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INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE OF CHICAGO

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  • 23 Jan 2026 12:57 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    This week saw the Institute of Medicine of Chicago host its biennial State of Health of Chicago event and panel discussion. [Health News Illinois]

    The panel, moderated by Health News Illinois, took a deep dive into a wide range of health issues facing the city, including addressing health disparities, improving public trust in health and the potential impact of federal changes to the Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

    Panelists included:

    • Dr. Arti Barnes, Chief Medical Officer, Illinois Dept. of Public Health
    • Dr. Kimberley Darey, CEO and President, Edward – Elmhurst Hospital, Endeavor Health System
    • Ollie Idowu, President and CEO, Illinois Primary Health Care Association
    • Dr. Olusimbo Ige, Commissioner of the City of Chicago Department of Public Health
    • Dr. Ian Jasenof, Chief Medical Officer, Mile Square Center, University of Illinois Health Center
    • Dr. Doriane Miller, Director, Center for Community Health & Vitality, University of Chicago Medical Center
    • Sana Syal, Senior Director of Programs and Strategic Impact Leader, Greater Chicago Food Depository
    • Dr. Lauren Smith, Chief Medical Officer, Cook County Health

    Edited excerpts below:

    HNI: What do you see as some of the pressing health issues facing the communities you serve?

    Sana SyalSome of the most pressing health concerns for me, I care less about my own health and seeing my doctor if I'm worried about putting food on the table for my kids. And so health-related social needs for me are the most pressing health-related concern, and cross-sector partnerships between healthcare and community-based organizations are critical to help us ensure that people are getting the care that they need in the order that they prioritize for themselves.

    Dr. Lauren SmithWe have a 180-year history of providing care to Cook County residents, regardless of their ability to pay. So obviously for us, the hot burning topic is the one behind the (Affordable Care Act) and the impact that it might have. So you know, Cook County, prior to the Affordable Care Act, almost 50 percent of our patients were uninsured. And we did see that drop over these last five to 10 years, down to 20 percent. And we've already started to see an uptick towards the end of 2025. Last year, we spent about $280 million dollars in charity care. We estimate that 100 million more will be added on top of that in 2026. Then obviously, as other changes that will kick off in 2027, that impact and that ripple effect will really have a huge impact on the ability for us to continue to do as much charity care as we do. We do believe in the city, we provide the largest percentage of charity care in Chicagoland. And so for us, that's kind of the biggest thing. Then the other pressing topic, I would say, is probably the shortages in the workforce. So, nursing positions are getting more and more challenging to recruit. It is definitely a new day from recruiting docs 20 years ago to what we're seeing today, as well as nurses.

    Ollie Idowu: We have a math problem. So everyone here knows what happened with HR1, or (the One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act), whatever you want to call it, it's impossible to expect that you can cut a trillion dollars from the system and not have to worry about sustainability. So the biggest issue facing my health centers today is sustainability. The safety net is really looking at what it means to be sustainable. All those fights we had 10, 15, 20 years ago, about access, about social determinants of health, about health-related social needs, about health equity, we're not even having those conversations. First of all, we can't even say some of those words. But honestly speaking, we have a math problem, and that's where we are. I mean, I'm looking at health centers that traditionally are underfunded year over year. One thing that's kept us alive with 340B, and now we're looking at churn because of what's going to happen with redeterminations, with work requirements. We have shortages in the workforce. Again, I don't want to sound like a Debbie Downer, but we have a math problem.

    HNI: What are some steps your organizations is taking to address these challenges?

    Dr. Doriane Miller: I want to talk a little bit about partnerships and the importance of partnerships in addressing some of these challenges. I'm going to call out a partnership in particular that the University of Chicago has with RUSH, the project is called Live Healthy Chicago, in which we're trying to address both clinical identification and management, as well as community-based interventions for people who have high blood pressure. It's a wonderful opportunity.... being able to partner with RUSH, the BMO Institute for Health Equity and others to do work in the space is incredibly important. From an institutional standpoint, we are standing up the first free-standing comprehensive cancer center in the state of Illinois at the University of Chicago, with the opening in the spring of 2027. And that's directly in response to data that we generated through our Community Health Needs Assessment 14 years ago in order to look at this issue and to respond to the issues and the needs of the people that live in our community. And so again, just underscoring the question of making a generational investment in terms of tackling these problems.

    Dr. Kimberley Darey Telehealth, for sure, is one of the access points that we really try to provide to patients. And then, more importantly, what we're trying to do is what we call — this isn't really innovation, but it really is more like partnership — warm handoffs. We happen to be a pretty popular Elmhurst Hospital, for instance, is a very popular hospital. People love our emergency department just because we have other competing hospitals in the area... they just like coming to my hospital, even though that's not their health home. But what we found is that, we want patients to really start establishing relationships, and how do we do that is some handouts, either back to their primary care doctors... and I will just touch a little bit on maternal health, I'm an OBG/YN by trade, but I do want to just mention that part of that disparity with the black maternal health issues is that many women don't have a place where they call their health home. So they are going from hospital to hospital, many times, delivering to some place that might be close to their house, but their doctor is in a whole other area. And so part of that is, once again, the insurance issues and lack of access, and so women don't get a chance to have... healthy women that suddenly are not able to see a doctor for the next 10 or 12 visits, they now have to bounce around and be treated like somebody that they don't know. And so when they're actually delivering, then you don't have that trust there. You don't establish those relationships at that hospital or with those doctors. And so it really does become a huge health risk and not even just black women that are pregnant, but women with low resources have the same issue. Women who are immigrants, those who are undocumented, still go through a lot of that change. So that's why we partner with so many FQHCs, for instance, and other community health clinics to say, 'Hey, listen, they're in your backyard, but our doctors will deliver you.' So we are working in those spaces to try to help them establish that trust, because when you don't trust someone with your care, that's when things just don't go right.

    Dr. Ian JasenofNumber one is that it starts with the infrastructure of who you are. So we have three major service lines doing research, and we have medical debt to behavioral health. We've made sure that we've hired the folks that are (medical doctors), (doctor of osteopathic medicine), et cetera, that are mission and vision aligned to be able to provide the type of line services as well. We also do workforce development. So we've worked with a few (federally qualified health centers) that actually have started a dental assistant program that's been very successful, and has been grant-funded. It's hired folks in the community. We've trained these individuals for future careers in the dental industry as well. Many of them have gone back to dental school, which is an amazing, full-circle direction in their careers. And also, we're looking for other avenues for expansion, which include cancer survivorship.

    The reality is this: more patients now are living with cancer survivorship, and they have their own unique sense of what their needs are. And having an entire program developed for cancer survivorship is an amazing opportunity to bring to our patients to help lead better lives, longer lives, et cetera, and also bring the concept of genetic testing into the primary care world.

    HNI: How are you preparing for the changes being brought by the federal government to programs like Medicaid and SNAP?

    Sana SyalIn addition to work requirements for Medicaid, it also has work requirements for SNAP, and those go into effect February 1. So two weeks from now, individuals 18 to 64 (years old) who are not exempt have to prove that they are working or volunteering 80 hours a month, or they will lose their SNAP benefits for three years. So this is historic and the most detrimental threats to Medicaid and SNAP that we've seen in both programs' history. So I just want to emphasize the importance of this moment, and on top of that, when we look at SNAP participation in Illinois, there are about 1.8 million people in the state who have SNAP. Ninety percent of those individuals have Medicaid. And so there is a huge overlap with the individuals that are coming to our FQHCs, to our hospitals, and those that are coming to food pantries and soup kitchens for food. So nonprofits, in addition to FQHCs, we're preparing for more lines out at our pantries, because people will lose their SNAP benefits and won't be able to afford food at the grocery store. What we're doing right now to address some of that is on the ground, as much as possible, getting the word out about these work requirements, and the very first step is to check and see who is exempt from the requirements. And the same is going to go for Medicaid. First, rule out those that are exempt. And there are new individuals who are now going to be required to prove that they are working. Folks who are dealing with homelessness are now going to be asked to prove some amount of work, and certain immigrant and refugee populations will no longer have access to SNAP benefits. And so this is a huge moment where we need to rally and get the word out about these changes and their impact on them, because it inevitably impacts the cross-sector, both healthcare and community-based organizations.

    HNI: How do you rebuild public trust in health?

    Dr. Arti BarnesSo the big picture is that I think the trusted messenger... we have to acknowledge in all the surveys, we are not the trusted messenger. Whether we can become the trusted messenger in five years or in three years. I think we can work towards that, but the crisis is now. So I think the acknowledgement is that the faith-based leaders, the community leaders, the physicians, clinical providers, nurses, they're the ones that the community trusts. And if they trust us, maybe they can say, 'Look, this guidance came out from IDPH, and I trust them. I trust what's coming out from here. They have your interests at heart.' Then maybe there could be some transfers of trust. From a communications perspective, how can we deal with misinformation? And I can tell you, I've had multiple conversations with computational engineers who propose models for how they can use listening platforms to find out. But none of that really came to bear. They're all designed for market brands like ‘who in Boone County wants to buy Nike?’ rather than something like, 'Do they think cat hair can cure diabetes?' So what we realized was that there wasn't enough geographic specificity in all the current tech to tackle misinformation, and I feel that tackling misinformation will happen in two ways. Either grassroots, that means in the schools, in the communities, by community leaders. And/or through some kind of media intervention, and it has to be a mass-scale media intervention for the amount of misinformation out there.

    Dr. Olusimbo Ige: I am big on on storytelling and sharing. If you wanted an electrician, how would you determine what electrician you want to choose? You will go to Thumbtack and see the number of stars they have or some type of review place? So what is the equivalent for public health? How do people rate our services and say, 'Oh, this is a fantastic place to work' or 'this is a fantastic job.' We have to make it visible. We have to have more opportunities to say that these are the two things that public health does and what it achieves. We have brag sessions in my department where people say, 'this is the cool thing that happened today.' And we do surveys all the time, and I'm very proud to tell you that when we talk about trust, we are always doing surveillance on that, and the health department is always one of the top three sources of information for Chicago. So that tells us that people know they can talk to us. I think this is how we will retain interest in public health at a time like this, by helping our communities know what public health does and the impact that it has and how useful it is. By creating platforms for community input and feedback, I think there are ways to continue to have support for public health.

    Health News Illinois - Media Partner for this event. 

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  • 23 Jan 2026 9:14 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Two natural experiments in Canada suggest that herpes zoster (shingles or varicella zoster) vaccination averts or delays dementia diagnoses. [University of Minnesota-CIDRAP]

    The analysis, published in The Lancet Neurology, was led by Stanford University researchers. The team estimated the effect of live attenuated shingles vaccination on new-onset dementia in 232,124 Canadians aged 70 years and older based on a natural experiment in Ontario. The researchers then triangulated the findings with a second natural experiment in Ontario and a quasi-experimental approach that used data from multiple provinces.

    A quasi-randomized rollout of shingles vaccine took place in Canada in 2016. In Ontario, residents who turned 71 in or after January 2017 were eligible for free vaccination, while those who turned 71 before that month were ineligible.

    “The date-of-birth eligibility thresholds of Ontario's herpes zoster vaccination programme created three comparison groups: ineligible because they were born before Jan 1, 1945; eligible for only 3.5 months because they were born in 1945; and eligible for at least 1 year and 3.5 months because they were born between Jan 1, 1946, and Sept 15, 1951 (ie, aged 65–70 years on Sept 15, 2016),” the study authors wrote. 

    Role of microbes in dementia 

    Participants were born in Canada from January 1930 to December 1960 and registered with one of 1,434 primary care providers in the Canadian Primary Care Sentinel Surveillance Network as of September 2016. 

    Dementia diagnoses were counted using electronic health records from January 1990 to June 2022, and Ontario residents aged 65 years and older were surveyed to estimate shingles vaccine coverage.

    More> 

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  • 22 Jan 2026 9:12 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Annual heart disease deaths fell 2.7% from 2022 to 2023, the report found.

    Fewer people are dying from heart disease, but the condition is still the leading cause of death in the U.S., a new report from the American Heart Association (AHA) finds. [ABC News] 

    Although death rates from heart disease have dropped for the first time in the past five years, it still kills more Americans than any other condition, according to the report, published early Wednesday in the journal Circulation. 

    Annual heart disease deaths decreased by 2.7% between 2022 and 2023 -- from 941,652 to 915,973, according to the report. However, cardiovascular disease still killed more people in the U.S. than cancer and accidents combined. 

    More> 

  • 21 Jan 2026 8:30 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Organ donations from the recently deceased dropped last year for the first time in over a decade, resulting in fewer kidney transplants, according to an analysis issued Wednesday that pointed to signs of public mistrust in the lifesaving system. [AP -ref.. Kidney Transplant Collaborative]  

    More than 100,000 people in the U.S. are on the list for an organ transplant. The vast majority of them need a kidney, and thousands die waiting every year.

    The nonprofit Kidney Transplant Collaborative analyzed federal data and found 116 fewer kidney transplants were performed last year than in 2024. That small difference is a red flag because the analysis traced the decline to some rare but scary reports of patients prepared for organ retrieval despite showing signs of life.

    Those planned retrievals were stopped and the U.S. is developing additional safeguards for the transplant system, which saves tens of thousands of lives each year. But it shook public confidence, prompting some people to remove their names from donor lists.

    More> 

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  • 20 Jan 2026 3:56 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Only about 17% of hospitals met standards for high pediatric readiness in a 2024 national study of almost 5,000 emergency departments, Axios reported. In related news, the United States is on the cusp of losing its measles elimination status.  [KFF Health News] 

    More>

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  • 19 Jan 2026 11:39 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Martin Luther King, Jr. Day 

  • 19 Jan 2026 10:40 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Researchers combined soil measurements and public health data to identify area where children may be exposed to unsafe levels of lead in the dirt.

    by Rebecca Owen15 October 2025 (published- EOS)

    LINK: Chicago Soil Maps Childhood Lead Exposure Risk – Eos

    Lead is a neurotoxin that can damage multiple body systems and lead to learning and developmental problems. The element has been phased out of use in paint, gasoline, and other industrial applications for decades, but it can persist for years in the soil. Children, who can be particularly vulnerable to lead poisoning, can accidentally ingest and inhale lead particles when they play in contaminated areas.

    Even though one in four U.S. homes likely has soil lead levels over the recommended safety limits, no major U.S. city includes systematic soil monitoring as part of its lead prevention services, and blood testing often happens only after exposure.

    …“…analyzed 1,750 soil samples from Chicago’s 77 community areas. The researchers then used these data with the EPA’s Integrated Exposure Uptake Biokinetic model (IEUBK) to estimate how much lead children are likely to have in their blood. Comparing these data to actual EBLL findings from the Chicago Department of Public Health and accounting for factors such as household income, the age of housing, and the housing’s proximity to industrial land, the researchers built a comprehensive map that identifies the Chicago communities most at risk for soil lead exposure.

    More than half of the citywide soil samples showed lead levels above the EPA’s recommended threshold of 200 parts per million—with some hot spots rising above 300 parts per million. When matched with the modeling from IEUBK, an estimated 27% of children across the city are at risk of EBLL. In the hot spot areas, that risk rises to 57%.

    These findings suggest that though median household income is the strongest predictor of EBLL prevalence, soil lead levels are also a significant predictor. Systematic soil testing could become a crucial way to reduce children’s risk of lead exposure in contaminated areas, the authors say. (GeoHealth, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025GH001572, 2025)

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  • 16 Jan 2026 8:33 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    If you feel a lift after exercise, you're in good company. Movement can boost mood, and according to the results of a new study, it can also help relieve symptoms of depression. [NPR & WBEZ]

    As part of a review of evidence by the Cochrane collaboration — an independent network of researchers — scientists evaluated 73 randomized controlled trials that included about 5,000 people with depression, many of whom also tried antidepressant medication.


    Exercise is more important than ever

    "We found that exercise was as effective as pharmacological treatments or psychological therapies as well," says Andrew Clegg, a professor at the University of Lancashire in the U.K.

    The findings are not a surprise to psychiatrist Dr. Stephen Mateka, medical director of psychiatry at Inspira Health. "This new Cochrane review reinforces the evidence that exercise is one of the most evidence-based tools for improving mood," says Mateka.

    More> 

    Upcoming Programs: Open to All 

    Jan. 21, 2026 (Event) 10th State of Health of Chicago> 

    Feb. 17, 2026  A Public Health Opportunity: Addressing the Health Needs of Justice-Involved Individuals during Reentry

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  • 15 Jan 2026 7:46 AM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    Access to mental healthcare remains out of reach for millions of Americans, with some states facing more severe shortages of mental health professionals than others, new federal data shows. [Becker's Behavioral Health]

    The Health Resources and Services Administration’s Bureau of Health Workforce published its latest quarterly report of Designated Health Professional Shortage Area Statistics on Jan. 14, reflecting data as of Dec. 31, 2025. For mental health, an area generally qualifies as a shortage area when the population-to-psychiatrist ratio is at least 30,000 to 1 — or 20,000 to 1 in communities with unusually high need.

    Compared with the 2024 snapshot, the latest HRSA figures suggest shortages have worsened. The number of designated mental health professional shortage areas rose from 6,418 to 6,807 as of Dec. 31, and the population covered by those designations grew from about 122 million to 137 million. Over the same period, the percentage of Americans’ mental health needs met improved only slightly — from 26.4% to 27.3% — while the estimated number of additional practitioners needed to remove the designations increased from roughly 6,200 to 6,800. The figures suggest that workforce growth has not kept pace with demand.

    Below is a breakdown of how each state and Washington, D.C., rank based on the percentage of mental healthcare needs met.

    More>

    Check out our upcoming program: 

    1.21.2026 10th State of Health of Chicago - eight speaker panel and more>

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  • 14 Jan 2026 12:07 PM | Deborah Hodges (Administrator)

    The U.S. has reached a watershed moment in the fight against cancer: Seven in 10 people now survive five years or more after diagnosis, according to the latest annual report from the American Cancer Society. [NBC News & American Cancer Society] 

    That’s a big improvement since the 1970s, when only half of those diagnosed lived at least five years. In the mid-1990s, the rate was 63%.

    The 70% figure is based on diagnoses from 2015 to 2021. The findings were published Tuesday in the American Cancer Society’s medical journal, CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.

    Five years is the most common benchmark for measuring cancer survival, since the risk of certain cancers’ recurring declines significantly if the cancers haven’t come back within that time.

    Thanks to improved treatment options over the last decade, many cancers have gone from death sentences to chronic diseases, according to the report’s lead author, Rebecca Siegel, the American Cancer Society’s senior scientific director of surveillance research.

    “It takes decades for research to understand and develop these more effective treatments, and now we’re seeing the fruits of those investments,” Siegel said.

    The report estimates that 4.8 million cancer deaths were prevented from 1991 to 2023, largely because of better treatments, earlier detection methods and reductions in smoking.

    More>

    Interested? 

    10th State of Health of Chicago, Jan. 21,2026, more>

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