OPM Director Resigns
From Washington, DC,
- Federal News Network reports,
- Kiran Ahuja, director of the Office of Personnel Management, will be stepping down from her position in early May, OPM announced Tuesday. * * *
- Ahuja decided to leave the position due to ongoing health concerns and a recent death in the family, an agency spokesperson said. Once Ahuja vacates her position as the top-most OPM official in the coming weeks, OPM Deputy Director Rob Shriver will begin serving as acting director. * * *
- “Kiran leaves an incredible legacy as a strong and indefatigable champion of the 2.2 million public servants in the federal workforce,” OPM’s Shriver said in a statement. “Under Kiran’s leadership, OPM has bounced back stronger than ever and partnered with agencies across government to better serve the American people. Kiran represents the very best of the Biden-Harris administration, and I am honored to call her a dear colleague and friend.”
- Here are links to today’s relevant House of Representatives Committee hearings — one “Examining Health Sector Cybersecurity in the Wake of the Change Healthcare Attack” and the other “ERISA’s 50th Anniversary: the Path to Higher Quality, Lower Cost Health Care.”
- STAT News reports,
- “President Joe Biden’s administration will help 50 countries identify and respond to infectious diseases, with the goal of preventing pandemics like the Covid-19 outbreak that suddenly halted normal life around the globe in 2020.
- “U.S. government officials will offer support in the countries, most of them located in Africa and Asia, to develop better testing, surveillance, communication, and preparedness for such outbreaks in those countries.
- “The strategy will help “prevent, detect and effectively respond to biological threats wherever they emerge,” Biden said in a statement Tuesday.
- “The Global Health Security Strategy, the president said, aims to protect people worldwide and “will make the United States stronger, safer, and healthier than ever before at this critical moment.”
- The Congressional Budget Office issued a report about past performance and future directions of Medicare Accountable Care Organizations.
- One Digital tells us,
- “The 2023 EEO-1 Component 1 data collection window opens on April 30, 2024 and ends June 4, 2024. Private-sector employers with 100 or more employees or federal contractors with 50 or more employees must submit workforce demographic data. The EEO-1 Component 1 report is a mandatory annual data collection. Covered employers must submit data by job category and sex and race or ethnicity to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). Updates to the data collection will be posted to the EEOC’s dedicated EEO-1 Component 1 website.
- “The 2023 EEO-1 Component 1 Instruction Booklet and 2023 EEO-1 Component 1 Data File Upload Specifications are available on the EEOC’s dedicated EEO-1 Component 1 website. Employers must file their information through the EEO-1 Component 1 Online Filing System (OFS) either through manual data entry or data file upload. The EEO-1 Component 1 online Filer Support Message Center (i.e., filer help desk) will also be available on Tuesday, April 30, 2024, to assist filers with any questions they may have regarding the 2023 collection.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- Value Penguin lets us know,
- “Some much-needed good news for U.S. citizens: Between the first quarters of 2021 and 2023, the national age-adjusted death rate fell by 17.7%, according to the latest ValuePenguin study.
- “Our study also looked at death rates by cause and the leading causes by state. Perhaps unsurprisingly given increased vaccination access and herd immunity, COVID-19 deaths fell most precipitously over that time. Deaths from most other causes showed a decline, too.”
- HHS’s Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research released a Medical Expenditure Panel Survey with the following highlights
- “In 2021, the top 1 percent of the population ranked by their healthcare expenditures accounted for 24 percent of total healthcare expenditures, while the bottom 50 percent accounted for less than 3 percent.
- “Persons in the top 1 percent expenditure tier had an average of $166,980 in healthcare expenditures in 2021, nearly $30,000 higher than in 2019 or 2018. In 2020, persons in the top 1 percent expenditure tier had average expenditures that were more than $20,000 higher than in 2019 or 2018.
- “Persons aged 65 and older and non-Hispanic Whites were disproportionately represented in the top expenditure tiers.
- “Inpatient stays accounted for about 26 percent of healthcare expenses for persons in the top 5 percent expenditure tier.
- “More than three-quarters of aggregate expenses for persons in the top 5 percent expenditure tier were paid for by private insurance or Medicare.
- “Among adults in the top 5 percent expenditure tier, 78.1 percent had two or more priority conditions.”
- MedPage Today relates,
- “Independent reviewers confirmed a causal relationship between the first mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and myocarditis, and also determined that, more broadly, intramuscular shots can cause a series of shoulder injuries.
- “At the same time, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) committee rejected a causal relationship between the Pfizer-BioNTech BNT162b2 and Moderna mRNA-1273 (Comirnaty and Spikevax, respectively) mRNA COVID vaccines and female infertility, Guillain-Barré syndrome, Bell’s palsy, thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS), and myocardial infarction.”
- According to the University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP,
- “A study yesterday in JAMA Internal Medicine demonstrates that 22% of hospitalized adults aged 50 years or older with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection experienced an acute cardiac event—most frequently acute heart failure (16%). Moreover, 1 in 12 of infected patients (8.5%) had no documented underlying cardiovascular disease.
- “RSV is associated with annual totals of up to 160,000 US hospitalizations, 10,000 deaths, and $4 billion in direct healthcare costs among adults age 65 years or older.
- “Despite evidence of considerable RSV-associated morbidity, mortality, and health care expenditure, the potential severity of RSV infection in adults has historically been underappreciated by public health professionals and clinicians,” the authors write. RSV is rarely tested for in the clinical settings, and symptoms usually mirror other respiratory diseases, they add.”
- and
- “New research conducted at US primary and urgent care sites shows that antibiotics didn’t provide any benefit for patients with a cough caused by an acute lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI).
- “In fact, the findings, published yesterday in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, show that receipt of an antibiotic was associated with a small but significant increase in the duration of cough overall compared with those who didn’t receive an antibiotic. Even for those patients with a confirmed bacterial infection, the time until illness resolution was the same whether or not the patients received an antibiotic.
- “Patients who received an antibiotic also had a higher overall disease severity over the entire course of their illness compared with those who didn’t.
- “The study authors say the results of the Enhancing Antibiotic Stewardship in Primary Care (EAST-PC) study, which is the largest observational study to date on LRTIs in US primary and urgent care settings, are yet another indication that clinicians should be more prudent about using antibiotics for LRTIs.”
- BioPharma Dive informs us,
- “An antipsychotic drug from Intra-Cellular Therapies appears to also work as an add-on therapy for depression, according to clinical trial results the New York-based biotechnology company released Tuesday.
- “The large trial enrolled almost 500 patients with major depression and hit its main goal as well as “key secondary endpoints,” the company said in a statement. It found that, over a six-week period, depressive symptoms significantly declined in study volunteers given Intra-Cellular’s drug plus antidepressants compared to those given a placebo and antidepressants.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Healthcare Dive reports,
- “UnitedHealth estimates costs from the Change Healthcare cyberattack could reach $1.6 billion this year, executives said on Tuesday. However, the managed care giant maintained its full-year earnings guidance, suggesting the financial fallout from the attack on the massive claims clearinghouse may be less serious than feared.
- “The hit comes from direct response efforts like recovering Change’s clearinghouse platform and paying higher medical costs after its insurance arm suspended some utilization management processes, in addition to the loss of Change’s revenue.
- “In the first quarter alone, the cyberattack cost UnitedHealth $872 million, according to financial results posted Tuesday.”
- Beckers Payer Issues adds,
- “Rising medical cost trends aren’t going down, but they are stabilizing, UnitedHealth Group executives say.
- “CEO Andrew Witty told investors April 16 that pent-up demand and increased health system capacity following the COVID-19 pandemic drove rising costs through 2023, but the trend was a “one-off.”
- “We don’t see anything like that. We see much more stabilization. We haven’t seen a step-down from that trend, but we certainly see that kind of sustained activity without aggressive acceleration,” Mr. Witty said.
- “Every major insurer reported rising costs in the Medicare Advantage population in the last months of 2023. While a few insurers, including Humana and CVS Health, cut their 2024 earnings guidance based on the trend, UnitedHealth Group maintained it can weather the storm.
- “The company reported its first-quarter earnings April 16. UnitedHealthcare’s medical loss ratio was 84.3% in the first quarter, compared to 82.2% the year prior and down from 85% in the fourth quarter of 2023.”
- and
- “UnitedHealth Group plans to bring Change Healthcare back stronger than it was before it suffered the largest cyberattack in the history of the U.S. healthcare system.
- “On an April 16 call with investors, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty said it is “important for the country” that UnitedHealth Group owns Change.
- “Without UnitedHealth Group owning Change Healthcare, this attack likely would still have happened. It would have left Change Healthcare, I think, extremely challenged to come back,” Mr. Witty said. “Because it is a part of UnitedHealth Group, we’ve been able to bring it back. We’re going to bring it back much stronger than it was before.”
- Medscape offers a slideshow on 2023 physician compensation.
- Beckers Payer Issues notes,
- “Elevance Health will enter a partnership with private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice to develop advanced primary care models.
- “The joint effort will operate across multiple states and commercial, individual, Medicare and Medicaid markets, according to an April 15 news release. The payer-agnostic platform will serve more than 1 million members, the companies said.
- “The deal is financed primarily “through a combination of cash and our equity interest in certain care delivery and enablement assets of Carelon Health,” according to the news release. The two companies did not disclose the financial terms of the deal, and it is not expected to have a material impact on Elevance’s 2024 earnings.
- “The partnership will bring together two CD&R assets, digital platform Apree Health and Florida-based provider group Millennium Physician Group, and Carelon Health. Several Carelon Health clinics, part of Elevance Health, will provide care to members with chronic and complex conditions.”
- Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
- “About nine months after the FDA fully approved an Alzheimer’s drug for the first time, the medicine is trudging through insurance barriers and hesitations from potential patients, the Chicago Tribune reported April 12. * * *
- “One of its manufacturers, Eisai, predicted 10,000 patients would begin treatment by the end of March. Eisai executives have since backed away from that forecast, but they say sales are increasing, according to the Tribune.
- “CMS covers Leqembi, and so do about 75% of commercial plans in the U.S., a spokesperson for the drugmaker said. But, for the upwards of 6 million Americans who are diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, the medication has not made a splash as patients worry about side effects and contraindications.”
- and
- “Multiple April bankruptcy court filings revealed that Camp Hill, Pa.-based Rite Aid has plans to shutter 53 additional locations across nine states after it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and shared it will close 154 locations last October.
- “The “notice of additional closing stores” filings, obtained by Becker’s, revealed the stores are located in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, California, Massachusetts, Michigan, Virginia and Maryland.”