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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A study conducted in part by Chicago’s Northwestern Medicine found that tanning beds not only triple the risk of melanoma, but can also damage DNA across nearly the whole skin surface.
Northwestern Medicine and the University of California, San Francisco launched the study after researchers noticed an unusually high number of women under 50 who had skin cancer more than one time.
Dr. Pedram Gerami, professor of skin cancer research at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, and his research team compared roughly 3,000 tanning bed users with a control group of 3,000 age-matched people who did not have a history of indoor tanning.
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Researchers found that tanning bed users were nearly three times as likely to develop melanoma — the deadliest form of skin cancer — compared to people who’d never tanned indoors. They also had DNA damage that can lead to melanoma across nearly the entire surface of the skin.
“Even in skin cells that look normal, in tanning bed patients, you can find those precursor mutations” that lead to melanoma, says Dr. Pedram Gerami, one of the study’s authors and the IDP Foundation professor of skin cancer research at Northwestern University.
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A recent study out of Northwestern University found evidence that using tanning beds can increase a person’s risk of developing skin cancer. The research is the first of its kind and found that using tanned beds increased the risk of melanoma threefold, according to a university news release.
What they’re saying: “Even in normal skin from indoor tanning patients, areas where there are no moles, we found DNA changes that are precursor mutations that predispose to melanoma,” said study first author Dr. Pedram Gerami, professor of skin cancer research at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. “That has never been shown before.”
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A new study suggests the shingles vaccine could slow the progression of dementia. Dr. Aarati Didwania with Northwestern Medicine joins via Zoom to share more about this study and the importance of the shingles vaccine.
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You know menopause can cause hot flashes. But did you know it can also lead to a dry mouth, heart palpitations or recurring urinary tract infections?
Though only a handful of them get much attention, there are more than two dozen known symptoms of menopause and perimenopause, the time leading up to and immediately following your last period.
Dr. Lauren Streicher, a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, contributed to the story.
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Chicago philanthropists Don and Anne Edwards have donated $11 million to Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital to establish what will be the largest pediatric genetics training program in Illinois and triple the hospital’s rare disease clinical trials.
Dr. Carlos Prada will head the Edwards Family Division. Prada, who joined the hospital in 2021, is also medical director of Lurie’s Cellular & Gene Therapy Program and a professor of pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
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The US has now returned to a time where vaccinations against hepatitis B are no longer recommended for all newborns.
Some public health experts and those living with hepatitis B say the move is a regression that could risk exposing all children to a virus that has become much less common because of vaccines.
“Evidence shows that even a two-month delay in administering the hepatitis B vaccine can result in hundreds of additional deaths from liver disease and liver cancer as those children age,” said Claudia Hawkins, director for the Center for Global Communicable and Emerging Infectious Diseases at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine.
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The ambient air on planes and in hospitals mostly contains harmless microbes typically associated with human skin, researchers reported Dec. 4 in the journal Microbiome.
The cutting-edge study analyzed germ samples captured on the outer surface of face masks worn by air travelers and health care workers, researchers said.
“We realized that we could use face masks as a cheap, easy air-sampling device for personal exposures and general exposures,” senior researcher Erica Hartmann, an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, said in a news release.
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The White House released new medical information about President Donald Trump on Monday, saying recent imaging tests showed he is in “excellent overall health.” But some medical experts say the notice raised more questions than answers.
Dr. Jeffrey Linder, chief of general internal medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, said the memo left him confused.
“There is nothing standard about an executive physical,” he told The Times. He added: “There is no medical specialty that recommends that an otherwise asymptomatic individual get imaging.”
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Just in time for the busy holiday travel season, researchers report on a question that will run through many people’s minds as they cram into tightly packed planes: How clean is airplane air?
To find out, Erica Hartmann, associate professor in the department of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern University, and her colleagues tested face masks worn by passengers on flights to log what kinds of bugs these products trapped. The team was also interested in the air circulating in hospitals, another public place where germs commonly spread, and tested face masks worn by hospital personnel.