Articles

Company news

Covance Inc. is seeking state and local tax incentives as part of a $150 million expansion that would create 465 jobs at its Greenfield operations, nearly doubling the number of employees there. The proposed expansion would occur over the next four years and include the construction of a new laboratory, the renovation of existing buildings, and the hiring of administrative and laboratory personnel, according to the Daily Reporter in Greenfield. Princeton, N.J.-based Covance, a pharmaceutical research company, acquired Greenfield Labs from Eli Lilly and Co. in October 2008 for $50 million and a 10-year agreement from Lilly to use Covance’s services. At that time, 264 Lilly employees shifted to Covance. The company now employs 565 workers at the site, according to the newspaper. The Hancock County Council is set to hear Covance’s request for incentives July 11. Documents filed with the county show the 465 jobs would add $29 million in salaries with annual pay averaging more than $62,000 per employee, the Daily Reporter said. The company uses the Greenfield Laboratories to conduct early-stage tests of experimental drug molecules, readying them for tests in humans.

Officials from Indiana University Health Arnett broke ground on a facility in West Lafayette last week, according to the Journal and Courier of Lafayette. The new location, housed in a former Kmart store, will add outpatient imaging and expanded laboratory services to IU Health’s existing services in West Lafayette. The $8 million facility also will include an urgent care center with extended hours of operation. Indianapolis-based IU Health operates a full-scale hospital in Lafayette.

Dr. Yang Sun, an assistant professor of ophthalmology at the Glick Eye Institute, received a five-year, $1 million grant from the National Eye Institute to study congenital glaucoma with the hope of discovering new treatments for common forms of glaucoma. “Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness in the world, yet the mechanisms of glaucoma development remain poorly understood, and treatments are limited,” Sun said. “I’m hoping to understand the mechanism of inherited congenital glaucoma, in the hopes that this will provide insight and potentially lead to novel treatments for commonly seen forms of glaucoma.”

Read More

People

Hall, Render, Killian, Heath & Lyman PC named attorney John Williams as the head of its new federal legislative and regulatory advisory advocacy practice. The Indianapolis-based health law firm also named two of-counsel attorneys to the practice: Andrew Woods and Andrew Coats, both of whom are also part of the Washington, D.C.-based consulting firm Liberty Partners Group. Williams holds degrees from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and George Mason University School of Law. Woods completed his undergraduate studies at North Carolina State University and earned his law degree at University of North Carolina School of Law. Coats, the son of U.S. Sen. Dan Coats, holds a bachelor’s degree from James Madison University and a law degree from Indiana University.

Dr. Keith Knuth has joined the faculty of the Indiana University School of Medicine Department of Ophthalmology at the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Eye Institute. He will see patients at the Glick Eye Institute’s Spring Mill and Mooresville locations. Knuth earned a bachelor’s degree from Purdue University and completed his medical degree at the IU School of Medicine. He also holds an MBA degree from Butler University.

Tony Origer, a chiropractic physician, is now seeing patients two days a week at the Carmel office of Methodist Sports Medicine / The Orthopedic Specialists. Origer is continuing to manage his practice, Performance Chiropractic & Sports Rehabilitation, in Greenwood. Origer did his chiropractic training at Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport, Iowa. He has done work for the Indianapolis Indians, as well as the athletic teams at the University of Indianapolis and Franklin College.

Read More

People

Dr. Daniel Spitzberg has been named vice chair for adult clinical affairs in the Department of Ophthalmology at the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Eye Institute, which is part of the Indiana University School of Medicine. Spitzberg, who will serve under Dr. Louis Cantor, the chairman of the opthamology department, has been a full-time professor at the IU medical school since 2008. Spitzberg earned both his bachelor’s and medical degrees from IU.

Jeff Dill has been promoted to director of reporting and business analytics at Managed Health Services, the Indiana subsidiary of St. Louis-based Centene Corp., which manages Indiana Medicaid patients. Dill had been the MHS manager of data and enrollment.Prior to working at MHS, Dill served as an analyst with actuarial and consulting firm Milliman. Dill holds a bachelor’s degree from IUPUI.

Read More