From Washington, DC,
- The Senate Finance Committee announced,
- Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., will convene a committee hearing on Tuesday, December 5, 2023 titled “Drug Shortages: Examining Supply Challenges, Impacts, and Policy Solutions from a Federal Health Program Perspective.” The hearing will take place at 10:00 a.m. in Room 215 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building.
- The American Hospital Association News notes,
- “The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health Nov. 29 held a hearing to explore how medical devices and hospitals are using artificial intelligence and what Congress should consider as AI in health care evolves.”
- BioPharma Dive reports,
- “The Food and Drug Administration’s top scientist Namandjé Bumpus will assume the role of principal deputy commissioner when longtime agency leader Janet Woodcock retires from that role in early 2024, according to an announcement Thursday.
- “Among Bumpus’ priorities when she assumes the role will be “creating a new model” for the FDA’s Office of Regulatory Affairs, the branch that conducts inspections, monitors drug imports, and issues recalls, market withdrawals and safety alerts, Commissioner Robert Califf said in a memo to agency staff.”
- Sequoia reminds us,
- “Beginning in 2024, group health plans and carriers will be required to include all covered items and services in their self-service internet-based price comparison tool, as required under the Transparency in Coverage (TIC) Final Rules.
- “As background, plans must provide participants and beneficiaries with out-of-pocket cost estimates via a user-friendly online self-service tool (and by paper upon request). The intent of this requirement is to provide individuals with real-time cost-sharing information to support making informed health care decisions. Implemented in two phases, the first phase of the price comparison tool required the first 500 items and services (as defined by the DOL) to be published in the tool effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, and the second phase will require all other services covered by the plan to be included in the tool effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2024.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The Centers for Disease Control announced,
- “CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics released two reports today examining provisional mortality data from 2022. While analysis shows the number and rate of suicides increased for the second year in a row from, overall life expectancy at birth increased by just over a year. This increase regains some of the 2.4 years of life expectancy lost between 2019 and 2021.
- “The findings are featured in two new reports, “Provisional Life Expectancy Estimates for 2022” and “Provisional Estimates of Suicide by Demographic Characteristics: United States, 2022. * * *
- “The increase of 1.1 years in life expectancy from 2021 to 2022 primarily resulted from decreases in mortality due to COVID-19, heart disease, unintentional injuries, cancer, and homicide. Declines in COVID-19 mortality accounted for approximately 84% of the increase in life expectancy. * * *
- “The percentage increase in the number of suicides was greater for females (4%) than males (2%), but the provisional 2022 suicide number for males (39,255) was nearly four times that of females (10,194).”
- Health Day points out,
- “The prevalence of a highly mutated COVID variant has tripled in the past two weeks, new government data shows.
- “Now, nearly 1 in 10 new COVID cases are fueled by the BA.2.86 variant, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Monday.
- “The variant is spreading the fastest in the Northeast: Just over 13% of cases in the New York and New Jersey region are blamed on BA.2.86. * * *
- “So far, preliminary data on the variant suggests it does not trigger more severe illness than previous variants, the WHO said in a recent risk evaluation, but the international agency still noted a recent and “substantial rise” in BA.2.86 cases.
- “The CDC also noted that BA.2.86 variant poses a “low” public health risk.”
- and
- “Personal trainers can help people increase their strength and their fitness.
- “Could a “brain coach” be just as useful in preventing Alzheimer’s’ disease?
- “A new study suggests that personalized health and lifestyle changes can delay or even prevent memory loss for older adults at high risk of Alzheimer’s or dementia.
- “People who received personal coaching experienced a 74% boost in their thinking and memory tests compared with those who didn’t receive such attention.
- “This is the first personalized intervention, focusing on multiple areas of cognition, in which risk factor targets are based on a participant’s risk profile, preferences and priorities, which we think may be more effective than a one-size-fits-all approach,” said co-lead researcher Dr. Kristine Yaffe, vice chair of research in psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF).”
- Healio informs us,
- “One in four adults relied solely on medications to manage chronic pain, highlighting an opportunity to increase use of nonpharmacologic therapies, particularly in men, older adults and those with public insurance, according to researchers.
- “Findings from this study contribute important information about use of over-the-counter pain relievers, prescriptions nonopioids and exercise, which were found to be some of the most common pain management therapies used by adults with chronic pain,” Stephanie Michaela Rikard, PhD, a health scientist at the CDC, told Healio.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Cigna and Humana are in talks for a combination that would create a new powerhouse in the health insurance industry.
- “The companies are discussing a stock and cash deal that could be finalized by the end of the year, assuming the talks don’t fall apart, according to people familiar with the matter.”
- and
- “A law designed to protect patients from surprise medical bills is contributing to the financial distress of some medical-service providers, which say lengthy billing disputes and payment delays with insurers are hurting their ability to stay afloat.
- “The No Surprises Act, which took effect last year, aims to protect patients from surprise medical bills from out-of-network healthcare providers when there are disagreements over reimbursements between insurers and providers. Previously, providers often billed patients to make up for the amounts insurers were unwilling to pay.
- “Numerous healthcare businesses, some owned by private equity, said the legislation is contributing to delays and reductions in payments by insurance companies, hurting their cash flows and earnings. A handful of major healthcare-service providers already have filed for chapter 11 protection this year, specifically naming the law as a major reason for their bankruptcies. These include physician-staffing companies Envision Healthcare and American Physician Partners as well as helicopter-ambulance operator Air Methods.”
- and
- “There are five tech companies valued at over $1 trillion. In healthcare, the closest contender is Eli Lilly.
- .”This year it became the first big pharmaceutical to surpass a market capitalization of $500 billion thanks to the popularity of its obesity and diabetes medications and, to a lesser extent, its experimental Alzheimer’s drug. But hanging over Lilly and rival Novo Nordisk is a reality that puts the brakes on big pharma’s ascent: the patent cliff.
- “There are several reasons why there isn’t a big pharma company in the trillion-dollar club, but the boom-and-bust nature of drug development is high on the list. Unlike Apple, which hypothetically can make huge margins off the iPhone for perpetuity, U.S. drug companies have a limited period from which to profit from their innovation. As their patents expire and generic competitors enter the market, sales plunge. Pharma executives, overly focused on short-term growth, don’t often prepare their companies for that.”
- FEHBlog notes on the Journal articles,
- Cigna and Humana are undoubtedly aware of the firebreathing nature of anti-trust enforcers in the federal government. Cigna is focused on the commercial market while Humana currently is pulling out of that market to focus on government business. Time will tell.
- Out-of-network doctors and air ambulance companies flying the pirate flag can avoid No Surprises Act problems by joining health plan networks.
- Lilly’s recent growth has been impressive.
- Reuters tells us,
- “UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday forecast 2024 profit broadly in line with Wall Street expectations, indicating that medical costs are likely to remain elevated for the health insurance giant.
- “The healthcare sector has this year seen a recovery in demand, especially among older patients who started returning to doctors’ clinics and hospitals for procedures they had delayed during the COVID-19 pandemic.”
- Healthcare Dive adds,
- “Healthcare insurers could get a slight respite from rising medical costs next year. Global costs are expected to rise 9.9% year over year in 2024, down from a 10.7% increase in 2023, according to a new survey from consultancy WTW released on Tuesday.
- “However, that decline might not last long. Nearly three-fifths of insurers surveyed anticipate higher medical cost growth over the next three years as new medical technologies, overuse of care and members’ poor health habits drive increased spend.
- “Many insurers told WTW they are leaning on deductibles, contracted provider networks and telehealth options to manage costs. Others are excluding coverage for healthcare such as fertility treatments or gender re-affirming care.”
- Beckers Hospital CFO Report identifies the states with the most rural hospital closures.
- “Since 2005, 104 rural hospitals have closed and more than 600 additional rural hospitals — 30% of all rural hospitals in the U.S. — are at risk of closing in the near future, according to the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform.”
- Beckers Hospital Review calls attention to this development,
- “Mayo Clinic’s board of trustees has given the green light to an initiative dubbed “Bold. Forward. Unbound.,” which involves a $5 billion redesign of Mayo Clinic’s downtown Rochester, Minn., campus.
- “The redesign will introduce new facilities that incorporate innovative care approaches and digital technologies, according to a Nov. 28 news release from Mayo, with a pivotal element of these being specialized “neighborhoods.” According to the health system, the neighborhood concept will offer patients a centralized location for all required services related to their specific condition, eliminating the need for navigating between different departments.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Accountable care organizations do not positively influence treatment and outcomes for chronic mental health conditions for Medicare patients, according to a study in Health Affairs.
- “For patients newly enrolled in ACOs, they saw no improvements in their depression and anxiety symptoms after one year. These patients were also 24% less likely to have their depression or anxiety treated than patients unenrolled in ACOs, and 9.8% less likely to have an evaluation and management visit for depression or anxiety with a primary care clinician.
- “Since mental health conditions in Medicare patients are often underdiagnosed and undertreated, some have suspected that mental health illnesses are ideal conditions for ACOs to handle, but the study found that there were no significant differences in any other measures of mental health treatment.”
- Beckers Hospital Review also names the winners of Forbes 30 under 30 in healthcare for 2024.