The following two stories took place in China, which raises the question of whether the coroner in the region was properly trained.
Li Qiugspong, a 95-year-old woman, passed away peacefully. Her family was preparing for her funeral, and in the meantime, they placed her body in a coffin.
In China, funeral preparations apparently take several days, but that too has come to an end and the family members have entered the room to carry the coffin to the funeral home, or to the river, or to any other Chinese ceremony.
But the cupboard was empty. The frightened family members began looking for the grandmother and suddenly discovered her in the kitchen trying to cook something.
After long minutes of anxiety, the sons and grandchildren managed to ask the grandmother what exactly she was doing, and she replied naturally that she had been sleeping for a long time, and now she had woken up and felt hungry, so she went into the kitchen to 'cook something.'.
But this story is not the last case to come from China.
A few weeks ago, a 45-year-old Chinese man was pronounced dead. The man, surnamed Guo, was a heavy smoker, and while out with friends, he fainted and was rushed to the hospital.
At the hospital, he was diagnosed with a cerebral hemorrhage and was in a coma. Three months later, his wife received word that he had passed away, and his funeral was quickly organized.
But here too, the doctor who pronounced death apparently completed his studies by correspondence, as the family suddenly heard crying sounds from inside the coffin. They opened the lid of the coffin and discovered the 'dead' crying.
He was rushed back to the hospital, where it was determined that his ability to speak and move was impaired, but that he would survive and live.