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.

  • USA Today

    Atlanta woman has an antidote for burnout – napping for self-care and social justice

    Vikas Jain, a sleep medicine doctor at Northwestern Medicine in Chicago, said most working adults don’t make time for naps. But he recommends midafternoon naps, especially for people who get less than seven hours of sleep at night. Jain said the naps should be no longer than about 30 minutes. “The communal napping is a newer idea but I like the idea of trying to eliminate the stigma that surrounds sleep,” Jain said. “People don’t want to come forward and let anyone know they are tired … and we are trying to cram so much into our day that we’re not taking care of ourselves.”

  • WBEZ

    New Study Sheds Light On How White Parents Can Prevent Racial Bias

    A new study from Northwestern University found that the more white parents recognized racial bias in the world, the more likely they were to talk with their children about current racial events.

    Morning Shift talks with co-author Sylvia Perry about the study’s potential implications for interventions to address racial bias and discrimination in kids.

    GUEST: Sylvia Perry, assistant professor of psychology at Northwestern University

  • HealthDay

    Prior Pregnancies May Affect Your Tummy Tuck

    Pregnancy-related widening and thinning of the belly muscles may reduce the effectiveness of tummy tuck (abdominoplasty) surgery, researchers found. This is especially true in women who’ve had multiple pregnancies. But Dr. Gregory Dumanian and colleagues at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago said there may be a fix. In certain cases, an alternative approach that follows the principles of hernia repair may be successful, the researchers found.

  • U.S. News & World Report

    Rising Obesity Rates Undermining Strides Made Against Heart Disease

    “These findings are surprising and alarming, because despite medical and surgical advances and public policy initiatives around cholesterol and blood pressure awareness, we are losing ground in the battle against cardiovascular disease,” said lead researcher Dr. Sadiya Khan. She is an assistant professor of cardiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, in Chicago. “The culprit may be the rise in obesity,” she added, though the study could not prove that definitively. “One of the greatest success stories of the past century has been the marked reduction in cardiovascular disease death rates,” Khan said.

  • Reuters

    Cancer doctors don’t focus on lifestyle risks

    The survey of doctors from a Midwestern health system found that oncologists were far less likely than primary care physicians to offer advice on health promotion strategies, such as weight loss and smoking cessation, researchers reported in the journal Cancer. With oncologists reticent to offer advice on lifestyle changes, the onus may fall upon patients to bring the topic up and to find ways on their own to address changes, said study coauthor Bonnie Spring, a professor of preventive medicine, psychiatry, psychology and public health and director of the Institute for Public Health and Medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

  • USA Today

    Spaceflight alters gut bacteria in the same ways, every time

    Northwestern University researchers found that spaceflight has a consistent effect on gut bacteria. After comparing data from mice in space and studies on Earth using a tool they developed called STARMAPS, they found something surprising. The cause of changes in gut bacteria during spaceflight isn’t radiation.

  • WTTW

    Lightfoot Launches Task Force to Combat Sexually Transmitted Infections

    Sexually transmitted infections are on the rise across the nation. To combat the increase in STIs locally, Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the Chicago Department of Public of Health are launching a multiyear initiative, starting with a task force aimed at a reducing new syphilis cases.

    Below, the full list of task force members.[…]

    Brian Mustanski, Ph.D.; Co-Director, Third Coast Center for AIDS Research (CFAR)

  • Reuters

    Many dermatologists need more training on African American skin and hair

    Each of the focus groups, which were held at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, consisted of four to 12 people who came from similar backgrounds. Because most of the participants, 74%, had received care at other clinics in the past, the researchers were able to compare patient experiences at a clinic with black dermatologists to clinics where they were seen by doctors of other races. Some patients had experienced clinic visits in which the doctor seemed uncomfortable touching their skin. In fact, some had the experience of doctors avoiding skin contact altogether, examining hair with the end of a pencil or not at all, for example.

  • Yahoo! News

    Joe Biden’s former brain surgeon explains why he’s not too old to be president

    “They all belong to a sub-group of the population that is privileged. And privileged sub-groups tend to live longer and better than the average,” Olshansky told Politico, categorizing them as “super-agers,” or individuals in their 70s and 80s who have the mental capabilities of people decades younger. Another neuroscientist who studies aging, Northwestern University’s Emily Rogalski, explained to Politico that scientifically, it’s hard to “determine someone’s cognitive abilities simply by knowing someone’s chronological age.”

  • Chicago Tribune

    These Northwestern doctors saw 30,000 patients during WWII, sometimes performing 100 surgeries a day. Here’s their story.

    The doorway was too narrow for the patient on the stretcher. So the high-powered Northwestern neurosurgeon did the next best thing. He knelt on the ground and tried to pull the patient through the window of the shuttered Algerian resort, which served as a makeshift hospital staffed by Northwestern medical school-affiliated doctors during World War II. During the war, more than 50 Northwestern doctors and dentists, and more than 100 nurses from hospitals across Chicago, formed the 12th General Hospital unit, which set up hospitals and cared for servicemen in Algeria and Italy.