Doctors resume battle with Anthem, health insurers
Doctors are pushing again to strengthen their hands in contract negotiations with health insurers, especially market leader
Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
Doctors are pushing again to strengthen their hands in contract negotiations with health insurers, especially market leader
Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
Our legislators are reconvening in Indianapolis to “do the people’s business.” What they do actually
is send tremors though the fiscal foundations of our state. Households and businesses cannot figure out our tax structure
or our spending priorities.
Indy Racing League cars will be outfitted with a new gear, this one allowing them to go backwards. It will help teams that
wipe out on road courses and take pressure off tracks’ safety crews.
Wanda Robertson was sentenced to eight years in prison, with four years suspended, after pleading guilty Wednesday.
Indianapolis Business Journal and The Wall Street Journal have joined the legal fight to unseal search
warrant documents related to the federal investigation of businessman Tim Durham.
A contentious split between two prominent accounting partners is getting even uglier after a lawsuit filed by one of them
has the other pledging to counter sue.
RealMed enjoys a nearly 99-percent renewal rate among its current customers and attracted 4,000 new doctors
in 2009. Employment at the company is rising after a steady decline.
3G is the third generation of cell technology and is designed to make it easier to send video and other bandwidth-hungry material.
Police have arrested Malcolm Williams, 20, in connection with the stabbing death of a Beech Grove woman. Heâ??s accused of
killing Mallory Olhausen, 25, and seriously wounding Jonathon Tolan early Tuesday morning at Beech Meadow Apartments. The
two victims and the suspect all had worked together at a nearby Wal-Mart, according to investigators. Co-workers say Williams
was recently fired for sexual harassment. Olhausenâ??s 2-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter were in the apartment during
the incident. Fox59 will have more at 4 p.m.
Legal complaint alleges new $20 million facility in Greenwood breaches partnership deal struck in 2001.
After a stream of angry callers go off on Colts President Bill Polian, the plug is pulled 10 minutes early on his weekly radio
show on WLHK-FM 97.1.
Agreement accelerates Stifel’s repayment of $54 million in auction-rate securities sold to 142 Hoosier investors.
The bill imposes hefty new taxes and coverage rules that will pinch insurers such as WellPoint Inc. by forcing them to cover
more sick people without gaining enough healthy, lower-cost customers, industry insiders say.
Eli Lilly and Co. has bought the rights to co-market a new cholesterol-fighting drug in the U.S., giving it a third heart drug for sales personnel
to push.
Omnicity makes seventh acquisition since going public in February. The Rushville company aims to be nation’s largest wireless
broadband provider in rural markets.
The Akron company had been meeting its obligations for decades before Tim Durham acquired it seven years ago.
A Shelby County man is in jail and charged with confinement and criminal recklessness after locking himself in his home on
Tuesday afternoon, refusing to release his teenage son, and threatening to kill himself and police. According to authorities,
39-year-old Jason Brammer barricaded himself and his 13-year-old son in his Shelby County home after a domestic dispute with
his estranged wife. Because Brammer was armed, a SWAT team was called to the scene. After several hours and allegedly threatening
police, Brammer surrendered. His son was not injured.
Here’s a look back at the great, the good, and the ugly of the past 10 years.
Here are the 10 offerings that I most enthusiastically recommended to friends and readers in the past year.
The decade witnessed a massive terrorist attack, two wars, and a building-and-buyout boom fueled by easy credit.