Simplicity is a virtue.
From Washington, DC,
- The American Hospital Association News reports,
- “The House Budget Committee July 16 passed a budget resolution by a 20-14 vote along party lines during a markup, paving the way for a new reconciliation bill that is narrowly focused on providing additional funding for defense, farm aid and election-related provisions. The budget resolution instructs the House Committees on Administration, Agriculture, Armed Services, and Intelligence to draft legislation by Sept. 11 that provides up to $95 billion in funding. The resolution does not include a request for committees to offset the increase in spending, and no committees with a healthcare jurisdiction received instructions. The budget resolution could be considered by the full House next week. The House and Senate must pass an identical budget resolution before moving forward with a reconciliation bill.”
- STAT News relates,
- “A Senate vote to halt a Medicare pilot that uses artificial intelligence to approve or deny care failed along party lines on Thursday.
- “Republicans voted to block consideration of a Democratic-led measure, which would have stopped the Trump administration from employing prior authorization in original Medicare, where the practice is rarely allowed. The vote was 46 to 50.
- “The White House had pushed back against the Democratic bill. Medicare officials gave a handout to lawmakers’ offices on Tuesday outlining what they say are the benefits of the test, known as WISeR.”
- Per a Senate news release,
- “U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), Chairman of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Ranking Member of the HELP Committee, applaud the unanimous vote in the Senate to pass the Older Americans Act (OAA). The bill supports the health, independence and dignity of older adults across the nation.” * * *
- “The bipartisan reauthorization of the Older American Act marks a major step forward in strengthening the nation’s commitment to older adults. The legislation expands critical nutrition, health and community-based services. It reauthorizes OAA programs through fiscal year 2030 and makes improvements to better support family caregivers and direct care workers, Tribal seniors and those with disabilities in their communities.”
- Per a House of Representatives news release,
- “Large hospital systems and insurance companies will be required to be more transparent about their prices and financing practices while seniors and patients living in rural and underserved communities will have more access to better health care under [a boatload of] legislation approved by the Ways and Means Committee. Among the policies advanced by the Committee are reforms that will force health insurers and providers to be more open and honest about the cost of care before a patient undergoes treatment. Insurance companies that provide Medicare Advantage plans will also be required to disclose more information about their companies’ finances – including revenues and administrative spending – provide clearer guidelines for how they utilize the prior authorization process, and update and streamline that process to ensure seniors get timely access to care.
- “In addition to ensuring patients have the information they need to make more informed health care decisions, the Committee also approved legislation to expand and protect access to care in rural and underserved communities – including remote patient monitoring services and anesthesia services – as well as legislation to provide long-term care sooner for the sickest patients who need it. For seniors in nursing homes, legislation approved by the Committee will ensure essential caregivers, like a family member, can enter and provide care – even during a designated emergency when other visitation rights might be suspended.”
- The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services discusses the steps that agency is taking to strengthen Original Medicare and further announced
- “On July 16, 2026, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued program guidancethat provides interested parties with detailed processes and requirements for manufacturer effectuation of the maximum fair price (MFP) in 2028. Sections 11001 and 11002 of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA) (P.L. 117-169) establish the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program (hereinafter the “Negotiation Program”) to negotiate MFPs for certain high expenditure, single source drugs and biological products. The program’s requirements are described in sections 1191 through 1198 of the Social Security Act (hereinafter “the Act”), as added by sections 11001 and 11002 of the IRA and subsequently amended.
- “This draft guidance sets forth policies regarding manufacturer effectuation of the MFP in 2028 for selected drugs payable under Part B and/or covered under Part D. The Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program: Final Guidance, Implementation of Sections 1191 – 1198 of the Social Security Act for Initial Price Applicability Year 2028 and Manufacturer Effectuation of the Maximum Fair Price in 2026, 2027, and 2028(“final guidance for initial price applicability year 2028”) established the MFP effectuation policies for 2026, 2027, and 2028 for selected drugs covered under Part D and such policies currently remain in effect. When issued later this year, the final guidance will supersede for 2028 only the sections of the final guidance for initial price applicability year 2028 with respect to MFP effectuation for selected drugs covered under Part D that are included and updated herein.”
- The American Hospital Association News adds,
- “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services July 16 announced nationwide implementation of a new risk-based survey review process for high-performing nursing homes. CMS pilot tested the RBS process in more than 100 facilities in 22 states beginning in 2023. The initiative includes the addition of an icon on higher performing facilities in CMS’ Care Compare tool. CMS said the approach would reduce time required and staff members needed to conduct standard recertification surveys at higher performing facilities. All nursing homes will continue being surveyed at least every 15 months. While the RBS process would be available to all qualifying nursing homes, state agencies and CMS may still opt to use the traditional long-term care survey process based on concerns regarding residents’ health and safety, such as complaint reports, CMS said.
- “Approximately 12% of all nursing facilities will initially qualify for the new risk-based survey. To qualify, a nursing home must meet criteria quarterly, including a five-star overall rating on the Care Compare website, accurate data submission to CMS, zero citations indicating harm or substandard care quality in the previous survey cycle, and no recent ownership changes. CMS said that survey implementation is scheduled to begin in September following state agency training. Designations for high-performing facilities in the Care Compare tool are also expected to begin in September.”
- Per a Health and Human Services Department news release,
- “U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. today joined U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Brooke Rollins at Tampa General Hospital to celebrate the hospital’s signing of the Trump Administration’s Dietary Guidelines for Americans.” * * *
- “Secretary Kennedy also toured Tampa General Hospital’s cafeteria, where Chef Zakarian redesigned the menu in 2025 around the principle that food is medicine.”
- Federal News Network tells us,
- “Dozens of House and Senate Democrats are demanding answers from the Trump administration on its implementation of Schedule Policy/Career — a move that’s already affecting thousands of career federal employees and may be poised for expansion.
- “A letter sent to the White House on Wednesday, obtained exclusively by Federal News Network, called for details about exactly how many positions were reclassified last month, and whether the administration plans to add to the list of those stripped of their civil service protections.
- “Lawmakers argued that the White House has not provided enough information on who has been affected and why, compounding their concerns about Schedule Policy/Career. Signed by 53 Democrats, the letter launches an inquiry into the reach and impact of the new employment classification, while warning that the policy will politicize and undermine the federal workforce.” * * *
- “The White House is facing a July 31 deadline to respond to the congressional demands. The White House and the Office of Personnel Management did not immediately respond to Federal News Network’s requests for comment.”
- Meanwhile, OPM Director Scott Kupor added a post to his Secrets of OPM blog about GPPA.
- “Then-actor Ronald Reagan immortalized the phrase – “Just win one for the Gipper” – in his 1940 portrayal of George Gipp, a young Notre Dame football player who died in 1920 after a big Notre Dame win. The phrase was Gipp’s dying words to his legendary coach Knute Rockne.
- “In the Reagan movie, Rockne recounts the story of Gipp’s heroism and selflessness to rile up his team at halftime during a tied game against Army. Notre Dame prevailed over Army and the player who scores the winning touchdown proudly proclaims: “That’s one for the Gipper.”
- “Reagan later popularized the phrase as part of his various political campaigns, culminating with his 1988 Republican National Convention speech endorsing former Vice President George Bush: “But, George, just one personal request: Go out there and win one for the Gipper.”
- “Ok, back to reality.
- “This week, OPM launched a new, modernized version the Guide to Processing Personnel Actions (affectionately known as “GPPA”). And, truth be told, I’ve been waiting with bated breath to release this post – if only to bastardize Gipp’s famous words.”
- Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, explains “why Social Security’s uncertainty is becoming a federal workforce issue.”
- A bipartisan proposal would force Congress to confront Social Security’s long-term finances, with significant implications for retirement planning under FERS.
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “The federal government is cracking down on companies that provide ketamine for consumers to take at home, as concerns grow about misuse, adverse effects and deaths.
- “The Drug Enforcement Administration has ongoing multiple investigations into “bad actors” prescribing the powerful mind-altering drug online, according to a person familiar with the probes.
- ‘In late June, the Food and Drug Administration sent warning letters to 14 online marketers citing “significant violations” and ordering them to stop selling their ketamine products.
- “FDA has identified significant risks associated with unapproved ketamine products, especially in the absence of appropriate medical supervision,” the agency wrote in the letters to marketers whose websites include ketaminetroches.com and legitketaminesuppliers.com. “The easy availability of unapproved and misbranded ketamine products via the internet puts U.S. consumers at risk for serious adverse events.”
- FYI, according to the Journal of Accountancy, the Internal Revenue Service, effective July 1, 2026, released
- “Announcement 2026-11 modified Notice 2026-10. It revised the optional standard mileage rates for computing the deductible costs of operating an automobile for business, medical, or moving expense purposes and for determining the reimbursed amount of these expenses that is deemed substantiated.
- “The American Automobile Association reported that the average price for regular gasoline was $2.819 a gallon on Jan. 8, and $3.890 on July 15, an increase of 38%.
- “The revised standard mileage rates, effective July 1, are: 76 cents per mile for business, an increase from 72.5 cents, and 23.5 cents per mile for medical and moving purposes, up from 20.5 cents per mile for each. The mileage rate that applies to the deduction for charitable contributions is fixed under Sec. 170(i) of the Internal Revenue Code at 14 cents per mile.
- “All other provisions of Notice 2026-10 remain in effect.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- Cardiovascular Business reports,
- “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved enlicitide, a new oral PCSK9 inhibitor from Merck, to reduce low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) in adults with hypercholesterolemia. The approval covers patients presenting with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH) as well.
- “This is first time an oral PCSK9 inhibitor has been approved by the FDA to lower LDL-C. All PCSK9 inhibitors on the market today are injectable—an oral option that does not require needles could make a significant impact on patient care.
- ‘Merck is selling enlicitide under the brand name Lipfendra. Patients take a 20-mg tablet of the drug once per day in addition to following a heart-healthy diet and regularly exercising.
- “By harnessing the innovative science of PCSK9 inhibitors and novel macrocyclic peptide technology, Lipfendra was designed to significantly lower LDL-C in the form of a convenient once-daily pill,” Dean Y. Li, MD, PhD, president of Merck Research Laboratories, said in a statement. “This is a pivotal moment as we bring the first U.S. FDA-approved oral PCSK9 inhibitor to adults with high LDL-C, offering patients an important new option. We’re proud of our work with regulators on this rigorous and efficient review process.”
- The Washington Post adds,
- “These [oral PCSK9 inhibitor] drugs are an important line of defense for people whose cholesterol won’t come down enough with a statin alone.
- “Some patients do not respond well to a statin, which is the standard, low-cost treatment for high cholesterol. In many cases that is because of a condition called hypercholesterolemia, an inherited disorder.
- “Other patients may not be able to tolerate the side effects of a statin, which can cause muscle pain, weakness and headaches, as well as gastrointestinal issues.
- “There are some patients who can’t tolerate statins, or they can’t tolerate statins at a high enough dose to achieve their LDL goals,” Michos said. “The reality is there’s a huge unmet need — lots of patients out there who are not at their goal.”
- “And for people who don’t want to inject themselves, the new pill presents an alternative.”
- The article delves into related topics, like potential side effects.
- The Lupus Foundation tells us,
- “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation to EMD Serono’s investigational drug, enpatoran, for the treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in those with active cutaneous skin manifestations. This designation is given only to therapies that show early promise for serious conditions and signals the FDA’s commitment to speeding up their development and review. This announcement marks a significant milestone for the lupus community, as there are currently no approved targeted therapies specifically for lupus skin manifestations.
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- The Washington Post reports,
- “Investigators have linked shredded iceberg lettuce supplied to Taco Bell restaurants by Taylor Farms [based in Salinas, Calif.] as a potential source of contamination in the outbreak of a parasitic illness that has sickened thousands in United States, according to two individuals familiar with the investigation.
- “The two spoke on the condition of anonymity to share details of the ongoing investigation.
- “This summer’s outbreak of cyclosporiasis has been largely concentrated in southeastern Michigan, where more than 4,300 cases have been reported and at least 100 people have been hospitalized as of Thursday.”
- FEHBlog observation: Taylor Farms sells its prepackaged salad products in Dripping Springs Texas where the FEHBlog lives so he expects that its products are widely offered. Stay clear of pre-packaged lettuce. Heads of lettuce are less expensive anyway.
- The New York Times explains
- “The New York Times publishes maps that track air quality and wildfire smoke nationwide. Fire.AirNow.Gov also show the air quality index in a given area, which can help you determine if you should limit the amount of time you spend outdoors [due principally to the Canadian wildfires].
- “Air Quality Index values above 100 mean that outdoor air may be unsafe for people who are at higher risk of getting sick. (More on that below.) The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that some people could experience health effects at levels between 151 and 200, and that these might be more serious for high-risk people. Levels over 200 are considered “very unhealthy” for anyone. An AQI between 301 and 500 means pollution levels are hazardous, and even more likely to cause health issues.”
- The article offers additional information about protecting your health in smoky conditions.
- Health Day relates,
- “Obesity prevalence has risen substantially since 1999 and now affects more than 40 percent of U.S. adults and 20 percent of U.S. youths, according to a study published online July 6 in Circulation.
- “Anum S. Minhas, M.D., from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, and colleagues used data from a median of 8,687 participants from each cycle of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey between 1999 and 2023.
- “The researchers found significant increases in the prevalence of obesity (30 to 41 percent), severe obesity (5 to 10 percent), and abdominal obesity (48 to 61 percent) among adults (aged 20 years and older). These increases were seen for all adult age groups; adults 40 to 59 years old had the highest prevalence of overall obesity at the end of the study period. Women had higher end-point prevalence estimates than men for severe obesity (13 versus 7 percent) and abdominal obesity (70 versus 51 percent). Across survey cycles, non-Hispanic Black adults consistently had the highest prevalence of obesity, severe obesity, and abdominal obesity versus other race and ethnicity groups. Similar trends were seen in youths (younger than 20 years), with increases in prevalence estimates of obesity (15 to 22 percent), severe obesity (1 to 3 percent), and abdominal obesity (21 to 27 percent) during the study period.”
- MedPage Today tells us,
- :Epidural analgesia during labor was not linked with neonatal neurological morbidity or other adverse neonatal and pediatric outcomes.
- “Epidurals are the most effective pain relief in labor but their impact on neonatal health remains understudied.
- “This study was among Scottish women, who opt for epidural analgesia at far lower rates than U.S. women.”
- Healio informs us,
- “The weekend warrior-style exercise pattern may effectively lower risk for development of cardiometabolic disease among people with hypertension, according to a study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
- “Achieving the majority of guideline-recommended physical activity over the weekend reduced risk for first cardiometabolic disease to a similar level vs. those who reach their goal throughout the week, researchers reported.”
- and
- “A highly sensitive blood test can detect signs of pancreatic cancer that standard methods often miss, according to results of a prospective cohort study.
- “Digital droplet polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR) analysis performed upon diagnosis of localized disease detected KRAS-mutant circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) nearly four times more often than more widely used next-generation sequencing, with results strongly predicting survival.
- “Administration of ddPCR after chemotherapy or surgery also detected traces of ctDNA with the key genetic mutation at considerably higher rates, suggesting it more effectively identifies patients with residual disease who are at greater risk for recurrence.”
- Cardiovascular Business points out,
- “As transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) gains more and more momentum as a go-to treatment option, many patients with severe aortic stenosis are still missing out on the procedure. Can advanced artificial intelligence (AI)algorithms make a difference?
- “That was the question behind ALERT, a clinical trial presented at ACC.26 and simultaneously published in JACC.[1] Lead author Wayne B. Batchelor, MD, a veteran interventional cardiologist and president of Inova’s medicine service line, and colleagues aimed to learn if AI software from Chicago-based Tempus could be used to alert clinicians when suspicious findings turn up on a patient’s echocardiography results.
- “Batchelor is participating in an upcoming webinar to discuss ALERT at length and explore the potential impact AI-enabled clinician alerts can have on patient care.” * * *
- “Cardiovascular Business and Medtronic are hosting the free webinar on Wednesday, July 22, at 6 p.m. ET. A live Q&A session will follow the presentation.
- “Click here to register or view additional details.”
- and
- “A surgeon in Michigan has performed the world’s first single-port robotic mitral valve repair, highlighting a new minimally invasive treatment option for leaky mitral valves.
- “The surgery typically requires a five-port technique. This new single-port approach, however, saves patients a lot of pain and helps them recover much more quickly. Rakesh M. Suri, MD, DPhil, regional director of cardiac surgery robotics and innovation at Corewell Health William Beaumont University Hospital, performed the procedure.
- “For two decades, we’ve worked to make heart surgery safer and less invasive,” Suri said in a statement. “With single-port robotic surgery, we can now repair the heart through one small robotic port and a tiny access incision—streamlining the procedure, reducing complexity and enhancing safety—ultimately delivering a better experience and better outcomes for patients.”
- “The patient undergoing this historic procedure was Patrick O’Brien, a 60-year-old male and longtime Corewell Health patient.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “Veradermics on Wednesday delivered another research win for its experimental baldness drug, showing it can help women with mild-to-moderate pattern hair loss.
- “The pill, known as VDPHL01, is an extended-release version of minoxidil, sold for decades under the brand name Rogaine. Veradermics theorized that prolonging exposure to the medicine would allow more consistent and intense hair growth while avoiding spikes of drug concentration that can cause side effects.
- “The new Phase 2 study followed 28 women who took the pill either once or twice a day. Results across both groups were similar, with a mean increase of about 23 hairs per square centimeter after six months of treatment. Importantly, a majority of participants and researchers reported seeing improvement at the earliest check-in point of two months, Veradermics said.”
From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “UnitedHealth Group reported results well above analysts’ expectations and substantially raised its earnings projection for the year, moves likely to bolster Wall Street’s belief in the healthcare company’s financial turnaround.’ * * *
- “The announcement comes a little more than a year after Chief Executive Officer Stephen Hemsley returned to the top job, promising major changes after a financial meltdown.
- “For the second quarter of 2026, UnitedHealth reported net income of $5.48 billion, or $6.04 a share. That compared with net income of $3.41 billion, or $3.74 a share, a year earlier.
- “On the back of that strength, UnitedHealth raised its guidance for full-year adjusted earnings to a range of $19.50 to $20 a share, from a prior floor of $18.25. The FactSet consensus was $18.49.
- “It’s almost like we’re doing a reset on guidance,” said Wayne DeVeydt, UnitedHealth’s chief financial officer, in an interview. The company had been cautious about expectations after the first quarter, but now feels that the trends it saw then are durable, he said.”
- Beckers Payer Issues adds,
- “UnitedHealthcare is joining the choir of insurers calling for an overhaul of the No Surprises Act’s arbitration system.
- “The IDR process is not working, certainly not as Congress intended it, and it needs to be reformed,” Dan Kueter, CEO of the insurer’s employer and individual business, said on UnitedHealth Group’s second-quarter earnings call July 16.
- “Mr. Kueter said the independent dispute resolution process is “being exploited by select providers and select geographies,” adding about 50 basis points of incremental cost trend in 2026 and now accounting for at least 100 basis points of total commercial cost at the company.
- “According to the insurer, upwards of 40% of claims that enter the IDR process are ineligible, and roughly 60% of arbitration cases are brought by just five entities, a concentration Mr. Kueter said marks a shift from prior years. When arbiters side with out-of-network providers, the average payout is now 11 times what Medicare would pay, with some determinations reaching 30 times Medicare rates, he said.”
- Beckers Health IT points out,
- “CVS Health wants to position itself as the primary data host for the Trump administration’s push on healthcare interoperability, CEO David Joyner told Politico in a July 16 interview.
- “Mr. Joyner, who oversees a company spanning pharmacies, primary care clinics and health insurer Aetna, said fragmented data systems keep patients from making informed care decisions. He argued that opening up data access, paired with artificial intelligence, would let CVS serve as a connective layer between hospitals, pharmacies and health plans.
- “The company’s Health100 app is central to that strategy. Mr. Joyner described it as a personal health assistant that uses AI to suggest alternatives to emergency room visits and coach patients through care decisions.
- “Mr. Joyner’s remarks come as the Trump administration has stepped up scrutiny of health information blocking and pushed health IT developers, insurers and other industry actors toward more open data-sharing practices.
- “Affordability is also driving the strategy. CVS Health needs to be “part of the solution as opposed to the problem,” Mr. Joyner told Politico, pointing to hospitalization utilization and drug manufacturer pricing as the largest drivers of healthcare costs ahead of the midterms.”
- The Wall Street Journal relates,
- “Eli Lilly LLY has struck a deal to buy mental-health-focused AtaiBeckley ATAI for an initial $2.8 billion, continuing the drugmaker’s recent buying spree.
- “Eli Lilly on Thursday said it would pay $6.75 a share in cash for AtaiBeckley, a 26% premium to Wednesday’s closing price of $5.36 for the New Yorkclinical-stage biopharmaceutical company.
- “The deal also includes contingent value rights worth up to an additional $1 billion, or $2.50 a share, tied to AtaiBeckley’s pipeline of therapeutics for mental-health conditions, including psychedelic therapies such as its lead program BPL-003, which is aimed at providing relief from treatment-resistant depression, Eli Lilly said.
- “The contingent value rights bring the total potential deal value to $3.8 billion, or $9.25 a share.”
- Fierce Healthcare tells us,
- “GE HealthCare and a six-hospital New York nonprofit health system have struck a 10-year, $500 million strategic partnership that will outfit the provider’s facilities with advanced imaging, AI and other technologies.
- “The deal with Catholic Health, referred to by GE HealthCare as a Care Alliance, is among the medical technology company’s largest such partnerships to date and is expected to result in new service line expansions as well as improved care, the partners said in their Thursday morning announcement.
- “It’s slated to add more than 1,300 new pieces of technology across over 40 hospital and outpatient sites, about half of which will arrive within the agreement’s initial three years. The first rollouts will hit care sites “within months,” per the announcement, and include contrast-enhanced mammography, diagnostic imaging capabilities for multiple modalities and maternal-infant care monitoring tools.”
- Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
- “New York City-based NYU Langone Health is adding two physician practices in Palm Beach County, Fla., as the system builds a larger ambulatory care campus in West Palm Beach.
- “NYU Langone Medical Associates—Palm Beach Gardens opened earlier this month, according to a July 15 health system news release. The practice offers internal medicine, cardiology, rheumatology, orthopedics, gynecology and gastroenterology. Three physicians are joining the location: Madina Ray, MD, relocating from NYU Langone Hospital—Brooklyn to provide rheumatologic services; Sterling McClain, DO, for gynecologic services; and Rami Elkhechen, MD, who is moving his existing South Florida sports orthopedic practice to the new site.
- “A second location, NYU Langone Medical Associates—Boynton Beach, will open in September, offering internal medicine, urology and gynecology.
- “With each new location, we are making it easier for patients across Palm Beach County to access the comprehensive, coordinated care they need close to home,” Oren Cahlon, MD, executive vice president, vice dean for clinical affairs and strategy, and chief clinical officer at NYU Langone, said in the release.”
- and
- “Drug costs are emerging as one of hospitals’ fastest-growing expense categories, outpacing labor and other nonlabor costs as organizations continue to navigate a challenging financial environment, according to Kaufman Hall’s latest “National Hospital Flash Report.”
- “Nationally, drug expense per adjusted discharge increased 11% compared to 2023, one of the largest increases among major hospital expense categories. Drug expense per calendar day also rose 5% year over year and 25% compared to 2023, exceeding the growth rate for labor and total operating expenses.
- “The trend is especially pronounced at the nation’s largest hospitals.”
- and
- “Ambulatory surgery center operator Amsurg has acquired five North Carolina-based endoscopy centers.
- “The newly acquired facilities are located in the eastern and central portions of the state and provide patients with a team-based approach to managing acute and chronic gastrointestinal conditions, according to a July 14 news release.
- “Each of the five centers will continue providing high-quality care while benefiting from Nashville, Tenn.-based AmSurg’s operational expertise, clinical resources and growth support, according to the release.
- “The acquisitions come just over a month after Amsurg was acquired by St. Louis-based Ascension in a deal valued at about $3.9 billion. As a condition of FTC approval, six divested Amsurg facilities are being picked up by Optum subsidiary SC Affiliates, adding to UnitedHealth’s already sizable ASC network.”
- and
- “Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic has deployed roughly 150 AI models across its health system, CNN reported July 16.
- “The tally, according to Matthew Callstrom, MD, a radiologist and medical director of the health system’s generative AI program, spans tools built with partners including Microsoft and Scale AI, drawing on Mayo Clinic’s patient records and research.
- “One example, a documentation tool called Record Time, was developed with Scale AI to help physicians parse patient files before visits. Alexander Ryu, MD, an internal medicine physician and vice chair of innovation for Mayo Clinic’s Department of Medicine, told the publication the tool saves him five to 30 minutes of prep time per patient by organizing records chronologically and surfacing key details.
- “Mayo is also running a clinical trial testing whether AI can flag early-stage pancreatic cancer, a disease often not caught until it has spread.”
