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.

  • Yahoo! News

    The best hair growth products of 2024, according to dermatologists

    Losing your hair or experiencing thinning hair is a stressful and often embarrassing experience that affects millions of people in the U.S. But the good news is, for most individuals, this is a temporary condition that can be reversed with the right treatments and products. “The most common cause of hair loss is androgenetic alopecia, aka male pattern hair loss or female pattern hair loss,” explains Amy Forman Taub, MD, FAAD, a board-certified dermatologist and assistant professor at Northwestern University Medical School. “The second most common is called telogen effluvium and can be caused by many things, including severe stress, childbirth, certain drugs and thyroid abnormalities,” Taub says. If you notice hair loss three to four months after a mild to severe bout of Covid or the flu, you can almost bet that is the cause. But there are other causes too. “People can also develop hair loss from underlying medical conditions like alopecia areata,” Taub says.

  • HealthDay

    Doctor ‘Alert’ Warnings Helped One Health System Reduce Unnecessary Tests

    The doctor tapped at his computer, ordering a routine prostate exam for an 80-year-old man, when a dramatic yellow alert popped up on the patient’s electronic health record. “You are ordering a test that no guideline recommends,” it warned. “Screening with PSA can lead to harms from diagnostic and treatment procedures. If you proceed without a justification, the unnecessary test will be noted on the health record.” The message was part of a strategy Northwestern Medicine investigators were testing to see if it would prompt doctors to stop ordering unnecessary screenings for older adults. “To our knowledge, this is the first study to significantly reduce all of the unnecessary testing or treatments studied using point-of-care alerts,” said lead researcher Stephen Persell, a professor at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. “We believe that incorporating elements like a focus on potential harms, sharing social norms and promoting a sense of social accountability and reputational concerns led to the effectiveness of these messages,” Persell said in a university news release.

  • Yahoo! News

    5 tips to keep your brain sharp for when you’re Biden’s age

    Despite his active lifestyle and a reasonably clean bill of health, Biden has long faced criticism for his age and judgment surrounding his memory and mental acuity. With the President’s cognitive capabilities making headlines again, here are five top tips from experts to keep your brain sharp for when you get to be Biden’s age. Tips include living like you’re in a Blue Zone, managing your exercise and diet, taking a probiotic with herbal tea, trying new things and continuing to socialize. Brain health isn’t limited to the choices we make individually. According to experts, one key component to keeping your mind healthy is ensuring you get enough social stimulation as well. “In general, people with strong social networks tend to live longer,” Talia Lerner, PhD, an assistant professor of neuroscience at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine explained. “Spending time with other people is good for your emotional life, which is good for brain health.”

  • NBC 5 Chicago

    Post-COVID insomnia? Experts weigh in on new study showing sleep impacts of COVID

    If you’ve had trouble sleeping following a COVID diagnosis, you aren’t alone. In fact, a new study seems to have found a connection between the two, particularly in milder cases of COVID-19, that experts say isn’t entirely unexpected. “So after SARS-CoV-2 infection, there’s certainly a lot of neurocognitive issues that come about. So specifically, people tend to have symptoms of what we call brain fog, or issues with memory and their attention span, and a lot of these are linked to primary neurological brain issues and ailments from whatever COVID has done to their body in terms of inflammation, or other biological patterns to it. And so it’s not really surprising that actually, given that your brain also manages your circadian rhythms, that people might have issues with either sleep disordered breathing on the aspect of insomnia, fractured sleep, or even sleep apnea in many individuals,” Marc Sala, MD, the co-director of the Comprehensive COVID Center at Northwestern Medicine. “So I think that’s still being fleshed out in the research, but that actually isn’t very surprising to me that people who have long COVID might also have a detriment to some form in their sleeping patterns, knowing what it can do to people’s processing speeds, memory, attention, and all other aspects that relate to the brain to begin with.”

  • Yahoo! News

    Magic Hangover Pills Are Popping Up Everywhere—But Do They Actually Work?

    Hangovers are a multi-part affair. It’s like your whole body gets together the morning after you drink to talk about how to ruin your life the following day. Alcohol’s diuretic or dehydrating effects cause most hangover symptoms: the bleary-eyed headache and incessant need to pee, and alcohol also disrupts your GI system, leading to gastro issues like diarrhea and nausea. But another issue with hangovers is the accumulation of alcohol’s most toxic byproduct: acetaldehyde. That’s where these supplements come in. “When you drink, there’s a hormone that’s suppressed, and it causes you to urinate more, and you can become dehydrated, but you’re not losing just water, you’re losing other minerals and electrolytes from your body too,” explains Aarati Didwania, MD, who specializes in internal medicine at Northwestern Medicine. “The way that all these pills are being marketed is that they’re replacing what you’re losing. Some of them also seem to claim that they’re helping the way that your liver metabolizes the alcohol.” “For the majority of the population, [these hangover supplements are] not going to cause any harm. But it’s the fact that they’re unregulated, and you don’t really know the exact quantities of everything that’s in them or who’s monitoring what’s written on the outside of the packaging versus what’s actually in the pill that I think is the danger,” Dr. Didwania says, adding that if you’re taking a multi-vitamin daily, you’re probably getting the same benefits. Another worry is that people might falsely assume that taking these supplements means they’re protected from the effects of alcohol, which could then encourage excessive drinking—something that study after study proves isn’t healthy.

  • CNN

    What is a typical degree of cognitive ability for a person in their 80s?

    Concerns about age and mental fitness have been a recurring theme through the past two presidencies and are set to only mount in 2024 with two frontrunner candidates nearing or exceeding the age of 80. Common changes in thinking as people age include slower word and name recall, difficulty with multitasking and mild decreases in attention span, according to the UCSF Memory and Aging Center. These skills are part of what scientists call fluid abilities, which decline steadily throughout our lifetimes. “Fluid abilities are things like processing speed, attention, working memory. This stuff requires cognitive efficiency,” said Molly Mather, PhD, an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “It’s thought that general wear and tear happens as we get older and chips away at cognitive efficiency.” Natural changes happen in the brain as someone ages. Certain parts that are important to learning and other complex mental activities shrink, connectivity between neurons may become less effective, blood flow may decrease, and inflammation may increase.

  • Nature

    Turbocharged CAR-T cells melt tumours in mice – using a trick from cancer cells

    Cancer cells are the ultimate survivors, riddled with mutations that let them thrive when healthy cells would die. These same mutations can boost the ability of game-changing cell therapies to quash cancer, a study in mice shows. Among these therapies are chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, which are already used to treat several types of blood cancer. The new study shows that engineered CAR T cells carrying a mutation that was first found in cancerous T cells can vanquish tumors that don’t respond to current CAR-T therapies. “It’s a very special molecule, it seems to be able to beat all the tests we put to it,” says study co-author Jaehyuk Choi, a dermatologist at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

  • NPR

    You can order a test to find out your biological age. Is it worth it?

    These days, you can order up a test to find out your biological age, an estimate of how quickly or slowly you’re aging compared to your peers. It’s based on an analysis of modifications in your DNA. If you take one of these tests, you’ll get back a number — an estimate of your biological age. You probably shouldn’t put too much stock in it, researchers say. No test can tell you exactly how long you’ll live, of course. What the test can do is estimate how fast or slow you’re aging compared to your peers. Let’s say you’re 50 and you get back an age of 45. That means you’re aging slower than the average 50-year-old. Your rate of aging is more like that of a 45-year-old. This score could be useful when combined with other measurements, says Doug Vaughan, MD, the director of the Human Longevity Lab at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. “I think knowing can provide a person with some information about the overall state of their health and provide some prediction for them about what they can look forward to in the years to come,” Vaughan says. But, Vaughan points out that DNA age tests are just one measure of biological age and overall health. His lab uses a variety of tests, including AI-generated computations of cardiovascular health and retina health, to give a more integrative assessment. When the measures are combined, a more comprehensive picture of your health and potential life span emerges.

  • New York Times

    Get Your Cholesterol in Check

    While 86 million adults in the United States have high cholesterol levels, one third of Americans say they haven’t had their numbers checked in the last five years. Getting your cholesterol tested — and under control — is critical to preventing heart disease and other serious health problems. But figuring out when to test and what to make of the numbers can feel daunting. Most people don’t have any symptoms until their arteries are already severely clogged. That’s why doctors look to cholesterol levels to catch and treat cardiovascular problems early, said John Wilkins, MD, an associate professor of cardiology and epidemiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. A doctor may recommend cholesterol-lowering drugs if you have already had a heart attack or stroke or if an ultrasound or angiogram shows significant blockages in your arteries. A provider may also consider medication if your LDL cholesterol is 190 or higher. For most other people, doctors consider cholesterol levels in combination with age, family history of heart disease, smoking history and other factors before deciding whether to prescribe a drug, Wilkins said “No one has zero risk,” he said. “But there’s a lot you can do to mitigate it.”

  • USA Today

    Americans don’t sleep enough. The long-term effects are dire, especially for Black people

    Poor sleep is linked to a host of health problems, among them some of America’s greatest killers, most of which plague Black Americans. The data indicates quality sleep is harder to come by for Black people, with economic, social and environmental factors all playing a role. Along with heart health, poor sleep is linked with increased risk of hypertension, diabetes and obesity, as well as cognitive issues like Alzheimer’s – all of which disproportionately plague Black communities. For instance, 47% of Black adults have been diagnosed with cardiovascular disease, compared to 36% of white adults. Black men have a 70% higher risk of heart failure than white men; for Black women, the figure is 50%. Black adults have the highest incidence of severe obesity, and 59% of Black adults have hypertension, the highest rate among all racial and ethnic groups. Additionally, they are more likely than white adults to have strokes and more likely to die as a result. Mercedes Carnethon, PhD, a professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, said research now needs to go more than skin-deep to determine what is driving the disparities. “The reasons are not the color of one’s skin,” Carnethon said. “They’re socioeconomic factors, household characteristics, and cultural values around sleep. They’re the occupations that people hold. It’s not race as biology but race as social factor, and by identifying the social factors, we can think of strategies to address them.”