Indianapolis-based life sciences research firm Pearl Pathways acquired by Versiti
The acquisition is the second in central Indiana this year for Versiti, a not-for-profit specializing in blood-health services.
The acquisition is the second in central Indiana this year for Versiti, a not-for-profit specializing in blood-health services.
Eli Lilly and Co.’s hot-selling diabetes drug, Mounjaro, will now be sold for a second use, chronic weight management, using a separate brand name, Zepbound.
The Indianapolis-based drug company is ramping up manufacturing capacity to avoid possible shortages and to meet potentially huge demand in a nation where more than 40% of adults are classified as obese.
Indiana lawmakers passed a law in 2022 that would allow electric utilities to build small modular reactors similar to the one called off by NuScale.
According to the same Trust Barometer, respondents trust ‘my CEO’ and ‘my colleagues’ far more than government leaders or journalists.
At least 30% of depression is treatment-resistant and something I clinically see routinely.
My wife and I take this responsibility seriously, me with the cooking and her with the spending.
Women of all faiths have long been important figures in making our families, communities, societies and world better, despite having to fight inequality.
The decision to table a proposal to move much of the administration of the Kinsey Institute into a not-for-profit came after significant faculty and staff pushback, a petition of opposition with nearly 8,000 signatures and a campus protest.
To take full advantage of the new economic opportunities coming Indiana’s away, addressing education and workforce development deficiencies will be paramount.
Several new and growing training programs in central Indiana are designed to bring the next desperately needed generation of HVAC technicians up to speed.
Karen Bravo became dean of the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law in July 2020. She joined its faculty 16 years earlier, in 2004, teaching international law, international trade law and business courses. An international law scholar and expert in the study of human trafficking, her research interests include labor liberalization, personhood, slavery […]
But what if “what’s wrong” is NOT “what matters” most?
Consumer advocates and other across the country and in central Indiana are saying big executive-compensation packages are ripe for review.
The foundation spent itself down to zero this year, distributing legacy grants to arts organizations, the University of Indianapolis and not-for-profits focused on military families, former prison inmates, HIV prevention and animal conservation.
Matt Gentry recently sat down with IBJ to discuss what’s next for both Lebanon and him, going into what he said will be his final term.
Thinking big and inspiring others to do so as well has been Mitch Daniels’ hallmark through five decades in business, public service and higher education.
The current water study is examining the art of the possible—if appropriate need should exist in the future to move water from the Lafayette region to central Indiana. Indiana is blessed with more than adequate water resources; they’re just not always precisely where we need them.
The research is the first to document that an obesity medication can not only pare pounds, but also safely prevent a heart attack, stroke or a heart-related death in people who already have heart disease—but not diabetes.
Kinsey Institute supporters say the proposal to move much of the administration of the institute into a not-for-profit is rushed, unnecessary and underdeveloped. Indiana University trustees have delayed a decision on the plan to gather more input.