Monday Roundup
From Washington, DC,
- Fierce Healthcare tells us
- “A slew of bills targeting enhanced access to care within rural communities have, to the applause of the hospital industry, passed through committee to the full House of Representatives.
- “The rural care bills that made it through the Ways and Means Committee’s Wednesday markup broadly support the financial stability of designated Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) and Rural Emergency Hospitals (REH) along with other smaller hospitals serving rural communities [, among other objectives discussed in the article].
- “These included The Preserving Emergency Access in Key Sites Act of 2024 (PEAKS Act), which expands increased emergency ambulance services coverage for patients served by CAHs; The Rural Hospital Stabilization Act, which authorizes new grants funding for investments into CAHs, REHs and small rural hospitals staving off potential closure; and The Second Chances for Rural Hospitals Acts, which expands the eligibility requirements for low-volume hospitals that wish to become REHs.”
- Per an HHS press release,
- “Today, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) announced the winners of the FentAlert Challenge, which sought innovative ideas from U.S. youth, aged 14-18, to develop a community strategy to educate their peers about fentanyl and fake pills ― and prevent drug overdose deaths. The Challenge supports primary prevention efforts prioritized in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Overdose Prevention Strategy, a key element of the Biden-Harris Administration’s Unity Agenda’s focus on beating the opioid crisis. The Challenge received almost 200 entries from across the country.
- “The announcement launched National Prevention Week (NPW) (May 12-18), which celebrates the possibilities of prevention science and offers a platform to showcase substance use prevention activities across the country.”
- Federal News Network lets us know,
- “The nation’s top doctor is prescribing more attention to federal employees’ mental health and well-being.
- But now in a hybrid work environment, that task has become remarkably more challenging, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said.
- “I do think that there are a lot of positives to having flexibility to be able to work from home — reduced commute times, time with family, being able to pick your kids up from school, be home for family dinner, while also not sacrificing your work,” Murthy said Thursday during a mental health and wellness event at the Office of Personnel Management. “But I think one of the things we also have to realize is that all of these choices come with trade-offs.”
- “One of those trade-offs, he said, is that it can become harder to build social connections among coworkers — something that’s crucial for an agency’s operations overall.
- “When people feel connected to other people in the workplace, that actually positively impacts their creativity, their productivity, and ultimately contributes to their engagement and retention,” Murthy said. “Creating opportunities for people to come back in person periodically, creating more intentional opportunities for people to be able to connect and learn about one another virtually, those become increasingly important when you’re in a hybrid work environment.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Do you know how old your heart is? And does it even matter?
- “More online calculators, wearable devices and medical tests are attempting to estimate your heart’s age. The companies and organizations behind the tools say that having insight into your heart health can prompt you to make lifestyle changes to help stave off cardiovascular disease down the road.
- “It’s an extension of our newfound obsession with “biological age,” the concept that your body, or parts of it, can be physically aging faster or slower than your actual age. And that by knowing those ages, you can take control to live longer and healthier.
- “As for the heart, scientists say the tools can be a helpful jumping-off point for conversations with doctors about habit changes or medications before heart disease sets in.
- But you should take the results with a grain of salt, doctors and researchers say. The age calculations tend to be imprecise and don’t capture all of your possible risk factors, such as family history, air pollution, pregnancy complications or genetic variations.
- “It’s pretending to quantify something for you specifically that is just directionally true,” says Dr. Gregory Katz, a cardiologist at NYU Langone Heart. “It’s based on a true story, but it’s not actually a true story.”
- Bloomberg Prognosis discusses “advances in treating brain cancer using different forms of immunotherapy — CAR-T, which uses engineered T-cells, and a messenger RNA-based therapeutic vaccine.”
- Bloomberg also notes,
- “Patients could wean themselves off blockbuster drugs such as Ozempic or Wegovy without piling the pounds back on, according to a scientific study.
- “Data [from a small study] presented at the European Congress on Obesity in Venice, Italy on Sunday provides some of the first evidence that it could be possible to stop taking Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic or Wegovy and not regain any weight that has been lost — as long as a healthy lifestyle is maintained. * * *
- “The Danish study of patients using semaglutide, which is the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy, alongside a weight management program run through the Embla app, suggests that tapering the drug — instead of a hard stop — could potentially prevent weight regain.
- “However, just 353 patients were in the sample of patients who stopped semaglutide, which is a small study size. These patients had reached their target weight and reduced their semaglutide dose over nine weeks. Patients continued to lose weight as they tapered, losing an average of 2.1% over the nine weeks. * * *
- “The combination of support in making lifestyle changes and tapering seems to allow patients to avoid regaining weight after coming off semaglutide,” said Henrik Gudbergsen, lead researcher and Embla’s chief medical officer, in a statement.”
- STAT News informs us,
- “Reluctance among dairy farmers to report H5N1 bird flu outbreaks within their herds or allow testing of their workers has made it difficult to keep up with the virus’s rapid spread, prompting federal public health officials to look to wastewater to help fill in the gaps.
- “On Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expected to unveil a public dashboard tracking influenza A viruses in sewage that the agency has been collecting from 600 wastewater treatment sites around the country since last fall.
- “The testing is not H5N1-specific; H5N1 belongs to the large influenza A family of viruses, as do two of the viruses that regularly sicken people during flu season. But flu viruses that cause human disease circulate at very low levels during the summer months. So the presence of high levels of influenza A in wastewater from now through the end of the summer could be a reliable indicator that something unusual is going on in a particular area.
- “Wastewater monitoring, at least at this stage, cannot discern the sources — be they from dairy cattle, run-off from dairy processors, or human infections — of any viral genetic fragments found in sewage, although the agency is working on having more capability to do so in the future.”
- The Washington Post offers Consumer Reports guidance on how to reduce your exposure to plastics in food (and elsewhere).
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Kaiser Permanente kicked off 2024 with $935 million of operating income (3.4% operating margin) and over $2.7 billion of net income when excluding a one-time, $4.6 billion net asset gain from its Geisinger Health acquisition, according to topline first-quarter numbers shared late Friday.
- “The performance handily outpaces the $233 million operating income (0.9% operating margin) and $1.2 billion bottom line of last year’s opening quarter.
- “Still, the integrated nonprofit noted that its operating income was still “below historical first-quarter trends leading up to the pandemic” due to industry-wide cost pressures around high utilization, care acuity and elevated goods and services expenses. The top of the year is typically bolstered by the timing of the open enrollment cycle, and then followed by steady revenue but rising expenses, the organization explained.”
- RAND reports
- “Prices paid to hospitals during 2022 by employers and private insurers for both inpatient and outpatient services averaged 254 percent of what Medicare would have paid, with wide variation in prices among states, according to a new RAND report.
- “Some states (Arkansas, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi) had relative prices under 200 percent of Medicare, while other states (California, Florida, Georgia, New York, South Carolina, West Virginia, Wisconsin) had relative prices that were above 300 percent of Medicare.
- “Even as the number of hospitals and insurance claims analyzed has grown across multiple rounds of the RAND Hospital Price Transparency Study the state-level average price has remained above 200 percent of Medicare—from 247 percent of Medicare prices in 2018 to 224 percent in 2020 and to 254 percent in 2022.”
- Fierce Healthcare also points out
- “Foley & Lardner released a new state survey of telehealth insurance laws that tracks the changes in the legal landscape from 2019, before the COVID-19 public health emergency, until April 2024.
- “The survey includes key figures on each state’s telehealth commercial insurance coverage and payment/reimbursement laws.
- “Nearly all states have adopted a telehealth statute as of April 2024. Of particular note is the number of states that expanded audio-only coverage, states that implemented coverage and payment parity for mental and behavioral health provided via telehealth, and states that passed reimbursement and parity laws.”
- Following up on Cybersecurity Saturday, Fierce Healthcare noted earlier today,
- “Ascension said it is communicating with several government organizations and for the first time referred to its cybersecurity event as a “ransomware incident” in an update posted this weekend.
- “The 140-hospital health system said that it is still working to investigate and restore its systems—a process that is “making progress” but “will take time to complete” across each of its care sites.
- “In the meantime, the system said it has notified law enforcement and other government bodies including the FBI, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the Department of Health and Human Services, among others.”