Articles

Company news

Indianapolis-based EmotEd LLC, recently spun out of the Indiana University School of Medicine, received nearly $200,000 from the National Institutes of Health to develop video games to diagnose and improve emotional health. The company is based on research by EmotEd founder Dawn Newmann, a research professor at the medical school who also works at Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana. The NIH money, which came via a Phase I Small Business Technology Transfer award, will allow EmotEd to build an initial platform and test it in a clinical setting. EmotEd will continue to seek non-dilutive funding through Phase II STTR mechanisms and through the Department of Defense.

Indianapolis-based Activate Healthcare is expanding its employer health care clinic operations into Wisconsin, according to Modern Healthcare magazine. Activate already manages 20 near- or on-site health clinics, used by 40 employers, in Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Washington. Activate was created in 2009 by former Steak n Shake CEO Peter Dunn and ex-Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates CEO Debra Geihsler. Its clients include Monroe County government in Bloomington as well as Monarch Beverage Co. and Major Tool Co. in Indianapolis. Activate is one of a handful of Indiana-based clinic operators that have been growing rapidly and expanding into other states.

Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. this month started offering 4 million patients the ability to have e-visits with doctors, while Aetna Inc. says it will boost online access to 8 million people next year from 3 million now, according to Bloomberg News. The health insurers are joining companies such as Teladoc Inc., MDLive Inc. and American Well Corp. that offer virtual visits with doctors who, in some states, can prescribe drugs for anything from sinus infections to back pain. In Indiana, legislation passed this year gave the green light to WellPoint and American Well to partner with the American Health Network physician group to conduct a pilot program of the technology.

Biomet Inc. reported preliminary profit for the past 12 months of $36.8 million on sales of $3.22 billion. That's an improvement in profit of $660 million from fiscal 2013’s $623 million loss on consolidated net sales of $3.05 billion, according to the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette. Excluding extraordinary items, the Warsaw-based company earned $420 million for the year ended May 31. Biomet also reported fiscal fourth-quarter profit of $66.7 million on sales of $845 million, a $288 million improvement over the same period a year earlier when the company posted a $221 million loss on sales of $784 million. Zimmer Inc. in April offered to acquire Biomet for $13.35 billion. The Federal Trade Commission is considering implications of allowing the competitors to merge.

Read More

Correction

The Rehabilitation Hosptial of Indiana is one of 16 health care facilities awarded five-year grants this year from the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research as part of its Traumatic Brain Injury Model System. The Oct. 1 issue of IBJ Health Care & Reform Weekly incorrectly stated the number of sites getting grants.

Read More

People

St. Vincent Health named Gary Fammartino as the administrator of St. Vincent Fishers Hospital, beginning in February. The new hospital will open in 2013 as an expansion of the medical office building and emergency department St. Vincent operates in Fishers. Since 2008, Fammartino has been the St. Vincent system’s executive of ambulatory and outpatient services. Fammartino holds degrees in education, respiratory science and business administration from Youngstown State University.

Dr. Paul Broderick, the owner of Central Indiana Proctology in Martinsville, has joined St. Francis Medical Group. Broderick, who is the former chief of surgery at Indiana University Health Morgan Hospital, has practiced in Martinsville since 1995. He received a bachelor's degree from Ball State University and did his medical training at the Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine.

Daniel B. Woloszyn has been named CEO of the Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana by its joint owners, Indiana University Health and St. Vincent Health. Woloszyn will take over for Sidney Norton, the chief financial officer for Rehabilitation Hospital, who has been serving as RHI’s interim CEO since September 2010. Woloszyn spent the past eight years as CEO of Van Matre HealthSouth Rehabilitation Hospital in Rockford, Ill. Woloszyn holds doctorates in clinical and health psychology from the Illinois School of Professional Psychology in Chicago.

Read More

People

Warsaw-based Symmetry Medical Inc. named Thomas J. Sullivan president and CEO beginning Jan. 17. He replaces Brian S. Moore, who has been CEO since 2003. Moore will remain with the orthopedic supply company through June 2012 as head of business development and as a member of the board of directors. Sullivan was previously president of the supply-chain and business-process division of New Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson Health Care Systems Inc. From 2005 to 2007, Sullivan served as president of Warsaw-based DePuy Orthopaedics Inc., a unit of Johnson & Johnson. Sullivan holds an MBA degree from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

Westfield-based consulting firm maxIT Healthcare named Mike Sweeney its president, reporting to CEO Parker Hinshaw. The 600-person firm, which advises health care clients, also promoted Reese Gomez to be executive vice president of solution management.

The Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana named Dr. Lisa A. Lombard its new medical director. Lombard comes to the Indianapolis rehab hospital from California, where she was the chief of traumatic brain injury rehabilitation at Santa Clara Medical Center.  She also held a similar role at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. The Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana is a joint venture of Clarian Health and St. Vincent Health, two Indianapolis-based hospital systems.

Read More

People

The University of Indianapolis named Stephanie Kelly, a physical therapist, the new dean of its College of Health Sciences, promoting her from acting dean status. Kelly, who joined UIndy in 1996, emerged as the favorite candidate after a national search. The college produces more physical and occupational therapists than any other in Indiana.

Scott Teffeteller will remain CEO of Union Hospital in Terre Haute after a national search. Teffeteller had been serving as interim CEO since his predecessor David Doerr stepped down in September to become CEO of the entire Union Health System. Teffeteller, 39, joined Union in 2006 as chief operating officer.

Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana named Sharyl J. Border its new executive director of marketing. Border was previously a senior specialty sales representative at Eli Lilly and Co.
 

Read More

Rehab hospital shakes up leadership

The CEO is on his way out and the board has been dissolved at Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana, as its owners—Clarian Health and St. Vincent Health—work to pull the hospital closer to their own operations.

Read More

Building binge hasn’t crimped hospital profits

Indianapolis-area hospitals spent billions on construction in the past decade and increasingly tried to poach patients from one another’s territories. Yet last year—one of the worst economically in recent history—21 of 26 hospitals still were able to show operating profits.

Read More