Aside from Buffalo, Indianapolis, Indiana; Providence, Rhode Island; Hartford, Connecticut; and Philadelphia round out the top five hottest markets. Why Buffalo continues to be No. 1 Buffalo's ...
Jay Chaudary, former director of the Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction, led the effort to overhaul the state's behavioral health system. He takes listeners through lessons learned and potential future policy threats to care access.
Indiana Gov. Mike Braun on Thursday waded into a legal fight over the release of abortion records while signing a health-focused tranche of executive orders.
Indiana Landmarks awarded more than $6 million to help organizations around Indy save meaningful places and preserve history.
According to a new study conducted by the company Blue & Co. and shared by the Indiana Council of Community Mental Health Centers, crisis services save the state $45 million in jail services every year.
Providence Health & Services and its unionized workers in Oregon appear to remain deadlocked a week into the largest health care strike in Oregon history. Nearly 5,000 Providence nurses and about ...
AnalytiXIN has launched a consortium designed to give Indiana researchers better access to health care data—potentially helping Eli Lilly and Co. and other companies develop new medicines more quickly.
EO 25-20 - requires the Department of Health to report terminated pregnancies as required by law; EO 25-21 - requires state agencies to improve price transparency for health care
Legislators voted to move five of the six bills forward in the legislative process, including bills banning non-compete agreements for physicians and placing limits on prior authorization.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is distancing himself from his anti-vaccine work as he seeks to become the leader of the nation’s top health agency under President Donald Trump, according to government ethics documents released Wednesday.
Indiana Gov. Mike Braun signed nine executive orders Jan. 22 related to healthcare. A news release from the governor's office said the orders aim to reduce healthcare costs, increase access and increase transparency. The executive orders are as follows:
Senate Bill 480 would put restrictions on when insurance companies could require prior authorizations before covering a patient's care.