Happy Groundhog Day

Happy Groundhog Day

The Hill reflects on the history of Groundhog Day. By the way, “on Thursday, Punxsutawney Phil predicted six more weeks of winter.”

Each year on the first Friday in February, [February 3, 2023], the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, The Heart Truth® and others around the country celebrate National Wear Red Day® to bring greater attention to heart disease as a leading cause of death for Americans and steps people can take to protect their heart. Promote Wear Red Day in your community with resources such as printable stickers, posters, and social media graphics, including customizable ones.

From Capitol Hill, Roll Call tells us that “Senate committees will be able to get to work next week after the Senate adopted resolutions constituting their membership for the 118th Congress before departing Thursday afternoon.”

STAT News interviews the Chair and Ranking Member of the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, Senators Bernie Sanders and Bill Cassidy respectively.

Both senators cited addressing the national shortage of nurses as high on the bipartisan to-do list. The chairman also said he thinks expanding community health centers and improving dental coverage could get both parties’ buy-ins, while Cassidy pointed to mental health care legislation and probing the rollout of efforts to eliminate patients’ surprise medical bills.

Unsurprisingly, however, Sanders’ top priority is slashing drug costs — and he’s banking on voter polling to push GOP members, or at least put them in an uncomfortable spot with constituents. 

From the Medicare front, Health Payer Intelligence provides an overview of reactions to yesterday’s CMS 2024 Medicare Advantage Advance Notice with changes for Medicare Advantage plans and Medicare Part D.

The Kaiser Family Foundation offers a detailed study of prior authorization requests for Medicare Advantage enrollees in 2021. Adverse decisions on prior authorization requests. The number of requests varied by Medicare Advantage carrier. Six percent of all prior authorizations were partially or entirely denied. 11% of prior authorization requests were appealed, and 82% of appeals were decided in the Medicare Advantage enrollee’s favor. What an interesting batch of percentages.

From the U.S. healthcare business front, BioPharma Dive reports

Sales of Eli Lilly’s new diabetes drug Mounjaro grew strongly in the final quarter of 2022, the company reported Thursday, challenging the market position of competing medicines from rival Novo Nordisk. 

Fourth quarter sales totaled $279 million, bringing the total for 2022 to $483 million following the drug’s June launch. The fast sales put Mounjaro, approved to improve blood sugar control in people with Type 2 diabetes, on pace to quickly reach blockbuster status. Studies have shown the drug to have a powerful weight-loss effect as well, supporting Lilly’s current efforts to expand the drug’s approval to include obesity treatment.  * * *

On an earnings call Thursday, Lilly executives said the company is having trouble keeping Mounjaro production high enough to match patient demand. More manufacturing capacity is being added, with a site in North Carolina expected to start production sometime later this year, CFO Anat Ashkenazi said on the call.

Russ Roberts spoke with Dr. Vinay Prasad on this week’s Econtalk episode. The topic is “Pharmaceuticals, the FDA, and the Death of Duty.” During the episode, Dr. Prasad identified Dr. Bernard Fisher as one of his heroes. Dr. Fisher passed away in 2019 at age 101. I had never heard of Dr. Fisher, but his story should be shared.

Healthcare Dive informs us.

Healthcare consumers appear to be increasingly comfortable switching providers when their current one isn’t meeting their needs, according to a report from Accenture. About 30% of patients selected a new provider in 2021 — up from 26% in 2017, the report found. A quarter switched providers in 2021 because they were unhappy with their care — up from 18% in 2017. Switching providers is especially true among younger generations, like Gen Zers and millennials, who were six times more likely to switch providers than older people, according to the report.

From the miscellany department —

  • Health Affairs Forefront delves into the data produced to date by the government’s payer transparency rules.
  • Fierce Healthcare tells us about a recent expansion of CVS Health’s virtual primary care service.
  • Benefit consultant Tammy Flanagan writing in Govexec, follows the path of a federal employee’s retirement application.

Midweek update

From our Nation’s capital, HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra made a statement honoring Black History Month which began today.

The Wall Street Journal reports

President Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy began face-to-face debt-ceiling discussions [today], with the latter expressing cautious optimism that they can come to a deal to avoid the first-ever default of the country’s debt.

The Hill tells us

  • Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has pulled Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), who tried to oust him as the Senate’s top Republican in a bruising leadership race, off the powerful Commerce Committee.  
  • McConnell also removed Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), who supported Scott’s bid to replace McConnell as leader, from the Commerce panel, which has broad jurisdiction over a swath of federal agencies.  

Speaking of federal agencies, Healthcare Dive informs us

The Federal Trade Commission is penalizing GoodRx for sharing users’ sensitive health information with advertisers, in the agency’s first enforcement action under the Health Breach Notification Rule.

The FTC filed an order with the Department of Justice on Wednesday that would prohibit GoodRx from sharing user health data with third parties for advertising purposes, among other guardrails. GoodRx has also agreed to pay a $1.5 million fine, though the company admitted no wrongdoing. The order needs to be approved by a federal court in order to go into effect.

Also, the President issued a Statement of Administration Policy objecting to Republican legislative efforts to end the national and public health emergencies for the Covid pandemic without further delay. The Statement explains why the White House has opted to end those emergencies on May 11.

In that regard, Health Payer Intelligence notes

CMS announced that there will be a special enrollment period on the Affordable Care Act marketplace for individuals who lose their Medicaid coverage due to the public health emergency unwinding.

“Today, CMS is announcing a Marketplace Special Enrollment Period (SEP) for qualified individuals and their families who lose Medicaid or CHIP coverage due to the end of the continuous enrollment condition, also known as ‘unwinding,’” the FAQ sheet explained.

The special enrollment period will stretch from March 31, 2023 to July 31, 2024. In order to be eligible for the special enrollment period, individuals must be eligible for Affordable Care Act marketplace coverage and must have lost their Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), or Basic Health Program (BHP) coverage.

From the Omicron and siblings front, Beckers Hospital Review points out

The FDA altered its emergency use authorizations on Paxlovid and Lagevrio, two COVID-19 treatments, on Feb. 1 to revoke a requirement for a positive COVID-19 test before a provider can prescribe them. 

“The agency continues to recommend that providers use direct SARS-CoV-2 viral testing to help diagnose COVID-19,” the FDA said in an emailed statement. But, “in rare instances, individuals with a recent known exposure (e.g., a household contact) who develop signs and symptoms consistent with COVID-19 may be diagnosed by their healthcare provider as having COVID-19” even if they test negative.

From the public health front —

  • The Commonwealth Fund issued a report titled “U.S. Health Care from a Global Perspective, 2022: Accelerating Spending, Worsening Outcomes.” The FEHBlog’s perception is quite sunny compared to this gloomy report.
  • The National Institutes of Health is celebrating American Heart Month.
  • The National Cancer Institute offers an interesting newsletter on its work.
  • The Wall Street considers dangerous fungi that are infecting people as a result of climate change.

From the No Surprises Act front, according to Healthcare Dive, the Texas Medical Association has filed a fourth lawsuit concerning the law. This time the TMA objects to the regulators’ entirely appropriate decision to increase the arbitration administration fee from $100 split between the parties to $700 similarly split. The arbitration or IDRE process was being bombarded with arbitration requests from providers. The fee increase will focus more provider attention on the open negotiation period that precedes the arbitration. “The suit also challenges the laws’ restrictions on batching claims, which allows arbitration processes only on claims with the same service code, requiring providers to go through a separate payment dispute process for each claim related to an individual’s care episode, according to the suit.” Quelle domage.

From the U.S. healthcare business front

  • Beckers Payer Issues reports, “Humana posted revenues of nearly $93 billion in 2022 and a net loss of $15 million in the most recent quarter, according to its year-end earnings report published Feb. 1.  The company also appointed Steward Health Care President Sanjay Shetty, MD, to lead its healthcare services business, CenterWell, which includes pharmacy dispensing, provider and home health services. Dr. Shetty will start April 1. In addition, the company promoted its Medicare president, George Renaudin, to president of Medicare and Medicaid, effective immediately.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review examines whether Amazon can disrupt the pharmacy industry.

From the Medicare front, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services released

the Calendar Year (CY) 2024 Advance Notice of Methodological Changes for Medicare Advantage (MA) Capitation Rates and Part C and Part D Payment Policies (the Advance Notice). CMS will accept comments on the CY 2024 Advance Notice through Friday, March 3, 2023. CMS will carefully consider timely comments received before publishing the final Rate Announcement by April 3, 2023.

Tuesday’s Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Capitol Hill, Roll Call reports

The Biden administration will send its budget for the next fiscal year up to Capitol Hill on March 9, according to a memo from top White House aides.

That’s about a month later than the statutory deadline, which is the first Monday in February, though that target is often missed and there’s no penalty for doing so.

National Econonic Council Director Brian Deese and Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young laid out the timing in a memo to “interested parties” that also discussed agenda topics for Wednesday’s scheduled meeting between President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.

The memo, first reported by ABC News, said Biden will ask McCarthy to “commit to the bedrock principle that the United States will never default on its financial obligations,” a reference to the upcoming fight over the statutory debt ceiling. Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen has warned that the U.S. could be in danger of missed payments by early June if Congress doesn’t act to raise or suspend the $31.4 trillion debt limit.

The memo also says Biden will urge McCarthy and House Republicans to release their own fiscal 2024 budget blueprint that spells out the spending cuts they want to attach to any debt limit deal and how their budget will balance if they plan to extend expiring tax cuts.

Senator Tina Smith (D MN) and a bipartisan group of colleagues sent several large health insurers a letter requesting answers to questions about ghost networks. It turns out the ghost networks are online provider directories with errors. The FEHBlog thinks that the Senators should be pressuring the No Surprises Act regulators to implement the provider directory accuracy provision in that law.

From the Omicron and siblings front, the New York Times explores why Paxlovid, a reliable treatment, is underprescribed by doctors.

Doctors prescribed it in about 45 percent of recorded Covid cases nationwide during the first two weeks of January, according to White House data. In some states, Paxlovid is given in less than 25 or even 20 percent of recorded cases. (Those are likely overestimates because cases are underreported.)

Why is Paxlovid still relatively untapped? Part of the answer lies in a lack of public awareness. Some Covid patients also may decide that they don’t need Paxlovid because they are already vaccinated, have had Covid before or are younger. (My colleagues explained why even mild cases often still warrant a dose of Paxlovid.) * * *

Experts have increasingly pointed to another explanation for Paxlovid’s underuse: Doctors still resist prescribing it. Today’s newsletter will focus on that cause.

Some doctors have concerns that are rooted in real issues with Paxlovid and inform their reluctance to prescribe it. But experts are unconvinced that those fears are enough to avoid prescribing Paxlovid altogether, especially to older and higher-risk patients.

“What I’m doing for a living is weighing the benefits and the risks for everything,” said Dr. Robert Wachter, the chair of the medicine department at the University of California, San Francisco. In deciding whether to prescribe Paxlovid, he said, the benefits significantly outweigh the risks.

This isn’t very encouraging.

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

Beckers Hospital Review reports

Six years after regulators approved Amjevita, a biosimilar to the nation’s most lucrative drug, Humira, Amgen’s drug jumped on the U.S. market Jan. 31 with two list prices.

The biosimilar to AbbVie’s most profitable drug will either cost 5 percent or 55 percent less than Humira’s price, according to Amgen. Humira costs $6,922 for a month’s supply, meaning Amjevita’s price — depending on the buyer — will be $6,576 or $3,115. The higher price is designed to entice pharmacy benefit managers, and the lower one is for payers, according to Bloomberg

As Humira’s 20-year, $114 billion, 247-patent-strong monopoly ends with the first biosimilar, more copycat versions are set to premiere in the next few months.

STAT News dives deeper into the implications of Amgen’s pricing approach.

AHIP responded yesterday to CMS’s final Medicare Advantage plan audit rule.

“Our view remains unchanged: This rule is unlawful and fatally flawed, and it should have been withdrawn instead of finalized. The rule will hurt seniors, reduce health equity, and discriminate against those who need care the most. Further, the rule would raise prices for seniors and taxpayers, reduce benefits for those who choose MA, and yield fewer plan options in the future. 

“We encourage CMS to work with us, continuing our shared public-private partnership for the health and financial stability of the American people. Together, we can identify solutions that are fair, are legally sound, and ensure uninterrupted access to care and benefits for MA enrollees.” 

Is the next step the courthouse?

Money Magazine offers a list of hospitals that provide bariatric surgery with Leapfrog safety grades.

From the mental healthcare front, Fierce Healthcare tells us

Parents can now be added alongside providers, health insurers and employers to the list of stakeholders with growing concerns about mental health, according to a study by the Pew Research Center.

The study found that 40% of parents call the fact that their children might be struggling with anxiety and depression their No. 1 concern—something they’re extremely or very worried about—followed by 35% of parents who put the fear that their children are being bullied into that category.

From the tidbits department —

  • The NY Times lists ten nutrition myths that experts wish would be forgotten.
  • The NIH Directors blog explains why a “New 3D Atlas of Colorectal Cancer Promises Improved Diagnosis, Treatment.”
  • The National Association of Plan Advisors points out that “Despite a rebound in out-of-pocket health care spending in 2021, health savings account (HSA) balances increased on average over the course of the year, the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) recently found. Its analysis of HSA balances, contributions, and distributions also found, “patients sought health care services more frequently in 2021—and spent more out of pocket, as well—than they did in 2020, yet the average end-of-year balance was higher than the average beginning-of-year balance.”

Monday Roundup

    Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

    Today was another busy day.

    The biggest surprise is that OPM begun refreshing its website and has revealed its logo.

    U.S. Office of Personnel Management logo
    New OPM Logo

      From the public health front —

      • The Hill reports that the President plans to end the national and public health emergencies for the Covid pandemic on May 11, 2023. Congress took steps to arrange for a soft landing in the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2023, which likely is a factor in reaching this executive decision.
      • Health IT Analytics tells us, “Researchers from New York University (NYU) Grossman School of Medicine and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) unveiled the Congressional District Health Dashboard (CDHD), an online data tool that provides health data for all 435 US congressional districts and the District of Columbia.” Interesting.
      • The New York Times informs us, “A new report [on maternal health in the U.S.] highlighted the dangers faced by Native American women, who face the greatest risks during and after pregnancy. Native American women were 3.5 times as likely to die during this critical period, compared with white women, the study found.” This rang a bell with the FEHBlog because the FEHB Program included Native American employers who have contracted with OPM for FEHB coverage for their employees. “During and after pregnancy, Black women also faced heightened odds of death that were almost double those of white women, along with a risk of dying specifically from pregnancy complications that was 2.8 times that of white women.” No child should be deprived of a mother due to inadequate healthcare.
      • Yale New Haven Hospital offers insights on heart disease for lay people/patients.
      • Medpage Today discusses recently extended and updated Body Mass Indices (BMIs0 for children and adolescents.
      • LifeSciences Intelligence reports that “In a recent news release, the Emergency Care Research Institute (ECRI) highlighted gaps in communication regarding medical device recalls, noting that these gaps could be a significant threat to patient safety. This commentary was a part of the organization’s Top 10 Health Technology Hazards report.”

      From the Affordable Care Act front, the ACA regulators today promulgated a proposed rule that would create

      a new independent pathway through which individuals enrolled in plans or coverage sponsored or arranged by objecting entities that have not opted for the existing accommodation (including those enrolled in individual health insurance coverage issued by such an objecting entity) could access contraceptive services at no cost. Specifically, these proposed rules would create a mechanism, independent from the employer, group health plan, plan sponsor, institution of higher education, or issuer, through which individuals could obtain contraceptive services at no cost from a willing provider of contraceptive services. This individual contraceptive arrangement would be available to the participant, beneficiary, or enrollee without the objecting entity having to take any action facilitating the coverage to which it objects. Simply put, the action is undertaken by the individual, on behalf of the individual. * * *

      These proposed rules, if finalized, would rescind the moral exemption to covering contraceptive services without cost sharing, while keeping intact the religious exemption and without narrowing its scope or the types of entities or individuals that may claim the religious exemption. These proposed rules would also maintain the optional accommodation for sponsors of group health plans and institutions of higher education arranging student health insurance coverage that qualify for the religious exemption. 

      Here’s a link to the regulator’s fact sheet. This strikes the FEHBlog has a wise solution to this knotty problem.

      From the healthcare business front —

      The American Hospital Association relates

      Last year was the worst financial year for U.S. hospitals and health systems since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, as growth in expenses outpaced growth in revenues and volumes, according to the latest report on hospital finances from Kaufman Hall. 

      “The increases were driven in part by a competitive labor market, as well as hospitals needing to rely on more expensive contract labor to meet staffing demands,” the report notes. “Increased lengths of stay due to a decline in discharges also negatively affected hospital margins.” 

      Hospitals experienced negative operating margins for most of the year, with approximately half of the nation’s hospitals ending the year in the red. According to the report, hospitals’ expense pressures “are unlikely to recede in 2023.”

      STAT News discusses business focused on improving human longevity.

      Health Payer Intelligence reports

      The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has released a final rule that aims to introduce more oversight into the Medicare Advantage risk adjustment data validation and payment process. * * * Under the finalized rule, CMS will not extrapolate audit findings for payment years 2011 through 2017, the CMS fact sheet stated. CMS will collect non-extrapolated overpayments for plan years 2011 through 2017. Extrapolation will begin with the plan year 2018 risk adjustment data validation audit using any extrapolation technique that is statistically valid. The audits will center on high-risk plans.

      The Wall Street Journal adds “A Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services official, Deputy Administrator and Center for Program Integrity Director Dara Corrigan, said the estimated recoveries for 2018 would be around $479 million, and the agency projected a total of about $4.7 billion over a decade. The large recoveries wouldn’t actually occur until 2025 and after, however.”

      Will this regulation drive companies out of Medicare Advantage? Time will tell. In the meantime here is a link to HHS’s fact sheet.

      Friday Factoids

      Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

      From Capitol Hill, Fierce Healthcare tells us

      Two top senators have reintroduced legislation that would introduce several reforms to pharmacy benefit managers, including prohibiting clawbacks of pharmacy payments. 

      Sens. Maria Cantwell, D-Washington, and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, reintroduced on late Thursday the Pharmacy Benefit Manager Transparency Act and the Prescription Pricing for the People Act. The move shows the lawmakers are not backing down from going after PBMs in the latest Congress. 

      Congress is a piker compared to OPM, which has been successfully “going after PBM’s” for over a decade.

      From the public health front

      • All of the Omicron metrics are trending down. “As of January 25, 2023, there are 118 (3.7%) counties, districts, or territories with a high COVID-19 Community Level, 855 (26.6%) with a medium Community Level, and 2,242 (69.6%) with a low Community Level.”
      • Overall, about 268.9 million people or 81% of the total U.S. population, have had a single dose of Covid vaccine, “About 229.6 million people, or 69.2% of the total U.S. population, have completed a primary series.* More than 41.6 million people, or 19.9% of the eligible U.S. population ages five years and older, have received an updated (bivalent) booster dose.”
      • The CDC’s Weekly FluView again headlines, “Seasonal influenza activity continues to decline across the country.”
      • Turning to our longest-standing public health emergency, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration informs us

      Illicitly-used xylazine is most often reported in combinations with two or more substances present, such as fentanyl, cocaine, or heroin, and can increase the potential for these drugs to cause fatal overdoses.

      While scientists have not conducted much research on its effects, anecdotal reports suggest that users experience symptoms similar to those encountered via opioids, namely depression of the central nervous system. More specifically, effects associated with xylazine use include dry mouth, drowsiness, hypertension, respiratory depression, and even coma. Users can develop a physical dependence to xylazine, reporting withdrawal symptoms more serious than from heroin or methadone, such as sharp chest pains and seizures.

      Note: Since xylazine is not an opioid, naloxone does not reverse its effects.

      • The Food and Drug Administration proposed changing from “time-based deferrals to assessing blood donor eligibility using gender-inclusive, individual risk-based questions to reduce the risk of transfusion-transmitted HIV. This proposal is in line with policies in place in countries like the United Kingdom and Canada.”
      • Bloomberg relates, “Americans aren’t exercising enough.  Less than a third of US adults meet suggested benchmarks for aerobic and muscle-building activities set out by health officials, according to a new study released on Thursday.”

      From the Rx coverage front, STAT News reports, “After months of anticipation, the first biosimilar version of Humira will become available next week — a pivotal moment in the long-running debate about whether cheaper copies of pricey biologics can lower soaring U.S. health care costs.” Time will tell.

      From the electronic health records front —

      • MedCity News identifies five ways to inject intelligence into the prior authorization process.
      • Fierce Healthcare points out that

      “A new report from the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families seeks to make several reforms to the Transparency in Coverage rule to ensure the data are more usable and accessible by researchers. The goal is to ensure that the data can be used to help regulators and lawmakers target policies that can boost coverage affordability. 

      “’The good news is that many of the access and usability problems stem from the technical specifications provided by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services [CMS],’ the report said. ‘Most can be fixed through administrative action and better enforcement, with minimum cost burdens for the plans and issuers.’”

      From the U.S. healthcare business front —

      • MedCity News informs us that health insurers continue to receive a C grade from Leapfrog.
      • Fierce Healthcare tells us, “The Minnesota attorney general’s office has formally asked Sanford Health and Fairview Health Services to postpone the March 31 closing date of their proposed merger as it seeks more information on the repercussions of the deal, Chief Deputy Attorney General John Keller said during a public meeting held Wednesday evening. The Midwest nonprofit health systems had announced their 58-hospital merger plans in November, saying at the time that joining together would expand care quality and access across their rural and urban markets. The resulting organization would employ nearly 80,000 people.”
      • Healthcare Dive reports, “In a lawsuit filed Thursday, Cigna alleged that Amy Bricker’s appointment to chief product officer of CVS’s consumer segment places the payer’s trade secrets at risk and violates her noncompete agreement.” 
      • The Wall Street Journal reports that CVS and Walmart pharmacies will follow Walgreen’s lead by reducing their retail pharmacy hours. “CVS, in a recent notice to field leaders, said most of its reduced hours will be during times when there is low patient demand or when a store has only one pharmacist on site, which the company said is a “top pain point,” for its pharmacists.” Walmart will be closing its pharmacy at 7 pm rather than 9 pm.

      Happy Days are Here Again!

      OPM Headquarters a/k/a the Theodore Roosevelt Building

      The FEHBlog was delighted to read today that OPM is encouraging FEHB carriers that OPM is encouraging FEHB carriers to incorporate Medicare Part D EGWPs in their plans for 2024. The FEHBlog has been encouraging this step for years, as readers must know.

      The Medicare Part D EGWPs will cushion the FEHBP against the expenses of drugs to treat Alzheimer’s Disease and other illnesses that impact annuitants over age 65. While there are many factors at play in determining premiums, this factor standing alone would lower premiums. Thank you, OPM.

      From the Omicron and siblings front, the New York Times virus briefing newsletter wished its readers well today.

      Now, after three years, we’re pausing this newsletter. The acute phase of the pandemic has faded in much of the world, and many of us have tried to pick up the pieces and move on. We promise to return to your inbox if the pandemic takes a sharp turn. But, for now, this is goodbye.

      The American Hospital Association informs us

      In a study released today by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC}, a single bivalent COVID-19 vaccine booster provided additional protection against omicron XBB variants in adults who previously received two to four monovalent vaccine doses. XBB-related variants account for over half of currently circulating COVID-19 variants in the United States.

      “All persons should stay up to date with recommended COVID-19 vaccines, including receiving a bivalent booster dose when eligible,” the authors conclude.

      and

      The CDC yesterday launched a website to help consumers locate no-cost COVID-19 testing through its Increasing Community Access to Testing program, which includes pharmacies, commercial laboratories and other sites that bill the tests to government and private insurers and focus on vulnerable communities. The tests may include laboratory-based nucleic acid amplification tests and rapid antigen point-of-care tests, with results typically provided in 24-48 hours.

      From the public health front

      • The Hill tells us about a CDC internal reorganization.
      • The HHS Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research provides us with an infographic and report about the three most commonly treated illnesses among older adults — hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and arthritis / other joint disorders
      • Fierce Healthcare relates, “The Biden administration is planning to release three to four new payment models on advance primary care and another enabling states to assume the total cost of care for Medicare, a top official shared.”
      • HHS’s HEAL Program Director, Dr. Rebecca Baker, discusses “Research That Offers Hope to End Addiction Long-Term.”

      From the U.S. healthcare business front

      Healthcare Dive reports

      Elevance Health, one of the nation’s largest insurers, added more members in 2022, fueled by growth in its government business thanks to continued relaxed eligibility rules on enrollment.  

      Elevance ended the year covering 47.5 million people, a nearly 5% increase from the prior-year period, driven largely by growth in Medicaid members.

      In turn, total revenue climbed 13% to nearly $157 billion for the year as the insurer collected higher premium revenue from its Medicaid plans.   

      Net income dipped about 1% to $6 billion for the full year as expenses climbed about 14%.  

      and

      The CMS announced Wednesday that a record-breaking 16.3 million people signed up for Affordable Care Act marketplace plans during the 2023 open enrollment season, a result of extended pandemic-era subsidies enacted by the American Rescue Plan.

      Over 1.8 million more people enrolled in marketplace coverage compared to last year — a 13% increase, and the most amount of plan selections of any year since the launch of the ACA marketplace a decade ago, according to the CMS. The record-breaking enrollment numbers include 3.6 million first-time marketplace enrollees.

      STAT News tells us

      The claims have become almost ubiquitous. Hospital CEO after hospital CEO stands at a podium and promises the merger being announced will improve quality and lower costs.

      Once deals close, though, there tends to be little, if any, follow-up to determine whether those things actually happened. A new Journal of the American Medical Association study adds to the growing body of evidence that they don’t. The authors looked across a large swath of the country’s hospitals and physicians found that while quality did improve marginally, the prices paid for services delivered by health system hospitals and doctors was significantly higher than their non-system peers.

      “You start to feel really hopeful when you hear about this, ‘Yeah, we can really improve health care,’ and then when you look at it, it’s just not there,” said Nancy Beaulieu, a study author and research associate in Harvard Medical School’s department of health care policy.

      Ruh roh.

      On related note, Fierce Healthcare informs us

      A top insurance lobbying group plans to press Congress this session to adopt legislation that expands the footprint of site-neutral payment reform, setting up a likely clash with hospital groups. 

      The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA), which represents 38 Blues plans, released several policy priorities for the current Congress as part of a new report Tuesday. Some of the policies focus on changing Medicare reimbursement rates to pay the same amount to clinics whether they are independent or affiliated with a hospital. Other reforms focus on prescription drugs and spurring more participation in value-based care. 

      “We’re very concerned about the increasing acquisition of physician practices by hospitals in the healthcare system,” said Kris Haltmeyer, vice president of policy analysis for BCBSA, during a reporter briefing Tuesday. 

      One of the association’s major priorities is to pass a bill that would remove a grandfathering provision in the 2015 Balanced Budget Act. The provision shielded certain hospital outpatient departments from billing limits established in the law, with the exception of emergency departments. 

      The association also wants to require off-campus hospital sites to get a different national provider identifier than the main facility campus. They should also use a different claim form for any professional service rendered in an office or clinic owned by a hospital but not on the campus. 

      Go get ’em.

      Monday Roundup

      Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

      From the Omicron and siblings front, the Wall Street Journal reports

      Most people would get one Covid-19 shot annually—as they do with the flu shot—under Food and Drug Administration proposals for simplifying the nation’s Covid-19 vaccine procedures.

      The drug regulator also proposed that people getting vaccinated for the first time receive vaccines that target both Omicron and the original strain of the coronavirus. 

      The proposals, outlined in materials the FDA released Monday, would mark the biggest changes to Covid-19 vaccinations since boosters rolled out and are a sign of the nation’s shift to a more endemic-like approach to the coronavirus.

      Vaccine experts who advise the FDA are scheduled to meet Thursday to discuss the proposals. The advisers are scheduled to vote on whether to give the bivalent shot as the initial inoculation, as is already allowed in Europe.

      Makes sense to the FEHBlog.

      From the OPM front, the House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) has sent OPM Director Kiran Ahuja a letter demanding documents and a staff briefing on the recent GAO report criticizing OPM’s internal controls over family member eligibility in the FEHBP. Here’s a little free advice for my favorite agency. Rather than coming up with your own solutions, adopt solutions that have been proven to work in the private sector — the HIPAA 820 standard enrollment transaction which ties premium payments to enrollees and dependent eligibility verification audits based on statistical sampling.

      From the U.S. healthcare business front —

      Fierce Healthcare informs us

      Elevance Health has inked a deal to acquire Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana, with the Pelican State insurer joining the Anthem Blue Cross affiliated plans.

      The acquisition builds on an existing partnership between the two insurers, according to the announcement. The two jointly own Healthy Blue, a plan that serves Medicaid and dual-eligible beneficiaries. 

      The combination will also allow BCBSLA to accelerate its push toward improved access, affordability and quality for its 1.9 million members, thanks to the capabilities of Elevance Health’s Carelon subsidiary, the companies said. More than $4 billion has been invested in Carelon over the past several years, building out its behavioral health, complex and chronic care programs and digital health models.

      and

      CVS Health has named two key leaders for its pharmacy and consumer products business, including a returning face to the company, according to a report from Bloomberg.

      David Joyner, a former executive at the company, will make a return as the leader of its pharmacy services segment, which includes the Caremark pharmacy benefit manager, people familiar with the matter told the outlet. Joyner left CVS three years ago and will succeed Alan Lotvin, M.D., who is set to retire.

      In addition, former Express Scripts President Amy Bricker will join the company as the chief product officer for the consumer segment, which centers on developing new products for CVS’ consumer health brands, Bloomberg reported.

      Fierce Healthcare points out a twist in the second story.

      That Bricker had departed Express Scripts, a subsidiary of Cigna, was revealed last week when the PBM announced it had named a new president, veteran supply chain leader Adam Kautzner. What was next for Bricker, however, was conspicuously absent from the announcement.

      The FEHBlog often counsels clients on Family and Medical Leave Act issues. He had no idea until today that the Labor Department offers helpful information to healthcare provider and employees on this law. For example,

      This background information can fill knowledge gaps for employers too.

      From the Rx coverage front —

      • The Washington Post reports on the reaction to “the American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, based on decades of scientific research, call[ing] for early and aggressive treatment, instead of “watchful waiting.” They urge intensive therapy for children as young as 6, weight loss drugs for those as young as 12 and surgery for teens as young as 13.”
      • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Research released a

      Final Evidence Report on Fezolinetant for Vasomotor Symptoms Associated with Menopause

      — Independent appraisal committee voted that evidence is not yet adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for fezolinetant when compared to no pharmacological treatment —

      —  Using point estimates from short-term clinical trials, analyses suggest this drug would achieve common thresholds for cost-effectiveness if priced between $2,000 – $2,600 per year for women who cannot or choose not to take menopausal hormone therapy —

      — All stakeholders have a responsibility and an important role to play in ensuring that women have access to effective new treatment options for symptoms of menopause

      The ICER upshot is “Given that many patients may benefit from readily available, effective, and low cost [menopausal hormone therapy] MHT, clinical experts agreed that it would be reasonable for payers to require prescriber attestation that patients are not appropriate candidates for MHT prior to prescribing fezolinetant.”

      From the SDOH front, Health Leaders Media tells us about new ICD-10 diagnosis codes with an SDOH emphasis which will take effect on April 1, 2023.

      From the telehealth front, U.S. News reports,

      Despite distance and occasional technical glitches, a new study finds that most patients like seeing a surgeon for the first time via video.

      The study was published Jan. 19 in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons. * * *

      The study included 387 patients who participated in first-time visits between May 2021 and June 2022 at general surgery clinics across the Vanderbilt system. Researchers used a standard questionnaire to look at the quality of shared decision-making and asked patients and surgeons open-ended questions about their consultations.

      In all, 77.8% of patients had an in-person visit, while 22.2% saw their doctor remotely.

      Both groups reported high levels of quality communication during these appointments.

      Levels of shared decision-making and quality of communication were similar between remote visits and in-person care, the study found.

      In responding to the open-ended questions, patients praised the convenience and usefulness of telehealth appointments. Researchers received some negative comments about technical difficulties and not being physically present.

      Friday Factoids

      Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

      Becker’s Hospital Review reports

      The weekly rate of emergency department visits and hospitalizations for flu, COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus peaked in early December, new CDC data shows. 

      The CDC unveiled two data dashboards Jan. 17 that track emergency department visits and hospitalizations for COVID-19, flu and RSV. 

      ED visits for flu, RSV and COVID-19 peaked the week ending Dec. 3, hitting a weekly total of 235,850 before falling through December and the first half of January. The nation’s current weekly total was 72,119 as of Jan. 14, according to the ED dashboard. The dashboard uses information from the CDC’s National Syndromic Surveillance Program, which receives data from 73 percent of the nation’s EDs. 

      The combined hospitalization rate for flu, RSV and COVID-19 peaked at 22.5 admissions per 100,000 in the week ending Dec. 3. This figure now sits at 9.4 per 100,000 for the week ending Jan. 7, though the CDC said reporting delays may affect the most recent week’s data.

      RSV hospitalizations peaked in mid-November, while flu hospitalizations peaked in early December, CDC data shows. COVID-19 admissions also appear to be leveling off nationwide, even as the highly transmissible omicron subvariant XBB.1.5 gains prevalence. This trend suggests the U.S. will see more of a COVID-19 “bump” this winter versus a full-fledged surge, experts told The New York Times.

      The CDC’s weekly interpretative review of its Covid stats focuses on these new dashboards this week. The agency’s weekly Fluview report informs us “Seasonal influenza activity continues to decline across the country.”

      The Wall Street Journal adds

      Three years after health authorities announced the first known Covid-19 case in the U.S., the virus behind the disease remains persistent but thus far hasn’t triggered the severity of the waves seen in prior winters.

      A recent climb in hospitalizations and Covid-19 wastewater readings—two key metrics for spotting trends—appears to have stalled following the quick rise of the Omicron XBB.1.5 subvariant. The U.S. was gripped in significantly more deadly waves at this point in the last two winters, though currently there are still hundreds of deaths reported each day. * * *

      At least for now, it appears unlikely new variants are going to cause as substantial illnesses and deaths as the virus did early on and in the prior winter waves, said Jay Varma, a physician and epidemiologist who directs Weill Cornell Medicine’s Center for Pandemic Prevention and Response in New York City. He cautioned that more severe mutations could still emerge. “We seem to have settled into somewhat of a detente with the virus,” he said.

      Although the FEHBlog will continue to track Omicron and siblings developments, he has decided to replace Friday Stats and More with Friday Factoids.

      Medscape tells us

      Public health officials have said for some time that use of Paxlovid, approved under an FDA emergency use authorization (EUA) in December 2021, remains far below the proportion of Americans who could potentially benefit from the therapy.

      What’s driving the lackluster uptake remains unknown, so Medscape Medical News took a deeper dive into the challenges surrounding Paxlovid prescribing.

      Older Americans remain one of the groups at highest risk for COVID-19 adverse outcomes, including hospitalization and severe illness. However, the survey found that providers also remain reluctant to prescribe Paxlovid in this population for multiple reasons. * * *

      The survey found that almost half of patients were on a medication that is contraindicated with Paxlovid and that could not be discontinued (44%). Another finding was that almost the same proportion were on a medication that is contraindicated with Paxlovid, but the risk of discontinuing that medication was too high (41%). Also, the researchers found some patients were on a medication that could interact with Paxlovid, but it was unclear how to manage the interaction (29%).

      [Medscape medical editor in chief Dr. Eric Topol said that doctors, in some cases, may be overly concerned about the drug interactions. “There’s a straightforward workaround strategy for nearly all the drug interactions — most commonly statins — which can easily be stopped for 5 days,” he said.

      Another concern preventing Paxlovid prescription is renal impairment, the survey reveals. More than one third of respondents, 37%, said they did not prescribe the protease inhibitor combination because of concerns over this condition, which can lower how efficiently medications are cleared by the body.

      That’s a helpful study.

      In other survey news, MedPage Today informs us

      Fewer emergency department (ED) visits end with a prescription for opioids, CDC survey data showed.

      The percentage of ED visits with an opioid prescribed at discharge fell from 12.2% in 2017-2018 to 8.1% in 2019-2020, reported Loredana Santo, MD, MPH, and Susan Schappert, MA, of the National Center for Health Statistics in Hyattsville, Maryland, in NCHS Data Briefopens in a new tab or window.

      The rate of prescribing at discharge also dropped: in 2019-2020, opioids were prescribed at 36.4 ED visits per 1,000 adults, lower than 50.5 per 1,000 in 2017-2018. The decline was similar for both men and women.

      In U.S. healthcare business news —

      • Cigna points out the value of integrated health plans a/k/a health plans without carveouts.

      A study released today by Cigna (NYSE: CI), a global health service company, finds that triple integration of medical, pharmacy and behavioral benefits resulted in lower health care costs for employers. Conducted by Aon plcThis link will open in a new tab., a leading global professional services firm, the Value of Integration StudyThis link will open in a new tab. [PDF] shows that Cigna’s integrated employer clients saved $148 per member per year in 2021. 

      Using a similar study method, Cigna then evaluated the financial impact of engaging employees to participate in health improvement programs, such as wellness coaching. The results show even greater client savings for Cigna integrated employer clients, exceeding $1,400 per member per year.

      In addition, Cigna found that when individuals with specific high-cost conditions and therapies were enrolled in a triple-integrated health plan and needed specialty medicines, the savings for the health plan were:

      • Nearly $9,000 per member per year, increasing to more than $11,000 per member when the specialty drug is for an inflammatory condition like rheumatoid arthritis; and
      • Almost $17,500 per year for members who took specialty drugs and have a confirmed depression diagnosis.
      • Medpage Today reports, “Switching to [employer-sponsored] high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) spelled trouble when it came to diabetes complications, a retrospective cohort study found.” The report studies health savings account (HSA) – eligible HDHPs versus traditional low-deductible plans. The FEHBlog doesn’t understand why the HSAs don’t balance out the two types of coverage. The article doesn’t compute.
      • STAT News relates, “More than a dozen of the country’s large not-for-profit hospital systems descended on this year’s J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference with a subtle but clear message for bankers and municipal investors: Higher costs in 2022 slowed them down, but they are adamant about increasing revenue by expanding their footprints and hiking prices.” Charming.
      • Fierce Healthcare calls our attention to

      A new behavioral health solution launched this week aims to make it easier for insurers to connect members with tools that may benefit their mental health care.

      Lucet represents the combination of New Directions Behavioral Health and Tridiuum and is a spinout from the Blues network, where its core product cut its teeth. Lucet’s Navigate & Connect platform harnesses a large team of care navigators with an advanced technology stack that allows insurers to better optimize care and access for members.

      Shana Hoffman, president and CEO of Lucet, told Fierce Healthcare that the platform enables faster connections to appointments and helps cut through the noise on which solutions a plan may want to bring into the fold.

      “What we’re bringing to the market is really an operating system platform for health plans that allows them to reliably connect members to care,” Hoffman said.

      • Health Affairs Forefront analyzes “The Fair Price For One-Time Treatments; How Can We Overcome Existing Market Price Distortions?” Check it out.

      Midweek Update

      Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

      From Capitol Hill, Roll Call reports that Senator Joe Manchin (D W Va) “has talked “briefly” with Speaker Kevin McCarthy about a bill he co-sponsored with Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, in the last Congress to create a “rescue committee” for every endangered government trust fund, like the Social Security, Medicare and highway trust funds.

      The Concord Coalition, a nonpartisan research group, named Romney and Manchin as its 2022 Economic Patriot Awards honorees because of their work on the legislation. 

      The bill, which they have yet to reintroduce in the 118th Congress, would allow the top four congressional leaders to appoint three members each for every rescue committee and give lawmakers on the panels 180 days to come up with policy solutions for solvency.

      Any legislation the rescue committees produce would be subject to expedited procedures for floor consideration; it couldn’t be amended but would require 60 Senate votes to advance to final passage. 

      Keep hope alive.

      From the Omicron and siblings front —

      The Wall Street Journal reports

      Moderna Inc. plans to expand its mRNA vaccine production capacity, saying shots targeting different pathogens can be made in the same facility, Chief Executive Stephane Bancel said.

      “This is what gives me hope, not only for [coronavirus] variants, but also for other vaccines,” Mr. Bancel said on a panel at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.  * * *

      The company was able to roll out booster shots adapted to the Omicron variant in 60 days, according to Mr. Bancel.

      That would be helpful assuming the FDA and CDC are on board.

      The American Hospital Association lets us know

      The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention yesterday released a dashboard tracking hospitalization rates for laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, flu and Respiratory Syncytial Virus by age group, sex, race/ethnicity, state and season based on data from select counties in 13 states, which the agency will update weekly. CDC also released another dashboard tracking weekly emergency department visits for COVID-19, flu and RSV by age group and percent of all ED visits based on data from the National Syndromic Surveillance Program.

      In other vaccine news, the National Institutes of Health announced today

      An investigational HIV vaccine regimen tested among men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender people was safe but did not provide protection against HIV acquisition, an independent data and safety monitoring board (DSMB) has determined. The HPX3002/HVTN 706, or “Mosaico,” Phase 3 clinical trial began in 2019 and involved 3,900 volunteers ages 18 to 60 years in Europe, North America and South America. Based on the DSMB’s recommendation, the study will be discontinued. Participants are being notified of the findings, and further analyses of the study data are planned.

      Janssen Vaccines & Prevention B.V., part of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, sponsored the Mosaico study with funding support from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. The trial was conducted by the NIAID-funded HIV Vaccine Clinical Trials Network, based at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. The U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command provided additional study support.

      Keep trying.

      Also from the public health front

      Gallup informs us “The percentage of Americans reporting they or a family member postponed medical treatment in 2022 due to cost rose 12 points in one year, to 38%, the highest in Gallup’s 22-year trend.” The story concludes

      With high inflation creating moderate to severe hardship for a majority of Americans in the second half of 2022, their reports of delaying medical care in general due to cost — as well as delaying care for a serious condition — rose sharply to new highs. Young adults, those in lower-income households and women were especially likely to say they or a family member had put off medical care.

      No bueno.

      From the U.S. healthcare business front, McKinsey & Co. tells us

      When we last looked at the trajectory of the US healthcare industry in our July 2022 article, “The future of US healthcare: What’s next for the industry post-COVID-19?,” we had emerging concerns about what persistent inflation could cause.1 It is now clear that inflation is not transitory and that the economic outlook has meaningfully darkened.2 These economic troubles, combined with a healthcare-worker shortage and endemic COVID-19, are clouding the industry outlook. In an accompanying article, we update how these changes could affect payers, providers, healthcare services and technology (HST), and pharmacy services.

      Check it out.

      From the Medicare front, Fierce Healthcare relates

      Enrollment in Medicare Advantage (MA) has topped 30 million, according to new data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

      This represents coverage across 776 contracts, according to the data, as of Jan. 1 payments, which reflect enrollments accepted through Dec. 2. Enrollment in standalone prescription drug plans was also about 22.7 million, bringing total enrollment across all types of private Medicare plans to nearly 50.3 million.

      This represents growth of about 2 million from 2022. An analysis from the Kaiser Family Foundation found that enrollment in MA plans was about 28 million last year. 

      Tuesday’s Tidbits

      From the Omicron and siblings front

      • The New York Times accurately describes this Covid winter as a bump rather than a surge.
      • The Washington Post discusses a large medical study that supports the need for pregnant women to be vaccinated against Covid.

      On a related note the Wall Street Journal reports

      An experimental vaccine from Moderna Inc. significantly reduced the risk of a viral respiratory disease among older adults in a large clinical trial, the latest promising sign in drugmakers’ efforts to fight the deadly RSV virus. * * *

      The results are the latest for an experimental RSV vaccine. Also developing shots are GSK PLC, Pfizer Inc. and Johnson & Johnson

      Meanwhile, Sanofi SA and AstraZeneca PLC have co-developed an antibody-based drug to be used for the prevention of RSV in infants. They applied for FDA approval of the drug and expect a decision in the third quarter of 2023.

      From the FEHB front, Reg Jones, a retired OPM FEHB contracting officer, provides an “insiders look at FEHB” in FedWeek. His first observation is

      First, when the FEHB became law some 60 years ago, I think it would have been better if there had only been a single risk pool. In other words, no Self Only, Self Plus One, and Self and Family options. Because there are these distinctions, enrollees have ever since wanted to further carve up the risk pool, creating subcategories, such as employees vs. retirees or retirees with or without Medicare as their primary insurer.

      While the FEHBlog fully agrees with Mr. Jones about the value of risk pooling to FEHB, the self only, self plus one, and self and family choices are enrollment choices that affect the premiums paid but not the risk pool. OPM does break out risk pools by plan option, e.g., Standard, Basic, Elevate.

      Mr. Jones is concerned about the risk pool splitting occasioned by the creation of the new Postal Service Health Benefits Program. The FEHBlog has stated his belief that OPM could have avoided this outcome by allowing FEHB plans to offer Medicare Part D EGWPs back in 2005. The FEHBlog expects that once FEHB enrollees see the lower premiums in PSHBP, Medicare D EGWPs will be added to FEHB and before the PSHBP and FEHB will become one again.

      Mr. Jones also presses concern about access to medically necessary benefits which coincidentally is a topic that STAT News addressed today stemming from the Institute for Clinical and Economic Research’s publication of its “Second Annual Assessment of Barriers to Fair Access Within US Commercial Insurance Prescription Drug Coverage.” Here is a summary of the ICER Assessment’s results:

      The assessment found a high level of alignment between coverage policies and fair access criteria across the formularies with the highest number of covered lives of large private payers and the VHA in the United States.  Across all relevant payer policies, ICER gave concordance ratings of 70% (59/84) for cost-sharing policies of drugs that ICER found to be reasonably priced, 96% (310/322) for clinical eligibility criteria, 98% (316/322) for step therapy criteria and 100% (322/322) for prescriber restrictions.

      In the exploratory transparency analysis for select migraine and ulcerative colitis (UC) drugs aimed at discerning whether prospective plan members can find information about cost-sharing and clinical eligibility, payers were found to provide relatively good transparency into their formularies (16/18 payers met transparency criteria) but only 10/18 payers provided adequate transparency into their clinical coverage policies. In an exploratory analysis for documentation burden which reviewed the number of questions on prior authorization forms, prior authorization policies for UC and migraine drugs had a median number of questions from 25 to 36 and a range of questions from 22 to 71.

      One of the most notable results of this effort is the change in coverage policies made by five payers for 11 drugs following receipt of draft results of the assessment. These changes all served to bring coverage into alignment with fair access criteria.

      Note bene

      ICER will host a public webinar at 12:00 p.m. ET on January 18, 2023 to discuss the key conclusions and policy implications of this assessment. Webinar presenters will include:

      • Sarah Emond, MPP, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, ICER
      • Mary B. Dwight, Senior Vice President and Chief Policy & Advocacy Officer, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation 
      • Meghan Buzby, Executive Director, Coalition for Headache and Migraine Patients (CHAMP) 

      Register here for the webinar.

      Also from the Rx coverage front

      Fierce Healthcare reports “California has filed suit against a slew of major drugmakers and pharmacy benefit managers, alleging that they acted unlawfully to drive up the cost of insulin.”

      Pharmacy Times informs us

      The FDA has approved a label update for semaglutide (Rybelsus; Novo Nordisk) that allows the drug to be used in addition to diet and exercise as a first-line option to improve glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes.

      This update removes a previous limitation that stated the medication should not be used as initial therapy for treating patients with type 2 diabetes. With its initial FDA approval in 2019, semaglutide became the first and only glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) analog in pill form.

      “The removal of the limitation of use is an important step forward for people living with type 2 diabetes and provides the option for Rybelsus to be taken earlier,” said Aaron King, MD, a family medicine and diabetes specialist, in a press release. “By taking Rybelsus first, people with type 2 diabetes, in conjunction with their care teams, are now able to utilize this medicine early in their diabetes treatment journeys.”

      On a related note, the Wall Street Journal tells us

      Parents and doctors are looking for new strategies to help adolescents with obesity. One controversial approach drawing the interest of some families is intermittent fasting, which limits people to eating for just a part of the day or week

      Intermittent fasting has gained traction among adults who use it to try to manage weight and improve health. Doctors have largely avoided trying it with adolescents out of concern that introducing a fasting period to their schedules might result in nutritional gaps or trigger eating disorders when teens are rapidly growing and developing.

      Now, a small number of doctors and researchers are evaluating types of intermittent fasting in adolescents, searching for solutions as rates of obesity and Type 2 diabetes rise. One pediatric endocrinologist in Los Angeles is launching a clinical trial looking at eating within a set time window in adolescents with obesity. Researchers in Australia are completing a separate trial, the results of which they expect to publish later this year.

      Healthcare Dive and Fierce Healthcare offer tidbits from the medical technology front. Healthcare IT News considers whether telehealth can be used for preventive care.

      From the U.S. healthcare front,

      • Beckers Hospital Review lists Healthgrades’ Top 50 Hospitals.
      • Insurance News Net fills us in on AHIP’s foci for 2023. “Access and affordability are the top two concerns of the health insurance industry as we move into a new year.”
      • You can scan Fierce Healthcare’s Fierce 15 of 2023 honorees here.