Weekend Update

From Washington, DC

  • Roll Call updates on this week’s activities on Capitol Hill/

From the public health front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Measles outbreaks across Texas and New Mexico have sickened nearly 100 people, with more cases expected, according to state health officials.
    • “The disease has spread through the South Plains region of Texas since late January, the Texas Department of State Health Services said Friday. Ninety cases have been identified to date in the state. Five patients were vaccinated, and the rest were unvaccinated or their status was unknown, the agency reported. 
    • “Due to the highly contagious nature of this disease, additional cases are likely to occur in the outbreak area and the surrounding communities,” the agency said. 
    • “The disease has been found across several counties in Texas, but the largest cluster of patients, 51, has been in Gaines County on the western border, according to health department data.  
    • “The New Mexico Department of Health has reported a measles outbreak that has infected nine people in Lea County, which borders Gaines County in Texas. The agency has begun contact tracing among those who developed symptoms to try to minimize the spread and has offered free vaccinations. 
    • “Among the 90 known cases in Texas, 77 were among people under 17 years old. Sixteen patients had to be hospitalized, the state said. 
    • “Last year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 285 cases of measles nationwide, across 33 states that included Texas and New Mexico. The CDC counted 16 outbreaks, defined as three or more related cases, that accounted for about 198 out of the 285 people who fell ill. By comparison, in 2023, four outbreaks were reported among 59 individual illnesses.”
  • The New York Times lets us know six things E.R. doctors wish you’d avoid.
  • The Washington Post informs us,
    • “Forty-four percent of rural Medicare patients must drive an hour or more for surgery, a recent analysis in JAMA finds. The study shows that patients in rural areas typically drive 55 minutes to a hospital — far longer than their counterparts in more populous areas.
    • “The research used beneficiary data from Medicare to identify patients 65 to 99 years old who had any of a list of common surgeries between 2010 and 2020. The study looked at about 12.3 million surgery admissions overall, 2.6 million of which were in rural areas.
    • “The number of rural Medicare beneficiaries who traveled more than 60 minutes for their procedure rose from 36.8 percent in 2010 to 44.1 percent in 2020, with the median travel time climbing from 47 minutes to 55 minutes. Among nonrural Medicare beneficiaries, travel times were lower, with a median of 20 minutes’ travel in 2010 vs. 23 minutes in 2020.
    • “Travel times depended on the risk involved in surgery; median times for low-risk procedures such as appendectomies and hernia repair were lower than for higher-risk surgeries like aortic valve repair or a liver resection.”
  • The Wall Street Journal discusses the growing lack of public trust in the medical profession. It strikes the FEHBlog that health insurers can contribute toward restoring that trust by encouraging the use of primary care physicians and reducing prior authorization requirements.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Washington Post explains why GLP-1 weight loss drugs also are reshaping the economy.
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Orlando Health will close Rockledge Hospital and four outpatient facilities in Brevard, Florida on April 22, just months after buying the 298-bed facility from bankrupt Steward Health Care
    • “The health system blamed the closure on Steward, saying in a statement that “years of neglect” had left the Rockledge’s electrical, plumbing and heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems failing. 
    • “Orlando plans to demolish Rockledge and replace it with a new facility, as it would cost more to renovate and repair Rockledge than to build a hospital from the ground up, the system said.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bluebird bio, a pioneering gene therapy developer that in recent years has struggled to stay afloat, has agreed to be acquired and taken private in a deal with investment firms Carlyle Group and SK Capital.
    • “Under an agreement announced Friday, Bluebird will sell to the two firms for $3 per share upfront. Bluebird shareholders could receive an additional $6.84 per share via a so-called contingent value right, should its currently marketed gene therapies reach $600 million in net yearly sales by the end of 2027.
    • “The deal values Bluebird at just over $29 million upfront, and potentially about $96 million if the CVR is redeemed.”
  • Per Modern Healthcare,
    • “Hartford HealthCare, which operates seven hospitals and a network of physicians, behavioral health services and other providers in Connecticut, is partnering with the artificial intelligence-driven virtual health provider K Health to improve access to primary care. On April 1, the organizations will launch HHC 24/7, a virtual health platform powered by K Health, designed to make “comprehensive, personalized primary care available anytime and anywhere.” The service will be fully integrated with Hartford HealthCare. Terms of the partnership were not disclosed.”