From Washington, DC
- The House of Representatives and the Senate will be in session this week for Committee business and floor voting.
- Decision Desk puts 2024 House election results at 220 Republicans to 213 Democrats while the AP count is 2018 Republicans to 212 Democrats. The total number of Representatives is 435, and a majority is 218 members.
- Per Modern Healthcare,
- “The Drug Enforcement Administration is set to once again extend a COVID-19 era rule that allows clinicians to remotely prescribe controlled medications, such as Adderall and Vicodin.
- “The DEA is set to publish a rule on Tuesday with the Health and Human Services Department that will temporarily extend providers’ ability to remotely prescribe Schedule II-V controlled medications via telemedicine to new and existing patients through Dec. 31, 2025. Current flexibilities were set to expire at the end of this year.”
- “On Friday, an unpublished version of the rule was released on the Federal Register.”
- OPM has released its FY 2024 financial report. Worth noting is the OPM’s director’s “Response to OIG FY 25 Top Management Challenges Report dated September 27, 2024.”
- The Wall Street Journal offers an informative report on the federal civilian workforce.
- “There are 2.3 million Americans working for the federal government in civilian jobs, a tally that has steadily climbed as control of the White House has shifted between parties and presidents.
- “They constitute less than 2% of the total U.S. workforce. They work as everything from nurses in Veterans Affairs hospitals and park rangers in Yellowstone to guards in federal prisons and the 19 employees of the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board. About 80% of them work outside of the Washington, D.C., region.” * * *
- “Roughly 70% of the civilian roles are in military- or security-related agencies. Veterans Affairs has the most civilian workers, mainly because it operates hundreds of hospitals and clinics. Homeland Security, created in 2002, is now the third largest. The Education Department, with 4,425 workers, is the smallest.”
- Stars and Stripes updates us on the pilot program to improve access to healthcare for federal employees living and working in Japan. There are 11,000 federal employees living and working in Japan. The FEHBlog understands that the access problem occurs outside the Tokyo metropolitan area.
- Per Legal Dive,
- [Martine] Cicconi, a former special counsel in the Office of the White House Counsel, expects a “dynamic” regulatory environment over the next year. Following Trump’s election, she said the primary question she hears from corporate clients regards the fate of regulatory rules under Biden that remain in various stages of implementation.
- These regulations tend to fall into four categories, Cicconi said.
- Rules under consideration, not yet finalized. These will probably be subject to a regulatory pause by the incoming administration on Jan. 20.
- Rules that are passed before Biden’s term ends, and within the past 60 days will be subject to the Congressional Review Act, Cicconi said. The next Congress, under Republican control in January, is likely to enjoin Biden rules with a joint resolution Trump would sign.
- Finalized agency rules that are still wending their way through litigation, including some that have been enjoined. The Trump administration is likely to stop defending many of the Biden rules, which would effectively end them. However, “in many of those challenges there are intervenors with authority to defend the rule going forward,” Cicconi noted.
- That means rules that have survived court challenges and avoided being enjoined “will stay at least on the books” pending further administration action, she said.
From the public health and medical research front,
- The New York Times reports,
- “A person in California has tested positive for a form of mpox causing a widespread epidemic in Africa, the state’s Department of Public Health reported on Saturday. It is the first known case in the United States.
- “The individual, who was not identified, had recently returned from East Africa. The patient was diagnosed in San Mateo County, just south of San Francisco, and was isolating at home.
- “Officials at the California Department of Public Health and at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are reaching out to potential contacts of the patient for further testing.
- “There is no evidence that this version of the mpox virus, called Clade Ib, is circulating in communities in the United States, C.D.C. officials said.”
- and
- “One person has died and 39 people have become ill in an E. coli outbreak linked to organic carrots, federal regulators said on Sunday.
- “The infections were tied to multiple brands of recalled organic whole bagged carrots and baby carrots sold by Grimmway Farms, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. Fifteen people have been hospitalized, according to the agency.
- “Carrots currently on store shelves are unlikely to be affected by the recall but those in consumers’ refrigerators or freezers may be, the authorities said.
- “If you have any recalled carrots in your home, throw them out or return them to the store,” the C.D.C. said.” * * *
- “The carrots were sold under multiple brand names and at several retailers, including Trader Joe’s and Wegmans.
- “The states with the most outbreaks were Minnesota, New York and Washington, according to the Food and Drug Administration.”
- The Washington Post lets us know,
- “Up to 10,000 lives could be saved each year by improving access to blood in the field, a group of surgeons said in a news conference last month.
- “The event, which took place at an American College of Surgeons clinical conference in San Francisco, emphasized how faster access to blood could improve survival during emergencies.
- “Despite evidence that carrying blood in the field can reduce deaths by preventing patients from bleeding to death, the surgeons said, blood is rarely available to emergency responders.
- “The bad news is that only about 1 percent of [emergency medical services] vehicles, whether it’s ground or air, carry blood in the United States,” said John B. Holcomb, a trauma surgeon and professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “About 10,000 lives a year could be saved if every ambulance in the United States had blood.”
- NPR Shots informs us,
- “A study of cells from 84 cadaver brains suggests that Alzheimer’s has two distinct phases, and that one type of neuron is especially vulnerable.
- “There’s an early phase where there’s a very slow increase in the amount of pathology,” says Ed Lein, a senior investigator at the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, “then a more exponential phase where suddenly things get really bad.”
- “The study also found evidence that a small subset of neurons known as somatostatin inhibitory neurons begin to die off during the early phase of Alzheimer’s, Lein and a team of nearly 100 other scientists report in the journal Nature Neuroscience.
- “That was quite a surprise,” Lein says, because these neurons have received relatively little attention from Alzheimer’s researchers.
- “The findings suggest that Alzheimer’s treatments are most likely to help early in the disease, and that one strategy might be to protect vulnerable inhibitory neurons.
- “The results also show how scientists’ understanding of Alzheimer’s is being changed by new tools and techniques that can reveal detailed information about millions of individual brain cells.
- “They’ve produced a picture of what’s going on that no one could have anticipated just a few years ago,” says Dr. Richard Hodes, who directs the National Institute on Aging, which played a key role in funding the research.”
- Per Fortune Well,
- “Everyone has a different relationship with exercise. You might be a fitness junkie, hitting the gym five days a week or training for a marathon to push your body’s limits. But for most Americans, physical activity takes a backseat to everything else going on in life.
- “Only 26% of men, 19% of women, and 20% of adolescents get enough activity to meet aerobic and muscle-strengthening guidelines, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.
- “If you’re one of the many people currently not hitting the minimum exercise recommendations—150 to 300 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity a week—then you might be missing out on substantial gains in longevity and healthspan, according to a new study published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- HR Dive tells us,
- “A Texas federal judge on Friday struck down the U.S. Department of Labor’s recently expanded overtime rule nationwide, stripping overtime eligibility from an estimated 1 million workers, according to a court filing.
- “U.S. District Court Judge Sean Jordan ruled that “the 2024 Rule exceeds the Department’s authority and is unlawful.” The ruling vacates DOL’s overtime rule that changed the threshold at which workers qualified for overtime from $35,568 to $43,888 effective July 1 and would have raised it to $58,656 on Jan. 1, 2025, according to Littler attorneys.
- “Jordan previously granted a preliminary injunction to the Texas state government days before the rule was to go into effect.”
- Per Yahoo Finance, Optum has launched a website to present its defense against a federal antitrust lawsuit challenging an acquisition of Amedisys, a large home healthcare company. “The website notes that the home healthcare industry remains highly fragmented despite the growing market.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports that “Makers of Ozempic, Zepbound fight to stop compounded copies of their drugs {when it is} unclear whether pharmaceutical companies can increase production enough.