Thursday Report

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call reports
    • “The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee on Thursday advanced the nomination of former Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer to be Labor secretary in a 14-9 vote.
    • “Chavez-DeRemer, a former one-term Republican member of the House from Oregon, is likely to be confirmed. She caused less worry among Democrats than some of President Donald Trump’s other nominees. 
    • “Committee Chair Bill Cassidy, R-La., laid out his hopes for a “pro-America agenda that puts workers first.”
    • “Over the last several weeks, Rep. Chavez-DeRemer demonstrated her commitment to this mission,” he said.
  • Per a Senate news release,
    • “Senate Finance Committee Members Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) introduced bipartisan legislation to improve health care access for children with complex medical conditions. The Accelerating Kids’ Access to Care Act simplifies out-of-state Medicaid screening and enrollment processes for pediatric care providers, while retaining key safeguards to preserve the integrity of the program. Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-Iowa) is leading companion legislation in the House of Representatives.
    • “Moms and dads seeking life-saving care for their kids should be able to access it quickly and wherever it’s available. Families shouldn’t have to trip over red tape to reach the most effective specialist, treatment or procedure, whether around the corner or across state lines. Our bill simplifies the process so parents can ensure children with a rare disease or cancer diagnosis get the right specialized medical care,” Grassley said.
    • “For children with complex medical conditions, bureaucratic red tape should not be an obstacle to care. This bipartisan legislation will make it easier for families to navigate our health care system and relieve some of the stress that they face to get their kids the care they need when they need it,” Bennet said.
    • “Click HERE for text of the legislation.”

From the judicial front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “A federal judge on Thursday ordered [at a TRO hearing] the Office of Personnel Management to rescind directives that initiated the mass firing of probationary government workers in several agencies across the government, ruling that the terminations were probably illegal, as a group of labor unions argued in court. Civil Action No. 3:25-cv-01780 (N.D. Cal.)
    • “U.S. District Judge William Alsup [appointed by President Clinton] ordered OPM to rescind its prior directives to agencies including the Department of Defense, the Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Science Foundation, and others. The ruling is one of the biggest roadblocks so far to President Donald Trump’s effort to slash the federal workforce.
    • “Congress has given the authority to hire and fire to the agencies themselves. The Department of Defense, for example, has statutory authority to hire and fire,” Alsup said from the bench as he handed down the ruling Thursday evening in San Francisco federal court. “The Office of Personnel Management does not have any authority whatsoever under any statute in the history of the universe to hire and fire employees at another agency. They can hire and fire their own employees.”
  • The Court has not yet posted a written opinion.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Eleanor Maguire wasn’t great at navigating the streets of London, but it wasn’t until she was at home one night watching a movie in the mid-1990s that she started to think that the brains of the people who were expert navigators—the city’s famous cabdrivers—might actually be different than hers.
    • “The next morning, she burst into her lab at University College London, where she worked as a neuroscientist, and told her mentor, Chris Frith, that she’d just seen a movie called “The Knowledge” about a group of would-be London cabdrivers, and that it had given her an idea for a scientific study. Frith told her to go for it.
    • “Maguire, who had cancer and died Jan. 4 at age 54, specialized in the hippocampus, a part of the brain that plays a key role in memory. It was also known to play a role in navigation for rats, but early in her career, Maguire demonstrated that it played a role in navigation for humans as well. In a series of studies, she demonstrated that human memories aren’t movies that we replay in our minds the way we watch movies on TV. Rather, they are imperfect scenes that we construct in our minds. Similarly, when we’re thinking about where we want to go, our brains construct scenes that show us how to get there.”
    • RIP
  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “Cervical precancer rates dropped precipitously among young women who underwent screening after the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine was first recommended in the U.S., CDC researchers reported.
    • “Among women ages 20 to 24 who were screened for cervical cancer from 2008 to 2022, rates of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) grades 2-3 and adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS), defined as CIN2+, decreased by 79%, and rates of CIN grade 3 and AIS, defined as CIN3+, decreased by 80%, said Julia W. Gargano, PhD, of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, and colleagues.
    • “Moreover, among women ages 25-29 who were screened over the same time period, rates of CIN3+ — the precancerous lesions most likely to progress to invasive cervical cancer — decreased by 37%, they noted in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
    • “These data are consistent with considerable impact of HPV vaccination for preventing cervical precancers among women in the age groups most likely to have been vaccinated and support existing recommendations to vaccinate children at the routinely recommended ages as a cancer prevention measure,” Gargano and colleagues wrote.”
  • and
    • “During the current flu season, influenza-associated encephalopathy or encephalitis (IAE) was identified in 9 of 68 (13%) pediatric deaths, including four with acute necrotizing encephalopathy (ANE), a severe form IAE, CDC researchers reported.
    • “In comparison, the median proportion of pediatric influenza deaths with IAE during the 2010-11 through 2024-25 flu seasons was 9% (166 of 1,840), reported Amara Fazal, MD, of the CDC, and colleagues in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. It is not known whether cases observed this season vary from expected numbers, they noted.”
  • Per an NIH press release,
    • “Using an animal model of multiple sclerosis (MS), researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have created a four-dimensional brain map that reveals how lesions similar to those seen in human MS form. These findings, published in Science, provide a window into the early disease state and could help identify potential targets for MS treatments and brain tissue repair.
    • “The researchers, led by postdoctoral fellow Jing-Ping Lin, Ph.D., and senior investigator Daniel S. Reich, M.D., Ph.D., both at NIH’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), combined repeated MRI imaging with brain-tissue analysis, including gene expression, to track the onset and development of MS-like lesions. They uncovered a new MRI signature that can help detect brain regions at risk for damage weeks before any visible lesions occur. They also identified “microenvironments” within affected brain tissue based on observed patterns of neural function, inflammation, immune and support cell responses, gene expression, and levels of damage and repair.
    • “Identifying the early events that occur after inflammation and teasing apart which are reparative versus which are damaging, can potentially help us identify MS disease activity sooner and develop treatments to slow or stop its progression,” said Dr. Reich.”  
  • The U.S. Preventive Health Services Task Force posted for public comment a proposed research plan for evaluating “Tobacco Cessation in Adults: Interventions.” The public comment period ends on March 26, 2025.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. shares rose Thursday morning after a report that a potential take-private deal from Sycamore Partners would lead to a breakup of the drugstore chain.
    • “Sycamore, which has been reportedly exploring a purchase of Walgreens for months, is planning on splitting up the company’s U.S. and U.K. pharmacy businesses, as well as its specialty pharmacy unit, the Financial Times reported Thursday.”
  • Kauffman Hall considers implications of its National Hospital Flash Report for Hospital Operations.
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Nashville, Tenn.-based HCA Healthcare has completed the purchase of Lehigh Acres, Fla.-based Lehigh Regional Medical Center, from Ontario, Calif.-based Prime Healthcare.
    • “This hospital and associated physician practices are a wonderful complimentary addition to our existing 17 hospitals within our division along Florida’s West Coast and will serve as a catalyst for growth as we further expand our services and programs in Lee County,” Jyric Sims, PhD, president of HCA Healthcare west Florida division, said in a Feb. 27 news release shared with Becker’s.”