IMS logo current Bulletin front cover Magazine
IMS president, Jeffrey J. Kellams, MD President's Message
Paula A. Hall, MD Paula A. Hall, MD, a Family Practice physician, was the 127th President of the Indianapolis Medical Society, serving in that capacity in 2000. Dr. Hall is engaged in the full-time practice of medicine and divides her time between offices in Franklin and Greenfield. She has limited her practice to proctology and lower endoscopy. Remembering the tenant of teaching your fellow physicians, she has preceptored three other family physicians and they now have privileges and are performing colonoscopies at their own hospitals.

She has been very active throughout her career by holding offices in, not only the IMS, the IMS Foundation but also the Indiana State Medical Association. In the past, she also served an Alternate Delegate to the American Medical Association.

She received her medical degree from Indiana University School of Medicine in 1984 and completed her Residency at Methodist Hospital in 1987. Dr. Hall resides in Indianapolis with her husband, Michael Raymond, and their two children, Mike and Jennifer.

...more

Project Health

The Mission

Project Health is an initiative of the Indianapolis Medical Society Foundation to expand access to healthcare for low-income, adult, uninsured residents of Indianapolis (Marion County), in partnership with volunteer physicians, hospitals, community clinics, the pharmaceutical industry and other providers in a system of coordinated, case managed, charity care.

Project Health Goals

What Project Health Has Achieved

Since the first patient was enrolled in May 2004, Project Health has grown to 1,000 volunteer physicians, 1,576 active patients and the three largest Indianapolis hospital systems have DONATED more than $12.6 Million Dollars in health services to Project Health patients. This includes 10 open heart procedures, 4 corneal transplants, 2 brain surgeries, many cancer surgeries accompanied by chemotherapy and radiation, a hip replacement, dozens of gall bladder and cataract removals ... and the list goes on.

Since 2004 frivolous emergency room visits have gone from 77% to less than 1% in 2006 and holding.

Non-Urgent ER Visits Dramatically Reduced graph showing the decline in frivolous emergency room visits

Paula Hall, MD
photo of Paula Hall, MD

"Project Health boils down to Hoosiers taking care of Hoosiers," says Paula Hall, MD, Chairman of Project Health's Advisory Board. "The experts said it could not be done in Indianapolis because we have such a competitive healthcare market. We have proven them wrong many times over. Taking care of a Project Health patient is like helping your neighbor who is a little down on his luck. They are unbelievably grateful, and you feel good for having had the opportunity to help."

Project Health Participating Hospitals

Others Donating Services to Project Health

How it Works

Who are Project Health Patients?

58% work but most are working in low paying jobs where either their employer doesn't offer health insurance (22%) or they can't afford the premiums (54%)

86% are clinically obese and 38% have type 2 diabetes. 40% of our minority patients have diabetes.

Project Health patients are atypical. They majority of them don't visit a physician or clinic at the first sign of illness, because they don't have the money. These patients wait until their conditions become serious and intolerable before seeking medical help. They present to Project Health with Stage 3 and 4 cancers. Diabetes patients come to Project Health with complications of retinal bleeding, uncontrolled blood sugars, heart damage, vascular compromise, high cholesterol and major stroke risk. Almost ALL of their health problems could have been prevented with early detection. They have worked hard all of their lives; they are humble; they are embarrassed to ask for help; they are losing their homes, retirement savings and virtually everything they have due to medical bills. Currently the leading cause of personal bankruptcies in the U.S. is medical bills.

Still, not everybody without insurance can become a Project Health patient. Not only must they meet the income eligibility guidelines, they must agree to abide by a strict set of rules. Project Health patients have proven themselves to be compliant patients because they know that if they break the rules, they will be dropped from the program. The standards for participation in Project Health are high and the patients rise to meet them.

Patient Responsibilities

Benefits to Doctors Volunteers

Doctors who want to volunteer should call Carrie Jackson-Logsdon at (317) 262-5625.