Midweek update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Capitol Hill —

  • Katie Keith helpfully provides more detail on the healthcare provisions found in the draft House of Representative’s COVID-19 relief budget reconciliation bill.
  • Govexec.com reports on the federal employee related provisions of the same draft bill.
  • FedSmith informs that “Some Members of Congress are asking the Office of Personnel Management to give federal employees administrative leave for any time they spend getting vaccinated for COVID-19. The letter was sent to OPM by Reps. Don Beyer (D-VA), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), Gerald E. Connolly (D-VA), Anthony Brown (D-MD), Jamie Raskin (D-MD), David Trone (D-MD), and Jennifer Wexton (D-VA). They state in the letter that mandating that federal agencies provide administrative leave to federal employees is necessary to fight the pandemic. “…it is imperative that the federal government take every possible step to encourage federal employees to receive the vaccine, including providing them with the administrative time to do so,” reads the letter.”
  • Politico reports on Office of Management and Budget Director nominee’s confirmation hearing this morning before the Senate Budget Committee.
  • The Brookings Institute released a report with recommendations on making Capitol Hill a better place to the work. This recommendation caught the FEHBlog’s eye:

Since 2014, members and certain congressional staff have been required to use Washington, D.C.’s small-business marketplace established by the Affordable Care Act to obtain insurance, rather than having their health benefits provided via the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program that insures other federal employees. As the HSCMC’s final report noted, “The transition to the D.C. exchange has been particularly challenging for some district-based staff as finding local health providers who accept patients covered by the D.C. exchange is difficult.” The HSCMC recommended that Congress eliminate this setup, allowing both D.C.- and district-based staff to either enroll in standard federal health plans or to use their relevant local marketplace to purchase coverage.

OPM could implement the “local marketplace” fix via regulation. An interim regulation would be nice as the federal ACA marketplace is about to reopen for three months.

While on the topic of the Affordable Care Act, the Biden Administration’s Justice Department filed a very sensible letter today with the U.S. Supreme Court regarding the California v. Texas case concerning the ACA’s constitutionality. It states that it is now the Justice Department’s position that zeroing out the individual mandate did not render the ACA unconstitutional. “[T]he 2017 amendment preserved the choice between lawful options and simply eliminated any financial or negative legal consequence from choosing not to enroll in health coverage.” How true.

From the COVID-19 front —

  • MedCity News reports that “An Eli Lilly therapy comprised of two antibodies given together has been awarded FDA emergency authorization for treating Covid-19, providing yet another option for patients diagnosed with the disease. The decision comes two weeks after Indianapolis-based Lilly reported clinical trial data showing that given together, the antibodies bamlanivimab and etesevimab reduced Covid-19 patients’ risk of hospitalization and death by 70 percent. The FDA authorization, issued late Tuesday, covers adults and children 12 and older with mild-to-moderate Covid-19 whose cases are at high risk of progressing to severe disease. The authorization also includes patients 65 and older who have certain chronic medical conditions.

New data from the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) take a look at just how much COVID-19 cases are costing insurers.

BCBSA studied more than 90,000 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus pulled from a diverse selection of its membership. The group found COVID-19 cases treated in an outpatient setting cost between $500 and $1,000 per member on average, with the average age of patients seeking such care being 34.

When members were hospitalized with the virus, however, costs were 45 times higher than for cases treated on an outpatient basis. For members who needed a stay in the intensive care unit, costs jumped another 2.5 times compared to other hospitalizations, BCBSA found. The average age for members hospitalized with COVID-19, including in the ICU, was 54, according to the analysis.

  • The Wall Street Journal tonight adds more detail to yesterday’s report on the World Health Organization of the spread of COVID-19 in China.

About 90 people were hospitalized with Covid-19-like symptoms in central China in the two months before the disease was first identified in Wuhan in late 2019, according to World Health Organization investigators, who said they pressed Beijing to allow further testing to determine whether the new virus was spreading earlier than previously known. * * * If the 90 cases included Covid-19 infections, it could help explain suspected coronavirus cases that researchers believe occurred in Europe and possibly the U.S. in November and December 2019. * * * The U.S. said Tuesday it saw no potential origin other than in China and wanted to examine the underlying data from the WHO’s four-week mission.

Finally, Health Payer Intelligence provides its perspective on fourth quarter financial reports from health insurers. “Payers anticipate that increased membership, lower utilization, potentially a higher federal medical assistance percentage, and other factors could offset healthcare spending as it returns to normal levels.”