From Washington, DC,
- The Washington Post reports,
- “Republicans moved Thursday to speed up Senate confirmation of President Donald Trump’s nominees by changing the chamber’s rules over the objections of Democrats.
- “Senators voted 53-45 to allow themselves to change the rules with a simple majority instead of 60 votes — a move known as the “nuclear option.”
- “The rules change will allow the Senate to confirm multiple people at once, helping to clear a backlog of nearly 150 nominees awaiting floor votes. Republicans argue it is necessary because Democrats have held up the confirmation process by forcing time-consuming votes on each nominee rather than allowing some of them to be confirmed by voice votes, which is faster.
- “The change excludes Cabinet officials, Supreme Court justices and federal judges, who must be confirmed one by one.”
- Per an OPM news release,
- “The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) announces the 2025 Combined Federal Campaign (CFC), running from October 1, 2025, to December 31, 2025. The CFC provides federal employees and military personnel opportunities to support charitable causes.
- “OPM supports the generosity of federal employees but is reviewing the program’s administrative costs and declining participation for potential changes in 2026. Read more in OPM Director Scott
- “Kupor’s latest blog here and read the memo to agencies here.”
- OPM Director Scott Kupor explains in his blog,
- “Over the years, participation in the program has continued to decline from its peak – donations have been hovering around $65-70 million over the past few years. At the same time, the costs to administer the program have continued to increase. This year, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) estimates the program will consume $22 million in outside contractor fees and listing fees to administer the program.
- “This means for every $1 a federal employee donates, about $0.33 (or 33%) does not reach the charity for which it was intended. Rather, dollars that could be deployed to help sick children, help veterans in need, or help victims of natural disasters get back on their feet, are instead diverted to overhead. * * *
- “Despite all of this, we at OPM will shortly launch the 2025 CFC, only because many charities have already spent time and money preparing for this over the course of this year. We hope 2025 will be a successful campaign.
- “But, at the same time, OPM is concerned about excessive administrative costs associated with the CFC, along with steadily declining participation, and it is evaluating changes to the CFC for 2026 (including whether to continue the program).
- “We believe strongly in charities and in the generosity that Americans continue to show in donating in support of charities – roughly 50% of American households donate. But we also believe donors expect their dollars to benefit the very causes they intend to support and not to lose the effectiveness of their donations because of excessive administrative costs.”
- Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, explains what to know before setting your 2026 retirement date.
- CNBC reports,
- “Millions of Social Security beneficiaries may see a 2.7% to 2.8% increase to their monthly checks in 2026, according to new estimates based on the latest government inflation data.
- “A 2.8% Social Security cost-of-living adjustment may go into effect next year, estimates Mary Johnson, an independent Social Security and Medicare policy analyst. That increase would push the average retirement benefit up by about $54.70 per month, she said. * * *
- “Those estimated increases would be up from the 2.5% boost to benefits that went into effect in 2025. The COLA has averaged 2.6% over the past 20 years, according to the Senior Citizens League.”
- “The COLA projections are based on new consumer price index data for the month of August that was released Thursday.
- “The official Social Security cost-of-living adjustment will include one more month of inflation data.”
- The American Hospital News tells us,
- “The Federal Trade Commission announced yesterday that it sent letters to many large health care employers and staffing firms, urging them to review their employment agreements — including any noncompete agreements — to ensure they are in compliance. The commission’s announcement follows one from Sept. 5, when it moved to vacate a 2024 noncompete final rule, voting 3-1 to dismiss appeals initiated by the previous administration attempting to uphold it. On Sept. 4, the FTC issued a request for information on noncompete agreements, seeking to “better understand the scope, prevalence, and effects of employer noncompete agreements, as well as to gather information to inform possible future enforcement actions.”
- The public comment deadline is November 3, 2025.
- Healthcare Dive informs us,
- “The 340B drug discount program incentivizes hospitals to purchase outpatient clinics and prescribe more and higher-cost drugs — behaviors that tend to increase costs for the federal government and commercial health plans, according to a new report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
- “Only one-third of the sharp growth in 340B spending since 2010 is due to rising drug costs and higher prescribing of more expensive drugs, the CBO estimates. Instead, the growth has mostly been fueled by hospitals acquiring off-site clinics and contracting with more independent pharmacies, along with more providers becoming eligible for 340B.
- “Though the CBO stressed it doesn’t have enough data to quantify the influence of each factor individually, the agency believes that the biggest driver of snowballing 340B growth is probably hospital-clinic M&A.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- BioPharma Dive tells us,
- “Senior Food and Drug Administration official Vinay Prasad has reclaimed a role as the agency’s top doctor and scientist six weeks after his dramatic departure and one month after his surprising return to lead the regulator’s biologics medicine division.
- “On the FDA’s website, Prasad, a physician and prolific researcher, is now listed as the agency’s chief medical and scientific officer in addition to his role as director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, or CBER. A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services, the FDA’s parent agency, confirmed via email Prasad’s reappointment to his former role.
- MedTech Dive adds,
- “Patient groups called for substantial changes to medical device user fees in comments submitted to the Food and Drug Administration. Negotiations recently kicked off for the medical device user fee amendments, which will determine how much funding the FDA’s device center can collect from the industry in fiscal years 2028 through 2032.
- “After a public hearing last month, clinicians and patient groups submitted comments calling for an increase to user fees, bolstering FDA staffing and more emphasis on product safety. They also called for greater transparency around negotiations and for patients to have more input on the final agreement.
- “The FDA received a total of 27 comments by Sept. 4, including several submissions from patients and medical groups. Two large medtech industry lobbying firms, Advamed and the Medical Device Manufacturers Association, which had opposed user fee hikes in the public hearing, had not posted comments as of Thursday.”
- Beckers Hospital Review provides us with an update on State actions to expand access to the Covid vaccine.
From the public health and medical/Rx research front,
- The New York Times reports,
- “Chronic diseases like heart disease, cancer and diabetes are some of the leading causes of death around the world. A new global study shows that deaths from such “noncommunicable” conditions have been declining in most countries — but the pace of that decline, including in high-income countries like the United States, has slowed in recent years.
- “The probability of dying from a chronic disease between birth and age 80 dropped in about 150 countries from 2010 to 2019, the study, published Wednesday in The Lancet, found. But compared to the previous decade, there was a widespread slowdown — in some cases, even a reversal — in progress.
- “In the United States, the overall probability of dying from a chronic disease fell markedly between 2001 and 2010 but remained nearly flat over the following nine years. Among younger adults (20 to 45 years old), this probability increased — a rarity among high-income countries. The chance of dying specifically from neuropsychiatric conditions like Alzheimer’s disease and alcohol and drug use disorders also rose in the United States during this period.””
- Cardiovascular Business notes,
- “Diets that prioritize plant-based foods while limiting meat and dairy products are associated with reduced risks of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease (CVD), coronary heart disease, stroke and diabetes.
- “That was the primary takeaway from a new study of more than 3.4 million adults who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), UK Biobank or one of 37 different clinical trials. The full analysis was published in Science Advances.” * * *
- Click here to read the full study.
- The Hill points out,
- A DermaRite Industries hand soap recall has been expanded to more than 30 products, including deodorant, lotions, shampoo, hand sanitizer and more.
- The recall was initiated in July and was expanded recently over concerns that more of its products may include Burkholderia cepacia complex. Exposure to the bacterium could “result in serious and life-threatening infections,” the company said in a release.”
- “For healthy individuals with minor skin lesions, the use of the product may result in local infections, whereas in immunocompromised individuals the infection could spread into the blood stream, potentially leading to life-threatening sepsis,” the release noted.
- “Symptoms of bacteria exposure include fever, fatigue and possible respiratory infections for patients with compromised immune systems, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
- “The products were distributed nationwide in the U.S., including Puerto Rico.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “More women are using cannabis during pregnancy, driven by fears about prescription drugs and beliefs it’s safe for conditions like nausea.
- “Research on cannabis use during pregnancy is limited, but recent studies suggest potential risks to fetal brain development.
- “Dispensary practices and conflicting advice from various sources add to confusion, highlighting the need for more research.”
- BioPharma Dive relates,
- “Capsida Biotherapeutics has suspended a recently begun clinical trial of an experimental gene therapy after the first participant in the study died following treatment.
- “Capsida disclosed the death in a letter Wednesday to the patient community for the rare neurodevelopmental disease its gene therapy is designed to treat. In it, the biotechnology company noted it has informed the Food and Drug Administration and will soon provide regulators a full report of the patient’s death.
- “We understand this devastating news will raise questions and uncertainty, and we are working with urgency to gather information and find answers,” Capsida wrote in its letter.”
- Per Fierce Pharma,
- “Approved 15 months ago as a pneumococcal disease vaccine for adults—and billed as the first shot designed for seniors—Merck’s Capvaxive now has data supporting its potential in children and adolescents.
- “In a phase 3 study of 882 participants aged 2 through 17 who have completed a primary pediatric pneumococcal vaccination regimen and have one or more chronic medical conditions that put them at an increased risk of the respiratory disorder, Capvaxive made the grade in three key measures.”
- Per Medscape
- Pavani Chalasani, MD, MPH, is professor of medicine and director of the Division of Hematology/Oncology at The George Washington University. In this interview, Chalasani discusses how liquid biopsies are used to guide therapy in breast cancer and reviews the role of antibody-drug conjugates in current practice.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal relates,
- “AbbVie has struck a deal with generic drugmakers aimed at extending patent protection for its blockbuster autoimmune drug Rinvoq well into the next decade.
- “AbbVie on Thursday said it has settled litigation with all generic manufacturers that have filed applications with the Food and Drug Administration for generic versions of Rinvoq, which is approved for use in several autoimmune diseases.
- “The North Chicago, Ill., biopharmaceutical company said it now doesn’t expect any U.S. generic entry for Rinvoq prior to April 2037, given the settlement and license agreements and assuming the company wins pediatric exclusivity.
- “Analysts at William Blair, who had previously assumed a 2033 loss of U.S. patent exclusivity for Rinvoq, said the settlements are a big win for AbbVie that support longer-term protection for the franchise.”
- STAT News reports,
- “Consumers can now purchase Exact Sciences’ liquid biopsy early detection test, Cancerguard, and get an indication of whether they might have one of 50 different cancers included in the test’s analysis. The biotechnology company launched the test on Wednesday, and Tom Beer, Exact’s chief medical officer, relayed the news with elation.
- “I am feeling fantastic. This is what I came to Exact to do,” Beer said. A practicing oncologist, Beer said that he’s reminded every Friday in clinic of the world of difference that catching cancer early can make. The promise of liquid biopsy tests is to do that for dozens of cancers, not just breast, prostate, colorectal, lung, and cervical cancer.”
- Per Modern Healthcare,
- “CVS Health has named Jon Thiboutot as president of retail health, effective immediately.
- “Thiboutot was most recently vice president of operations at CVS MinuteClinic. He succeeds Dr. Creagh Milford, who had served as interim president of retail health since May and will continue to lead primary care provider Oak Street Health, CVS said Thursday.
- “A CVS spokesperson declined to say whether the company will fill Thiboutot’s former role.”
- and
- “The American Medical Association released nearly 300 new Current Procedural Terminology billing codes Thursday as part of its proposed 2026 code set.
- “Two other codes can be used to report remote monitoring treatment management after 10 minutes of services per calendar month, down from 20 minutes, according to an AMA news release.
- “Several augmented and artificial intelligence services were also included in the new code updates, ranging from tools that assess coronary disease to burn wound classification, according to the release.
- “The updates signal potential broader acceptance and reimbursement for digital health services in standard billing codes.
- “The AMA’s CPT Editorial Panel organizes the association’s CPT code system, which is used in billing and reimbursement by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, as well as other payers and providers. CMS and others have the option to adopt the changes and put them into effect starting Jan. 1.”
- Beckers Hospital Review informs us
- “The District of Columbia holds the highest ratio of nurses to population, to a significant degree, at 7.14 per 100 residents, while Utah has the lowest, at 1.38, according to a Becker’s analysis. [The full list is displayed in the article.]
- “The analysis is based on U.S. Census Bureau state population estimates as of July 1, 2024, and active registered nurse and practical nurse license counts from the National Council of State Boards of Nursing database. The number of nurses per 100 residents was calculated by dividing the total number of active licenses in each state by its population and multiplying by 100. In California, the total reflects RN and vocational nurse licenses, rather than PN.”
- and
- “Landmark Hospital of Cape Girardeau (Mo.), a long-term acute care facility, has shared plans to close “in the coming weeks,” according to a Sept. 10 news release.
- “The hospital has been open since early 2006 and is part of Cape Girardeau-based Landmark Holdings of Florida, which operates six long-term acute care hospitals across the U.S. The hospital operator sought Chapter 11 protection in early March and plans to find buyers for its facilities to relieve mounting financial challenges.”
