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.

  • The Wall Street Journal

    The Humble Stethoscope Gets a High-Tech Makeover

    They found that the algorithm was more effective at picking up the murmurs than five pediatric cardiologists who listened to the sounds, when compared against echocardiogram results, according to an abstract of a study presented at an American Heart Association conference in 2018. In March, the company started a clinical trial with Northwestern Medicine Bluhm Cardiovascular Institute to test the heart-murmur algorithm on 800 patients, who will also be screened with an echocardiogram. “It’s one thing to listen with a digital stethoscope. Then you need a whole lot of separate training anyway to see what those squiggles read,” said Patrick McCarthy, executive director at the institute.

  • The New York Times

    Should You Be Eating Eggs?

    Then a report in JAMA of a very thorough long-term analysis involving nearly 30,000 men and women initially free of cardiovascular disease suggested otherwise. The researchers, headed by Victor W. Zhong of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, found that eating as little as one-half an egg a day could increase a person’s risk of heart disease, stroke and premature death. “My study showed a dose-response relationship,” Dr. Zhong, a nutrition epidemiologist, told me. “The higher the consumption of eggs, the greater the risk. Those who consumed less than one egg a week had no increased risk.”

  • HealthDay

    Almost Half of Young Asthma Patients Misuse Inhalers

    Teens were the most likely to make mistakes in inhaler technique and to skip use of a spacer, according to the study published April 17 in the Journal of Hospital Medicine. “We know that asthma can be well-managed in the majority of patients and using your inhaler correctly is key factor to managing asthma,” said lead author Dr. Waheeda Samady, a hospitalist at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. “Improper inhaler technique can contribute to children having uncontrolled asthma and needing to come to the hospital for their asthma,” Samady said in a hospital news release.

  • U.S. News & World Report

    Whether to Preserve Fertility Is Tough Decision for Transgender Youth

    “As a child psychologist, I’m usually talking to adolescent patients about contraception to prevent unwanted pregnancies, not, ‘Down the line, do you want to be a parent? And if so, how important to you is a genetic connection to your child?’,” said Diane Chen. She’s an assistant professor of psychiatry, behavioral sciences and pediatrics at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. Chen is also first author of a revealing new study examining the considerations that go into that decision.

  • Yahoo! News

    Should You Stop Taking That Medication?

    During use of a decongestant nasal spray, a small amount of the drug may be released into your bloodstream, which can elevate your heart rate, says Robert Kern, M.D., professor and chair of the department of otolaryngology—head and neck surgery at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. This might be a problem if you have heart disease or an irregular heart rhythm.

  • U.S. News & World Report

    Magnet ‘Zap’ to the Brain Might Jumpstart Aging Memory

    A small group of older people experienced improved memory function after five daily sessions with the device, to the point that they were performing memory tasks as well as a “control” group of young adults. “After receiving stimulation, they were no longer worse than young individuals performing the same task,” said lead researcher Joel Voss. He is an associate professor of neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

  • Yahoo! News

    The FDA’s New Sugar Label Could Seriously Reduce Heart Disease and Diabetes-And Boost Longevity

    “Clear, easy-to-understand nutrition labels help guide everyone on the path to healthy eating,” says Linda Van Horn, PhD, RDN, American Heart Association volunteer expert said in a press release. “Consumers are better empowered to make more informed food choices that will help reduce their risk for heart disease and stroke and live longer, healthier lives.”

  • The Washington Post

    ‘It’s almost miraculous’: Tiger Woods’s return from back surgery is a medical marvel

    Before Woods, the chances may have been nonexistent. Wellington Hsu, a professor of orthopedic surgery and neurological surgery at Northwestern University, has studied athlete recovery from spinal fusion surgeries. For golfers, he pegged the successful return after spinal fusion surgery as a “0 percent success rate.” Hsu has seen players return to the NBA, NHL and NFL with few problems. He used PGA Tour pro Dudley Hart as a case study for golf.

  • CNN

    Diabetes drug has heart and kidney benefits, researchers find

    This study has the potential to influence medical practice, said Dr. Mark Molitch, professor of endocrinology at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, who was not involved in the new study but often has prescribed canagliflozin for his own patients. Canagliflozin, a medication used to treat type 2 diabetes, belongs to a class of drugs called sodium-glucose cotransporter-2, or SGLT2 inhibitors, which lower blood sugar by causing kidneys to remove sugar

  • Chicago Tribune

    A Chicago man ran the Boston Marathon with a cow heart valve 11 weeks after open-heart surgery. 13 years later, he’s running for another milestone.

    The long-distance runner from Chicago, who will attempt to become the first Illinois competitor to finish 40 straight Boston Marathons on Monday, had a question about a third option. “Do you have any cheetah valves?’’ Buciak asked Patrick McCarthy, Northwestern Memorial Hospital’s chief of cardiac surgery. “Because I’d really like to come out of this running faster.’’ Buciak sat in McCarthy’s office 13 years ago, a healthy 45-year-old man who got the shock of his life after a routine physical.