• Corporate Programs
  • Gift Cards
  • Advertise
  • People
  • Lists
  • Jobs
  • Classifieds
  • Public Notices
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
  • Contact Us
Indianapolis Business Journal
Subscribe Now Log In
Indianapolis Business Journal
  • Newsletters
  • Podcast
  • Weekly Paper
  • Advertise
  • People
  • Lists
  • Jobs
  • Classifieds
  • Public Notices
  • News
    • Weekly Paper
      • Digital Edition
      • Purchase Past Issues
    • Diversity
    • Sports Business
    • Small Business
    • Banking & Finance
    • Regional
      • Boone County
      • Hamilton County
      • Hancock County
      • Hendricks County
      • Johnson County
      • Madison County
      • Morgan County
      • Shelby County
      • Other Counties
    • More Industries
      • Communications
      • Education & Workforce Development
      • Energy & Environment
      • Government & Economic Development
      • Law
      • Manufacturing
      • Philanthropy
      • Transportation, Distribution & Logistics
      • Workplace Issues
    • Company News
      • Eli Lilly and Co.
      • Simon Property Group
      • Elevance
      • More Public Companies
      • More Private Companies
    • Corrections
    • Multimedia
      • Photo Galleries
      • Videos
      • IBJ mobile apps
      • RSS Feeds
  • Real Estate
    • Retail
    • Restaurants
    • Commercial
    • Residential
  • Politics
  • North of 96th
  • Health Care
  • Tech
  • Opinion
    • Forefront
    • Viewpoint
    • Editorials
    • Letters to the Editor
  • Events
    • 20 in Their Twenties
      • 2025 Honorees
      • 2025 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for event
    • Bourbon & Brokers
    • CEO of the Year & C-Suite Awards
    • Commercial Real Estate & Construction Power Breakfast
    • Economic Forecast
    • Education Power Breakfast
    • Fast 25
      • 2025 Honorees
      • 2024 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for Event
    • Forty Under 40
      • 2026 Honorees
      • 2023 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for Event
    • Gleaners – Hunger & Health
    • Health Care & Benefits Power Breakfast
    • Excellence in Health Care
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • 2026 Honorees
      • 2024 Event Video
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for Event
    • Indiana 250
      • 2022 Photo Gallery
      • Indiana 250 Website
    • Innovate Indiana Series
      • Innovate Northeast Indiana – Fort Wayne
      • Innovate Southwest Indiana – Evansville
      • Innovate Northwest Indiana – Valparaiso
      • Innovate West Central Indiana – Terre Haute
      • Innovate Southern Indiana – New Albany
      • Innovate East Central Indiana – Muncie
      • Innovate North Central – South Bend – Elkhart
      • Innovate South Central Indiana – Bloomington
      • Innovate Central Indiana – Indianapolis
    • Leadership in Law
    • Life Sciences Power Breakfast
    • Nonprofit Excellence Awards
      • 2025 Honorees
    • Technology Power Breakfast
    • Women of Influence
      • 2025 Honorees
      • 2024 Event Video
      • 2024 Event Photos
      • Past Recipients
      • Nominate
      • Register for event
  • Awards
    • Submit Award Nominations
    • Award Recipients
      • 20 in their Twenties
      • CEO of the Year and C-Suite Awards
        • Past Recipients
        • 2025 Honorees
      • Fast25
      • Excellence in Health Care
        • Past Recipients
        • 2026 Honorees
        • Nominations
      • HR Impact Awards
      • Michael A. Carroll Award
      • Nonprofit Excellence Awards
      • Women of Influence
        • 2024 Honorees
        • Past Recipients
      • Forty Under 40
        • Class of 2026
        • Past Recipients
      • Tech Exec of the Year
        • 2024 Honorees
        • Past Recipients
  • Content Studio
    • Thought Leadership
      • In commercial real estate, trust turns relationships into long-term successes.
      • After 30 years, Women’s Fund of Central Indiana goes statewide, now Women’s Foundation of Indiana
      • Why Quality Facilities are a Mission-Critical Investment for Nonprofits
      • How nonprofits can adapt to a shifting financial landscape
      • Planning considerations for business succession
      • How Organizations Can Spend Less Time on Investments and More Time on Impact
      • Bringing a personal touch to financial planning
      • A prescription for better health
      • Small and mid-sized firms shouldn’t take cybersecurity risks lightly
      • It’s time to take a scalpel to the business school
      • Advancing access, affordability, and workforce readiness
      • Addressing Indiana’s workforce transformation needs
      • Rethinking Risk: How Climate Change is Reshaping Insurance
      • Pacers Foundation, Gleaners team up to feed hungry Hoosiers
      • Howard Bailey Financial® Vice President Marshal Johnson on Helping You “Retire With Purpose”
      • Educators preparing for new diploma standards
      • Innovation is a mindset that must be taught
      • What to consider before selling your business
      • Q&A: STATE OF WOMEN IN CENTRAL INDIANA REPORT
      • Cracking the Glass Ceiling is Not Enough: New Women’s Executive Leadership Institute Brings Sisterhood Approach to Progress
      • Integrating AI
      • Thinking of selling your business? Here’s what you need to know
      • Indiana State University focuses on workforce readiness
      • Putting students on the best career path
      • CareSource provides resources and programs to make Indiana healthier
      • Housing market on the mend
      • Cybersecurity requires savvy, vigilance
      • Kelley School of Business Indianapolis is building a robust and reliable talent pipeline
      • How mission-driven work helps retain and attract top talent
      • Innovation & Workforce
      • Talent & Workforce
      • Talent for today—and tomorrow
      • Transparency can be transformational
      • Process improvement and its impact on healthcare delivery
      • Overcoming barriers for patients and providers
      • Shaping the disruptors: How Purdue’s MBT program sets a new standard
      • Group 1001 bringing innovation to financial services
      • Bringing technological advancements to life
      • Clearing the path to rewarding employment
      • The Tragedy of the Phone-Based Childhood is an Urgent Call We Must Answer
      • Addressing laboratory staffing shortages is critical for healthcare’s future
      • Business Succession Planning Q&A
      • Designing a benefits plan that works
      • Pandemic brought changes that are here to stay
      • Help students make the connection between learning and work
    • Thought Leadership Topics
    • Sponsored Content
      • Reauthorize The FirstNet Authority
      • Building wealth matters. Building a legacy matters more.
      • The essential role of a health plan in Indiana
      • New Initiative Protects Indiana Employers and Working Families from Increased Healthcare Costs
      • Addressing Indiana’s Healthcare Affordability Crisis
      • FirstNet: A Public-Private Partnership That Keeps America Safe
      • Make IT the Secret Weapon for Your Small Business
      • Automation can enhance client interactions
      • Loren Wood Builders: Crafting Legacy Projects Across Indiana
      • To drive government efficiency, connected technology is a must
      • INNOVATIVE – TRANSFORMATIVE – RAW AWE!
      • Where are they now: Rolls-Royce
      • Where are they now: LER TechForce
      • Where are they now: Micropulse
      • Future-ready HR: The versatility of full-service PEO partnerships
      • Where are they now: Meats by Linz
      • Where are they now: Liberation Labs
      • Where are they now: Doral Renewables/Mammoth Solar
      • Where are they now: Corteva Agriscience
      • Busey Bank Continues to Grow in Indiana, Adds Stutsman to Local Leadership Team
      • Competitive Advantages of Conscious Capitalism
      • Mohr Logistics Park: Transforming The Indianapolis Industrial Landscape
      • Empowering American Cities: Local Economic Intelligence, Trusted Advice
      • 2024 Indiana Global Economic Summit is key to building state’s economy of the future
      • When the Business of Your Business Becomes Your Wealth
      • Balancing Cost and Quality with Price Transparency Tools
      • Navigating Opportunities in Indianapolis Despite Economic Uncertainty
      • Superior Dental Care brings its highly regarded dental plans to the entire state of Indiana
    • Sponsored Content Samples
      • Sponsored Content – Emails
      • Sponsored Content – Print
      • Custom Videos
    • Business Cares Sites
      • Business Cares: Corporate Social Responsibility
      • Business Cares Breast Cancer Awareness
      • Business Cares Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
      • Business Cares Heart Health Awareness
    • Career Ready Indiana
      • 2025-26 – Earn & Learn
      • 2024-25 – Build Your Talent Pipeline
      • 2024-25 – Build Your Job Skills
      • 2023-24 – Need Talent? Grow Your Own
      • 2022-23 – Looking for Talent? Employers, We’ve Got You Covered!
      • 2021-22 – Hoosiers Talk About Why Indiana is a Great Place for Your Career
      • 2020-21 – Today’s College Students Older, Wiser
      • 2019-20 – Former Indy 500 Driver Crosses College Finish Line
    • Contact Us
Subscribe Now Log In
  • The Tip-Off
  • Weekly Paper
  • Latest IBJ Forefront
  • Excellence in Health Care 2026
  • Forty Under 40 2026
  • Corrections
Home » Search

Search Results

7,328 results for 'Search IBJ.com'

  • Sort By
    • Relevance
    • Oldest
    • Newest
  • Date
    • Any Time
    • Past Day
    • Past Week
    • Past Month
    • Past Year
    • Custom Date Range
  • Content Type
    • {{post_type.label}}
  • Topics
  • Authors
  • Reset

Articles

Lilly foe still testing Alzheimer’s theory where others failed

December 12, 2013

Since 1998, there have been more than 100 attempts to develop an Alzheimer’s treatment, and all have failed. Such a product may generate as much as $5 billion annually for Merck, according to analysts

Economic distress doesn’t recognize county lines

December 12, 2013

Hamilton and Boone counties are home to upscale communities, but the suburbs are not immune to problems like unemployment, homelessness and food insecurity.

Lilly set to fall off second patent cliff

December 9, 2013

Eli Lilly and Co. on Wednesday will fall off its second “patent cliff” in as many years as its best-selling drug Cymbalta sees its U.S. patents expire.

Company news

December 9, 2013

Indiana University Health hospitals and doctors could fall out of UnitedHealthcare’s discounted network on Jan. 1 if the two entities don’t come to an agreement by then. IU Health, the state’s largest hospital system, and UnitedHealthcare, the state’s second-largest health insurer, have been unable to come to terms on a new set of reimbursement contracts, according to both organizations. The previous contracts end Dec. 31. Such contracts between health systems and health insurers typically shave 30 percent or more off the list prices charged by hospitals and doctors. In notices sent to local benefits brokers late last month, Minnesota-based UnitedHealthcare said the two organizations are wrangling over a reimbursement hike by IU Health and over how the new contracts will make more of that reimbursement hinge on measurements of clinical quality. The contract dispute could affect the roughly 400,000 Hoosiers that have employer-based or individually purchased insurance with UnitedHealthcare. That represents about 12 percent of the Indiana commercial market.

Medical workers, military personnel, hundreds of volunteers and a platoon of ambulances transferred 149 patients from Wishard Memorial Hospital on Saturday, the final day of service for the facility that dates as far back as World War I. Those patients were moved to the new Eskenazi Hospital, just four blocks away. The new $754 million hospital replaces Wishard as the county-owned hospital in Indianapolis. Construction on the art-filled, 315-bed Eskenazi Hospital began four years ago.

Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. has joined two other companies to contribute $40 million to an early-stage life sciences venture capital initiative in New York City. New York economic development officials announced the effort to launch more life sciences companies last week. The city of New York will contribute $10 million, according to The Wall Street Journal, and will look to attract venture capital firms willing to put in another $50 million. The initiative hopes to launch 15 to 20 new life sciences companies in New York by 2020. Lilly operates a research and development center in New York focused on cancer, which it acquired in 2008 as part of its purchase of New York-based drug company ImClone Systems Inc. The two other companies contributing money are New Jersey-based biotech company Celgene Corp. and GE Ventures, the venture capital arm of Connecticut-based General Electric Co. The contributions of each company were not disclosed.

Eli Lilly and Co. will end development of the depression medicine edivoxetine as an add-on therapy after the drug failed to meet goals in three Phase 3 studies, according to Bloomberg News. The end of edivoxetine as a potential add-on therapy is another research setback for Lilly, which has had a cancer treatment, ramucirumab, fail in breast cancer patients, and an experimental compound prove unsuccessful in helping people with advanced Alzheimer’s disease. Edivoxetine had been expected to generate $560 million by 2020, said Seamus Fernandez, an analyst with Leerink Swann & Co. The decision to end the development as an add-on therapy will result in a pretax charge of $15 million, or 1 cent a share, in the fourth quarter, Lilly said. The company reaffirmed its 2013 forecasts and said it still plans to return to revenue growth in 2015.

LOU’S VIEWS: Farce the herald angels sing

December 6, 2013

Holiday spirit, solid acting, and a great Christmas song, populate this year’s installment of “A Very Phoenix Xmas.”

MAURER: Who’s reading this newspaper—and others?

December 5, 2013

You can learn a lot about a person by finding out what newspapers they read.

IU Health could fall out of network for UnitedHealthcare

December 5, 2013

IU Health, the state’s largest hospital system, and UnitedHealthcare, the state’s second-largest health insurer, have been unable to come to terms on a new set of reimbursement contracts.

Skjodt donates $2M to Herron’s art-therapy program

December 5, 2013

The gift will endow a chair in the program, which is based at IUPUI and was developed with cooperation from the Indiana University School of Medicine. The two-year, full-time residential program is the only one of its kind in Indiana.

Endowment pledges $63M toward fight against brain drain

December 4, 2013

The Lilly Endowment will give nearly $63 million in grants to 39 Indiana colleges and universities to boost job prospects for their graduates, pushing the endowment’s anti-brain-drain campaign to $120 million over the past decade.

Lilly invests in NY life sciences venture capital initiative

December 4, 2013

Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. has joined two other companies to contribute $40 million to an early-stage life sciences venture capital initiative in New York City.

Company news

December 2, 2013

The National Science Foundation awarded Indiana University’s Bloomington campus more than $614,000 to recruit, support and retain undergraduate students majoring in astronomy, biology, chemistry, mathematics and physics over the next five years. Nearly 85 percent of the money will be used for student scholarships. The so-called S-STEM Program—Scholarships in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math—aims to put college students on a path to pursue further education and careers in key science and math-based fields. The program also tries to connect students, faculty and local professionals from all the science- and math-based disciplines. “This program focuses on the development of a community of STEM scholars who will engage students in preparation for a successful career in these fields,” said IU’s dean of the college of arts and sciences, Larry Singell. The initial round of scholarships will fund students enrolled for the spring 2014 semester.

A federal judge in Indianapolis temporarily blocked restrictions on abortions induced by medicine scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, while a lawsuit filed by Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky Inc. proceeds. The dispute involves a law passed by the General Assembly this year, which requires abortion clinics that use only medications—not surgical procedures—to add procedure and recovery rooms, as well as surgical equipment. Only the Planned Parenthood clinic in Lafayette meets that description. But the law allows office-based physicians to continue prescribing abortion-inducing medications without adding the additional rooms and equipment. U.S. District Court Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson said Nov. 27 the state had not provided an adequate basis for making such a distinction between abortion clinics and physicians’ offices.

Indiana University Health joined a growing list of businesses and organizations proclaiming public opposition to a proposed state constitutional amendment that would reinforce Indiana’s ban on same-sex marriage. IU Health, the state’s largest hospital system and the state’s fourth-largest employer with about 26,000 workers, said it was taking the position for health-related reasons. “Research has demonstrated that unequal treatment of same-sex couples … adversely impacts their health and well-being,” IU Health said in a prepared statement. “As a leading health care provider in this state, IU Health must support efforts that reduce disparities and improve the overall health and well-being of its patients, their families and the community.” IU Health joined Eli Lilly and Co., Cummins Inc. and Emmis Communications Corp. as major employers opposing the amendment. Indiana, Ball State, Butler and DePauw universities and several other colleges also have voiced opposition. State lawmakers will begin considering the same-sex marriage ban in January. Supporters of limiting marriage to one man and one woman say a constitutional amendment is needed to keep the courts from legalizing gay marriage in Indiana. Thirty states have constitutional amendments banning legal recognition of same-sex marriage, and five others ban it by law.

ALTOM: The data says: Driving deserves your full attention

November 27, 2013

Even talking on the phone while behind the wheel is a potentially dangerous use of your time.

City’s new pro hockey team to be called Indy Fuel

November 26, 2013

The Fuel said they are in the process of hiring front-office and coaching staff, signing an affiliation agreement with a NHL franchise, and recruiting players to fill the roster.

State auditor Sawyer resigns after three months

November 26, 2013

State Auditor Dwayne Sawyer—former president of the Brownsburg Town Council and the first black Republican to serve in a statewide office—said he was stepping down due to “family and personal concerns.”

KRUGMAN: Mild depression might be the new normal

November 25, 2013

Spend any time around monetary officials and one word you’ll hear a lot is “normalization.” Most such officials accept that now is no time to be tightfisted, that for the time being credit must be easy and interest rates low.

STYRING: Obamacare rests on numbers concoction

November 25, 2013

Everybody’s talking about Obamacare. Website crashes. People booted off their health insurance. Sticker shock. No doubt we’ll be talking about it through the 2014 election. And the 2016 election. And most likely well beyond that.

SHEPARD: Conrad’s intensity still felt downtown

November 25, 2013

Surely Larry Conrad is smiling over the recent report about the phenomenal strength of the housing market in downtown Indianapolis.

WAGNER: It’s a brave new world in the suburbs

November 25, 2013

Earlier this year, I wrote for this publication about the rise of a new Hoosier swing voter, women my age who live in the doughnut counties around Indianapolis.

MARCUS: Not the time to emphasize our negatives

November 25, 2013

What is the number one complaint of Hoosier employers? The labor force is outdated. We do not have enough workers with the training and experience to compete with other states and nations.

DANIELS: Fight over marriage amendment is foolish

November 25, 2013

Indiana has a habit of being a bit behind the curve. In recent years, we have departed from that tradition, moving boldly in education reform, telecommunications reform and economic development. We have been named the fifth-best state to do business, third best in job attraction, and best in the country for international investment.

« Previous 1 … 261 262 263 264 265 … 367 Next »
Back To Top
  • Subscriptions
    • Online & Print Subscriptions
    • FREE eNews
  • Submit to Edit
    • Submit People
    • Submit Records
    • IBJ Awards
  • IBJ.com Account
    • My Account
    • Register
  • Events
    • Upcoming IBJ Events
    • Award Nominations
    • Event Sponsorship Opportunities
  • Support & Information
    • Customer Service
    • Contact Us
    • Career Opportunities
    • Reprints
  • Advertising
    • IBJ Advertising
    • Contacts
    • Classifieds
    • Legal Notices
    • Submit Advertising
  • Multimedia
    • Photo Galleries
    • Videos
    • IBJ Mobile App
  • IBJ.com
    • Book of Lists
    • Editorial Calendar
    • IBJ Digital Newspaper
    • Past Print Issues
    • Magazines/Supplements
    • IBJ Store
  • Online Products
    • Purchase Past Issues
    • Bookstore
  • IBJ Media
  • Inside INdiana Business
  • The Indiana Lawyer
  • Indiana 250
  • AdEndeavor
Copyright © 2026 All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy | Terms of Service