Weekend update

Weekend update

From Washington, DC,

  • The American Medical Association reports,
    • “As of today, patients and physicians have a clear-eyed view on how to protect Medicare from injurious cuts. A bipartisan group of House members— led by Reps. Greg Murphy, M.D., (R-N.C), Danny Davis, (D-Ill.), Brad Wenstrup, D.P.M. (R-Ohio), Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.), Larry Bucshon, M.D. (R-Ind.) and Michael Burgess, M.D. (R-Texas)—introduced HR 6683 that would eliminate the pending 3.37 percent cuts to Medicare payments. These cuts threaten healthcare access for seniors as well as the viability of physician practices, including many in rural and underserved areas. Canceling the cut is a good new year’s resolution.”
  • The Federal Benefits Open Season ends tomorrow, December 11.
    • OPM explains that “The Federal Benefits Open Season ends at 11:59 pm Eastern Time on Monday, December 11, 2023, for the Federal Employees Dental and Vision Insurance Program (FEDVIP) and the Federal Flexible Spending Account Program (FSAFEDS). Open Season for the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHB) ends at 11:59 pm, in the location of your electronic enrollment system, on Monday, December 11, 2023.”

From the public health front,

  • Fortune Well provides background on pneumonia, the lung disease that is the number one cause of hospital admission in children and adults.
  • Bloomberg Prognosis delves into the old saying, “Feed a cold and starve a fever,” which dates back to the 16th century. Well, it turns out that your best bet is to feed colds and fevers according to Bloomberg.
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday warned clinicians and the public about an outbreak of a rare but deadly tick-borne disease that hospitalized five patients in Southern California, killing three of them, after they traveled to or lived in a Mexican border city in recent months.
    • “Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is transmitted by the bite of infected ticks that live primarily on dogs. It’s rare in the United States but it has emerged at epidemic levels in northern Mexico, where more than 2,000 cases, resulting in hundreds of deaths, have been reported in the past five years.
    • “In a health advisory issued late Friday, the CDC said the five patients had been diagnosed since late July. All had traveled to or lived in the city of Tecate, in the northern Mexican state of Baja California, within two weeks of getting sick. All five sought care in hospitals in Southern California, including four pediatric patients. CDC officials declined to provide more details about the individuals to protect their privacy. Three of the patients were U.S. residents, and two were siblings who lived in Mexico. Two deaths were pediatric patients and one was an adult, CDC officials said.”
  • The Post also discusses nitazenes, a street opioid more potent than fentanyl.
    • “Naloxone, the commonly used overdose reversal drug, can revive nitazene users. But nitazenes may complicate rescue efforts if users or medical personnel do not know the drugs have been consumed. In a study published in August, researchers found that a small group of emergency room patients who had taken nitazenes needed more naloxone than people overdosing on fentanyl. Two patients who ingested a compound known as metonitazene suffered heart attacks. One died, according to the study in JAMA Network Open.
    • “The concerns about nitazenes being more potent than fentanyl were confirmed by the study,” said Alex F. Manini, a study co-author and a professor of emergency medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.”

We have big news from the U.S. healthcare business front.

  • The Wall Street Journal reported this afternoon,
    • Cigna abandoned its pursuit of a tie-up with  Humana that would have created a roughly $140 billion giant in the health-insurance industry.
    • “The companies couldn’t come to an agreement on price and other financial terms, according to people familiar with the matter. In the near term, Cigna is turning its focus toward smaller, so-called bolt-on acquisitions. * * *
    • “Instead, Bloomfield, Conn.-based Cigna plans an additional $10 billion of stock buybacks, bringing its total planned repurchases to $11.3 billion. * * *
    • “Humana, the No. 2 Medicare insurer, remains in the midst of its own succession handoff. Humana said in October that Jim Rechtin—previously chief executive of Envision Healthcare—would take over as president and chief operating officer, effective Jan. 8. Rechtin is then to take over as chief executive officer from Bruce Broussard in the back half of 2024.” 

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Endpoints informs us,
    • “In a landmark moment for genetic medicine and sickle cell disease patients, the FDA on Friday approved not just one but two gene therapies for the disease: Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ and CRISPR Therapeutics’ Casgevy, marking the first-ever approval of a CRISPR-based medicine in the US, and Lyfgenia, bluebird bio’s lentiviral gene therapy.
    • “The treatments are approved for sickle cell disease patients 12 years of age and older who experience painful attacks associated with the disease. Vertex will charge $2.2 million in the US for Casgevy, while bluebird will charge $3.1 million for Lyfgenia.
    • “This is the very first time that some patients have ever imagined that they might not have to live their entire lifespan with the consequences of sickle cell disease,” Alexis Thompson, the chief of the division of hematology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and investigator on the clinical trials that led to the therapies’ approvals, told Endpoints News ahead of the announcement.” * * *
    • “ICER, a drug pricing watchdog, has suggested the therapies could be cost-effective at $2 million in the US. Bluebird bio markets a gene therapy as Zynteglo for transfusion-dependent beta thalassemia as well in the US, for which it charges $2.8 million.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “New polling suggests voters would rather work to improve the current U.S. healthcare system and keep the Affordable Care Act in place, rather than drastically overhaul the system in favor of a national public option or Medicare for All.
    • “Three-quarters of survey respondents said they prefer fixing the current health insurance system versus starting fresh with a Medicare for All system, while 64% said Medicare should begin at the age of 60 instead of 65 and 58% believe people should be allowed to purchase health insurance beginning at the age of 50.
    • “Repealing the ACA struck a chord with respondents as just 32% of voters and only 44% of GOP voters said they support repealing the ACA. When asked if ACA subsidies should be extended, 60% said they should while only 41% of Republicans agreed.
    • “Notably, the survey was conducted on behalf of the Partnership for America’s Health Care Future, an industry group created in 2018 comprised of America’s Health Insurance Plan, the American Hospital Association, BlueCross BlueShield Association, the Federation of American Hospitals, PhRMA and other major hospital systems, payers and healthcare advocacy groups that seek to quell support and prevent passage of Medicare for All.” 
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “Hospitals are up in arms over a bill in the U.S. House of Representatives that would equalize payments for drugs administered in outpatient clinics, regardless of ownership.
    • The American Hospital Association and the Federation of American Hospitals sent separate letters to Congress this week urging legislators to vote against the bill over the site-neutral provision, arguing it would threaten access to care by cutting hospitals’ Medicare payments.
    • “The bipartisan Lower Costs, More Transparency Act is scheduled to come up for a House vote the week of Dec. 11.”
  • Fierce Healthcare offers more information on this bill (HR 5378).
    • [T]he legislation would ban spread pricing in Medicaid, force PBMs and providers to adopt President Trump-era transparency rules, push closer toward site-neutral payment reform, extend a federal program due to expire and approve funding increases for community health centers.
  • The American Hospital Association News points out,
    • The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Dec. 8 discussed draft payment update recommendations for 2025, which the commission will vote on in January. The draft recommendations call for Congress to update Medicare payment rates for hospital inpatient and outpatient services by the current law amount plus 1.5%, and transition to a safety-net index policy that would distribute an additional $4 billion to safety-net hospitals. They also propose that Congress:
      • Update 2025 Medicare payments for physicians and other health professional services by 50% of the Medicare Economic Index increase, and enact a non-budget-neutral add-on payment under the physician fee schedule to services provided to low-income Medicare beneficiaries.
      • Reduce the 2025 payment rate for home health agencies by 7%.
      • Reduce the 2025 payment rate for skilled nursing facilities by 3%.
      • Reduce the 2025 payment rate for inpatient rehabilitation facilities by 5%.
  • On December 6, the Biden Administration’s latest semi-annual regulatory agenda was posted. Here is a link to OPM’s agenda. Here are the FEHB rulemakings in process:
    • OPM Proposed Rule Stage Federal Employee Health Benefits Program: Effective Date of Coverage RIN 3206-AO47
    • OPM Proposed Rule Stage Postal Service Health Benefits Program: Additional Requirements and Clarifications RIN 3206-AO59
    • OPM Proposed Rule Stage Federal Employee Health Benefits Program: Decreasing Enrollment Type to Self Only RIN 3206-AO62
    • OPM Final Rule Stage Requirements Related to Air Ambulance, and Agent, and Broker Services, and Provider Enforcement RIN 3206-AO28
    • OPM Final Rule Stage Postal Service Health Benefits Program RIN 3206-AO43
  • Readers can research these rulemakings on regulations.gov by referencing the RIN.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced
    • “In first-of-its-kind research to examine racial and ethnic disparities in the medical costs of smoking in the United States, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) found that adults from some racial and ethnic populations benefit substantially more than others from tobacco control policies. The research, published today in the journal Tobacco Control, supports President Joe Biden’s April 2023 Executive Order calling for policymakers to examine distributional effects in cost-benefit analyses required in the rulemaking process.  This study helps inform such analyses and will benefit other research in this area.
    • “The study shows that even though adults in specific racial and ethnic populations have a lower ever-smoked rate than White adults and make more attempts to quit, their medical spending associated with smoking was twice as high, with a 41% higher rate of having multiple chronic conditions associated with smoking. * * *
    • “Disparities in medical spending, as well as adverse health outcomes, are continuing to increase over time,” said AHRQ co-author Dr. William Encinosa. “AHRQ’s results indicate that racial and ethnic populations benefit substantially from tobacco control policies, such as tobacco product regulations.”
    • “The article, “Racial and Ethnic Disparities in the Healthcare Costs and Outcomes of Smoking in the United States: 2008-2019,” is published in Tobacco Control and may be found at: https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/lookup/doi/10.1136/tc-2023-058136
  • Medscape notes,
    • “Patients receiving semaglutide for weight loss show a significantly higher rate of continuing the medication at 1 year compared with less effective anti-obesity drugs. However, even among those patients, continuation declines to fewer than half of patients.
    • “We now have effective US Food and Drug Administration-approved anti-obesity medications; [however], this study shows that in a real-world setting, the vast majority of patients discontinued their prescription fills within the first year,” said first author Hamlet Gasoyan, PhD, lead author of the study and a researcher with Cleveland Clinic’s Center for Value-Based Care Research, said in a press statement.
    • “The study was published online today in the journal Obesity.”
  • HR Morning fills us in on cancer benefit trends in 2024 and how employers can support employees fighting cancer.
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “An outbreak of Clade I mpox virus is currently spreading in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), and clinicians should be aware of the potential for transmission from people traveling from the Central African country, the CDC said Thursday in a Health Alert Network advisoryopens in a new tab or window.
    • “Of the two distinct mpox subtypes, Clade I is endemic in Central Africa, and appears to be more transmissible and causes more severe infections than the Clade II subtype. So far, no Clade I mpox infections have been detected in the U.S. during surveillance testing. The current threat for Clade I mpox in travelers remains low, the CDC said, in part because there are no direct commercial flights to the U.S. from the DRC.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Becker’s Payer Issues explains how BCBS plans are using price transparency data.
    • “It’s been nearly two years since payers have been required to publish the costs of their in-network provider rates for covered items and services, and now Blue Cross Blue Shield plans are using that data to create actionable insights for stakeholders across the healthcare system.
    • “Much of that work is being done by Blue Health Intelligence, the data and analytics arm of the BCBS Association that is collectively owned by 17 BCBS affiliates. Becker’s sat down with BHI CEO Bob Darin to learn how Blues plans around the country are utilizing price transparency data, and the major challenges that still lie ahead.”
  • Check out the interview.
  • HR Dive reports,
    • “The U.S. government published its fall regulatory agenda Wednesday, sharing its rulemaking plans for the remainder of 2023 and early 2024.
    • “Of interest to HR professionals are U.S. Department of Labor updates on wage and hour law, workplace safety and retirement plans. Perhaps most notably, the DOL plans to finalize overtime regulations in April 2024. Final regulations for independent contractor classification — under the Fair Labor Standards Act — hang in the balance, as they were slated to be published in November, per the DOL.
    • “Separately, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said it will finalize Pregnant Workers Fairness Act rules in December.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management advises
    • “With the end of the year quickly approaching, HR and benefits leaders have yet one more task to add on to their busy end-of-year checklist: reminding employees about approaching deadlines to use up remaining cash in their health care flexible spending accounts (FSAs). ***
    • “So how should employers share end-of-year news about FSAs? And what should they say?
    • “One of the best ways to remind employees is to send multiple emails during the remainder of the year, Dinich said, adding that if company leaders simply raise the issue in a company meeting, anyone who is on leave or out sick won’t get that reminder.
    • “Make sure to reiterate any terms and conditions within that email and advise on checking which expenses are eligible, so that employees can refer back to this when making claims before the end of the year,” he said. “Also ensure that it’s clear when the expiry date is, as some plans are tied to specific dates rather than defaulting to the end of the year.”

Happy Hanukkah

Hanukkah greeting template. Hand-drawn sketch illustration. Unsplash.

From Washington, DC,

  • The White House posted a fact sheet on the steps that the Administration is taking to lower health and prescription drug costs.
  • Following up on yesterday’s post, BioPharma Dive adds
    • The White House on Thursday took steps to pressure pharmaceutical companies to lower the price of drugs developed with federal funding, backing a plan that would enable the government to sidestep patent protections for those medicines.
    • New draft guidelines published by the National Institutes of Standards and Technology permit government agencies to consider “reasonableness of the price” when evaluating whether to invoke so-called march-in rights, which permit the government to suspend patents when federally funded inventions aren’t made available to the public.
    • The newly published framework gives agencies the power to act “if it appears that the price is extreme, unjustified, and exploitative of a health or safety need.” One example is a “sudden, steep price increase in response to a disaster,” although the initial cost of a drug when it’s launch can also be considered, the guidance said.
    • The agency is seeking further comment on its guidance — the product of an interagency review that began early this year — before publishing a final version.
  • The Senate Finance Committee leadership announced that “the Committee has reported legislation that was marked up in the committee in November. The “Better Mental Health Care, Lower-Cost Drugs, and Extenders Act” addresses a number of important health care priorities in the committee’s jurisdiction.”
    • “The final reported legislative text can be found here. A section by section summary can be found here.”
  • American Hospital News tells us,
    • “The House Energy and Commerce Committee Dec. 6 advanced 19 health care bills, including legislation (H.R. 6364) that would prevent Medicare from publicizing a telehealth provider’s home address when the provider delivers telehealth services from their home. AHA has additionally urged Congress to remove a requirement that these telehealth providers report their home address on Medicare enrollment and claims forms effective Jan. 1, 2025. 
    • “The committee also advanced H.R. 6545, as amended, which included provisions that were part of two other bills that had previously moved through the health subcommittee: H.R. 6366, to extend for one year the Geographic Practice Cost Index floor for physician work under the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule; and H.R. 6369, to extend the 3.5% incentive payment for eligible Advanced Alternative Payment Model participants for the calendar year 2026 period. AHA supports the extension, but would prefer Congress to restore the incentive payment to 5% and remove the legislation’s payment reductions for longstanding participants.”
  • MedPage Today offers insights into a December 5 Senate Finance Committee hearing on drug shortages.
  • The Government Accountability Office issued a report on “improper payments and fraud: how they are related but different.” OPM has focused FEHB carrier attention on this topic in 2023.

In federal benefit news,

  • FedWeek discusses how FEHB premiums compare for retirees versus employees.
  • Govexec reports,
    • “For the third time this year, the federal government’s backlog of pending retirement claims filed by departing federal workers hit a six-year low, as the Office of Personnel Management continues its focus on improving a process that has long pestered agencies and retirees alike.
    • “OPM reported Tuesday that its retirement backlog fell to 15,826 pending cases at the end of November. That’s the second time the inventory fell below 16,000 this year, and the third time this year that the backlog reached a six-year record low, dating back to when it briefly felt to around 14,000 in 2017. OPM’s goal is a “steady state” of 13,000 pending claims at any given time.
    • “In 2023, the retirement backlog has fallen in seven out of 11 months. Last month, the average processing time fell across multiple metrics. Measured on a monthly basis, the average processing time of a retirement claim fell from 73 days in October to 66 last month. And the average processing time so far this fiscal year—or since Oct. 1—fell from 73 at the end of last month to 69 days.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post offers helpful advice on wounds that aren’t healing properly.
  • JAMA Network posts observations on GLP-1 drugs from last October’s Obesity Week meetings. Of note,
    • “Jacinda Nicklas, MD, MPH, gave a talk at the conference showing that females often respond better to newer antiobesity medications than males.
    • “Something that we’re gradually becoming more aware of over time is that GLP-1s, in general, seem to work better in females,” Nicklas, an associate professor of internal medicine at CU School of Medicine who specializes in obesity and women’s health, said in an interview with JAMA.
    • “Nicklas did not present new research, but instead combed through past studies of GLP-1 agonists. She said sex differences haven’t often been separated out in studies and that the majority of participants in the clinical trials are females.
    • “Digging into the data from the STEP trials of semaglutide, she said females had greater weight reduction than males. The same was true in a phase 2 clinical trial of retatrutide for treatment of obesity without type 2 diabetes. Participants who received the highest dose lost an average of 24% of their body weight but females lost much more: about 29% compared with about 20% for males.”
  • MedPage Today tells us that an “Alzheimer’s Blood Test Predicts Who Might Benefit Most From Anti-Amyloid Drugs — Novel two-cutoff approach may reduce need for confirmatory PET scans.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review points out that “U.S. News and World Report released a list December 5 recognizing hundreds of hospitals for maternity care.” Becker’s article includes that list.
  • Beckers Health IT notes,
    • “CVS is planning to release a new mobile healthcare app designed to function as a central hub for its healthcare services.
    • “The app, teased in a video at the company’s Dec. 5 investor meeting, can help consumers manage their prescriptions while providing access to informative health tips. 
    • “Some of the app’s other features include an augmented reality store navigation and a function that allows consumers to schedule appointments at CVS MinuteClinics and CVS-owned Oak Street Health. 
    • “An AI-powered chatbot will also be integrated into the app so consumers can get their questions answered.  
    • “CVS did not detail when the app would be released.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Merck & Co. is ending a late-stage study of the combination of Keytruda and Lynparza in certain lung cancer patients due to an expected failure of the trial.
    • “The Rahway, N.J., drugmaker, which was evaluating Keytruda in combination with maintenance Lynparza in a Phase 3 study in patients with metastatic squamous non-small cell lung cancer, said it is stopping the trial for futility based on the recommendation of an independent data monitoring committee.”

Midweek update

Photo by Hugo Clément on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • STAT New reports,
    • “The White House is throwing its support behind a controversial authority that allows the government to claw back patents for certain high-priced medicines, according to three sources familiar with the plans. It’s an early step that could have major ramifications for the American pharmaceutical industry, depending on whether and how federal officials actually use the authority.
    • “The administration will on Thursday issue a framework for the National Institutes of Health to more broadly use so-called “march-in rights” — a policy that allows it to seize patents from drugmakers whose products rely on federally funded research, according to the three people familiar with the plans. The framework will lay out when the agency might assert this authority, and endorse using a drug’s price in that determination, the sources said. * * *
    • “[T]he framework will likely include a number of conditions limiting its use, two sources said. The public — including pharmaceutical companies — will also get the chance to weigh in on the idea before it is finalized.”
    • Neverthless, the FEHBlog hears the litigation turbobillers revving up.
  • American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “A bipartisan group of senators this week introduced the Protect Rural Seniors’ Access to Care Act, AHA-supported legislation that would prohibit the Health and Human Services Secretary from finalizing a proposed rule on minimum staffing for long-term care facilities.
    • “AHA has urged the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services not to finalize the rule and instead develop more patient- and workforce-centered approaches focused on ensuring a continual process of safe staffing in nursing facilities.
    • “Over 90 organizations have endorsed the bill, introduced by Sens. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., Roger Marshall, R-Kan., Jon Tester, D-Mont., James Lankford, R-Okla., Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., Roger Wicker, R-Miss., Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Angus King, I-Maine.
    • “Rep. Michelle Fischbach, R-Minn., introduced a House version of the bill in September.”
    •  Fingers crossed for the bill to enacted. The HHS rule is short sighted.

In FEHB Open Season news, Govexec, Federal News Network, and FedWeek offer tips for last-minute shoppers as we approach the end of the Federal Benefits Open Season next Monday. What’s more, FedWeek offers advice on protecting your survivor’s access to FEHB coverage.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Covid-19 test positivity rates increased over the summer and then stabilized earlier this fall. They have recently ticked back up, rising 1.2% for the latest week, according to the CDC’s most recent data. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are up about 10% over the same period. 
    • “Scientists and public-health officials say that data understates the current virus spread and point to elevated levels of the virus detected in wastewater. Wastewater levels are an early warning for infections, with levels up nationally since mid-October. * * *
    • [Variant] JN.1 * * * is growing rapidly on a global level, says Jesse Bloom, a virologist and professor at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle. It has quickly spread in countries such as France and England. JN.1 has been detected in the U.S., though only as a blip.
    • Epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, a scientific adviser to the CDC and author of the “Your Local Epidemiologist” newsletter [available on Substack], says that while JN.1 isn’t growing as fast as the original Omicron in the winter of 2021-22, its current rate of growth could fuel a wave in Covid-19 cases. 
    • “If that rate continues, we should see dominance in the U.S. around Christmastime, which means that it would really jump-start a wave around New Year’s,” she says.
    • The good news, says Bloom, is that research indicates the new booster—developed to protect against the XBB variants that were dominant this summer—appears to work for the more mutated newer variants, too.
  • Here’s a link to the National Cancer Institute’s research newsletter.
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “More than a third of mothers — around 40 million women — are affected by lingering health issues after giving birth, according to a new study published Dec. 6 in The Lancet Global Health.
    • “However, many of the issues they report experiencing after giving birth extend long after they stop receiving postpartum care, which is where the major issues lie, according to the researchers.
    • “The authors found that after giving birth, 32% of women report low back pain, 19% experience anal incontinence, 11% experience perineal pain, 8-31% are affected by urinary incontinence, and around 11% are affected by secondary infertility issues. Mental health issues like anxiety and depression are also pervasive.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Bloomberg reports,
    • Eli Lilly & Co.’s new weight-loss drug Zepbound is now available at US pharmacies, offering an alternative to rival medications like Novo Nordisk A/S’s Wegovy as supply issues persist. 
    • “Zepbound was approved by the US Food and Drug Administrationin early November as a treatment for people with obesity. Patients with a prescription from their doctor will now be able to get the drug, which was added to the list of available drugs for Express Scripts and Cigna Healthcare this month, Lilly said in a statement Tuesday.”
  • BioPharma Dive points out,
    • “AbbVie is restocking its drug pipeline in a big way, announcing Wednesday an $8.7 billion deal to buy neuroscience-focused Cerevel Therapeutics, just days after agreeing to a similar sized acquisition of the cancer biotechnology company ImmunoGen.
    • “Per the deal, AbbVie will pay $45 per share of Cerevel, which is developing medicines for schizophrenia, dementia and Parkinson’s disease. The buyout price is 22% higher than Cerevel stock’s closing price Wednesday and 73% above what shares closed at Friday, before rumors of a pending deal emerged. 
    • “Both companies’ boards of directors have agreed to the acquisition, which they expect will close sometime around the middle of next year.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Elevance Health’s pharmacy benefit manager is launching a new digital pharmacy that aims to make it easier for members to track their prescriptions.
    • “CarelonRx Pharmacy will launch on Jan. 1, and members will be able to connect with pharmacists via text, chat or phone around the clock. The platform will also allow them to check the price of medications for comparison and track their prescriptions throughout the order process, similar to how a customer may follow a pizza order.
    • “The pharmacy will also use push notifications to keep members up-to-date on their prescriptions and will allow them to use text messaging to connect directly with representatives.”
  • and
    • “Many of the past year’s buzziest topics and omnipresent struggles will likely rear their heads as major talking points across 2024, per the year-ahead predictions of Deloitte’s healthcare industry heads.
    • “A disruptive pandemic, rapid digital transformation and mounting cost pressures have taken their toll on the industry’s decisionmakers, Deloitte’s healthcare sector leader Tina Wheeler and senior manager of its health solutions center Wendy Gerhardt wrote in a Wednesday outlook writeup.
    • “The pair highlighted a recent annual survey of 60 executives that found that only 3% of health system executives and 7% of health plan executives had a “positive” outlook for the coming year—down from the respective 15% and 40% of the prior year’s survey.
    • “However, there are some bright spots to consider as the industry undergoes convergence,” which the authors described as “the disruption of traditional health care stakeholders, entrance of new players like retailers and tech companies and the reassembly of a new ecosystem that creates opportunities.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence lets us know,
    • “Cardiovascular, diabetes, and obesity treatments are a critical part of women’s health, and employers can take steps to ensure that women have access to information and care related to their hearts, a flipbook from Northeast Business Group on Health (NEBGH) emphasized.
    • “With women comprising more than half of today’s workforce, employers are making women’s health and well-being a top priority, and rightfully so,” Candice Sherman, chief of executive officer of NEBGH, said in the press release.
    • “Cardiovascular disease in women is underdiagnosed and undertreated. Employers can play an important role in raising awareness and educating employees about heart disease and risk factors like diabetes and obesity as well as providing wellness and benefit programs that support women’s health. We developed this guide to give employers a tool to develop ways to improve the overall heart health of their workforce.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • STAT News informs us,
    • “The Senate health care committee will consider a sweeping bill next week meant to combat the opioid epidemic, according to four lobbyists and a congressional aide familiar with the legislation. 
    • “The proposal would reauthorize a number of programs first created by the SUPPORT Act, an addiction-focused bill that Congress first passed in 2018. Many of those programs’ authorizations expired earlier this year, however, leading addiction treatment advocates to fret that lawmakers — and specifically the committee’s chairman, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) — no longer view the issue as a priority.    
    • “If passed, the legislation would mark Capitol Hill’s first major action this year on the addiction crisis. Current data shows that roughly 110,000 Americans are dying of drug overdoses each year. Roughly 85,000 of those overdoses involve opioids.” 
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “Today, United States Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is launching the 5-for-5 Connection Challenge, calling on Americans to take five actions over five days to build more connection in their lives. Dr. Murthy recently issued this challenge to students across the country on his “We Are Made to Connect” College Tour, which concluded just last week. Now, as we enter the holiday season, the 5-for-5 Connection Challenge aims to inspire people of all ages to build, strengthen, and prioritize their relationships.
    • “For the next two weeks, from December 4th – December 15th, the Surgeon General will encourage people to take five actions over five days that express gratitude, offer support to, or ask for help from people in their lives. These types of actions are outlined in the Surgeon General’s Advisory on Our Epidemic of Loneliness – PDF as some of the ways that people can catalyze social connection. As outlined in the Advisory, social connection can advance physical, mental, and cognitive health, and it is even associated with a decreased risk of mortality.”
  • MedTech Dive tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration is evaluating the potential for plastic syringes made in China to suffer problems such as leaks and breakages.
    • “Officials began the investigation after receiving information about quality issues associated with “several Chinese manufacturers of syringes” that made them concerned that some devices “may not provide consistent and adequate quality or performance.”
    • “The FDA is advising consumers and healthcare providers to check where syringes are made and “consider using syringes not manufactured in China, if possible.” The advice applies to plastic syringes used for injecting fluids into, or withdrawing fluids from, the body.”

In FEHB Open Season news, Govexec offers helpful, last-minute advice from Kevin Moss.

From the public health and medicare research front,

  • U.S. News and World Report points out,
    • “After a period of limited change, COVID-19 activity is increasing again especially in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions,” the CDC said in a report published Friday.
    • “Federal health officials are likely watching the increase given that they expect a “moderate” winter wave of coronavirus and this could be the start of it. Holiday gatherings and travel are also typically followed by an increase in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.
    • “COVID-19 vaccination rates, meanwhile, have been disappointing for many.
    • “CDC Director Mandy Cohen told Congress this week that about 16% of Americans have gotten the updated COVID-19 vaccine.
    • “That’s not enough,” Cohen said.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “So far this year, the CDC estimates there have been at least 1.8 million illnesses, 17,000 hospitalizations, and 1,100 deaths from flu in the U.S. 
    • “Influenza A continues to be the dominant strain in circulation, making up around 82% of cases, while influenza B is only accounting for around 18%. 
    • “Louisiana and South Carolina are still reporting the highest levels of flu activity in the country. 
    • “Nine states are experiencing high activity levels, but less than the two states above, including: California, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Colorado, Florida and Tennessee. 
    • “Cases are also high in New York City and Puerto Rico.”
  • The Journal of the American Medical Association presented the following study results:
    • Question  Is smoking still decreasing among US adults and do the trends vary by age, income, and race and ethnicity?
    • Findings  In this cross-sectional study of 353 555 adults responding to the 2011 to 2022 National Health Interview Surveys, adults younger than 40 years had dramatic declines in smoking prevalence during the last decade, especially among those with higher incomes. In contrast, relatively slow declines were observed among adults aged 40 to 64 years, with no decrease in smoking among those 65 years or older.
    • Meaning  These findings suggest that the precipitous decline in smoking among younger adults should be maintained, but that additional efforts are required to further reduce smoking in older adults.”
  • The American Medical Association explains “What doctors wish patients knew to improve their mental health.”
  • Per Endocrinology Advisor, “Decreased mortality risk is associated with concomitant reductions in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and body weight among patients with type 2 diabetes, according to study results published in Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare profiles ten women of influence in U.S. healthcare. Check it out.
  • BioPharma Dive reports
    • “Roche on Monday agreed to acquire biotechnology company Carmot Therapeutics in a deal that bulks up the Swiss pharmaceutical giant’s pipeline with a group of weight loss drugs in early clinical testing.
    • “Roche will pay $2.7 billion upfront for the Berkeley, California-based Carmot. Roche could owe as much as $400 million more in future payments to Carmot shareholders, among them The Column Group and RA Capital, if certain milestones are met. The companies expect the acquisition to close next year.
    • “The deal hands Roche a trio of drugs in human testing for obesity, an area of pharmaceutical research that has been catalyzed by the success of weight loss medicines like Wegovy and Zepbound. Their progress has fueled a gold rush among large drugmakers, a number of which are either advancing in-house medicines or inking deals to acquire new prospects.”
  • and
    • “The Food and Drug Administration granted conditional approval to Eli Lilly’s oral cancer drug Jaypirca in two types of blood cancer, expanding its use from a rare type of lymphoma to people with leukemia and lymphoma patients who have previously received two other treatments, the company said Friday.
    • “Jaypirca is the fourth of a group of drugs called BTK inhibitors, a class that includes AbbVie and Johnson & Johnson’s Imbruvica and AstraZeneca’s Calquence. It gained approval earlier this year and posted $42 million in sales through Sept. 30.
    • “With this approval, Jaypirca can now be used in chronic lymphocytic leukemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma after patients have been treated with AbbVie and Roche’s Venclexta and another BTK inhibitor. Lilly said a Phase 3 trial meant to confirm Jaypirca’s accelerated approval has already met its primary goal.”
  • HR Dive discusses “Why EAPs go unused despite growing mental health awareness; Many factors contribute to the historic underutilization of employee assistance programs, despite their value as an access point to quality care.”
  • Medscape offers an infographic on how doctors grade their EHR systems while MedCity News explains how improved coding quality by healthcare providers can prevent denials and improve cash flow.
  • Health Payer Intelligence adds,
    • “Payers are investing in healthcare IT resources to support cost optimization and improve member experience, according to a study from EY-Parthenon and KLAS Research.
    • “As payers face operational and financial pressures, they are turning to healthcare IT solutions for help. Researchers sought to understand what strategies payers prioritize, how much they spend on healthcare IT resources, and what future investments look like.
    • “The study findings reflect responses from over 100 executives across payer entities serving commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid populations. Around 70 percent of respondents were traditional payers; the remaining were provider-sponsored, third-party administrators, and management services organizations.”
  • According to Healthcare Dive,
    • “A merger between major health insurers Cigna and Humana would go through the wringer of an intense antitrust review, but could come out finalized, experts say.
    • “Though, to receive the regulatory green light, a combined company would probably have to emerge looking different from the Cigna and Humana of today. * * *
    • “Gaining regulatory approval — especially if a challenge further ties up the process in the courts — could set a deal’s finalization back by a year or more. But, due to a lack of direct competition between the two, Cigna and Humana could be allowed to combine, creating a healthcare powerhouse with roughly $300 billion in annual revenue.”
  • and
    • “For-profit hospital chain HCA Healthcare’s Houston affiliate announced last week it completed its acquisition of 11 free-standing emergency departments from SignatureCare Emergency Centers. 
    • “HCA Houston Healthcare, which operates a network of 13 hospitals and nine outpatient surgery centers, now has 26 free-standing emergency departments in the area in addition to hospital-based emergency rooms, according to a Friday press release.
    • “The SignatureCare centers will be re-branded to HCA Houston ER 24/7. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
  • and
    • “Rural hospital chain Lifepoint Health and Ascension Saint Thomas announced a joint venture last week to co-own Highpoint Health, a four-hospital system in Tennessee currently operated by Brentwood, Tennessee-based Lifepoint.
    • “The hospitals and care sites will be co-branded with Ascension Saint Thomas, but will be majority-owned and operated by Lifepoint, according to the release. The companies declined to comment on the cost of the buy-in.
    • “The health systems have partnered before. Ascension Saint Thomas partnered with Kindred Rehabilitation Services, a Lifepoint business unit, in 2022 to jointly own Ascension Saint Thomas Rehabilitation Hospital in Nashville.” 

Weekend Update

From Washington, DC,

  • The Federal Benefits Open Season ends a week from tomorrow.
  • KFF News provides a helpful overview of the recently proposed Affordable Care Act notice of benefit and payment parameters.
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “A small group of Republican senators on Friday called on President Biden to ban travel from China to protect against an outbreak of respiratory illnesses in children there, even as scientists and global and American health officials said there were no signs of a threatening new pathogen.
    • “Instead, those experts said, the evidence so far pointed to a surge of age-old infectious agents such as influenza, driven by the colder weather and China’s emergence from stringent Covid lockdowns. The World Health Organization said last week that China had shared data about its outbreak, including laboratory results from infected children, that did not show any unusual pathogens.
    • “Dr. Mandy Cohen, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, echoed that assessment on Friday. She said American officials had also been in touch with Chinese authorities, academic experts and health workers.
    • “What we have all been able to ascertain is that there is no novel pathogen,” she said. “This is all related to upticks of known viruses and bacteria in their pediatric population.”

From the public health front,

  • NPR Shots tells us,
    • “There’s just not much that’s very effective for treating the common cold,” said Dr. Lauren Eggert, clinical assistant professor in the Pulmonary Allergy and Critical Care Division at Stanford University. * * *
    • “She opens a database called UpToDate, which physicians use as a resource when they want to see the summary of evidence for medications targeting specific concerns. The conclusions for cold and flu remedies are disconcerting:
      • “Antihistamines, vitamins and herbal remedies are deemed ineffective.
      • “Cough syrups, decongestants, expectorants, and zinc may have minimal or uncertain benefits.
      • “Nasal sprays and analgesics like Tylenol and ibuprofen may be effective.”
  • The American Medical Association lets us know what doctors wish their patients knew about Covid oral anti-virals, Paxlovid and molnupiravir.
  • Medscape points out,
    • Breast cancer has a worse prognosis when diagnosed during pregnancy or postpartum. Methods for early detection are needed, as evidenced every day in the multidisciplinary unit for treating pregnancy-associated breast cancer, which operates within the Breast Unit at the Vall d’Hebron University Hospital in Barcelona, Spain.
    • “The team working in this field is led by Cristina Saura, PhD, who is also head of the Breast Cancer Group at the Vall d’Hebron Institute of Oncology (VHIO). The results of a study recently published in Cancer Discovery show, for the first time, that breast milk from breast cancer patients contains circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) that can be detected by a liquid biopsy of the milk.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec tells us,
    • “A House panel on Wednesday hosted another spirited hearing over the role of telework and remote work at federal agencies, with Democrats and agency officials extolling the practices’ impact in improving productivity to skeptical GOP lawmakers.
    • “The House Oversight and Accountability Committee’s subcommittee on government operations and the federal workforce held its long-awaited second hearing on federal agencies’ “post-pandemic” telework policies. In September, the subcommittee heard testimony from HR leaders at agencies that made a “good faith effort” to comply with the panel’s information requests on telework, and Republican committee leaders suggested Wednesday’s hearing was designed to hear from agencies whose submissions were found wanting.
    • “It is difficult for me to understand why [these agencies’] responses looked like nothing more than them phoning it in,” said Subcommittee Chairman Pete Sessions, R-Texas. “This is a serious effort by the subcommittee. It has produced questions across both sides of the aisle. Either these agencies simply do not know the answers to some or all of the questions asked, or perhaps they just don’t want to share it.”
  • The American Hospital News reports,
    • The Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor and the Treasury will give healthcare providers and insurers initiating a payment dispute through Jan. 16 under the No Surprises Act’s Independent Dispute Resolution process 10 business days to select a certified IDR entity after initiating the dispute, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced Nov 29. 
    • “Following the reopening of the Federal IDR portal on October 6, 2023, to certain new single disputes, including disputes involving bundled payment arrangements, but excluding disputes related to air ambulance services, the Departments extended the certified IDR entity selection timeline to 10 business days until November 3, 2023,” CMS explained. “Following the expiration of that extension and the return to the three-business-day timeline, numerous disputing parties have requested that the timeline temporarily return to 10 business days. Accordingly, the Departments are announcing that disputing parties will have 10 business days to select a certified IDR entity for all disputes through January 16, 2024. This extension will be provided automatically and does not require a request by disputing parties.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force released for public comment a draft research plan for assessing the value of screening for HIV. The public comment period ends on January 3, 2024.

In FEHB Open Season news, Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, discusses the Medicare Advantage plans that may FEHB carriers have integrated into their FEHB plans.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times looks back at the Omicron variant of Covid which has been with us for two years now. While the earlier commanding Covid variants caused dangerous lower respiratory infections, Omicron causes more manageable upper respiratory infections.
  • Medscape informs us about encouraging developments that may lead to long Covid tests.
    • “[A] new preprint study suggests that the elevation of certain immune system proteins are a commonality in long COVID patients and identifying them may be an accurate way to diagnose the condition.
    • “Researchers at Cardiff University School of Medicine in Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom, tracked 166 patients, 79 of whom had been diagnosed with long COVID and 87 who had not. All participants had recovered from a severe bout of acute COVID-19.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “The rosiest of revenue projections for treatments like Wegovy and Zepbound rely on a future in which their use goes beyond diabetes and obesity and into Alzheimer’s disease and substance use disorders. But GLP-1 drugs’ pathway to pharmaceutical ubiquity is a little cloudier than it might seem.
    • “Take for example alcohol use disorder, or AUD. This week, a case study published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry reported that six patients diagnosed with AUD received Wegovy for weight loss and experienced significant reductions in their symptoms, sparking more interest in the potential of GLP-1 treatments in addiction. According to Leerink analyst David Risinger, there are at least six other mid-stage studies testing whether Novo Nordisk’s drug can treat AUD or nicotine dependence, each reading out in the coming years.
    • “The problem is that not one of those studies is sponsored by Novo, which has been noncommittal about running the costly, large-scale trials that would be required to win FDA approval in addiction. Physicians could prescribe a GLP-1 drug off-label, but manufacturers are already struggling to meet demand for patients with diabetes or obesity, leaving little supply for speculative indications.”
  • MedPage Today points out,
    • “Younger onset age of coronary heart disease was tied to higher risks of incident all-cause dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, and vascular dementia, a large prospective cohort study in Great Britain showed.
    • “Each 10-year decrease in coronary heart disease onset age was associated with a 25% increased risk of all-cause dementia, a 29% increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease, and a 22% increased risk of vascular dementia (all P<0.001), reported Fanfan Zheng, PhD, of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College in Beijing, and co-authors in the Journal of the American Heart Association.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The United States faces a serious shortage of primary care physicians for many reasons, but one, in particular, is inescapable: compensation.
    • “Substantial disparities between what primary care physicians earn relative to specialists like orthopedists and cardiologists can weigh into medical students’ decisions about which field to choose. Plus, the system that Medicare and other health plans use to pay doctors generally places more value on doing procedures like replacing a knee or inserting a stent than on delivering the whole-person, long-term healthcare management that primary care physicians provide.
    • “As a result of those pay disparities, and the punishing workload typically faced by primary care physicians, more new doctors are becoming specialists, often leaving patients with fewer choices for primary care.
    • “There is a public out there that is dissatisfied with the lack of access to a routine source of care,” said Christopher Koller, president of the Milbank Memorial Fund, a foundation that focuses on improving population health and health equity. “That’s not going to be addressed until we pay for it.”
  • and
    • “Renton, Washington-based Providence’s operations tallied $310 million of net losses (-4.3% operating margin) during the third quarter and now sit $857.3 million in the hole (-4% operating margin) through nine months, according to filings and other financial information released this week by the nonprofit.
    • “Providence’s leadership was quick to highlight the system’s performance improvements relative to 2022, when the Catholic organization had posted a nearly $1.1 billion operating loss (-5.6% operating margin) across nine months.
    • “Rising demand, reduced length of stay, lower premium pay and better workforce retention and recruitment each helped Providence chip away at the losses, the organization wrote in an accompanying release, though lingering expense pressures and revenue roadblocks still held operations below break even.”
  • and
    • “The Cleveland Clinic logged another negative operating margin and nine figures of net losses during the three months ended Sept. 30, according to unaudited financial statements released this week.
    • “The nonprofit reported a $14.9 million operating loss (-0.4% operating margin) for the third quarter of 2023.
    • “This was an improvement over the same period in 2022, when the system logged a $28.3 million operating loss (-0.9% operating margin), and a narrow increase over the $21.4 million operating loss (-0.6% operating margin) of the immediately preceding quarter.
    • “In commentary accompanying the results, Cleveland Clinic’s management highlighted a 10.1% year-over-year rise in third-quarter operating revenue that outpaced the 9.6% bump in operating expenses.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues notes,
    • “Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona is looking to the payer-provider example set by Kaiser Permanente as the Phoenix-based company expands its primary care subsidiary Prosano Health Solutions, the Phoenix Business Journal reported Nov. 20.
    • “BCBSAZ opened its first Prosano facility in Maricopa County this year, with several more locations opening in the Phoenix area in 2024. Prosano launched in January for BCBSAZ employees, with 1,800 employees and their dependents enrolling. 
    • “A new health plan, the BlueSignature Prosano PPO plan, will be offered to employer groups in 2024 and provide access to the Prosano care centers. The new care centers offer access to a primary care team, behavioral health practitioners, lab services, same-day appointments, virtual options, and a selection of the most needed prescriptions. An expansion to Tucson is planned for 2025.”
  • MedPage lets us know,
    • “Optum Health now counts 90,000 doctors — some 10% of the physician workforce — as employees or affiliates, company leadership announced.
    • “The company, which is a part of UnitedHealth Group, said during an investor conference on Wednesday that it acquired or hired nearly 20,000 doctors in 2023 alone, according to reports. It also counts an additional 40,000 advanced practice clinicians among its ranks.
    • “The figures, reported by Amar Desai, MD, CEO of UnitedHealth’s Optum Health division, make Optum Health the largest employer of physicians in the U.S., and UnitedHealth is the country’s largest private health insurer.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “AbbVie will pay $10 billion for the biotech firm Immunogen, the company said Thursday, acquiring an approved treatment for ovarian cancer and buying into a burgeoning area of oncology.
    • “Under the agreement, AbbVie will pay $31.26 per share in cash for Immunogen, a nearly 100% premium to the company’s recent trading price. Central to the deal, expected to close in the middle of next year, is Elahere, an Immunogen product that won Food and Drug Administration approval for advanced ovarian cancer in 2022.
    • “Elahere is among a surging class of cancer medicines called antibody-drug conjugates, or ADCs, which are designed to deliver a targeted dose of chemotherapy directly to tumor cells while sparing healthy tissues. AbbVie’s acquisition is the latest multibillion-dollar deal in the space, following Merck’s $22 billion agreement with ADC specialist Daiichi Sankyo and Pfizer’s $43 billion buyout of Seagen earlier this year.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Senate Finance Committee announced,
    • Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., will convene a committee hearing on Tuesday, December 5, 2023 titled “Drug Shortages: Examining Supply Challenges, Impacts, and Policy Solutions from a Federal Health Program Perspective.” The hearing will take place at 10:00 a.m. in Room 215 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building.
  • The American Hospital Association News notes,
    • “The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health Nov. 29 held a hearing  to explore how medical devices and hospitals are using artificial intelligence and what Congress should consider as AI in health care evolves.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration’s top scientist Namandjé Bumpus will assume the role of principal deputy commissioner when longtime agency leader Janet Woodcock retires from that role in early 2024, according to an announcement Thursday.
    • “Among Bumpus’ priorities when she assumes the role will be “creating a new model” for the FDA’s Office of Regulatory Affairs, the branch that conducts inspections, monitors drug imports, and issues recalls, market withdrawals and safety alerts, Commissioner Robert Califf said in a memo to agency staff.”
  • Sequoia reminds us,
    • “Beginning in 2024, group health plans and carriers will be required to include all covered items and services in their self-service internet-based price comparison tool, as required under the Transparency in Coverage (TIC) Final Rules.
    • “As background, plans must provide participants and beneficiaries with out-of-pocket cost estimates via a user-friendly online self-service tool (and by paper upon request). The intent of this requirement is to provide individuals with real-time cost-sharing information to support making informed health care decisions. Implemented in two phases, the first phase of the price comparison tool required the first 500 items and services (as defined by the DOL) to be published in the tool effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, and the second phase will require all other services covered by the plan to be included in the tool effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2024.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control announced,
    • CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics released two reports today examining provisional mortality data from 2022. While analysis shows the number and rate of suicides increased for the second year in a row from, overall life expectancy at birth increased by just over a year. This increase regains some of the 2.4 years of life expectancy lost between 2019 and 2021.
    • The findings are featured in two new reports, “Provisional Life Expectancy Estimates for 2022” and “Provisional Estimates of Suicide by Demographic Characteristics: United States, 2022. * * *
    • “The increase of 1.1 years in life expectancy from 2021 to 2022 primarily resulted from decreases in mortality due to COVID-19, heart disease, unintentional injuries, cancer, and homicide. Declines in COVID-19 mortality accounted for approximately 84% of the increase in life expectancy. * * *
    • “The percentage increase in the number of suicides was greater for females (4%) than males (2%), but the provisional 2022 suicide number for males (39,255) was nearly four times that of females (10,194).”
  • Health Day points out,
    • “The prevalence of a highly mutated COVID variant has tripled in the past two weeks, new government data shows.
    • “Now, nearly 1 in 10 new COVID cases are fueled by the BA.2.86 variant, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Monday.
    • “The variant is spreading the fastest in the Northeast: Just over 13% of cases in the New York and New Jersey region are blamed on BA.2.86. * * *
    • “So far, preliminary data on the variant suggests it does not trigger more severe illness than previous variants, the WHO said in a recent risk evaluation, but the international agency still noted a recent and “substantial rise” in BA.2.86 cases.
    • “The CDC also noted that BA.2.86 variant poses a “low” public health risk.”
  • and
    • “Personal trainers can help people increase their strength and their fitness.
    • “Could a “brain coach” be just as useful in preventing Alzheimer’s’ disease?
    • “A new study suggests that personalized health and lifestyle changes can delay or even prevent memory loss for older adults at high risk of Alzheimer’s or dementia.
    • “People who received personal coaching experienced a 74% boost in their thinking and memory tests compared with those who didn’t receive such attention.
    • “This is the first personalized intervention, focusing on multiple areas of cognition, in which risk factor targets are based on a participant’s risk profile, preferences and priorities, which we think may be more effective than a one-size-fits-all approach,” said co-lead researcher Dr. Kristine Yaffe, vice chair of research in psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF).”
  • Healio informs us,
    • “One in four adults relied solely on medications to manage chronic pain, highlighting an opportunity to increase use of nonpharmacologic therapies, particularly in men, older adults and those with public insurance, according to researchers.
    • “Findings from this study contribute important information about use of over-the-counter pain relievers, prescriptions nonopioids and exercise, which were found to be some of the most common pain management therapies used by adults with chronic pain,” Stephanie Michaela Rikard, PhD, a health scientist at the CDC, told Healio.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Cigna and Humana are in talks for a combination that would create a new powerhouse in the health insurance industry.
    • “The companies are discussing a stock and cash deal that could be finalized by the end of the year, assuming the talks don’t fall apart, according to people familiar with the matter.”
  • and
    • “A law designed to protect patients from surprise medical bills is contributing to the financial distress of some medical-service providers, which say lengthy billing disputes and payment delays with insurers are hurting their ability to stay afloat. 
    • “The No Surprises Act, which took effect last year, aims to protect patients from surprise medical bills from out-of-network healthcare providers when there are disagreements over reimbursements between insurers and providers. Previously, providers often billed patients to make up for the amounts insurers were unwilling to pay. 
    • “Numerous healthcare businesses, some owned by private equity, said the legislation is contributing to delays and reductions in payments by insurance companies, hurting their cash flows and earnings. A handful of major healthcare-service providers already have filed for chapter 11 protection this year, specifically naming the law as a major reason for their bankruptcies. These include physician-staffing companies Envision Healthcare and American Physician Partners as well as helicopter-ambulance operator Air Methods.”
  • and
    • “There are five tech companies valued at over $1 trillion. In healthcare, the closest contender is  Eli Lilly
    • .”This year it became the first big pharmaceutical to surpass a market capitalization of $500 billion thanks to the popularity of its obesity and diabetes medications and, to a lesser extent, its experimental Alzheimer’s drug. But hanging over Lilly and rival  Novo Nordisk is a reality that puts the brakes on big pharma’s ascent: the patent cliff.
    • “There are several reasons why there isn’t a big pharma company in the trillion-dollar club, but the boom-and-bust nature of drug development is high on the list. Unlike Apple, which hypothetically can make huge margins off the iPhone for perpetuity, U.S. drug companies have a limited period from which to profit from their innovation. As their patents expire and generic competitors enter the market, sales plunge. Pharma executives, overly focused on short-term growth, don’t often prepare their companies for that.”
  • FEHBlog notes on the Journal articles,
    • Cigna and Humana are undoubtedly aware of the firebreathing nature of anti-trust enforcers in the federal government. Cigna is focused on the commercial market while Humana currently is pulling out of that market to focus on government business. Time will tell.
    • Out-of-network doctors and air ambulance companies flying the pirate flag can avoid No Surprises Act problems by joining health plan networks.
    • Lilly’s recent growth has been impressive.
  • Reuters tells us,
    • “UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday forecast 2024 profit broadly in line with Wall Street expectations, indicating that medical costs are likely to remain elevated for the health insurance giant.
    • “The healthcare sector has this year seen a recovery in demand, especially among older patients who started returning to doctors’ clinics and hospitals for procedures they had delayed during the COVID-19 pandemic.”
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Healthcare insurers could get a slight respite from rising medical costs next year. Global costs are expected to rise 9.9% year over year in 2024, down from a 10.7% increase in 2023, according to a new survey from consultancy WTW released on Tuesday.
    • “However, that decline might not last long. Nearly three-fifths of insurers surveyed anticipate higher medical cost growth over the next three years as new medical technologies, overuse of care and members’ poor health habits drive increased spend.
    • “Many insurers told WTW they are leaning on deductibles, contracted provider networks and telehealth options to manage costs. Others are excluding coverage for healthcare such as fertility treatments or gender re-affirming care.”
  • Beckers Hospital CFO Report identifies the states with the most rural hospital closures.
    • “Since 2005, 104 rural hospitals have closed and more than 600 additional rural hospitals — 30% of all rural hospitals in the U.S. — are at risk of closing in the near future, according to the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review calls attention to this development,
    • “Mayo Clinic’s board of trustees has given the green light to an initiative dubbed “Bold. Forward. Unbound.,” which involves a $5 billion redesign of Mayo Clinic’s downtown Rochester, Minn., campus. 
    • “The redesign will introduce new facilities that incorporate innovative care approaches and digital technologies, according to a Nov. 28 news release from Mayo, with a pivotal element of these being specialized “neighborhoods.” According to the health system, the neighborhood concept will offer patients a centralized location for all required services related to their specific condition, eliminating the need for navigating between different departments.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Accountable care organizations do not positively influence treatment and outcomes for chronic mental health conditions for Medicare patients, according to a study in Health Affairs.
    • “For patients newly enrolled in ACOs, they saw no improvements in their depression and anxiety symptoms after one year. These patients were also 24% less likely to have their depression or anxiety treated than patients unenrolled in ACOs, and 9.8% less likely to have an evaluation and management visit for depression or anxiety with a primary care clinician.
    • “Since mental health conditions in Medicare patients are often underdiagnosed and undertreated, some have suspected that mental health illnesses are ideal conditions for ACOs to handle, but the study found that there were no significant differences in any other measures of mental health treatment.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review also names the winners of Forbes 30 under 30 in healthcare for 2024.


 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call offers a preview of Congress’s actions over the next month, after which point the first session of this 118th Congress will come to a close.
  • Bloomberg provides an update on ongoing efforts to revamp the Nation’s organ transplant system. Here are the highlights:
    • “First contract bid solicitations from HHS expected this fall, and
    • “Multiple vendors to run transplant system for first time.”
  • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services published in today’s Federal Register corrections to its Section 111 reporting civil monetary penalty rule which was issued on October 11, 2023. CMS asserts that the corrections fix “typographical and technical errors in the final rule, and it does not make substantive changes to the policies or the implementing regulations that were adopted in the final rule.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “As part of the inaugural meeting of the White House Council on Supply Chain Resilience, President Biden and Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra today announced new efforts to bolster the domestic supply chain for essential medicines and medical countermeasures.
    • “President Biden will issue a Presidential Determination broadening HHS’ authorities under Title III of the Defense Production Act (DPA) to enable investment in domestic manufacturing of essential medicines, medical countermeasures, and other critical inputs that have been deemed by the President as essential to the national defense. In addition, HHS will designate a new Supply Chain Resilience and Shortage Coordinator for efforts to strengthen the resilience of critical medical product and food supply chains, and to address related shortages.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “approv[ing] Ogsiveo (nirogacestat) tablets for adult patients with progressing desmoid tumors who require systemic treatment. Ogsiveo is the first drug to be approved for the treatment of patients with desmoid tumors, a rare subtype of soft tissue sarcomas.
    • “Desmoid tumors are non-cancerous but can be locally aggressive. The tumors may invade into surrounding structures and organs, resulting in pain, issues with being able to move, and decreased quality of life. Although surgical removal has historically been the treatment of choice, there is a high risk that the tumor will return or that other health challenges will occur after removal; therefore, systemic therapies (cancer treatment targeting the entire body) are being increasingly evaluated in clinical trials.” 
  • The HHS Inspector General concluded that “The Risk of Misuse and Diversion of Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder in Medicare Part D Continues to Appear Low: 2022.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The U.S. Postal Service is planning to hire just 10,000 temporary employees during the current holiday season as part of a new approach that management has acknowledged comes with some risks. 
    • “The seasonal hiring marks a 64% reduction from the employees brought on in 2022 during what USPS calls its “peak season” when the agency made 28,000 temporary hires. The agency had said it would bring on just 20,000 seasonal workers that year, but a recent USPS inspector general report found it reached a higher tally. 
    • “This will mark the second consecutive year in which the Postal Service significantly reduces its seasonal hiring. In 2021, USPS added 45,000 non-permanent staff for the holiday rush. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy has said additions to the permanent, career workforce has lessened the need for such a surge. In the last two years, the agency has converted 150,000 employees from part-time workers to full-time, career personnel.”
  • Federal News Network informs us,
    • “Participants in [OPM’s] Thrift Savings Plan felt less content with the TSP this year, according to the latest results of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board’s annual satisfaction survey.
    • “Currently, 82% of TSP participants are satisfied with the plan, compared with an 87% satisfaction rate in 2022, the board’s survey of tens of thousands of TSP participants showed.
    • “The slumping satisfaction scores may not come as a surprise after the TSP’s tumultuous transition to a new recordkeeper in June 2022. The 2023 survey, conducted between March and May of this year, was the first time the major update was reflected in the annual participant satisfaction survey.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Precision Vaccinations points out,
    • “The World Health Organization (WHO) today reported that the multi-country mpox outbreak continues at a low transmission level in the European Region and the Americas.
    • “The 30th WHO Situation Report, published on November 25, 2023, offers insights regarding the latest epidemiology and a particular focus on the ongoing and evolving epidemiology of mpox in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).
    • “The WHO confirmed that from January 2022 through October 31, 2023, a cumulative total of 91,788 laboratory-confirmed cases of mpox, including 167 deaths, have been reported from 116 countries/territories/areas.
    • “The countries that have reported the highest cumulative number of mpox cases are the United States (30,771), Brazil (10,967), and Spain (7,647).”
  • Healio notes,
    • “Eating disorder claims in the United States rose 65% as a percentage of all medical claims over the last 5 years, according to a report from FAIR Health, a health care claims repository.
    • “Researchers at FAIR Health evaluated more than 43 billion private health care claims records to investigate trends in eating disorders from 2018 to 2022 based on regional and national levels, demographic and socioeconomic factors and other health conditions. * * *
    • “Key takeaways:
      • “Patients aged 14 to 18 years accounted for most eating disorder claims in 2022.
      • “Overall, 72% of patients with eating disorders were diagnosed with at least one co-occurring mental illness.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro helped patients lose weight more effectively than Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic, according to a preprint study that included more than 40,000 patients. 
    • “The research evaluated 41,223 EHRs of overweight or obese patients taking Mounjaro (tirzepatide) or Ozempic (semaglutide) for Type 2 diabetes. The cohort was restricted to patients with available weight data and those who had not received a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist prior to May 2022.
    • “Although about 77% of the patients took Ozempic, those who took Mounjaro “were significantly more likely to achieve 5%, 10% and 15% weight loss and experience larger reductions in weight at 3, 6, and 12 months,” the study found.
    • “Truveta, a healthcare data company that collects EHR information from more than 30 systems, conducted the research. It is the first real-world comparative effectiveness study between Mounjaro and Ozempic, Truveta said in a Nov. 27 news release.” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “The inflammation-targeting therapy Dupixent succeeded in a Phase 3 trial in patients with the chronic lung disease COPD, its developers said Monday, results that could propel the blockbuster medicine into a massive new market.
    • “Dupixent, which is jointly developed by Sanofi and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, has already racked up approvals for several indications, including asthma, atopic dermatitis, and eosinophilic esophagitis. If approved for COPD, it would be the first biologic treatment for the condition.
    • “The trial, dubbed Notus, was the second Phase 3 trial for Dupixent in COPD, with the companies announcing similarly positive results from the Boreas trial earlier this year. The full data from Boreas were published in the New England Journal of Medicine.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Employee Benefit News offers tips on PBM contracting.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company has inked its latest partnership, joining forces with Expion Health to address the rising cost of specialty drugs.
    • “Cost Plus Drugs’ pricing model will integrate into Expion’s dynamic pricing technology, harnessing the power of both for speciality medications. Expion’s tool and Cost Plus Drugs’ approach together “equips payers with a sophisticated tool for navigating this modern landscape,” the companies said in the announcement.”
  • and
    • Ayble Health, a digital health platform for patients with chronic gastrointestinal conditions, has announced a new collaboration with the Mayo Clinic.
    • “Ayble is working with the Mayo Clinic Complex Care Program to offer a hybrid care model that matches patients with the appropriate virtual and in-person care based on acuity and need.
    • “By matching the right care for a patient at the right time, the two hope to improve outcomes and costs for digestive diseases. The collaboration is available for large employers and health plans.” 
  • MedCity News calls to our attention,
    • “AI startup Hoppr teamed up with AWS to launch a new foundation model to help bring more generative AI solutions into medical imaging, the companies announced on Sunday at RSNA 2023, the annual radiology and medical imaging conference in Chicago.
    • “The new product, named Grace, is a B2B model designed to help application developers build better AI solutions for medical images — and to build them more quickly. Along with the launch of Grace, Hoppr also announced that it received “a multi-million dollar investment” from Health2047, the American Medical Association’s venture studio.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
  • “Advocate Health’s financial performance dipped in the third quarter despite rising patient volumes as the major nonprofit health system navigated higher expenses and declining investment returns.
  • “The operator reported a nine-month operating income of $79.4 million, down from the $85.7 million Advocate recorded through the first half of the year.
  • “Advocate’s investment income also took a hit, falling more than a third from midyear. Overall, the nonprofit’s bottom line dropped to $721.2 million, 28% lower than midyear. * * *
  • “Formed out of a merger between Illinois-based Advocate Aurora Health and North Carolina-based Atrium Health last year, the health system is comprised of three divisions: Advocate Aurora Health, Atrium Health’s Charlotte-Mecklenburg Hospital Authority and Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist. Together, the divisions operate more than a thousand care sites, including 67 hospitals.”

Thanksgiving Weekend Update

We are halfway through the Federal Employee Benefits Open Season, which will end on December 11.

The Senate and the House of Representatives will be engaged in Committee business and floor voting this week.

Axios brings us a dental coverage update for Affordable Care Act plans and Medicare. Of note, Axios tells us that “earlier this month, the Biden administration expanded all Medicare beneficiaries’ access to dental services when they’re necessary for other medical care, like cancer treatment.”

From the public health front,

  • Axios reports
    • The big picture: In the two years since Omicron emerged, it has continued to rank as the predominant strain in the U.S., and its subvariants are now driving most of the country’s coronavirus infections.
    • State of play: COVID-19 is circulating in every country and remains a threat, Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, said in an update Tuesday.
      • “Infection from the variants now in circulation can cause anything from asymptomatic infection to severe disease, pneumonia and death, she explained.”Infection from the variants now in circulation can cause anything from asymptomatic infection to severe disease, pneumonia and death, she explained.
      • “Luckily, she added, most people are experiencing less severe symptoms because they have population-level immunity from vaccination, prior infection, or both.
    • Zoom in: Case rates are not as high as this summer, but experts expect they may rise during the winter as they have the past three years, given colder weather that drives people indoors and holiday gatherings.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • “Flu and RSV killed thousands of people on their own during typical winters before the pandemic. Covid isn’t killing people as it once did, but it remains the deadliest of the three—in part because it is more active year-round. 
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention predicts hospitalizations this year will be about the same as last year: well above pre-pandemic levels. Even a milder season with the three viruses circulating together would likely mean more hospitalizations than a severe season of just flu and RSV, said Jason Asher, who directs a CDC forecasting department.
    • “More illness means more disruptions to life and work. The flu alone is responsible for billions of dollars in medical and economic costs and millions of lost workdays. Covid has added to worker absences in recent winters.  * * *
    • “There’s one more virus out there for you to get,” said Justin Lessler, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of North Carolina. “Your risk of getting sick has probably gone up.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “About half of all people are in hospice at the end of their lives, but more than 25 percent of hospice patients enroll in the final week, according to 2021 data from the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, which advises Congress on Medicare issues.
    • “Others among the 1.7 million Medicare patients who used hospice that year availed themselves of its services for much longer. That is reflected in data that reveal the dual nature of hospice: The median stay is only 17 days, meaning half of patients were in hospice less than 17 days and half longer than that. But the average is 92 days, which shows that some patients were in hospice for many months.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • A healthcare hiring boom is helping offset weaker job growth in other areas of the softening U.S. economy, boosting its chances of skirting a recession.
    • The industry could serve as a strong job generator for years to come as an aging population and Covid-19 fuel widespread worker shortages and greater needs for healthcare services. 
    • Healthcare providers—including hospitals, clinics, pharmacies and doctors’ offices—accounted for 30% of U.S. job gains in the six months through October, though less than 11% of the country’s total employment, Labor Department figures show. 
    • “As behavior returns to normal—as kids go back to germ-factory indoor play spaces and daycare centers, and as people schedule elective procedures and catch up on routine scans delayed during the height of the pandemic—providers are having to staff up to keep up with demand,” said Julia Pollak, chief economist at Ziprecruiter.”