From Washington, DC
- Federal News Network says,
- “The largest payroll provider for federal employees is at risk, and if there aren’t improvements soon, hundreds of thousands of employees could see the impacts immediately.
- “The National Finance Center, an agency housed in the Agriculture Department, is struggling with legacy IT systems, limited funding, low staffing — and even building maintenance issues. In a new nine-month study, the National Academy of Public Administration said NFC must take immediate action or else risk being unable to provide payroll services to more than 170 agency customers, spanning some 650,000 federal employees.
- “It is unthinkable that the U.S. government could find itself in a position where it could not pay a sizeable portion of the federal workforce — but it could happen, at least in the short term,” the NAPA report, published earlier this month, said.”
- Ruh-roh.
- In other puzzling news, Healthcare Dive informs us that a committee advising Congress on how to avoid surprise billing with ground ambulance charges decided against using the No Surprises Act IDR process but does not appear to have a good alternative. The committee meets again in October and plans to submit its report to Congress later this year.
- On a related note, Thompson Reuters reports that the Department of Health and Human Services prevailed in an air ambulance providers’ challenge to the No Surprises Act independent dispute resolution rules. Ass’n of Air Med. Servs. v. HHS, 2023 WL 5094881 (D.D.C. August 4, 2023); Available at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/USCOURTS-dcd-1_21-cv-03031/pdf/USCOURTS-dcd-1_21-cv-03031-0.pdf
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
- “A major health insurer says it will jettison the complicated system that Americans use to pay for drugs and create something that aims to be better, with partners including Amazon.com and the entrepreneur Mark Cuban.
- “Blue Shield of California said it is dropping CVS Health’s Caremark, the pharmacy-benefit manager it currently uses, which negotiates drug prices and wraps in other services such as a mail-order pharmacy.
- “Instead, Blue Shield, a nonprofit health plan with about 4.8 million members, will work with a selection of companies that each perform a designated function. Amazon will offer at-home drug delivery. Cuban said Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company will provide access to low-cost medications, including through retail pharmacies. Another company, Abarca, will process drug claims.
- “Blue Shield said that working with its partners, it aims to negotiate prices with pharmaceutical makers in a way that is different from the typical approach—with a simple net price structure that is supposed to eliminate rebates and hidden fees.
- “Blue Shield executives said that with one company handling many aspects of how drugs are procured through the system, it is often hard to track the flow of payments accurately.”
- Health Payer Intelligence also discusses this new unbundled PBM arrangement and related developments.
- The Segal Co. points out,
- “The average stop-loss coverage premium increase is 8.4 percent for the nearly 250 health plans in Segal’s national medical stop-loss database’s 2023 dataset.
- “The average includes groups that increased specific stop-loss deductible levels and/or aggregating specific stop-loss deductibles resulting in an overall reduced rate action. The average premium increase for groups that maintained similar specific stop-loss benefit levels as the prior year is 13.4 percent.”
- Fierce Healthcare notes
- “Tech company HealthEdge polled more than 2,800 insured people to delve into their attitudes toward their health plan and where they think payers can improve the experience.
- “The survey asked respondents what they think insurers should be doing to improve satisfaction. Five steps ranked highest:
- “Offer members incentives and/or rewards for healthy behaviors.
- “Ensure they can easily access their medical records.
- “Connect them to providers who offer care based on their preferences and personal traits.
- “Provide high-quality customer service.
- “Deploy tools and information that members can use to avoid high-cost care.”
- From the miscellany department,
- MedPage Today tells us,
- “Few people with early Alzheimer’s disease met eligibility criteria for the new anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody treatments lecanemab (Leqembi) and aducanumab (Aduhelm), cross-sectional data from the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging showed.
- “Of 237 people with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia and increased brain amyloid on PET, clinical trial inclusion and exclusion criteria narrowed the number who would qualify for a lecanemab trial to 19 or 8% of the cohort, reported Maria Vassilaki, MD, Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and co-authors. * * *
- “Our study results show only a small percentage of people with early Alzheimer’s disease may be eligible to receive treatment, mostly due to chronic health conditions and brain scan abnormalities common in older adults,” Vassilaki said in a statement.”
- Fierce Healthcare relates,
- “Kaiser Permanente has launched a multichannel support center to better address the social needs of members and nonmembers.
- “The Community Support Hub is a self-service online directory of community resources. It also includes a call center for referral assistance. The solution will enable Kaiser to have more touch points with patients and better address the overall health of its communities.
- “Many people need more than high-quality medical care to stay healthy, which is why we’re continuing to support our members beyond clinical walls to seamlessly connect them to the community resources they need to live healthy, thriving lives,” Bechara Choucair, M.D., senior vice president and chief health officer, said in a press release.
- “If you’re not a KP member, your friend is, your neighbor is,” Vice President of Social Health Anand Shah, M.D., told Fierce Healthcare. In effect, there is no distinction between a member and a community. “You can’t have one without the other.”
- BioPharma Dive reports,
- A drug combination involving Gilead’s antibody medicine Trodelvy shrank or eliminated tumors in just over half of the lung cancer patients who received it in a closely watched Phase 2 trial, according to data released ahead of a medical meeting next month. The findings suggest Trodelvy, currently approved to treat breast and bladder cancers, may be active against lung tumors as well.
- The study, EVOKE-02, is testing several regimens of Trodelvy and Merck & Co.’s immunotherapy Keytruda with or without chemotherapy in patients newly diagnosed with advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Full results were inadvertently published Wednesday, weeks before the data will be presented at the World Conference on Lung Cancer.