From Washington, DC,
- The FEHBlog was in college when Congress moved the beginning of the federal fiscal year from July 1 to October 1 to give Congress more time to decide on appropriations.
- Congratulations to former President Jimmy Carter who turned 100 years old today. Mr. Carter is the first former President to reach the century mark. The FEHBlog heard on the radio today that October 1, 1924, was only 98 and 1/4 years after July 4, 1826, the date when Presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson passed away.
- Blue Cross FEP has posted its 2025 benefits information on the internet.
- CMS has turned on its 2025 Medicare open enrollment decision making tool, and Fierce Healthcare discusses the various Medicare Advantage offerings. The Medicare open enrollment period begins on October 15 and ends on December 7, 2024.
- The Department of Labor launched an online tool that “provides access to more than 700 accommodation ideas for workers with disabilities and their employers.”
- BioPharma Dive points out five FDA decisions to watch in the fourth quarter of 2024. “Over the next three months, the agency could approve a rival to a fast-selling Pfizer heart drug, a much-debated lung cancer medicine and an addition to Vertex’s dominant cystic fibrosis business.”
- The American Hospital Association News lets us know,
- “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Sept. 30 released a report on the hospital-at-home program, which found that patients and caregivers overall had positive experiences in the program. Patients in the H@H program were more likely to be white, urban-living and less likely to receive Medicaid or low-income subsidies. The report does not provide insight into the criteria participating hospitals use to identify patients suitable for H@H care but does note that hospitals used evidence and an awareness of their own capacity to support care in the home to establish their criteria. Patients were most commonly treated for respiratory, circulatory and renal conditions, as well as infectious diseases. The study also found that H@H patients had a lower mortality rate than those in brick-and-mortar facilities but had a slightly longer length of stay.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The New York Times reports,
- “Rates of breast cancer — the second leading cause of cancer deaths in U.S. women — climbed by 1 percent a year from 2012 to 2021, and even more sharply among women under age 50 and among Asian American/Pacific Islander women of all ages, according to an American Cancer Society report published on Tuesday.
- “The biennial report is among the most comprehensive and detailed studies of breast cancer occurrence over recent years. One in 50 U.S. women will develop invasive breast cancer by the age of 50, the authors said, based on National Cancer Institute calculations.
- “The sharpest increases in young adults by age during the decade were among women in their 20s, whose rate increased by about 2.2 percent a year, though their absolute risk remains very low, at about 6.5 per 100,000 women.
- “Among Asian American/Pacific Islander women, who historically also have had a low prevalence of the disease, rates increased by 2.7 percent a year among those under 50, and by 2.5 percent a year among older women.”
- STAT News informs us,
- “Across all kinds of cancer, Black Americans have higher rates of mortality and, often, more aggressive forms of the disease. A growing body of research suggests the reasons may not have to do with African ancestry as much as social and environmental factors like racism, housing discrimination, and — according to a new study — exposure to pollution.
- “The study, published in Nature Communications, found that in several types of cancer, Black patients had more cancers with extra copies of genes. But the team found that these genetic duplications, which can make cancers more aggressive, didn’t seem to be linked to anything ancestral. Rather, the team reported genetic duplications were more likely in cells exposed to pollutants.
- “What this paper hints at, is that we’re seeing something which looks like a genetic difference, but the source of that might actually not be genetic — it’s more environmental,” said Kanika Arora, a computational biologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering who was not involved with the new study.” * * *
- “[T]he study highlights the need to reduce people’s exposure to pollutants and the importance of prioritizing genetic screening to understand a person’s individual cancer risk, according to Melissa Davis, the head of the Institute of Genomic Medicine at Morehouse School of Medicine. Davis also notes if pollutants are driving disparate cancer rates, cancer treatment and prevention methods need to change accordingly.”
- MedPage Today tells us,
- “Nearly 11% of older adults with an injurious fall were diagnosed with dementia 1 year later.
- “Compared with other traumatic injuries, falls were tied to a 21% increased risk of a subsequent dementia diagnosis.
- “Findings support cognitive screening for older adults who have a fall that involves an ED visit or hospital admission.”
- McKinsey & Co. interview “Marcus Schindler, executive vice president for R&D and chief scientific officer at Novo Nordisk. They discuss how Novo Nordisk is expanding its external innovation capabilities and moving into new therapeutic areas. They also explore his efforts to embed AI throughout the R&D organization, establish Novo Nordisk as a leader of AI ecosystems (in Boston and beyond), and eventually advance from treating diseases to curing them, with help from AI.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Healthcare Dive reports
- “CVS plans to lay off 2,900 workers amid swirling reports that the healthcare behemoth is undergoing a strategic review, including a potential breakup of its businesses.
- “The layoffs, which were confirmed by a CVS spokesperson, will affect about 1% of CVS’ 300,000 employees.
- “CVS unveiled a plan to cut $2 billion in costs this summer in a bid to bolster flagging operational performance amid rising costs for its health insurance arm Aetna and shaky reimbursement at its pharmacies.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “On the same day that Johnson & Johnson confirmed layoffs at its home base in New Jersey, the company made waves with a major manufacturing announcement in Wilson, North Carolina.
- “J&J is planning to build a state-of-the-art biologics plant to provide supplies for treatments across the oncology, immunology and neuroscience treatment areas, J&J said in a Tuesday press release. Construction is slated to begin in the first half of 2025, and the site will have a workforce of 420 once fully operational.
- “The company’s total investment in the site is expected to reach “more than $2 billion,” according to J&J’s release.”
- Beckers Payer Issues tells us five things to know about United Healthcare’s prior authorization gold card which launched today.
- Beckers Hospital Review notes,
- “Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare has completed the sale of its 70% majority ownership interest in Birmingham, Ala.-based Brookwood Baptist Health to Orlando (Fla.) Health,” and offers six things to know about the transaction.
- and
- Detroit-based Henry Ford Health and Ascension Michigan have officially launched their joint venture to improve healthcare access, experience and outcomes and offers seven things to know about this joint venture.
- The Wall Street Journal explores the future of dental care.
- “Imagine a world where you could regenerate a missing tooth with a single drug, and microrobots clean your teeth every night.
- “That future is getting closer, scientists say. “We are really looking for disruptive technology,” says Dr. Hyun (Michel) Koo, co-founding director of the Center for Innovation & Precision Dentistry at the University of Pennsylvania.”