2019 Women of Influence: Dr. Angela Fiege
Dr. Angela Fiege founded Rachael’s First Week after her daughter died from a traumatic brain injury the day after arriving at Indiana University in Bloomington for her freshman year.
Dr. Angela Fiege founded Rachael’s First Week after her daughter died from a traumatic brain injury the day after arriving at Indiana University in Bloomington for her freshman year.
Abbott Laboratories announced plans Monday night to build a 120,000-square-foot facility in the NorthPoint Industrial Park along U.S. 31 where it will manufacture a heart valve repair device.
Matthew Sause, 42, returns to Roche Diagnostics Corp., where he worked for 17 years before leaving briefly this year for a senior position at Gilead Sciences.
Individual rights have never been absolute. We believe there can be a balance between the common good and preserving individual rights. Bipartisan solutions are possible.
Medicare for All is not socialized medicine. It’s government health insurance that provides access to the private health care delivery system.
Colleges nationwide are launching angel networks that connect business executives and investors with entrepreneurs and startups with ties to the school.
Dr. Ulrich Klopfer competed so avidly in the 1970s to perform the most abortions each day that it was said he would set his coffee aside, jump to his feet in the break room and rush to the operating table whenever his chief rival in the macabre derby walked by.
Dr. Paul Wallach, an executive associate dean at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, predicts that within the next decade, hand-held ultrasound devices will replace the stethoscope as part of the routine physical exam.
The federal government says readmissions are often unnecessary and cost taxpayers tens of billions of dollars a year for treatments that should have been caught the first time around, or were not followed up adequately.
Rich Hofstetter is inheriting control of Story, Indiana, after the death of his father, Richard, who for years was the public face of the off-the-beaten-path attraction.
The drug, called pegilodecakin, had been seen as a promising treatment for one of the deadliest types of cancer, and was the lead product in Lilly’s $1.6 billion acquisition of Armo BioSciences last year.
The law initially designed to increase access and decrease costs has ultimately resulted in decreased access and increased costs. Only in Washington.
This legislation is an important part of the comprehensive effort to prevent youth initiation of a lifelong deadly addiction.
Every day, thousands of Americans get a surprise bill in the mail from a health provider, asking for thousands of dollars for medical services that weren’t covered by the patient’s insurance.
Vaping has grown into full-blown health crisis in Indiana, panelists said at an IBJ health care event.
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Josh Owens, the 34-year-old CEO of tech firm SupplyKick, has never held elected office. But he doesn’t consider that a bad thing.
Since the first pager was patented in 1949 and used in New York’s Jewish Hospital, millions of doctors have done their daily rounds in hospitals with the gadget clipped to their waistband, always ready to hear the beep that might signal a medical crisis on the other end. But hospitals are now phasing them out.
Nearly half of Americans with private insurance—47%—are covered by high-deductible plans, up from 25% in 2010. That’s driven up out-of-pocket health spending among people with employer coverage—from $493 in 2007 to $792 in 2017.
We are currently entertaining changes in policy that sound good or intuitive but are not necessarily data-driven and evidenced-based.
The new stalled rule would require applicants to have the state health department, not the BMV, sign off on an individual’s attempt to be recognized on their driver’s license or state ID as anything other than their gender at birth.