Weekend Update

Photo by Dane Deaner on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The FEHBlog’s attention is drawn to this Committee hearing:
    • House Committee on Appropriations
    • June 12, 9:00 AM (EDT) | 2359 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, D.C.
    • Markup: Fiscal Year 2025 State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs and Homeland Security Bills
    • Meeting Details
  • MedPage Today reminds us about “the Top Supreme Court Health Cases to Watch [this month]. — A slew of cases this term could reshape health policy.” The Supreme Court now hands down its opinions on Thursdays.
  • Last week, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s (OPM) Office of Inspector General posted its Semi-annual report to Congress for the period ended March 31, 2024, and OPM posted its response to that report. These reports are always worth a gander.

From the public health and medical research front.

  • The American Medical Association offers “the top health tips your cardiologist wants you to know.”
  • Fortune Wells points out “five lifestyle changes improved brain function for those with early Alzheimer’s.”
  • NPR notes “eight mistakes to avoid if you’re going out in the heat.”
  • The Washington Post advises folks that “‘The first step before you take inventory of your body is to decide that you care about living a long, healthy life,’ one expert says.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Doctors couldn’t help. [Parents and patients] turned to a shadow system of DIY medical tests.”Doctors couldn’t help. [Parents and patients] turned to a shadow system of DIY medical tests.
    • “Buoyed by regulatory vacuums, Silicon Valley is building a booming online wellness market that aims to leave the doctor’s office behind.
      • “Many investors and entrepreneurs endorse self-testing with similar urgency. Tiny Health founder Cheryl Sew Hoy said she raced to develop her baby microbiome testing start-up because of her experience giving birth to a C-section baby with gastrointestinal issues that doctors could not address. Though she and her business partners were aware that the benefits of gut bacteria testing have often been overhyped, they found cutting-edge research showing that the simplicity of a baby’s gut makes it highly responsive to interventions.
      • “To them, it did not seem fair to wait for years — possibly decades — until that research could become standard pediatric advice.
      • “It will eventually get to the point where you get screened with a stool test every time you go to the hospital, but that’s not going to happen next year or the next couple of years,” said Ruben Mars, a microbiologist at the Gut Microbiome Laboratory at the Mayo Clinic, and a scientific adviser to Tiny Health. “But these kids are getting chronic disease now. … They shouldn’t have to wait until it becomes standard of care.”
      • “As long as the medical system remains slow there is going to be a market for people who take matters into their own hands, said Anarghya Vardhana, a Silicon Valley investor. “If you don’t give patients the tools, they will go figure it out themselves,” she added.”