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Articles
FEIGENBAUM: Non-education items destined for budget haircut at Legislature
As lawmakers look to return home by April 29, truly partisan measures are not in evidence among the more intriguing unresolved issues, having been worked through, avoided or simply ignored during the first three months of the session.
Radiologists follow FedEx with flat-rate prices. Is this the future of health care?
To satisfy patients with high-deductible health plans, Northwest Radiology has introduced flat-rate pricing for its imaging scans. It’s a centuries-old concept among postal services, but for health care, it’s revolutionary.
Rivoli Theatre, medical museum on Indiana endangered list
The Rivoli Theatre and the Indiana Medical History Museum in Indianapolis are among 10 places on this year's most-endangered places list from the not-for-profit historic protection group Indiana Landmarks.
Did Congress just kick off another wave of doc mergers?
Things got quiet after a wave of hospital systems' acquiring physician practices swept through central Indiana from 2008 to 2011. But a new wave could start now that Congress passed the "doc fix" last week.
Priority list includes Loretta Lynn and a celebration of Eiteljorg addition
Last minute change: Audra McDonald postpones due to illness.
Company news
Eli Lilly and Co. announced that an experimental drug it is developing to treat psoriasis also proved effective against psoriatic arthritis. The drug, called ixekizumab, was statistically superior to a placebo when studied in a Phase 3 trial, the Indianapolis-based drugmaker announced Monday. It also reported that adverse events were higher for patients taking ixekizumab than for those taking placebos. Lilly will announce more detailed results from its latest clinical trial in coming months. In August, Lilly announced that ixekizumab helped six times more patients with psoriasis than an existing therapy for psoriasis in two Phase 3 clinical trials. Lilly is now seeking approval by regulators to bring ixekizumab to market.
A federal whistleblower lawsuit charges that Indiana University Health and HealthNet Inc. put low-income pregnant women and their newborn babies at risk in a fraud scheme to increase revenue and bilk taxpayers out of millions of dollars. The suit, brought by Dr. Judith Robinson and recently unsealed, claims that the two health care providers left their pregnant patients' care to lower-cost nurse midwives instead of having them treated by doctors. But when billing Medicaid, the two providers claimed the services were provided by doctors, Robinson’s complaint alleges. Robinson formerly served as director of women’s services at HealthNet, as well as medical director of ob-gyn services at IU Health. When Robinson learned of three instances of babies with permanent neurological injuries within a six-month period, allegedly due to the subpar care, she alerted IU Health executives as early as February 2013, according to her suit. Four months later, she was fired. HealthNet is the largest provider of midwifery services in the state. MDWise Inc., a Medicaid claims processor, also is named in the suit. Robinson filed her suit in December 2013 and amended the complaint in October 2014. Per the court’s order, both remained sealed from public view until March 10 of this year. "In keeping with our corporate policy and out of respect for those involved, IU Health does not comment on matters involving active litigation," IU Health said Friday in an email to IBJ. "We will fully cooperate with any requests throughout the investigation."
Indiana University Health plans to construct a new hospital in Bloomington four or five years from now after striking a deal with Indiana University to build on the school's golf driving range. The project, which would cost hundreds of millions of dollars, still must win approval from the IU Health board of directors and IU trustees. IU Health’s executives in Bloomington said in December they were considering a new hospital either in a new location or on the existing IU Health campus in downtown Bloomington. In February, IU Health’s Bloomington executives said a study had found that building on the existing site was not feasible. IU Health officials considered building on 85 acres the hospital system owns on the northwestern outskirts of Bloomington. But the IU driving range sits closer to the heart of the city, on 75 acres northeast of the IU campus and adjacent to the IU Technology Park. The exact timing and cost of the project will be determined by a year-long design process, according to IU Health spokeswoman Amanda Roach.
The state budget would cut property taxes in half for for-profit hospitals, according to The Times of Northwest Indiana. Sen. Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville, said the tax break was included to help for-profit hospitals compete more equally with not-for-profit hospitals, which are not required to pay property taxes. The break would apply to buildings and equipment at such hospitals as Porter Regional Hospital in northwestern Indiana and Lutheran Health Network in Fort Wayne. In Porter County, Auditor Vicki Urbanik told The Times that Porter Regional would save $381,000 if its property taxes for 2016 remain about the same as this year.
As immigration reshapes Indy, schools struggle to keep up
The Legislature has slashed extra aid to support English language learning programs at the very moment when schools are struggling with explosive growth of children who need them.
Airport to keep fabric in multimillion-dollar garage-roof fix
The Indianapolis Airport Authority could spend up to $6.5 million designing and building what it hopes is a solution to a parking garage canopy that has failed twice in four years.
Startups take cloud-based tech savvy to legal realm
At least three emerging tech firms are targeting the legal space with subscription-based software, confident they can bring efficiencies to an industry heavy with clients, data and documents.
EDITORIAL: Justice center critics must follow through
Opponents of the controversial justice complex proposal pushed by Mayor Greg Ballard might have killed the project when the City-County Council’s Rules and Public Policy Committee voted against it April 14, but that victory shouldn’t be confused with solving the problem. The city is still burdened with inefficient, unsafe jails and courtrooms.
LOPRESTI: Anderson legend Carl Erskine still a fixture at the ballpark
There he was the other day at Victory Field in a Brooklyn cap and Dodger sweater.
MORRIS: WIBC Limbaugh decision a tough one
Getting rid of Rush was the radio version of the Colts parting ways with Peyton Manning.
Fishers to buy $3.1M building for co-working program expansion
The city of Fishers is proposing to purchase a new building for its entrepreneurial co-working space that would triple the size of the facility.
Longtime developer Alig charged with 20 felonies
A Marion County prosecutor’s affidavit accuses the Mansur Real Estate Services co-founder of receiving $340,000 from several victims through a securities fraud scheme.
Hospitals hiring scribes to tame electronic medical records
A growing number of hospitals locally and nationally hiring scribes to help doctors fill out electronic medical records, which were billed as a time-saver over paper charts.
Company news
Indianapolis-area office buildings that lease a majority of their space to medical tenants boast a vacancy rate of 11.7 percent—about one-third lower than the citywide office vacancy rate, according to data compiled by Indianapolis-based brokerage Summit Realty Group. That’s because cost-conscious hospitals have leased more space in existing buildings, instead of building additional medical office […]
Priority list includes Neil Diamond, Angela Brown, more
Butler ArtsFest continues while the Madame Walker screens the classic musical “Cabin in the Sky.”
High tech hopes: Can Bloomington’s tech park succeed?
After years of a growing Indiana University student population dominating downtown housing, Bloomington city planners believe diversification is possible through the employees who “live, work and play” in the Certified Technology Park.
