Tuesday Tidbits

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From Washington, DC

  • STAT News reports
    • “Lawmakers are considering increasing doctors’ Medicare pay in an upcoming government funding package, but their policy would only partially offset cuts providers saw earlier this year, three lobbyists and two sources familiar with the talks told STAT.
    • “Physicians’ groups have agitated for Congress to undo a roughly 3.4% Medicare pay cut this year, resulting from the expiration of pandemic-era bonuses lawmakers chose to give the industry.
    • “The cut went into effect on Jan. 1, but a fix hasn’t entirely fallen off of the agenda. A pay increase was discussed in negotiations over a stopgap funding bill earlier this year.
    • “There are more questions than answers at this point in negotiations. It’s unclear what the exact pay increase could be, when it could be passed, and how it could be paid for. The fate of legislation to fund the government is uncertain, too. But the five sources made it clear that an effort to completely offset the 3.4% cut is now off the table.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering loosening its recommendations regarding how long people should isolate after testing positive for the coronavirus, another reflection of changing attitudes and norms as the pandemic recedes.
    • “Under the proposed guidelines, Americans would no longer be advised to isolate for five days before returning to work or school. Instead, they might return to their routines if they have been fever free for at least 24 hours without medication, the same standard applied to the influenza and respiratory syncytial viruses.
    • “The proposal would align the C.D.C.’s advice with revised isolation recommendations in Oregon and California. The shift was reported earlier by The Washington Post, but it is still under consideration, according to two people with knowledge of the discussions.
    • “The C.D.C. last changed its policy on isolation in late 2021, when it scaled down the recommended period to five days from 10. If adopted, the new approach would signal that Covid has taken a place alongside other routine respiratory infections.”
  • The Federal Times tells us,
    • “The federal employee retirement backlog shot back up in January, snapping a four-month streak of steadily shrinking caseloads and indicating the government still has trouble getting a handle on its system for processing annuities.
    • “Nearly 13,000 people applied for retirement in January, matching the usual record-high number the Office of Personnel Management receives at the beginning of each calendar year. Traditionally, the retirement claims surge culminates in winter and case workers work through it well into spring.
    • “Last month, the Office of Personnel Management processed roughly 6,400 cases while intaking almost twice that. The overall inventory was 46% higher in January than December. And while processing times again improved last month after steadily quickening, it remains to be seen how the influx will impact speeds in the coming months.
    • “Despite the increases, fewer employees overall retired in 2023 than 2022, 2021 and 2020.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management lets us know,
    • “Inflation fell in January to 3.1 percent year-over-year, missing some economists’ estimates that it would fall below 3 percent for the first time in nearly three years. 
    • “The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for all items rose 3.1 percent for the 12 months ending in January, before seasonal adjustment, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported today. That’s down from the unadjusted 3.4 percent annual gain seen in December—and a significant improvement from the 9.1 percent high notched in June 2022. 
    • “Core inflation—which accounts for all items minus food and energy—rose 3.9 percent over the past 12 months, the same for the 12 months ending in December.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Women who develop high blood pressure or diabetes in the course of pregnancy are more likely to give birth to children who develop conditions that may compromise their own heart health at a young age, scientists reported on Monday.
    • “By the time they are 12 years old, these children are more likely to be overweight or to be diagnosed with high blood pressure, high cholesterol or high blood sugar, compared with children whose mothers had complication-free pregnancies.
    • “The research underscores the strong association between healthy pregnancies and child health, though the study stops short of proving a cause-and-effect relationship. The conclusions also offer support for the “fetal origins of adult disease” hypothesis, which suggests that many chronic conditions may have roots in fetal adaptations to the uterine environment.”
  • The American Hospital News points out,
    • “Syphilis infections during pregnancy more than tripled between 2016 and 2022 to 280 cases per 100,000 births, ranging from 46 per 100,000 in Maine to 763 per 100,000 in South Dakota, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Feb. 13. Rates doubled in seven states and grew fivefold in six states: New Mexico, Colorado, Mississippi, South Dakota, Montana and Alaska. Rates increased across all racial/ethnic and age groups, with the highest rates in mothers who were American Indian and Alaska Native, under age 25 and had no prenatal care.
    • “According to a CDC report last November, over 3,700 mothers passed the infection onto their babies in 2022, 10 times more than in 2012, although timely testing and treatment could prevent most mothers from transmitting the infection to their babies. Congenital syphilis can cause adverse pregnancy outcomes such as fetal and neonatal death, low birthweight, preterm birth, and brain and nerve disorders.”
  • The Wall Street Journal notes,
    • “At a biomedical center here, there’s a man scarfing down Frosted Flakes and tater tots while hooked up to an IV. His job? To help the government figure out what you should eat.
    • “That man, Kevin Elizabeth, a 28-year-old tech worker, is one of 500 Americans who will be living at scientific facilities around the country for six weeks, eating precisely selected meals and undergoing hundreds of medical tests. He is part of a new study, costing $189 million, that is one of the most ambitious nutrition research projects the National Institutes of Health has ever undertaken. * * *
    • “If all goes according to plan, in a few years you’ll be able to walk into your doctor’s office, get a few simple medical tests, answer questions about your health and lifestyle, and receive personalized diet advice, says Holly Nicastro, coordinator for the NIH’s Nutrition for Precision Health study.”
  • On the flip side, MedPage Today explains,
    • “Gastric bypass surgery in people with severe obesity was associated with sustained improvements in cognitive function, inflammation, and comorbidities, according to results of a cohort study in the Netherlands.
    • “At 2 years post-surgery, neuropsychological tests showed improvements of 20% or higher in global cognition (43% of patients), ability to shift attention (40%), episodic memory (32%), verbal fluency (24%), and working memory (11%), reported Amanda J. Kiliaan, PhD, of Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen, the Netherlands, and colleagues.
    • “Lower inflammation and adipokine secretion, remission of comorbidities, higher physical activity, and better mood” may have played a role in the sustained improvement in global cognition for that subset of patients, the researchers suggested in JAMA Network Open.”
  • The Washington Post illuminates “How D.C.’s first sobering center could ease drug and alcohol addiction. The facility, part of the District’s response to a worsening opioid epidemic, exceeded 1,000 admissions in just over three months since it opened late last year.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per a Cigna press release,
    • “Cigna Healthcare, the health benefits division of The Cigna Group (NYSE: CI), and HelloFresh*, the world’s leading meal kit company, announce an exclusive collaboration to offer discounted access to HelloFresh’s wholesome, affordable meals to as many as 12 million Cigna Healthcare customers through their employers. The two companies will also team up to support HelloFresh’s Meals with Meaning program, a social impact initiative that provides free meal kits for individuals experiencing food insecurity in local communities.
    • “Business leaders recognize that healthy employees mean a healthy business, and by expanding access to affordable, healthy meals, employers can better cultivate a stronger workforce,” said Heather Dlugolenski, U.S. commercial strategy officer, Cigna Healthcare. “We’re proud to team up with HelloFresh to support the health and vitality of America’s workforce and to make a difference for communities in need.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • Chronic care provider Omada Health is expanding its GLP-1 program to better care for patients interested in maintaining weight loss progress while discontinuing usage of the drugs.
    • For patients prescribed to GLP-1 drugs for weight loss, up to 40% of the weight loss can be due to loss of muscle mass. Omada is building upon its weight management solution to help users regain muscle throughout a member’s journey and when the drug is no longer utilized, a solution that would improve health outcomes and allow patients to not stray far from weight-related goals. Members of Omada’s cardiometabolic programs can benefit from the expanded care track, the company said.
  • and
    • “Zocdoc has launched a new guided search to help patients choose and book the right provider with greater confidence. 
    • “The guided search function on the healthcare marketplace and appointment booking platform offers a more tailored set of results based on patients’ unique care needs. When a patient searches for a provider, they are presented with an optional questionnaire to help better understand their symptoms and the type of treatment being sought. The goal is to take the guesswork out of which provider is the best fit.
    • “This search function can also help patients discover more about a provider’s scope of practice and helps providers ensure the patient is a good fit, Zocdoc said. A broad spectrum of specialties have the function available.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • CVS’ Aetna will begin offering in-home care services to its Medicare Advantage members with chronic kidney disease. 
    • Aetna has partnered with Monogram Health, a provider of in-home care management services, according to a Feb. 13 LinkedIn post from Monogram. Under the partnership, Monogram nurse practitioners will provide in-home and virtual specialty provider appointments to eligible Aetna members.