Ceremony marks start on new Wishard hospital
Construction of a new Wishard Memorial Hospital was hailed as a great legacy for Indianapolis as a formal groundbreaking was
held for the $754 million project.
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Construction of a new Wishard Memorial Hospital was hailed as a great legacy for Indianapolis as a formal groundbreaking was
held for the $754 million project.
The Indianapolis Convention & Visitors Association is spending $1.3 million to promote the city to eight Midwestern markets,
in
hopes of attracting more travelers.
Hamilton County’s prosecutor says she’s hopeful a decision on whether to file charges in the Carmel High School
sexual assault case will be made by the end of the week. Investigators say two freshmen were allegedly assaulted by seniors
on the basketball team. One victim says he was attacked in the locker room. The other says he was attacked on a bus ride home
after a game. Investigators say the charges could include battery, criminal confinement and criminal deviant conduct. A grand
jury has been hearing testimony in the case.
A woman is recovering at Wishard Hospital after a shooting on Indianapolis’ southeast side. The unidentified lady was
walking up to a house on East Michigan Street near Emerson Avenue when several shots were fired from a passing car. The woman
was hit in the back and is reported to be in serious but stable condition.
A Pizza Hut employee who was shot during a robbery late Tuesday night has been upgraded to serious condition. Terry Justice,
44, was shot in the back at the North Michigan Road restaurant in Indianapolis despite cooperating with robbers. Police say
the victim was by himself when two men entered the restaurant wearing masks and carrying semi-automatic handguns. Prior to
being shot, Justice gave the pair cash from a register but told them he couldn’t get into the store’s safe. Fox59
will have more at 4 p.m.
The Phoenix Theatre’s Bryan Fonseca, abetted by talented actor/musicians, create a strong, world-weary world premiere.
Society says the attendance represents a 57.4-percent increase over typical walk-in traffic to the Indiana History Center.
John Cardenas, news director at WBNS-TV Channel 10 in Columbus, Ohio, will assume his new job at WTHR June 1. He'll take
over for Jim Tellus, who died suddenly in early March.
After purchasing the Franklin-based company two years ago, TruFoods says it now is positioned to seek franchisees in an attempt
to grow the Ritter’s chain to 100 locations within five years.
Marian University has renamed its school of business after Clark H. Byrum, president of Indianapolis-based The Key Corp.,
who made a significant gift to the university this month.
Details of a plan to assist the Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library have yet to emerge, but city leaders are pledging
their support to shore up a widening budget gap.
State political parties launch lobbyistdancoats.com and badforindiana.com to criticize Senate candidates Dan Coats and Brad
Ellsworth. Both dismiss the other side's website as a political distraction.
Committee Chairman Sen. Luke Kenley says it's "vital" for state officials to get a handle on the fiscal impact
of the health care changes as they begin the early stages of putting together the next two-year state budget.
Indianapolis-based CountryMark, a co-op that provides fuel to farmers, has acquired 600 oil wells and other assets in the
Illinois basin.
The new federal health law mandates that health insurers spend at least 80 percent of premiums on medical care for customers
buying coverage on their own. But that rule may need to be loosened between now and 2014 to keep companies from quitting the
market, according a draft report released Monday by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. Bloomberg News reported
that the group of state regulators is expected to send a final recommendation on the rules to U.S. officials by June 1. The
new rule threatens to squeeze profits at WellPoint Inc., which has the largest share of individual customers
in the industry.
WellPoint CEO Angela Braly openly objected to President Obama’s weekend criticism of the health insurer
for reports that it seeks out breast cancer patients to cancel their policies. Such claims were reported last month by the
news service Reuters, but WellPoint called the story “inaccurate and grossly misleading.” In a letter to Obama,
Braly wrote, “If we are going to make this law work on behalf of all Americans, the attacks on the health insurance
industry—a valued industry that provides coverage for more than 200 million Americans—must end.” She also
noted that WellPoint paid for breast cancer coverage for 200,000 women last year and canceled the policies of just four. None
of the cancellations were because the women had breast cancer, Braly said, suggesting instead that the women had misrepresented
their health status. In response to criticism last month from Obama’s administration, WellPoint changed its rescission
policy to match the new health law signed by Obama in March. The new law says health insurers can cancel a customer’s
policy only in cases of fraud or intentional lying.
Two uninsured patients have sued the Clarian Health hospital system in Marion Superior Court for charging
unreasonably high prices, according to the Associated Press. Abby Allen's bill was about $15,600 for a June 2008 hospital
stay—about twice as much as the total bill would have been if she had been insured, the lawsuit claims. Walter Moore,
the other plaintiff in the case, was billed $1,138 for treatment he received after an auto accident in May 2009. Clarian said
it offers a financial-assistance program for uninsured and low-income patients. Hospitals typical set prices as a starting
point for negotiations with health insurers based on their volume of patients. The uninsured are often the only patients charged
the full price.
SonarMed, based in West Lafayette, received market approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for
its airway monitoring system. SonarMed’s product uses acoustic technology to catch and prevent movement or obstruction
of the tube, both of which can harm patients. The technology was developed at Purdue University and licensed to SonarMed by
Purdue Research Foundation's Office of Technology Commercialization.
West Lafayette-based Kylin Therapeutics Inc. has hired Henry Li as director of its research and development
team. He was director of research and pharmacology at San Diego-based NexBio Inc., which develops drugs to treat pandemic
influenza.
Joe Guzman is a co-founder of Indianapolis-based Ascend USA, the new trade adopted after Guzman merged his
benefits brokerage, Benefits Strategies Inc., with benefits business Steven Goodin. The eight-person firm expects to hire
as many 15 new employees in the next year. Those workers will help Ascend diversify from health benefits into brokering commercial
insurance products.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration last week pushed its self-declared deadline for rendering an approval decision on the
drug Bydureon to Oct. 22. The previous deadline was in March.