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.

  • Crain’s Chicago Business

    Lurie lists top worries of Chicago youth

    Survey finds violence, bullying, poverty top the list of social concerns for Chicago children and adolescents LURIE IDENTIFIES KID’S TOP SOCIAL ISSUES. Gun violence, bullying and poverty are the biggest social problems facing Chicago’s youth, according to parents surveyed by Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and the Chicago Department of Public Health. The survey of parents from all 77 community areas in Chicago also flagged racism and unsafe housing among the top ten concerns.

  • NBC News

    Academic programs aim to close diversity gap in medicine

    The Northwestern scholars program is run by Dr. Clyde Yancy, vice dean for diversity and inclusion at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and chief of cardiology at the Northwestern Memorial Hospital, in Chicago.[…]Sixty percent of the scholars pursue science, technology, engineering or math majors in college; are in premed tracks; or are in health care-related fields, such as nursing, said Janet Rocha, an assistant professor of medicine at the Feinberg School of Medicine.

  • Yahoo! News

    What’s Causing Your Annoying AF Cough That Won’t Go Away?

    If you have a cough that’s wet (mucus/congestion in your lungs in your cough) and if you can feel the congestion dripping from your sinuses down the back of the throat into the airway, then you know you have a cough caused by a post-nasal drip, says Angela C. Argento. M.D., interventional pulmonologist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. How to treat it: First line of defense? “Nasal sprays that can include steroids or just saline (salt water) or treatments to clear the sinuses, such as a sinus rinse or Neti pot,” Dr. Argento says. In severe cases, you may require a procedure with an ear, nose and throat doctor to address the issue, along with antibiotics, she adds.

  • Yahoo! News

    5 Belly Button Infections You Can Get (and What to Do if You Have One)

    Like other areas of your body, your navel naturally contains bacteria and fungi. If you don’t clean your belly button regularly and the circumstances are just right, microorganisms can proliferate and cause an infection, Edidiong Kaminska, M.D., a dermatologist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, tells SELF. There are a few other mechanisms behind common belly button infections, too. Here are five different belly button infections you can get, along with their symptoms.

  • U.S. News & World Report

    AHA News: For the Best Health, Does the Intensity of Your Workout Matter?

    Increasing exercise intensity can be as simple as adding a short sprint into a longer walk or run, said Mercedes Carnethon, vice chair of preventive medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “High-intensity interval training provides variety and challenges that appeal to some types of personalities,” Carnethon said. “Some people enjoy the sedative experience of jogging or walking briskly for a period of time. Others want to do short bursts of activity.”

  • Associated Press

    Haunting ‘Roma’ scene shines a rare spotlight on stillbirths

    Studies have found that allowing parents to spend time with stillborn infants may reduce mothers’ chances for developing anxiety and depression afterward. Many U.S. hospitals let parents spend hours or even days with them. Some hospitals take memento photographs, footprints and handprints for families; some provide cooling cots to preserve the body while the family grieves. We stress “how important it is to the patient for us to get comfortable being with them and talking about it and reassuring them that this is a terrible thing but they will get through it,” said Dr. Alan Peaceman, who heads Northwestern Medicine’s maternal-fetal medicine department in Chicago.

  • U.S. News & World Report

    Metastatic Prostate Cancer: Symptoms, Medications and More

    THE NUMBER OF MEN developing metastatic prostate cancer is increasing rapidly, research published in 2016 in the journal Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases suggests. The number of new cases of metastatic, or stage 4, prostate cancer shot up 72 percent between 2004 and 2013, according to the Northwestern Medicine study. Overall, one in nine men in the U.S. will develop prostate cancer during his lifetime, according to the American Cancer Society. While the five-year survival rate for men with early-stage prostate cancer is nearly 100 percent, the numbers are far worse for those with a metastatic form of the disease. About two-thirds of men with metastatic prostate cancer succumb to it within five years of their diagnosis, says Dr. Sean Cavanaugh, the radiation oncology director of the CTCA Genitourinary Cancer Institute in Atlanta.

  • Chicago Tribune

    How to be a ‘super ager’

    Super agers tend to share a number of traits that we can all seek to emulate. They’re generally active and engaged, whether through work, volunteering or socializing, and they’re resilient in the face of setbacks. “These individuals didn’t necessarily have easy lives,” says Emily Rogalski, associate professor at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. But they “tend to do a very good job of finding the silver lining.” Strong friendships may be key to protecting the brain in later life.

  • HealthDay

    AHA News: Living Near Convenience Stores Could Raise Risk of Artery-Clogging Condition

    After adjusting for various factors, researchers discovered participants had a 34 percent increase in the likelihood of developing atherosclerosis with each 10 percent increase in nearby convenience stores. “This supports the notion that place matters,” said Kiarri Kershaw, the study’s senior author. “An increase in convenience stores may make unhealthy eating options more readily accessible. It may also be a marker for a larger set of changes occurring in a neighborhood that could influence health, like a decline in wealth or economic investment.”

  • The Washington Post

    Is KonMari a fad? I can say this: It tamed my anxiety as much as my stuff.

    Why? When our environment is unkempt, anxiety can bleed into other parts of our lives, making us feel badly about ourselves. Researchers have known for years that being around clutter can raise stress levels, especially among women — who can find it difficult to manage and organize their family’s possessions. Inger Burnett-Zeigler, an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, said a disorganized environment is a constant visual reminder of things left undone. It can make people feel “like they’re overwhelmed, and their life is out of control and in chaos.” On the flip side, studies show that women who see their homes as restorative feel less depressed throughout the day. Having order and simplicity in your space can free up your mind.