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Health Care & Reform Weekly will not publish the next two weeks. It will resume Jan. 7.
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Health Care & Reform Weekly will not publish the next two weeks. It will resume Jan. 7.
Eli Lilly and Co. suffered a delay in its effort to bring an Alzheimer’s drug to market this month, but it also published new research that the pharmaceutical company thinks confirms it is on the right track.
Gov. Mitch Daniels is planning one last trip in his campaign RV as it heads to the RV Hall of Fame. The Governor’s Office says Daniels is donating the vehicle, dubbed RV-1, to the Indiana State Museum, but it’s first going on display at the RV museum in Elkhart. Daniels and others involved in his gubernatorial campaigns are planning to ride in the RV on Wednesday from the Statehouse in Indianapolis to the museum in northern Indiana. Daniels leaves office as governor on Jan. 14.
An Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officer is on administrative leave after shooting a suspect on Sunday in a south-side home invasion. Officers responded to the 200 block of Bakemeyer Street just before 11 a.m. Sunday. Multiple 911 callers had reported a man driving a green station wagon erratically in the area before backing into a driveway between two yellow houses. Police saw the suspect enter and later leave one of those two homes with a handgun. An officer fired at the suspect, striking him. The suspect was taken to Wishard Hospital in critical condition. The officer was placed on administrative leave, which is standard police procedure.
Chicago-based OkCopay Inc. posts prices offered by Indianapolis health care providers, many of which have agreed to give cash-paying patients a price roughly equivalent to those charged to insured customers. The site also includes pricing information from health care providers that do not give cash-paying patients an additional break.
The Indianapolis Parks Foundation has received a record-setting $10 million grant from the Lilly Endowment to upgrade 13 parks in Marion County, the foundation announced Monday.
Indianapolis businessman Tim Durham has begun the process of appealing his conviction to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago. Durham was sentenced to 50 years in prison after a jury found him guilty on 12 felony counts.
Safis Solutions LLC has hired Thomas Stergar as director of business development. Stergar previously founded Diabco Life Sciences LLC, a nutraceutical ingredient manufacturer for diabetes, malnutrition and immune system enhancement. He holds a bachelor’s in psychology from Indiana University.
Richard Ashby will join St. Vincent Medical Group on Jan. 7 as director of physician recruiting. Ashby comes from Houston-based Intercede Health, a national medical management organization, where he oversaw physician recruiting business operations. Ashby holds a degree from Ball State University.
The Anson Group added Sharon Kvistad as a senior regulatory consultant. Kvistad, who has worked on regulatory issues for medical device companies for three decades, holds a degree in biology from the University of Minnesota.
Officials of an eastern Indiana city are giving the potential buyer of a large vacant auto parts factory more time to close on the purchase.
State officials are expected to sign off on a one-year extension of the Healthy Indiana Plan started by Gov. Mitch Daniels, sparing the program’s roughly 40,000 enrollees a lapse in coverage, according to the Associated Press. Family and Social Services Administration spokeswoman Marni Lemons said the state received the needed paperwork from the federal government on Dec. 13. The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services agreed to a waiver that would allow the state to continue the program unchanged for a year, Lemons said. The HIP program offers health savings accounts to the working poor, requiring them in most cases to pay a monthly contribution to their savings accounts. The Daniels administration had sought a three-year extension of the program via the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' waiver process, but the federal government replied in July with an offer of one year and a request that the state end mandatory contributions from enrollees. Lemons said the new offer allows Indiana to continue collecting a monthly contribution, but did not say why CMS reversed its position.
Milliman Inc., an actuarial and consulting firm, announced Friday morning that it plans to add 26 jobs in Indianapolis by 2017 as part of a $2 million expansion. The Seattle-based company, which has 54 offices worldwide, said the investment will go toward installing additional technology at its 25,000-square-foot office in downtown’s Chase Tower. Milliman already had 55 employees at the location and has begun hiring additional actuarial consultants. The Indiana Economic Development Corp. said it will provide Milliman up to $400,000 in performance-based tax credits and up to $97,000 in training grants based on the company's job-creation plans. Milliman has had a presence in Indianapolis since 1965.
A south-side entrepreneur unveiled plans Thursday to convert the old St. Francis Hospital in Beech Grove into a $20 million mixed-use senior-living development. Joe Wolfla, who helped lead the reintroduction last year of the chocolate beverage Choc-ola, announced the project at a Beech Grove Chamber of Commerce event. Dubbed Franciscan Place, the development will feature 150-plus apartments, shops and a restaurant in the old hospital. Wolfla purchased the 14-acre site from Franciscan St. Francis for $10. The property became available in March after the Catholic hospital system ended all inpatient operations at the facility. Franciscan announced five years ago that it would consolidate its Beech Grove operations into an expanded facility seven miles south, near Interstate 65 and Emerson Avenue. The Beech Grove hospital was founded in 1914 by the Sisters of St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration, an order of nuns based in Mishawaka. But it fell victim to the need for hospitals to attract patients using private health insurance, which pays generous prices compared to government-sponsored health plans such as Medicare and Medicaid.
Eli Lilly and Co. last week halted one clinical trial for a rheumatoid arthritis drug and announced a new trial for an Alzheimer’s drug. Both moves are potential setbacks for the Indianapolis-based drugmaker's product pipeline. Lilly stopped one of three Phase 3 trials it was conducting on the drug tabalumab, because it failed to show efficacy against rheumatoid arthritis. The other two trials are proceeding, but Lilly is holding off on enrolling new patients until more analyses are finished early next year. Lilly is still evaluating tabalumab in systemic lupus erythematosus. The company said it expects to take a pretax charge of $20 million to $35 million in the fourth quarter, or about 2 cents a share after tax. Lilly also announced that it needs to run another Phase 3 trial of its experimental Alzheimer's treatment solanezumab. That means it will likely take another five years before Lilly can launch solanezumab—assuming the new trial confirms and strengthens the signs that the drug helps slow the progression of Alzheimer’s in patients with mild forms of the disease. Lilly said the study will begin no later than the third quarter of 2013. With many other companies also testing Alzheimer’s drugs in Phase 3 trials, the delay means another company could beat Lilly in its quest to launch the first drug to successfully reverse the course of the memory-sapping disease.
Based in Indianapolis since 1970, The Saturday Evening Post is searching for office space in Philadelphia to return news operations back to the historic publication's roots.
The Fishers Town Council voted Monday to spend $8 million in local funds toward construction of an Interstate 69 exit at 106th Street that will cost an estimated $25 million to build.
For me it was Indianapolis Opera’s “Amahl and the Night Visitors” plus lots of films. What about you?
Tipton officials approved a 10-year tax abatement worth $2.5 million to help the company launch production in a nearly 800,000-square-foot plant at U.S. 31 and State Road 28, about 25 miles north of Carmel.
Home-sale agreements in the nine-county Indianapolis area jumped 14.2 percent in November, marking the 19th straight month the number of pending sales has increased.
The proposal includes a large addition at the campus, a student life center and other improvements that would nearly double Ivy Tech's current 258,000 square feet.
Mike Pence's staff says he likes to chew over an issue extensively before presenting it to the public, and wants to hear from multiple sides before making up his mind.
Hattiesburg-based SMEPA, which generates and wholesales power to 11 electric cooperatives serving 410,000 Mississippi customers, says it will join Carmel-based Midwest Independent Transmission System Operator in December 2013.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services agreed to a waiver that would allow the state to continue the program unchanged for a year.