Before ventilators, before modern ICUs, and before vaccines nearly erased one of the most feared diseases in history, there was the iron lung.
In this episode of Medicine, Mystery, Mayhem & Murder, Andrea and Crystal explore the strange, fascinating, and sometimes heartbreaking story of the machine that helped people breathe when their own bodies couldn’t. During the height of the polio epidemics, hospital wards filled with massive metal cylinders that kept patients alive. Sometimes for weeks, sometimes for decades.
We talk about how the iron lung actually worked, why it became such an iconic symbol of the polio era, and the human stories behind the machine. From the desperate race to save patients during outbreaks to the small number of survivors who lived inside these machines for most of their lives, this is a chapter of medical history that feels both unbelievable and deeply personal.
It’s a story about ingenuity, survival, and a time when medicine was forced to invent solutions in real time.
Join us as we step back into the age of the iron lung, when breathing itself depended on a machine.