Weekend Update

Mount Rushmore

From Washington, DC, both Houses of Congress return to work here this week for floor voting and Committee business. On Tuesday, July 11, 2023, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee will hold a hearing titled “Superbugs: The Impact of Antimicrobial Resistance on Modern Medicine.”

From the public health front, the Wall Street Journal reports

  • “The U.S. has spent decades eradicating lead from well-known sources such as paint, gasoline and pipes. The Journal’s investigation reveals a hidden source of contamination—more than 2,000 lead-covered cables—that hasn’t been addressed by the companies or environmental regulators. These relics of the old Bell System’s regional telephone network, and their impact on the environment, haven’t been previously reported.
  • “Lead levels in sediment and soil at more than four dozen locations tested by the Journal exceeded safety recommendations set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. At the New Iberia fishing spot, lead leaching into the sediment near a cable in June 2022 measured 14.5 times the EPA threshold for areas where children play. “We’ve been fishing here since we were kids,” said Tyrin Jones, 27 years old, who grew up a few blocks away.
  • “For many years, telecom companies have known about the lead-covered cables and the potential risks of exposure to their workers, according to documents and interviews with former employees. They were also aware that lead was potentially leaching into the environment, but haven’t meaningfully acted on potential health risks to the surrounding communities or made efforts to monitor the cables.” * * *
  • “The Journal’s findings “suggest there is a significant problem from these buried lead cables everywhere, and it’s going to be everywhere, and you’re not even going to know where it is in a lot of places,” said Linda Birnbaum, a former EPA official and director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, a federal agency.”

Big ruh-roh.

From the health care cost front —

  • Health Payer Intelligence informs us
    • “What drivers influence the medical cost trend, and what steps can payers take to address these factors?
    • “The medical cost trend is the percentage that experts anticipate treatment costs will grow year-over-year, the PwC Health Research Institute’s (HRI) medical cost trend report for 2024 explains.
    • “The higher medical cost trend in 2024 reflects health plans’ modeling for inflationary unit cost impacts from their contracted healthcare providers, as well as persistent double-digit pharmacy trends driven by specialty drugs and the increasing use of the GLP-1 agonists for Type 2 Diabetes or weight loss,” the report summarized.
    • “In 2024, overall inflation, consolidation, pharmaceutical costs, and other factors will drive medical cost trend inflation, while biosimilars and site-of-care changes will exert deflationary force.”
  • Revcyle Intelligence points out
    • “Healthcare spending is still on the rise, with median costs per person increasing to over $6,000 in 2021, according to a new analysis from the Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI).
    • “Median per person healthcare spending increased by 24 percent from 2017 through 2021, HCCI’s latest Healthy Marketplace Index shows. But healthcare spending varied significantly depending on where people lived. For example, patients in metropolitan areas with the highest utilization rates paid nearly three times more for healthcare services that year compared to their neighbors in metropolitan areas with the lowest utilization rates.”
    • The American Medical Association (AMA) reports patients spent $433.2 billion, or 10.2 percent of total healthcare spending, in 2021, the same year of the HCCI analysis.
    • “High and growing health spending is forcing families, employers, and governments across the country to make difficult tradeoffs,” Katie Martin, HCCI’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “The Healthy Marketplace Index shows that health care costs depend a great deal on where you live, the result of market dynamics like prices, practice patterns, and competition. Therefore, we need a multi-dimensional approach to making [healthcare] more affordable.”
  • FEHBlog note — The AMA report indicates that health plan cost sharing for members is reasonable.
  • In related news, the Wall Street Journal warns us the “Last mile of the inflation flight will be the hardest; Housing and used-car sectors are expected to help push down the core index, but progress could then stall so long as the economy doesn’t weaken.”

From the medical research front, NPR offers a story about personal achievement

  • “Sixteen years ago, when Calliope Holingue was in high school, she had a problem. Two, actually. She developed gastrointestinal symptoms severe enough to force her to give up running, plus she had a long history of anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder. 
  • “And I wondered if maybe there was a link between my mental health and the GI symptoms I was experiencing,” she recalls now. 
  • “Her doctors shrugged off her questions. “That led me to start reading a lot about the gut microbiome, the autonomic nervous system, and their connection with the brain and mental health,” she says. 
  • “Today, Holingue [who holds a Ph.D degree in public health] has joined the ranks of scientists seeking to understand the interplay between the brain (and the rest of the nervous system) and the gut microbiome – that is the vast array of organisms, including bacteria, fungi and viruses, that thrive in the human gut. 
  • “She’s now an assistant professor of mental health at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and part of the faculty at the Center for Autism and Related Disorders at Kennedy Krieger Institute. She’s currently leading research on gut microbes and symptoms that cooccur with autism, including GI and behavioral symptoms.”

The article goes on to interview Dr. Holingue. The FEHBlog wishes her good luck.