2016 Health Care Heroes: Dr. Margaret “Meg” Frazer
Dr. Margaret “Meg” Frazer is the midwest medical director for Pfizer but continues to see patients as a neurologist at Josephson Wallack Munshower Neurology PC.
Dr. Margaret “Meg” Frazer is the midwest medical director for Pfizer but continues to see patients as a neurologist at Josephson Wallack Munshower Neurology PC.
If you live in Indiana and see a heart doctor, there’s a good chance that doctor was trained by Dr. Eric Williams, a professor of medicine at IU School of Medicine.
The not-for-profit, founded in Indianapolis, uses a boxing training regimen to fight Parkinson’s disease.
Lance Trexler, the executive director of Resource Facilitation at Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana, created a personalized, specialized plan of attack to help patients with brain injuries return to more normal lives.
The IU Child Protection Program at Riley Hospital for Children has a team of five physicians, three social workers, two nurses and a nurse practitioner who consult on about 6,000 suspected cases of child abuse a year statewide.
Medical malpractice victims would be able to receive more compensation under a bill passed on Monday by an Indiana House committee
Under the deal, Franciscan was financially accountable for what it would spend on care for about 60,000 patients who had Anthem benefits provided by its employers or purchased individually. Would it work?
For years, the people concerned with drug abuse and alcoholism nibbled at it only on the margins. Most states, including Indiana, have been far more likely to throw drug users in prison than to get them treatment.
Indianapolis International Airport officials on Tuesday afternoon announced that a $500 million proposal to build a brain health complex was chosen as one of two winning bids for 428 acres of land at the airport.
It took former WISH-TV Channel 8 General Manager Jeff White only one trip to VisionThree’s studio to convince him to take an ownership stake in the company and spearhead sales and product development for the firm full time.
Last month, state Sens. Jim Banks and Scott Schneider introduced Senate Bill 144, called the “Indiana Heartbeat Act.” The bill makes it a felony for physicians to perform an abortion if the fetus has a detectable heartbeat. This bill is bad by telling women they are not qualified to make their own choices.
In just over a year as chief operating officer of St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital, Erica Wehrmeister has been credited with transformative changes across St. Vincent’s five hospitals.
Brooke Worland helps meld great ideas with applied learning as dean of alumni and student engagement at her alma mater, Franklin College.
Carmel-based Nightingale Home Healthcare Inc. is trying to keep from being kicked out of the federal Medicare program for allegedly putting patients in “immediate jeopardy,” according to documents in a bankruptcy reorganization case the company filed in December.
Under the revised proposal, pharmacists will have the option of requiring a pseudoephedrine prescription for some customers.
A family dispute over the estate of a well-known heart surgeon and developer in Carmel could delay progress on multiple mixed-use real estate projects in Hamilton and Boone counties.
Patients who have been injured or killed as the result of negligence by Indiana hospitals and physicians could win more cash under proposed changes to Indiana’s Medical Malpractice Act.
Carmel-based Stratice Healthcare LLC wants to take the concept of electronic prescribing for drugs and extend it to most of the rest of the health care system.
Preferred Population Health Management is trying to get hospital systems, health insurers and area agencies on aging to use a set of tools and techniques to help dementia patients and their families—tools that were developed by the medical staff at Eskenazi Health, the Indiana University School of Medicine and the Regenstrief Institute.
Tony Cox failed to point out that we are only one of very few countries in the world that allow direct-to-consumer advertising.