Weekend Update

Photo by Tomasz Filipek on Unsplash

The Wall Street Journal reports that in last week’s Congressional election

Democrats retained control of the Senate after Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto won a tight race in Nevada over Republican Adam Laxalt, giving the party the 50 seats it needs for a majority, and disappointing Republicans who believed they had a strong chance to flip the chamber.

The GOP appeared on track toward winning the barest of House majorities, nonpartisan analysts said, but the final outcome hinged on races, mostly on the West Coast, that remain too close to call.

HR Dive recounts the outcome of state ballot initiatives that relate to employer-employee relations.

The lame-duck session of the current Congress kicks off tomorrow with floor voting in the Senate and House and Committee business.

The Federal Employees Benefits Open Season starts tomorrow and ends on December 12, 2022.

The American Medical Association’s Interim Meeting started yesterday and ends on Tuesday, November 15, in Honolulu, Hawaii.

The Centers for Disease Control marks Antibiotic Awareness Week this week with a focus on prevention.

Every year, CDC honors U.S. Antibiotic Awareness Week to raise awareness and share information on the importance of improving antibiotic and antifungal use.

Antibiotics and antifungals save lives, but any time they are used, they can cause side effects and can contribute to the development of resistance.

Prevention puts a “pause” on antimicrobial resistance (AR), and we all have a role in combating AR.

McKinsey and Company offers guidance on preparing for the next pandemic.

COVID-19 won’t be the last pandemic, but is the world prepared for the next one? COVID-19 exposed underlying vulnerabilities in public health systems that made them less resilient to acute threats than expected. The learning: there’s much work to be done. McKinsey partner Matt Craven, and senior partners Matt Wilson and Lieven Van der Veken, identified four areas where governments can focus their efforts to build greater confidence in readiness. Learn more about this strategic approach to managing future threats, and dive deeper with these insights on vaccine innovation and resilience, boosting COVID-19 vaccine uptake in Africa, improving social determinants of health, strengthening the public health workforce, and more.

Fierce Healthcare informs us

The Biden administration is pushing to resolve big gaps in the quality and accuracy of data on health equity as it installs new requirements for payers and providers.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released a blog post late Thursday outlining steps to address data issues such as aligning standards for collection and gradually implementing equity scores.

“Data can tell a story, but if the data is incomplete or unaligned, the story is also incomplete,” wrote LaShawn McIver, M.D., director of CMS’ Office of Minority Health. “To work to advance health equity, we must improve our data, especially our health equity data.”

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has made closing equity gaps a key pillar of the Biden administration, including pursuing new equity requirements in health plans and value-based care payment models.

A recent framework released by CMS detailed the need for increasing the collection of data on social determinants of health (SDOH) to better identify equity gaps.

“CMS recognizes that progress has been made but is committed to resolving the major gaps in data quality, accuracy and completeness,” McIver wrote. 

The FEHBlog would be happy if OPM started sharing SDOH data with FEHB carriers.

Health Payer Intelligence discusses steps that health plans are taking to make explaining benefits more understandable to members.