Media Coverage

The work done by Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine faculty members (and even some students) is regularly highlighted in newspapers, online media outlets and more. Below you’ll find links to articles and videos of Feinberg in the news.

  • Fox 32 Chicago

    CDC expected to relax guidance on wearing masks outdoors

    “If we are vaccinated, going outside and wearing a mask will be fine and I am sure that’s what we will hear from the CDC,” said Dr. Jeffrey Kopin of Northwestern Medicine Lake Forest Hospital. The CDC is also reporting that 5-million Americans did not get their second dose of the vaccine. Speculation shows some people didn’t think they needed it, while others feared side effects.

  • Chicago Tribune

    Several Chicago hospitals earn low marks for quality, safety in new reports, while Rush University Medical Center shines

    University of Chicago Medical Center scored its 19th consecutive A grade from Leapfrog, something achieved by only three other hospitals in the state, including Elmhurst Hospital, Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital in Winfield and OSF St. Mary Medical Center in Galesburg.

  • TIME

    CDC Says Vaccinated Americans (Mostly) Don’t Need to Wear Masks Outside

    “The timing is right because we now have a fair amount of data about the scenarios where transmission occurs,” said Mercedes Carnethon, a professor and vice chair of preventive medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. What’s more, she said, “the additional freedoms may serve as a motivator” for people to get vaccinated.

  • Chicago Tribune

    Untreated traumas in arrested juveniles linger 15 years past incarceration, Northwestern study finds

    “We’ve been studying incarcerated populations for 40 years,” said Linda Teplin, the Northwestern project’s principal investigator and the moderator at the April 15 Zoom event. “These kids enter with a lot of psychiatric problems, and they continue because they never receive adequate treatment. And the blame is not just on the juvenile justice system, but these kids don’t get treatment when they go back to their communities.”

  • NBC 5 Chicago

    New Study Provides Clarify on Impacts of Stress on Fertility

    [VIDEO] A new study provides clarity on the impacts that emotional stress has on fertility. (Featuring: Tarun Jain, MD, reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Northwestern Medicine )

  • WTTW News

    At What Point Does a COVID-19 Infection Become a Disability?

    Dr. Charles Davidson, who oversees the Northwestern Medicine Comprehensive COVID-19 Center, estimates that about 20% to 30% of COVID-19 patients are impacted by the phenomenon.

  • Crain’s Chicago Business

    Northwestern Researchers Detail Opioid Fatalities During Stay-at-Home Period

    Disruptions in treatment, in-person support and even the opioid drug supply lead to more opioid overdose deaths in Cook County during the 11-week stay-at-home order in Illinois, according to a Northwestern University study published last week in JAMA Insights.

  • The New York Times

    Five Takeaways From the New Food Allergy Law

    Dr. Ruchi S. Gupta, a professor of pediatrics at Northwestern Medicine in Chicago, said these sections of the FASTER Act put food allergies on a similar level with other health conditions because it centralizes efforts to monitor food allergies. “We need to do a deeper dive into what is 10, 11, 12” on the list of top allergens, said Dr. Gupta, a senior author of the 2019 study.

  • NBC News

    Covid slowed mass shootings. But from Colorado to California, they’re back. Here’s why.

    March of 2020 will forever be remembered as the month the World Health Organization’s director-general officially declared that Covid-19 was a global pandemic. But as a mass shooting researcher, I will remember it as the month mass shootings stopped.

  • The Washington Post

    Biden signs new law that makes sesame the ninth major food allergen

    In the past two decades, life-threatening childhood food allergies have risen steadily, growing by about 4 percent per year to afflict 32 million Americans, according to research by Northwestern University, McKinsey & Company, and Food Allergy Research and Education, a nonprofit. Studies estimate that the costs borne by American families — for medical bills, buying special foods or forgoing full-time employment to care for a child with a food allergy — total $24.8 billion annually.