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  • Northwestern Medicine, Siemens roll out revamped cancer tech

    “It is going to be a big deal” for cancer patients, said Northwestern Medicine’s Dr. James Carr, chair of the radiology department. “We can now really begin to leverage that technological expertise and really begin to focus some of those innovations in cancer care, as well as other areas.” Carr said Northwestern’s collaboration with Siemens…

  • Neil Bluhm gifts Northwestern Medicine $50M to keep it at forefront of cardiac care

    Neil Bluhm is putting another $50 million into Northwestern Medicine’s heart program — the one he launched 20 years ago — to ensure it will remain among the nation’s best for decades to come. Dr. Patrick McCarthy, director of the institute, said the idea behind this latest donation started last year, when Bluhm and the…

  • Time100 Health 2026: Sadiya Khan

    In a study published in November in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, researchers introduced the free tool, which aims to spark dialogue between patients and providers.

  • Low-fat or low-carb — which is better for the heart? The answer may surprise you

    The researchers defined unhealthy diets as relying more on refined grains and animal sources of protein and fat. Dr. Clyde Yancy, chief of cardiology at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, said the study was particularly strong because of its size and duration and the way it drilled down into categories of low-fat and low-carb…

  • Billionaire Neil Bluhm donating another $50 million to Northwestern for heart care

    With the new gift, Bluhm will have donated $135 million over the last two decades to the institute, which started in 2005 with an initial $10 million gift from Bluhm. The institute provides care across 18 locations in the Chicago area. “It really is a vote of confidence in what we did for the last…

  • Doctor spreads awareness of heart risks for Black people

    Heart disease is actually the leading cause of death both nationally and in Chicago. Black Americans are 35 percent more likely to die from heart related issues, than white people. Dr. Quentin Youmans, a heart specialist at Northwestern Medicine joined ABC7 to discuss the risk factors.

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