2018 Year in Review: Flurry of health care construction ramps up
The projects range from full-service hospitals in Bloomington, Brownsburg and Shelbyville to a flurry of “micro-hospitals,” free-standing emergency rooms and urgent care centers.
The projects range from full-service hospitals in Bloomington, Brownsburg and Shelbyville to a flurry of “micro-hospitals,” free-standing emergency rooms and urgent care centers.
The standalone, two-story facility is expected to offer a wide array of inpatient and outpatient services, including addiction treatment, counseling and psychiatric intensive care.
Is the current GDP growth the beginning of a new period of robust 20th-century-like growth? Or simply a one-time growth spurt that will revert to the anemic growth of recent decades?
Insurance companies say it will take time to design new plans and get approval from state regulators.
Environmental leaders say the new rule changes for coal-fired power plants put Indiana residents particularly at risk because the state has the most coal ash ponds in the country.
CNO initially signed a three-year deal in 2016 to become the title sponsor of the annual race organized by local not-for-profit Beyond Monumental.
A five-year, $7 million program is led and supported by a coalition of local health institutions, including Eli Lilly and Co., Fairbanks School of Public Health and Eskenazi Health. It is based on a model that Lilly has used in other countries.
The Pediatric Center of Hope starts picking up the pieces for sexually abused children the minute they walk into the exam room.
Teenage cancer patient Emma Stumpf is on a mission to share with others the relief she finds in art.
Greg Denniston is a certified recovery specialist at Aspire Indiana, a job he found the hard way, part of a long journey that started with a mental breakdown in 1985.
Paige Dooley brings passion, enthusiasm to patients and co-workers at Community Hospital East.
To challenge acrimonious language and call out vindictive behavior is not partisan; it is patriotic.
A wave of fear about inflation and higher interest rates helped send stock prices tumbling Friday and Monday. Yet the rush of anxiety has obscured a fundamental fact about the U.S. economy: It's healthy.
Only three states—Louisiana, Nevada and Alabama—spend less per inmate on health care than Indiana, a new report says.
More than half of all physicians suffer from burnout, which can lead to alcoholism, depression and suicide. Health systems are trying to cope with the issue.
A sampling of panelists’ conversation at IBJ’s Sept. 21 Health Care & Benefits Power Breakfast.
The Greenfield-based unit, which makes a vast array of vaccines, antibiotics, feed additives and other health products for livestock and pets, is in a slump, after more than a decade of growth.
Partially hydrogenated oils, the main source of artificial trans fat and an invisible mainstay of the American food industry for decades, are on the verge of being totally pushed out in favor of better alternatives.
Just as a company is only as good as “the intelligence of its people,” the same rule applies to “the health of its people.” And these two rules apply to our nation.
in cases of extreme expansion of federal power, the court of public opinion is arguably at least as important as the legal process.