified by Gretel as 'the dead one sent for me') appeared in the operating room, unseen by other staff, and Gretel repeatedly stated she would die. Post-mortem, more hair was found in Gretel's trachea, suggesting a non-medical cause of death. The room is now avoided, with an altar placed outside to appease the entity.

Multiple patient testimonies of paranormal activity in Room 07; the surgeon's direct observation of the mysterious woman; Gretel's pre-surgery premonitions; the unusual surgical findings and post-mortem discovery of hair in the trachea.

2The Doctor Who Never Left: Post-Mortem Patient Care

A young man caring for his ailing aunt in a Tamaulipas hospital encountered a doctor making rounds at night. The doctor ignored his questions and left without a word. Upon reporting the doctor's behavior, a nurse revealed that the described doctor had been violently killed in the hospital by organized crime three months prior. The room's repainted wall concealed bullet impacts. This suggests the deceased doctor's spirit continued his medical duties, driven by vocation even after death.

The nephew's direct interaction with the phantom doctor; the nurse's confirmation of the doctor's death and the circumstances; physical evidence of repainted bullet marks in the room; the doctor's known dedication to his profession.

3Lalo the Ventriloquist Dummy: A Persistent Supernatural Attachment

Dr. Sebastián Ayala, an oncologist, receives a ventriloquist dummy named 'Lalo' from a child patient he cured. The doctor recognizes it as his own childhood dummy, which had terrorized him with paranormal activity (moving on its own, speaking during sleep paralysis, biting) after his paternal grandmother and another woman 'manipulated' it. Despite disposing of it years ago, the dummy returned, bearing his childhood inscription. This suggests a powerful, perhaps cursed, attachment to the doctor and now potentially his son, who has begun asking for a ventriloquist dummy.

Dr. Ayala's vivid childhood memories of Lalo's paranormal activity; the discovery of his childhood inscription on the dummy; his son's sudden desire for a ventriloquist dummy.

4The Rosary from the Deceased Seller: Objects of Power

A newly graduated doctor, facing hostility and heavy workload in a rural hospital during the 2021 pandemic, was approached by an old man selling rosaries. The man, who seemed to know the doctor's troubles, insisted he take a blessed rosary. After acquiring it, the doctor's situation at work improved, and his tormentor fell ill. Upon losing the rosary, he returned to the house to buy another, only to be told by the man's daughters that their father had died in the first wave of the pandemic. This suggests the rosary was an 'object of power' given by a benevolent spirit, offering protection and influence.

The doctor's direct interaction with the deceased vendor; the subsequent positive changes in his work environment; the daughters' confirmation of their father's death; the doctor's feeling of protection from the rosary.

5The Possessed Child: Spiritual Warfare in the Hospital

A general practitioner, initially a skeptic, encountered a 12-year-old boy admitted for heatstroke and epilepsy. The boy's mother insisted his condition was spiritual. During an 'epileptic' attack, the boy's body contorted unnaturally, he spoke with a deep, unfamiliar voice, and revealed intimate, unknown details about his mother and the medical staff. The doctor later learned the boy's mother had conducted a spiritualist session to find buried treasure, during which the boy was present. The doctor, using a rosary and a 'mass of liberation' video, witnessed the boy's violent allergic reaction and superhuman strength, confirming a possession. The boy was eventually taken to Puente Jula, Veracruz, known for exorcisms.

The doctor's direct observation of the boy's physical contortions, unnatural voice, and knowledge of personal secrets; the boy's violent reaction to religious items/media; the mother's confession about the spiritualist session; the boy's ability to lift his father with one hand; the recurring allergic reactions on Sundays when his grandmother played mass.

Notable Moments

The hosts emphasize that hospitals are unique places where 'true prayers' are offered, and people genuinely seek miracles, creating a potent spiritual atmosphere.

This sets the stage for why hospitals might be particularly susceptible to paranormal phenomena, linking intense human emotion and spiritual appeal to supernatural manifestations.

The discussion of hospitals having monthly masses or 'cleanings' by priests to 'purify' them and prevent paranormal occurrences.

This reveals an institutional acknowledgment, even if unofficial, of the spiritual intensity and potential for negative energies within medical facilities, suggesting a proactive approach to spiritual hygiene.

The mention of Puente Jula, Veracruz, as a known location for exorcisms and 'liberations,' where 'El Doc' previously witnessed a case of possession conclude.

This provides a real-world anchor for the extreme cases of spiritual affliction discussed, lending credibility to the severity of such phenomena and the existence of specialized interventions.

The doctor's personal experience with a possessed child, where the child revealed intimate, unknown details about the doctor and his nurse, demonstrating knowledge beyond human means.

This serves as a powerful piece of 'evidence' for the hosts, as it directly challenges scientific skepticism with information that could not have been rationally acquired, forcing a reevaluation of belief systems.

Quotes

"

"Se dice que los hospitales pueden llegar a ser mucho más siniestros que un cementerio. ¿Sabes por qué? Porque en los cementerios los muertos descansan. En los hospitales no."

Paco Arías (Host)
"

"Yo sé que no la va a librar. El muerto no la va a dejar."

Gretel's Mother (as recounted by surgeon)
"

"Es que mi hija no la va a librar porque el muerto no la va a dejar. No tienes que llevar tu hija puente Jula."

Gretel's Mother (as recounted by nurse)
"

"Doctor, no es mi tía, usted también la puede ver. No, no es mi tía, es la muerta que me mandaron, es la que no me deja en paz, es la que me causa dolor."

Gretel
"

"¿Qué tanta debe ser la vocación de una persona como para seguir cuidándolo después de haber muerto?"

El Doc
"

"No me voy a ir, no me voy a ir porque tú y yo somos amigos."

Lalo the Ventriloquist Dummy (as recounted by Dr. Ayala)
"

"No querías hablar con el abuelo, mami? Tu ambición lo llevará a la muerte, estúpida."

Possessed Child
"

"Ya lo saben tus papás, que eres una… lo que tú hiciste no se debe hacer. No estás casada. ¿Qué le vas a decir a tus papás?"

Possessed Child

Q&A

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