More progress needed for primary care docs
Thank you for [Oct. 21 Morris column] on the shortage of primary care doctors from a patient’s perspective.
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Thank you for [Oct. 21 Morris column] on the shortage of primary care doctors from a patient’s perspective.
When my mother told me money can’t buy happiness, she was evidently onto something. Recently, the World Happiness Report recognized Denmark—a cold country with one of those high-tax “socialist, nanny-state” governments—as the happiest nation on Earth.
Pathway to Recovery provides housing with support services to homeless adults diagnosed with substance abuse and mental illness so they can begin recovery, become financially self-sufficient, and live independently in safe, affordable, substance-free permanent housing.
Sandra Norman was charged with stealing the money by writing checks to herself, friends and her boyfriend since she became trustee in early 2011.
There are two key financial tables that can help you plan for retirement. They can be found on the Internet. With them you can input two simple factors—period invested and interest rate earned—and quickly see how your net worth is affected.
Much of the rhetoric about the costs and benefits of the minimum wage is pure bunk. Life as an adult minimum-wage worker is tough, but not because of salaries.
A 33-year-old Indianapolis man was in serious condition Wednesday night after suffering multiple gunshot wounds. Fredrick McKinney Jr. was shot in the 1500 block of South Rural Street at about 9:15. Witnesses said they saw two cars leaving the scene. The victim drove himself to a Village Pantry at 2360 E. Raymond St. before being taken to the hospital.
Hamilton County authorities arrested 19-year-old Jose Luiz Romo after a fatal shooting Wednesday in Noblesville. The victim, 45-year-old Jesus Armando Martinez-Lopez, was found lying in a driveway in the 2700 block of Cicero Road at about 9:30 p.m. after being shot in the chest with a pellet gun. He was pronounced dead at Riverview Hospital. Romo was charged with reckless homicide, a Class C felony.
Bus Rapid Transit could revive 38th Street and the neighborhoods that surround it.
Indianapolis police arrested a 23-year-old man Wednesday in connection with a sexual assault and home invasion Tuesday morning on the north side. Alexander Dupree was preliminarily charged with rape, criminal confinement, criminal deviate conduct and robbery. Police say Dupree and three or four other armed men broke into the home on East 79th Street near College Avenue, forced a woman in her 50s to drive them to an ATM, shot her in the leg, sexually assaulted both her and her daughter, and stole three vehicles.
About 130 workers at the GE Appliances factory will no longer have jobs effective Friday, although that number is down from about 160 jobs the company announced in early September.
Indiana Sen. Joe Donnelly told reporters in a conference call Wednesday that his Skills Gap Strategy Act seeks to ensure the Department of Labor has a concerted strategy to address skills-gap issues.
Lawyers for the Federal Home Loan Banks of Boston, Chicago and Indianapolis on Wednesday told a New York Supreme Court judge they are withdrawing from the case against Bank of America Corp.
Why are Indiana’s hospitals cutting jobs. Because they’re spooked about cuts to Medicare payments. They should be.
Premiums written by the firm’s insurance subsidiaries hit $96.6 million, an increase of nearly 19 percent over the third quarter a year ago and 4 percent over the second quarter.
New developers hope to begin renovating the eyesore at 733 N. Capitol Ave. as soon as their design gets approval from the city’s Regional Center Hearing Examiner.
HHGregg Inc.’s revenue fell in its latest quarter as the Indianapolis-based electronics and appliance retailer saw a decline in sales of televisions and computers.
More than 925,000 Hoosiers who accept government assistance to purchase food will receive fewer benefits starting Friday when a program enacted during the economic downturn expires.
The commissioner of the Indiana Department of Environmental Management, Thomas Easterly, told lawmakers that the pending federal regulations will essentially rule out coal-fired power plants that currently generate much of the state’s electricity.