Recent News

  • Enhancing Musician’s Medical Care

    Enhancing Musicians’ Medical Care A program launched this fall by Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine and School of Music seeks to improve treatment of elite musicians and educate music students and teachers about the causes and prevention of performance injuries. Says Toni-Marie Montgomery, DMA, School of Music dean, “Few music schools have adequately addressed the[…]

  • Student Orientation Week Held

    Student Orientation Week Held Starting Monday, August 23, the Feinberg School of Medicine welcomed the Class of 2008 with an array of activities during Orientation Week. Students were introduced to the curriculum and learned about financial aid, professionalism, and student organizations, as well as received basic life support training. Social events included an evening at[…]

  • Robert Satcher Selected for Top 50 List

    Robert Satcher Selected for Top 50 List The editors of Science Spectrum and U.S. Black Engineer & Information Technology have selected Robert L. Satcher, MD, PhD, assistant professor of orthopaedic surgery at the Feinberg School of Medicine, as one of this year’s “50 Most Important Blacks in Research Science.” Dr. Satcher and other honorees are[…]

  • Researcher Offers Tips for Better Sleep

    September 14, 2004 Researcher Offers Tips for Better Sleep CHICAGO—The 2003 Sleep in America poll by the National Sleep Foundation found that 67 percent of older Americans report trouble sleeping. Sleep for people over 55 often involves waking up several times during the night, not being able to get back to sleep and waking up[…]

  • Apparently Normal Teens are Not “Ticking Time Bombs,” Study Finds

    September 9, 2004 Broadcast Media: Tamara Kerrill Field at (847) 491-4888 or attlk@northwestern.edu Apparently Normal Teens are Not “Ticking Time Bombs,” Study Finds CHICAGO— Contrary to the psychoanalytic theory that children who appear to be well adjusted as adolescents are actually “ticking time bombs,” most normal teenagers adapt to and benefit from life experiences, a[…]

  • Auditorium Named for First African American Medical School Graduate

    August 25, 2004 Auditorium Named for First African American Medical School Graduate CHICAGO— Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine will dedicate a new state-of-the-art auditorium and atrium to Daniel Hale Williams, MD, the school’s first African American graduate and faculty member and one of the most noteworthy physicians of the 20th Century. Dr. Williams served[…]

  • University Hosts Workshop on Bioterrorism

    August 19, 2004 Contact: Charles R. Loebbaka at 847/491-4887 or atc-loebbaka@northwestern.edu University Hosts Workshop on Bioterrorism CHICAGO— Northwestern University was host on Wednesday, August 12, to a workshop on the crucial role of the media in reporting on a bioterrorist attack. The workshop featured remarks by U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge and Mary[…]

  • Public Invited to Breast Cancer Forum

    August 19, 2004 Public Invited to Breast Cancer Forum CHICAGO— The 2004 Lynn Sage Breast Cancer Town Hall meeting, “Expert Perspectives on the Latest Breast Cancer Treatments and Research,” which is free and open to the public, will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 12, at Northwestern University, Thorne Auditorium, 375 East[…]

  • In Memoriam (Eugene Derlacki)

    In Memoriam (Eugene Derlacki) Eugene L. Derlacki, MD, professor emeritus of otolaryngology—head and neck surgery at the Feinberg School of Medicine, died July 21 at a retirement home in Corvallis, Oregon; he was 91. Born and raised in the Chicago area, Dr. Derlacki obtained both his bachelor’s and MD degrees from Northwestern University. He completed[…]

  • Drug-Behavioral Therapy Helps Depressed Teens

    August 25, 2004 Drug-Behavioral Therapy Helps Depressed Teens CHICAGO— Adolescents with major depressive disorder show improvement after treatment that combines the antidepressant fluoxetine (Prozac®) and cognitive behavioral therapy, according to the results of the Treatment for Adolescents with Depression Study (TADS), published in the August 18 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.[…]

  • Major Grant Renewal Funds Cancer Clinical Studies

    August 12, 2004 Major Grant Renewal Funds Cancer Clinical Studies CHICAGO— Northwestern University has received a six-year renewal grant of $2.9 million from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) through the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG). The grant will fund an extensive portfolio of cancer clinical studies and will be administered by the Robert H. Lurie[…]

  • One in Four Adults at Risk for Irregular Heart Rhythm

    August 19, 2004 One in Four Adults at Risk for Irregular Heart Rhythm CHICAGO— One in four adults age 40 and older is at risk for developing a heart rhythm abnormality known as atrial fibrillation. What is worse, many of them may not even know they are having symptoms, according to a study in the[…]

  • Preventive Medicine Leader Recognized

    Preventive Medicine Leader Recognized Jeremiah Stamler, MD, professor emeritus of preventive medicine at the Feinberg School of Medicine, has been named an American Heart Association (AHA) Distinguished Scientist. This honor is bestowed on a highly select group of investigators who have made significant contributions to cardiovascular and stroke research. In a letter dated July 29,[…]

  • Brain Development, Puberty: Key to Learning Problems?

    July 1, 2004 Contact: Wendy Leopold at 847/491-4890 or atw-leopold@northwestern.edu Brain Development, Puberty: Key to Learning Problems? EVANSTON, ILL.— A Northwestern University study is the first to suggest that delayed brain development and its interaction with puberty may be key factors contributing to language-based learning disabilities such as dyslexia. The article appears in the June[…]

  • In Memoriam (Leonid Calenoff)

    July 21, 2004 In Memoriam (Leonid Calenoff) Leonid Calenoff, MD, professor emeritus of radiology at the Feinberg School of Medicine, died on July 16 in Illinois of complications from esophageal cancer. He was 80. Born in Vienna, Austria, Dr. Calenoff served as a medic in the Bulgarian Army during World War II. After the war,[…]

  • Gene Mutation Causes Cell Deficits in Aging

    July 1, 2004 Gene Mutation Causes Cell Deficits in Aging CHICAGO— A mutation of the gene for lamin A protein gradually causes devastating effects on cellular structure and function in Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome, a rare, fatal genetic condition characterized by an appearance of accelerated aging in children. A study on the lamin A gene mutation[…]

  • Hyperglycemia and Pregnancy Study Receives $9.2 Million

    July 21, 2004 Hyperglycemia and Pregnancy Study Receives $9.2 Million CHICAGO— Northwestern University has received a four-year, $9.2 million renewal grant from the National Institutes of Health to support the Hyperglycemia and Adverse Pregnancy Outcome (HAPO) study. An additional $1.7 million has been awarded to fund the HAPO Data Coordinating Center. Boyd E. Metzger, MD,[…]

  • Nuzzarello Heads Office of Student Programs

    July 7, 2004 Nuzzarello Heads Office of Student Programs Angela Nuzzarello, MD, MHPE, has been appointed associate dean for student programs and professional development at the Feinberg School of Medicine. She succeeds Jack F. Snarr, PhD ’67, who retired earlier this month after 29 years as head of the Office of Student Affairs. Dr. Nuzzarello[…]

  • Keeping Summer Fun Safe

    July 9, 2004 Keeping Summer Fun Safe Summer, with its warmer temperatures and sunny skies, entices everyone to get moving and enjoy the outdoors. While boosting activity levels can increase summer fun, the season presents hazards to personal health and safety if one does not exercise caution. “Active people are generally more susceptible to a[…]