From Washington, DC
- Kiplinger Private Finance reminds us,
- “Beginning in 2025, people with Part D plans won’t have to pay more than $2,000 in out-of-pocket costs, thanks to a provision in the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. The $2,000 cap will be indexed to the growth in per capita Part D costs, so it may rise each year after 2025. Part D enrollees will also have the option of spreading out their out-of-pocket costs over the year rather than face high out-of-pocket costs in any given month.”
- The Part D EGWP benefit package is so generous for 2025 that it should sell itself. Given this juicy carrot, there is no reason why OPM chose to resort to the stick – prohibiting Part D EGBP opt outs from receiving the regular PSHBP prescription drug benefits. Hopefully, OPM will switch back to the carrot in the final PSHBP supplemental rule.
- Govexec points out,
- “Only 7% of the full-time civil service was under the age of 30 at the end of fiscal 2022 compared with 20% of the overall U.S. labor force, according to the Partnership. This shaky pipeline of young workers could exacerbate staffing shortages, as a 2022 White House document concluded that 30% of the federal workforce would be eligible to retire over the next five years.
- “The underrepresentation also means that federal agencies could miss out on younger perspectives and talent, particularly from Generation Z (individuals born in the late ‘90s and early ‘00s). Gaurav Gupta — managing director of the consulting firm Kotter, which researches workforce transformation — argues that workplaces could greatly benefit from younger workers who have a “much higher propensity for change.”
- The article discusses approaches for attracting more Gen Zers to federal government service.
- MedTech Dive reports,
- “The Food and Drug Administration has approved Guardant Health’s Shield blood test as a primary screening option for colorectal cancer in average-risk adults age 45 and older, the company said Monday.
- “Guardant is positioning the test, which can be completed during a routine doctor visit, as a more pleasant and convenient alternative to colonoscopy or stool-based tests that will encourage more people to undergo colorectal cancer screening.
- “Shield can address a number of unscreened individuals (with a blood draw) for those not willing or unable to perform a colonoscopy or take a stool test,” Leerink Partners analyst Puneet Souda wrote in a report to clients. Still, Souda expects colonoscopy to remain the first-line screening choice of physicians based on clinical evidence, followed by Exact Sciences’ Cologuard stool test.”
- Supreme Court journalist Amy L. Howe shares the Supreme Court’s October and November 2023 oral argument calendars. None of the scheduled cases directly impacts health plans as such.
From the public health and medical research front,
- NBC News reports,
- “The number of measles cases recorded this year is more than triple the total from all of last year — with five months still to go.
- “According to data released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 188 cases have been reported in 26 states and Washington, D.C. No deaths have been reported, but 93 people have been hospitalized — mostly children under 5 years old.
- “The U.S. has seen 13 measles outbreaks this year, the largest of which took off at a migrant shelter in Chicago in March and was linked to more than 60 cases.
- “This month, measles cases have been reported in Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon and Vermont. Massachusetts’ case was the first in the state since early 2020.” * * *
- “Experts attribute this year’s uptick to two main factors: declining vaccination rates in the U.S. and a rise in measles cases worldwide.
- “Around 85% of the people who got measles this year were either unvaccinated or had an unknown vaccination status, according to the CDC. Many of the cases have been linked to international travel, meaning the disease was brought into the U.S. by travelers who were infected in other countries.”
- STAT News tells us,
- “With the number of U.S. dairy herds infected with H5N1 bird flu rising almost daily, fears are growing that the dangerous virus cannot be driven out of this species. That belief is amplifying calls for the development of flu shots for cows.
- “Multiple animal vaccine manufacturers are reportedly at work trying to develop such products. And the U.S. Department of Agriculture is eagerly encouraging the effort, detailing in a notice last week what kinds of evidence would be needed to win licensing approval for cow vaccines.
- “But a number of scientists question whether investing too heavily in this strategy is a wise approach at this point, given that there remain many outstanding questions about whether vaccinating cows would be an effective way of stopping spread of the virus in cattle in the first place. Some wonder whether farmers will be willing to absorb the costs of vaccines to prevent an infection they don’t currently view as a serious threat to their operations, or whether they would agree to the stringent post-vaccination surveillance that must go hand-in-glove with any attempt to use vaccines to solve this vexing problem.” * * *
- “David Swayne, an avian influenza expert who worked for the USDA for nearly 30 years and is now a private consultant, agreed that vaccination of cows would have to be done as part of a more multifaceted response. “It’s not just about injecting a vaccine,” he said. “You need to then follow up to look serologically, and then you also need to follow up to make sure there’s no virus by testing, let’s say, bulk milk or something like that. Surveillance is really a critical part of any kind of vaccination program for a severe disease like [highly pathogenic avian influenza.]”
- “Swayne acknowledged the concerns about the unanswered questions about how H5N1 is spreading in cows, but he said vaccine manufacturers should be working on vaccines while researchers are seeking those answers. Vaccines may be a necessary tool for controlling this disease in the future. “Instead of waiting until you answer all the questions on pathogenesis, it’s good to go ahead and start working on those vaccines now, so that when you get to the end, and you have all your answers, you’ve got the vaccines ready for that final step,” he said.”
- Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
- “The FDA is warning healthcare providers of dosing errors associated with compounded versions of semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic, Rybelsus and Wegovy.
- “The agency has received reports of hospitalizations and adverse events tied to the issue, including gastrointestinal issues, fainting, headache, dehydration and acute pancreatitis, according to a July 26 update.
- “Most adverse events occurred when patients self-administered incorrect doses of weight loss drugs from multiple-dose vials, sometimes taking five to 20 times the intended amount. Several reports also involved clinicians miscalculating doses, resulting in patients receiving five to 10 times more than the intended dose.
- “The agency said patients’ inexperience with self-injections and confusion over different measurement units may have contributed to the errors.
- “FDA encourages health care providers and compounders to provide patients with the appropriate syringe size for the intended dose and counsel patients on how to measure the intended dose using the syringe,” the agency said in the update. “Additionally, health care providers should be vigilant when prescribing and administering compounded semaglutide, as there may be different concentrations available.”
- “Learn more here.”
- At this link, “KFF Examines the Latest Data on Calls, Texts, and Chats to the 988 National Suicide and Crisis Hotline, Two Years After Its Launch.”
- The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review announced that
- “[I]t will assess the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of suzetrigine (Vertex Pharmaceuticals) [an opioid alternative] for the treatment of Acute Pain.
- “The assessment will be publicly discussed during a meeting of the Midwest CEPAC in February 2025, where the independent evidence review panel will deliberate and vote on evidence presented in ICER’s report.
- “ICER’s website provides timelines of key posting dates and public comment periods for this assessment.“
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Per its website,
- “”Community Health Systems (CHS) operates 71 acute-care hospitals and more than 1,000 other sites of care, including physician practices, urgent care centers, freestanding emergency departments, occupational medicine clinics, imaging centers, cancer centers and ambulatory surgery centers.”
- Healthcare Dive adds,
- “Community Health Systems grew same-store surgical volumes and outpatient volumes in the second quarter, helping the Franklin, Tennessee-based system trim losses for the second consecutive quarter. However, the system still posted a net loss of $13 million for the quarter.
- “CHS attributed its improved financial position to an early “extinguishment” of debt, reduced expenses for contract labor and increased reimbursement rates.
- “On an earnings call Thursday, CEO Tim Hingtgen said the results speak to CHS’ solid fundamentals, and said he believes the company can continue to improve in subsequent quarters. CHS raised the midpoint of its full-year EBITDA guidance by $10 million in light of the results.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “An experimental heart drug from biotechnology company NewAmsterdam Pharma met its main goal in the first of several Phase 3 trials, but the results fell short of investor and analyst expectations.
- “In the trial, people with an inherited condition called heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia who received the drug alongside other medicines saw their levels of LDL, or “bad,” cholesterol fall by 36% after three months, when adjusted for placebo, and by 41% after one year. The drug, obicetrapib, reduced other markers of heart disease while its safety was “comparable to placebo,” the company said.
- “On a conference call, NewAmsterdam CEO Michael Davidson said the results raise the company’s confidence in other ongoing studies. But shares fell by as much as one-third in premarket trading before opening down 4% Monday morning, as investors had anticipated more powerful cholesterol-lowering effects.”
- American Hospital Association News points out,
- “A fact sheet released July 29 by the Coalition to Strengthen America’s Healthcare features analysis from KNG Health Consulting that shows nearly half of all hospital emergency department visits occur after-hours (between 5 p.m. and 8 a.m.), when patient care options are limited. The analysis found that children are particularly more likely to receive care at an ED outside of normal business hours. It also found that of the 136 million ED visits in 2021, 18.1 million were in rural areas, and that 34.3 million visits that year were trauma related. The AHA is a founding member of the Coalition.”
- That means over 100 million of the ED visits were not trauma related. What’s up with that?
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “A month after a CDC panel narrowed its recommendations for who should receive vaccines to protect against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), Airfinity has put numbers to the impact, reducing the projected market value in the United States by 64% by the end of the decade.
- “The London-based healthcare analytics company has sliced the RSV market value for seniors in the US from $4.7 billion to $1.7 billion in 2030.” * * *
- “Much still has to be decided related to RSV vaccines. Airfinity pointed out that “future dosing recommendations could change as long-term efficacy and safety data emerge.” With recommendations for a booster every two to three years, the U.S. market could increase in annual value to between $5.2 billion and $6.6 billion, Airfinity projects.”
- The Washington Post reports,
- “Almost half the counties in the United States lack a single cardiologist, according to a new study that puts the decades-long rural health-care crisis into sharp relief.
- “Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston looked at all 3,143 U.S. counties and found that just over 46 percent had no cardiologist, a finding senior author Haider J. Warraich called “truly shocking.”
- “Compounding the problem, researchers discovered that risk factors for cardiovascular disease such as smoking, diabetes, obesity and high blood pressure “were actually more prevalent in the counties that did not have a cardiologist,” said Warraich, who spent several months in 2019 moonlighting as the only cardiologist in rural Randolph County, N.C.” * * *
- “Alexander Razavi, a cardiology fellow at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, said cardiologists may need to look beyond telemedicine to additional measures to reach rural communities. Cardiology practices that serve these areas, he said, might consider extending their hours or creating mobile examination units.
- “We need to invest and provide resources to these communities,” Razavi said.”
- Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, lets us know how to know if claims made by health products are real or just hype. Check it out.