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.
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Numerous clinical studies are also exploring strategies to extend overall health. At the same time, critics warn that longevity medicine exists in a regulatory gray area where influencers can promote unsafe protocols and clinics exaggerate the benefits of their treatments.
“A lot of this space is dominated by medical influencers, and not scientists,” said Douglas Vaughan, director of the Potocsnak Longevity Institute at Northwestern Medicine. “We’re still in the discovery mode, and we are trying to find the truth and interventions that are scalable, affordable and effective for the 99 percent.”
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Crying, laughing and nosebleeds are examples of normal – albeit uncommon – reactions to orgasm, according to a recent small study.
Gynaecologists Prof Lauren Streicher, from Northwestern University, and Prof James Simon, from the George Washington University, used social media to invite women to share how their bodies respond to orgasm.
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It’s a new year, which means refocusing on self-care screenings. Dr. Sonya Bhole, assistant professor of Radiology, joins Audrina Sinclair to discuss risk assessment for breast cancer and addressing breast health before regular mammograms are scheduled.
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For the new study, researchers surveyed more than 3,800 women after they viewed a short video posted on social media that explained these reactions, which are called peri-orgasmic phenomena. A little more than 2% of the women — 86 total — said they’d experienced such a response, researchers recently reported in the Journal of Women’s Health.
“Women need to know that if they have uncontrollable peals of laughter every time they orgasm (and nothing was funny), they are not alone,” lead researcher Dr. Lauren Streicher said in a news release. She’s a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.
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Emergency department visits and hospitalizations for the flu are at their highest levels in three years in Chicago, and experts said it’s not ending any time soon.
“This year, we’re worried, because this amount of activity, although not unexpected, is really high,” said Dr. Matthew Kippenhan, the medical director of the emergency department at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
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The bulk of hospital admissions and ER visits associated with respiratory illnesses were made because of flu symptoms, according to officials. And experts warn “we haven’t peaked yet.”
Dr. Santina Wheat, a family physician with Northwestern Medicine, shared similar thoughts in an interview with NBC Chicago, explaining an uptick in cases might occur within the next week as children head back to school.
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Samir Abboud, chief of emergency radiology for Northwestern Medicine, thought he was already working at maximum speed. In a carefully honed routine, aided by voice dictation, he could finish writing an X-ray report in as little as 75 seconds.
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And while medical experts told CNN there is no fresh cause for concern, calling it a likely benign condition common in older people, they warned that Trump’s reluctance to be more transparent about his health only threatens to intensify the scrutiny that he’s struggled all year to escape.
“They’re just feeding the curiosity cycle,” said Dr. Jeffrey Linder, chief of general internal medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “He’s in the public eye, he has a certain image he wants to portray, and even these minor things detract from that image.”
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Kara Goldman, a reproductive endocrinologist and director of fertility preservation at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, said that the barometer for success would be if Fertilo is able to produce pregnancies at the same rate as IVF. The company’s early trials have shown it to be comparable to IVF, and a Phase 3 clinical trial is underway in 15 U.S. clinics.
Goldman said she was “excited” about Gameto because it moved beyond “the current model of treating one disorder at a time … to target the underlying inefficiency of ovarian biology.”
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Gestational diabetes increased by 36% between 2016 and 2024, increasing from 58 to 79 cases for every 1,000 births, researchers reported Dec. 29 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
“Gestational diabetes has been persistently increasing for more than 10 years, which means whatever we have been trying to do to address diabetes in pregnancy has not been working,” senior researcher Dr. Nilay Shah said in a news release. Shah is an assistant professor of cardiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.