Weekend update

From Washington, DC,

  • Congress left town late last week on two weeklong recess which wraps around the upcoming Passover and Easter holidays.
  • Beckers Payer Issues reports,
    • “Healthcare took center stage in governors’ 2026 “State of the State” addresses.
    • “The National Governors Association compiled excerpts from across the country that focused on healthcare, ranging from technology use to the Rural Health Transformation Program to insurance reforms.”
  • The FEHBlog expects that OPM’s call letter for 2026 FEHB and PSHB benefit and rate proposals will be released this week, and the sooner the better.

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • ABC News reports on how online gambling has become a public health crisis for our Nation’s youth.
    • “[T]he link between gambling early and gambling addiction has become increasingly clear. While only 1% of adults who gamble report addictions, the Journal of Behavioral Addictions reports that between 2% and 7% of young people who place bets report gambling addictions. 
    • “Young people’s brains are particularly susceptible to this because … the parts of their brains that respond to these rewards develop more quickly,” said Dr. Nasir Naqvi, the director of Columbia University’s gambling disorders clinic. “So they become sensitive to these awards and to that dopamine release before the part of their brain that helps them to control these behaviors.” 
    • “Naqvi says he now routinely hears about children as young as 13 seeking support for possible addictions to gambling. 
    • “I don’t want to overstate the problem. But yes … it’s a looming public health crisis,” Naqvi told ABC News. “In fact, it’s already here.” 
  • Medscape reports,
    • “Going into 2026, widespread shortages of most major diabetes medications had largely stabilized: The shortages of Humulin and lispro insulin vials, and therefore medications, that dogged Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly in spring and summer 2024 have resolved, and it, like other manufacturers, has largely caught up with much of the demand for its GLP-1 products as well. 
    • “However, experts from the advocacy group T1D Strong say that shortages of GLP-1 receptor agonists, basal and rapid-acting insulin analogues, and several frontline oral agents are expected to persist into 2026 as the supply chain remains unstable, and especially in certain geographic pockets. 
    • “When shortages occur, it often falls to primary care clinicians to improvise substitutions and bridge strategies, while hospitalists see the downstream effects of shortages in real time in patients who show up with conditions like dehydration, medication errors, and avoidable admissions. The challenge has shifted from simply locating medication to building structured, risk-based strategies that prevent treatment gaps and protect the most vulnerable patients.” “
  • and
    • “Repeating the same meals and keeping calorie intake steady produced more weight loss than eating a more varied diet among individuals living with overweight or obesity, a short-term trial showed.
    • “Conventional wisdom around dieting says you should incorporate a lot of different foods to avoid getting bored and that you should splurge on the weekends or special occasions so you don’t feel as deprived,” lead author Charlotte Hagerman, PhD, of the Oregon Research Institute, Springfield, Oregon, told Medscape Medical News. “This contradicts research showing that consistency makes your behavior more habitual, that is, more automatic or effortless.
    • “We wanted to formally test these competing ideas in a group of people trying to lose weight,” she explained. “Maintaining a healthy diet in today’s food environment requires constant effort and self-control. Creating routines around eating may reduce that burden and make healthy choices feel more automatic.”

From the U.S. healthcare business and articifical intelligence front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Insurers and providers are locked in more messy contract disputes than in previous years
    • “A convergence of economic pressures across nearly all business lines has raised the stakes.
    • “Reimbursement disagreements are just one factor as providers object to insurance company practices.
    • “Both sides are equipped with unprecedented access to price transparency data.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Alex Zhavoronkov, CEO of Insilico Medicine, can’t stop complimenting Eli Lilly. “Lilly is better in AI than Insilico, and no other company is better in AI than us … except for these guys,” he said. 
    • “He insisted he wasn’t saying nice things about Lilly just because the pharma giant has signed a new deal with Insilico that’s worth $115 million up front and approximately $2.75 billion in biobucks, which are contingent on achieving regulatory and commercial milestones. After calling Lilly’s tirzepatide, which he is on, “the best drug ever invented by humans,” he said he’s been consistently singing Lilly’s praises for a year. “Mounjaro makes me so happy every day. I want to develop the next one.
    • “It looks like Zhavoronkov might have the opportunity to do just that — his AI drug development company’s new deal with Lilly, announced on Sunday, includes rights for the Mounjaro and Zepbound manufacturer to develop, manufacture, and commercialize some of Insilico’s preclinical AI-discovered candidates for oral therapeutics. Though he declined to say which assets Lilly licensed, he said that the company is the “absolutely best partner” for the candidates and that “nobody is better than them” in these disease areas. Insilico’s pipeline webpage recently was updated to note that a candidate targeting GLP-1 has been out-licensed to an undisclosed partner.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review relates,
    • “Hospitals and health systems have continued to close maternity units, citing ongoing financial challenges, workforce shortages and declining birth rates. However, in rural Kansas, AdventHealth Ottawa — part of Altamonte Springs, Fla.-based AdventHealth — recently restored labor and delivery services to Franklin County.
    • “The AdventHealth Ottawa Family Birth Place temporarily closed in 2023 and reopened in September 2025 with a fully staffed labor and delivery team. As of August 2025, the hospital had hired 11 full-time staff for the unit, with additional providers joining in 2026.
    • “Maternity care challenges remain significant. A report reflecting data stretching into 2026 from the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform found that fewer than half of U.S. rural hospitals still offer labor and delivery services. In a dozen states, fewer than one-third do.
    • Becker’s has reported similar trends, including 29 maternity service closures in 2025 and seven in 2026. Against that backdrop, AdventHealth Ottawa’s reopening stands out.
    • “What’s unique about Ottawa is that we’re an OB desert that does not sit in a population desert, so there’s a lot of population around us that doesn’t have OB services,” AdventHealth Ottawa President and CEO Brendan Johnson said in a hospital video. “But within a large circumference, there’s about 400 to 500 births a year that didn’t have a place to go.”
  • and
    • “Defining return on investment for healthcare technology has never been more consequential — or more contested. As health systems face mounting financial pressure, workforce strain and the rapid proliferation of AI-driven tools, the question of what truly constitutes a return on a technology investment has grown more complex than a simple cost-benefit calculation. The old metrics — uptime, deployment speed, license cost — no longer tell the full story. 
    • ‘”Across the industry, a new framework is emerging, one that measures ROI not just in dollars saved or revenue gained but in time restored to clinicians, cognitive burden lifted, outcomes improved, and trust strengthened between technology and the people who use it. From community hospitals to academic medical centers, health system leaders are redefining what it means for technology to deliver value. Becker’s asked 50 healthcare leaders how they define ROI for a technology they invest in.” [The answers are found in the article.]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *