Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Because this is the FEHBlog, the lede tonight necessarily is OPM’s announcement naming the carriers who are currently prepared Postal Service Health Benefit Program benefit and rate proposals. Good luck to them all.
  • FedWeek notes,
    • “President Biden has issued an open letter to federal employees thanking them for their “tireless service on behalf of our country.”
  • and
    • “While seeking a January 2025 raise of 2 percent (see related story), the White House’s fiscal 2025 budget proposal cites several initiatives related to federal pay.
    • “In addition to year-to-year pay increases, the Administration is pursuing structural reforms to enhance the competitiveness of the Federal pay system,” it says.
  • Reg Jones, writing in Fedweek, fills us in on benefits available upon the death of a federal employee or annuitant.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services provided a readout from “Biden-Harris Administration Convening with Health Care Community Concerning Cyberattack on Change Healthcare. Leaders from HHS, White House, DOL, and the health care community convened to discuss ways to mitigate harms to patient and providers caused by the cyberattack.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration “advised consumers in Some Medicines and Driving Don’t Mix to make sure they know if their prescription or over-the-counter medication can cause side effects that may make it unsafe to drive. Most medications won’t affect consumers’ ability to drive safely or operate other heavy machinery, but some do.”
  • The Buck consulting firm points out why “maintaining creditable coverage may prove difficult for some employer sponsored plans in 2025.”
  • STAT News discusses the treatment impact of new federal methadone rules.
    • “The federal government is reforming methadone care for the first time in over two decades. But how far do the changes actually go?
    • “To many methadone clinics, the Biden administration’s recent refresh of the rules governing opioid treatment programs represents an unprecedented opportunity to offer care that is more compassionate and responsive to patients’ needs. To many patient advocates, however, it simply nibbles around the edges. 
    • “The reality is likely somewhere in between: It will depend, in large part, on whether state-level regulators embrace the changes, and whether individual clinics actually implement them. In reform-oriented states, and at patient-centered clinics, the new rules could make a world of difference for people seeking addiction treatment.” 
  • The Office of National Coordinator for Healthcare Information Technology, Micky Tripathi, in his blog, looks forward to “HTI-2 & ONC’s Commitment to Furthering the Vision of Better Health Enabled by Data.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Roche’s experimental Alzheimer’s disease drug trontinemab showed “best-in-class” potential based on its ability to quickly clear clumps of amyloid protein from the brains of patients enrolled in a small clinical trial, the company said Monday.
    • “A majority of patients receiving the highest dose of the drug, which is specially designed to penetrate brain tissue, saw their amyloid levels drop below detectable levels after 12 weeks, Roche executives said in an investor presentation on the pharmaceutical giant’s neurology pipeline.”
  • Reuters tells us, “Pfizer  said on Tuesday its drug, Adcetris, extended survival in patients with the most common type of lymphoma in a late-stage study, bolstering efforts to expand the use of the treatment gained through its $43 billion purchase of Seagen [in 2023].
  • MedPage Today lets us know,
    • “Pragmatic implementation of an automated online behavioral obesity treatment program that included 9 months of active maintenance helped people with overweight or obesity lose a clinically significant amount of weight by 12 and 24 months, a randomized trial showed. * * *
    • “This pattern persisted at 24 months, reported J. Graham Thomas, PhD, of the Weight Control and Diabetes Research Center in Providence, Rhode Island, and colleagues in JAMA Internal Medicine.
    • “This study shows that a fully automated online obesity treatment program can produce beneficial results for many patients in real-world primary care settings,” Thomas told MedPage Today. “We were encouraged to find that the online weight-loss program performed just as well in real-world primary care practices as it does in our previous highly controlled clinical trials.”
    • “These patients lost weight “at rates comparable” to those seen in studiesopens in a new tab or window in which the researchers were completely hands-on in every aspect of the program, he added.
    • “Because the treatment program is online and fully automated, Thomas said it is quite practical for widespread implementation across primary care practices. “The data show that the primary care clinicians were able to implement the program independently, and patients were able to use it successfully.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds,
    • “Hospital transplant departments have strict cutoffs for patients with higher body mass indexes because of the increased risk of complications, but GLP-1s such as Ozempic and Wegovy are helping more patients be eligible for surgery. 
    • “Potential transplant donors and diabetic patients who otherwise would not be able to undergo surgery because of their BMI are now quickly dropping weight. Popular GLP-1s, including Ozempic, and GLP-1s and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptides, such as Mounjaro and Zepbound, are dramatically helping these weight loss efforts.” 
  • Medscape cautions,
    • “Novo Nordisk’s CEO on Friday said the company was working with authorities in several countries to tackle counterfeit versions of its popular diabetes drug Ozempic, as new reports emerge of patient harm across the world.
    • “This is something we take very seriously,” Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen, CEO of the Danish drugmaker, told Reuters. * * *
    • “Jorgensen, echoing comments from the FDA’s Califf, also said compounded semaglutide in the United States was a serious health issue, and that the raw materials, or active pharmaceutical ingredients (API), for these products were coming from unregulated facilities in Asia and elsewhere. 
    • “We don’t know them, and we have really no insights or ability to understand what the API is in a certain compounded product,” he said.
    • “While fake drugs often do not contain any of the medication advertised, compounded drugs are custom-made medicines that are based on the same ingredients as branded drugs. Because Wegovy and Ozempic are in short supply, they can be legally produced by licensed pharmacies in the U.S.
    • “Further reports obtained by Reuters through FOIA requests show that one person died last year from abnormal blood clotting after taking a drug that was advertised as compounded semaglutide. Three others suffered severe vomiting and nausea, sensory loss in their legs, and a drop in blood platelet levels.”
  • The U.S. Census Bureau announced,
    • “An additional 573,000 people died in the United States during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic but “excess mortality” at the national level masks substantial variations by state, age, sex, and race and ethnicity, according to new U.S. Census Bureau research recently published in Demography.
    • “Excess mortality” refers to deaths from any cause above what is expected from recent mortality trends.
    • “This research shows the pandemic widened the mortality gap between the nation’s Black and White populations and completely erased the mortality advantage of the Hispanic population in relation to the non-Hispanic White population.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced‘,
    • “Two phase 2 clinical trials to test the safety and effectiveness of three treatments for adults with autonomic nervous system dysfunction from long COVID have begun. The autonomic nervous system acts largely unconsciously and regulates bodily functions, such as heart rate, digestion and respiratory rate. Symptoms associated with autonomic nervous system dysfunction have been among those that patients with long COVID say are most burdensome. The trials are part of the National Institutes of Health’s Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) Initiative, a nationwide research program to fully understand, diagnose and treat long COVID. Other RECOVER phase 2 clinical trials testing treatments to address viral persistence and neurological symptoms, including cognitive dysfunction (like brain fog), launched in July 2023. * * *
    • “People 18 years of age and older who are interested in learning more about these trials can visit https://trials.RECOVERCovid.org/autonomic or ClinicalTrials.gov and search identifier NCT06305793, NCT06305806 and NCT06305780. Please do not contact the NIH media phone number or email to enroll in these trials.”
  • The Wall Street Journal warns,
    • “Ultra-processed foods may not only affect our bodies, but our brains too.
    • “New research suggests links between ultra-processed foods—such as chips, many cereals and most packaged snacks at the grocery store—and changes in the way we learn, remember and feel. These foods can act like addictive substances, researchers say, and some scientists are proposing a new mental-health condition called “ultra-processed food use disorder.” Diets filled with such foods may raise the risk of mental health and sleep problems
    • “The science is still early and researchers say there is a lot they don’t know. Not all ultra-processed foods are equal, some scientists say, adding that some might be good for you. A diet high in ultra-processed foods has been linked with obesity, Type 2 diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular disease, but researchers are still figuring out exactly why, beyond calorie counts and nutrient composition. 
    • “Makers of foods such as processed meats and muffins defend their products, and note that there isn’t a consistent, universally accepted definition of ultra-processed food.”

From the HIMSS Conference in Orlando,

  • HIMSS offers an article about “Google Cloud’s debut of new genAI advancements for healthcare at HIMSS24. In total, the company is offering its cloud clients updates to Vertex AI Search, Healthcare Data Engine and MedLM, designed to improve patient care.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • HR Dive reports,
    • “Nearly half of U.S. workers don’t have the benefits they need at work, according to the results of a survey by Perceptyx, an employee experience company. Of the 1,500 full-time employees surveyed, 59% said they had “benefits envy” of friends’ and family members’ healthcare coverage.
    • “When it comes to benefits equity, the survey found that medical, maternity and mental health are the “magic trifecta,” Emily Killham, senior director of people analytics, research and insights at Perceptyx, said. “When employees have access to all three, women and men feel equally that their needs are met.”
    • “Yet 53% of those surveyed said they don’t have mental health coverage, 51% don’t have maternity leave, and 25% don’t have any medical benefits, per the results.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “Healthgrades recognized 832 hospitals with its 2024 Patient Safety Excellence Awards and Outstanding Patient Experience Award. Only 79 of those hospitals received both awards. 
    • “The dual recipients spanned 27 states. Texas had the most dual recipients with 13 honorees — including four Baylor Scott and White Health and four Houston Methodist hospitals.”
    • The article lists the dual recipients.
  • Beckers Payer Issues relates,
    • “Selective contracting with primary care physicians may be one factor behind lower per-patient expenses in Medicare Advantage, a study published in the March edition of Health Affairs found. 
    • “The study examined 4,456,037 traditional Medicare patients who visited 151,679 primary care physicians. The physicians who participated in Medicare Advantage networks had $433 lower costs per patient than the regional average of physicians. 
    • “The quality measures for physicians participating in Medicare Advantage were similar to the regional average, the study found. 
    • “Physicians who did not participate in any MA networks cost $1,617 more per patient per year than those participating in MA networks, and they had lower quality measures. 
    • “The findings suggest that “managed care tools, particularly selective contracting with primary care physicians” contribute to lower costs in Medicare Advantage, the authors concluded. Though the differences in cost are most likely attributable to differences in practice style, that could also serve as a mechanism for plans to select healthier patients, the authors wrote.” 
  • Health Payer Intelligence adds,
    • “The average Medicare Advantage premium has remained low and stable, with many beneficiaries choosing plans with a zero-dollar monthly premium, according to data from eHealth, Inc.
    • “eHealth’s seventh annual Medicare Index Report includes data from over 190,000 applications for Medicare insurance products submitted to eHealth during the annual enrollment period for 2024 coverage.
    • “The average monthly premium for Medicare Advantage plans chosen by eHealth customers for 2024 is $9, the same as last year and up slightly from $6 in 2022. The popularity of plans with zero-dollar premiums contributed to the low average.”
  • HealthDay informs us,
    • “The cost to American families of caring for a child with a mental health condition jumped by almost a third between 2017 and 2021.
    • “It now costs an average $4,361 more per year for a U.S. family to care for a child with a mental health condition, compared to families without such children, a new study has found.”