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 woman received two bundles of joy after a bout with aggressive breast cancer that caused the removal of both her fallopian tubes and ovaries. With her cancer diagnosis came the devastating thought of not having any more children. So, before starting chemotherapy, a double mastectomy, and removing her fallopian tubes, the woman named Shelly Battista met with Dr. Kara Goldman, “She knew that this chemotherapy would save her life but would likely take her fertility,” Goldman said. With that, eight healthy embryos were frozen. After one year following her cancer treatment, Battista was cleared for pregnancy. “There’s a tremendous misconception that you have to have ovaries in order to carry a pregnancy, but actually, the ovaries and uterus function quite separately from each other,” Goldman said. It was a challenging process nonetheless. Battista underwent two failed embryo transfers, but the third time was the charm. “We didn’t want to get our hopes up too high, right? So, when we got the phone call from Dr. Goldman, she called us herself. We were very, very ecstatic,” Battista said. As they went to their first ultrasound, there was yet another surprise.
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Making the decision to step away from a job is not always easy or feasible. But when your physical or emotional well-being is suffering and your stress isn’t eased by the occasional mental health day, experts say it’s generally best to start looking elsewhere. Just be sure to give it some thought before rage quitting. Here are some signs it might be time to leave — and what to do if you can’t. Work is often intertwined with people’s identities. Our job titles, the organization we work for and even the amount of time that we spend working each day can become a big part of who we are. But what happens when your priorities change and you no longer feel the same level of attachment to your job? “When people have a shift in an aspect of their identity, that can absolutely lead to depression and anxiety,” said Stewart Shankman, a professor of psychology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. If work used to be a core aspect of your identity and now it isn’t, then that may be a reason to consider stepping away. Even if you cannot stop working at the moment, try to take time to explore the things that do feel meaningful to you right now. There may be some other part of your life that is filling the role that work used to play, Dr. Shankman said. “Your job doesn’t necessarily have to be the thing that defines you,” he added.
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As colds, flu and COVID continue to circle this winter, a new U.S. government study finds that young children infected with COVID plus a second virus tend to become sicker. While severe COVID is rare among children, kids can and do fall ill enough to end up in the hospital. When youngsters have more than one infection, it’s hard to know what’s “driving” their symptoms, said William Muller, MD, PhD, an infectious disease specialist at Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. He also noted that severely ill kids are probably more often tested for multiple bugs. But to Muller, the bottom line is straightforward: “We need to vaccinate more,” he said. That means both COVID vaccination and the yearly flu shot, Muller said. Both can be given to children age 6 months or older, and both slash the risk of severe illness. Both doctors stressed that the point is not to alarm parents: The vast majority of children with COVID or the flu do not land in the hospital. At the same time, there are ways to lower those odds.
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If you’re like most Americans, someone in your family or social circle is sick right now with COVID, flu, a cold or RSV. It is in fact, possible, to catch more than one of these germs at the same time. There’s plenty of evidence of people testing positive for, say, COVID and the flu or flu and RSV simultaneously. “Absolutely, you can catch more than one virus at the same time,” says Tina Tan, MD, professor of pediatrics in infectious diseases at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. “We’ve had kids that have actually had three different viruses. Some of them come in with RSV. They’ve also had influenza and enterovirus. There have been other kids who have presented with COVID and influenza.” The risk for multiple infections is especially high this year because so many viruses have been surging together. “It’s kind of a perfect storm for co-infections,” Tan says. It’s unclear how often this happens because most of the testing for this sort of thing is done on hospitalized patients, who probably aren’t representative of the general public. But some studies have found co-infections in up to 20% of those patients. The risk, however, doesn’t appear to be the same for everyone. Children appear to be far more likely to get more than one bug on top of the other, especially very young kids, researchers say.
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Medication shortages aren’t just an American problem, they aren’t limited to children’s medications, and in some instances were becoming a concern before 2020. In the meantime, we may continue to see medication shortages, which is particularly gutting when it comes to our children. Due to the confluence of the flu, RSVP and Covid, shortages have been common. That’s coupled with the outsourcing of production of most active pharmaceutical ingredients in drugs, something that’s been connected to the current amoxicillin shortage. If there are hold ups in getting those active ingredients into the global supply change, that can lead to shortages of essential medications. Sterling Elliot, a clinical pharmacist and assistant professor of orthopaedic surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of medicine who has described the shortages of medications in the United States as “a very ugly scenario” that’s been ongoing for years, said the shortages have bubbled up into our consciousness because seeing little kids in harm’s way is so poignantly awful for parents. “There’s no worse feeling on the planet as a parent than the feeling that I cannot help my kid,” he said.
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Childhood vaccination rates have fallen for the third year in a row, according to the CDC. Experts say there are a few potential factors at play. “During the first year of the pandemic, well child care visits dropped dramatically, starting this downward trend in immunization rates,” said Michael Bauer, MD, clinical assistant professor of pediatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. At the same time, the pandemic became politicized and encouraged “a simultaneous rise in public health policies coming into question and distrust in government decisions – leading to an increase in anti-vaccination sentiment,” Bauer says. Along with the distrust, Bauer notes “an increase in the number of states enacting laws allowing patients to refuse to vaccinate their children aside from medical reasons.” He adds that “states that have the strictest laws have the highest rates of vaccine compliance.” Both the unvaccinated and those around them can be at risk for getting sick. “Even a slight drop in vaccination rates can lead to dramatic increases in these preventable illnesses, as evidenced by recent outbreaks of measles, which is highly preventable,” Bauer says.
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While appendicitis is a common emergency, Black people experiencing its symptoms often have a delayed diagnosis. But that doesn’t happen in lower-quality hospitals that serve more Black patients, according to new research. There, Black people are diagnosed more quickly. “There is clearly a benefit to patients being treated in predominantly minority-serving hospitals when they are having symptoms of appendicitis,” said senior author Anne Stey, MD, surgeon and assistant professor of surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, in Chicago. Symptoms of appendicitis include sudden pain that begins on the right side of the lower abdomen; pain that worsens if you cough, walk or make other jarring movements; nausea and vomiting; and loss of appetite. The researchers found that diagnosis delays were less common in hospitals serving populations that were greater than 50% Black or Hispanic people compared to those where they represented less than 25%. “It may be hospitals that are more used to serving racial-ethnic minority patients are better at diagnosing them, because they’re more culturally informed and have a better understanding of these patients,” Stey said.
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Gas stoves have come under scrutiny after a new study linked the common appliance to nearly 13% of cases of childhood asthma. The latest study’s finding that 12.7% of current childhood asthma nationwide is attributed to gas stove use seems extreme – it’s similar to the childhood asthma burden linked to secondhand smoke exposure. “This may not be a true representation of what is happening, and there is uncertainty around how many children with asthma are truly because of those emissions,” said Dr. Deeba Maswood, health system clinician of allergy and immunology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. She further says, “Asthma is a multifactorial disease.”
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Breast cancer is a common diagnosis for women of all races. But there are differences along racial lines when it comes to early detection, treatment and survival rates. The disease is deadliest for non-Hispanic Black women. They’re more likely than women of other races or ethnicities to get diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer, and they have higher odds of having triple=negative breast cancer, which is a hard-to-treat form of the disease that spreads fast. In order to prevent this it is important for patients to ask about national treatment guidelines. Grace Suh, MD, health system clinician of hematology and oncology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, says she understands why people are worried their race or ethnicity might affect their treatment. Studies show people of color often get a lower quality of care compared to other races. “I try to bring in objective treatment guidelines that are accessible to everybody, not just doctors or people who have money,” Suh says, “so they feel comfortable that they’re receiving the proper care that’s expected for their condition.”
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For millions of Americans, the winter months – when the days get shorter and the nights grow colder – are a time of sadness and struggle. It’s called winter-pattern seasonal affective disorder, or SAD. Signs of SAD include excessive sleep, overeating and avoiding social activities. Sunlight is so important to our brain and body that the retinas in our eyes have specialized photoreceptors that send signals to the brain’s perihabenular nucleus, which regulates mood. These receptors also send signals to our central circadian clock, which regulates our circadian cycles in behavior and physiology, said Phyllis Zee, MD, PhD, a neurologist and director of the Center for Circadian and Sleep Medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. Scientists do not know for certain why some people are more susceptible to SAD, but one theory is that they may have less-sensitive photoreceptors in their eyes, meaning they are not taking in enough sunlight to keep these clocks aligned