Will ACOs really get off the ground?
The hype over accountable care organizations—something every major hospital in Indianapolis is moving to become—is increasingly being laced with skepticism as the economics behind the idea get more scrutiny.
The hype over accountable care organizations—something every major hospital in Indianapolis is moving to become—is increasingly being laced with skepticism as the economics behind the idea get more scrutiny.
Community Health Network hired Dr. Scott Reece as medical director of primary care outreach. Reece will oversee Community’s new extended care facility physician practices. He most recently served as the senior associate director of the Department of Medical Education Family Medicine Residency at IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital. He also was a family practice physician in Delaware County for 24 years.
Tony Javorka has been named chief operating officer for Community Health Network’s new integrated physician group. Javorka previously held the position of chief operating officer for practice and hospital operations at Community Heart and Vascular, a subsidiary of Community Health that includes cardiologists and the Indiana Heart Hospital. Before joining Community, Javorka served as CEO for the Indiana Heart Associates physician practice as well as senior manager of the health care group at Somerset CPAs.
Thad Johnson became CEO of Methodist Sports Medicine / The Orthopedic Specialists on June 15, the first time the 19-physician practice has had a non-physician executive.
St. Francis Medical Group’s Indiana Heart Physicians has added Dr. George Blake to its practice. Blake was previously part of Premier Healthcare Inc., an internal medicine practice in Bloomington. Blake received his undergraduate degree in biology at the University of Houston and his medical degree at Baylor College of Medicine.
Residents of the Anderson area—when they paid with health insurance provided by an employer—spent 76 percent more on health care in 2009 than the average American with employer health insurance, highest among all metropolitan areas in the nation.
Dr. Murray Korc, an internationally known pancreatic cancer researcher, comes to the cancer center as the first Myles Brand Professor of Cancer Research. The position is funded through a Lilly Endowment grant.
A German researcher disputed the validity of a study that found Byetta and another diabetes drug increase cancer risk.
Zotec Partners, a fast-growing physician-billing management company based in Carmel, has acquired a family-owned medical-billing firm with 100 employees based in Florida.
The factory system is no longer acceptable. We now demand professionalism from our teachers and a system that adapts to each child’s particular needs.
Even though Google Inc. has given up on the business of electronic personal health records, Fort Wayne-based NoMoreClipboard.com is launching a new service it thinks will crack open the market.
Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. caught the attention of employers and health benefits brokers with its agreement to buy a stake in Bloom Health, a private health-insurance exchange that would compete for employers with the state-run marketplaces set to open in 2014 as part of the health reform overhaul. According to Bloomberg News, WellPoint and two not-for-profit health insurers will acquire a 78-percent stake in Minneapolis-based Bloom. It is an online marketplace offering a variety of health plans to about 20,000 workers at almost 50 companies. WellPoint officials think a private exchange could offer more consistency for multi-state employers than the state-run exchanges. Under the Bloom model, companies pay employees a fixed amount to cover a portion of their health-care coverage and workers provide the rest based on the plans they select. The idea of the private health-care exchange and its defined contribution model is similar to the trend in retirement benefits in which employers have been abandoning defined benefit pension plans for the relative financial safety of a 401(k) that allows companies to control how much they spend.
With its bestseller Zyprexa losing patent protection next month, Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. is trying to wring every dollar it can out of its other products, including its $2.2 billion-a-year lung cancer drug Alimta. And Lilly got some good news on that front Monday. A committee at the European Medicines Agency issued a positive opinion for the use of Alimta as a "continuation" maintenance therapy, Lilly announced. That makes market approval by the European Commission more likely. Continuation maintenance approval could mean significantly more dollars for Lilly. It would allow doctors to treat lung cancer patients with Alimta during initial treatment and for numerous months afterward to keep the disease in check. Alimta already was approved as a maintenance drug, but only for use after initial treatment of the disease with other drugs. Receiving approval as a maintenance therapy, which Alimta won back in 2009, helped sales soar 66 percent since then. Alimta sales totaled $1.2 billion worldwide in the first half of 2011. According to Lilly, no chemotherapy is currently approved as a continuation maintenance drug. Alimta is designed to treat patients with non-small cell lung cancer who have a certain tumor type called nonsquamous.
The Conquer Cancer Foundation of the American Society of Clinical Oncology gave $450,000 to Dr. Bryan Schneider, a physician-researcher at the Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center. Schneider will use the three-year grant to study the neuropathy that some chemotherapy patients develop in hopes of eventually developing treatments to prevent it. Schneider has received three previous awards from the foundation.
Community Health Network opened a Community Spine Center in Greenwood, similar to the original spine center at Community North Hospital in Castleton. The south-side center will be led by Dr. Joshua Salyer, a graduate of Midwestern University-Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Dr. Ed Kowlowitz, owner and medical director of the Center for Pain Management in Indianapolis, recently challenged a regional Medicare reimbursement policy and, surprisingly, won. He spoke with IBJ about the experience, as well how his three-physician practice is growing even while many physician practices are selling to hospitals.
Reform-induced changes dominate health care panel of health care experts convened by Indianapolis Business Journal.
The recession pushed some nurses out of retirement and others into full-time jobs. But the nurse shortage is expected to resume as the economy improves.
Indiana University announced a partnership with the Indianapolis-based IU Health hospital system that will launch four primary care clinics in Bloomington, which can be visited for no extra charge by those enrolled in IU’s health plans.
The integration of the two not-for-profit hospital systems, approved by Howard Regional's board in late May, is now dead, the two hospitals announced Monday.
Medical residents are getting more job offers than before, yet greater numbers of them say if they had it to do over again, they would not go to medical school.
Dr. Sarah Amo, an obstetrician and gynecologist, has joined the St. Vincent Physician Network in Indianapolis. She received her bachelor’s degree from Michigan State University before earning her medical degree from Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit.
Dr. Bruce C. Inman, a general surgeon, has joined Hendricks Surgical Associates, part of the Hendricks Regional Health Medical Group. Inman practiced for many years previously with Indiana Surgery in Avon. He did his medical training at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
Dr. Hazem N. Shamseddeen has established a practice with Indy Southside Surgical, part of the St. Francis Medical Group. Shamseddeen specializes in general and bariatric surgery. Shamseddeen earned his medical degree at Beirut Arab University. He is the sixth surgeon to join Indy Southside Surgical.