Highlights
Trine Tsouderos is a reporter for the Chicago Tribune.
Trine Tsouderos is a reporter for the Chicago Tribune.
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Review: 'Lean In' by Sheryl Sandberg
When Sheryl Sandberg was pregnant with her first child, she was a senior executive at Google. She had gained a lot of weight — 70 pounds — and suffered nausea throughout the pregnancy. Google's parking lots were vast, and she would lumber...Tags: Timothy Geithner, eBay Inc., Arts and Culture, Larry Page, Culture
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'On Looking' inspires rumination on the influence of perspective
Several years ago, my daughter, who is now 7, drew a picture of the gym where she was taking gymnastics. My main impression of this gym was that it smelled of dirty socks and that it was a hectic place. But how did my preschooler see it? Her drawing...
Tags: Game Playing, Politics, Blindness, Personal Weapon Control, Museum of Natural History
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Vivid impressions of Russian culture in 'Encyclopedia of a Life in Russia'
Cuban author José Manuel Prieto's playful and fascinating book, “Encyclopedia of a Life in Russia,” is, according to Prieto's narrator, an encyclopedia-style guide to a book the narrator is planning to write about a man named Thelonious Monk...Tags: YouTube, Libraries, Saint Petersberg (Russia), The New York Times, Arts and Culture
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Memory lane on Trib Nation
As I was looking for a long-ago Trib Nation post that explained our approach to releasing information to put readers in touch with sympathetic story subjects, I found a trove of interesting articles past. There were eighty-eight pages of our blog, at...
Tags: Chicago Mayor, Chicago Tribune
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Doctor who treated chronic Lyme disease indicted
A physician featured in a Tribune story about the dubious diagnosis and risky treatment of chronic Lyme disease has been indicted on federal charges of health care fraud and filing false tax returns, according to court records. Dr. Carol Ann Ryser, who...Tags: Lyme Disease, Health, Trials, Prosecution, Diseases and Illnesses
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Long on decline, whooping cough makes a comeback
Hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. -- many of them children -- were coming down with whooping cough each year when vaccines against "this menace," as one newspaper called it, were introduced in the 1930s and 1940s.
"Childhood Cough Is Given...Tags: Health, Hospitals and Clinics, Coughing, Tetanus, Food and Drug Administration
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Letters: Many views of 'alternative' treatment
The recent series of articles by Trine Tsouderos in the Los Angeles Times misrepresents the scientific contributions and future research agenda of the National Institutes of Health and its National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine ["New...Tags: Arthritis, Acupuncture, Health, Placebo, Complementary and Alternative Medicine
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Remote-control surgery grows, despite inconclusive evidence
Chubby, pink and anesthetized into unconsciousness and paralysis, 16-week-old Ian Lund was a small bump under blue drapes on an operating table at University of Chicago Medicine. Perched above him was a robot, with arms like a three-legged spider.
One...Tags: Health, Trials, Urinary Incontinence, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Ovarian Cancer
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Killer bird flu? What's behind the controversy over bird flu research
"Engineered Doomsday." "Mutant Bird Flu." These may sound like the names of disaster movies, but they are headlines on recent news reports about experiments involving the H5N1 influenza virus.
The H5N1 virus is known as a "bird flu" because it mainly...Tags: Viral Diseases and Infections, Flu, Health, Columbia University, Hospitals and Clinics
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Whooping cough facts
Whooping cough, or pertussis, infects babies, children and adults and looks a lot like the common cold at first — runny nose, sneezing and a mild cough or fever, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
After one to two...Tags: Health, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Coughing, Vaccines, Common Cold
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Our whooping cough story, and why medical reporting is so interesting
One especially fascinating aspect of my job is sifting through medical history, something I was more than happy to do for my story on the resurgence of reported cases of whooping cough in Illinois and across the nation. You can find that story, which...Tags: Health, Coughing, Preventative Medicine, Diseases and Illnesses, Drugs and Medicines
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Energy healing sparks debate
Tribune NewspapersEnergy healers say they can detect and channel a "universal energy" and even manipulate this energy within another person. Science has not proved that this energy exists, that anybody can detect it or manipulate it, or that it has anything to do with...Tags: Fibromyalgia, Health, Placebo, Prostate Cancer, Hands
Mar 15, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Mar 1, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jan 4, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jul 16, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jul 9, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jan 6, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jan 30, 2012
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Feb 25, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jan 12, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jan 6, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jan 6, 2012
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Dec 11, 2011
|Story| Chicago Tribune
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