Friday Factoids

Friday Factoids

From Washington, DC,

  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) News tells us,
    • “Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Bob Casey, D-Pa., Sept. 11 introduced the SEPSIS Act, legislation which would task the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with building on its current efforts addressing sepsis care. New efforts would include an education campaign about addressing sepsis in hospitals, improving pediatric sepsis data collection, sharing information with the Department of Health and Human Services on data collection, including the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on sepsis quality measures, and the development and implementation of a sepsis outcome measure. The bill also includes a voluntary recognition program for hospitals which maintain effective sepsis programs or improve their programs over time.”  
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP lets us know,
    • “A National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report recommends five actions to transition the National Wastewater Surveillance System (NWSS)—developed as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic—to a forward-looking version for both endemic and emerging pathogens.
    • “The paper, released yesterday, is the second and final report by the Academies’ Committee on Community Wastewater-Based Infectious Disease Surveillance done at the behest of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
    • “The CDC launched the NWSS with the US Department of Health and Human Services to centralize the detection and quantification of pathogen biomarkers that people shed into the sewer system.
    • “Whereas clinical laboratory testing tracks individual cases of infection, sampling and analysis at the wastewater treatment plant level (termed community-level wastewater surveillance) provide aggregate data from the homes, businesses, and other institutions that share a common sewer system,” the committee wrote.”
  • CMS has launched a public facing website and posted a consumer fact sheet about the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan which will take effect January 1, 2025.
  • Healthline offers a projection of 2025 IRMAA brackets applicable to Medicare Parts B and D coverage for higher income beneficiaries.
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, offers thirteen things to know about long-term care planning.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted their weekly summary concerning respiratory illnesses in the U.S. today.
    • “Seasonal influenza and RSV activity are low nationally, but COVID-19 activity is elevated in most areas.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity remains elevated nationally, but there are continued signs of decline in many areas. COVID-19 test positivity, emergency department visits, and rates of COVID-19–associated hospitalizations remain elevated, particularly among adults 65+ and children under 2 years. There are many effective tools to prevent spreading COVID-19 or becoming seriously ill.
    • “Influenza
    • RSV
      • “Nationally, RSV activity remains low.
    • Vaccination
      • “National vaccination coverage for COVID-19, influenza, and RSV vaccines was low for children and adults for the 2023-24 respiratory illness season. RSV, influenza, and COVID-19 vaccines are available to provide protection during the 2024-25 respiratory illness season.”
  • Ruh roh. The New York Times reports,
    • “Someone who lived with a Missouri resident infected with bird flu also became ill on the same day, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Friday.
    • “The disclosure raises the possibility that the virus, H5N1, spread from one person to another, experts said, in what would be the first known instance in the United States.
    • “On Friday night, C.D.C. officials said that there was “no epidemiological evidence at this time to support person-to-person transmission of H5N1,” but that additional research was needed.
    • “The coincidental timing of the illnesses, especially outside flu season, concerned independent experts. H5N1 has been known to spread between close contacts, including those living in the same household.
    • “And neither the initial patient nor the household contact had any known exposure to the virus via animals or raw milk.
    • “Neither patient has been identified, and details are scant. The household contact was not tested, so officials cannot be sure that the individual actually was infected with the bird flu virus.”
  • More ruh roh. Health Day points out,
    • “U.S. obesity rates keep rising, with 1 in every 5 people in every state reported to be obese in 2023
    • “In 23 states, 35% or more of the population is now obese
    • “Tackling unhealthy weight gain as early as childhood may be key to turning these numbers around.”
  • The NIH Director cheers us up by writing in her blog,
    • In Parkinson’s disease, neurons in parts of the brain gradually weaken and die, leading people to experience worsening problems with movement and other symptoms. While the causes of this disease aren’t fully known, studies have suggested the Parkinson’s brain lacks fuel to power dopamine-producing neurons that are essential for movement. When too many of those neurons are lost, Parkinson’s disease symptoms appear. But what if there was a way to boost energy levels in the brain and stop the neurodegenerative process in its tracks?
    • While the findings are preliminary, an NIH-supported study reported in Science Advances takes an encouraging step toward this goal. The key element, according to the new work, is an energy-producing enzyme known as phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK1). In fact, these latest preclinical findings in models of the disease suggest that boosting this enzyme in the brain even slightly may be enough to restore energy and afford some protection against Parkinson’s disease.
    • The team, led by Timothy Ryan and Alexandros Kokotos , Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City, was inspired by recent discoveries suggesting an unexpectedly important role for PGK1 in protecting the normal function of neurons. They knew PGK1 plays an essential role in the pathway through which cells use glucose to generate and store energy in the form of adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) molecules. The surprise came when studies showed the drug terazosin, which is used to treat high blood pressure and enlarged prostate, has an unexpected side effect: it enhances PGK1 activity, although perhaps weakly. * * *
    • “For the approximately one million Americans with Parkinson’s disease today, current treatments help to relieve symptoms but don’t stop the disease from progressing. These new findings raise the possibility that terazosin or drugs that enhance PGK1 activity even more may fuel the brain, helping to protect essential dopamine-producing neurons to treat or even prevent Parkinson’s disease, as well as other neurodegenerative conditions where PGK1 may play a role.”
  • Per an NIH press release,
    • “The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has established a pandemic preparedness research network to conduct research on high-priority pathogens most likely to threaten human health with the goal of developing effective vaccines and monoclonal antibodies. Currently, many of the diseases caused by these pathogens have no available vaccines or therapeutics, and investing in this research is key to preparing for potential public health crises—both in the United States and around the world. NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) expects to commit approximately $100 million per year to fund the program, pending the availability of funds.
    • “The Research and Development of Vaccines and Monoclonal Antibodies for Pandemic Preparedness network—called ReVAMPP—will focus its research efforts on “prototype pathogens,” representative pathogens from virus families known to infect humans, and high-priority pathogens that have the potential to cause deadly diseases. By studying specific prototype pathogens, scientists will build a knowledge base that could be applied to other related viruses. For example, NIAID’s earlier work on the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) played a crucial role in understanding and developing safe and effective treatments and vaccines for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused the COVID-19 pandemic. The ReVAMPP network will study viruses from virus families that have caused human disease for millennia—many of which have the potential to become pandemic threats in the future.
    • “In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and ongoing outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases, the need for robust pandemic preparedness is evident,” said NIAID Director Jeanne M. Marrazzo, M.D., M.P.H. “The ReVAMPP network will enable researchers to fill key knowledge gaps and identify strategies to develop safe and effective medical countermeasures for targeted virus families before the need becomes critical.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “A new drug — approved by regulators last month — has shown it can delay tumor progression, meaning patients could get more years to work and travel and be with their families before subjecting themselves to the rigors of the more pernicious treatments, which can lead to a range of health and cognitive problems. It is one of the first major brain tumor breakthroughs in decades.
    • “It gives you more time to do the things you love to do and lets you live a more normal life,” said [a patient], who enrolled in the trial that led to the approval of the drug, called Voranigo and developed by the privately held French firm Servier.
    • “Taken as a daily pill, Voranigo, or vorasidenib, is a signal to researchers and other pharmaceutical companies that success in this field is possible. It’s also the first targeted therapy designed specifically for this brain cancer, homing in on a genetic mutation that drives tumor formation and bringing the type of the success seen in lung and breast cancers to among the most difficult-to-treat tumors. 
    • “The drug, which has a list price of nearly $480,000 a year, is approved for patients with specific types of brain tumors — gliomas and astrocytomas — that are categorized as grade 2, a few thousand of which are diagnosed every year in the U.S. (Brain tumors are graded on a scale of 1 to 4, with higher grades indicating tumors that are more aggressive.) It’s also only meant for people who have particular mutations in one of two related genes, known as IDH1 or IDH2, who account for the large majority of low-grade glioma patients. Now, researchers are starting to test it in combination with other treatments in more advanced brain cancers. 
    • “I was in the field for 38 years, and when you can count the number of approved drugs on one hand, you know you’ve got a difficult disease to treat,” said Mark Gilbert, who recently retired as chief of the National Cancer Institute’s neuro-oncology branch.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • Boar’s Head announced on Friday that it would indefinitely shut down the troubled Virginia deli meat plant that it acknowledged had caused a deadly listeria outbreak, killing nine people and sickening dozens more in 18 states.
    • The company also said it had identified liverwurst processing as the source of contamination and would permanently discontinue the product.
    • “Given the seriousness of the outbreak, and the fact that it originated at Jarratt, we have made the difficult decision to indefinitely close this location,” the company said in a statement posted on its website Friday. The shutdown affects about 500 workers in Jarratt, Va., a small rural town whose economic livelihood largely depended on the plant’s business.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Employers are bracing for a third straight year with health benefit costs increasing more than 5%, according to a new report from Mercer.
    • “The organization released preliminary findings from its annual National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans and found that the total health benefit cost for individual employees is expected to increase by 5.8% in 2025. This accounts for any cost-reduction initiatives that employers may take on.
    • “The survey, based on responses from 1,800 employers across the country, estimates that with no cost-reduction efforts, expenses would increase by 7% per worker.”
  • and
    • “Elevance Health has entered into a deal to acquire Indiana University Health Plans, the company’s Anthem Blue Cross unit announced this week.
    • “Should the deal close, IU Health Plans will operate as part of Anthem in the Hoosier State, according to the press release. Financial terms of the sale were not disclosed.
    • “IU Health Plans provides Medicare Advantage plans to 19,000 people across 36 counties and has a 4.5-star rating from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. It also has 12,000 fully insured commercial plan members, according to the release.” * * *
    • “The parties expect the deal to close at the end of 2024.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Oakland, Calif.-based Kaiser Permanente received approval from the San Jose (Calif.) planning commission during a Sept. 11 meeting to move forward with plans to demolish its existing San Jose Medical Center and build a new hospital.
    • “Kaiser Permanente San Jose is excited about this new facility, which will provide greater access to high-quality care and medical services to our members and patients in the greater San Jose community,” a spokesperson for Kaiser shared with Becker’s in a Sept. 12 statement. 
    • “The project, which the health system shared initial plans for in February, would demolish the current 250,000-square-foot hospital and develop a new 685,000-square-foot hospital, central utility plant and a five-level parking garage, resulting in the addition of around 800 new employees.
    • “It would also increase bed count from 247 to 303, according to project highlights during the meeting.” 
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Steward Health Care exited a federal bankruptcy court hearing on Wednesday absolved of billions of dollars in outstanding lease agreements and with a plan to keep the majority of its remaining hospitals open.
    • “Under the deal, Steward’s landlord, Medical Properties Trust, will forgive approximately $7.5 billion in outstanding obligations and allow Steward to receive $395 million in proceeds from a recent hospital sale in Florida in order to pay its lenders and unsecured creditors, according to testimony from the health system’s chief restructuring advisor, John Castellano.
    • “In exchange, Steward will waive its rights to pursue lawsuits against the real estate investment trust.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “When Roche’s Genentech gained approval for Ocrevus in 2017, the first-in-class infused drug quickly became the best-selling treatment in a crowded multiple sclerosis (MS) market. Three years later, Novartis’ next-in-class Kesimpta stole some of Ocrevus’ thunder, offering a convenience edge with its once-monthly, at-home prefilled injection. 
    • “Now, Genentech has responded with a new formulation as the FDA has endorsed a subcutaneous version of Ocrevus. While it can’t match the at-home convenience of Kesimpta, subcutaneous Ocrevus Zunovo, with its twice-a-year, under-the-skin dosing regimen, provides an attractive option.
    • “This is something than can be provided in clinics and doesn’t require people to go to an infusion center,” David Jones, Genentech’s medical director for MS, said in an interview. “This will expand access to individuals who may not be able to access Ocrevus now, especially for reasons like geography or rural setting, individuals that might have challenges with their healthcare provider.”
    • “Ocrevus Zunovo can be injected in 10 minutes, compared to the two-plus hours needed for an infusion of the drug. For patients who experience side effects, the intravenous infusion can take up to four hours.” 
  • and
    • “It’s better late than never for an FDA approval for the first subcutaneous PD-L1 inhibitor, which was doled out to Roche’s Tecentriq Hybreza after manufacturing delays derailed the company’s initial launch plans last year.
    • “The agency was originally slated to issue its verdict on Tecentriq in its under-the-skin formulation last September but the drug’s manufacturing processes needed updating, Roche’s delivery technology partner Halozyme Therapeutics said in a filing at the time. The tweaks, which a Roche spokesperson said were made in response to the FDA’s evolving requirements, were expected to wrap up in 2023 to support a 2024 launch. The world-first approval for the formulation came in the U.K. last year. 
    • “Now, the therapy has been cleared for use in the U.S. in all of the Tecentriq adult formulation’s indications, including types of lung, liver, skin and soft tissue cancers. The new version uses Halozyme’s Enhanze drug delivery tech to subcutaneously inject the product over seven minutes, compared to the 30 to 60 minutes needed for an IV infusion.
    • “By enabling subcutaneous administration for a cancer immunotherapy, Tecentriq Hybreza now offers patients with multiple cancer types and their physicians greater flexibility and choice of treatment administration,” Roche’s chief medical officer and head of global product development Levi Garraway, M.D., Ph.D., said in a press release.”

Tuesday’s Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • BioPharma Dive reports
    • The U.S. House of Representatives voted Monday to approve legislation that would restrict U.S. companies from working with five China-based biotechnology firms on clinical development, research and manufacturing, in an attempt to secure the pharmaceutical supply chain.
    • The Biosecure Act passed 306-81 under a procedure used to pass relatively noncontroversial legislation. It was left out of a large Department of Defense bill that cleared the House in June, but may yet need to be included in a Senate version of that defense bill for it win support in that chamber.
    • The legislation would prohibit the federal government from contracting with the five “companies of concern” or any biotech that has a contract with those companies. Drugmakers with current contracts would have until 2032 to allow those deals to expire before being subject to the law.
  • Roll Call and Govexec bring us up to date on FY 2025 appropriations measures under consideration on Capitol Hill.
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “A bipartisan pair of lawmakers on Tuesday filed a discharge petition seeking to force a vote on the House floor on a measure that would eliminate a pair of controversial tax rules that reduce the retirement benefits of some ex-government workers.
    • “Reps. Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., and Garret Graves, R-La., are the lead sponsors of the Social Security Fairness Act (H.R. 82), a measure introduced last year that would eliminate Social Security’s windfall elimination provision and government pension offset.” * * *
    • “Though the bill has widespread support in Congress among both parties—with more than 300 cosponsors in the House alone—the chamber’s leadership has balked at allowing the bill to receive a floor vote. If Spanberger and Graves can secure at least 218 signatures among House lawmakers, they can then force such a vote to take place.”
  • FedWeek reminds us,
    • “September 30 is the end of the “special enrollment period” in which Postal Service retirees eligible for Medicare Part B but not currently enrolled in it may elect that coverage without the standard penalty for enrolling more than three months beyond first eligibility, which typically is on turning age 65.” * * *
    • “Further information on the special enrollment period is here.
    • “Meanwhile, the announcement of plans, coverage terms and premium rates in both the FEHB and the PSHB for 2025 is just ahead. That announcement commonly comes in late September or early October, with fuller information provided just ahead of the open season for enrolling or changing current enrollments, which this year will run November 11-December 9.”
  • Newfront poses a Q&A,
    • Question: What steps do employers need to take to ensure their coverage meets the ACA affordability standard in 2025?
    • Short Answer: The 2025 ACA affordability threshold increases to 9.02%. The easiest way to ensure affordability in 2025 is to meet the federal poverty line affordability safe harbor by offering at least one medical plan option (that provides minimum value) for which the monthly employee-share of the premium for employee-only coverage does not exceed $113.20. Otherwise, employers will need to calculate the applicable affordability threshold under one of the other safe harbor approaches, which are based on employee compensation levels.”
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), recently awarded $68 million in grants for suicide prevention and mental health care programs. Addressing the U.S. mental health crisis and preventing suicide are top priorities of the Biden-Harris Administration and part of President Biden’s Unity Agenda.
    • “Every September we recognize Suicide Prevention Month as a time to raise awareness—to remind those struggling that they are not alone and that there is hope. Many people who have experienced suicidal thoughts are alive today because they got help,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra, “The Biden-Harris Administration is deeply committed to expanding and improving suicide prevention in order to save lives. That is why we launched the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline two years ago and why we continue to invest in suicide prevention programs that help save lives across this country.”
  • The Census Bureau posted its report with 2023 statistics on health insurance coverage in the United States based on information collected in the Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement (CPS ASEC).
    • “Of the subtypes of health insurance coverage, employment-based insurance was the most common, covering 53.7 percent of the population for some or all of the calendar year, followed by Medicaid (18.9 percent), Medicare (18.9 percent), direct-purchase coverage (10.2 percent), TRICARE (2.6 percent), and VA and CHAMPVA coverage (1.0 percent).
    • “While the private coverage rate was statistically unchanged between 2022 and 2023, the employment-based coverage rate declined by 0.7 percentage points to 53.7 percent in 2023. At the same time, the rate of direct-purchase coverage increased by 0.3 percentage points to 10.2 percent in 2023.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Cost, wait times, transportation problems and negative interactions with healthcare professionals are driving U.S. women to delay medical care or skip it altogether, according to a recent Deloitte survey.
    • “Half of the approximately 1,000 women who responded to the consultancy’s 2024 Health Care Consumer Survey said they had forgone care in the past year, compared with 37% of men, Deloitte said in a report Tuesday.
    • “Deloitte paired the results of its survey — which asked a representative sample of roughly 2,000 people in February 2024 about how everyone in the country could have quality medical care — with an analysis of claims data. It found that although women require on average almost 10% more health services than men, they’re about 35% more likely to say they’ve skipped or delayed care.”
  • JD Supra offers “5 Tips for Employers to Prepare for Cold, Flu, and COVID Season.”
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest five actions that communities can take to reduce suicides.
  • Per National Institutes of Health press releases,
    • “A scientific team supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has created a preclinical blood test to identify adults most likely to develop severe respiratory conditions, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The blood test analyzes 32 proteins that scientists determined accurately predicted an adult with an increased likelihood for requiring medical care for or dying from severe respiratory illness. The risk score was based on lung health data collected from nearly 2,500 U.S. adults over a 30-year period. The findings were published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine(link is external).
    • “We are still not ready for this test to be used in practice, but it’s a promising advance,” said James P. Kiley, Ph.D., director of the Division of Lung Diseases at NIH’s National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), which funded the study. “It consolidates insights from decades of breathing tests and medical evaluations into a single tool that has the potential to identify patients at risk for severe disease and complications.”
  • and
    • “Providing optional syphilis tests to most people seeking care at a large emergency department led to a dramatic increase in syphilis screening and diagnosis, according to a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-supported study of nearly 300,000 emergency department encounters in Chicago. Most people diagnosed had no symptoms, which suggests that symptom-based testing strategies alone could miss opportunities to diagnose and treat people with syphilis. The results were published today in the journal Open Forum Infectious Diseases.
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that adult and congenital syphilis cases increased by 80% and 183% respectively between 2018 and 2022. Improved syphilis diagnosis strategies will be essential for reaching populations such as pregnant women and people with limited access to health care. The optimal model for syphilis screening has not been identified, particularly for preventing congenital syphilis. Previous literature supports targeted emergency department syphilis screenings based on clinical factors such as active symptoms or pregnancy. However, the screening criteria used in those models would not capture most people whose syphilis is asymptomatic.”
  • Here is a link to NIH’s Research Matters report covering “Deep brain stimulation for Parkinson’s | Brain-computer interface for speech | Glucose metabolism and Alzheimer’s disease.”
  • Per STAT News,
    • “The first late-stage trial of a GLP-1 drug in young children with obesity showed the treatment helped lower body mass index. But the findings also raise questions about whether obesity medications, some of which are currently approved for teenagers, should also be given to children at such a young age.”
  • Per Medscape
    • “Sustained participation in a community-based structured exercise program is linked to a reduced risk for all-cause hospitalization among older adults, but the benefits varied by gender {favoring women], according to a new study.”
  • Ruh roh. Bloomberg Prognosis lets us know,
    • “I [the reporter] was exposed to Covid at a family get-together in upstate New York last month. Two days later, I woke up feeling awful — sniffles, fatigue and fever. So I swabbed both nostrils with the last Covid test in our cabinet. 
    • “To my great surprise, it was negative, and I went back to sleep. When I tested again two days later, it turned positive in seconds. I started to wonder: Are home Covid tests bad at detecting the latest variants?
    • “The short answer is no, the doctors I spoke with told me. But that answer comes with a big caveat. It turns out the way the immune system interacts with the virus these days means home tests may not turn positive until several days after you get sick.”
  • More ruh roh. The New York Times reports,
    • “Two years before a deadly listeria outbreak [earlier this year], U.S. inspectors warned that conditions at a Boar’s Head plant posed an “imminent threat” to public health, citing extensive rust, deli meats exposed to wet ceilings, green mold and holes in the walls.
    • ‘But the U.S. Agriculture Department did not impose strict measures on the plant, in Jarratt, Va., which could have ranged from a warning letter to a suspension of operations.
    • “Since then, other inspections found that many of the problems persisted, but again, the plant continued to process tons of beef and pork products, including liverwurst.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “More providers are opting out of contracts with Medicare Advantage plans as national insurers reconfigure their networks, leaving patients in limbo.
    • “Medicare Advantage enrollment and profitability surged in recent years as a growing number of seniors sought plans with minimal copays and extra benefits not offered in traditional Medicare. However, Medicare Advantage enrollment growth has slowed and insurance companies’ earnings per member have declined over the past year as insurers grapple with stiffer competition, higher medical costs and utilization, lower reimbursement rates and stricter regulatory oversight.” * * *
    • “This is just the start of insurers’ squeeze on Medicare Advantage markets and provider contracts, the effects of which will grow as Medicare Advantage enrollment is expected to account for about 60% of all Medicare membership by 2030, consultants, analysts and policy experts said.
    • “This is the first year that MA plans have really hammered hospitals, and I think it will get uglier,” industry consultant Paul Keckley said.
    • “Health systems have walked away from in-network agreements or looked to scale up as a buffer and negotiating tool.”
  • and
    • “The American Medical Association released its updated list of Current Procedural Terminology codes for 2025, adding 270 new universal codes used for billing healthcare services and reimbursing providers.
    • “The organization announced 420 updates to its list Tuesday, with several revisions and additions for genetic testing, digital health services like remote patient monitoring and care involving artificial intelligence.”
  • Even more ruh roh. The American Hospital Association News complains,
    • “Hospitals and health systems are seeing significant increases in administrative costs, including due to burdensome practices by commercial insurers that often delay and deny care for patients, according to a new report released Sept. 10 by the AHA. 
    • “Many hospitals and health systems are forced to dedicate staff and clinical resources to appeal and overturn inappropriate denials, which alone can cost billions of dollars every year,” the report notes. 
    • “Among other findings, the report highlights recent data from Strata Decision Technology showing that administrative costs alone account for more than 40% of total expenses hospitals incur in delivering care to patients. In addition, between 2022 and 2023, care denials increased an average of 20.2% and 55.7% for commercial and Medicare Advantage claims, respectively.” 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Rx will join its peers in the big three pharmacy benefit managers by pulling Humira from some of its preferred formularies, according to a report from Reuters.
    • “Instead, it will recommend a cheaper biosimilar as the preferred option beginning Jan. 1, 2025, according to the article. Amgen’s Amjevita biosimilar will be among the options.
    • “CVS Health’s Caremark announced similar steps in April, and Cigna’s Express Scripts unit followed suit in August. Prescriptions for Sandoz’s Hyrimoz biosimilar spiked after CVS removed Humira from its major commercial formularies, according to a report in Stat.
    • “Reuters reported that UnitedHealth will continue to offer Humira coverage until the biosimilars are awarded an interchangeable designation from the Food and Drug Administration, which is expected in 2025.”

Thursday Miscellany

From Washington, DC,

  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “Today, leaders from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) joined recovery advocates to kick off observance of the 35th National Recovery Month at the second annual SAMHSA Walk for Recovery. The National Walk for Recovery supports and celebrates recovery from substance use and/or mental health conditions while reducing stigma.
    • “In addition to hosting the walk, SAMHSA published the Gallery of Hope which features over 250 visual art entries submitted to the Art of Recovery project. The gallery highlights the transformative impact of art on mental health and substance use recovery. * * *
    • “Recovery Month, observed every September since 1989, promotes evidence-based substance use disorder and mental health treatment and recovery support practices and serves as an opportunity to celebrate the achievements of tens of millions of people in recovery and reduce stigma surrounding substance use and mental health issues. Over 65 million people consider themselves in recovery from substance use and/or mental health issues according to the 2023 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), among adults 18 or older in America. SAMHSA’s National Recovery Month Toolkit is available online and features recovery resources, social media assets, and weekly themes and messaging.”
  • American Hospital Association News lets us know,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Sept. 5 published a list of participants for the Transforming Episode Accountability Model. TEAM is a mandatory payment model that will bundle payment to acute care hospitals for five types of surgical episodes. The AHA June 10 urged CMS to make the model voluntary, however the mandatory model was finalized in the CY 2025 Inpatient Prospective Payment System Final Rule.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “A year after missing on a trial endpoint, Travere Therapeutics can breathe a sigh a relief. The FDA has converted Filspari’s conditional nod in the kidney disease IgA nephropathy (IgAN) into a full approval.
    • “As part of the conversion Thursday, the FDA has removed a specific urine protein level requirement from Filspari’s label. Now, the only condition for treatment with Filspari is that patients be at risk of disease progression.
    • The adjustment will allow Filspari to reach more patients who’re at lower risk of progression, Travere CEO Eric Dube, Ph.D., said in a recent interview. The company will be able to promote Filspari’s ability to preserve kidney function, and the full approval could give more doctors confidence to start using the drug, he added.
    • During a drug launch, “those later adopters oftentimes look for things like guidelines, support or advocacy from their peers, or in this case, also full approval,” Dube said. “So we do expect that there’s going to be a broader set of nephrologists prescribing.”
  • Federal News Network informs us,
    • “The Postal Service is bringing back a holiday surcharge for some of its package services, as the agency prepares for its busy year-end peak season.
    • “The new prices will take effect on Oct. 6, 2024, and will last through Jan. 19, 2025. USPS announced the return of the holiday surcharge in a press release Thursday.
    • “USPS waived the surcharge last year, in the hopes that that lower prices would help the agency capture a bigger share of the lucrative holiday package business from private-sector competitors like UPS, FedEx and Amazon.
    • “USPS said in a press release Thursday that the temporary price adjustment will “help cover extra handling costs to ensure a successful peak season.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The California Department of Food and Agriculture Aug. 30 reported cows in three dairy herds tested positive for bird flu. No human cases were confirmed in association with this incident. Both the California Department of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention consider the risk of bird flu to the general public as low. As of yesterday, there have been 13 total positive cases of H5 bird flu in humans, according to the CDC.” 
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The number of teenagers who reported using e-cigarettes in 2024 has tumbled from a worrisome peak reached five years ago, raising hopes among public health officials for a sustained reversal in vaping trends among adolescents.
    • “In an annual survey conducted from January through May in schools across the nation, fewer than 8 percent of high school students reported using e-cigarettes in the past month, the lowest level in a decade.
    • “That’s far lower than the apex, in 2019, when more than 27 percent of high school students who took the survey reported that they vaped — and an estimated 500,000 fewer adolescents than last year.
    • “The data is from the National Youth Tobacco Survey, a questionnaire filled out by thousands of middle and high school students that is administered each year by the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”
  • The Washington Post points out,
    • “A new study adds to a growing body of evidence that Parkinson’s disease, long believed to have its origins in the brain, may begin in the gut.
    • “Gastrointestinal problems are common in patients with neurodegenerative disorders, to the point where a condition known as “institutional colon” was once thought to afflict those who lived in mental health institutions. In Parkinson’s disease, the entire gastrointestinal tract is affected, causing complications such as constipation, drooling, trouble swallowing and delayed emptying of the stomach. These symptoms often appear up to two decades before motor symptoms such as rigidity or tremor.
    • “People have, for the longest time, described Parkinson’s disease as a top-down disease — so, it starts in the brain and then percolates down to the gut, and that’s why patients have issues with their gastrointestinal tract,” said study author Subhash Kulkarni, an assistant professor at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. “Another hypothesis suggests that, in many patients, it may be a bottom-up approach, where it starts in the gut and goes all the way up to the brain.”
    • “Kulkarni and his colleagues found that people with upper gastrointestinal conditions — in particular, ulcers or other types of damage to the lining of the esophagus, stomach, or upper part of the small intestine — were far more likely to develop Parkinson’s disease later in life. The study was published online Thursday in JAMA Network Open.”
  • The NIH Director writes in her blog,
    • “Each year in the U.S. there are about 18,000 new spinal cord injuries, which damage the bundle of nerves and nerve fibers that send signals from the brain to other parts of the body and can affect feeling, movement, strength, and function below the injured site. A severe spinal cord injury can lead to immediate and permanent paralysis, as our spinal cords lack the capacity to regenerate the damaged tissues and heal.
    • “So far, even the most groundbreaking regenerative therapies have yielded only modest improvements after spinal cord injuries. Now, an NIH-supported study reported in Nature Communications offers some new clues that may one day lead to ways to encourage healing of spinal cord injuries in people. The researchers uncovered these clues through detailed single-cell analysis in what might seem an unlikely place: the zebrafish spinal cord.
    • “Why zebrafish? Unlike mammals, zebrafish have a natural ability to spontaneously heal and recover after spinal cord injuries, even when the injuries are severe. Remarkably, after a complete spinal cord injury, a zebrafish can reverse the paralysis and start swimming again within six to eight weeks. Earlier studies in zebrafish after spinal cord injury found that this regenerative response involves many types of cells, including immune cells, progenitor cells, neurons, and supportive glial cells, all of which work together to successfully repair damage. * * *
    • “In future work, the researchers plan to conduct similar studies in the many other cell types known to play some role in spinal cord healing in zebrafish, including supportive glia and immune cells. They’re also continuing to explore how the activities they see in the zebrafish spinal cord compare to what happens in mice and humans. With much more study, these kinds of findings in zebrafish may lead to promising new ideas and even treatments that encourage neural protection, flexibility, and recovery in the human nervous system after spinal cord injuries.”
  • The “Institute for Clinical and Economic Review publishes Evidence Report on treatments for Transthyretin Amyloid Cardiomyopathy — Current evidence suggests that tafamidis and acoramidis provide a net health benefit when compared to no disease-specific therapy; these treatments would achieve common thresholds for cost-effectiveness if priced between $13,600 to $39,000 per year.” * * * “This Evidence Report will be reviewed at a virtual public meeting of the Midwest CEPAC on September 20, 2024.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force posted a final research plan for “Early Allergen Introduction to Prevent Food Allergies in Infants: Counseling.
  • Per Reuters,
    • “There is no link between mobile phone use and an increased risk of brain cancer, according to a new World Health Organization-commissioned review of available published evidence worldwide.
    • “Despite the huge rise in the use of wireless technology, there has not been a corresponding increase in the incidence of brain cancers, the review, published on Tuesday, found. That applies even to people who make long phone calls or those who have used mobile phones for more than a decade.”
  • FEHBlog comment: Whew!
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Having a medical condition was associated with an increased risk of suicide in a dose-response-like manner, such that the higher the burden of disability, the higher the risk of suicide, according to an observational study in Denmark.
    • “An analysis of more than 6.6 million people found that nine medical condition categories including 31 specific conditions were associated with a statistically significant increased risk of suicide, with the exception of endocrine disorders, reported Søren Dinesen Østergaard, MD, PhD, of Aarhus University Hospital, and co-authors.
    • “The associations were most pronounced for gastrointestinal conditions (incidence rate ratio [IRR] 1.7, 95% CI 1.5-1.8), cancers (IRR 1.5, 95% CI 1.4-1.6), and hematological conditions (IRR 1.5, 95% CI 1.3-1.6), they wrote in JAMA Psychiatry.
    • “The risk was highest in the first 6 months following diagnosis and subsequently faded over time, although the risk after certain medical conditions remained elevated up to 15 years after onset.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues provides context to Modern Healthcare’s story in yesterday’s post about HCSC offering a no deductible plan design. It’s a trend.
  • Modern Healthcare adds today,
    • “Cigna Group CEO David Cordani underscored the booming state of the company’s health services business and outlined the unit’s potential growth opportunities during Morgan Stanley’s annual Global Healthcare Conference on Thursday.
    • “Cordani said the company sees opportunities to capitalize on the $400 billion specialty pharmacy market and to drive more business for its pharmacy benefit manager, Express Scripts.
    • “Cigna has been charting strong growth this year for its Evernorth Health Services business as it pulls out of the lucrative Medicare Advantage market, and it’s already seeing positive returns. Evernorth, which houses Cigna’s specialty pharmacy and pharmacy benefits businesses, generated more than 80% of its total revenue in the second quarter ended June 30.
    • “Cordani highlighted Evernorth’s successes as the segment announced another low-cost biosimilar product. Early next year, eligible members will have access to a biosimilar for Johnson & Johnson’s Stelara arthritis drug with no out-of-pocket cost at its specialty pharmacy. Cordani said the new offering could save each member $4,000 annually.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Over the past several years, Humana has made significant strides in growing its senior-focused primary care business, and a new study highlights areas where it’s seeing success in this model.
    • The study, conducted by the Humana Healthcare Research team along with Harvard researcher J. Michael McWilliams, M.D., Ph.D., digs into data from six senior-focused primary care organizations on more than 421,000 patients who were enrolled in Medicare Advantage coverage in 2021.
    • “It found that patients in these organizations had 17% more primary care visits across the board. This included 39% more visits among Black patients and 21% more among low-income patients, which can address disparities faced by these populations.
    • “The study also suggests that patients who are engaged with a senior-focused primary care model see better outcomes on multiple quality measures including cancer screenings, medication adherence and controlled blood pressure. The researchers did note that future analysis is necessary to refine these findings.”
  • Modern Healthcare notes,
    • “Ochsner Health is expanding its digital medicine program to offer weight management, the health system said Wednesday.
    • “Some [program] patients will have access to popular weight loss medications including glucagon-like peptide agonists, Ochsner said in a release. The digital medicine program has previously focused on patients with hypertension, Type 2 diabetes and hyperlipidemia.” * * * 
    • “Ochsner is the latest organization seeking to leverage the popularity of GLP-1 medications such as Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Eli Lilly’s Zepbound. GLP-1s have led many organizations to offer virtual weight management services, including Mayo Clinic. The Rochester, Minnesota-based organization said in January it’s testing a telehealth weight loss offering through its diet program.”  
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Henry Ford Health and Ascension will launch their joint venture in Michigan at the start of October, moving eight Ascension and Genesys hospitals and an addiction treatment center under the Henry Ford brand, the companies said on Wednesday.
    • “Detroit-based Henry Ford will double in size once the joint venture launches, growing its acute care footprint from five to 14 hospitals.
    • “The no-cash deal, announced nearly a year ago, is expected to create an organization with more than $10.5 billion in annual operating revenue. Henry Ford CEO Bob Riney will serve as the CEO of the new entity.”
  • and
    • “Female physicians and doctors who work in nonrural practices deliver more care via telehealth, according to a study published this week in Health Affairs. 
    • “The research also found differences in virtual care utilization by specialty. For example, 23% of psychiatrists delivered all or nearly all of their visits through telehealth, compared with fewer than 1% for physicians in all other specialties. 
    • “The findings offer insight into long-term patterns of telehealth utilization in the U.S. and help show how virtual care might be affecting care access and outcomes, the study authors wrote.”
  • Per Kauffman Hall,
    • Hospital financial performance remains strong this year, with continued stabilization in the month of July. Outpatient revenue and average lengths of stay showed signs of improvement.
    • The median Kaufman Hall Calendar Year-To-Date Operating Margin Index reflecting actual margins for July was 4.1%.
    • The recent [/July] issue of the National Hospital Flash Report covers these and other key performance metrics.
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Abbott is working to integrate its newest continuous glucose monitor (CGM) with Beta Bionics’ automated insulin delivery (AID) system.
    • “The companies plan to connect Beta Bionics’ iLet Bionic Pancreas to Abbott’s Freestyle Libre 3 Plus CGM, according to the Wednesday announcement. Readings from the CGM will help iLet calculate insulin doses for automated delivery.
    • “Beta Bionics said the integration, which is scheduled to launch in the fourth quarter, will be the first of its kind for Freestyle Libre 3 Plus in the U.S. Abbott also has AID partnerships with Insulet and Medtronic.”

Thursday Miscellany

From Washington, DC,

  • AARP tells us,
    • “By 2029, more than 4 million people with a Medicare drug plan who do not receive the program’s low-income subsidy will hit the annual [$2000 out of pocket cost] ceiling and see savings when they go to fill their prescriptions, according to a new report published by AARP. * * * [The new cap takes effect January 1, 2025.] * * *
    • “The amount of money each person will save under the new law [the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA)}will vary depending on the medications a person takes and how much they have to pay for them. An estimated 1.4 million adults with a Medicare prescription drug plan who reach the new out-of-pocket cap between 2025 and 2029 are expected to see an average annual savings of $1,000 or more, the AARP report shows. More than 420,000 Medicare Part D enrollees will save $3,000-plus.”
    • This is one on many reasons why FEHB annuitants with Part A or B coverage should consider enrolling in an FEHB Part D EGWP plan or Medicare Advantage with Prescription Drugs (MAPD) plan for 2025. Of course, under OPM’s proposed rule, PSHB annuitants would lose their PSHB drug coverage if they opt out of participating in a Part D EGWP plan or an MAPD for 2025. The FEHBlog does not understand why OPM finds it necessary to create an opt out penalty in view of the generous Part D benefits available next year.
  • Fierce Pharma points out a report finding that the IRA’s provisions intended to juice the sales of biosimilar drugs to hospitals has had limited impact so far.
  • Per a Congressional press release,
    • “House Committee on Oversight and Accountability Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) today [August 28] is calling on the CEOs of three major Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs)—CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, and Optum Rx—to correct the record for statements made during their appearance before the House Oversight Committee at a hearing titled, “The Role of Pharmacy Benefit Managers in Prescription Drug Markets Part III: Transparency and Accountability.”
    • “‘At the House Oversight Committee’s hearing, the PBM chief executives made statements that contradict the Committee’s and the Federal Trade Commission’s findings about the PBMs’ self-benefitting practices that jeopardize patient care, undermine local pharmacies, and raise prescription drug prices. The chief executives for CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, and Optum Rx claimed they do not steer patients to PBM-owned pharmacies. The executives also made claims contradicting the Committee’s and FTC’s findings regarding contract negotiations, contract opt outs, and payments to pharmacies.”
    • The PBM replies are due by September 11, 2024. 
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, fills us in on Social Security survivor benefits.
  • Per a HRSA press release,
    • “Today, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) announces that for the first time in the 40-year history of the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN), the OPTN Board of Directors—the governing board that develops national organ allocation policy—is now separately incorporated and independent from the Board of long-time OPTN contractor, the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS). HRSA has awarded an OPTN Board Support contract to American Institutes for Research to support the newly incorporated OPTN Board of Directors. 
    • “These critical actions to better serve patients by breaking up the monopoly that ran the nation’s organ allocation system are part of the OPTN modernization plan announced by HRSA in March 2023. Prior to these steps, the national body responsible for developing organ allocation policy for the country—the OPTN—and the corporate entity contracted to implement the policy—UNOS—shared the exact same Board of Directors. The new board support contractor will be accountable to HRSA and will organize a special election for a new OPTN Board of Directors with a focus on eliminating conflicts of interest and ensuring that data, evidence, and the voices of clinical leaders, scientific experts, patients, and donor families are driving action and accountability. Moving forward, no member of the OPTN Board can sit on an OPTN vendor’s board of directors.”
  • Per an FDA press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced a final rule that raises the minimum age for certain restrictions on tobacco product sales. These requirements are in line with legislation signed in December 2019 that immediately raised the federal minimum age of sale of tobacco products in the United States from 18 to 21 years of age. Once implemented, the requirements are expected to help decrease underage tobacco sales.  
    • “Beginning Sept. 30, retailers must verify with photo identification the age of anyone under the age of 30 who is trying to purchase tobacco products, including e-cigarettes. Previously, this requirement applied to anyone under the age of 27. It’s important for retailers to request and examine photo IDs to verify age from anyone under 30, regardless of appearance, as research has shown that it is difficult for retailers to accurately determine the age of a customer from appearance alone. 
    • “Additionally, starting Sept. 30, retailers may not sell tobacco products via vending machine in facilities where individuals under 21 are present or permitted to enter at any time. Previously, this prohibition applied to facilities where individuals under 18 were present or permitted to enter at any time. These, and the other changes made by the final rule, aim to maximize the public health impact of the original December 2019 legislation.”
  • The American Hospital Association lets us know,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will not appeal its loss in American Hospital Association v. Becerra. The AHA, joined by the Texas Hospital Association, Texas Health Resources, and United Regional Health Care System, last November sued HHS to bar enforcement of a new rule adopted in guidance by the Office for Civil Rights titled “Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates,” which prevented hospitals and health systems from using standard third-party web technologies that capture IP addresses on key portions of their public-facing webpages. A federal district court in the Northern District of Texas June 20 held that the OCR bulletin’s new rule “was promulgated in clear excess of HHS’s authority under HIPAA.” HHS Aug. 29 officially withdrew its notice of appeal, finalizing the AHA’s victory in this case.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The death toll of people who consumed products tainted with listeria that have been linked to Boar’s Head deli meats has risen to nine over the last three weeks, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Wednesday.
    • “In total, 57 people have been hospitalized because of the bacteria in the outbreak that started in May, the C.D.C. said. 
    • “As a result of the outbreak, the company has recalled millions of pounds of meat. The recall includes about 70 products — including those made from ham, beef and poultry — that were manufactured at its plant in Jarratt, Va. The recall mostly affects products that are sliced at the deli counter, the company said in a statement on its website.
    • “The six new deaths are one person from Florida, one person from Tennessee, one from New York, one from New Mexico and two people from South Carolina, according to health officials.”
    • “The C.D.C. is warning people not to eat the recalled deli meats. Health officials are telling consumers to check their fridges for any recalled Boar’s Head products. (The C.D.C. is telling people to look for “EST. 12612” or “P-12612” inside the USDA mark of inspection on the product labels. Some of the products have sell-by dates that last until October 2024.)”
  • The Wall Street Journal informs us,
    • “Shingles, also called herpes zoster, is a viral infection caused by the reactivation of the virus that also causes chickenpox. The virus remains dormant in the body of anyone who’s ever had chickenpox, and can reactivate at any time.
    • “Most of us think shingles is an old person’s disease and don’t even think about it until our 60s or 70s, especially since the vaccine was long recommended for people aged 60 and over. But the reality is, it can strike at any time, triggered by stress—physical or psychological—and it is often very painful. The good news is it’s often milder at younger ages.
    • “Starting in 1998, shingles rates increased across all ages for nearly two decades, including for those in their 40s, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. Rates have stabilized somewhat recently but remain higher than the 1990s.” * * *
    • “The CDC doesn’t advise getting the shingles vaccine until you’re 50 or older, at which time people typically have no out-of-pocket cost.
    • “Typically younger people experience milder cases of shingles and are less likely to develop postherpetic neuralgia, or neuropathic pain in the area where you had shingles, which can last months.
    • “But people under 50 who are immunocompromised are more at risk of developing shingles, and the CDC recommends vaccination for those people, provided they are age 18 or over.
    • “It’s unclear how long the shingles vaccine protects against infection. Doctors say it seems to offer good protection for at least up to a decade. Currently the CDC doesn’t recommend getting a booster after the initial two-shot regimen.”  
  • The National Institutes of Health Director writes in her blog,
    • “When someone receives an inactive sugar pill for their pain, the expectation of benefit often leads them to experience some level of pain relief. Researchers have long known that this placebo effect is a very real phenomenon. However, the brain mechanisms underlying the placebo effect for pain have been difficult for researchers to understand.
    • “Now, findings from an intriguing NIH-supported study in mice published in Nature offer insight into how this powerful demonstration of the mind-body connection works in the brain. Furthermore, the researchers identified a previously unknown neural pathway for pain control and suggest that specifically activating this pathway in the brain by other means could one day offer a promising alternative for treating pain more safely and effectively than with current methods, including opioids.” * * *
    • “While the experience of pain is exceedingly complex, and this research is in mice, the researchers expect that these findings will have relevance to people. The next step is to explore the role of activity in this newly discovered pain pathway in humans’ experience of the placebo effect. The hope is that with continued study it may one day be possible to target this brain area using small molecules or neural stimulation as a potentially more effective and safer means to ease pain compared to current methods.”
  • The National Cancer Institute posted its most recent cancer information highlights.
  • Cardiovascular Business points out,
    • Artificial intelligence (AI) is being used more and more to perform opportunistic screening of computed tomography (CT) scans for a variety of diseases. This is believed to be one way care teams can potentially change the course of preventive care in the near future, and it has been a growing topic at radiology and cardiology conferences in recent years. 
    • “One study study presented at the Society of Cardiovascular CT (SCCT) 2024 meeting led by Brittany Nicole Weber, MD, PhD, director of the Cardio-Rheumatology Clinic at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is shedding light on the potential of using opportunistic screening in CT scans to detect cardiovascular disease (CVD). This study explored the use of the HealthCCSng AI algorithm developed by Nanox, which was cleared by the FDA in 2021 to identify coronary artery calcium (CAC) in CT scans originally performed for noncardiac reasons. Weber said this strategy could significantly improve early detection and intervention in patients at risk for cardiovascular events. Coronary calcium is a marker of coronary disease on imaging and can be seen in any types of CT scans of the chest. The software can identify and quantify the calcium burden to risk stratify a patient without human intervention.
    • “Patients with autoimmune disorders are at a significantly higher risk for cardiovascular disease, largely due to systemic inflammation. However, many of these patients are not receiving the preventive therapies they need,” Weber explained in an interview with Cardiovascular Business.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Kauffman Hall reports,
    • “Kaufman Hall’s National Hospital Flash Report showed another month of solid performance through the first half of 2024 with a 4.1% operating margin year to date, continuing a trend of stronger performance that began in late 2023. It’s as if a light bulb turned on and has stayed on, setting up 2024 to be a better year than 2023.
    • “Before we declare victory, there are few noteworthy caveats.
      • “First, not all margins are created equally. While the month-over-month median shows improvement, the median change in margin is down, suggesting an uneven distribution of the improvement. About two-thirds of hospitals in the data through 2023 showed no change in operating margin compared to 2019. Many hospitals are running hard but running in place. This means that the improvement in the margin rests on the herculean shoulders of the remaining one third that are doing well—really well, in fact—to drive the national median up.
      • “Second, the Flash report typically reflects only a hospital’s acute care operations. If one were to add in physician enterprises and other similar non-acute care operations that negatively impact performance, margins would decline by about 200 basis points. This would bring our Calendar Year 2023 median of 2.7% in line with FY 2023 rating agency medians, which reported breakeven results.
    • “Notwithstanding these caveats, performance through the first half of 2024 suggests much improved results for full 2024. 
  • Per the Wall Street Journal,
    • “Luxury hotels such as the Waldorf Astoria, renowned for offering impeccable service to clientele, are now catering to an unexpected cadre of VIPs: newborns and their parents.
    • “Postnatal-wellness centers, modeled after ones in Taiwan and Korea, are popping up in American cities, quietly ensconced within tony hotels. For up to $1,500 per night, families leave the hospital and head to a retreat or check in for R & R later. They indulge in recovery, coaching in newborn care and pampering.
    • “Perhaps the most coveted service, however, is the 24-7 nursery staff, affording new parents that elusive treasure: sleep.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues provides seven payer executive answers to the question — what are the most dangerous trends facing payers? For example,
    • “Jen Truscott. Senior Vice President of Aetna Clinical Solutions (Hartford, Conn.):  According to the National Council on Aging, 80% of adults aged 65 and older have two or more chronic conditions. Many older adult patients seek care for health complications long after they have arisen. Care management can improve outcomes for health plan members when these programs are proactive and personalized, yet coordinated care is not utilized to its full extent across the U.S. To combat this, health plans should increase their emphasis on holistic care, effective care management programs and the power of value-based care. Our data show that four in 10 Aetna members changed their behavior — including reducing avoidable emergency room visits, improving medication adherence and choosing more cost-effective sites of care — due to our care management programs proactive outreach.”
  • HR Dive relates,
    • “Three in five U.S. workers reported living paycheck to paycheck, according to PNC Bank’s second annual Financial Wellness in the Workplace Report. And 31% of the more than 1,000 workers surveyed said they would like early access to their paycheck. 
    • “Meanwhile, 78% of the more than 500 U.S. employers surveyed said their workers were financially stressed, up from 71% in 2023. But access to financial planning benefits doubled from the previous year, jumping from 14% to 28%. 
    • “Three out of 10 workers of any generation and 4 out of 10 Generation Z workers with student loan debt report being “at a standstill” while they pay it off.”

Tuesday’s Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Fedweek lets us know,
    • “Another report to Congress has estimated an annual $1 billion cost to the FEHB program from ineligible persons being covered as family members, a cost that is passed on to both enrollees and the government in the form of higher premiums.
    • “The Congressional Budget Office estimate—agreeing with one last year from the GAO—was done in an analysis of S-4035, which is pending a vote in the full Senate after Congress reconvenes September 9. A counterpart bill, HR-7868, has cleared the House committee level, as well.
    • “The bills would require agencies to verify the eligibility of dependents enrolled in the FEHB when the employee or annuitant starts or changes a dependent’s enrollment; require OPM to audit dependents’ enrollment in the program; and expand fraud risk assessments of the program to include information on ineligible enrollees. * * *
    • “CBO expects that implementing the bill would cause enrollment to decline by about 100,000 people, on average, in each year over the 2025-2034 period. Verifications of eligibility during open season would cause a decline of about 10,000 people, on average, in each year over the same period,” it says.
    • However, that estimate “is subject to significant uncertainty because no similar verification audit of the FEHB program has been undertaken,” it added.
  • FEHBlog sermonette — About ten years ago, OPM added a provision to the FEHB standards contracts providing that the carriers would foot the bill for any family member eligibility audits. OPM never has performed a verification audit due to the FEHB program’s size. However, audits are based on sampling, and surely a sample-based audit of various geographic regions where federal and postal employees live (e.g., Washington, DC and nearby counties, Texas, Florida, etc.) would have told OPM whether or not it has a family member eligibility problem.
  • OPM does have a more glaring enrollment problem because OPM separately reports enrollment and premiums to carriers. Consequently, carriers, which carry the insurance risk, do not have the opportunity to confirm that enrollees in their records (based on OPM’s data) are paying the proper premiums for selected self only or other than self only coverage. What is the sense of nailing down family member coverage when no one knows whether the enrollee is paying the proper or any premium?
  • For close to twenty years, CMS, which implements HIPAA’s electronic standards, has made available an electronic enrollment roster transaction known as the HIPAA 820, which would allow FEHB carriers to reconcile enrollment and premiums at the individual level using computer systems. That’s a massive gap in internal controls that needs to be corrected without further delay, in the FEHBlog’s humble opinion. All that OPM has to do is tell the payroll offices to use the HIPAA 820. End of sermonette.
  • Per a company press release,
    • Maximus has been awarded a $20 million contract from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to serve as the Contact Center Services Provider for the agency’s new Postal Service Health Benefits Program. This program will provide health insurance to eligible Postal Service employees, annuitants, and their eligible family members starting in 2025.
    • Maximus will be leading the customer support effort to answer calls and emails for OPM’s new, enhanced customer service platform dedicated to assisting eligible individuals access health insurance benefits. Maximus will leverage offerings from its Total Experience Management (TXM) solution, including state-of-the-art telephony, customer relationship management, and call quality reporting tools to provide best-in-class customer service.
    • “The Postal Service Health Benefits Program is an invaluable benefit for the U.S. Postal Service workforce, and Maximus is uniquely positioned to develop this new contact center and Customer Experience (CX) approach based on more than 30 years of experience working with OPM,” said Larry Reagan, Senior Managing Director, Federal Civilian Market, Maximus. “Our senior team has vast experience standing up new customer service programs at scale for federal agencies to deliver a range of services, including disaster recovery, education, and health benefit services.”
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “An expensive drug for weight loss could become one of Medicare’s costliest medications, even if the majority of patients are ineligible for coverage, according to a study published on Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
    • “The analysis found 3.6 million people are highly likely to be eligible for semaglutide like Wegovy, a GLP-1 that’s effective at treating obesity. More liberal definitions of eligibility could increase that number to 15.2 million patients.
    • “If all newly eligible patients received semaglutide, spending in Medicare’s Part D prescription drug benefit could increase by $34 billion to $145 billion each year, according to the study. Even if the government narrowly defined eligibility, federal spending on the medicine could still exceed $10 billion annually.”
  • Medscape adds,
    • “Now that the U.S. government has negotiated prices for some Medicare program drugs effective in 2026, Wall Street analysts are betting on a 2027 list that will include Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster Ozempic for diabetes and have a limited impact on Big Pharma. [FEHBlog note — Wegovy is the weight loss version of Ozempic. Medicare by statute does not cover weight loss drugs.]
    • “Other possible 2027 candidates include Pfizer’s cancer drugs Ibrance and Xtandi, GSK’s asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) treatment Trelegy Ellipta, Teva’s Huntington’s disease treatment Austedo and Abbvie’s irritable bowel syndrome drug Linzess, according to five analysts as well as researchers and company executives.”
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced more than $558 million in funding to improve maternal health, building on the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to reducing the nation’s high maternal mortality rate through the White House Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis. The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency of HHS, is awarding more than $440 million in funding to expand voluntary, evidence-based maternal, infant, and early childhood home visiting services for eligible families across the country. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced a new investment of $118.5 million, over five years, to 46 states, six territories, and freely associated states to continue building the public health infrastructure to better identify and prevent pregnancy-related deaths.” * * *
    • “For a complete list of Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program awardees, visit https://mchb.hrsa.gov/programs-impact/programs/home-visiting/maternal-infant-early-childhood-home-visiting-miechv-program/fy24-awards.”
  • A Federal News Network Data Dive tells us, “USPS improves on-time delivery in delay ‘hotspots’, but faces year-end challenges. Postal experts say USPS improvements to on-time delivery are needed, and must continue, for Congress to allow these plans to keep moving forward.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review reports on an August 23, 2024, press conference that leaders of the CDC, HHS and FDA held to discuss the upcoming respiratory virus season.
  • The American Medical Association informs us about what doctors wish their patients knew about lung cancer screening.
    • “Lung cancer causes about 160,000 U.S. deaths a year, which is greater than the toll of the next three most common cancers—colon, breast and prostate—combined. Yet only about 30% of lung cancer cases are diagnosed early. Most patients are diagnosed at a far less treatable, later stage of the disease. And with about 20% of lung cancer deaths preventable, evidence-based screening recommendations for high-risk patients offers the best hope to catch the disease early and provide the best chance for effective treatment.”
  • Medscape looks into how old is too old to undergo a screening colonoscopy.
  • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) issued a medical research report this afternoon.
  • Per an NIH press release,
    • “So-called low-intensity blood stem cell transplants, which use milder conditioning agents than standard stem cell transplants, do not appear to damage the lungs and may help improve lung function in some patients with sickle cell disease (SCD), according to a three-year study of adults who underwent the procedure at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
    • “Damage to lung tissue and worsened lung function is a major complication and leading cause of death in people with sickle cell disease, a debilitating blood disorder. The new study, published today in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society, helps answer whether less intensive types of transplants, which tend to be better tolerated by many adults, by themselves either cause or promote further harm to the lungs.
    • “By using a low-intensity blood stem cell transplant for sickle cell disease, we may be able to stop the cycle of lung injury and prevent continued damage,” said study lead Parker Ruhl, M.D., an associate research physician and pulmonologist at NIH. “Without the ongoing injury, it’s possible that healing of lung tissue might occur, and this finding should help reassure adults living with sickle cell disease who are considering whether to have a low-intensity stem cell transplant procedure that their lung health will not be compromised by the transplant.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealth Group’s philanthropic arm has released a new deep dive into maternal and infant health, underscoring socioeconomic disparities in women’s health.
    • “The study found that American Indian/Alaska Native, Black and Hawaiian/Pacific Islander women had maternal mortality rates that were between 2.5 and 4.5 times higher than other ethnic groups. Severe maternal morbidity was, in 2020, two times higher among Black mothers than white mothers, and 1.5 times higher among Black mothers compared to Hispanic mothers.
    • “There were also racial disparities identified in low-birth weight, according to the study. Low birth weight rates were 2.1 times higher among babies born to Black mothers compared to infants born to white mothers.
    • “There were some bright spots in the data, however. Between 2008 and 2011 and 2018 to 2021, there were improvements to infant mortality rates among some racial groups. The study found improvements of 15% among infants born to white mothers, 12% among babies born to Black mothers and 9% for babies born to Hispanic mothers.
    • “Lisa Saul, M.D., national medical director of maternal child health at UnitedHealthcare, said in a press release that analyses like this are critical to developing targeted solutions to key challenges.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “After about 18 months since the FDA greenlit preventive COVID-19 medication Pemgarda for emergency use, the agency has tweaked its decision. 
    • “The agency has narrowed the medicine’s emergency use authorization. It is now OK to use when “the combined national frequencies of variants with substantially reduced susceptibility to Pemgarda is less than or equal to 90%,” the FDA said in an Aug. 26 letter to the drug’s maker, Invivyd. 
    • “Pemgarda (pemivibart) is authorized for the pre-exposure prophylaxis of COVID-19 in some adults and children older than 12. Eligible patients are those who have a moderate-to-severe immune compromise and are unlikely to have an adequate response to a COVID-19 vaccine.
    • “Early data indicate that COVID-19 variant KP.3.1.1 may have substantially reduced susceptibility to Pemgarda. As of Aug. 17, the variant accounted for 36.8% of COVID-19 infections, according to CDC data. If this percentage surpasses 90%, Pemgarda’s emergency use authorization could be revoked.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Insulet received U.S. clearance Monday for its Omnipod 5 system for Type 2 diabetes management — a first for the industry — making automated insulin delivery to control blood sugar available to millions of additional people living with diabetes.
    • “The system’s tubeless pump automatically adjusts insulin levels based on data from a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), replacing manual dosing. Since its approval for Type 1 patients in 2022, Omnipod 5 has become the most prescribed insulin pump in the U.S. and has more than 250,000 users globally, Insulet Chief Medical Officer Trang Ly said in an interview with MedTech Dive.
    • “Ly discussed the product’s launch for Type 2 diabetes patients, partnerships with other device makers and how the company is working to win over doctors reluctant to prescribe insulin pump therapy.”
    • Check out the interview.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • BioPharma Dive tells us,
    • Eli Lilly is now distributing a single-dose vial form of its popular weight loss medicine Zepbound that it says people with a valid prescription can obtain for a cash price that’s 50% less than the current cost of other GLP-1 drugs for obesity.
    • The single-dose vials are available through Lilly’s online service LillyDirect as a self-pay option, which could appeal to people without employer insurance coverage or those who don’t qualify for the company’s savings card program, Lilly said.
    • A four-week supply of Zepbound single-dose vials at a 2.5 milligram dose will cost $399, while the 5 milligram dose will cost $549. While those prices are well below the $1,060 monthly list price of Zepbound’s injector pen formulation, they’re not far from the drug’s estimated net price after accounting for rebates and discounts to insurers, according to a client note from Evercore ISI analyst Umer Raffat.
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Pfizer on Tuesday launched a direct-to-consumer service it claims will help people schedule telehealth appointments, fill prescriptions and access savings programs for the company’s migraine, COVID-19 or influenza medicines.
    • “Dubbed PfizerForAll, the online service will provide resources for people looking to obtain treatment for migraine, COVID or the flu, or to schedule vaccinations for diseases like pneumococcal pneumonia and respiratory syncytial virus.
    • “The platform aims to “streamline the path for those seeking better health,” Aamir Malik, Pfizer’s chief U.S. commercial officer, said in a statement. The company said it is working with partners UpScriptHealth, Alto Pharmacy and Instacart.”
  • MedCity News notes,
    • “Waltz Health, a digital health company focused on prescription drugs, launched Waltz Connect on Monday. The new solution aims to reduce the cost of specialty medications.
    • “Chicago-based Waltz Health was founded in 2021 and serves payers and pharmacies. It has a product called Marketplace Search, which allows users to search for any prescription and see the range of prices available at their pharmacy. It also works with health plans to bring its marketplace solutions into their pharmacy benefit.
    • “The company’s Waltz Connect product supports payers and focuses on specialty medications. When a specialty prescription is submitted for a member, Waltz Connect redirects it to the most suitable pharmacy, regardless of the pharmacy’s network status with the payer. This routing is based on the member’s benefit design and several factors, including price, turnaround time, fulfillment accuracy, member experience and adherence rates. These factors can be customized by drug class or specific drugs. Health plans also receive information on the member’s condition, prescription onboarding, the selected pharmacy’s contact information, expected fulfillment turnaround time and the number of refills.”
  • and discusses the pros and cons of artificial intelligence for health insurers. “With so much hinging on technology that is the subject of so much hype, it is important to understand where AI actually helps at present — and where it most definitely does not.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “Boston-based Mass General Brigham’s Home Hospital program has expanded to 70 beds, making it the largest home hospital in the country, according to a news release shared with Becker’s.
    • “The capacity increase was accompanied by expanded clinical care teams and the creation of dedicated roles within Home Hospital created. The system has also incorporated medical assistants into the care model and expanded the ambulance services to meet growing demand.
    • “Since its launch in January 2022, the program has had more than 4,000 patient admissions and saved more than 20,000 acute care hospital-based bed days. The average patient stays in a Home Hospital bed is 5 days.”
  • and
    • Where Steward’s 31 hospitals stand
      • From seeking Chapter 11 protection on May 6 to sharing plans to close four of its hospitals across Massachusetts and Ohio that would result in a combined 2,187 layoffs, Dallas-based Steward Health Care has experienced a great deal of turbulence over the last year.
      • As the for-profit health system continues to push back bid deadlines and sale hearings for many of its hospitals, the status of each facility remains in question, leaving community members, healthcare workers and state and local lawmakers concerned.
      • Below, Becker’s has provided a list of Steward’s 31 hospitals by state, per the health system’s website, and the most recent information regarding each facility. [FEHBlog note — Beckers plans to keep this list updated.]
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Aetna will cover intrauterine insemination as a medical benefit for eligible plans, a move the insurer called a “landmark policy change.” 
    • “Intrauterine insemination, or IUI, is usually only covered if employers offer a separate fertility benefit plan, according to an Aug. 26 news release from Aetna. 
    • “The change will apply to fully insured Aetna commercial plans. * * *
    • “Expanding IUI coverage is yet another demonstration of Aetna’s commitment to women’s health across all communities, including LGBTQ+ and unpartnered people,” Cathy Moffitt, MD, Aetna’s chief medical officer, said in the news release. “This industry-leading policy change is a stake in the ground, reflecting Aetna’s support of all who need to use this benefit as a preliminary step in building their family.”
  • Medscape adds,
    • “In a move that acknowledges the gauntlet the US health system poses for people facing serious and fatal illnesses, Medicare will pay for a new class of workers to help patients manage treatments for conditions like cancer and heart failure.
    • “The 2024 Medicare physician fee schedule includes new billing codes, including G0023, to pay for 60 minutes a month of care coordination by certified or trained auxiliary personnel working under the direction of a clinician.
    • :A diagnosis of cancer or another serious illness takes a toll beyond the physical effects of the disease. Patients often scramble to make adjustments in family and work schedules to manage treatment, said Samyukta Mullangi, MD, MBA, medical director of oncology at Thyme Care, a Nashville, Tennessee-based firm that provides navigation and coordination services to oncology practices and insurers.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Per a Congressional press release,
    • “Today, House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington (R-TX) and Senate Budget Committee Ranking Member Chuck Grassley (R-IA) spearheaded a letter to Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Director Phillip Swagel asking the CBO to analyze a new Medicare Part D Premium Stabilization Demonstration program that invites an unchecked taxpayer-funded bailout to paper over the flaws in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). 
    • Chairman Arrington and Ranking Member Grassley were joined by Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-ID), House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA), and House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith (R-MO).
  • Kevin Moss, now writing in Federal News Network, provides advice on whether to pay an IRMAA tax to obtain Medicare Part B coverage when you are retired with FEHB coverage. He notes that “The only question is whether you expect to be at this high IRMAA level throughout retirement.” The IRMAA tax, which for 2024 is based on your 2022 adjusted gross income, can disappear following retirement. In contrast, the hefty Medicare Part B late enrollment penalty is forever. Planning is important.
  • STAT News reports,
    • Covid caught the world flat-footed. No antiviral drugs were immediately available, and nearly two years would pass and over 800,000 Americans would die before the first pill, Paxlovid, was authorized. The Biden administration was determined not to be caught off guard again. In June 2021, it announced the Antiviral Program for Pandemics, or APP, for which $3.2 billion was to be spread across several government divisions and dozens of academic labs.  * * *
    • “That structure, STAT has learned, was never built. Just five months after the APP was announced, Omicron broke out, sending a seemingly waning pandemic into overdrive. When Congress refused to appropriate more funds to purchase variant-specific vaccines, the White House diverted money from the APP.”
    • The article goes onto to explain in depth why the APP is fizzling out.
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “The Biden-Harris Administration today continued its historic investment in health care coverage and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) by awarding a new round of $100 million to organizations vital to helping underserved communities, consumers, and small businesses find and enroll in quality, affordable health coverage through HealthCare.gov, the Health Insurance Marketplace®. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is awarding the grants, in advance of this year’s Marketplace Open Enrollment (which begins November 1, 2024) to 44 Navigator grantees in states using HealthCare.gov. The grants are part of a commitment of up to $500 million over five years – the longest grant period and financial commitment to date, and a critical boost for recruiting trusted local organizations to better connect with those who often face barriers to obtaining health care coverage.”
    • That’s a lot of boxes of ziti as they would say on the Sopranos.
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Insulet received Food and Drug Administration clearance on Monday for its newest insulin pump to be used by people with Type 2 diabetes.
    • “The regulatory decision will bring to market the first automated insulin delivery (AID) system, also known as an “artificial pancreas,” for both Type 1 and Type 2 patients. By pairing Insulet’s Omnipod 5 pump with a continuous glucose monitor, the device will automatically adjust insulin delivery based on a person’s blood glucose levels. 
    • “Insulet’s new indication comes as other diabetes device makers target the Type 2 market. Tandem Diabetes Care is running a randomized controlled trial of its Control IQ AID system in people with Type 2 diabetes, which could lead to an expanded indication for its t:slim X2 and Mobi pumps. Meanwhile, Medtronic struck a partnership with Abbott to make a sensor that would pair with Medtronic’s insulin pumps, with the goal of expanding access to its AID algorithms.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Among Covid’s superlatives is the blow it dealt to people’s career plans en masse. 
    • “Never before have so many Americans redrawn their relationships with work as a result of one public-health crisis. More than four years after the pandemic began, some are still reckoning with how to balance their livelihoods and life with long Covid, the chronic condition doctors are still trying to understand. People at the height of careers in finance, technology and healthcare are operating without clarity on when, or if, they can resume the paths they once laid out.
    • “Covid just kicked me off the train while it was still moving,” said Amie Pascal, 47, who spent years climbing the ladder at a digital-marketing agency in Oregon before getting long Covid.
    • “Long Covid has pushed around one million Americans out of the labor force, economists estimate. More than 5% of adults in the U.S. have long Covid, and it is most prevalent among Americans in their prime working years. About 3.6 million people reported significantly modifying their activities because of the illness in a recent survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”
  • KFF offers expert observations on the newly approved Covid booster, while MedPage Today tells us that COVID Vaccine Myocarditis stays mild with a good prognosis over a year later as the evolution of postvaccine myocarditis was tracked for 18 months in a cohort study.
  • The Washington Post alerts us,
    • “A rare but deadly disease spread by mosquitoes has nearly a dozen Massachusetts communities on alert, prompting some towns to close parks after dusk, restrict outdoor activities and reschedule public events.
    • “Massachusetts health officials this month confirmed the state’s first human case of the eastern equine encephalitis virus this year — a man in his 80s exposed in Worcester County, west of Boston. Ten communities are now designated at high or critical risk for the virus, health officials said Saturday. Plymouth, about 40 miles south of Boston, closed all public parks and fields from dusk until dawn, when mosquitoes are most active. Nearby, Oxford banned all outdoor activities on town property after 6 p.m.
    • “We have not seen an outbreak of EEE for four years in Massachusetts,” Robbie Goldstein, the state’s department of public health commissioner, said in a statement. “We need to use all our available tools to reduce risk and protect our communities. We are asking everyone to do their part.” * * *
    • “Residents are urged to use mosquito repellents, drain standing water around their homes, wear clothing that covers skin, and reschedule outdoor activities to avoid the hours between dusk and dawn.”
  • STAT News points out,
    • “The U.N. health agency on Monday launched a six-month plan to help stanch outbreaks of mpox transmission, including ramping up staffing in affected countries and boosting surveillance, prevention and response strategies.
    • “The World Health Organization said it expects the plan from September through February next year will require $135 million in funding and aims to improve fair access to vaccines, notably in African countries hardest hit by the outbreak.
  • MedTech Dive adds,
    • “Roche said it is working with partners to increase laboratory capacity for mpox testing worldwide.
    • “The push to support diagnosis of mpox comes days after the World Health Organization declared an outbreak of the viral disease a public health emergency of international concern. 
    • “A new strain of mpox is spreading rapidly in parts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the WHO said in a statement, and a coordinated international response is needed to stop outbreaks.”
  • The Washington Post notes,
    • “For years, Amanda Smith and her husband were jolted awake at night by a buzz-buzz-beep — an alarm warning that her blood sugar was too high or too low. She would reach for juice boxes stored in her nightstand or fiddle with her pump to release a bolus of insulin.
    • “Smith, a 35-year-old nurse from London, Ontario, has Type 1 diabetes, which wipes out critical islet cells within the pancreas that produce insulin. Without them, Smith relied on vials of insulin from a pharmacy and constant vigilance to stay alive. “You have to pay attention to your diabetes, or you die.”
    • “On Valentine’s Day 2023, doctors transplanted replacement islet cells, grown in a lab from embryonic stem cells, into a blood vessel that feeds Smith’s liver. By August, she no longer needed insulin. Her new cells were churning it out.
    • “I just feel normal again,” Smith said. “You didn’t realize how much of your life it took up — until it’s taking up none, now.”
    • “Smith is at the forefront of a medical experiment that seeks to treat the root cause of diabetes by replacing the cells the disease destroys. It’s a key step forward in the long quest to develop a cure for diabetes and a front-runner to finally deliver the sci-fi promise that has enveloped the stem cell field for more than two decades.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “McKesson plans to grow its oncology platform by investing nearly $2.5 billion into a community oncology clinic operator’s business and administrative services arm.
    • “Announced Monday, the deal sees Irving, Texas-based McKesson picking up a 70% stake in Community Oncology Revitalization Enterprise Ventures (Core Ventures), which was launched earlier this year by Florida Cancer Specialists & Research Institute (FCS).
    • “The Fort Myers, Florida-based institute is a group practice of over 250 physicians, 280 advanced practice providers and almost 100 Florida locations that will remain independent following the deal’s close. Its physician owners will retain their minority interest in Core Ventures.
    • “Pending closing conditions and regulatory clearances, Core Ventures would become part of McKesson’s oncology platform.”
  • Per FiercePharma,
    • “When CVS Caremark removed AbbVie’s Humira from its national commercial formularies back in April, biosimilar prescriptions picked up at a whirlwind pace. Now, Cigna’s Express Scripts is following suit in a move that could further chip away at Humira’s market share.
    • “Express Scripts, which is Cigna’s pharmacy benefit unit, is removing branded Humira from its largest commercial formularies come 2025 in favor of biosimilar options from Teva, Sandoz and Boehringer Ingelheim.
    • “We’ve been thoughtful in developing a comprehensive approach that considers not just the formulary placement of biosimilars, but also each product’s clinical efficacy, interchangeability, available supply, dose, and concentration that will provide a seamless patient experience with these more affordable products,” Express Scripts president Adam Kautzner said in a release, adding that the company is “prepared to embrace the savings biosimilars offer.”
  • STAT News discusses the impending launch of the over-the-counter glucose monitors.
    • “By the end of the summer, both Dexcom and Abbott will begin selling CGMs over the counter, without a prescription. Dexcom will start selling its CGM, called Stelo, on Monday. Abbott previously said it planned to release its version, called Lingo, before the end of the summer. The company told STAT it plans to launch and provide pricing details “soon.”
    • “The devices are being targeted at a huge swath of potential users: The nearly 100 million Americans with prediabetes (including the majority who don’t know it), people with type 2 diabetes who don’t use insulin, and even healthy people who want to keep an eye on their blood sugar levels. It’s a giant market for Abbott and Dexcom to tackle, and one especially welcomed by Dexcom, as it recently lowered sales guidance for its prescription CGMs. The companies are also betting that the frenzy over new weight loss drugs, GLP-1s, might generate more consumer interest in tracking glucose. 
    • “But the overall impact of the devices will depend a lot on how both clinicians and consumers decide to use them. “You’re looking at questions like affordability, how often patients are going to use this, whether they’re actually going to change their behavior and keep using it,” said Marie Thibault, a medical technology and digital health analyst at finance firm BTIG.” 
  • The Society for Human Resource Management relates,
    • “Despite the importance of open enrollment, employees aren’t exactly thrilled about reviewing forms for health insurance and other benefits every fall.
    • “Nearly 7 in 10 benefits-eligible employees (67%) spend just 30 minutes or less reviewing their options during open enrollment, while 42% spend 20 minutes or less, according to a 2023 Voya Financial survey. And the overwhelming majority of employees (roughly 90%) choose the same options as they did the previous year, a report by insurance firm Aflac found.
    • “Choosing benefits is “extremely overwhelming for people,” said Christin Kuretich, vice president of supplemental products at Voya, a New York City-based financial and insurance firm. “It’s not something that people generally want to think about or take the time to focus on.” * * *
    • “It’s not that employees don’t care about benefits—they mostly feel overwhelmed, confused, and now cost-conscious, industry experts said. That’s where employers come in, as many have been falling short with their important task of communication.
    • “Educating employees on the importance of open enrollment is always a challenge,” said Jess Gillespie, head of product and underwriting at Prudential Group Insurance. “HR departments can be stretched thin and will sometimes lack the time and resources to communicate about all workplace benefits available, let alone noncore products such as supplemental health.”
    • “In short, Gillespie said, employers “need to ensure employees see the value” of benefits.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Beckers Payer Issues explains how members of Congress receive their health benefit coverage. Of course, since 2014, the answer has been and remains the DC Affordable Care Act exchange. However, retired members of Congress often are eligible for federal pension which includes FEHB coverage with the full government contribution.
  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management is starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel on its never-ending journey to modernize its retirement systems.
    • “A pilot to test out a new online retirement application platform is showing promise with several federal payroll providers.
    • “Guy Cavallo, OPM’s chief information officer, said the pilot includes the Agriculture Department’s National Finance Center and several others to reduce both the amount of paper needed and the error rate in processing retirement applications.
      Guy Cavallo is the CIO at the Office of Personnel Management.
    • “We believe doing the online checking will help really reduce that back and forth that often is needed. We’re also rebuilding the way calculations are done, and we’re implementing a digital file system so that we can stop dealing with millions and millions of pages of paper to be part of retirement,” Cavallo said in an interview with Federal News Network. “It’s going to take many years for us to do this, but by taking the heart of that, we’re improving the way somebody starts to retirement. We’re making sure the calculation service is correct, and then we’re working to get rid of paper versions and move to digital. Those are our first three building blocks.
    • “Cavallo said the goal of the test is to test out the technology and the process changes and continually improve them. He said there is no specific time frame for how long the pilot will last.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “The FDA is building a post-market surveillance program for medical devices.
    • “The agency will look for medical device-related safety issues reported in EHRs, billing claims and pharmacy data, according to a U.S. Government Accountability Office report released Aug. 15.
    • “The program will begin surveillance of two medical devices by December, with plans to increase the number of devices under investigation each year over the next five years. 
    • “There were more than 1.7 million injuries, and 83,000 deaths linked to medical device safety issues over a 10-year period, according to FDA data from 2018, the report said.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “The average age of hip- and knee-replacement patients is getting younger.” * * *
    • “For patients ages 45 to 64, there was a 211% increase in inpatient hip replacements and a 240% increase in inpatient knee replacements between 2000 and 2017, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (Records after 2017 are less accurate due to changes in Medicare coding.)
    • “There was also an increase in joint replacements for patients ages 65 to 84, but the rise wasn’t as steep.
    • “This tracking doesn’t include the growing share of replacements that are outpatient surgeries, which allow patients to go home the same day as their procedure. More than a million hip and knee replacement surgeries are performed in the U.S. every year.”
  • The New York Time warns us,
    • “Without a sharp pivot in state and federal policies, the bird flu virus that has bedeviled American farms is likely to find a firm foothold among dairy cattle, scientists are warning.
    • “And that means bird flu may soon pose a permanent threat to other animals and to people.
    • “So far, this virus, H5N1, does not easily infect humans, and the risk to the public remains low. But the longer the virus circulates in cattle, the more chances it gains to acquire the mutations necessary to set off an influenza pandemic.
    • “I think the window is closing on our ability to contain the outbreak,” said Dr. Krutika Kuppalli, an infectious-disease physician who worked at the World Health Organization until April.”
  • Here’s a link to the CDC’s website on the disease.
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “Lack of research into miscarriage in the U.S. — its prevalence, its causes, and how best to treat people who’ve experienced pregnancy loss — has helped to reinforce what has long been a culture of silence and shame around miscarriage. That knowledge gap means that people who miscarry, and miscarry repeatedly, like Hanson, aren’t given the emotional support they need at a time when they are most vulnerable. Equally important, they aren’t given the medical treatment, screening, and support from the health care system that might help them avert future miscarriages. And research into the possible reasons for recurrent pregnancy loss has been limited and siloed, several experts told STAT.”  * * *
    • “When Carol Gilbert, an assistant professor at the University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Public Health, examined CDC data for her 2021 Ph.D. dissertation on perinatal periods of risk, she realized that she needed more complete data for losses before 20 weeks. For public health researchers like Gilbert, incomplete data prevents them from making accurate comparisons between states.When she examined the data, she understood why the CDC doesn’t publish statistics on fetal losses before 20 weeks of gestation. 
    • The individual case data on pregnancy losses are collected by hospitals, assembled by states, and then forwarded to the CDC. But a trifecta of quality problems may explain why the CDC does not publish what data it does receive on losses before 20 weeks of gestation. First, laws regarding the gestational age at which fetal losses need to be reported vary across states. The second problem Gilbert found was that states were inconsistent in their reporting, failing to follow their own laws. This was especially true for fetal deaths between 20 and 24 weeks. 
    • “The third problem was that not all states fill forms completely, leaving out data elements like birthweight and basic maternal characteristics. Some of this is inevitable because it is difficult to weigh fetal tissue in the early stage of pregnancy loss. A CDC spokesperson told STAT that “information regarding early pregnancy losses before 20 weeks’ gestation, including ectopic pregnancies and miscarriages, is challenging to obtain as these outcomes are not routinely reported to CDC.”
  • and
    • “Rachel Gross wants to clear up misconceptions about children and Covid-19. A pediatrician and population health researcher, she recalls a time four years ago when people didn’t think children could even contract the disease. Then, after accepting kids’ vulnerability to the virus, it was thought only adults could suffer from the myriad symptoms that persist or crop up post-infection, collectively known as long Covid.
    • “Now that it’s clear kids can also develop long Covid, Gross wants to correct assumptions that the condition looks the same in adults as in children, no matter their age. In new research published Wednesday in JAMA, Gross and the RECOVER-Pediatrics Consortium report that school-age children and adolescents experience similar long Covid symptoms across multiple organ systems, but those symptoms cluster in ways that vary depending on their age while diverging to some degree from the pattern seen in adults.” * * *
    • “Gross told STAT the study’s purpose was to learn how to identify children experiencing long Covid and how these symptoms change over time. “Then we will be able to better understand the question we really want to know: Why is this happening?”
  • Medscape adds, “Severe COVID-19 was associated with elevated risks for depression and serious mental illness months after infection, especially among unvaccinated people, a cohort study involving more than 18 million individuals in the U.K. found.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Renton, Wash.-based Providence posted an operating loss of $123 million in the second quarter of 2024, a $79 million improvement from the $202 million loss the 51-hospital system posted during the same period last year.
    • “Operating revenues increased by 6% compared to the same period last year, according to an Aug. 21 Providence news release shared with Becker’s. Operating expenses increased 5% for the three months ended June 30. 
    • “Providence saw higher volumes in the second quarter of 2024, according to the release. Inpatient admissions and case mix adjusted admissions were both up 5% compared to the same period last year. 
    • “Despite ongoing headwinds, our strategies for renewal and recovery are driving positive results, and we remain focused on continued improvement in 2024,” Providence CFO Greg Hoffman said in the release.” 
  • and
    • “Dallas-based Steward Health Care plans to close Trumbull Regional Medical Center and Hillside Rehabilitation Hospital, both in Warren, Ohio, on or around Sept. 20 after the facilities failed to attract qualified buyers, the health system said in an Aug. 21 statement shared with Becker’s.
    • “Steward, which sought Chapter 11 protection May 6, shared that the “regrettable but unavoidable situation” has occurred due to its “significant cash constraints.”
    • “We remain hopeful we can find an alternative solution that would keep the hospitals open and preserve the jobs of our dedicated team members,” the statement said. “We want to help save this hospital and will continue to work with qualified bidders during this process.”

Weekend Update

From Washington, DC,

  • The House of Representatives and the Senate remain on their August recess until September 9.
  • Roll Call reported on August 14,
    • “New Jersey Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy intends to appoint his former chief of staff, George Helmy, to fill the Senate seat that Sen. Bob Menendez will vacate next week, multiple New Jersey media outlets reported Wednesday evening, citing sources.
    • “Helmy, who has most recently worked as executive vice president and head of external affairs for RWJBarnabas Health, will serve until the end of the 118th Congress. The seat for the full term starting in January will be filled by the winner of the November election between Rep. Andy Kim, the Democratic nominee, and Republican Curtis Bashaw.”
  • On August 16, the Congressional Budget Office released to the House Oversight and Accountability Committee a report on H.R. 7868, the FEHB Protection Act.
    • The problematic aspect of the bill is that it focuses on tightening up oversight of family member eligibility when OPM does not give FEHB plans the information to confirm that plan enrollees are paying the proper premium or any premium for their coverage, which creates a yawning gap in internal controls. OPM can cure this problem by implementing the HIPAA 820 enrollment roster transaction.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Fortune Well identifies where COVID has been spiking in the U.S. this summer.
    • “In the four-week period ended Aug. 10, the national test positivity rate was 15.6%. During that time, five states in the South-Central U.S. saw the highest test positivity, 21%. These states collectively make up the CDC’s Region 6:
      • Arkansas
      • Louisiana
      • New Mexico
      • Oklahoma
      • Texas
    • “States in Region 9—Arizona, California, Hawaii, and Nevada—had the next-highest four-week positivity rate, 18.8%. Ten other states across two Midwestern regions were also above the national average. No state—as well as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands—had a positivity rate below 10%.”
  • The Washington Post lets us know,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is warning clinicians to be on the lookout for a viral disease that is spread by small flies and some types of mosquitoes and that causes sudden fever, severe headaches and chills.
    • “Cases of Oropouche virus disease have been climbing in South America and the Caribbean in the past two years and turned deadly for the first time this year.
    • “The CDC advisory issued Friday recommends that pregnant people reconsider nonessential travel to Cuba, which reported its first confirmed case in June.”
  • and
    • “Though appendectomies have been the gold standard of care since before the turn of the 20th century, doctors have been treating appendicitis with antibiotics since the 1950s, as soon as they became available — a “dark secret” in the surgery world, says David R. Flum, professor of surgery and director of the Surgical Outcomes Research Center at the University of Washington. A 1959 paper detailed the use of antibiotics to treat nearly 500 people (a mix of adults and children) with appendicitis. They were — and still are — often used in people whose appendicitis is so advanced that surgery risks spreading the infection further. The military relied on antibiotics for service members who got appendicitis while in inaccessible locations, like submarines.
    • “But the treatment didn’t get wider attention until the late 1990s and early 2000s, Flum says, when researchers began to collect data on how often antibiotics don’t work and found that failure was not as common as they thought.
    • “Then came two large, randomized trials in adults. In the first, published in 2015, 257 adults received an antibiotic treatment. Seventy of those patients, or 27 percent, had to have an appendectomy within one year. But the rest were fine.
    • “A second, larger study of 1,552 adults had similar results: Twenty-nine percent of the 776 people who received antibiotics underwent surgery within 90 days; 4 percent of people in the antibiotics group had serious adverse events, compared with 3 percent in the appendectomy group. The New England Journal of Medicine published the results in 2020. The same year, the American College of Surgeons added nonoperative management as an option in its guidelines for treating appendicitis.
    • “It wasn’t a slam dunk, but the studies showed that antibiotics could be a good choice.”
  • The New York Times discusses “The Painkiller Used for Just About Anything. In huge numbers, older people are taking gabapentin for a variety of conditions, including itching, alcohol dependence and sciatica.”
    • “It’s crazy how many [off label] indications it’s used for,” said Dr. Michael Steinman, a geriatrician at the University of California, San Francisco, and a co-director of the U.S. Deprescribing Research Network. “It’s become a we-don’t-know-what-else-to-do drug.”
    • “What has fueled this multipurpose popularity? “The history of gabapentin is really a history of uses getting ahead of the evidence,” said Dr. Joseph Ross, an internist and health policy researcher at Yale School of Medicine.” * * *
    • Dr. Steinman called it a “sticky” drug. He was an author of a 2022 study on older adults who were prescribed gabapentin after surgery, most commonly hip and knee replacements. One in five refilled the prescription more than three months later, when “presumably their surgical pain has long since resolved,” he said.
    • As older patients seek to find relief from chronic pain, “we don’t have a lot of great options,” Dr. Steinman said of health care providers. Prescribers try to avoid opioids, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories like ibuprofen are recommended only for short-term use.
    • Some find relief from medical cannabis, topical medications like creams and patches, and non-pharmacological approaches such as acupuncture, therapeutic massage and exercise.
    • “Often the single best thing I can do for patients with pain is to get them to physical therapy,” Dr. Steinman added.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Orlando Health has offered to buy Steward Health Care’s three “Space Coast” Florida properties, including three hospitals and a medical practice, for $439 million, according to a court document filed Wednesday.
    • “Bankrupt Steward Health Care and Orlando Health have entered into a binding asset purchase agreement to sell Rockledge Regional Medical Center, Melbourne Regional Medical Center, Sebastian River Medical Center. The proposed deal also includes Steward Medical Group Practices in East Central Florida.
    • “According to the court document, filed in U.S. bankruptcy court in the southern district of Texas, Steward designated Orlando Health a “stalking horse bidder,” which is the first to negotiate a purchase agreement with a debtor in bankruptcy. The bidder sets a minimum price and protects the debtor from low bids.
    • “The purchase agreement for Steward’s northern Florida assets is for $439.42 million in cash, according to the court document.
    • “Orlando Health’s bid will be subject to higher or better-qualified bids received by August 26, at which time a bankruptcy court-approved auction may occur, according to a press release from Steward Health Care.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds
    • “Steward Health Care System was in such dire straits before its bankruptcy that its hospital administrators scrounged each week to find cash and supplies to keep their facilities running. 
    • “While it was losing hundreds of millions of dollars a year, Steward paid at least $250 million to its chief executive officer, Dr. Ralph de la Torre, and to his other companies during the four years he was the hospital chain’s majority owner.
    • “Steward filed for bankruptcy in May, becoming one of the biggest hospital failures in decades.” * * *
    • “The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions in a bipartisan vote authorized an investigation and subpoenaed de la Torre to testify at a Sept. 12 hearing.”

Friday Factoids

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The battle to empower the federal government to negotiate lower prices for Medicare enrollees was years in the making. The war has just begun. 
    • “After years of opposition from the pharmaceutical industry and lawsuits seeking to halt the law that led to the new prices, resistance paled and legal efforts failed. The talks settled into a sometimes testy back and forth: hundreds of pages of paperwork, offers and rejected counteroffers, then rounds of meetings in windowless rooms with strict rules on how many people could attend.
    • During the meetings, many manufacturers lowered counter offers while federal officials moved up from their initial offers, said Meena Seshamani, director of the Center for Medicare and a deputy administrator of Medicare’s parent agency, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.” * * *
    • “Round two is just around the corner. 
    • “Companies and officials are already preparing for negotiations over more drugs that could take a bigger bite out of high drug costs, and possibly their bottom lines. Next up are prices of 15 more drugs the government will identify by Feb 1. 
    • “The two sides are also fighting over how the talks should work. Among the drug industry’s demands: clarity on how CMS determines the price of a drug. Drug companies are also fighting the agency’s potential changes for next year, including possibly cutting back the number of in-person meetings to fewer than three.”
  • Federal News Network informs us,
    • “Scores of House Democrats are calling on the Postal Service to adopt stricter workplace protections for extreme heat.
    • “The 77 House Democrats are calling on USPS to “immediately implement” the standards in the workplace heat rule the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) proposed last month.
    • “Proactively implementing this rule would save lives by ensuring that your workforce is protected with the most up-to-date heat safety standards,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter to Postmaster General Louis DeJoy.
    • “The proposed rule, if finalized, would be the nation’s first-ever federal heat rule.”
  • and
    • “Federal employees on official travel will soon enjoy another bump in reimbursable travel costs, as the General Services Administration has increased per diem rates for lodging and meals.
    • “Starting Oct. 1, the reimbursable daily limit will rise to $178, from $166 last year. This increase marks the third consecutive year feds saw lodging rates go up, while rates for meals and incidental expenses (M&IE) last went up in 2022.
    • “The standard per diem lodging rate within the continental United States (CONUS) went up from $107 to $110, while the rates for M&IE increased from a range of $59 to $79, to a range of $68 to $92.
    • ‘Agencies [and experience rated FEHB contractors] use per diem rates to reimburse employees for lodging and M&IE during official travel. Even with inflation growth in the U.S. now losing steam, the continued increase in per diem rates reflect the persistent rise in overall costs that Americans face across the board.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tells us,
    • Seasonal influenza and RSV activity are low nationally, but COVID-19 activity is elevated in most areas.
    • COVID-19
      • “Many areas of the country are continuing to experience increases in COVID-19 activity, though other areas are experiencing declines in COVID-19 activity following increases this summer. COVID-19 test positivity, emergency department visits, and rates of COVID-19–associated hospitalizations remain elevated, particularly among adults 65+ and children under 2 years. Surges like this are known to occur throughout the year, including during the summer months. There are many effective tools to prevent spreading COVID-19 or becoming seriously ill.”
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • “Nationally, RSV activity remains low.”
    • Vaccination
  • Minnesota CIDRAP adds,
    • “Nationally, wastewater detections of SARS-CoV-2 are at the very high level for the second straight week. The highest levels are still in the West and South, followed by the Midwest and the Northeast. The CDC’s latest update, however, shows downward trends from high levels in the South and Midwest.” 
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Federal authorities are preparing to approve updated coronavirus vaccines targeting the latest virus variants late next week, a move that could make shots available before Labor Day, according to a federal health official and a person familiar with the plans who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a confidential process.
    • “The mRNA shots manufactured by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna designed to target the KP.2 variant can hit the market within days of approval by the Food and Drug Administration. A third protein-based vaccine made by Novavax, preferred by people who are cautious about mRNA vaccines or who have had bad reactions to them, will probably take longer to be approved and will be distributed in subsequent weeks, according to the federal health official.
    • “Consumers should be able to start getting shots at pharmacies within a week after approval and at doctor’s offices soon after.”
  • and
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Friday authorized the first at-home [, over the counter,] syphilis test amid surging cases of the bacterial infection and calls from federal health officials for innovative strategies to detect the disease.
    • “The manufacturer, NowDiagnostics, anticipates the 15-minute test called First to Know, being available in pharmacies, major retail stores and online as early as September. FDA staff hailed the new product as an advancement in testing for sexually transmitted illnesses but noted that an additional test by a health-care provider is needed to confirm a positive result.
    • “Syphilis was nearly eliminated in the 1990s, but rates have since soared to a 70-year high. Between 2018 and 2022, cases rose nearly 80 percent, according to the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Pfizer and BioNTech on Friday said a combination flu and COVID-19 shot they’ve been developing met one of its main goals in a Phase 3 trial but missed another, leaving the vaccine’s future in doubt. 
    • ‘The study tested Pfizer and BioNTech’s vaccine against separately administered, marketed COVID and flu shots in more than 8,000 people between the ages of 18 and 64. While the combination vaccine spurred a comparable immune response against COVID and influenza A, it didn’t meet that mark against the “B” strain of the flu.  
    • “As a result, two companies are “evaluating adjustments” that would improve the vaccine’s performance against influenza B while discussing next steps with health authorities.”
  • STAT News adds,
    • “The National Institutes of Health said Thursday that an antiviral often used to treat mpox did not resolve patients’ symptoms faster than placebo in a randomized trial.
    • “The results are notable because the drug, tecovirimat, has rarely been studied clinically for mpox, despite its wide use during the 2022 and 2023 outbreaks in the U.S. and Europe.”  
  • The American Medical Association shares “Top health tips sleep medicine physicians want you to know.”
  • Per Healio,
    • “Among a select group of women with uterine factor infertility, uterus transplant was feasible and associated with a high live birth rate after successful graft survival, data from a case series show.
    • “In an analysis of the Dallas Uterus Transplant Study (DUETS), researchers also found that although adverse events were common, including complications requiring surgical intervention, infants born to women who received a uterine transplant had no congenital abnormalities or developmental delays, though follow-up of the cohort is ongoing.
    • “We show that uterus transplantation is not only feasible and safe, but also associated with a success rate that is comparable with and even favorable to other infertility treatments,” Liza Johannesson, MD, PhD, of the Annette C. and Harold C. Simmons Transplant Institute at Baylor University Medical Center, told Healio. “[What is] important is that the children born after uterus transplant are healthy and developing normally.”
  • Medscape offers an interview with a Harvard medical professor about preventing dementia.
    • “Hello. This is Dr JoAnn Manson, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. I’d like to talk with you about a new report on the preventability of dementia that is both exciting and paradigm-shifting. The new study, published in The Lancet by the Lancet Commission on Dementia, estimates that close to 50% of cases of dementia worldwide can be prevented or delayed by improving 14 modifiable risk factors.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • MedCity News discusses the future of retail healthcare.
  • Behavioral Health Business lists the 40 fastest growing behavioral health companies in the U.S.
  • Per Reuters,
    • “Older Americans are having little success getting prescriptions for weight-loss drug Wegovy covered by Medicare despite the federal healthcare program’s decision to pay for patients with obesity at risk of heart disease, according to their doctors.
    • “In interviews with Reuters, seven obesity and heart disease specialists from various parts of the United States said their prescriptions for the Novo Nordisk (NOVOb.CO), opens new tab drug have been denied repeatedly by the healthcare companies that administer Medicare drug benefits, with some prescriptions approved only following an appeal for each application.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Massachusetts’ governor has announced that deals in principle have been reached for Steward Health Care’s four remaining hospitals in Massachusetts.
    • “Should the deals be finalized, Lawrence General Hospital will operate both campuses of Holy Family in Haverhill and Methuen. Lifespan would take over operations of Morton Hospital and Saint Anne’s Hospital. Boston Medical Center will take over operations of Good Samaritan Medical Center.
    • “Boston Medical Center also intends to operate Saint Elizabeth’s down the line. The state is first taking control of the hospital through eminent domain, according to an announcement from the governor’s office.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The American Hospital Association News informs us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Aug. 15 announced it negotiated lower prices with drug makers for 10 high-cost, sole-source drugs, with the new prices becoming effective in 2026 for individuals with Medicare Part D coverage. The drugs treat conditions such as heart disease, diabetes and cancer, and about nine million Medicare beneficiaries use at least one of the 10 drugs selected for negotiation. The new prices are estimated to save $1.5 billion in out-of-pocket costs for individuals with coverage. A CMS fact sheet includes more information about the newly negotiated prices. The agency last year announced the first list of 10 Medicare Part D drugs subject to price negotiations.”
  • STAT News cautions,
    • “The White House is touting just how much its new Medicare negotiation process cut drug prices. The problem is the numbers it’s using don’t actually mean much.”
    • “In a striking side-by-side comparison, President Biden tweeted out a graphic showing newly negotiated prices that Medicare will pay for 10 drugs including blood thinners, cancer treatments, and diabetes medications, among others. The table compares the new prices to the list price of the medicines last year, showing discounts ranging from hundreds to thousands of dollars. 
    • “However, Medicare generally doesn’t pay list prices for medications. Currently, prescription drug plans negotiate discounts off of the list prices at a smaller scale than the new program — but those prices are secret, even in a public program.
    • “The White House did release more meaningful overall numbers tied to the amount Medicare actually pays for drugs that show discounts of roughly 22% on the 10 drugs collectively, compared to what the program paid last year. That’s more modest than the exaggerated discounts based on list prices that show price reductions of up to 79%.”
  • In any case, why didn’t Congress align the effective dates for the enormous consumer improvements in Part D, discussed yesterday, with the “negotiated prices”?
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The Biden administration on Wednesday announced a new initiative aimed at improving the hiring process for federal job applicants, hiring managers and other agency HR officials alike, as the White House continues to search for ways to speed up the process and better compete for top talent.
    • “Strategic human capital management has been on the Government Accountability Office’s famed High-Risk List, a biennial report highlighting issues that present potential liabilities of at least $1 billion for the federal government, for more than two decades. In 2021, GAO found that the government had actually regressed in its effort to address difficulties in hiring new federal workers during the final two years of the Trump administration.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management and Office of Management and Budget worked jointly on the effort, announced Wednesday in a memo to agency heads entitled “Improving the Federal Hiring Experience.” The document encompasses plans to improve strategic workforce planning, making it easier for potential job applicants to find jobs they are interested in and making the hiring process both faster and more transparent for jobseekers, as well as making hiring less agonizing for the hiring managers and other human resources personnel.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration marked a milestone building on Phase I of its voluntary sodium reduction targets and issued draft guidance for Phase II in a data-driven, stepwise approach to help sodium reduction across the food supply. Prior to 2021, consumer intake was approximately 3,400 milligrams per day on average, far higher than the limit recommended by the Dietary Guidelines for Americans of 2,300 milligrams per day for those 14 years and older. If finalized, the new set of voluntary targets would support reducing average individual sodium intake to about 2,750 milligrams per day. This reduction is approximately 20% lower than consumer intake levels prior to 2021. 
    • “The Phase II voluntary sodium reduction targets follow an initial set of targets issued in October 2021. The initial set of targets encouraged the food industry to reduce sodium levels in a wide variety of processed, packaged, and prepared foods. Preliminary data from 2022 show about 40% of the initial Phase I targets are very close to or have already been reached indicating early success of this effort.”
  • FedWeek explains the uncommon exceptions to the FEHB Program’s five-year rule which governs whether a federal employee can continue FEHB coverage into a civil service retirement with the full government contribution.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • CNN reports,
    • “Americans, and especially those under age 35, are changing their tune on alcohol use, with a growing share endorsing the view that moderate drinking is bad for health — and a new study backs them up.
    • “According to a Gallup poll released Tuesday, almost half of Americans, 45%, say that having one or two alcoholic drinks a day is bad for a person’s health. That’s the highest percentage yet recorded by the survey, which has been conducted 10 times since 2001.”
  • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director, writing in her blog, discusses “Mapping Psilocybin’s Brain Effects to Explore Potential for Treating Mental Health Disorders.”
    • Psilocybin is a natural ingredient found in “magic mushrooms.” A single dose of this psychedelic can distort a person’s perception of time and space, as well as their sense of self, for hours. It can also trigger strong emotions, ranging from euphoria to fear. While psilocybin comes with health risks and isn’t recommended for recreational use, there’s growing evidence that—under the right conditions—its effects on the brain might be harnessed in the future to help treat substance use disorders or mental illnesses.
    • “To explore this potential, it will be important to understand how psilocybin exerts its effects on the human brain. Now, a study in Nature supported in part by NIH has taken a step in this direction, using functional brain mapping in healthy adults before, during, and after taking psilocybin to visualize its impact. While earlier studies in animals suggested that psilocybin makes key brain areas more adaptable or “plastic,” this new research aims to clarify changes in the function of larger brain networks and their connection to the experiences people have with this psychedelic drug.”
    • The blog explains the latest research.
  • Per an NIH press release,
    • “The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has launched a program that will support Native American communities to lead public health research to address overdose, substance use, and pain, including related factors such as mental health and wellness. Despite the inherent strengths in Tribal communities, and driven in part by social determinants of health, Native American communities face unique health disparities related to the opioid crisis. For instance, in recent years, overdose death rates have been highest among American Indian and Alaska Native people. Research prioritized by Native communities is essential for enhancing effective, culturally grounded public health interventions and promoting positive health outcomes.”
  • The New York Times reports that “In an experiment that surpassed expectations, implants in an ALS patient’s brain were able to recognize words he tried to speak, and A.I. helped produce sounds that came close to matching his true voice.” Truly amazing.
  • Per Healio,
    • “Women with vs. without cognitive impairment had more intense menopause symptoms.
    • ‘Lower BMI, sexual activity, exercise, hormone therapy use, and higher education were tied to lower cognitive impairment odds.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Employer-sponsored health plan costs are expected to rise 9% in 2025, totaling more than $16,000 per employee before cost-saving measures, according to professional services and consulting company Aon.
    • “Aon predicts that demand for prescription drugs such as glucagon-like peptide-1 agonists and growth in medical claims for high-cost treatments such as gene and cell therapies are among the main drivers of rising costs for employers.
    • Janet Faircloth, senior vice president of innovation and integrated solutions for Aon, said employers are expected to apply cost-saving strategies used in previous years, including raising out-of-pocket costs for employees and bidding between insurers for the best price.
    • For 2024, Aon predicted health plan costs would increase by 8.5%, but the firm projects employer cost-saving efforts are likely to hold the increase to 6.4% overall.
    • “We generally see a 1% to 2% reduction from the initial trend expectation after employers make their changes,” Faircloth said.
    • The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans released a similar report Thursday, estimating employer-sponsored health plan costs would rise 8% in 2025 due to the same factors Aon cited.
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Health insurers have invested heavily in building out their Medicare and Medicaid businesses in recent years, tempted by the prospect of healthy margins and growing membership in the government-run insurance programs.
    • “But privately run Medicare Advantage and safety-net Medicaid plans are seeing their profitability shrink amid ongoing operational pressures, creating a sharp reversal in expected fortunes — much to health insurance executives’ chagrin.
    • “For much of the past year, insurers bemoaned the headwinds in MA as seniors using more medical care caused spending to snowball. But in the second quarter, many payers suggested Medicaid has become a bigger problem, as states remove ineligible beneficiaries from the safety-net coverage, sickening insurers’ risk pools and saddling them with higher costs.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues illustrates the fact that “The CEOs of the six largest for-profit insurers have different perspectives on Medicare Advantage.” 
  • Per a Health Care Cost Institute announcement,
    • “Technological medical advancements have shifted an array of procedures previously rendered in inpatient hospitals to ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs). For example, same-day procedures (e.g., cataracts surgery) that do not require an overnight hospital stay and musculoskeletal procedures, such as arthroscopy, are commonly performed at ASCs. 
    • “Because they operate independently of brick-and-mortar hospital facilities, ASCs are considered “off site.” Compared to procedures rendered in hospital outpatient departments, ASC’s receive lower reimbursement. For low-risk procedures, ASCs may be a cost-efficient site of care. Recent market analysis found that procedures at ASCs have grown over time and now account for half of all outpatient surgeries. 
    • “In this brief, we compare employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) ASC reimbursement amounts for a subset of procedures to Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) payment for the same procedures. We find that, on average, ESI pays two times more than Medicare FFS for procedures provided at ASCs. If ESI reimbursed at Medicare average rates, spending would have been nearly $9 billion lower in 2021.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Cleveland Clinic saw an operating income of $45.3 million at a 1.2% margin in the second quarter of 2024 for the three months ended June 30, a 312% increase from a $21.4 million operating loss (-0.6% margin) during the second quarter of 2023, according to its Aug. 16 financial report.
    • “Total revenue for the system was $3.9 billion in the second quarter of 2024, up from $3.6 billion during the same period last year. 
    • “Net income for the health system was $187.8 million for the three months ended June 30, 2024, up from $145.2 million during the second quarter of 2023.
    • “Expenses increased 8% to $3.7 billion, with salaries, wages and benefits also increasing 8% to $2.3 billion. Cleveland Clinics outstanding and long term debt was $5.4 billion, the report said.” 
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Neuronetics said Monday it has agreed to merge with Greenbrook TMS to acquire treatment centers that use its mental health devices.
    • “Greenbrook provides transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and other mood treatments from 130 sites. Neuronetics sells a TMS device to treat major depressive disorder (MDD).
    • “William Blair analysts said in a note to investors that the merger changes Neuronetics’ profile “from device-centric to a device-service business operating brick-and-mortar facilities.”
  • Per Reuters,
    • “Eli Lilly (LLY.N) has sent cease-and-desist letters to U.S. healthcare providers in recent days to stop the promotion of the compounded versions of its drugs for weight loss and diabetes, as their supply increases, the company said on Wednesday.
    • “The letters were sent to telehealth companies, wellness centers and medical spas selling compounded versions of the drugmaker’s popular treatments Zepbound and Mounjaro, a spokesperson told Reuters.”