Thursday Miscellany
From Washington, DC
- The Congressional Budget Office posted a presentation about “CBO’s Approach to Estimating the Budgetary Effects of the No Surprises Act of 2021.”
- “This presentation describes CBO’s approach to estimating the budgetary effects of the No Surprises Act. The stated aim of the No Surprises Act was to protect patients from surprise billing. The law:
- “Established protections for patients receiving out-of-network care,
- “Established an arbitration process for resolving payment disputes, and
- “Directed arbiters to consider the qualifying payment amount, defined as the median in-network rate, as the benchmark for payment (with other factors).
- “CBO projected that reductions in prices paid to providers would reduce insurers’ costs, in turn reducing premiums by roughly 1 percent and reducing federal deficits from 2021 to 2030 by a total of $17 billion.”
- The Internal Revenue Service warned consumers to “Beware of companies misrepresenting nutrition, wellness and general health expenses as medical care for FSAs, HSAs, HRAs and MSAs.”
- Fedweek tells us,
- “In a series of recent reports, the OPM inspector general’s office said it has identified misspending in the FEHB program, which adds to the cost of premiums both for the enrollees and the government, but that legal barriers prevent the program from recouping some of that amount.
- “A report covering the last three months of 2023 is typical in noting that the FEHB program is precluded from pursuing cases under the Anti-Kickback Statute, which makes it illegal for health care providers to knowingly and willfully accept bribes or other forms of remuneration in return for activities such as patient referrals.”
- Query me this. How can there be misspending when Congress decided in 1996 not to apply this law to the FEHBP because it is operated by commercial entities? It’s sour grapes.
- Federal News Network informs us,
- The Office of Personnel Management’s retirement backlog made huge improvements in claims processed for February reaching 10,025, the highest number since April 2023. OPM received 8,794 claims in February and managed to process more than 3,000 claims compared to January.
- After seeing a large increase in the inventory backlog in January, OPM made small improvements shrinking the backlog by 1,231 to a total of 19,591 claims in February. With a slight decrease in the backlog, OPM is still over 6,000 claims above the steady goal of 13,000.
- OPM also saw improvements for the average processing time for February, reaching 47 days, setting a new record.
From the public health and medical research front,
- STAT News reports good news,
- “A new monoclonal antibody product to protect against respiratory syncytial virus was 90% effective at preventing little children from being hospitalized with RSV, according to new data from the first season it was in use.
- “The data, published Thursday in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention publication, looked at how well Beyfortus worked in the children whose parents managed to secure a scarce dose of the drug. These are the first real-world data showing how effective the product was in the United States.
- “It’s basically really good news,” said Sean O’Leary, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and a pediatric infectious diseases specialist at Children’s Hospital Colorado. “In some clinical trials we see some level of effectiveness … but then when it’s rolled out in the real world, for any number of potential reasons, things don’t work out as well as they had in the clinical trials.”
- “In this case, it’s great. The point estimate they came up with is even better than in the clinical trials,” said O’Leary, who was not involved in the study.
- “AstraZeneca and Sanofi jointly developed Beyfortus, which is sold in the U.S. by Sanofi.”
- and
- “A pill being developed by Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk may lead to greater weight loss than the obesity therapy Wegovy, the company reported Thursday, citing early data.
- “In a Phase 1 trial, participants experienced an average of 13.1% weight loss after 12 weeks of taking the experimental oral medicine amycretin, according to data presented at an investor meeting. In comparison, in an earlier Phase 3 trial of the injectable drug Wegovy, people taking Wegovy lost about 6% of their body weight over the same time period. * * *
- “Novo Nordisk isn’t the only pharma company working on a pill. An experimental pill being developed by Eli Lilly led to 14.7% weight loss in a 36-week, Phase 2 trial. Pfizer had been developing an oral medication, as well, but opted to shut down that product’s developmentdue to disappointing trial results.
- “Many other companies are also testing oral obesity drugs, according to the STAT Obesity Drug Tracker.”
- The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review announced,
- [that it will assess the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of acoramidis (BridgeBio Pharma, Inc.), tafamidis (Pfizer Inc.), and vutrisiran (Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) for the treatment of transthyretin amyloidosis cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM).
- “The assessment will be publicly discussed during a meeting of the Midwest CEPAC (Midwest CEPAC) in September 2024, where the independent evidence review panel will deliberate and vote on evidence presented in ICER’s report.
- “ICER’s website provides timelines of key posting dates and public comment periods for this assessment.“
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Beckers Hospital Review considers why healthcare cyberattacks last so long.
- “The cyberattack on Change Healthcare that has caused disruptions across a wide swath of the industry has entered its third week. But why do these IT outages last so long?
- “It’s a combination of ensuring that the hackers are no longer in the system and securing the vulnerability that allowed them to breach it in the first place, according to John Riggi, national advisor for cybersecurity and risk at the American Hospital Association.
- “The victim must figure out how the bad guys broke into their network, where they are, throw them out and then seal that technical ‘hole,'” Mr. Riggi told Becker’s. * * *
- “But Mr. Riggi, who spent more than two decades at the FBI, said it could take even longer to fully recover. “These disruptions could linger for several months or a year, and legacy systems that may not have been backed up or destroyed during the attack may become totally unrecoverable,” he said.”
- United Healthcare offers a March 7 update on its Change Healthcare cyber response website.
- Beckers Hospital Review also names ten drugs poised to be best seller this year and discusses “Newsweek‘s 2024 “America’s Greatest Workplaces for Women” ranking, which includes hospitals and health systems.”
- Business Insurance reports,
- While inflation in the general economy has slowed since 2022, workers compensation payment growth is still at levels higher than in 2020, experts with the Workers Compensation Research Institute said Tuesday.
- Changes in medical care utilization and mix of services continue to affect workers comp pricing, and the recent trend of health care labor shortages, especially in nursing, is also contributing to higher costs, panelists said during a session at the 2024 WCRI Issues & Research Conference.
- The Hill relates,
- Drugmaker Boehringer Ingelheim plans to cap the out-of-pocket costs for all its inhalers at $35 per month after coming under fire from Democratic lawmakers over pricing.
- The company announced Thursday that the program will start June 1. It’s aimed at patients with employer-sponsored insurance, and those who are underinsured and uninsured, meaning they likely have to pay cash.