From Washington, DC,
- Fierce Healthcare reports,
- “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is creating a voluntary demonstration program to support changes to Medicare Part D under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
- “The agency also finalized bid information for contract year 2025, with a base beneficiary premium increase of $2.08 for people with Part D.
- “The IRA is designed to limit yearly premium increases from contract year 2024 to 2029. Because Part D and prescription drug plans can result in plan price variation for beneficiaries, CMS is creating the Part D Premium Stabilization Demonstration to “improve premium stability for participating stand-alone prescription drug plans,” according to a news release.
- “This should result in a smoother rollout in how the IRA requires Medicare to support Part D prescription plans. The program will test whether even more financial requirements would improve the Part D program, a senior CMS official said Monday afternoon.”
- Here is the link to the CMS fact sheet for the Part D demonstration project and bid information.
- American Hospital Association News lets us know,
- “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services July 30 issued a final rule updating hospice payment rates for fiscal year 2025. Overall, CMS finalized a 2.9% net increase to payments compared with FY 2024. This includes a 3.4% market basket update and a 0.5 percentage point cut for productivity. As a result of this increase, the hospice payment cap will be increased from $33,494.01 to $34,465.34. CMS also finalized adoption of the most recent Office of Management and Budget statistical area delineations, which will affect the wage index used by some providers. In addition, the rule adopts a new patient-level data collection tool to replace the existing Hospice Item Set and also adds two new process measures beginning in FY 2028.”
- Here is a link to the CMS fact sheet on the hospice payment rates.
- The Washington Post informs us,
- “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is launching a $5 million initiative to provide seasonal flu shots this fall to about 200,000 livestock workers in states hardest hit by the bird flu outbreak.
- “Workers on poultry, dairy and pig farms are at greatest risk of being simultaneously exposed to seasonal flu and the H5N1 bird flu that has infected at least 172 dairy herds in 13 states, according to the Department of Agriculture. Such exposures raise the rare risk of the two viruses exchanging genetic material, a process known as reassortment, to create a new influenza virus that “could pose a significant public health concern by becoming more efficient at spread and potentially more severe,” Nirav Shah, CDC’s principal deputy director, said at a news briefing Tuesday. Widespread seasonal flu vaccination would reduce that risk, he said.
- “Thirteen farmworkers have been infected in the outbreak. All had mild symptoms and recovered.
- Per an HHS press release,
- Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) released the results of the 2023 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), which shows how people living in United States reported their experience with mental health conditions, substance use and pursuit of treatment. The 2023 NSDUH report includes selected estimates by race, ethnicity and age group. The report is accompanied by two infographics offering visually packaged highlight data as well as visual data by race and ethnicity.
- The press release includes key findings from the survey.
- MedTech Dive tells us about how a “[p]atient shares a day in the life with diabetes at FDA’s first Home Health Hub meeting. The initiative, led by new CDRH Acting Director Michelle Tarver, is intended to improve health equity by including people’s living conditions in device design.”
- The Assistant Secretary of Labor for Employee Benefit Security seeks in her blog to “raise awareness and break the silence surrounding minority mental health.
- HHS’s Office for Civil Rights amended its Change Healthcare Cybersecurity Incident FAQ three to read as follows:
- “3. Have Change Healthcare or UHG filed a breach report with HHS?
- “A: Yes, on July 19, 2024, Change Healthcare filed a breach report with OCR concerning a ransomware attack that resulted in a breach of protected health information. Change Healthcare’s breach report to OCR identifies 500 individuals as the “approximate number of individuals affected”. This is the minimum number of individuals affected that results in a posting of a breach on the HHS Breach Portal. Change Healthcare is still determining the number of individuals affected. The posting on the HHS Breach Portal will be amended if Change Healthcare updates the total number of individuals affected by this breach. HIPAA breach reports filed on the HHS Breach Portal may be amended as the breach report form allows a filer to file an initial breach report or an addendum to a previous report.”
- Per a press release from the U.S. Attorney for the District of Massachusetts,
- “Burlington County Eye Physicians (BCEP), an ophthalmology practice with locations in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and Dr. Gregory H. Scimeca, an ophthalmologist and the owner of BCEP, have agreed to pay $469,232 to resolve allegations that they submitted and caused the submission of false claims for payment for medically unnecessary transcranial doppler (TCD) tests to Medicare and the Federal Employee Health Benefit (FEHB) Program in violation of the False Claims Act.
- “A TCD test is a noninvasive diagnostic test that can be used to estimate the blood flow through certain blood vessels in the brain. Medicare and the FEHB Program reimburse healthcare providers for both performing the test and for interpreting the test results. When a physician does not perform the test, but interprets the results of the test, they only can bill for their professional services of interpreting the test. A physician cannot bill for interpreting the test when they merely review another physician’s interpretation of the results.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The Washington Post reports,
- “The suicide rate for U.S. children 8 to 12 years old has steadily climbed in the past decade and a half, with a disproportionate rise among girls, data released Tuesday by the National Institute of Mental Health shows.
- “The findings, published in the journal JAMA Network Open, highlight pervasive issues regarding mental health that affect U.S. children daily, the study authors said.
- “The authors of the study blame no single reason for the increase, but experts not involved in the study say the problem is multifaceted, citing technology, social media and guns as the main culprits.
- “Between 2001 and 2022, 2,241 children ages 8 to 12 — known as preteens — died by suicide. While suicide rates were decreasing until 2007, they increased by about 8 percent each year from 2008 to 2022.
- “From 2001 through 2007, 482 children ages 8 to 12 died by suicide at a rate of 3.34 per 1 million “preteens. From 2008 to 2022, the number of suicides in that age group rose to 1,759, with a rate of 5.71 per 1 million.”
- Per STAT News,
- “If millions of Americans no longer qualify for a statin or a blood pressure medication based on a new calculator updated to better predict their risk, that could lead to 107,000 more heart attacks and strokes over 10 years, a new study estimates.
- “The research paper, published Monday in JAMA, is the second in two months drawing attention to widely used medicines designed to prevent the leading cause of death in the United States.
- “The research is creating a buzz in cardiology circles while two medical societies formulate new guidelines to inform practice, weighing the new risk models and existing thresholds that trigger prescriptions.
- “This is concerning that we could reverse eligibility for many millions of Americans,” Raj Manrai, assistant professor of biomedical informatics in the Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School and senior author of the new study, said in an interview. “We really need to reexamine the other side of the equation here, which is how those risk estimates are going to be used by patients and physicians to decide who and when individuals receive preventative care, particularly statins and antihypertensive blood pressure medications.”
- Per a National Institutes of Health (NIH) press release,
- “A new global study sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has determined that cabotegravir, an antiretroviral medication used for HIV treatment, is safe for use before and during pregnancy. The study analyzed the pregnancy and infant outcomes of using long-acting injectable cabotegravir in more than 300 pregnant women. These findings fill an important knowledge gap that will help increase access to HIV treatment for cisgender women before, during, and after pregnancy.”
- NIH also posted a summary of recent medical research developments.
- STAT News relates,
- “A new study suggests that an older GLP-1 drug may help protect the brains of people with early Alzheimer’s disease, supporting the case for further research on the class of medications — originally developed for obesity and diabetes — in neurological diseases.
- “The Phase 2 randomized trial, led by researchers at Imperial College London, tested Novo Nordisk’s liraglutide, the predecessor to Ozempic and Wegovy, in patients with early Alzheimer’s disease over one year. The study did not meet the primary endpoint of change on a measure of how much sugar the brain uses for energy, but it showed that patients on the drug had nearly 50% less shrinking in parts of the brain that control memory and learning and that treated participants had a slightly slower decline in cognitive function.”
- CNN adds,
- “A growing set of evidence suggests that using semaglutide could lead to decreased substance use, and a large new study shows a promising link between the medication and tobacco use. But experts emphasize that much more research is needed before using the medications off-label for smoking cessation.
- “In a study published Monday in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine, researchers tracked the medical records of more than 200,000 people who started medications to treat type 2 diabetes, including nearly 6,000 people using semaglutide medications such as Ozempic.
- “Over the course of a year, people who started using semaglutide were significantly less likely to have medical encounters for tobacco use disorders, prescriptions for medications for smoking cessation or counseling for smoking cessation than those who started other diabetes medications such as insulin and metformin.
- “The study authors note that the reasons individuals might be less likely to seek medical treatment for tobacco use disorder vary widely; it could suggest that their tobacco use decreased or that they’ve become less willing to seek help to quit smoking, for example.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Reuters points out,
- “Four pharmaceutical companies involved in the first U.S. negotiations over prices for the Medicare program said they do not expect a significant impact on their businesses after seeing confidential suggested prices from the government for their drugs that will take effect in 2026.
- “Top executives from Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY.N), opens new tab, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N), AbbVie (ABBV.N), and AstraZeneca (AZN.L), which have five of the 10 drugs chosen for the first wave of negotiations, described their newly informed views on quarterly conference calls.”
- Modern Healthcare notes,
- “Drug prices are expected to increase 3.81% next year, propelled by expensive cell and gene therapies and glucagon-like peptide agonists.
- “The estimate from Vizient, a group purchasing organization, tops the company’s 2024 drug cost growth projection of 3.42%. Vizient uses recent provider purchasing data to forecast what hospitals and health systems might pay for drugs after discounts and rebates.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Pfizer’s quarterly results beat Wall Street estimates and the drugmaker raised its outlook, denoting strong demand for its non-Covid products. * * *
- “Pfizer’s revenue was boosted by several acquired products and recent commercial launches, which offset a decline from its Covid-19 vaccine Comirnaty, and unfavorable foreign currency translation. Excluding Covid products, revenue rose 14% on the year.
- “Chief Financial Officer David Denton said this was the first quarter of top-line growth since the end of 2022, when Pfizer’s Covid-related revenues peaked.
- “Pfizer Chief Executive Albert Bourla said in an interview the company is making progress on its strategy to drive growth and improve the company’s share price through dealmaking, including its $43 billion acquisition of cancer-maker; cost-cutting programs; and launching new medicines.
- “We are progressing on all cylinders,” he said.”
- Per STAT News,
- “Shares of Merck fell 9% Tuesday after the company reported that in the second quarter, it saw a decrease in shipments of its HPV vaccine Gardasil in China, a significant market for the drug.
- “The company brought in $2.48 billion in sales of Gardasil in the second quarter, slightly lower than estimates of $2.5 billion made by analysts polled by Visible Alpha.
- “Despite the Gardasil hit, Merck raised guidance for full-year sales to $63.4 to $64.4 billion from the previously guided $63.1 to $64.3 billion. The company lowered guidance for full-year earnings, though, to $7.94 to $8.04 per share from the previously forecasted $8.53 to $8.65, due to expenses related to the acquisition of ophthalmology-focused biotech EyeBio.”
- Per Healthcare Dive,
- “Google will not renew its contract with Amazon’s primary care subsidiary One Medical, ending a longstanding agreement that gave Google employees access to discounted medical care, the companies confirmed to Healthcare Dive.
- “The contract loss is a major blow for the provider. Google was One Medical’s largest customer, accounting for 10% of its revenue in 2020. That figure dipped slightly in 2021, after which One Medical stopped disclosing its finances publicly.
- “The decision is not because One Medical was acquired by Google rival Amazon last year, a Google spokesperson said. The current contract will expire at the end of 2024.”
- and
- “Mental telehealth coverage has contracted slightly since the government declared an end to the COVID-19 public health emergency last year, according to a new study published in JAMA.
- “The study, which analyzed over 1,000 outpatient mental health treatment facilities, found that publicly owned mental health treatment facilities were less likely to have adopted telehealth services at all, and more likely to have discontinued them after the Biden administration ended the COVID PHE, compared to privately owned facilities.
- “The results come as lawmakers are considering whether to permanently expand telehealth flexibilities to providers this year, after the federal government enacted temporary policies that expanded access to telehealth services during the pandemic.”
- The Washington Post gives us a heads up on the test run of drones to deliver cardiac care to patients in North Carolina.
- “What if the first responder on the scene of a cardiac arrest were a drone carrying an automated external defibrillator?
- “When every second counts, public safety professionals are increasingly eyeing drones — which can fly 60 miles an hour and don’t get stuck in traffic — to deliver help faster than an ambulance or EMT.
- “Starting in September, 911 callers in Clemmons, N.C., may see a drone winging its way to those suffering a cardiac arrest. Under a pilot program operated jointly by the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office, local emergency services, the Clinical Research Institute at Duke University and drone consulting firm Hovecon, drone pilots from the sheriff’s department will monitor 911 calls and dispatch drones.”
- The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
- “Theranos’s ambitions for a finger-prick blood test are finally being realized—by other companies.
- “”Since May, needle-phobic people in Austin, Texas, have been able to visit pharmacies for routine medical tests on drops of blood squeezed from their fingertips, rather than the usual way of plunging a needle into a vein in the arm and drawing large vials of blood.
- The rise and fall of Theranos—the Silicon Valley startup that promised to revolutionize blood testing but ended dissolved, with its founder Elizabeth Holmes convicted of fraud—cast a pall over the idea that critical medical tests could be run on mere drops of blood.
- “Demand for alternatives to standard blood draws never went away, however. And companies—including Becton Dickinson and Babson Diagnostics, which make the tests rolling out in Austin—have been working out technological kinks that foiled Theranos.”
- FEHBlog observation: As the old saying goes, timing is everything.