Monday Roundup

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From the end of the public health emergency front –

CMS issued a comprehensive fact sheet titled “CMS Waivers, Flexibilities, and the Transition Forward from the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency.” Notwithstanding the title, the fact sheet includes sections on how the end of the PHE impacts

Private Health Insurance

Vaccines: Most forms of private health insurance must continue to cover COVID-19 vaccines furnished by an in-network health care provider without cost sharing. People with private health insurance may need to pay part of the cost if an out-of-network provider vaccinates them.

Testing: After the expected end of the PHE on May 11, 2023, mandatory coverage for over-the- counter and laboratory-based COVID-19 PCR and antigen tests will end, though coverage will vary depending on the health plan. If private insurance chooses to cover these items or services, there may be cost sharing, prior authorization, or other forms of medical management may be required.

Treatments: The transition forward from the PHE will not change how treatments are covered, and in cases where cost sharing and deductibles apply now, they will continue to apply.

Private Health Insurance and Telehealth

As is currently the case during the PHE, coverage for telehealth and other remote care services will vary by private insurance plan after the end of the PHE. When covered, private insurance may impose cost-sharing, prior authorization, or other forms of medical management on telehealth and other remote care services.

For additional information on your insurer’s approach to telehealth, contact your insurer’s customer service number located on the back of your insurance card.

Fierce Healthcare reports

Telehealth providers and advocates are balking at proposed telemedicine rules released by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) late Friday. If made permanent, the rules would be a marked change from the suspension of the  Ryan Haight Online Pharmacy Consumer Protection Act, which propelled a telepsychiatry boom during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Under the proposed rule released by the DEA, developed in concert with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and in coordination with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, some medications would require an in-person doctor’s visit. Controlled substances including stimulants like Adderall and opioids such as oxycodone and buprenorphine used to treat opioid use disorder (OUD) would require at least one in-person visit.

The DEA created a 30 day public comment period for this proposed rule.

From the U.S. healthcare business front, STAT News tells us about this surprising twist

On Friday, the Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency authorization for the first at-home test that can detect flu and Covid-19 — but for the test’s maker, Lucira, the long-anticipated authorization may have taken too long. The company filed for bankruptcy on Feb. 22, directly blaming the “protracted” FDA authorization process for the over-the-counter combination test for its financial troubles. * * *

The company’s lawyers indicated in the bankruptcy hearing that Lucira was not able to find anyone willing to buy the company prior to the Chapter 11 filing. With the only authorized at-home flu test on the American market, it’s an open question whether the company’s continued operations will allow the company to survive or will entice another party to buy Lucira.

The FEHBlog’s guess is that drug manufacturers will be lined up at the bankruptcy courthouse door to place a bid on the company if allowed.

BioPharma Dive informs us

  • “Cancer drug developer Seagen is in early talks to be acquired by Pfizer, according to The Wall Street Journal, which cited people familiar with the situation. A deal still may not be reached, the Journal said.
  • “Last summer, the Journal reported Seagen, a Washington-based company currently worth more than $30 billion, was considering selling to Merck & Co. for upwards of $40 billion. But as Bloomberg would later report, the deal stalled out because of disagreements over price. Since then, Seagen has brought on a new CEO, the longtime Novartis executive David Epstein, who played an integral role in ramping up the Swiss pharmaceutical giant’s cancer drug division.
  • “Should Pfizer acquire Seagen, it would gain access to a slate of experimental medicines as well as four marketed products that, together, generated $2 billion in revenue last year. Pfizer recorded $100 billion in product revenue in 2022, but estimates sales from its COVID-19 vaccine and Paxlovid therapy will fall significantly in the coming months. It also expects to lose around $17 billion in annual revenue between 2025 and 2030 due to the expiration of key patents.”

From the Rx coverage front —

  • The Wall Street Journal fills us in on the side effects of the new semaglutide weight loss drugs. For example, “Semaglutide spurs weight loss by stimulating the release of insulin and lowering blood sugar. It also delays stomach emptying, which causes people to feel full quickly and stay sated for longer stretches. When a patient comes off the drug, their normal appetite returns. * * * “People who stopped taking semaglutide gained back, on average, two-thirds of the weight they lost within a year, according to a study published in August 2022 in the journal Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism.”
  • The Journal also reports that “Amyloid Gains Converts in Debate Over Alzheimer’s Treatments; Dispute has far-reaching consequences, including whether Medicare will pay for new anti-amyloid drugs [e.g., Aduhelm and Leqembi].” Nevertheless, “Dr. [David] Knopman [,a Mayo Clinic neurologist,] said that Leqembi’s success is only a partial vindication of the amyloid hypothesis, which in the minds of many doctors promised to stop Alzheimer’s in its tracks or even reverse certain symptoms.” 

From the mental health care front, David Leonhardt, the New York Times Morning columnist, “examines the raging debate about smartphones and teenage mental health.”

I called Lisa Damour last week and asked what advice she would give to parents. Damour is a psychologist who has written two best-selling books about girls and just published a new book, “The Emotional Lives of Teenagers.” She is no anti-technology zealot. She thinks social media can have benefits for teenagers, including connections with peers. But she also sees reason for concern.

Her first piece of advice is not to blame teenagers. They didn’t invent smartphones, and earlier generations would have used those phones in the same ways that today’s teens are.

Her second piece of advice might be summarized as: less. She believes teenagers should rarely have their phones in their bedrooms, especially not at night. A phone is too disruptive to sleep, and sleep is too important to mental health.

Parents can also introduce digital technology in stages, recognizing that a 13-year-old brain is different from a 17-year-old brain. For younger teens, Damour suggests a phone that can send and receive texts but does not have social media apps.

From the miscellany department –

  • Beckers Hospital Review provides details on the business model of One Medical, which became part of Amazon last week.
    • The company employs primary care providers across more than 125 clinics in 19 markets, according to its website. One Medical then partners with local hosptials and health systems to provide specialty care.
    • One Medical offers a subscription-based membership — for $199 a year (though Amazon is now offering a promotion for $144 annually) — that gives patients access to its digital health platform, with 24-7 access to virtual care and online appointment booking and prescription renewals. The company still bills those patients’ insurance for the visits.
  • Govexec reports “The federal employees appeals board is setting new precedents restricting when agencies can fire employees who were injured on the job, issuing new rulings on cases that languished for years while the agency was rendered partially incapacitated.”
  • The Wall Street Journal tells us “The White House said there is no consensus within the Biden administration over the origins of the Covid-19 virus, a day after the disclosure of an Energy Department assessment that the pandemic likely originated with a leak from a Chinese lab.”