The Hill provides us with the latest on everything that is currently on Congress’s full plate of issues.
From the Delta variant front, the New York Times reports that
The Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine has been shown to be safe and highly effective in young children aged 5 to 11 years, the companies announced early Monday morning.
Pfizer and BioNTech plan to apply to the Food and Drug Administration by the end of September for authorization to use the vaccine in these children. If the regulatory review goes as smoothly as it did for older children and adults — it took roughly a month — millions of elementary school students could begin to receive shots around Halloween.
Trial results for children younger than 5 are not expected till the fourth quarter of this year at the earliest, according to Dr. Bill Gruber, a senior vice president at Pfizer and a pediatrician. Results from Moderna’s vaccine trials in children under 12 are also expected around that time, said Dr. Paul Burton, the company’s chief medical officer.
From the M&A front, HCA Healthcare, one of the largest healthcare systems in the U.S., announced this evening that
the signing of a definitive agreement for HCA Healthcare to acquire the operations of Steward Health Care’s five Utah hospitals. HCA Healthcare also entered into an agreement to lease the related real estate from its owner following the expected closing. The hospitals will become part of HCA Healthcare’s Mountain Division, which includes 11 hospitals in Utah, Idaho and Alaska. * * *
Steward Health Care also operates hospitals in Arizona, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts. The sale of these facilities to HCA Healthcare will enhance Steward Health Care’s ability to continue growing and reinvesting in other states and locations served by the health system.
Evidently HCA plans to give Intermountain some competition in Utah.
Employee Benefit News offers expert opinions on the pros and cons of healthcare savings account which can only be funded when the individual is enrolled in a high deductible health plan.
From the human resources front
- The Federal Times informs us that “‘The Office of Personnel Management will temporarily drop several geographic restrictions associated with special hiring authorities for military spouses, according to a regulation published in the Federal Register Sept. 20. * * * ‘It removes limitations — such as a relocation requirement, geographic restrictions, and arbitrary quotas — which caused this authority to be underused until now,’ wrote Rob Shriver, associate director of employee services at OPM, in a Medium blog post. ‘As a result, this new regulation means more military spouses can find their place in the federal workforce, and federal agencies have a larger talent pool of highly-qualified people to hire from.'” The FEHBlog was not aware that OPM has a Medium website.
- HR Dive reports on the recent Society for Human Resources Management annual conference. The article focuses on a give and take between EEOC commissioners and attendees about vaccination mandates and EEO-1 reporting among other issues.