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.

  • HealthDay

    Overweight in Pregnancy? Here’s How to Keep Excess Pounds at Bay

    Study author Linda Van Horn said the study aimed to see if women could safely avoid excess weight gain during pregnancy. “The majority of pregnant women are overweight or obese at the time of conception. It’s a major public health concern,” said Van Horn, a professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. The U.S Institute of Medicine recommends that normal-weight women gain 25 to 35 pounds during pregnancy, but just 15 to 25 pounds if they’re overweight at the start of pregnancy. Women who are obese should only gain 11 to 20 pounds while expecting, the IOM says.

  • Chicago Tribune

    Why it matters that Weight Watchers pivots toward wellness

    Northwestern Memorial Hospital dietitian Bethany Doerfler said she finds the switch encouraging. It will model the conversations she has with her patients — which are about not simply avoiding one food or focusing on one thing, but instead focusing on their overall health beyond weight. “I think it’s fabulous,” she said. “I personally like my patients to think about their whole mind-body connection when they’re making a lifestyle change, not just what they’re eating, but their sleep, their stress levels, their exercise regimen.

  • The Washington Post

    The Fibroid Factor: Episode 7

    Filmmaker and reporter Nicole Ellis explains the process of retrieving your eggs to try to make a baby. She interviews doctors and patients about the impact of fibroids on success rates and gets a glimpse of her own family history in a candid conversation with her mother and aunts. [Featuring: Eve Feinberg, MD]

  • TODAY

    Study finds 4 main personality types — which one are you?

    As they looked at the data it appeared that people clustered around four different areas, and those emerged as the different personalities. “The findings suggest there are types,” Luis Amaral, a professor of chemical and biological engineering at Northwestern University McCormick School of Engineering and an author of the paper told TODAY. “These (types) are sort of more of an attractor for these personality traits.”

  • WebMD

    Is 100 the New 80? What’s It Take to Live Longer?

    The SuperAging Study, an ongoing clinical trial at Northwestern University, includes people who are older than 80 but still have the memory of someone in their 50s. It’s not such a tall order. Exceptionally old age and exceptionally good health for that age, both in body and brain, seem to go hand in hand. “We think they might be on a different trajectory of aging,” says Emily Rogalski, PhD, who leads the SuperAging Study.

  • Reuters

    Excess pounds can lead to a leaky bladder

    Urge incontinence, or overactive bladder, occurs when “the bladder squeezes and pushes urine out when you’re not asking it to,” explained Dr. Stephanie Kielb, an associate professor of urology, medical education and gynecology at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. “Stress incontinence occurs when there is increased pressure on the abdomen and you leak urine after sneezing or coughing.”

  • Reuters

    Chemical in cigarette smoke may damage important aspect of vision

    Even those with 20-20 vision can experience problems with daily living if their contrast sensitivity is impaired, said Dr. Nicholas J. Volpe, George and Edwina Tarry Professor and chairman of the department of ophthalmology at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. Contrast sensitivity declines as we age, Volpe said. But the new study suggests there might be other factors that can affect it.

  • The New York Times

    Why Your DNA Is Still Uncharted Territory

    Researchers tend to focus on genes that have been studied for decades, for example. To take on an enigma like PNMA6F can put a scientist’s career at risk. “This is very worrisome,” said Luís A. Nunes Amaral, a data scientist at Northwestern University and a co-author of the new study. “If the field keeps exploring the unknown this slowly, it will take us forever to understand these other genes.”

  • The Washington Post

    Scientists identify four personality types

    Gerlach and his colleagues Luís A. Nunes Amaral and Beatrice Farb are trying to propel these old ideas into the realm of big data. They took a relatively new approach — not adhering to Jungian theories but analyzing four huge data sets. They also enlisted the aid of Northwestern psychologist William Revelle, who been an outspoken skeptic of the idea of personality types. He was, at first, a critic of the group’s own study. “I’m going to be very blunt,” he said. “My first reaction was this is nonsense.”

  • Chicago Tonight – WTTW

    Physician: ‘We Can All Do Something’ to Address Gun Violence

    Dr. Mamta Swaroop has seen life slip away from gun violence. Two years ago, a patient she was treating for a gunshot wound died. She describes the experience as “one of the most self-defeating feelings in the world because you can’t do anything about that.” But what haunts Swaroop, an associate professor of surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, was how the victim’s mother responded. “She fell into my chest, and she’s crying and she’s yelling and she’s screaming. And those screams and those yells are in my bones,” she said.