Thursday report

From Washington, DC

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Senate Democrats have struck a deal with Republicans and the White House to pass five spending bills to fund a large portion of the government for the remainder of the fiscal year, as well as a stopgap measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security for two weeks while they continue negotiating guardrails to rein in immigration agents. Republicans had pushed to fund the department for several weeks, but Democrats insisted on a shorter-term measure. It is unclear how quickly the House can and will process those funding bills after the Senate passes them. The shutdown deadline is midnight on Friday.”
  • The Washington Post lets us know which government operations will remain open in the event of a partial shutdown.
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. today announced the appointment of a new Chair and 10 new public members to the Advisory Council on Alzheimer’s Research, Care, and Services. Established in 2011 under the National Alzheimer’s Project Act (NAPA), the Advisory Council meets quarterly to advise the Secretary on reducing the burden of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.” * * *
    • “The new Chair is Michelle Branham, Secretary of the Florida Department of Elder Affairs. Appointed by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis in 2021, Secretary Branham leads the state agency serving nearly 6.5 million Floridians. She brings more than 25 years of experience in Alzheimer’s disease public policy, public health, and public relations.”
  • Healthcare Dive tells us,
    • “The Trump administration has negotiated deals with major Medicaid systems vendors that it says will save states hundreds of millions of dollars as they hustle to implement massive changes to the safety-net insurance program from the GOP’s “Big Beautiful Bill.”
    • “On Thursday, CMS officials shared a list of 10 companies that have agreed to provide IT services and products at low or no cost to states to help them stand up work requirements, a controversial policy tying Medicaid eligibility to work or other approved activities.”
  • and
    • “Almost 23 million Americans signed up for health insurance coverage on the Affordable Care Act exchanges this year, the CMS said on Wednesday. That’s down 5% from last year’s record high, but not the nosedive some market watchers predicted given steep premium increases for ACA plans.
    • Some 3.4 million people are new to the marketplaces, while 19.6 million already had ACA coverage and re-enrolled.
    • “Enrollment trends differ across the country. Much of the volume was driven by Texas alone, where more than 200,000 additional people signed up for coverage in 2026 compared to 2025. Texas led the pack of 9 states and Washington, D.C. that had more residents sign up for ACA plans. The remaining 41 states experienced enrollment declines, with particularly steep drops in North Carolina, down 22%, and Ohio, down 20%.”
  • Bloomberg Law relates,
    • “President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced the nomination of a veteran federal prosecutor to lead a new Justice Department unit focused on fraud, as the administration looks to refocus attention on the justification for its immigration crackdown in Minnesota that has grown increasingly unpopular.
    • “Trump, in a post on his Truth Social platform, nominated Colin McDonald as “assistant attorney general for national fraud enforcement,” a role that requires Senate approval.”
  • and
    • “The Trump administration proposed a rule Thursday requiring transparency in pharmacy benefit managers’ compensation and referral fees they pay to brokers.
    • “The proposed rule (RIN: 1210-AB37) is part of President Donald Trump’s broader push on price transparency in the health-care sector, where PBMs have come under fire for what critics say is opaque and anticompetitive behavior. 
    • “The Labor Department released the proposal after an executive order Trump signed in February 2025. The rule follows recent updates to a set of price transparency rules for health insurers and hospitals that Trump initially finalized in his first term.” * * *
    • “The rule would require PBMs and affiliated brokers to disclose their compensation to fiduciaries of self-insured health plans under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, so they can “assess the reasonableness of the contracts” required under ERISA and the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 (CAA).”
    • The public comment deadline is March 31, 2026.
  • Tammy Flanagam writing in Govexec, offers a summary of the “annual adjustments to retirement benefits, FEHB costs, Social Security rules and TSP limits are now taking effect” for federal and postal annuitants.

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Fierce Pharma reports,
    • “Combining two eye drops that have been on the market for at least 30 years each has earned Tenpoint Therapeutics an FDA approval (PDF) for Yuvezzi, a treatment for presbyopia, a common, age-related condition that makes it difficult to focus on nearby objects.
    • “Yuvezzi, which is a solution of 2.75% carbachol and 0.1% brimonidine tartrate, becomes the first combination treatment for presbyopia, which affects roughly 2 billion around the world and 128 million in the United States.
    • “Carbachol reached the market in 1972 as Alcon’s Miostat to dilate pupils during cataract surgeries. Brimonidine tartrate was commercialized in 1996 by Allergan as an ocular hypertension eye drop and most recently by Bausch+Lomb as Lumify, a treatment to reduce eye redness.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Life expectancy in the U.S. reached a record high in 2024 following a substantial decline of drug-overdose deaths, according to figures released by the federal government Thursday.
    • “The life expectancy at birth for the average American was 79 years old in 2024, up 0.6 year from the year prior, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. The increase signals a rebound from declines in life expectancy during the coronavirus pandemic and progress in combating the opioid crisis.
    • “The agency reported that deaths related to drug overdose decreased by more than 26% between 2023 and 2024, marking the largest year-to-year drop in those types of fatalities recorded by the federal government.
    • “You’ve got those two things working together: improvements coming out of the pandemic and then declines in overdose deaths,” said Robert Anderson, chief of the Statistical Analysis and Surveillance Branch at the National Center for Health Statistics. “The result is increased life expectancy to a level a little bit higher than what we saw prepandemic.”
  • The New Yorrk Times tells us,
    • “Your potential life span is written in your genes, according to a new study. You can lengthen it a bit with a healthy lifestyle. But if your genetic potential is to live to be 80, for example, it is unlikely that anything you do will push your age at death up to 100.
    • “That, at least, is the conclusion of a paper published Thursday in Science.
    • ‘Uri Alon of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel and other researchers drew the data for the study from three sets of data from pairs of Swedish twins, including one set of twins that was reared apart. To test how generalizable the results are, the group also examined data from a study of 2,092 siblings of 444 Americans who lived to be over 100. Their goal was to identify outside factors that can affect how long someone lives, like infections or accidents, separate from the intrinsic factor of genetics.
    • “They report that aging is mostly hereditary, a conclusion that flies in the face of much conventional medical wisdom regarding dieting, exercising and healthy habits. These habits are important for the quality of a person’s life, but they run into another form of conventional wisdom: You can’t make someone into a centenarian, unless that person also has a genetic inheritance of longevity.”
  • NBC News adds,
    • “The early bird may not only catch the proverbial worm but also have a healthier heart, new research suggests.
    • “People who naturally stay up late, self-described night owls, are likelier to have poor heart health than people with more traditional sleep-wake schedules, according to a study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
    • “The findings were particularly strong among women.”
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “Roughly 126 million U.S. adults ages 20 and older are projected to have obesity by 2035, according to estimates from a cross-sectional analysis.
      “In 1990, 19.3% of U.S. adults had obesity; in 2022, this rose to 42.5%. By 2035, 46.9% of the adult population is expected to have obesity, reported Catherine O. Johnson, PhD, MPH, of the Hans Rosling Center for Population Health in Seattle, and colleagues.
      “The results, with data collected over three decades, provide insight into future levels of persons living with obesity, if past trends continue. Effective policies may be identified by examining populations with consistently lower rates of obesity,” Johnson and her team wrote in JAMA.”
  • Genetic Engineering and BioTechnology News points out,
    • “Organoids have helped create a comprehensive map showing how eight different genetic mutations associated with autism spectrum disorder affect early brain development. This work provides new insights into the ways diverse genetic causes may lead to shared features and symptoms of the disorder.
    • “Over the past two decades, more than 100 genes harboring rare mutations linked to autism have been identified. This genetic heterogeneity has raised a fundamental question: if autism can be caused by so many different genetic changes, why do individuals with autism often share common features?
    • “A new study published in Nature in the paper, “Developmental convergence and divergence in human stem cell models of autism,” provides new insights by demonstrating that while different mutations affect the developing brain in initially distinct ways, they increasingly impact overlapping molecular pathways as development progresses.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Health Care Cost Institute reports,
    • “Urgent care spending among people with employer-sponsored insurance increased by more than 50% from 2018 to 2022, according to a new analysis released today by the non-profit Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI). Unlike most health care categories where rising prices have driven spending growth, this increase was fueled primarily by a sharp rise in utilization.
    • “Urgent care centers have become a critical access point for patients seeking timely care, and this was especially true during the pandemic,” said Katie Martin, president and CEO of HCCI. “Our analysis shows that while prices remained relatively stable, utilization skyrocketed – underscoring the role urgent care plays in meeting patient needs outside traditional settings. While urgent care may be filling a critical gap and easing ER demand, with spending up 50% over five years it deserves close attention from employers, insurers and policymakers.”
  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • “Drugmakers are doing something unusual this year: slashing prices for several widely used medicines.
    • “The companies made their typical round of price increases to start the year. In addition, they also made big cuts to U.S. list prices for widely used drugs for diabetes, blood clotting and other conditions.
    • “A big factor: federal government policy changes, including lower prices that Medicare negotiated and took effect for the first time this year.
    • “All told, 20 brand-name drugs had list-price cuts this month, ranging from 9.8% to 91.7%, according to 46brooklyn Research, a Dayton, Ohio-based firm that analyzes drug pricing.
    • “Among them were a 43% cut to the list price for bloodthinner Eliquis from Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb and a 44.4% drop for diabetes treatment Jardiance from Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly.
    • “These are heavyweight drugs, and to see them crater in price like this is historic,” said Antonio Ciaccia, chief executive of 46brooklyn.
    • “For patients who have to pay the full price or a copay based on a percentage of list price, the price cuts will mean lower costs. Patients with insurance who pay a fixed monthly copay might not see much of a change.”
  • Modern Healthcare tells us,
    • “Hospitals discharge about 40% of patients to post-acute care, but not always to the most appropriate setting.
    • “Some health systems have special teams to ensure patients go to the correct place for additional care.
    • “Providers are successfully appealing some denials by insurers for referrals to nursing homes and inpatient rehab facilities.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “The Pennsylvania Department of Health on Jan. 28 approved Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems’ plan to sell its three Pennsylvania hospitals to the Tenor Health Foundation. 
    • “The approval comes after CHS, a for-profit system, signed a definitive agreement in October to sell Commonwealth Health to Tenor, a newly formed nonprofit organization. 
    • “Under the deal, Tenor will acquire Regional Hospital of Scranton (186 beds), Moses Taylor Hospital in Scranton (122 beds) and Wilkes-Barre General Hospital (369 beds).
    • “The sale would see CHS exit the Pennsylvania market. CHS previously attempted to sell the hospitals to WoodBridge Healthcare for $120 million in 2024, but the deal collapsed because WoodBridge was unable to satisfy the funding requirements.  
    • ‘CHS and Tenor will now work to finalize the transaction “as quickly and smoothly as possible,” a CHS spokesperson told Becker’s in a statement. The terms of this deal were not disclosed.”
  • Per Radiology Business,
    • “Premier Radiology Services is acquiring another rival teleradiology group, the private equity-backed imaging outfit announced on Wednesday. 
    • “The Deerfield Beach, Florida-based company said it has reached a deal to buy National Radiology Solutions, or NRad, for an undisclosed sum. Founded in 2013 by industry veteran Robb Kolb, MBA, Premier said NRad is a “highly regarded teleradiology provider,” known for its “deep expertise” across all subspecialties. 
    • “Adding the Winter Garden, Florida-based firm will allow Premier Radiology to grow its national footprint, strengthen clinical coverage and enable more efficient interpretations.
    • “Welcoming the NRad team marks another important milestone for Premier and meaningfully expands the scale and capabilities of our platform,” CEO Andy Copilevitz, MBA, said in a statement Jan. 28. “Our organizations share a deep commitment to advancing the practice of teleradiology and supporting the physicians who make it possible.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • Sword Health, a company that provides an artificial-intelligence-first care model, plans to acquire rival Kaia Health for $285 million, the company announced Wednesday.
    • “Kaia, which has headquarters in New York and Munich, is a digital therapeutics company focused on musculoskeletal (MSK) and pulmonary care.
    • F”ollowing the acquisition, Sword will move Kaia’s U.S. members onto its MSK platform, the company said in a press release. Kaia’s millions of American members will gain access to Sword’s expanded AI Care platform.” 

Notable Obituary

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Dr. Angella D. Ferguson, a pediatrician whose groundbreaking research aided in the early diagnosis and treatment of sickle cell anemia, a painful and deadly disease that disproportionately afflicts people of African descent, died on Jan. 6 at her home in Chevy Chase, Md. She was 100.
    • “Her death was confirmed by her nephew Roger W. Ferguson Jr., an economist and former vice chairman of the Federal Reserve.
    • “Dr. Ferguson was one of a small group of pediatricians — including Yvette Fay Francis-McBarnette and Doris Wethers — who as Black women physicians were rarities for their time, and who as researchers focused on sickle cell, a field that many white clinicians had overlooked.”
  • RIP

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