From Washington, DC —
- STAT News reports
- “Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley wants to see his party’s leadership turn up the pressure on pharmacy benefit managers.
- “They talk in such generalities on this subject that it’s difficult for me to tell where they’re coming from,” he said at a STAT event Wednesday, speaking about top GOP senators’ approach to reforming the drug pricing middlemen who negotiate between pharmaceutical companies and insurers. “We’re hearing… ‘We don’t want to do something splitting the caucus.’ But we’ve got a major problem here with PBMs deciding rebates, deciding the price of drugs, probably being an instrument to drive up the price of drugs, and nobody knows what they’re doing.”
- “Grassley has reason to push urgency. The Senate leaves this weekend for a July recess, and when they return next month, lawmakers have just over two weeks of working days in the Capitol before a monthlong AugusSt break. Multiple drug pricing priorities hang in limbo.”
- The Federal Times adds
- “The House’s fiscal 2024 funding plan for federal civilian agencies would force agencies to roll back telework, keep abortion out of employee health insurance plans and make pay contingent on compliance with Congressional demands.
- “The Financial Services and General Government Appropriations bill, which will be considered in a hearing Thursday, sets funding for more than two dozen independent agencies, including the Internal Revenue Service and White House offices, for the government fiscal year that starts Oct. 1, according to an executive summary released Wednesday.”
- STAT News informs us
- “A panel of experts that advises the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on vaccinations opted Wednesday not to recommend that all seniors get a vaccine to protect against RSV.
- “Instead, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices said that anyone 60 and older should be able to get one of the new vaccines — being brought to market by GSK and Pfizer — if they and their physicians think it would be worthwhile.”
From the public health front —
- The National Cancer Institute advises
- “A new study has found an effective way to help women in rural towns get screened for cancer. But the study didn’t zero in on just one kind of cancer screening. Instead, the researchers tried simultaneously boosting all of the cancer screenings women need—breast, cervical, and colorectal. And a randomized clinical trial of the approach showed that it worked.
- “In the trial, providing rural women with an interactive video of tailored messages about cancer screening plus a phone call with a patient navigator was the most effective way of getting them up to date on all three cancer screeningsExit Disclaimer.
- “Results of the study, which included nearly 1,000 women living in rural parts of Indiana and Ohio, were published April 28 in JAMA Network Open.
- “The basic message is: Health care providers can, and probably should, address all screenings needed at the same time,” said study co-leader Victoria Champion, Ph.D., R.N., of Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center.”
- and
- “New cases of colorectal cancer in people under the age of 50 have been rising at an alarming rate over the past several decades. But younger adults aren’t routinely screened for colorectal cancer because the disease is still relatively rare in younger adults.
- “Now, a study has identified four warning signs that, according to the investigators, could help encourage younger adults to seek medical care so they can potentially catch the disease at an earlier and more treatable stage.
- “To conduct the study, the research team analyzed insurance claims data on more than 5,000 people diagnosed before age 50, called early-onset colorectal cancer, and more than 22,000 people without cancer (controls).
- “The analysis showed that, in the period of 3 months to 2 years before people with colorectal cancer were diagnosed, four signs were more commonly reported in people who developed colorectal cancer than in matched controls:
- abdominal pain
- rectal bleeding
- diarrhea
- iron deficiency anemia
- “Having just one of these signs during this period was associated with nearly twice the likelihood of being diagnosed with early-onset colorectal cancer as having none of the signs.
- “Having three or more of these signs was associated with six times the likelihood of being diagnosed with the disease. The findings were published May 4 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.”
- STAT News reports “Xylazine or ‘tranq’ is making opioid overdoses harder to reverse.”
- “Six years ago, when you would hit somebody with naloxone, they would be very responsive,” said Sarah Laurel, the executive director of Savage Sisters, a Philadelphia nonprofit that provides resources and care to people who use drugs. But more recently, she said, “I started noticing that my friends, when we would hit them with Narcan, they weren’t responsive. Their color was not returning, and they weren’t beginning to breathe on their own.”
- “When responding to an overdose in the xylazine era, Laurel said, the new priority is simple: oxygen. Emergency responders and harm-reduction workers are increasingly using whatever tools and techniques they have available to make sure oxygen is reaching overdose victims’ brains, including mouth-to-mouth breathing and oxygen masks.
- “Amid the fast-changing landscape, doctors, first responders, public health officials, and nonprofits have scrambled to formalize their new overdose-response protocols. At the same time, they have worked to draw up new instructions for bystanders who encounter an overdose in progress. They are, in essence: Administer naloxone, call 911, and then immediately start “rescue breathing” to ensure the overdose victim doesn’t die or experience hypoxic brain injury before emergency responders arrive.
- “Recent guidance from the Philadelphia Department of Public Health encourages overdose responders to provide supplemental oxygen and employ “airway management” techniques — essentially, manipulating the head, neck, and body to ensure breathing isn’t blocked.”
- HHS announced
- The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), issued a new advisory today: Identification and Management of Mental Health Symptoms and Conditions Associated with Long COVID.
- “Long COVID has a range of burdensome physical symptoms, and can take a toll on a person’s mental health. It can be very challenging for a person, whether they are impacted themselves, or they are a caregiver for someone who is affected,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “This advisory helps to raise awareness, especially among primary care practitioners and clinicians who are often the ones treating patients with Long COVID.”
- and
- “The Biden-Harris Administration today announced a public-private partnership between the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Upstream to expand access to contraception, an essential component of reproductive health care, and address the growing disparities in women’s health in the U.S.”
- The Parkinson’s Foundation tells us
- “A framework set up by the Parkinson’s Foundation can help therapists and other professionals design more personalized exercise programs for people with Parkinson’s disease.
- “The competency framework, as it is called, outlines programs, courses, and approaches that help to educate and train movement specialists, given the importance of exercise for Parkinson’s patients. It was established by the foundation working with experts at several U.S. institutions, including Northwestern University’s Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, the American College of Sports Medicine, and Boston University College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences.
- “Details are in the point-of-view article “Parallel development of Parkinson’s-specific competencies for exercise professionals and criteria for exercise education programs,” published in Parkinsonism & Related Disorders.”
From the plan design front —
- Health Payer Intelligence points out
- “Payers should consider program design intensity when implementing value-based purchasing contracts, as higher-intensity programs can lead to better care quality and greater spending reductions, a systematic review published in Health Affairs found.
- “Value-based purchasing programs can incorporate both financial and non-financial features. Financial aspects include bonuses, penalties, and financial risk-sharing arrangements.
- “Non-financial aspects aim to help providers respond to the spending and quality incentives in a VBP program. These include analyzed data, reports, or lists; technical assistance through leadership or change management training, infrastructure payments to add more staff; raw claims data; risk-management support; and care management support.
- “Different combinations of financial and non-financial supports can lead to varying levels of program intensity.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports
- Food and insurance companies are exploring ways to link health coverage to diets, increasingly positioning food as a preventive measure to protect human health and treat disease.
- Insurance companies and startups are developing meals tailored to help treat existing medical conditions, industry executives said, while promoting nutritious diets as a way to help ward off diet-related disease and health problems.
- “We know that for adults, around 45% of those who die from heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, stroke, that poor nutrition is a major contributing factor,” said Gail Boudreaux, chief executive of insurance provider Elevance Health speaking at The Wall Street Journal Global Food Forum. “Healthy food is a real opportunity.”