Salvation Army reaches holiday goal after late surge
The Salvation Army of Indiana announced Wednesday morning that it reached its holiday fundraising goal of $2.93 million after a last-minute appeal.
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The Salvation Army of Indiana announced Wednesday morning that it reached its holiday fundraising goal of $2.93 million after a last-minute appeal.
One of the top executives at Brightpoint Inc. is leaving the Indianapolis-based cell phone distributor to take a similar position at Simon Property Group.
An Indiana House committee has endorsed a bill that would allow residents to add their cell phone numbers to the state's do-not-call list for unwanted telemarketing calls.
ParaPRO LLC’s treatment, called Natroba, has a potential U.S. market of 6 million to 12 million infected children annually.
Peyton Manning is expected to get a pay raise next season. Oft-injured safety Bob Sanders may have to take a pay cut, and longtime Colts running backs coach Gene Huey is looking for a new job.
The Indiana Lobby Registration Commission placed Executive Director and general counsel Sarah Nagy on paid leave Monday, the day before a busy filing day for the state's lobbyists.
State Health Commissioner Greg Larkin says much of Indiana lacks the access to hospital trauma centers needed to treat victims of attacks like the one in Tucson that left U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona critically injured.
Two Purdue University professors and a physician at the Indiana University School of Medicine have created a company to develop nanotechnology devices for medical diagnostic and therapeutic applications. NanoSense Inc., based in West Lafayette, will design tiny chips that can sense biological processes or the dosing of a medicine from inside a patient’s body. The company is led by IU’s Dr. Arthur Ko, a radiation oncologist; Purdue’s Babak Ziaie, a professor of electrical and computer engineering; and Teimour Maleki, a research professor at Purdue's Birck Nanotechnology Center.
With a $167,000 grant from the Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield Foundation, IUPUI will launch the Indiana Schweitzer Fellows Program on Friday. It is the 13th U.S. program site for the Albert Schweitzer Fellowship program, which pays stipends to graduate students who work to address social and health disparities. The Indiana program will be run by Dr. Douglas B. McKeag, former chairman of family medicine at the IU School of Medicine. The grant will be used to implement the 5-2-1-0 Healthy Kids Countdown, a childhood obesity-prevention program, by Schweitzer Fellows throughout the state. The program will select 15 fellows and pay each of them an annual stipend of $3,000. Online applications are due March 1.
Endocyte Inc. priced shares for its initial public offering last week, moving one step closer toward raising more than $80 million to fund its cancer-drug development. The West Lafayette-based drug-development firm intends to sell 6.15 million shares for $13 to $15 apiece. That range would fetch $80 million to $92 million. Those figures include 802,500 shares that will be sold only if demand outstrips the initial allotment of shares of 5.35 million. If Endocyte sells only the smaller amount of shares, it would raise between $70 million and $80 million. In either case, more than $10 million of the funds would cover Endocyte’s costs in staging the IPO. Endocyte first indicated in August it would take itself public by selling shares worth $86.3 million, but not until Jan. 12 did it disclose the price range and number of shares to be sold. The company is developing six cancer drugs, most of which target cancer cells by binding to their receptors for the compound folate. Such receptors are “over-expressed” in cancer cells, compared with healthy cells, so Endocyte’s drugs have the potential to be more potent killing the cancers while attacking fewer healthy cells than existing chemotherapy agents. Endocyte’s leading drug, called EC145, is being tested to treat ovarian cancer that is resistant to platinum-based drugs, as well as to treat non-small-cell lung cancer.
Some health advocacy groups that say they are speaking for patients’ interests before legislatures, regulatory agencies or public forums fail to disclose their funding from Eli Lilly and Co. and other drugmakers, according to The New York Times. Citing a new study from Columbia University, the Times reported that Lilly paid $3.2 million to 161 health advocacy groups in the first half of 2007. But only one in four of the groups acknowledged Lilly’s support anywhere on their public websites, the study said. Only one in 10 disclosed Lilly as the sponsor of a specific grant, and none of them disclosed the exact amount. Lilly’s reports were studied because it was the first company to disclose such payments.
Dr. Eric A. Yancy is now serving as chief medical officer of Indianapolis-based Managed Health Services, a health maintenance organization that has contracts with the state of Indiana to administer parts of the Medicaid Hoosier Healthwise and the Healthy Indiana Plan health benefits programs. Yancy will maintain his private medical practice.
Dr. Quinn Bensi, a pediatrician, has joined St. Vincent Physician Network in Zionsville. Bensi earned her bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and received her medical degree from Southern Illinois University School of Medicine in Carbondale, Ill. She served as chief resident at the Indiana University Medical Center before working as a pediatric hospitalist for the IU Hospital and the Riley Hospital for Children.
Clarian Health, which is set to change its name to Indiana University Health on Jan. 24, is relying on the academic expertise of its downtown Indianapolis hospitals to pull in patients from a wider swath of the state and the nation.
The chairman of the Indiana House Ways and Means Committee says he expects the panel to make at most modest changes to Gov. Mitch Daniels’ state budget proposal
Eli Lilly and Co. continues to misfire on getting new human medicines approved, but its animal health unit is on a roll.
Sen. Richard Lugar plans to return to Indiana on Friday for a major fundraiser in Carmel.
Unless something big and unexpected happens, 2011 will be consumed by a debate over the size of government.
Barack Obama’s Christmas resurrection was so miraculous that even a birther or two may start believing the guy is a Christian.
Wasn’t Texas supposed to be thriving even as the rest of America suffered? Didn’t its governor declare, during his re-election campaign, that “we have billions in surplus”? Yes, it was, and yes, he did. But reality has now intruded.
This is the paradox of America’s unborn. No life is so desperately sought after, so hungrily desired, so carefully nurtured. And yet no life is so legally unprotected, and so frequently destroyed.
In 2009, Gabrielle Giffords was holding a “Congress on Your Corner” meeting at a Safeway supermarket in her district when a protester, who was waving a sign that said “Don’t Tread on Me,” waved a little too strenuously. The pistol he was carrying under his armpit fell out of his holster.
Consider the extremes. President Barack Obama is redesigning his administration to make it even friendlier toward big business and the megabanks, which is to say the rich, who flourish no matter what is going on with the economy in this country. (They flourish even when they’re hard at work destroying the economy.) Meanwhile, we hear […]