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6 People Who Froze to Death—And Came Back to Life

Updated on Jul. 25, 2025

Once you freeze to death—that's it, right? Not always. Here are stories of people who froze and came back to life.

Survival stories from the icy edge

What happens when the human body stands at the brink of death—and defies it? For some people, it’s not a mystery. They lived it. It’s especially amazing when someone freezes to death, only to be miraculously revived. How is this possible? Keep reading. In some bone-chilling and almost unbelievable cases, doctors have worked on people who froze and came back to life.

Reader’s Digest brings you six medical survival stories aren’t just about recovery. They celebrate the wonders of science, which sometimes can revive people from the icy edge.

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A woman with closed eyes appears peaceful, snow covering her hair and face, against a dark background.
Jamie Chung for Reader's Digest

Stiffer than a board

It was minus 22 degrees on a December night in 1980 when 19-year-old Jean Hilliard’s car skidded off a side road in Lengby, Minnesota. The teen was on the way back home to her parents’ house and was wearing a coat, mittens and cowboy boots. The car was truly stuck, so she decided to walk to a nearby friend’s house. She collapsed a mere 15 feet from his door as hypothermia took hold. The friend, Wally Nelson, found her the following morning. She was frozen solid.

“I grabbed her by the collar and skidded her into the porch. I thought she was dead. Froze stiffer than a board, but I saw a few bubbles coming out of her nose,” Nelson revealed in a 2018 Minnesota Public Radio interview. When Hilliard finally got to the emergency room, her pulse was 12 beats per minute and her body temperature was 88 degrees, according to the New York Times. The medical staff thawed Hilliard with an electrical warming blanket, and Hilliard made a full recovery.

blood pressure device frozen
Jamie Chung for Reader's Digest

Snow-covered and blue

Justin Smith, 25, of Pennsylvania, had gone out with friends one night in 2016 when he technically died. The group had been drinking, and they lost track of each other. Smith was found unconscious on the roadside the following morning covered in snow. He was blue—he had been in sub-zero temperatures for more than 12 hours. Knowing his son had no pulse or blood pressure, Smith’s father had no hope. Gerald Coleman, DO, was working in the emergency department of Lehigh Valley Hospital when Smith came in, and he wasn’t ready to give up.

“My clinical thought is very simple: You have to be warm to be dead,” he told the Hazelton (Pennsylvania) Standard Speaker at the time. Dr. Coleman hooked Smith up to an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) machine, which pumps and oxygenates a patient’s blood, doing the work of the heart and lungs. Smith’s core temperature began to warm, and although he ended up losing his toes and two fingers, over the course of the next few weeks Smith made a complete recovery. “When you have a very low temperature, it can preserve the brain and other organ functions,” James Wu, MD, told the website Medical Daily in a discussion of the case.

frozen heart
Jamie Chung for Reader's Digest

A toddler in the icy Canadian night

In the winter of 2001, 13-month-old Erika Nordby woke up in the middle of the night. Although she was cuddling with her snoozing 3-year-old sister and mother, Nordby got up and toddled out into an icy Canadian night wearing only a diaper and T-shirt. At 3 a.m., Nordby’s mother woke to notice her baby was missing. When she finally found her daughter, Nordby was face-down in the snow and frozen stiff—she had been out in the snow for up to four hours.

When paramedics arrived, they struggled to insert an IV into Nordby’s veins to warm her, so they stuck the needle straight into her leg bone to run fluid through her bone marrow. After treatment with a warming blanket known as the “Bair hugger” at the emergency room, Nordby’s heart began beating again. The toddler eventually made a full recovery.

Frozen lake
oceanfishing/Shutterstock

Headfirst into a frozen lake

When 29-year-old Swedish radiologist Anna Bågenholm went for a day of skiing with her friends, she never expected that it would nearly claim her life. On the trip in 1999, Bågenholm slipped down a hill and fell headfirst into a frozen lake. Her friends tried to pull her out by her skis, but couldn’t get her back to land. For nearly 40 minutes, Bågenholm was conscious. She had found a small pocket of air under the ice. But then her body gave in to hypothermia.

When Bågenholm was finally pulled from the lake, she was nearly frozen solid—her core temperature was 56 degrees. On the electrocardiogram, which the doctor on the rescue helicopter had connected her to, there was a completely flat line. “No signs of life whatsoever,” attending physician Mads Gilbert, MD, told CNN. At the hospital, doctors hoped her body had frozen slowly enough to allow her brain to survive the lack of oxygen. They pumped her blood through a warming device and returned it to her body. The doctors were stunned when Bågenholm’s heart began to beat. It took over a year for Bågenholm to overcome nerve damage from being frozen, but she made a complete recovery.

stethoscope frozen
Jamie Chung for Reader's Digest

The human hibernator

Mitsutaka Uchikoshi, 35, of Japan, may be the only known case of human hibernation. In October 2006, Uchikoshi fell down a steep mountain slope while walking home alone from a work outing. Then he broke his pelvis slipping in a stream, and doctors believe he lost consciousness a day later. (No one really knows for sure, because he wasn’t found until 24 days later when hikers stumbled across his body.) During that time, Uchikoshi had endured temperatures that dipped to 50 degrees, and his body temperature had fallen to 72 degrees. Hypothermia starts to kick in at a body temp of 95 degrees.

When the hikers found Uchikoshi, he was suffering from organ failure and barely had a pulse. Shinichi Sato, MD, told the Guardian, “He fell into a state similar to hibernation and many of his organs slowed, but his brain was protected.” Uchikoshi made a full and incredible recovery, stunning the medical community.

1tomm/Shutterstock

Waiting for the death announcement

Stella Berndtsson’s parents gave their daughter permission to play outside while they prepared for Christmas in 2011. They had no idea it would lead to the 7-year-old’s disappearance in freezing waters. While playing, Berndtsson fell over a sea cliff and vanished. Her parents, Peter and Annika Berndtsson, frantically searched for her with neighbors until they found footsteps leading to the edge of the cliff and into the sea below. The coast guard and helicopters spotted a pink jacket floating in the waves—it was Berndtsson.

Rescuers started CPR on the way to the hospital, though they assumed it was futile. Her body temperature was just over 55 degrees. Doctors gave the parents little hope of their daughter’s recovery. But after 12 hours of slow warming, Berndtsson opened and closed her eyes. Two weeks later, she spoke. After two months of rehabilitation, she made a full recovery.

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Sources:

  • Minnesota Public Radio News: “Frozen. Thawed. Not dead: Jean Hilliard’s amazing Minnesota story”
  • New York Times: “‘Dakota Teenager Recovers After Being ‘Frozen Stiff’”
  • Medical Daily: “Frozen Man Presumed Dead, Justin Smith, Brought Back To Life By Cutting Edge Hypothermia Treatment Technique”
  • ABC News:Canadian Toddler Survives Sub-zero Cold”
  • Science Alert: “This is How a Norwegian Woman Survived The Lowest Body Temperature Ever Recorded”
  • CNN: “From an icy slope, a medical miracle emerges”
  • Guardian: “Injured hiker survived 24 days on mountain by ‘hibernating’”
  • Wayback Machine (MSN): “Girl survives 13 degree body temperature”