Recent News

  • Patricia Spear Elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Patricia Spear Elected to National Academy of Sciences Patricia G. Spear, PhD, Guy and Anne Youmans Professor of Microbiology—Immunology at the medical school, recently received what is considered to be one of the highest honors that can be awarded to an American scientist—election to the National Academy of Sciences. Nationwide, only 72 people this year[…]

  • Pediatrics Faculty Featured in Public Television Series

    Pediatrics Faculty Featured in Public Television Series The patients, families, and physicians of Children’s Memorial Hospital (CMH) in Chicago were recently featured in a six-week public television series called “Children’s Hospital” that began airing nationally in early July. Selected from among several children’s hospitals across the country, CMH is a member of the McGaw Medical[…]

  • New Protease Inhibitor Has Added Benefits

    July 6, 2002 New Protease Inhibitor Has Added Benefits BARCELONA— Atazanavir, a potent new HIV-fighting protease inhibitor, reduces high cholesterol and triglyceride levels that may be caused by other protease inhibitors, a Northwestern University researcher reported today at the XIV International AIDS Conference. Although protease inhibitors have been shown to be safe and effective in[…]

  • Cancer Expert Jordan Honored by Queen

    June 20, 2002 Cancer Expert Jordan Honored by Queen CHICAGO— Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II has awarded an OBE (Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) to V. Craig Jordan, the Diana, Princess of Wales Professor of Cancer Research, and professor of molecular pharmacology and biological chemistry at The Feinberg School of[…]

  • Cancer Walk Draws Nearly 3,500

    Cancer Walk Draws Nearly 3,500 Nearly 3,500 cancer survivors, friends, family members, and others touched by cancer participated in a National Cancer Survivors’ Day walk sponsored by the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. The five-mile lakefront walk from downtown Chicago to McCormick Place and back drew such figures as Attorney General[…]

  • Cholesterol-Lowering Drug Aids Diabetes

    June 20, 2002 Cholesterol-Lowering Drug Aids Diabetes CHICAGO— Statins, drugs usually prescribed for high cholesterol, have been found to slow diabetes-related kidney damage, according to a Northwestern University research study published in the June 11 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. The study found that statins affect the activity of a[…]

  • Fighting Disease on the Cellular Level

    June 21, 2002 Fighting Disease on the Cellular Level CHICAGO— Contrary to those static diagrams of a cell you may remember from high school biology, a eukaryotic cell (cell with a nucleus) is actually a dynamic and intricately ordered living creature, complete with its own set of tiny “organs” and empowered by thousands of chemical[…]

  • Graduates Urged to Face New Medical Challenges

    Graduates Urged to Face New Medical Challenges The medical school’s 144th Graduation Convocation, held May 24 at Navy Pier, featured David Satcher, MD, PhD, former U.S. surgeon general. In his address, “The MD Responsibility to the Health of the Public,” Dr. Satcher urged the graduates to tackle existing medical challenges while acknowledging past progress. “The[…]

  • In Memoriam (Charles Kramer, Robert Norman, Warren Wells, Harold Visotsky)

    In Memoriam (Charles Kramer, Robert Norman, Warren Wells, Harold Visotsky) Charles H. Kramer, MD, professor emeritus of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and a leader in family therapy, died April 30 at age 79. Dr. Kramer earned his undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Illinois, established a private practice in suburban Chicago for several[…]

  • Nanotechnology Technique Could Lead to Ultimate Gene Chip

    June 10, 2002 Contact: Megan Fellman at (847) 491-3115 or atfellman@northwestern.edu Nanotechnology Technique Could Lead to Ultimate Gene Chip EVANSTON, ILL.— Using an atomic force microscope tip as a pen and different single-stranded DNA as inks, scientists at Northwestern University have demonstrated a technique that could lead to the ultimate high-density gene chip because it[…]

  • New Device Removes Drinking Water Contaminants

    June 20, 2002 Contact: Megan Fellman at (847) 491-3115 or atfellman@northwestern.edu New Device Removes Drinking Water Contaminants EVANSTON, ILL.— A Northwestern University environmental engineer has received a U.S. patent for a treatment device that renders perchlorate—a thyroid-damaging ingredient of rocket fuel and a drinking water problem—harmless. The applications extend beyond the safety of drinking water[…]

  • McGaw Medical Center Welcomes New Housestaff

    McGaw Medical Center Welcomes New Housestaff The McGaw Medical Center of Northwestern University welcomed 332 new residents and fellows this month. On June 18 orientation was held for 112 first-year residents and 31 new upper-level residents at Northwestern Memorial Hospital (NMH) and VA Chicago Health Care System—Lakeside Division as well as the Rehabilitation Institute of[…]

  • NU-AID Volunteers Serve the Underserved in Nicaragua

    NU-AID Volunteers Serve the Underserved in Nicaragua The Northwestern University Alliance for International Development (NU-AID), a medical school student organization, will bring free health services to the people of Nicaragua this June 22–30. Twenty-one students and four faculty physicians will set up clinics in and near the towns of Matagalpa and Jinotega. Dispensing some $200,000[…]

  • University Receives Grant to Study Oral Cancer

    June 20, 2002 University Receives Grant to Study Oral Cancer CHICAGO— Oral cancer currently accounts for almost 6 percent of all malignancies, and its incidence is increasing worldwide. At least 90 percent of oral cancers are squamous cell carcinomas that originate from the oral epithelium, a thin lining of cells that covers tissues in the[…]

  • Student AMWA Chapter Recognized

    Student AMWA Chapter Recognized The student chapter of the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA) was selected the top graduate student organization at Northwestern on May 30 during the University Honors Day. The group was selected based on the nature and frequency of programs conducted. The chapter’s activities include presenting three guest speakers on topics ranging[…]

  • Choline Prevents Liver Damage in Patients on IV Nutrition

    May 15, 2002 Choline Prevents Liver Damage in Patients on IV Nutrition CHICAGO— Research has shown that fatty liver, a condition associated with obesity, diabetes and heavy alcohol consumption, often leads to cirrhosis of the liver or liver failure. Studies conducted by Alan L. Buchman, MD, associate professor of medicine at The Feinberg School of[…]

  • Construction Season Opens on Chicago Campus

    Construction Season Opens on Chicago Campus An often-heard saying is that Chicago has two seasons: winter and construction. If that’s the case, the construction season has begun in earnest on Northwestern’s Chicago campus with two major projects under way. Northwestern Memorial Hospital’s Wesley Pavilion, at the northwest corner of Fairbanks Court and Superior Street, is[…]

  • 1961 Wesley Nursing Grads Plan Reunion

    1961 Wesley Nursing Grads Plan Reunion All 1961 graduates of the Wesley Memorial Hospital School of Nursing are invited to reunion festivities planned for Chicago in spring 2003. For information, contact Carol Ross Premo at 3710 Ramshorn Drive, Fremont, MI 49412 or cpremo@ncats.net. The Wesley nursing school affiliated with Northwestern University in 1905 and offered[…]

  • Dr. David Satcher to Address Northwestern Medical Graduates

    Dr. David Satcher to Address Northwestern Medical Graduates Fomer U.S. Surgeon General David Satcher, MD, PhD, will speak to this year’s graduates of Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine during graduation convocation May 24 at Navy Pier. One hundred sixty-nine graduates will receive MD degrees; five of them also will receive PhD degrees, three others[…]