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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Urologists often deal with health problems that arise from two intimate functions: peeing and sex. There are two parts of a urologist’s job. “There’s the serious illness stuff, like cancers,” said Nelson Bennett, a professor of urology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, who specializes in male sexual function. “But there’s a big chunk of our practice that is basically quality of life. I tell my patients that no one dies of not having an erection, but they’re still suffering.” All of this may be why people who have seen a urologist (present company included) sometimes say the results are life altering. There are treatment options for almost every erectile problem, including oral medications, injectable medications, surgery and cognitive behavioral therapy, Dr. Bennett said. Although it can be tempting to furtively order medications such as Viagra on direct-to-consumer websites, a practice that Dr. Bennett found, in a 2021 study, is dramatically increasing, he said there are several reasons to see a specialist instead. “We can actually begin to figure out why you’re having the problem, as opposed to just taking medication to cover it up,” he said. Some medications can also affect erections, such as antidepressants, which can cause orgasms to be delayed, or vanish altogether. And a urologist can screen for those, he said.
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Following four California mass shootings in the span of eight days that left 25 people dead and 17 injured, some gun violence researchers said they’re concerned that a phenomenon known as “mass shooting contagion” is occurring across the state. “There are mass shootings waiting to happen, so one of them can influence the other,” Lori Post, director of the Buehler Center for Health Policy and Economics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, told ABC News. Post, who keeps a database of mass shootings dating back to 1966, added, “If a would-be shooter sees all the attention of another mass shooter, it may incentivize him to carry out his plan. But one mass shooting does not inspire a normal person to commit a massacre.”
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As many as 1 in 3 adults and 1 in 4 kids suffers from a seasonal allergy, a food allergy or eczema, the latest government data shows. Caused by a reaction to plant pollen, seasonal allergies were the most common type of allergy in both kids and adults. Symptoms include sniffling, coughing and itchy eyes. Peter Lio, MD, a clinical assistant professor of dermatology and pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, said he is seeing a tremendous number of allergic patients in his practice. It seems that there has been an increase over prior decades, though it is not clear why, Lio said. Chemicals and pollutants in the environment can damage your skin, gut and lung barriers, and “once damaged, allergens can enter into our bodies in an abnormal way and are more likely to cause allergic sensitization,” he explained. There is good news on the eczema front, Lio noted. “We are better than ever at treating eczema and doing so with safer treatments, and we are now starting to talk about the concept of remission or getting people so much better that they can reduce or even stop some of their treatments,” he said.
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Half of mass attackers in the United States were retaliating for personal, domestic or workplace-related grievances, and many used firearms that were obtained legally. The researchers found that three-quarters of the perpetrators had displayed behaviors or communicated in a way that concerned others before the attack. About 29 percent of attackers were described either by themselves or others as “withdrawn, loners or anti-social,” the report said, and more than half had experience mental health symptoms before the attack. Lori Ann Post, PhD, who studies mass killings as a public health issue at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, said mass shooters age 26 and older tend to be acting in retaliation for a perceived loss or failure. “The older ones seem to have left home; they’ve separated from their parents, but then they self implode and destroy their life,” she said. “They want revenge, they’re disgruntled, they want payback.” She said the report should have more narrowly defined mass attacks as incidents in which a perpetrator killed four or more people, because such attackers tend to be more organized and thoughtful in their planning. However, “No matter who you are, what data you use, there is an escalation going on,” she said.
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David Liss, PhD is a researcher with Northwestern Medicine.
“Not everyone needs an annual checkup,” he said.
That’s the key message from Liss, who helped craft new guidelines from the Society of General Internal Medicine.
“When you do go in you don’t necessarily need a physical exam,” he said.
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“Unfortunately, it does not take many of the virus particles to cause an infection, which usually develops within 24 to 48 hours,” says Dr. Michael Bauer, a pediatrician and medical director at Northwestern Medicine Lake Forest Hospital, tells Yahoo Life.
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It’s normal to have an occasional bout of constipation. Uncomfortable as it may be, this usually resolves within a few days. But the problem may be chronic if you have fewer than three bowel movements per week, you need to strain for at least a quarter of all your bowel movements, stool is often hard or lumpy and sometimes you feel like your bowels haven’t fully emptied. “Many older adults assume that constipation is just another inevitable part of aging, but it can be avoided through lifestyle [strategies and] occasionally medication,” says Christian Stevoff, MD, a gastroenterologist at Northwestern Medicine and assistant professor of gastroenterology and hepatology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. Chronic constipation might be more common in older adults, affecting about 26 percent of women and 16 percent of men over age 65, and 34 percent of women and 26 percent of men older than 85. Other factors, including insufficient fiber and too little physical activity, can also contribute. Medications such as opioids and certain antidepressants, blood pressure meds and Parkinson’s disease drugs are all potential culprits, Stevoff says.
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A new threat has emerged in the United States’ illicit drug supply: an animal tranquilizer called xylazine. The drug is showing up in synthetic opioids, particularly fentanyl, leading to more overdoses and alarming side effects. Xylazine was created in the 1960s and is used in veterinary medicine to sedate animals during procedures or diagnostic testing, according to the DEA. Xylazine is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for human use. While it has been given in the past for household pets, the sedative is now typically used for larger animals like horse, sheep and elk. Anecdotal reports indicate using xylazine causes open wounds to “spontaneously develop,” said Maryann Mason, PhD, associate professor of emergency medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. These open wounds may lead to necrosis, or dead tissue, and eventually amputation of affected limbs, she said. There is no amount of xylazine that is safe for humans as humans are about 10 to 20 times more sensitive to xylazine than animals are.
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For the first time in five decades, the anniversary of the Supreme Court’s 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade is being marked in a post-Roe world. On Sunday, the 50th anniversary of the court’s milestone ruling making abortion a protected, constitutional right, marches are taking place across the country amid uncertainty about the current state of reproductive rights. “Roe v. Wade, the case, has been overturned, but Roe is not dead,” Katie Watson, JD, an associate professor of medical education, medical social sciences and obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine said. “Roe is something larger than the case. It’s also a cultural phenomena that shaped the lives of all American women for 49 years. It’s also not dead in the sense that its principles have been carried forward in state legislation and in state constitutional analyses.” Watson further says, “American women aren’t standing still for this. They are not surrendering to this brutal hostage taking effort of their state governments to say, we’re going to force you to create another human being against your will. They’re literally moving. They’re literally getting out of Dodge, and seeking those abortions.”
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One myth includes the idea that you should never feed peanut products to your children within their first few years of life. For years, experts told new parents that the best way to prevent their children from developing food allergies was to avoid feeding them common allergenic foods, like peanuts or eggs, during their first few years of life. But now, allergy experts say, it’s better to introduce peanut products to your child early on. If your baby does not have severe eczema or a known food allergy, you can start introducing peanut products (such as watered-down peanut butter, peanut puffs or peanut powders, but not whole peanuts) at around 4 to 6 months, when your baby is ready for solids. Start with two teaspoons of smooth peanut butter mixed with water, breast milk or formula, two to three times a week, said Dr. Ruchi Gupta, a professor of pediatrics and the director of the Center for Food Allergy & Asthma Research at the Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine. If your baby has severe eczema, first ask your pediatrician or an allergist about starting peanut products around 4 months. “It is also important to feed your baby a diverse diet in their first year of life to prevent food allergies,” Dr. Gupta said.