From Washington, DC,
- Here is a link to the OPM Director’s weekly blog post.
- “Of course, government doesn’t – and shouldn’t – function like private entrepreneurship. We can’t shoot for the moon and embrace unbridled risk as do venture-backed startups. But government can embrace a growth mindset – not leaving good enough alone, but instead always thinking about ways in which we can improve operational efficiency, try new things, and embrace change.”
- Govexec reports,
- “President Trump has just nine days to issue his likely plan to freeze federal employees’ salaries in 2026, before sizeable automatic and across-the-board increases take hold.
- “Each August, the president must issue an alternative pay plan, declaring an economic emergency to avert the automatic implementation of sizeable increases to locality pay due to the 1990 Federal Employees Pay Comparability Act. Administrations of both parties have bemoaned the way that the law calculates those automatic adjustments, hence the annual sidestep of that provision.”
- and
- “The Internal Revenue Service is no longer planning to pursue layoffs as it seeks to rebuild parts of its workforce. The tax agency is now working to plug staffing holes with hiring, reassignments and rescinding the administration’s deferred resignation offer for some employees upon finding mission-critical staffing gaps.
- “The decision to forgo layoffs, confirmed by two sources briefed on the matter, marks a significant reversal for an agency that has shed about a quarter of its staff and had earlier this year planned to issue widespread reductions in force.”
- Per a National Institutes of Health news release,
- “I [NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya, MD] am pleased to announce the release of NIH’s new plan to promote gold standard science across all agency activities. Building on NIH’s longstanding commitment to scientific integrity, this forward-looking plan incorporates the nine, interlocking tenets of gold standard science adopted by the U.S. Government and aligns with the Department of Health and Human Services’ framework for achieving these principles.”
- STAT News lets us know,
- “The Food and Drug Administration announced Friday that it has begun publishing reports of adverse events concerning drugs and biological products on a daily basis. Previously, the database of the reports, called the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System, was updated quarterly.
- “People who navigate the government’s clunky adverse event reporting websites should not have to wait months for that information to become public,” FDA Commissioner Marty Makary said in a statement. “We’re closing that waiting period and will continue to streamline the process from start to finish.”
From the judicial front,
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “A federal court in Maryland has blocked [Dropbox link to opinion] several parts of a health insurance exchange enrollment and eligibility rule days before they were set to take effect.
- “The U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland temporarily stayed seven provisions from a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services rule issued June 20 and set to go live Monday.
- “Judge Brendan Herson’s Friday ruling temporarily blocks a $5 premium penalty on auto-reenrollments, along with a policy disqualifying people for advance payment of subsidies if they didn’t file income taxes and failed to reconcile their tax credits in a previous year.
- “It also stops regulators from eliminating guaranteed insurance coverage for individuals with past-due premiums and pauses a requirement that exchanges verify certain household income data.
- “Also on pause are policies to require pre-enrollment eligibility checks ahead of a special enrollment period and a change to the formula used to calculate plan tiers.
- “The ruling allows CMS’ methodology for calculating premium adjustments, along with its elimination of a 60-day window for enrollees to resolve household income data, to go forward.
- “The court did not weigh in on other provisions in the regulation, such as the shorter open enrollment period. Plaintiffs are not contesting the changes to the low-income enrollee signup period.”
From the public health and medical research front,
- The Centers for Disease Prevention and Prevention announced today.
- “COVID-19 activity is increasing in many areas of the country. Seasonal influenza activity is low, and RSV activity is very low.
- “COVID-19
- “The percentage of COVID-19 laboratory tests that are positive is going up across the country. Emergency department visits for COVID-19 are increasing among all ages and highest in young children. COVID-19 model-based epidemic trends (Rt) indicate that COVID-19 infections are growing or likely growing in most states.
- “Influenza
- “Seasonal influenza activity is low.
- “Additional information about current influenza activity can be found at: Weekly U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report | CDC
- “RSV
- “RSV activity is very low.
- “Vaccination
- “Research finding: An MMWR report released August 21, 2025, found that in the first RSV season (2023–24) where RSV prevention products were available, 29% of infants born during October 2023–March 2024 were immunized against RSV through receipt of nirsevimab (a monoclonal antibody) or maternal RSV vaccination during pregnancy. The report used data from immunization information systems representing 33 states and the District of Columbia. State-specific immunization coverage ranged from 11% to 53%. Preliminary data from the 2024–25 season suggested that RSV immunization coverage increased nationally.
- “The recent FDA approval and CDC recommendation for an additional monoclonal antibody, clesrovimab, could further increase access and immunization coverage for infants in the 2025–26 respiratory virus season. RSV immunization products will be available beginning in September for most of the continental United States.”
- The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP adds,
- “Emergency department (ED) visits for COVID, still at low levels, also rose, up 15.2% compared to the previous week. Levels are higher in the South, Southeast, and West compared with other parts of the country. The CDC said ED visits are rising for all age groups and are highest in young children.
- “Hospitalization rates have shown a slight upward trend since July, and the rate of deaths from COVID remains low with no change reported compared with the previous week.
- “Due to technical issues, the CDC did not report wastewater data for COVID, influenza A, or respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) today and said it would resume updates as soon as possible. Last week, it said the overall detection level was low and highest in the West.”
- and
- “The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) yesterday announced the end of a large measles outbreak in the southwestern part of the state, after two incubation periods passed with no new cases.” * * *
- “Elsewhere, the Wisconsin Department of Health Services and Oconto County Public Health have identified five more measles infections linked to nine earlier cases reported from Oconto County in early August, bringing the total to 14.
- “Officials said the ongoing investigation indicates that measles is spreading locally. Oconto County is located in northeastern Wisconsin and is part of the Green Bay area.
- “In other measles developments, the Pennsylvania Department of Health yesterday issued an alert about potential measles exposures in four counties after an out-of-state traveler visited the state while contagious. The exposures occurred in Adams, Clearfield, Lancaster, and York counties. Locations included two Mennonite facilities, along with a travel center, a restaurant, and an entertainment venue.”
- Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology tells us,
- In neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinson’s, and Alzheimer’s, healthy brain cells are damaged by aberrant reactive oxygen species (ROS). A potential treatment involves neutralizing ROS using antioxidant drugs. But these approaches failed to penetrate the brain effectively or proved unstable or indiscriminately damaged healthy cells.
- Now, a new study led by scientists at the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) in Daejeon, South Korea explores how the brain defends itself against hydrogen peroxide, a particularly harmful ROS. Using advanced imaging and molecular analysis, they discovered that hemoglobin exists in the nucleolus of astrocytes, where it acts as a “pseudoperoxidase” that breaks down H₂O₂ into harmless water. Full details are published in a new Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy paper titled “Hemoglobin as a pseudoperoxidase and drug target for oxidative stress-related diseases.”
- “The key was to uncover hemoglobin’s antioxidant potential in the brain and design a ‘first-in-class’ compound that could selectively enhance it,” said Won Woojin, PhD, first author on the study. “By boosting a natural defense mechanism rather than introducing an external antioxidant, we achieved strong and lasting protection across multiple disease models associated with oxidative stress.”
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- Fierce Healthcare reports,
- “Pittsburgh-based insurer Highmark brought in $16.5 billion in revenue for the first half of 2025, leaning on its health system and other diversified businesses as headwinds batter its payer unit.
- “That includes $121 million in operating income and $329 million in net income for the first six months of the year. As of June 30, the company had $10.3 billion in net assets.
- “The midyear financial results reflect an ongoing rebound at Allegheny Health Network, Highmark’s health system. The AHN posted $2.8 billion in revenue and $72 million in operating income for the first half of the year, bolstered by significant improvements to volumes across multiple categories.
- “In the first half of the year, inpatient discharges and observations were up by 4% and outpatient registrations were up by 5% compared to the first six months of 2024. The AHN also saw a 7% increase in physician visits and a 4% increase in emergency room visits year over year.”
- Beckers Hospital Review points out,
- “Boston-based New England Baptist Hospital has the lowest hospital wide readmission rate, while Oroville (Calif.) Hospital has the highest, according to CMS’ Unplanned Hospital Visits database.
- “The data, released Aug. 6, is based on provider data for hospital return days, including unplanned readmission measures and measures of unplanned hospital visits after outpatient procedures. The data was collected between July 1, 2023, and June 30, 2024.
- “The article identifies] the 10 hospitals with the highest and lowest hospital wide readmission rates, along with their respective scores.
- Medical Economics relates,
- “For decades, referrals and word-of-mouth were the main routes to finding a new physician. Now, according to rater8’s 2025 report, “The Next Evolution of Patient Choice: The Rise of AI in Healthcare Search,” patients are increasingly relying on artificial intelligence (AI), online reviews and social media when deciding where they should seek care.
- “The survey of more than 1,000 U.S. adults found that 70% are open to — or are already using — AI tools to research physicians. Among patients, 26% said AI recommendations directly influenced their decision — nearly equal to primary care referrals (28%) and health care review sites (29%).”
- MedTech Dive calls attention to the fact that the “robotic surgery market battle is heating up. After a busy summer of surgical robotics news, check out MedTech Dive’s roundup of coverage in the space.”
