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M⁴: Medicine, Mystery, Mayhem... and Sometimes Murder

Podcast de M4 Podcast

inglés

True crime & misterio

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Hosted by two seasoned RNs with over 45 years of combined experience and a friendship nearly as long, the M⁴ Podcast dives into the strange, shocking, and sometimes spine-chilling side of medicine. Each episode explores real cases, bizarre conditions, historical medical mysteries, and the occasional true crime, with expert insight, unfiltered commentary, and a touch of gallows humor. If you love twisted tales with a clinical twist, M⁴ delivers. Subscribe now—because healthcare isn’t always by the book.

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36 episodios

episode Ep. 36: The Roof, The Roof, The Roof is On Fire artwork

Ep. 36: The Roof, The Roof, The Roof is On Fire

The Clinic That Burned: The Cleveland Clinic Fire of 1929 One hundred and twenty-three people went to the doctor. They didn't come home. On May 15, 1929, a fire broke out in the basement of the Cleveland Clinic, one of the most respected medical facilities in the country. But it wasn't the flames that killed most of the victims. It was the gas, a toxic cloud released when nitrocellulose X-ray film ignited, that moved through the building faster than anyone could run. In minutes, a place built to heal people became one of the deadliest disasters in American medical history. In this episode, Andrea walks Crystal through the fire that shocked a nation, the science behind why it was so lethal, and the lasting changes it forced on hospital safety, film manufacturing, and how we think about the hidden dangers inside the buildings we trust most.

26 de may de 2026 - 58 min
episode Ep. 35: Wake Up artwork

Ep. 35: Wake Up

Sleeping Sickness: The Epidemic That Vanished and the Patients Left Behind It put millions to sleep. Some of them never woke up. Others woke up wrong. Between 1917 and 1928, a mysterious illness swept the globe, leaving its victims in states of suspended animation, rigid and unreachable, trapped somewhere between sleep and death. Doctors called it encephalitis lethargica. The world called it the sleeping sickness. And then, almost as quickly as it appeared, it was gone, leaving behind no clear cause, no confirmed treatment, and thousands of survivors warehoused in institutions for decades, largely forgotten. In this episode, Crystal walks Andrea through one of medicine's most enduring unsolved puzzles: what encephalitis lethargica is, what it did to the people it touched, why it vanished, and what its long shadow tells us about the limits of what medicine thinks it understands.

19 de may de 2026 - 49 min
episode Ep. 34: I Will Survive artwork

Ep. 34: I Will Survive

Not every case ends in darkness. This week, Crystal and Andrea bring you something a little different: stories of ordinary people thrust into extraordinary circumstances, and the sheer, stubborn will it took to make it out alive. We're covering Juliane Koepcke, the 17-year-old who fell two miles from a lightning-struck plane on Christmas Eve and walked out of the Peruvian Amazon eleven days later. Then there's Harrison Okene, a cook on a Nigerian tugboat who survived sixty hours at the bottom of the ocean in nothing but his underwear, breathing from a single pocket of air while rescue divers came expecting only bodies. And finally, Mauro Prosperi, an Italian ultramarathon runner who got swallowed by a Saharan sandstorm mid-race and turned up nine days later in Algeria, nearly 200 miles off course. Three different disasters. Three impossible odds. Three people who refused to stop moving. These are the ones who made it, and the science, the grit, and the grace behind how.

13 de may de 2026 - 1 h 14 min
episode Ep. 33: Get Out, Right Now artwork

Ep. 33: Get Out, Right Now

In 1955, the United States had 558,000 people living in state psychiatric hospitals. By 2000, that number had dropped to under 55,000. Not because mental illness got better. Not because we found a cure. Because we closed the doors. What came next was supposed to be a revolution: community mental health centers, wraparound care, dignity over warehousing. What actually came next was the Los Angeles County Jail becoming the largest psychiatric facility in its county. Rikers Island. Cook County. Streets. In this episode, we follow the full arc of psychiatric deinstitutionalization in America, from the genuine horrors of the old state hospital system and the reform movement that dismantled it, to the Medicaid funding loophole that gave states a financial incentive to empty beds, to the civil commitment laws that narrowed the path to treatment, to the correctional system that absorbed what the mental health system stopped holding. We talk about the families navigating a support structure that was promised but never built, the evidence-based models we've had for fifty years and consistently refused to fund, and the question nobody in power wants to answer: if we know what works, why don't we do it? Content note: This episode covers institutionalization, incarceration, homelessness, solitary confinement, and systemic neglect of people with serious mental illness. SOURCES: PrimaryHistories of Deinstitutionalization Fuller Torrey, E.(2014). American Psychosis: How the Federal Government Destroyed the MentalIllness Treatment System. Oxford University Press. Grob, G.N.(1994). The Mad Among Us: A History of the Care of America's Mentally Ill. FreePress. Deutsch, A.(1948). The Shame of the States. Harcourt Brace.   Sociology andTheory Goffman, E.(1961). Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and OtherInmates. Anchor Books. Szasz, T. (1961).The Myth of Mental Illness. Harper & Row.   Criminalizationand Incarceration James, D.J. &Glaze, L.E. (2006). Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates. Bureauof Justice Statistics. TreatmentAdvocacy Center. (2016). The Treatment of Persons with Mental Illness inPrisons and Jails: A State Survey. Gilligan, J.(1996). Violence: Our Deadly Epidemic and Its Causes. Putnam.   Homelessness Tsemberis, S.(2010). Housing First: The Pathways Model to End Homelessness for People withMental Illness and Addiction. Hazelden. Padgett, D.K.,Gulcur, L., & Tsemberis, S. (2006). Housing First Services for People WhoAre Homeless with Co-Occurring Serious Mental Illness and Substance Abuse.Research on Social Work Practice.   TreatmentModels Stein, L.I. &Test, M.A. (1980). Alternative to Mental Hospital Treatment. Archives ofGeneral Psychiatry. Swartz, M.S. etal. (2001). Can Involuntary Outpatient Commitment Reduce Hospital Recidivism?American Journal of Psychiatry.

6 de may de 2026 - 1 h 5 min
episode Ep. 32: You Are Not Alone artwork

Ep. 32: You Are Not Alone

You're alone. The odds are against you. And then, somehow, you're not alone anymore. Third Man Syndrome is one of the most haunting and hotly debated phenomena in survival psychology — the experience of an unseen presence appearing at the moment of greatest crisis, offering calm, guidance, and sometimes a voice that keeps you moving when every instinct says to stop. Explorers stranded in Antarctica. Climbers fighting for oxygen near Everest's summit. Shipwreck survivors adrift in open water. Across decades and continents, the accounts are strikingly similar: a presence that shouldn't be there, but feels more real than anything else. This week, Crystal and Andrea dig into what science, psychology, and spirituality each have to say about this phenomenon. Is it a hallucination? A survival mechanism the brain has been quietly running all along? Or something stranger and harder to explain away? The answer might depend on whether you've ever needed one.

29 de abr de 2026 - 1 h 2 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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