
From Washington, DC,
- The House of Representatives and the Senate are in session this week on Capitol Hill for Committee business and floor voting.
- Committee hearings of note this week:
- Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions March 5 10:00 AM (EST) | 562 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. Meeting: Hearings to examine the nomination of Jayanta Bhattacharya, of California, to be Director of the National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services.
- Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions March 6 10:00 AM (EST) | 562 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. Meeting: Hearings to examine the nomination of Martin Makary, of Virginia, to be Commissioner of Food and Drugs, Department of Health and Human Services.
- USA Today observes,
- President Trump on Tuesday [March 4] will deliver his first address to a joint session of Congress since his reelection. While the speech shares many characteristics with a State of the Union address, this presentation is slightly different in nature.
- Trump’s speech to Congress is expected to outline his legislative priorities for the upcoming term and highlight the work his administration has accomplished since taking office.
- But since this is his first address in his second nonconsecutive term, the speech is not classified as a State of the Union.
- The FEHBlog noticed today that on February 12, the Congressional Research Services released a legal sidebar titled Rescission of Executive Order 11246, Employment Opportunity”: Legal Implications.”
- Per MedTech Dive,
- “Tandem Diabetes Care received Food and Drug Administration clearance for its Control-IQ+ algorithm in Type 2 diabetes. The automated insulin delivery (AID) system can pull data from glucose monitors and integrate with Tandem’s insulin pumps, automatically calculating how much basal insulin patients should receive.
- “The expanded indication increases access for people with Type 2 diabetes who use Tandem’s t:slim X2 tubed pump and Tandem Mobi, a smaller form-factor pump.
- “CEO John Sheridan told investors in a Wednesday earnings call that the expanded indication covers all people with Type 2 diabetes who take insulin, more than doubling Tandem’s total addressable market in the U.S.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The Washington Post reports,
- Hospitals across the country have reported an increase in pediatric flu cases this season, with many children experiencing severe complications such as pneumonia, dehydration and organ failure. Hospital admissions for flu in children ages 5 to 17 increased by 145 percent, from 959 on Jan. 4 to 2,348 on Feb. 1, according to an analysis from the American Academy of Pediatrics.”
- “Death is obviously the most severe outcome, but there is a huge spectrum between well and not well,” Patel said. “The flu can take a previously healthy kid and land them on a ventilator.”
- “Doctors say early symptoms like dehydration or difficulty breathing should not be ignored, as they can indicate a more severe infection.
- “Patel added that while cases at her hospital have started to decline, the tail end of this flu season could last a few more months.”
- The Wall Street Journal discusses “The New Thinking on Concussions in Sports. Elite athletes are learning that the best way to recover from a sports-related concussion isn’t to shut down all physical activity. It’s to get back in a workout routine—and quickly.”
- Medscape offers several observations on GLP-1 drugs
- NPR Shots offers patient perspectives on two Alzheimer’s drugs — Leqembi and Kisunla. The FDA has approved “since 2023 that can clear the brain of sticky amyloid plaques, one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s.”
- Fortune Wells points out “Nutritionists offer these six ways to get back to a healthy diet.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “Prime Healthcare completed its acquisition of eight Ascension Illinois hospitals.
- “The transaction closed March 1 and involves more than half of Ascension’s Illinois hospital network, along with several skilled nursing, home health and senior living facilities. Federal and state regulators signed off on the $375 million deal last year.
- Prime, a for-profit system based in Ontario, California, pledged to invest $250 million in the facilities.
- Kauffman Hall tells us about the state of hospital volumes.
- MedTech Dive lets us know,
- “Teleflex will split into two publicly traded companies, with the new entity comprising its urology, acute care and OEM businesses. The remaining company will consist of the hospital-focused vascular access, interventional and surgical businesses.
- “The separation positions each organization to accelerate growth under a simplified operating model and increased management focus, with a streamlined manufacturing footprint and better allocation of resources, Teleflex said in a Thursday announcement.
- “In addition, Teleflex said it agreed to pay about 760 million euros (about $791 million) to acquire nearly all of Biotronik’s vascular intervention division. The company also announced the planned retirement of CFO Thomas Powell.”