Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) launched a new national campaign today to inform the public about common respiratory viruses and available vaccines. The campaign, Risk Less. Do More., aims to increase awareness of vaccines that reduce serious illness from influenza (flu), COVID-19, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in high-risk populations and to limit the spread of these viruses among all Americans.” * * *
    • “For more information on the Risk Less. Do More. campaign, please visit RiskLessDoMore.hhs.gov.”
    • “For more information about respiratory illnesses, please visit cdc.gov/RiskLessDoMore.”
  • The American Hospital Association News lets us know,
    • “The Organ Donation and Transplantation Alliance has created new resources for health care providers to encourage more organ donation and transplants. It has launched an educational guide to enhance collaboration between organ procurement organizations, transplant centers and hospitals. The Alliance last week hosted a workshop complementing the guide launch. An on-demand learning pathway video and other supporting materials will be available in September.”
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The Biden administration says federal agencies are getting rid of office space they no longer need, and will shed millions of square feet in the coming years, now that many federal employees are on a hybrid schedule of in-office and work-from-home days.
    • “The Office of Management and Budget, in a sweeping report released earlier this month, said telework-eligible federal employees are working in their offices about 60% of the time.
    • “That hybrid schedule allows agencies to reevaluate their office space needs, and shed excess leased and government-owned real estate.
    • “While agencies reach more durable, long-term decisions about their telework and work environment posture, they are also considering the impacts of these changes on their real property portfolios,” OMB wrote. “Agencies have undertaken considerable work to dispose of unneeded property, reduce costs, and improve overall utilization of real estate.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “In the study, which was published Monday in the journal Nature Medicine, researchers transformed deep brain stimulation — an established treatment for Parkinson’s — into a personalized therapy that tailored the amount of electrical stimulation to each patient’s individual symptoms.
    • “The researchers found that for Mr. Connolly and the three other participants [with Parkinson’s Disease], the individualized approach, called adaptive deep brain stimulation, cut in half the time they experienced their most bothersome symptom.
    • “Mr. Connolly, now 48 and still skateboarding as much as his symptoms allow, said he noticed the difference “instantly.” He said the personalization gave him longer stretches of “feeling good and having that get-up-and-go.”
    • “The study also found that in most cases, patients’ perceived quality of life improved. “That’s very important,” said Dr. Sameer Sheth, a professor of neurosurgery at Baylor College of Medicine who was not involved in the research.
    • “Although the study was small, it represents the strides being made in using brain implants and artificial intelligence to personalize treatment for neurological and psychiatric disorders — essentially developing pacemakers for the brain.”
  • STAT News points out,
    • “The distress from receiving a cancer diagnosis is something that clinicians widely anticipate in patients, but suffering often doesn’t just afflict the patient. It can blanket an entire household, burdening spouses and other family members with stress and anxiety and the exhausting routine of treating a life-threatening disease.
    • “But while standards exist for assessing and managing distress in patients, it’s often “hidden” in family members, sometimes with devastating consequences, said Weiva Sieh, an epidemiologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center. In a study published in JAMA Oncology on Thursday, spouses of cancer patients were found to be at significantly higher risk of suicide attempt and death compared to those married to people without cancer.  
    • “Psychosocial distress in cancer patients themselves are better anticipated, widely known, and accepted,” said Sieh, who did not work on the study but wrote an accompanying editorial in JAMA Oncology. “This problem is not extremely well recognized. Fortunately, mental health is often treatable. It’s just a question of recognizing it.”
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “Primary care practitioners (PCPs) provided the majority of prescriptions for HIV preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in the U.S., but the odds of patients filling a PrEP prescription were better when it came from an infectious disease (ID) specialist, according to a cross-sectional study.”
  • Fierce Healthcare asserts that “Insurers push ‘food is medicine’ interventions but rarely weigh in on ultra-processed food.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review reports,
    • “Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic reported an operating income of $449 million (8.9% margin) in the second quarter, a substantial improvement on the $300 million operating gain (5.9% margin) it posted in the same period last year.
    • “Second-quarter revenue increased 12.1% year over year to $5 billion while expenses grew by 9.4% to $4.6 billion, according to financial documents published Aug. 19. Solid patient volumes and increased donor contributions drove revenue growth during the second quarter. 
    • “Labor costs increased 7% year over year to $2.6 billion while supplies and services expenses rose 13.3% to $1.6 billion. The 7% increase in labor costs — which accounted for 56.9% of total second-quarter expenses — is attributed to staff growth to accommodate higher volumes and a 4% annual salary increase for all allied health staff.
    • “After factoring in nonoperating items, including philanthropy and returns from investments, Mayo reported a net income of $613 million in the second quarter, compared to $547 million in the second quarter of 2023.” 
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Bankruptcy filings in the healthcare sector have slowed so far in 2024 after spiking last year, according to a report by healthcare restructuring advisory firm Gibbins Advisors.
    • “This year is on track to see 58 filings by healthcare companies with at least $10 million in liabilities, compared with 79 cases in 2023.
    • “But the decline doesn’t necessarily mean the financial headwinds driving bankruptcies have lessened, according to the advisory firm. Restructuring could be taking place outside of courts, and case volumes might increase later this year, Clare Moylan, principal at Gibbins Advisors, said in a statement.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb’s highly anticipated schizophrenia drug KarXT is fast approaching a September deadline for the Food and Drug Administration to decide on approval. Yet competition already looms for a market that’s estimated to soon be worth billions of dollars.
    • “KarXT, a so-called muscarinic agonist, may become the first new kind of schizophrenia drug in decades. Close behind it is AbbVie’s emraclidine, which works in a similar fashion.
    • “People with schizophrenia experience a broad range of symptoms, from hallucinations and delusions to cognitive impairments and social withdrawal. Clinical testing has shown that, like KarXT, emraclidine, which AbbVie acquired from Cerevel Therapeutics in a multibillion-dollar deal, is effective at controlling symptoms without the debilitating side effects or drawbacks of traditional antipsychotics, which cause almost three-quarters of patients to abandon treatment.
    • “But experts say once-daily dosing versus twice-daily treatment, and a potentially more gut-friendly formulation, may give emraclidine an edge over KarXT, which Bristol Myers Squibb acquired in a $14 billion acquisition of Karuna Therapeutics.”
  • MedCity News considers “Why Primary Care Physicians Are Reluctant to Join Value-Based Care.”