From Washington, DC, the Society for Human Resource Management tells us that Labor Secretary Marty Walsh will be leaving his position to become head of the National Hockey League (NHL) Players’ Association, according to news reports.
In other regulatory news, Health Payer Intelligence reports
The Alliance of Community Health Plans (ACHP) was among around 50 organizations—including AHIP and Blue Cross Blue Shield Association—to sign a letter to HHS that supported fully aligning the substance use disorder patient data requirements in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
The group noted that the proposed rule falls short of this goal.
Also, the Office of National Coordinator of Health IT announced that “On Monday, February 13, HHS will recognize the first set of applicant organizations that are approved for onboarding as Qualified Health Information Networks (QHINs) under TEFCA.” The ongoing launch of TEFCA, which will serve as a backbone for the country’s electronic health record systems, is exciting.
From the Omicron and siblings front —
- The Kaiser Family Foundation’s Covid Vaccine Monitor informs us “nearly four in ten households (38%) were affected by this winter’s” tripledemic. The flu affected the largest share of households (27%), followed by Covid (15%) and RSV (10%). “At the same time, almost three years into the COVID-19 pandemic, most of the public says they are “not too” or “not at all” worried about getting seriously ill from the virus (69%), though 31% still say they are worried.”
- The Food and Drug Administration offers step-by-step guidance on reporting Covid test results to public health authorities.
From the public health front,
- MedPage Today and the New York Times offer opinion pieces on why experts are concerned about the spread of avian flu to humans.
- Health Affairs discusses an interesting study finding: “A high prevalence of mental health diagnoses in adults alongside ongoing shortages of mental health specialists and expansion of the patient-centered medical home has increased the involvement of primary care clinicians in treating mental health concerns.”
- McKinsey and Company offer the following interview: “McKinsey Global Publishing’s Eleni Kostopoulos chats with Alex Jadad and Tamen Jadad-Garcia about their new book, Healthy No Matter What: How Humans Are Hardwired to Adapt (Penguin Random House, January 2023). Dr. Jadad created the widely popular Jadad scale for assessing clinical trials. Now, he’s combining his medical expertise with his daughter’s health entrepreneurship to explore what it truly means to be ‘healthy’.”
- The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has made available for public comment a draft evidence review titled “Screening for Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy: An Evidence Update for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. The public comment deadline is March 6, 2023.
From the No Surprises Act front, Becker’s Payer Issues reports on a February 6, 2023, opinion from the Eastern District of Texas striking down certain provisions of the latest independent dispute resolution rule. Judge Kernodle considers those stricken provisions to conflict with the statute by placing too much emphasis on one of six factors that the law allows the arbitrator to consider: the health plan’s qualified payment amount. The FEHBlog doubts that this decision will immediately impact the IDR process, which continues to be quite bogged down. Providers should emphasize resolving billing disputes during the initial open negotiation period. Regardless, the plaintiff Texas Medical Association has two more NSA issues pending before the good Judge.
From the fraud, waste, and abuse front, the Justice Department announced that False Claims Act settlements and judgments exceeded $2 billion in fiscal year 2022. “[H]ealth care fraud remained a leading source of False Claims Act settlements and judgments.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front
- Fierce Healthcare tells us that Health insurer Centene announced its fourth-quarter 2022 financial results today.
- Medcity Today relates, “The U.S. healthcare system spent $60 billion on administrative tasks last year, which is about $18 billion more than it spent in 2021, according to a new report from the Council for Affordable Quality Healthcare (CAQH).” The report attributed the increase to a labor shortage and greater utilization of healthcare services in 2022.
- The Drug Channels blog assesses biosimilar challenges to Humira.