2024 Health Care Heroes: Tina Hoffmann
Hoffmann spends 75% of her time on the road traveling across Indiana leading classes with community partners, including the state chapter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
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Hoffmann spends 75% of her time on the road traveling across Indiana leading classes with community partners, including the state chapter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
SPONSORED BY Innovations in Health Care Dr. Jill Donaldson Community Physician Network Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Franciscan Health Riley Children's Health/Indiana University School of Medicine Physician Doctors Laurie Ackerman, Matthew Partain, Mitesh Shah and Satyan Sreenath Riley Children's Health Dr. Brownsyne Tucker Edmonds Chief Health Equity Officer, Indiana University Health Dr. Joseph Smucker Indiana Spine […]
This year, there were 10 marijuana-related bills filed in the Indiana House and Senate. None made it out of committee.
Simtra BioPharma Solutions on Wednesday announced plans to expand its sterile fill/finish manufacturing campus in Bloomington and add about 130 jobs.
Some Washington Township parents want to block an all-girls charter school from opening at a moment when tensions regarding school choice and access to equitable education are fermenting throughout Marion County.
Madison County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings is exploring a possible bid at the Indiana Republican Party’s state convention in June.
If you look at your calendar Thursday, you will see an unusual date: Feb. 29. There’s actually an important scientific reason leap years exist. Here’s what to know.
The 82-year-old Kentucky lawmaker is the longest-serving Senate leader in history.
Though inventories of new autos are still well below the roughly 4 million level that prevailed before the pandemic, analysts and dealers say the rising availability suggests that 2024 will be the most affordable year of the past five in which to buy a new car or truck.
Brandi Davis-Handy has worked for the utility for eight years, most recently as chief customer officer.
Peanut Montessori acquired the 12,100-square-foot brick building along Broad Ripple Avenue on Monday and plans to move its operations to the property later this year.
U.S. growth has now topped 2% for six straight quarters, defying fears that high interest rates would tip the world’s largest economy into a recession.
Lawmakers voted Tuesday to approve two contentious education bills—one would require school corporations to retain students who fail to pass the IREAD exam and another would push state universities to include more politically diverse instruction.
Despite the changes, bill author Sen. Chris Garten, R-Charlestown, said he was “supportive of the bill moving” and professed “trust” in the legislative process.
The real estate development firm, which has been based in Indianapolis for 114 years, plans to move to a new $7.3 million building after reaching an incentives deal with Noblesville that was approved Tuesday.
The Secretary of State’s Securities Division announced the action Tuesday against VoCare Inc. and three of its officers.
In his ruling, the judge emphasized that each side agreed about the need for more research on the long-term effects of gender-transition procedures.
Rust, running to succeed U.S. Sen. Mike Braun, was seeking to challenge Congressman Jim Banks for the GOP nomination in the May 2024 primary.
A revised bill targeting absenteeism would require schools to prohibit habitually truant students from extracurricular activities, and would also impose a penalty on parents who make unproven allegations against teachers.
Senate Bill 52, a Republican-authored bill that leaders of Indianapolis’ public transit agency say could kill the planned Blue Line, advanced out of committee to the full Indiana House on Tuesday.