Noah Fromson
Public Relations Representative

Fromson joined Michigan Medicine in March 2021. He covers the neurosciences and cardiovascular medicine. He spent three years as a television reporter in West Michigan and is passionate about multimedia storytelling. Contact: [email protected] Twitter: @noahfromson

Noah Fromson photo
two hands doctor patient yellow
Health Lab
Study: Older adults with rheumatoid arthritis still undermedicated, despite aggressive guidelines
Research shows adults with rheumatoid arthritis are underprescribed disease-modifying drugs, despite guidelines saying otherwise. Clinicians must treat rheumatic diseases while addressing multimorbidity and polypharmacy.
Police officer in uniform performing CPR to person lying on ground. Ambulance in  background.
Health Lab
Critical and underutilized: fire and police responders associated with higher cardiac arrest survival rates
Police and fire first responders are often first on the scene during emergency cardiac arrest, and their intervention correlates with higher survival rates for patients.
woman wheelchair doctor office therapy
Health Lab
Rehabilitation psychologists: specialists you may not yet know, but might one day need
More awareness is needed to grow the essential field.
stethoscope lab note
Health Lab
Kids with rare autoimmune disease show these symptoms before blood clots 
Antiphospholipid syndrome is rare in adults and even less common among children. 
Man in white jacket standing near Olympic rings
Health Lab
From Michigan to Beijing: An athletic trainer’s journey to Olympic hockey
He’s worked with the nation’s top talent in the sport for two decades.
Doctors-Masked-Portrait-Labcoat-Stethoscope
Health Lab
COVID-19’s faces of health care: Challenges faced, sacrifices made over two pandemic years
They were the first to answer the call in March 2020. Now, they reflect on COVID and how their lives have changed.
Man in blue blue background looking at doctor in phone. Pills floating and question mark
Health Lab
Hospital-affiliated doctors prescribe fewer antibiotics through telehealth than third-party physicians
Increased antibiotic use can lead to more resistance and fewer effective antimicrobial treatments for patients.
lungs drawing yellow blue lab note
Health Lab
Nanoparticle reduces skin and lung scarring for scleroderma, mouse study finds
The findings provide promise of targeted treatment for patients with the disease.
microneedle patch white and silver needle patch
Health Lab
Microneedle approach to address peanut allergy shows promise in mice
Promising results in animal studies suggest novel immunotherapy paired with new microneedle technology could provide a more reliable therapy option for people who are allergic to peanuts.
covid cell lab note
Health Lab
Rogue antibodies make cells “sticky” to trigger blood clots in COVID-19 patients
The finding brings researchers closer to finding the exact cause of inflammation and clotting in severe COVID-19 patients.
Heart model aneurysm aorta veins
Health Lab
A new tool for 3-D measurement of the aorta may identify fatal heart conditions earlier
The technique has potential to change the way aortic aneurysm is monitored.
PT with patient climbing up ladder and selfie of brother with mask on with peace sign in lab
Health Lab
His brother had a traumatic brain injury. Now, his mission is to research new treatments
Trauma creates ripples. When Matthew Finneran’s brother Ryan suffered a traumatic brain injury, his injury and recovery inspired Matthew to pursue a life’s work of researching innovative therapies for TBI patients.
spine drawing lab notes
Health Lab
Mental health is an issue for people with spinal cord injury. Chronic pain makes it worse
Spinal cord injury can negatively impact mental health, but new findings show that chronic pain can make anxiety, depression and other mental health conditions worse for people living with spinal cord injury.
brain with bandages on it pink and red
Health Lab
The U.S. is failing to care for traumatic brain injury survivors, experts say
Patients with traumatic brain injury in the United States are at the mercy of an oversimplified and inadequate classification and health care system. Experts are calling for comprehensive investment and systemic overhaul for TBI care.
News Release
Michigan Medicine receives $10M to rename critical care institute after field’s pioneer, Dr. Max Harry Weil
Michigan Medicine announced, it will rename its critical care research institute after Dr. Max Harry Weil, regarded by many as a father of critical care medicine, to recognize his family’s $10 million donation for advancing research and innovation.
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