From Capitol Hill, Fierce Healthcare points out four legislative items that providers should be tracking for the remainder of this year.
From the Omicron and siblings front, the Washington Post reports
Cold weather favors the coronavirus. But as summer gives way to fall, infectious-disease experts are guardedly optimistic that the spread of covid-19 this autumn and winter won’t be as brutal as in the previous two years of the pandemic.
Coronavirus scenarios from multiple research teams, shared in recent weeks with federal officials, foresee stable or declining hospitalizations in early fall. The scenarios show the possibility of a late-fall surge. A new variant remains the biggest wild card. But several factors — including the approval this week of reformulated boosters and the buildup of immunity against the latest strain of the virus — could suppress some of the cold-season spread, experts say.
In related news, the Wall Street Journal informs us
U.S. health authorities plan to recommend that people get Covid-19 boosters once a year, starting with the new shots now rolling out, a shift from their current practice of issuing new advice every several months.
The annual cadence would be similar to that of flu shots, White House officials said Tuesday, though elderly people and those with weakened immune systems may need more frequent inoculations.
A shift to annual Covid-19 boosters would be a departure from current practice and comes after many people in the U.S. have ignored calls to get a first or second booster, partly due to fatigue with repeat inoculations.
“Barring any new variant curveball,” said White House coronavirus coordinator Ashish Jha, “for a large majority of Americans, we are moving to a point where a single annual Covid shot should provide a high degree of protection all year.”
A very sensible approach, indeed!
From the healthcare business front, Healthcare Dive tells us
Amazon and One Medical said Friday that antitrust regulators want more information about the online retailer’s proposed $3.9 billion acquisition of the primary care group.
The Federal Trade Commission sent a second request for information on Friday, One Medical said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
A second request from the FTC means the two cannot move forward with the deal “until the companies have substantially complied with the additional investigatory request,” according to the FTC.
Amazon and One Medical will “promptly respond” to the second request, the primary care group said in the SEC filing.
In July, Amazon agreed to purchase One Medical for $3.9 billion in an all-cash deal.
From the tidbits department
- Drug Channels surveys the upcoming Humira price war as biosimilar competitors take the field.
- CMS posted new information about available group health plan defenses to CMS contractor assertions that the GHP has failed to properly coordinate its benefits with Medicare.
- Beckers Payer Issues offers expert opinions on the impact of the transparency in coverage rule on consumerism now that the three machine-readable files of health plan pricing data have been posted for two months. For example, “Neil Mayle is the founder and president of Visible Charges, a Cambridge, Mass.-based company that provides clients with curated datasets of both payer- and provider-negotiated service prices. * * * ‘I think we’ve gone from nothing to a lot,’ Mr. Mayle said. ‘We haven’t gone to perfect.'” Of course, it was only the first of three stages in transparency in coverage rule disclosures.
- The FEHBlog noticed today these CMS and DOL fact sheets on the No Surprises Act which are worth a gander.
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