From Washington, DC,
- Congress.gov tells us that the House Appropriations Committee’s markup of the Financial Services and General Government appropriations bill, which funds OPM and FEHB, has been postponed to June 13 at 11 am ET.
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “National health expenditures rose 4.1% to $4.5 trillion in 2022, according to data the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Office of the Actuary published in the journal Health Affairs Wednesday.
- “Healthcare accounted for 17.3% of gross domestic product last year, down from 18.2% in 2021. The independent, nonpartisan CMS analysts previously projected healthcare spending would rise to $7.17 trillion, or 19.6% of gross domestic product, by 2031.
- “Expenditures and their rate of change have stabilized since the worst phases of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021 caused spending to spike and healthcare as a share of GDP to increase, the actuaries’ report showed.”
- Axios lets us know,
- “Almost two years after the debut of a revamped national suicide hotline, its promise of a quicker, more seamless crisis response across the country is still a work in progress.
- “Why it matters: Congress gave states $1 billion to build out the 988 hotline, amid nationwide concern over worsening mental health, with the expectation that states would establish their own own long-term funding to operate call centers and crisis services.”
- “But those efforts have been uneven, contributing to significantly lower response times in certain states. As with much of the health care system, the level of crisis services available to people depends greatly on where they live.
- “What they’re saying: “We want a system where everybody has a comparable experience. It seems to me we’re still a few years from that,” said Chuck Ingoglia, CEO of the National Council for Mental Wellbeing.
- “He and other advocates and experts Axios spoke with said 988 implementation has been improving.”
- Per the Department of Health and Human Services,
- “Over the past decade, syphilis rates and case numbers in the U.S. have increased across all populations. In response to this surge in syphilis cases, HHS formed the National Syphilis and Congenital Syphilis Syndemic Federal Task Force led by HHS Assistant Secretary for Health Admiral Rachel Levine.
- “Today, this task force issued new considerations for health care providers who test patients for syphilis. The new HHS document “Considerations for the Implementation of Point of Care Tests for Syphilis – PDF,” outlines four main differences between syphilis point of care tests and laboratory-based serologic syphilis tests and highlights the best settings to consider use of point-of-care tests. It also examines parameters for point of care testing program implementation and management, provides answers to common questions, and lists links to related resources.
- “Syphilis testing is crucial, as syphilis infections can be difficult to diagnose because many of those infected may not have symptoms,” said Admiral Rachel L. Levine, MD, Assistant Secretary for Health. “The Food and Drug Administration has authorized two point-of-care tests for syphilis that can provide rapid test results during the same visit in about 15 minutes. This can help overcome barriers in our ability to timely diagnose patients in communities across the nation.”
- Here’s a link to a new Health Affairs Forefront article on the Biden Administration’s ACA Section 1557 final rule.
From the public health and medical research front,
- The New York Times reports,
- “A new study linking the low-calorie sugar substitute xylitol to an increased risk of heart attack or stroke has once again raised questions about the risks and benefits of sugar substitutes.
- “Xylitol is a sugar alcohol found naturally in fruits and vegetables, and even produced in the human body at very low levels. But it is often synthetically produced and is increasingly being added to processed foods, like candies and “low-sugar” baked goods, because it has 40 percent fewer calories than regular sugar does and doesn’t cause blood glucose to spike after a meal. The study authors said this rise in consumption was concerning, as the people most likely to turn to the sugar substitute may already be trying to manage conditions like obesity and diabetes that also increase the risk of cardiovascular issues.
- “They may think they’re making a healthy choice by picking xylitol over sugar, yet the data argues that it is not the case.” said Dr. Stanley Hazen, the chair of cardiovascular and metabolic sciences at the Cleveland Clinic’s Lerner Research Institute and an author of the study. Last year, Dr. Hazen and his colleagues found a similar association with another sugar alcohol, called erythritol.”
- Per the National Institutes of Health,
- “Researchers have identified inherited genetic variants that may predict the loss of one copy of a woman’s two X chromosomes as she ages, a phenomenon known as mosaic loss of chromosome X, or mLOX. These genetic variants may play a role in promoting abnormal blood cells (that have only a single copy of chromosome X) to multiply, which may lead to several health conditions, including cancer. The study, co-led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Cancer Institute, was published June 12, 2024, in Nature. * * *
- “The scientists suggest that future research should focus on how mLOX interacts with other types of genetic variation and age-related changes to potentially alter disease risk.”
- Following up on a FEHBlog post from last week, Beckers Hospital Review points out,
- “The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine has proposed a more precise definition of long COVID-19.
- “In its latest report, the group said long COVID needs to be understood as “an infection-associated chronic condition that occurs after COVID-19 infection and is present for at least three months as a continuous, relapsing and remitting, or progressive disease state that affects one or more organ systems.”
- “This comes after the National Academies published research detailing more than 200 symptoms related to long COVID.
- “Our committee hopes this single definition, crafted with input from across research and patient communities, will help to educate the public about this widespread and highly consequential disease state,” Harvey Fineberg, MD, PhD, chair of the report’s authoring committee and president of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, said in a June 11 news release.
- “The new definition also says long COVID:
- “Can involve any organ system and present with a range of symptoms.
- “Can come after asymptomatic, mild, or severe SARS-CoV-2 infections.
- “Can affect children and adults.
- “Can be clinically diagnosed even without a biomarker.
- “Can exacerbate preexisting conditions or present new ones.
- “Can be delayed in onset for weeks or months following acute infection.
- “Can resolve over a period of months or take years to resolve fully.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- MedCity News tells us,
- “In 2021, Medicare Advantage beneficiaries spent about $2,541 less in out-of-pocket costs and premiums than beneficiaries with fee-for-service Medicare, a new report discovered.
- “The report, released Monday, was conducted by healthcare research firm ATI Advisory and commissioned by Better Medicare Alliance, a research and lobby group for Medicare Advantage (MA). To conduct the study, the researchers used the 2019 to 2021 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey and Cost Supplement files. The results of the study show an increase from last year’s report, which found that MA beneficiaries spent about $2,400 less than traditional Medicare on average in 2020.
- “The researchers also found reduced spending among Medicare Advantage beneficiaries across racial and ethnic groups in 2021. Black MA beneficiaries paid $1,617 less in out-of-pocket costs and premiums than those in traditional Medicare, while Latino MA beneficiaries paid $1,593 less and White MA beneficiaries paid $2,371 less. In 2021, 25% of MA beneficiaries were Black or Latino, compared to 14% of traditional Medicare enrollees.”
- Fierce Healthcare offers two articles from this week’s AHIP conference held in Las Vegas.
- Healthcare Dive lets us know,
- “The Federal Trade Commission’s case aiming to block Novant Health from acquiring two Community Health Systems-owned North Carolina hospitals was dealt a series of blows this week. On Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth Bell ruled to deny the antitrust agency’s latest preliminary injunction against the deal. * * *
- “Bell ruled last week the sale could go forward as planned, reasoning that the hospitals were likely to shutter entirely absent a sale, which could harm care access in the region. The judge further argued that the deal could have a net positive impact on competition in the region by allowing Novant to better compete with the area’s largest healthcare provider, Atrium Health.
- “The FTC intends to fight that ruling in the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The antitrust agency filed its notice of appeal on Sunday, and petitioned a district court on Monday to pause the transaction during the appellate review.
- “However, Bell denied the FTC’s latest request for a preliminary injunction, again citing the risk of hospital closures.”
- Here’s a link to a law firm’s updated list of important takeaways for employees about the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act which took effect last June.