FEHBlog

Weekend update

Photo by Tomasz Filipek on Unsplash

The FEHBlog is back in DC for the workweek. So let’s get started with news from the Washington, DC, front,

  • The continuing resolution funding the federal government expires on Friday, November 17.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “House Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) unveiled a two-step short-term spending proposal that would keep money flowing to federal agencies into early next year, in a bid to stave off a partial government shutdown late [this] week. 
    • “* * * According to a document obtained by The Wall Street Journal, if the two-step plan doesn’t pass, House Republicans will turn to what they call a full-year continuing resolution, keeping spending flat—although it would contain “appropriate adjustments to meet our national security priorities.” * * *
    • “The announcement marks a major test for Johnson, who now needs to sell the plan to House Republicans, a group that has been hard to unify on federal spending. Republicans have a 221-212 majority, with Rep. Gabe Amo of Rhode Island, a Democrat, yet to be sworn in after winning an open seat.”
  • OPM.gov reminds us that the Federal Benefits Open Season begins at midnight November 13. The Open Season ends on December 11, 2023.
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • A proposed federal policy aims to protect older Americans from contracting HIV by offering free preventive medication, the latest effort to catch up to much of Europe and Africa in stemming the spread of the virus.
    • Under the plan from the Biden administration, Medicare would cover patients’ full cost of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) drugs, which prevent HIV transmission. The drugs would be free in pill form and — for the first time — as long-acting injectables through the government insurance program designed for those 65 and older. Those 50 and over make up half of all people in the U.S. already living with HIV.
  • The FEHBP and other group health plans have been covering PrEP since at least 2020.
  • The Washington Post informs us,
    • Publishing in the journal Health Affairs, researchers looked at data from the Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) program, zeroing in on physician density and mortality. Introduced in 1965, the HPSA program designates areas in need of more physicians and offers bonuses, loan repayment, visa waivers, higher reimbursements and other benefits to doctors who choose to practice and serve Medicare patients in specific communities.
    • “The researchers analyzed outcomes in HPSAs and areas without the designation between 1978 and 2015, matching 844 shortage counties with similar counties with enough providers. Using a variety of statistical methods designed to sift through dense demographic factors, the analysis yielded few clues that HPSA leads to higher physician numbers or reduces deaths. Some small effects were seen, but the changes were statistically insignificant, the researchers write.”

From the public health and medical/drug research front,

  • STAT News tells us,
    • [Novo Nordisk (Novo0] in August had announced that in this trial, called Select, Wegovy reduced the overall rate of major heart problems — heart attacks, stroke, or cardiovascular-related death — by 20%. That finding, which was the primary outcome the trial set out to study, was stronger than many were expecting and led Novo’s stock to surge.
    • Novo’s obesity drug Wegovy notably cut the risk of heart attacks in a landmark cardio-vascular trial that affirms the treatment offers health benefits beyond weight loss. * * *
    • But details of the study, including risk reductions for each specific heart complication, were not released until Saturday when they were presented here — before a standing-room-only crowd — as the first major session of the American Heart Association conference. 
    • The overall 20% risk reduction in heart problems translated to 15 complications prevented for every 1,000 patients treated.
    • Wegovy specifically cut the rate of heart attacks by 28% among patients who were already taking statins and other medications to prevent heart problems, according to the results, simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The drug also reduced the rate of cardiovascular-related deaths by 15% and strokes by 7%.
  • Per NPR Shots,
    • “For the first time, researchers have produced evidence that gene-editing can cut high cholesterol, a major risk factor for the nation’s leading killer.
    • “Preliminary results from a study involving ten patients born with a genetic condition that causes very high cholesterol found that editing a gene inside the liver can significantly reduce levels of “bad cholesterol.”
    • “The experimental treatment needs to be tested on more patients who would be followed for much longer to confirm the approach is safe and effective. But the results are being hailed as a potential landmark proof-of-concept that could eventually provide a powerful new way to prevent heart attacks and strokes.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “A new antibiotic, the first to be developed in decades, can cure gonorrhea infections at least as effectively as the most powerful current treatment, a large clinical trial has found. The drug, zoliflodacin, is taken as a single dose, and it has not yet been approved for use in any country.
    • “But the drug was developed in a way that experts hope will make it widely accessible and will prevent widespread drug resistance. * * *
    • “Pharmaceutical companies have largely abandoned antibiotic development as unprofitable. The development of zoliflodacin represents a new model: G.A.R.D.P., which is funded by many Group of 20 countries and the European Union, developed the drug in collaboration with an American pharmaceutical company called Innoviva Specialty Therapeutics.
    • “The nonprofit sponsored the Phase 3 trial of the drug. In exchange, it holds the license to sell the antibiotic in about 160 countries, while Innoviva retains marketing rights for high-income countries. 
    • “I’ll go out on a limb and say that’s probably the only way in which we develop antibiotics going forward, because the old model is simply not going to work,” said Ramanan Laxminarayan, a senior research scholar at Princeton University who chairs the G.A.R.D.P. board.”
  • Nature adds,
    • “To forestall resistance to zoliflodacin, the drug is being developed only as a treatment for gonorrhea and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). However, it will be up to regulatory and public health agencies to decide when and how the drug can be used.
    • “New diagnostics will also be important, says Teodora Wi, an STI specialist at the World Health Organization in Geneva. Tests that can rapidly distinguish gonorrhea from other STIs should be more widely available in the near future, but those able to identify drug resistance are further off. National surveillance programs for antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea could also guide the responsible use of zoliflodacin, Wi adds.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Forbes reports,
    • “Weight loss prescriptions Wegovy, Rybelsus and Saxenda—along with diabetes drug Ozempic, often used off label for weight loss—are driving health costs for employers up by more than $300 per insured worker this year, new data from benefits consultancy Aon says.
    • These GLP-1 drug costs are expected to boost healthcare spending through 2025, increasing from $324 per insured member this year up to $500 per insured health plan member in two years, new data from the benefits consultancy Aon says. By comparison, annual spending on such prescriptions in 2021 was $96 per member, Aon data shows.
    • “Employees, too, can expect higher co-payments, deductibles and premiums deducted from their paychecks because employers almost always shift part of their total premium costs onto workers, though this can vary widely depending on employer.
    • “Aon’s analysis comes from its Aon Rx claims data from nearly 500 employers and their 4.4 million health plan members. Aon said weight loss prescriptions Wegovy, Rybelsus and Saxenda have led the growth, with health spending contributions from Ozempic, which is approved to treat diabetes but is often prescribed off label by physicians for weight loss.”
  • Big money.

Cybersecurity Saturday

Happy Veterans Day! Thanks to all those who served our country.

From the cybersecurity policy front,

  • Health IT Security reports,
    • “US Senators Mark Warner (D-VA), Bill Cassidy (R-LA), John Cornyn (R-TX), and Maggie Hassan (D-NH) launched a bipartisan Senate healthcare cybersecurity working group. The group will focus on proposing legislative solutions within the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee to strengthen healthcare cybersecurity.
    • “We are seeing a disturbing rise in cyberattacks on our health care system. These attacks not only put patients’ sensitive health data at risk but can delay life-saving care,” Cassidy stated. “Just like a strong military and police force defends us against physical attacks, we must ensure health institutions can safeguard against increasing cyber threats and protect Americans’ crucial health data.”
  • Cyberscoop Informs us,
    • “[On November 2, 2023,] [f]ormer National Security Agency Executive Director Harry Coker told members of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee that if he’s confirmed as the next national cyber director, he’d largely continue along the same path as his predecessors.
    • “Coker, who also spent 17 years at the Central Intelligence Agency and had made few public appearances before Thursday’s hearing, expressed appreciation for previous Office of the National Cyber Director work, including the National Cybersecurity Strategy, the subsequent implementation plan and the National Cyber Workforce and Education Strategy.
    • “If confirmed, I would frankly continue the good work that ONCD has done with its partners,” Coker said. He noted in his opening statement he’s “seen the need for stronger partnerships and collaboration between the public and private sectors” and that collaboration would be “the north star” under his leadership.”
  • The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) announced that
    • “Director Jen Easterly and the Republic of Korea’s Deputy Director of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) Baek Jong-wook signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) outlining areas for collaboration under the bilateral Cyber Framework signed by President Biden and Republic of Korea President Yoon in April.   
    • “The Framework affirms cooperation with Korea in key CISA mission areas, to include sharing technical and operational cyber threat information and best practices in cyber crisis management.  In June, senior leaders from both countries determined that CISA and NIS would co-lead a Framework Action Group on critical infrastructure. This Action Group will also bring together Korea’s Ministry of Science and ICT and other USG departments and agencies. ” 
  • The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) informed us on November 9, 2023,
    • “The final public draft of NIST Special Publication (SP) 800-171r3 (Revision 3), Protecting Controlled Unclassified Information in Nonfederal Systems and Organizations, is now available for public review and comment.  * * *
    • “Concurrently, the initial public draft (ipd) of NIST SP 800-171Ar3 (Revision 3), Assessing Security Requirements for Controlled Unclassified Informationis also available.
    • “The public comment period for both drafts is open through January 12, 2024. We strongly encourage you to use the comment template available on each publication details page, and submit your comments to 800-171comments@list.nist.gov.”
  • NextGov offers an overview of the NIST’s final draft publications.
  • On November 9, 2023, CISA, the National Security Agency and their partners released.
    • Securing the Software Supply Chain: Recommended Practices for Software Bill of Materials Consumption. Developed through the Enduring Security Framework (ESF), this guidance provides software developers and suppliers with industry best practices and principles, including managing open source software and software bills of materials (SBOM), to maintain and provide awareness about the security of software.
    • Organizations can use this guide to assess and measure their security practices relative to the software lifecycle; the suggested practices may be applied across the acquisition, deployment, and operational phases of a software supply chain.
    • CISA encourages cybersecurity defenders to review this guidance and to speak to their software vendors about implementing its recommendations.

From the cybersecurity breaches and vulnerabilities front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Business software maker SolarWinds is denying charges that it lacked adequate cybersecurity controls in the build up to a significant hack of its products in 2020, and accused the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission of misrepresenting facts in its complaint.
    • “On Oct. 30, the SEC announced that it had filed charges against SolarWindsalleging the firm defrauded investors by repeatedly misleading them about its cyber vulnerabilities and the ability of attackers to penetrate its systems. 
    • “The SEC’s lawsuit is fundamentally flawed—both legally and factually—and we plan to defend vigorously against the charges,” SolarWinds said. The SEC declined to comment.”
  • Cybersecurity Dive points out,
    • Mortgage servicing provider Mr. Cooper Group shut down multiple systems after it determined a threat actor accessed certain technology systems on Oct. 31, according to a Thursday [November 2, 2023] filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
    • The company initiated precautionary containment measures in response to the cyberattack, a move that’s temporarily halting recurring payments and leading customers to make one-time loan payments online, via phone, email or third parties. The status of customers’ loans were last updated Oct. 31.
    • Mr. Cooper is the third-largest mortgage servicer in the U.S. with more than 4.3 million customers, according to the company.
  • TechCrunch adds,
    • Mr. Cooper, the mortgage and loan giant with more than four million customers, has confirmed customer data was compromised during a recent cyberattack.
    • In an updated notice on its website published Thursday [November 9, 2023], Mr. Cooper said that it was “still investigating what data may have been exposed,” though it remains unclear what kind of cyberattack hit Mr. Cooper’s system
  • CISA added another known exploited vulnerability to its catalog on November 7 and one more on November 8, 2023.
  • BusinessTech discusses the vulnerability management lifecycle.

From the ransomware front,

  • Because Bleeping Computer did not publish the Week in Ransomware yesterday, here is a notable attack featured in Cybersecurity Dive:
    • “A U.S. subsidiary of China’s largest bank was hit by a ransomware attack Wednesday that resulted in disruption to certain financial services systems, the bank announced Thursday [November 9, 2023].
    • “The hack disrupted the trading of U.S. Treasuries, forcing the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Financial Services to send required settlement details to certain parties by a messenger carrying a USB stick, according to Bloomberg.
    • “The New York City-based firm said it reported the incident to law enforcement and successfully cleared U.S. Treasury trades executed Wednesday and repo financing trades done Thursday.
  • Dark Reading adds,
    • “The disruptive ransomware attack on the world’s largest bank this week, the PRC’s Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), may be tied to a critical vulnerability that Citrix disclosed in its NetScaler technology last month. The situation highlights why organizations need to immediately patch against the threat if they haven’t done so already.
    • “The so-called “CitrixBleed” vulnerability (CVE-2023-4966) affects multiple on-premises versions of Citrix NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway application delivery platforms.
    • “* * * The exploit activity has prompted the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) to issue fresh guidance and resources this week on addressing the CitrixBleed threat. CISA warned of “active, targeted exploitation” of the bug in urging organizations to “update unmitigated appliances to the updated versions” that Citrix released last month.”
  • HHS’s health sector cybersecurity coordination center issued an analyst note on Blacksuit ransomware:
    • “A relatively new ransomware group and strain known as BlackSuit, with significant similarities to the Royal ransomware family, will likely be a credible threat to the Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) sector. Discovered in early May 2023, BlackSuit’s striking parallels with Royal, the direct successor of the former notorious Russian-linked Conti operation, potentially places the group with one of the most active ransomware groups in operation today. Both Royal and the now-defunct Conti are known to have aggressively targeted the HPH sector, and if their purported ties to BlackSuit prove to be verified, then the sector will likely continue to be attacked profoundly. What follows [in the note] is an overview of the potential new group, possible connections to other threat actors, an analysis of its ransomware attacks, its target industries and victim countries, impact to the HPH sector, MITRE ATT&CK techniques, indicators of compromise, and recommended defense and mitigations against the group.”
  • The HIPAA Journal notes,
    • “A new report from Sophos on healthcare cybersecurity trends indicates data encryption occurred in 75% of ransomware attacks on healthcare organizations. Only 24% of surveyed healthcare organizations were able to detect an attack in progress and disrupt it before files were encrypted. Sophos says this is the highest rate of encryption and the lowest rate of disruption the company has seen in the past 3 years. Last year, healthcare organizations disrupted 34% of attacks before files were encrypted.
    • “To me, the percentage of organizations that successfully stop an attack before encryption is a strong indicator of security maturity. For the healthcare sector, however, this number is quite low—only 24%. What’s more, this number is declining, which suggests the sector is actively losing ground against cyber attackers and is increasingly unable to detect and stop an attack in progress,” said Chester Wisniewski, director, field CTO, Sophos.”

From the cybersecurity defenses front,

  • An ISACA expert discusses how “Cyber Advisors, Security Services Providers Can Use Zero-Sum Game Theory Framework to Benefit Clients.”
  • Dark Reading explains “How to Outsmart Malware Attacks That Can Fool Antivirus Protection. One of the main challenges for Android users is protecting themselves from malicious applications that can damage devices or perform other harmful actions.”

Happy Veterans’ Day

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

Veterans Day is being observed today because November 11 is a Saturday. Thanks for your service, vets.

From Washington, DC,

  • Reuters reports,
    • “U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Thursday took a procedural step to allow the Democratic-majority chamber to pass a stopgap government funding bill before a Nov. 17 deadline to avert a partial government shutdown.”
  • and
    • “U.S. House of Representatives Republicans aim to release a stopgap measure to avert a partial government shutdown [next] Saturday”
  • and
    • “Moody’s on Friday lowered its outlook on the U.S. credit rating to “negative” from “stable” citing large fiscal deficits and a decline in debt affordability, a move that drew immediate criticism from President Joe Biden’s administration.
    • “The move follows a rating downgrade of the sovereign by another ratings agency, Fitch, this year, which came after months of political brinkmanship around the U.S. debt ceiling.”
  • Forbes offers an overview of the situation.
    • “[T]here are 12 appropriations subcommittees that comprise the U.S. budget. The Senate has made progress on three of them, passing a bipartisan combined bill on November 1 for Agriculture; Veterans Affairs and Transportation; Housing and Urban Development.
    • “The House has so far passed bills for seven of the 12 budgetary areas, although further progress this week has stalled so far. House bills have been passed along partisan lines, and so they are unlikely to attract the necessary support within the Democratic-controlled Senate. In contrast, the Senate measures have been bipartisan.
    • “In addition, the text of the bill raising the debt limit includes automatic 1% cuts to the government’s entire budget if a full one is not passed by January 1, 2024. The intent of that measure was to incentivize relatively quick progress on the budget, rather than for the cuts to actually be implemented. Still it’s another deadline consideration in the budgetary process.”
  • MedTech Dive tells us,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission is challenging patents for 17 drugs marketed by Abbvie, AstraZeneca, GSK and other pharmaceutical companies, claiming Tuesday that the intellectual property was “improperly or inaccurately listed” in a regulatory database.
    • “The notice letters are largely about products with specialized injectors or inhalers, such as Viatris’ anaphylaxis shot EpiPen and GSK’s asthma drug Advair, which rely on those devices to deliver a precise dose. The FTC said it has filed a dispute with the Food and Drug Administration seeking to have the patents removed from the database, called the Orange Book.
    • “The FTC’s action comes two months after it approved a policy statement saying the agency would “use its full legal authority” to invalidate improperly listed patents. Drugmakers are increasingly under scrutiny for creating so-called “patent thickets” that make it difficult for generic challengers to enter the market.”

From the public health and research front,

  • NBC News reports,
    • “The number of kids whose caregivers are opting them out of routine childhood vaccines has reached an all-time high, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Thursday, potentially leaving hundreds of thousands of children unprotected against preventable diseases like measles and whooping cough. 
    • “The report did not dive into the reasons for the increase, but experts said the findings clearly reflect Americans’ growing unease about medicine in general.
    • “There is a rising distrust in the health care system,” said Dr. Amna Husain, a pediatrician in private practice in North Carolina, as well as a spokesperson for the American Academy of Pediatrics. Vaccine exemptions “have unfortunately trended upward with it.”
    • “The CDC report found that 3% of children entering kindergarten during the 2022-2023 school year were granted a vaccine exemption from their state. This is the highest exemption rate ever reported in the U.S.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • “If you think canceling plans is always good self-care, you might want to think again. People who keep an active social calendar not only enjoy a better quality of life—they could also stave off an early trip to the grave.
    • “Loneliness and social isolation were linked to an increased risk of death from any cause, according to new research. That includes missing out on seeing loved ones, not having weekly group activities like a book club, or just often feeling lonely.
    • “Just like we need to make time in our busy lives to be physically active, we need to make time in our busy lives to be socially active,” said Julianne Holt-Lunstad, director of the Social Connection & Health Lab at Brigham Young University, who wasn’t involved in the report.
    • “A combination of several loneliness factors could be even more harmful, the data suggested. For example, having few family and friend visits was riskier when the person also lived alone.” 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Nearly two-thirds of specialty centers that conduct autism evaluations have wait times longer than four months, according to a new report.
    • “The report, focused on the state of pediatric autism diagnosis in the U.S., is based on a survey designed and conducted by Scott Badesch, former president of the Autism Society of America. Cognoa, maker of an FDA-approved, AI-powered diagnostic tool for autism, sponsored the study. The survey reached 111 specialty centers across the U.S., including hospitals, private practices, public health clinics, government agencies and academic entities. 
    • “Its findings underscore “how dysfunctional the current state of affairs is,” Cognoa’s CEO Sharief Taraman, M.D., told Fierce Healthcare.”
  • Medscape notes,
    • “The US Food and Drug Administration has approved fruquintinib (Fruzaqla, Takeda) for the treatment of certain adults with metastatic colorectal cancer who experience disease progression during or after prior treatment.
    • “More specifically, the approval extends to adult patients with metastatic colorectal cancer who received prior fluoropyrimidine-, oxaliplatin-, and irinotecan-based chemotherapy, an anti-VEGF therapy, and, in some cases, an anti-EGFR therapy.
    • In a company press release, Takeda Pharmaceuticals said the drug “is the first targeted therapy approved for metastatic colorectal cancer regardless of biomarker status or prior types of therapies in more than a decade.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Novo Nordisk plans to invest $6 billion to expand its drug manufacturing capacity as it tries to meet skyrocketing demand for its popular obesity and diabetes medicines Wegovy and Ozempic.
    • “The investment, announced by the Danish drugmaker Friday, will be spread over the next six years and builds on the company’s existing capital spending plans. Most of the money will go toward building a new plant for making active pharmaceutical ingredients, like the semaglutide protein that’s contained in both Wegovy and Ozempic.
    • “Construction, which will also add a new packaging facility, is expected to be completed in phases from the end of 2025 through 2029, Novo said. Once finished, the company expects the production site will employ 700 staff, with another 100 working at the packaging plant.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “As cold and flu season truly sets in, major home delivery platforms are now allowing customers to purchase products using their health benefits.
    • “Both DoorDash and Instacart announced this week that they would accept payments from health savings accounts and flexible spending accounts to cover the cost of health and wellness items. In particular, according to Instacart, this rollout will make it easier for people to take full advantage of their FSAs, as funds expire at the end of each year.
    • “In addition, some may find it difficult to use their HSA or FSA cards when making purchases at retail stores. Instacart said its new integration will allow for HSA and FSA payments from all retailers on its app that offer eligible items.”
  • According to the Society for Human Resource Management,
    • “According to a recent Gusto survey of over 300,000 small and midsize businesses, 30 percent of all employees in the professional services industries who get paid time off (PTO) have taken sick leave so far this year, an increase of 42 percent from 2019. 
    • “The average amount of sick time these workers have taken has increased by 15 percent since 2019 and is now 15.5 hours per year. The largest increase is among workers ages 25-34: Nearly a third (32 percent) of them have taken sick leave in 2023, compared to 28 percent of workers ages 35-54.”
  • AHIP announced,
    • AHIP joined with four other leading healthcare organizations to announce the Common Health Coalition: Together for Public Health.
    • The Common Health Coalition is focused on translating the hard-won lessons and successes of the COVID-19 pandemic response into actionable strategies that will strengthen the partnership between our healthcare and public health systems. The Coalition is the product of a joint commitment to public health made in March 2023 by founding members AHIP, the Alliance of Community Health Plans, the American Hospital Association, the American Medical Association, and Kaiser Permanente. 
    • In early 2024, the Coalition will publish recommendations informed by technical advisory groups of subject matter experts and an advisory council of public health leaders. The recommendations will focus on 4 initial priority areas:
      • spearheading greater coordination between the public health and healthcare systems;
      • building shared, well-maintained emergency preparedness plans;
      • establishing national standards for health care data that help identify health disparities; and
      • and modernizing infectious disease detection.
    • The development of these recommendations is being facilitated by ChangeLab Solutions, a national nonprofit that uses the tools of law and policy to advance health equity.

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call reports,
    • “Republicans yanked another fiscal 2024 spending bill before a final vote scheduled for Thursday morning, leaving them empty-handed for the week and stuck at seven out of 12 annual appropriations bills passed.
    • “The $25 billion Financial Services bill [which funds OPM and the FEHBP] ran into trouble with GOP moderates over language that would block the District of Columbia from implementing its 2014 law preventing employment discrimination based on reproductive health decisions, including taking birth control or having an abortion.
    • “The simple analogy is they didn’t have the votes. Shocking,” said Rep. Ryan Zinke, R-Mont., who backs the bill. “Monday, we’ll see if we can have a consensus over the weekend for those people that have a problem with what I think is a very straightforward bill.”
    • “Another issue which contributed to the measure’s demise Thursday, according to a source familiar with the decision, was conservative opposition to allowing the General Services Administration to implement its plan to build a new FBI headquarters in Greenbelt, Md.”
  • As Rosanna Rosannadana would say, “If it’s not one thing, it’s another.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management informs us,
    • Employees can funnel an extra $150 into their health flexible spending accounts (FSAs) next year, the IRS announced Nov. 9.
    • “The annual contribution limit is rising to $3,200 in 2024, up from $3,050 in 2023. The hike is still significant, although it’s a smaller boost than the $200 hike seen this year.
    • “If the employer’s plan permits the carryover of unused health FSA amounts, employees can carry over up to $640 in 2024. That’s up $30 over the 2023 carryover amount, which is $610.”
  • Here’s a link to the IRS’s complete list of 2024 inflation adjustments to tax items.
  • STAT News tells us that the Ground Ambulance Committee created by the No Surprises Act wants to cap the cost-sharing for people who use ground ambulances at $100 per trip. The catch is that they have difficulty deciding how much health plans should pay for ground ambulance services.
    • “Some experts say a Medicare benchmark is the simplest administrative solution. Medicare’s payment system for ambulances is outdated, but it’s based on some measure of costs. But that shift would result in a lot of upheaval, especially for ambulance providers that currently are able to bill and collect large sums of money from the biggest insurance companies. * * *
    • “Early next year, the federal ambulance committee will deliver its recommendations to Congress. Key lawmakers have not shown a lot of interest in taking up surprise billing again because it requires a lot of political capital to confront the ambulance and insurance industries.”

In FEHBP news,

  • FedSmith offers its strategy for approaching the FEHB open season which begins next Monday.
  • FedWeek discusses coordinating benefits between FEHB plans and Medicare. The best resource is OPM’s chart found in Section 9 of every FEHB plan’s brochure.

From the public health and research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “A team of New York surgeons has performed the world’s first whole-eye transplant on a human, a breakthrough that could change vision treatments even though the patient hasn’t regained sight in the grafted eye. 
    • “In the six months since the eye surgery was performed, in conjunction with a partial face transplant, the 46-year-old patient has shown promising signs of health in the eye, the surgical team at NYU Langone Health said Thursday. 
    • “The grafted eye is maintaining normal ocular pressure and has direct blood flow to the retina, the area at the back of the eye that receives light and sends images to the brain. It isn’t known if the patient will regain his sight, but the transplant is still a significant accomplishment, according to Dr. Eduardo D. Rodriguez, director of the Face Transplant Program at NYU Langone.  
    • “We’ve made one major step forward and have paved the way for the next chapter to restore vision,” Rodriguez said. Rodriguez led the May surgery, which lasted 21 hours and included more than 140 surgeons, nurses and other healthcare professionals.” 
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “approving Adzynma, the first recombinant (genetically engineered) protein product indicated for prophylactic (preventive) or on demand enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) in adult and pediatric patients with congenital thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (cTTP), a rare and life-threatening blood clotting disorder.”
  • and
    • “approving Ixchiq, the first chikungunya vaccine. Ixchiq is approved for individuals 18 years of age and older who are at increased risk of exposure to chikungunya virus.
    • “The chikungunya virus is primarily transmitted to people through the bite of an infected mosquito. Chikungunya is an emerging global health threat with at least 5 million cases of chikungunya virus infection reported during the past 15 years. The highest risk of infection is in tropical and subtropical regions of Africa, Southeast Asia, and parts of the Americas where chikungunya virus-carrying mosquitos are endemic. However, chikungunya virus has spread to new geographical areas causing a rise in global prevalence of the disease.” 
  • and
    • clearing for marketing the first over-the-counter (OTC) antigen test for COVID-19. ACON Laboratories’ Flowflex COVID-19 Antigen Home Test, originally authorized for emergency use in 2021, is now the second home COVID-19 test to successfully complete a traditional FDA premarket review pathway, and the first indicated for use in children under 18. Today’s announcement follows clearance of a molecular home test earlier this year.
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Pneumonia patients who took an antibiotic that’s typically reserved as an alternative were less likely to develop Clostridioides difficile infections compared to those taking the recommended drug, according to a study from Veterans Affairs Hospitals. 
    • “The retrospective study analyzed 156,107 patients treated for pneumonia at a VA hospital between 2009 and 2022. Overall, less than 1% of pneumonia patients were diagnosed with a C. diff infection, but among those who had C. diff in the year before contracting pneumonia, 12% developed a new C. diff infection associated with their antibiotic treatment. 
    • “Clinical guidelines recommend azithromycin, and nearly 9 in 10 of the patient cohort received the drug. Of the 13% who received doxycycline, the alternative antibiotic, the drug was associated with reducing C. diff infections by 45%. 
    • “The researchers concluded that, if Legionella pneumonia can be ruled out, clinicians might consider doxycycline as a first-line treatment over azithromycin.”
  • The Wall Street Journal notes,
    • “There is hope for those of us who live (and sleep) in the real world: Getting less than 8 hours of shut-eye a night doesn’t mean you’re doomed to an early grave.
    • “A recent study looking at sleep and longevity found that sleep “regularity”—going to bed and waking up at consistent times with few mid-slumber interruptions—matters more than how long you sleep. Sleeping six hours every night on a consistent schedule was associated with a lower risk of early death than sleeping eight hours with very irregular habits.
    • “The study adds to a growing understanding of the links between sleep and longevity. Research in recent years has shown not only how important sleep is for health and lifespan, but also that the duration of sleep isn’t the only thing that matters.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive points out,
    • “For-profit hospital operators strained by physician fees, payer relations in the third quarter of 2023. Except for HCA, the biggest U.S. health systems all reported lower year-over-year profits in the third quarter.”
  • and
    • “More than 85,000 Kaiser Permanente healthcare workers have a new four-year contract with the nonprofit system after union members overwhelmingly voted to ratify a compromise reached in October following months of labor negotiations and a high-profile strike.”
  • and
    • “Virgin Pulse announced on Thursday it closed its merger with third-party health plan administrator HealthComp. Private equity firms New Mountain Capital and Marlin Equity Partners are new majority and minority owners of the company, respectively, according to a release.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Optum Rx is shifting eight different insulin products to its preferred formulary in a bid to address affordability, the company said Thursday.
    • “The product selection includes all rapid-acting and short-acting insulin products and some long-acting insulins, according to the announcement. It includes insulins manufactured by Sanofi, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly.
    • “Optum’s Tier 1 includes the lowest cash prices that its members will pay, the company said.”
  • and
    • A BCBSA study concludes that the Affordable Care Act’s risk adjustment system works, notwithstanding noteworthy failures.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • AstraZeneca raised its full-year guidance for core earnings per share and total revenue excluding Covid-19 medicines despite a lower third-quarter profit that missed forecasts after booking a tax charge compared with a credit for the comparable period.
    • “The Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical giant said Thursday that it expects core earnings per share to increase by a low double-digit percentage compared with previous guidance of a high single-digit to low double-digit percentage increase.
    • “Total revenue excluding COVID-19 medicines is now expected to increase by a low-teens percentage at constant-exchange rates compared with previous expectations of low double-digit percentage growth.
    • “Total revenue is expected to increase by a mid-single-digit percentage compared with previous guidance of low-to-mid single-digit, it said.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • “Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Ranking Member Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, today lauded committee passage of the Better Mental Health Care, Lower Drug Cost, and Extenders Act, which was reported out of committee 26-0.” 
  • “The legislation expands mental health care and substance use disorder services under Medicaid and Medicare, reduces prescription drug costs for seniors at the pharmacy counter, extends essential Medicaid and Medicare provisions that will expire this year, and increases Medicare payments to support physicians and other providers. * * *
  • “Click here for more information on the legislation, including a description of the Chairman’s Mark and a section-by-section summary.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “Under the Senate Finance proposal, the $8 billion in cuts to hospitals through the Medicaid disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments will be eliminated, saving providers $16 billion over the next two years, according to the mark released earlier this week.
    • “Hopefully in further discussion Senators will decide not to pursue so-called ‘site neutral’ policies,” said Federation of American Hospitals President and CEO Chip Kahn in a statement. “This is no time for hospital cuts – particularly for struggling hospitals serving rural America. This ‘one-size-fits-all’ policy will ultimately threaten service resulting in limits on access to care for seniors and others who are better served receiving necessary treatment in the hospital. “
    • “The draft also includes decreasing physician reimbursements by 1.25%, a reduction from larger cuts that could better appease physician interest groups.”
  • STAT News reports
    • “Eli Lilly’s blockbuster drug tirzepatide, sold as Mounjaro for type 2 diabetes [and nicknamed the Godzilla of GLP-1 drugs], has been cleared to treat obesity, making it the second in a highly effective class of weight loss medications to enter the market.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration’s long-awaited approval of the injectable drug, which will be marketed under the name Zepbound for obesity, is a milestone for Lilly. It also introduces stiff competition for Novo Nordisk, which has had to limit starter doses of its obesity treatment Wegovy due to ongoing shortages. * * *
    • “Lilly will sell Zepbound at a list price of $1,059.87 per month, about the same price as Mounjaro and about 20% lower than the price of Novo’s Wegovy. Lilly is also introducing a savings card program for people with commercial insurance.
    • “Lilly expects the drug to be available in American pharmacies after Thanksgiving. In an effort to prevent future shortages, the company plans to have roughly doubled its manufacturing capacity by the end of the year, CEO David Ricks said on a conference call with reporters. Only about 5 million people in the U.S. receive any form of GLP-1 treatment, Ricks said, but there are roughly 50 million Americans who would be eligible for Zepbound and who have commercial insurance that covers obesity treatments.
    • “We know with such an effective medication there’ll be a lot of demand,” Ricks said. “We’re stepping up to that challenge and hope to fulfill it in the coming years.”
  • Ka-ching!!
  • Per an EEOC news release,
    • “The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) today released three reports focusing on different groups of women in the federal government: American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) womenAfrican American women, and Hispanic women and Latinas.
    • “The reports examined fiscal year (FY) 2020 data to compare the participation, retention, advancement, and pay of each group of women to three different groups: the total federal workforce, all women, and men of the same ethnicity or race. Results show that employment outcomes for these three groups of women were not equal to the comparison groups. Understanding the challenges these groups of women face in the federal workplace can help agencies better address these inequalities.”

From the public health and research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports that children in mental health crises have been surging into hospital emergency rooms.
    • “Broadly, children’s demand for emergency mental-health services has eased from the pandemic’s extreme highs, according to an analysis of records across more than 1,100 hospitals by the research arm of Epic Systems, a medical record software company. Still, the rates remain elevated. 
    • “For adults, the data on trips to emergency departments for psychiatric reasons during the pandemic is limited, but doctors say they are more used to seeing such cases. E.R.s aren’t accustomed to seeing large numbers of children in psychiatric crisis—and many are ill-equipped to handle them.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “The radiopharmaceutical world is now approaching critical mass. There are currently around 75 such startups in the U.S., several of which have raised sizable financing rounds this year. In September, RayzeBio managed to complete an IPO — rare amid an industry slump — raising $358 million. Bayer has made a few acquisitions in the field. And last month, pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly jumped in, acquiring Point Biopharma and its Phase 3 radiopharmaceutical treatment for prostate cancer for $1.4 billion.
    • “Investors and executives are optimistic these investments will pay off not just for venture capitalists, but for cancer patients. But just how much they can benefit the field remains to be seen. To achieve anything, radiopharmaceutical companies must hurriedly address supply and production challenges — issues that have handicapped other promising areas of oncology drug development.”
  • and
    • Vaccines work well to prevent cancers caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV). So well, in fact, that it may be time to review HPV screening protocols, according to the somewhat provocative conclusion of a new study examining the occurrence of genital HPV types eight years after immunization, published Wednesday in Cell Host & Microbe.
  • and
    • “In American health care, overtreatment is common. Recently though, there has been a subtle shift in the opposite direction. It’s possible that “less is more” is catching on.
    • “Now, some providers are asking what the line between necessary and unnecessary really is. The results are encouraging, suggesting that, in some cases, it may be possible to achieve the same health outcomes with less treatment — and fewer side effects, too.
    • “This shift is particularly noticeable in cancer care.”
  • Here is a link to the National Cancer Institute’s latest research update.
  • Gallup announced
    • “U.S. workers are optimistic that employer-sponsored wellness initiatives could enhance their wellbeing, according to data from the Bentley-Gallup Business in Society Report. When asked to rate the potential impact of six wellness initiatives on wellbeing, the top three most positively rated (based on combined extremely and somewhat positive ratings) are employers offering a four-day workweek option (77%), providing mental health days (74%) and limiting the amount of work employees are expected to perform outside of work hours (73%).”
  • Becker’s Payer Issues tells us,
    • “Increasing Medicare Advantage enrollment in rural areas did not increase rural hospitals’ financial distress or risk of closing, a study published Nov. 3 in the American Journal of Managed Care found. 
    • “Researchers studied rural hospitals in 14 states from 2008 to 2019. Medicare Advantage enrollment in rural hospital counties increased from 14.3% of Medicare beneficiaries in 2008 to 28.4% in 2019. The percentage of Medicare inpatient stays paid for by MA plans increased from 6.5% in 2008 to 20.6% in 2019. 
    • “The researchers found that when Medicare Advantage penetration increased by 1% in a county, hospitals’ financial stability increased slightly, and they experienced a 5% reduction in risk of closing. 
    • “One in 5 of the hospitals studied treated no Medicare Advantage patients during the study period.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Segal Company highlights fraud, waste, and abuse trends in this fourth quarter of 2023.
  • Healthcare Dive provides the biggest takeaways from health insurers’ third-quarter earnings.
  • KFF offers
    • One new analysis shows that the typical beneficiary has a choice of 43 Medicare Advantage plans as an alternative to traditional Medicare for 2024. That is the same number available as in 2023, but more than double the number of plans offered in 2018, which shows how this market is attractive to both enrollees and insurers.
    • “In addition, the typical person covered under traditional Medicare can choose among 21 Medicare stand-alone prescription drug plans (PDPs), the second analysis shows. The number of PDP options for 2024 is lower and the number of Medicare Advantage prescription drug plan (MA-PD) options is higher than in any other year since Part D started, reflecting the broader trend toward Medicare Advantage.”
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “A recent federal district court ruling against the office overseeing the 340B Drug Pricing Program has opened the doors for hospitals to more broadly claim discounts, healthcare legal experts say.
    • “The decision in Genesis Healthcare, Inc. v. Becerra, handed down Friday by the U.S. District Court of South Carolina, establishes that “at least some of [the] interpretative policies surrounding the 340B definition of the patient are inconsistent with the 340B statute,” Anil Shankar, a partner at Foley & Lardner, told Fierce Healthcare.
    • “This is a stunning decision that will have the attention of every 340B stakeholder,” he said. “… This creates new opportunities for 340B-covered entities to purchase 340B for their patients and suggests that [the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA’s)] audit processes will need to change.”
  • and
    • “Building on its One Medical deal, Amazon is now offering a One Medical for Prime membership, including 24/7 virtual care, for $9 per month, or $99 a year. That’s $100 less than the standard One Medical membership fee, according to the company.
    • “Prime members can add up to five additional memberships, each for just $6 a month, or $66 annually.
    • “The One Medical for Prime membership fee covers unlimited access to 24/7 virtual care nationwide, including video chats with licensed providers and access to an in-app “Treat Me Now” feature that lets users get fast care for common concerns like cold and flu, skin issues, allergies, urinary tract infections.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call informs us,
    • “House Republicans are aiming to reach a consensus this week on a stopgap funding measure that would get a vote next week before the current continuing resolution runs out on Nov. 17.
    • “During a Monday night leadership meeting, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., floated a “laddered CR” that would extend funding for four bills through Dec. 7 and the rest through Jan. 19. Johnson said Tuesday after meeting with the GOP conference that a stopgap bill running into January “with certain stipulations” is also on the table.
    • “The new speaker said he would be revealing his spending plan “in short order” but did not share any details Tuesday morning after House Republicans met to discuss the options. However, Senate Democrats are pushing for a stopgap measure into early December, with Dec. 8 as the preferred end date, according to sources familiar with the consideration.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Senate on Tuesday voted 62 to 36 to confirm cancer surgeon Monica M. Bertagnolli as the director of the National Institutes of Health, ensuring that America’s flagship biomedical agency will have a permanent leader following a months-long dispute involving a key senator that threatened to derail her nomination.
    • “Bertagnolli will be the second woman ever to lead the nearly $48 billion agency, which plays a central role in the U.S. scientific agenda by funding grants to hundreds of thousands of researchers, overseeing clinical trials on its Maryland campus and supporting other endeavors to develop drugs and therapeutics.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force gave brand new “inconclusive” recommendations to the following services:
    • The USPSTF concludes that the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of routine screening performed by primary care clinicians for oral health conditions, including dental caries or periodontal-related disease, in adults.
    • The USPSTF concludes that the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of routine screening performed by primary care clinicians for oral health conditions, including dental caries, in children and adolescents aged 5 to 17 years.
  • Federal News Network points out,
    • “In October, 6,924 new [federal and postal retirement] claims were filed, an increase of 156 more than September. OPM also processed fewer retirement claims last month. The agency said it processed 6,098 claims, a  2,781 drop from the previous month.
    • “Initial retirement cases in October completed in less than 60 days on average took 42 days to process, up 2 days from the previous month, while initial cases that were processed in more than 60 days on average took 113 days.  That’s a 9 day improvement from September.
    • “Along with the increase of the claims backlog, the monthly average processing time in days grew from 70 to 73. But there is some good news: The fiscal year-to-date average processing time in days decreased from 77 to 73 days in October.”

In FEHBP news,

  • Per the Federal Times,
    • “Millions of federal employees and their family members will be able to shop for health benefits beginning Monday. 
    • “Open enrollment, spanning for four weeks, could overlap with a government shutdown if Congress fails to extend the current continuing resolution or pass a spending package by next Friday. More than a month into fiscal 2024, the government is still operating on last year’s funding levels after Congress passed a last-minute stopgap bill on Sept. 30.
    • “As the name implies, a shutdown means that many agency offices close and employees whose work is outside of national security, health and “life or death” services are sent home without pay. However, the office that oversees the Federal Employee Health Benefits program and open season is funded by a trust that does not rely on annual appropriations.
    • “There are sufficient amounts in these trust funds to operate them throughout the duration of any lapse in appropriations,” according to the White House’s Office of Personnel Management.
    • “Thus, employees will be able to participate in open season in the event of a shutdown. And coverage will not lapse during this time either, either for medical or dental and vision.”
  • Federal News Network considers, in consultation with Kevin Moss from Consumers’ Checkbook, “six reasons feds why should take a look [at available FEHB plans] during Open Season this year.”

From the public health and research front,

  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “Over 3,700 babies were born with syphilis in 2022, 32% more than in 2021 and 10 times more than in 2012, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Nov. 7. Almost 9 in 10 cases last year could have been prevented with timely testing and adequate treatment, the agency said, and urged emergency departments, syringe service programs, prisons/jails and maternal and child health programs to use rapid syphilis testing and treatment during pregnancy and other settings to consider immediate treatment if a patient tests positive and faces obstacles to ongoing care.
    • “The congenital syphilis crisis in the United States has skyrocketed at a heartbreaking rate,” said CDC Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry, M.D. “New actions are needed to prevent more family tragedies. We’re calling on healthcare providers, public health systems, and communities to take additional steps to connect mothers and babies with the care they need.” 
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “In a small study, researchers at the National Institutes of Health have found that positron emission tomography (PET) scans of the heart may identify people who will go on to develop Parkinson’s disease or Lewy body dementia among those at-risk for these diseases. The findings, published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation and led by scientists at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), part of NIH, may advance efforts to detect the earliest changes that years later lead to Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia.
    • “In 34 people with Parkinson’s disease risk factors, researchers conducted PET scans of the heart to gain insight into levels of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine. They found that the scans could distinguish individuals who would later be diagnosed with Parkinson’s or Lewy body dementia—both are brain diseases caused by abnormal deposits of the protein alpha-synuclein that form clumps known as Lewy bodies. The research was conducted at the NIH Clinical Center, currently the only location for F-dopamine PET scanning.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports on ways to control sugar consumption
    • People assume they can build up the willpower to completely avoid sweets or restrict them to tiny amounts, but cutting them out increases the chances of overeating later, says Dr. Judson Brewer, a neuroscientist and psychiatrist at Brown University and author of a forthcoming book about eating habits. 
    • “Willpower is more myth than muscle,” says Brewer.
    • “Unsurprisingly, a fully permissive approach to sugar won’t work for kids, says Crystal Karges, a San Diego-based dietitian who works with families. Still, she doesn’t encourage restriction. One strategy she suggests is to offer sweets alongside regular meals in order to normalize the treats. 
    • “Brewer, the neuroscientist, suggests another alternative to restricting yourself: Find your “pleasure plateau.” Rather than cutting out treats entirely, train yourself to pay close attention to how a treat is tasting as you eat it and note when you stop enjoying the taste of it. 
    • “Practicing attentive eating or mindfulness over time can help your body feel the rewards of limiting sugar consumption, which can be anything from having more energy to fewer cravings to weight loss, Brewer says. 
    • “Keeping your home well-stocked with healthy snacks, alongside indulgent treats, is helpful. In her own home, [University of Minnesota professor Dianne] Neumark-Sztainer says roughly 70% of the food options are nutritious and lack added sugar, including whole grains, fruits and vegetables. 
    • “She doesn’t recommend most people count the amount of sugar they eat each day, which can increase anxiety. “Try to look at the whole picture and not to make a big deal about it,” she says.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per STAT News,
    • Sage Therapeutics set the price of Zurzuvae, its recently approved treatment for postpartum depression, at $15,900 for a 14-day course of therapy. The once-daily pill will be launched in December, co-marketed with Biogen. 
    • “Eisai reported sales of 300 million yen ($2 million) for Leqembi, its treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, in the company’s fiscal second quarter. Approximately 800 people were receiving treatment with Leqembi as of Oct. 27, the company said.” 
  • Beckers Payer Issues ranks the major health insurers by third-quarter medical loss ratios.
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “E-prescribing giant Surescripts has acquired ActiveRADAR, a company that aims to find cheaper medication alternatives.
    • “ActiveRADAR, formerly known as RxTE Health, evaluates drugs in 165 therapeutic categories to identify clinical equivalents, then uses health plan-specific data to determine alternative medications that could reduce costs for employers and patients, according to the company.
    • “The deal, announced on Monday, makes ActiveRADAR a wholly owned subsidiary of Surescripts, according to a company spokesperson. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.”
  • Forbes offers “Five considerations for health plan leaders using AI-enabled prior authorization and utilization management.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Bloomberg reports,
    • “House lawmakers worked over the weekend on a stopgap measure needed to fund the US government beyond a Nov. 17 deadline, Speaker Mike Johnson said.
    • “While Johnson didn’t mention the proposed length of the extension in a Fox News Sunday interview, he has floated a Jan. 15 timeline since being elected speaker in October.
    • “The extension “would allow us time” to continue the appropriations process, which involves bringing 12 spending bills to the House floor for passage, the Louisiana Republican said.”
  • The FEHBlog watched the House Rules Committee pass a rule on the financial services and general government appropriations bill (HR 4664), which means that the bill will be brought to the House floor this week.
  • From the other side of Capitol Hill,
    • “Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Ranking Member Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, today released the Chairman’s Mark of a legislative package to expand mental health care and substance use disorder services under Medicaid and Medicare, reduce prescription drug costs for seniors at the pharmacy counter, extend essential Medicaid and Medicare provisions that will expire this year, and increase Medicare payments to support physicians and other providers.
    • “The Committee will hold a markup on the legislation on Wednesday, November 8, at 10 a.m.
    • “The Chairman’s Mark can be found here. A section by section can be found here. A CBO analysis can be found here.
    • “Amendments and additional information will be posted here on Tuesday, November 7, after 12 p.m.”
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management announced,
    • “The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) released governmentwide results of the 2023 OPM Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey (FEVS) today. The OPM FEVS is the largest annual survey of government employees in the world that tracks how federal employees view their current work environment, including workforce management, policies, and new initiatives. OPM FEVS is an unmatched government data asset that collects employee feedback from more than 80 executive agencies to assist in driving improvement and supporting the workforce to serve the American people.   
    • “This year’s Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey highlights that federal employees remain remarkably resilient, increasingly engaged, and value diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility in the workplace,” said Kiran Ahuja, Director of the Office of Personnel Management. “These encouraging results provide opportunities for agencies to build momentum and support their workforce to leverage workplace flexibilities, continue advancing DEIA, and remain motivated to continue delivering for the American people.”  
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services proposed a new Medicare Advantage Program rule that covers multiple topics.
  • Health Payer Intelligence adds,
    • “Medicare Advantage beneficiaries experience higher quality care and better health outcomes than fee-for-service beneficiaries, according to a report from Harvard and Inovalon.
    • “Researchers used Inovalon’s claims data to assess care quality for people enrolled in Medicare Advantage and those with Medicare fee-for-service between 2015 and 2019.”
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Healthcare employment growth fell across the board during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some sectors have had more difficulty rebounding than others, according to a new study — especially skilled nursing facilities, which face a controversial federal push for more staffing.
    • “Employment in hospitals increased 0.4% per quarter before the pandemic, but that growth rate shrunk to 0.03% during COVID-19, according to the study published in JAMA. By comparison, employment at skilled nursing facilities was already declining before COVID, dropping at a rate of 0.2% per quarter. During the pandemic, the rate of job losses accelerated to 1.1%.
    • “The Biden administration is seeking to impose mandatory nursing staffing minimums at skilled nursing facilities, or SNFs. The nursing home industry largely opposes the rule, arguing there are not enough workers available to meet the staffing mandate.” 

From the public health and research front,

  • The FEHBlog took the RSV vaccine today. The pharmacist who administered the injection told him the RSV vaccine are expected to be a once-every-decade experience for adults like the Tdap vaccine.
  • American Hospital News informs us,
    • “The more than 11,000 patients who received care during the first 16 months of the Acute Hospital Care at Home initiative had a low mortality rate and minimal complications related to escalations back to the brick-and-mortar hospital, according to a study reported Friday in JAMA Health Forum. CMS launched the initiative in November 2021 to address the COVID-19 public health emergency and concerns about hospital bed capacity. The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 extended the CMS initiative through December 2024.
    • “The law also requires hospitals to provide additional data to CMS to monitor the quality of care, and for CMS to undertake a comprehensive study of the AHCAH initiative by September 30, 2024,” the authors note. “This study, data review, and additional monitoring will be important for identifying best practices that support safe and effective inpatient-level care delivered in the home environment.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “U.S. hospitals made gains to reduce healthcare-acquired infections (HAIs) but saw patient experiences further deteriorate in the latest release of an independent watchdog’s twice-yearly safety report.
    • “According to The Leapfrog Group, the sector has significantly reduced the incidences of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) and catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) after reaching five-year highs during the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • “Specifically, 66% of the almost 3,000 general hospitals polled by the group improved their performance on at least one of the three HAIs. Nineteen percent improved across all three of the infection measures, while 16% either worsened or made no improvement.
    • “Now that we have pre- and post-pandemic data for patient safety measures, we are encouraged by the improvement in infections and applaud hospitals for reversing the disturbing infection spike we saw during the pandemic,” Leah Binder, president and CEO of The Leapfrog Group, said in a release.”
  • Here is a link to the Leapfrog Group report.
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds, “A comparison of data from CMS and The Leapfrog Group suggests that a hospital’s strong performance in one national quality rating system does not necessarily mean it will be a top performer in another.”
  • The New York Times Magazine gives us a story about the use of bariatric surgery on teenagers.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Reuters reports,
    • “Cigna is working with an investment bank to evaluate options for its Medicare Advantage business, which could fetch several billions of dollars in a potential divestment, the sources said.
    • “The discussions with interested parties, including other companies and private equity firms, are at an early stage, and Cigna may decide to keep the business, the sources added, requesting anonymity because the matter is confidential.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Oakland, Calif.-based Kaiser Permanente reported $156 million in operating income (0.6% margin) for the third quarter, up from a $75 million operating loss (-0.3% margin) in the third quarter of 2022. 
    • “For the three months ended Sept. 30, Kaiser’s health plan, hospitals and their respective subsidiaries posted $24.9 billion in revenue and $24.7 billion in expenses, compared to $24.3 billion and $24.3 billion, respectively, in the same period of the prior year. 
    • “Net income for the third quarter was $239 million, up from a net loss of $1.5 billion in the third quarter of 2022.”
  • and
    • “As operating margins inch upward, hospitals are trending to profitability. But their performance still isn’t at pre-pandemic levels. 
    • “For the first three quarters of 2023, hospital operating margins were up 19% and operating EBIDA was up 11% compared to the same period last year, according to Kaufman Hall’s October National Hospital Flash Report. Net operating revenue per calendar day saw a 6% increase and even inpatient revenue was up 3%. Compared to 2020, year-to-date operating margins in September were down 2% and operating EBIDA margins were down 9%.”

Weekend Update

From Washington, DC

  • Tomorrow afternoon, the House Rules Committee will take up HR 4664, the financial services and general government appropriations bill that includes OPM and FEHB funding. The bill includes the typical FEHB appropriations provisions — the abortion coverage restriction, the contraceptives coverage mandate, and the prohibition against applying full Cost Accounting Standards coverage to experience-rated FEHB plan carriers.
  • The Federal Benefits Open Season begins next Monday, November 13, and ends on Monday, December 11, 2023. OPM has refreshed the Open Season website with 2024 plan information.

From the public health and research front,

  • NPR Shots discusses the impact of chronic drug shortages on hospitals and patients.
  • The Washington Post reports that “the hunt quickens” for vaccines and antibody therapies against opioids. For example,
    • “The federal government recently awarded an additional $14.8 million for research into a monoclonal antibody that would target fentanyl — the nation’s deadliest street drug — by binding to its molecules before they can invade the brain and shut down breathing. Cessation Therapeutics, a North Carolina biotech company, touts its monoclonal antibody as a way both to prevent overdoses and to treat overdoses and opioid addiction.”
  • Fortune Well tells us,
    • “Whether you snag some vitamin C at the first sign of a cold or stock up on probiotics to keep your gut health in check, you’re not alone in turning to dietary supplements—an estimated 75% of Americans use them.
    • “Among the various types, vitamin K is gaining popularity due to its potential benefits for healthy aging. Specifically, it is thought to aid in the prevention of age-related conditions such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease.”
  • Medscape informs us,
    • “Prescriptions for semaglutide jumped 150% in the past year, with an 80% increase in prescriptions written per provider, new data suggest.
    • “Among more than 350,000 prescribers in the nationwide DrFirst network between December 2022 and June 2023, prescriptions for the weight loss formulation Wegovy rose sixfold while those for Ozempic, the lower-dose version for treating type 2 diabetes, increased by 65%.”
  • and
    • “With nutrient-stimulated hormone therapies for obesity in phase 3 trials and activin-receptor inhibitors in the next upcoming drug class, highly effective treatments for obesity are on the horizon.
    • “We are at a watershed [moment] brought on by the recent introduction of highly effective antiobesity medications,” said Ania M. Jastreboff, MD, PhD, in a lecture at ObesityWeek.
    • “Jastreboff, from Yale University and the Yale Center for Weight Management, New Haven, Connecticut, provided an overview of the many nutrient-stimulated hormone-based antiobesity therapies in late phases of development — including dual and triple therapies with glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs), glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) agonists, glucagon, and amylin.”
  • and
    • “New research suggests terminating metformin may raise the risk for dementia in older adults with type 2 diabetes, providing more evidence of metformin’s potential neuroprotective effects.”
  • and, last but not least,
    • T3D-959, an oral dual delta/gamma peroxisome proliferator-activated nuclear receptor (PPAR) agonist, has shown promise in a phase 2 randomized, placebo-controlled study of adults with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s disease (AD).”

Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity policy front,

  • The FAR Council extended the public comment deadline for its October 3, 2023, proposed cybersecurity rules from December 4, 2023, to February 2, 2024. The FEHBlog noticed that the proposed rules (cited in the link) would be added to FAR Part 39 captioned “Acquisition of Information Technology.” In contrast, the FAR cybersecurity rules already found in the FEHB contract are found in FAR Part 4, captioned “Administrative and Information Matters.” For this reason, the FEHBlog has formed the opinion that these rules would not apply to FEHB plan contracts. In any event, the OPM FEHB contracts already include requirements for reporting data breaches and cyber incidents (Section 1.37).
  • Health IT Security tells us,
    • “HITRUST issued a response to the White House’s request for information (RFI) on the harmonization of cybersecurity regulations, suggesting that regulation alone is not a fix to the ongoing cyber challenges that critical infrastructure entities face.
    • “Rather, HITRUST recommended a shift away from further regulations in favor of a renewed focus on accountability and reciprocity within existing standards. Additionally, HITRUST emphasized the importance of reliable cybersecurity assessments and assurances.”
  • and
    • “The HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR) released an educational video to help covered entities understand how the HIPAA Security Rule can help them defend against cyberattacks. The video was produced in recognition of National Cybersecurity Month.
    • “Hosted by Nick Heesters, senior advisor for cybersecurity at OCR, the 43-minute video explores cyberattack trends gleaned from OCR breach reports and discusses how Security Rule compliance can help covered entities combat these threats.”
  • Cyberscoop informs us,
    • “The White House announced a long-awaited executive order on Monday that attempts to mitigate the security risks of artificial intelligence while harnessing the potential benefits of the technology. 
    • “Coming nearly a year after the release of ChatGPT — the viral chatbot that captured public attention and kicked off the current wave of AI frenzy — Monday’s executive order aims to walk a fine line between over-regulating a new and potentially groundbreaking technology and addressing its risks.
    • “The order directs leading AI labs to notify the U.S. government of training runs that produce models with potential national security risks, instructs the National Institutes of Standards and Technology to develop frameworks for how to adversarially test AI models, and establishes an initiative to harness AI to automatically find and fix software vulnerabilities, among other measures. 
    • “Addressing questions of privacy, fairness and existential risks associated with AI models, Monday’s order is a sweeping attempt to lay the groundwork for a regulatory regime at a time when policymakers around the world are scrambling to write rules for AI. A White House fact sheet describes the order as containing “the most sweeping actions ever taken to protect Americans from the potential risks of AI systems.”

From the cyber vulnerabilities and breaches front,

  • Per Cybersecurity Dive,
    • “The Securities and Exchange Commission charged SolarWinds and its CISO Timothy Brown with fraud and internal control failures for allegedly misleading investors about its cybersecurity practices leading up to the Sunburst attack discovered in December 2020. 
    • “The SEC on Monday [October 29] alleged the company overstated its cybersecurity practices and failed to disclose known risks from October 2018, when the company went public, up to at least the Sunburst attack. 
    • “Public statements from the company contradicted internal assessments, including a 2018 assessment by a company engineer, shared with Brown and others, showing the company’s remote access setup was “not very secure,” the SEC complaint said.
    • “SEC officials allege SolarWinds and Brown ignored repeated red flag warning signs that put the company’s cybersecurity at risk. 
  • Security Week offers industry reaction to the lawsuit.
    • “It remains to be seen how the lawsuit against the SolarWinds CISO will unfold and what implications it will have for the cybersecurity industry as a whole. Regardless of the outcome, it serves as a stark reminder that the role of CISOs is continually evolving, and they must navigate a complex landscape of legal and regulatory challenges.”
  • HHS’s Heath Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) issued its October vulnerability bulletin.
    • “In October 2023, vulnerabilities to the health sector have been released that require attention. This includes the monthly Patch Tuesday vulnerabilities released by several vendors on the second Tuesday of each month, along with mitigation steps and patches. Vulnerabilities for October are from Microsoft, Google/Android, Apple, Mozilla, Cisco, SAP, VMWare, Adobe, Fortinet, Atlassian, SolarWinds, NextGen Healthcare, and F5. A vulnerability is given the classification as a zero-day when it is actively exploited with no fix available or if it is publicly disclosed. HC3 recommends patching all vulnerabilities, with special consideration to the risk management posture of the organization.”
  • Cyberscoop points out
    • “The exploitation of zero-day vulnerabilities is on the rise globally and directly impacting federal agencies, part of what a senior Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency official called a “very eventful past six months” in the cyber threat landscape.
    • “Michael Duffy, the associate director for capacity building within CISA’s cybersecurity division, said that in the past month or so, the agency has seen “a really high increase in zero-day activity, exploits that we’re seeing across the globe, really affecting the federal government networks throughout the federal government.”
    • “Duffy’s comments, made during a cybersecurity governance panel this week at ACT-IAC’s Imagine Nation ELC conference in Hershey, Pa., come following a notable decline in so-called in-the-wild zero days last year. According to a July report from Google’s Threat Analysis Group, 41 zero days were detected and disclosed in 2022, down from 69 in 2021.
    • “Despite the decline, the number of zero-day exploits observed in the wild remained the second-highest number since TAG started tracking such exploits in 2014. U.S. government officials recently have described a tendency toward growing sophistication in the state-backed hacking campaigns, one hallmark of which is the use of the previously unknown vulnerabilities known as zero days.”  
  • The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure added two known exploited vulnerabilities to its catalog on Tuesday, October 31, and another on Thursday, November 2.

From the ransomware front,

  • Health IT Security reports,
    • “The International Counter Ransomware Initiative (CRI) held its third summit in Washington, DC, with representatives from 50 countries joining together to build upon counter-ransomware projects and announce new focus areas. Among the commitments announced, at least 40 of the member countries agreed not to pay ransoms to cybercriminals, Reuters first reported.
    • “As long as there is money flowing to ransomware criminals, this is a problem that will continue to grow,” said Anne Neuberger, US deputy national security adviser for cyber and emerging technology in the Biden Administration. [see The Week in Ransomware’s observation below.]
    • “The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has long encouraged ransomware victims to avoid paying the ransom when faced with a ransomware attack. Paying the ransom can embolden cybercriminals to continue targeting other victims and does not guarantee the safe return of data. * * *
    • “In addition to the pledge, CRI members continued to expand upon the commitments they made at last year’s summit. Key deliverables at the 2023 summit were centered around “developing capabilities to disrupt attackers and the infrastructure they use to conduct their attacks, improving cybersecurity through sharing information, and fighting back against ransomware actors,” the White House noted in a press release.”
  • and
    • “The HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced a $100,000 settlement to resolve a data breach investigation with Doctors’ Management Services, a Massachusetts-based medical management company and healthcare business associate that suffered a ransomware attack in 2018. The settlement marks the first-ever ransomware agreement that OCR has reached.
    • “In April 2019, Doctors’ Management Services filed a breach report with HHS, acknowledging that 206,695 individuals were impacted by a cyberattack carried out by GandCrab ransomware actors. Although the report was filed in 2019, the initial intrusion occurred in 2017. Doctors’ Management Services only detected the breach in December 2018, when ransomware was used to encrypt its files.”
  • HC3 released an analyst note about 8Base ransomware.
    • A recent attack on a U.S.-based medical facility in October 2023 highlights the potential threat of the ransomware gang, 8Base, to the Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) sector. Active since March 2022, 8Base became highly active in the summer of 2023, focusing their indiscriminate targeting on multiple sectors, primarily across the United States.
    • This surge in operational activity included the group’s engagement in double extortion tactics as an affiliate of Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) groups against mostly small- to medium-sized companies.
    • While similarities exist between 8Base and other ransomware gangs, the group’s identity, methods, and motivations remain largely unknown. What follows is an overview of the group, possible connections to other threat actors, an analysis of their ransomware attacks, their target industries and victim countries, impacts to the HPH sector, MITRE ATT&CK techniques, indicators of compromise, and recommended defenses and mitigations against the group.
  • Of course, here’s a link to Bleeping Computer’s The Week in Ransomware.

From the cybersecurity defenses front,

  • Per Cybersecurity Dive,
    • “Microsoft is overhauling its cybersecurity strategy, called the Secure Future Initiative, to incorporate key security features into its core set of technology platforms and cloud services. 
    • “The plan follows a massive government and industry backlash to Microsoft after the state-linked email theft from the U.S. State Department. Microsoft came under fierce criticism from key members of Congress and federal officials who were concerned that the company was forcing federal agencies to rely on software products that lacked the necessary security features to protect against sophisticated attackers. 
    • “The pushback related to the State Department case was that Microsoft was upcharging customers for additional, important security features. 
    • “Microsoft plans to enable secure default settings out of the box, so customers will not have to engage with multiple configurations to make sure a product is protected against hackers. 
    • For example, Microsoft will implement Azure baseline controls, which include 99 controls across nine security domains by default. 
  • An ISACA expert explains how to craft a corporate generative AI policy.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Economic uncertainty continues to chip away at corporate cybersecurity. 
    • “Layoffs, budget cuts and general skimping are putting more pressure on cybersecurity teams, which, in some cases, are pausing hiring and technology investment.
    • “Because of the economic pressure, there are more questions being asked about backfills or head counts,” said Diego Souza, chief information security officer at engine and generator manufacturer Cummins.
    • “Of 14,865 cyber professionals asked, 47% said there had been some form of cutbacks in cybersecurity—layoffs, budget cuts, hiring or promotion freezes—in the past 12 months, according to a survey by trade group ISC2 in collaboration with Forrester Research. Of that group, 22% said there had been layoffs on their teams, while 53% saw delays in buying or implementing technology, according to the study published Tuesday [October 31].

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Department of Health and Human Services discusses its efforts to support rural healthcare.
  • Today, the proposed No Surprises Act regulation that would change current Independent Dispute Resolution processes was published in the Federal Register. OPM’s proposed FEHB rules changes are described on page 75,808 and may be found on page 75,851.
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Service issued FAQs on its new final rule imposing civil monetary penalties on Section 111 reporting violations. The rule, which impacts FEHB carriers, becomes enforceable on October 11, 2024.
  • Congressman Gerry Connolly (D VA) released a “statement in support of the Office of Personnel Management’s (OPM) expansion of infertility coverage benefits for Federal Employee Health Benefits (FEHB) program enrollees.” The FEHBlog is pleased to read about Congressman Connolly’s support.
  • The Office of the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology created a blog post titled “Coming in Hot! TEFCA Will Soon Be Live and Add Support for FHIR-Based Exchange.” The post indicates that this critically important electronic health record key to data sharing will be going live soon.
    • “Our TEFCA timelines will remain aggressive and ambitious as ONC and the RCE help support the industry to usher in a new era of data exchange for the United States.
    • “For more information on TEFCA in general, please check out the RCE resources and sign up for the RCE newsletter and monthly public calls.”
  • Govexec reports, “The Office of Personnel Management on Friday announced new plans aimed at helping the federal government’s HR agency better weather the annual surge of retirement applications from departing federal employees that occurs each winter.” Good luck.
  • HR Dive reports,
    • “The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission opened its 2022 EEO-1 Component 1 data collection Oct. 31. Reports must be submitted by Dec. 5, the agency said in a news release
    • “The EEO-1 Component 1 report is a mandatory demographic data report the EEOC requires from all private-sector employers with 100 or more employees, and from certain federal contractors.
    • “EEOC’s Office of Enterprise Data and Analytics released a booklet to help filers complete the process. It has also provided a Filer Support Team Message Center and other resources, the agency said.”

From the public health front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control posted its inaugural issue of FluSight for the current flu season. Here’s the kickoff forecast.
  • Health Payer Intelligence explains how public and private payers cover healthcare for the LGBTQ+ community.
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research published
    • “its third annual “Barriers to Fair Access” assessment of prescription drug coverage policies (Report |Supplemental Materials) within US commercial insurance and the Veterans Health Administration. The analysis found that major payer coverage policies for 18 drugs often met fair access criteria for cost sharing, clinical eligibility, step therapy, and provider restrictions. However, the report’s findings suggest that major improvements are needed in the transparency of coverage policy information for consumers and in detailing out-of-pocket costs for patients.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review shares CMS statistics on emergency department wait times across our country.
  • The Wall Street Journal gives advice on how to avoid the gloom associated with turning the clock to standard time this weekend.
    • “Daylight hours affect our brain chemistry. As days grow shorter, light receptors in the eyes receive less light and send a signal to the brain about what chemicals to produce, says Lina Begdache, associate professor of health and wellness studies at Binghamton University. 
    • “Our brains begin producing more melatonin—the sleep-related hormone—and less serotonin, which enhances mood and controls appetite. When the brain starts making more melatonin at 4 p.m. due to the earlier dusk, people can feel prematurely sluggish, which can affect mood, diet, exercise and sleep patterns.  
    • “Focusing on improving one area that is affected by the time change, such as exercise, can help the others and might be more doable than trying to improve everything at once, says Begdache, the associate health and wellness studies professor.  * * *
    • “If you improve your diet, you’re more likely to exercise more. And if you exercise more, you’re more likely to sleep better,” says Begdache, who led a 2021 study on mental well-being and seasonal changes. “
  • The FEHBlog personally likes having more sunlight in the morning.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Here’s a link to the American Medical Association’s reaction to the 2024 Medicare Part B pay cut announced this week. The pay cut is a wash for FEHB carriers because the cut applicable to Medicare prime annuitants will be offset by price increases for younger members. The big problem is that the cut will drive more doctors out of Medicare Part B. When the FEHBlog, who is on traditional Medicare, lived inside the Beltway, his primary care doctor joined the crowd of local PCPs who had dropped out of Medicare. When the FEHBlog moved to Texas last year, he had no problem finding a PCP who takes Medicare, and what’s more, his PCP participates in an accountable care organization. Access to affordable healthcare and dental care is better in central Texas than inside the Beltway, at least for now. The FEHBlog agrees with the AMA that Congress needs to step up.
  • BioPharma Dive informs us,
    • “Moderna on Thursday shifted its revenue forecast for the year to “at least” $6 billion from a previous range of between $6 billion to $8 billion, a change it said reflected COVID-19 vaccination trends in the U.S.
    • “The biotechnology company also disclosed third-quarter earnings showing a net loss of $3.6 billion, driven mainly by non-cash charges of $3.1 billion related to a “manufacturing resizing” and a tax charge. Shares slumped 6% Thursday on the news but traded up Friday morning.
    • “Moderna said it plans to break even in 2026 through “disciplined investment” and launches for new products like its mRNA flu and respiratory syncytial virus vaccines as well as a combination flu and COVID shot.”
  • MedTech Dive shares medtech executives’ views on the new GLP-1 obesity drugs.
    • “Strong patient interest in GLP-1 drugs to treat obesity has prompted medtech companies to take a hard look at the potential impact on demand for procedures like bariatric surgery and products such as glucose monitors and sleep apnea devices.
    • “The potential threat to medical device sales has spooked investors, who have sold shares in companies across the sector.
    • “Fears that medications such as Ozempic, Mounjaro and Wegovy, which are used for diabetes and weight loss, will eventually reshape treatment for a variety of diseases have driven the most severe correction in the medtech sector since the onset of COVID-19, wiping out about $370 billion in market capitalization, according to Mizuho analyst Anthony Petrone.”