From Washington, DC —
- The Wall Street Journal reports, “Weight-loss drugmakers are lobbying Congress to grant them access to a monster payday for their blockbuster treatments: Medicare coverage.” At last Thursday’s carrier conference, OPM pointed out a related advantage of the Medicare Part D EGWPs that the FEHBP will offer next year. Although the weight loss drugs may not be on the Medicare formulary, those drugs would be made available to FEHB annuitants via the Plan’s formulary, which can gap-fill the Medicare formulary.
- CMS announced that the updated MMSE Section 111 GHP User Guide version 6.8 has been posted to the GHP User Guide page on CMS.gov. Refer to Chapter 1 for a summary of updates.”
- Per Health Payer Intelligence, AHIP launched a marketing campaign targeting Pharma’s prescription drug pricing. “The payer organization stated that prescription drug pricing is out of control and explained health insurance’s role in reducing the impact.”
- The Department of Health and Human Services proposed a rule to extend ACA marketplace, Basic Health Program, Medicaid, and CHIP coverages to 580,000 DACA recipients.
From the healthcare spending and plan design fronts
- Fierce Healthcare informs us,
- “About a year ago, Elevance Health launched a pilot program to offer digital concierge care to members who were recovering from COVID-19 infections.
- “Since then, the insurer has expanded that initiative to offer concierge care management to members with a number of chronic conditions, including Crohn’s disease, cancer and diabetes. Anthony Nguyen, M.D., the chief clinical officer at Elevance, told Fierce Healthcare that the program was born from a desire to be “more engaging with our members.”
- “The challenge for not only the programs that we have, the traditional ones, as well as others in the market, is that it’s not personalized,” Nguyen said. “It is not tailored to an ‘n’ of one.”
- “Greater personalization was built into the foundation of the program, he said. For example, concierge care deploys a nurse matching tool that connects members with a clinician who is likely to connect and resonate well with them, improving the care journey.”
- and
- “Healthcare spending declined dramatically in 2020 thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, but expenditures rebounded the following year, according to new data from the Health Care Cost Institute.
- “The group released its annual look at cost and utilization trends last week, which found the average health spending for people with employer-sponsored coverage reached $6,457, up 15% from the 2020 average of $5,630. Spending declined by 4% in 2020 as utilization decreased, the researchers said.
- “John Hargraves, director of data strategy at HCCI, told Fierce Healthcare that the 2020 data are an aberration in the long-term spending trends, which had grown steadily prior to the pandemic.
- “It’s almost like 2020 is a missing data point in the long-term growth in the healthcare spending and use patterns that we’ve noted,” Hargraves said.”
From the telehealth and fraud waste and abuse fronts, the HHS Inspector General made available a “toolkit intended to assist public and private sector partners—such as Medicare Advantage plan sponsors, private health plans, State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, and other Federal health care agencies—in analyzing their own telehealth claims data to assess program integrity risks in their programs.”