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.

  • CNN

    More health problems reported from cosmetic products

    However, the lead study author, Dr. Steve Xu, believes the number of adverse health events is probably much higher and more data are needed. “These numbers are likely underreported. We need better reporting, from both consumers and clinicians,” Xu said. “Broadly, the hope of our paper was to continue this discussion to modernize and expand the collection of data about personal care products. If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it, was our key point.”

  • Reuters

    Reports of side effects with cosmetics increasing

    “Adverse events to cosmetics matter to patients mostly because nearly everyone uses a cosmetic or personal care product every single day – this includes newborns, infants and pregnant women,” said senior study author Dr. Shuai Xu, a dermatology researcher at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. “Unlike drugs and medical devices, cosmetics permeate daily life,” Xu said by email. “We’re exposed to hundreds of chemicals a day from these products.”

  • Crain’s Chicago Business

    What Chicago experts think about Senate’s health care bill

    “The insurance subsidies are going to be retained for a limited amount of time. The premium assistance will peak in 2021 then goes down through 2026. The basis for premium assistance has changed. Before, it was pegged at the second-lowest silver plan; now it will be pegged at the so-called applicable median cost plan.’ The assumption is that this will translate to less premium assistance. But, as they say, results may vary. The impact will vary state to state. Someone’s going to have analyze the Illinois effect.” – Dr. Joel Shalowitz, professor of preventive medicine, Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, and health care system expert

  • Science Daily

    Battling infectious diseases with 3-D protein structures

    An international team of scientists including the Computation Institute has determined the 3-D atomic structures of more than 1,000 proteins that are potential targets for drugs and vaccines to combat some of the world’s most dangerous emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases…”Almost 50 percent of the structures that we have deposited in the Protein Data Bank are proteins that were requested by scientific investigators from around the world,” said Wayne Anderson of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, who is director of the project.

  • Science Daily

    Sugar-coated nanomaterial excels at promoting bone growth

    “Regenerative medicine can improve quality of life by offering less invasive and more successful approaches to promoting bone growth,” said Samuel I. Stupp, who developed the new nanomaterial. “Our method is very flexible and could be adapted for the regeneration of other tissues, including muscle, tendons and cartilage.”…For the interdisciplinary study, Stupp collaborated with Dr. Wellington K. Hsu, associate professor of orthopaedic surgery, and Erin L. K. Hsu, research assistant professor of orthopaedic surgery, both at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.

  • U.S. News & World Report

    What New Diagnostic Tests Might Be Available for MS Soon?

    “Sometimes doctors diagnose MS but it’s really a different disease, and sometimes multiple sclerosis is present and it’s not picked up,” says Dr. Roumen Balabanov, a neurologist at Chicago’s Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

  • Conde Nast Traveler

    Why Travel May Be the Secret to a Longer Life

    As most of us age, our brains shrink, which leads to a decline in cognition (or thinking skills) the older we get. “Atrophy is thought to contribute in part to the moments of forgetfulness we experience with aging,” says Emily Rogalski, Ph.D., the director of the study. SuperAgers like Scott, however, lose less brain volume—one study found that over the course of 18 months, ‘normal’ agers lost volume in the cortex (the brain area linked to critical thinking) twice as fast as SuperAgers.

  • Health

    How to Stop Itching Your Skin If You Have Eczema

    “Don’t scratch” is probably one of the best—and worst—pieces of advice an eczema patient can receive. The skin condition, which is caused by an abnormal immune reaction that results in dry, red, cracked patches of skin, is only made worse by itching. Your nails damage the skin barrier, which then ramps up inflammatory molecules that exacerbate the itch, explains Jonathan Silverberg, MD, PhD, assistant professor of dermatology at Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

  • Live Science

    Trying to Conceive: 12 Tips for Women

    The most important advice for a woman who wants to get pregnant is to get to know her body, specifically her menstrual cycle, said Dr. Mary Ellen Pavone, a reproductive endocrinologist and infertility specialist and medical director of the IVF program at Northwestern Medicine’s Fertility and Reproductive Medicine in Chicago.

  • Chicago Tribune

    ‘Where can I fit in?’: Fatherhood gets real at local expectant-dads class

    Expectant fatherhood gets real at the dads-only class at Northwestern Memorial’s Prentice Women’s Hospital, where pediatrician and dad Craig Garfield shares practical information and personal anecdotes, and fields questions about everything from Velcro swaddling blankets (he’s on the fence) to the strange color of a newborn (yes, they can initially look a little blue).