From Washington, DC,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “President Trump demanded Monday that House lawmakers back the bipartisan spending deal passed by the Senate last week and set aside policy demands in an effort to quickly end a partial government shutdown.
- “We need to get the Government open, and I hope all Republicans and Democrats will join me in supporting this Bill, and send it to my desk WITHOUT DELAY,” Trump posted on Truth Social. “There can be NO CHANGES at this time.”
- “House Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) is trying to pass as soon as Tuesday the $1.2 trillion package that funds large parts of the federal government through the end of the fiscal year while funding the Department of Homeland Security for just two weeks. That short-term extension is designed to provide time for a bipartisan deal to be reached on stricter policies for immigration-enforcement agents.”
- The American Hospital Association (AHA) News tells us,
- “The Department of Health and Human Services today announced a new behavioral health initiativeto assist homeless individuals with substance use treatment and recovery. The program, called the Safety Through Recovery, Engagement, and Evidence-based Treatment and Supports, or STREETS, will focus on psychiatric care, medical stabilization and crisis intervention, HHS said. The initiative is tied to an executive order issued by the administration last week on substance use.”
- In January 2024 OPM proposed to create to advance the FEHB / PSHB eligibility date to the first day of employment. AFHO, the trade association that the FEHBlog represents, used the public comment period to advocate for the HIPAA 820. Today, in a welcome deregulatory step, OPM withdrew the proposed rule.
- MedCity News considers whether “It is Time to Change the Independent Dispute Resolution Process of the No Surprises Act.” The FEHBlog thinks so because the current process is opaque.
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- MedTech Dive reports,
- “Grail has filed for Food and Drug Administration approval of its multi-cancer early detection test, the company said Thursday.
- “The premarket approval filing for Grail’s Galleri test focuses on a U.S. study of more than 25,000 people and a randomized, controlled trial the company is running in the United Kingdom.
- “Grail President Josh Ofman said at an event in January that approval will be a “major trigger” for evidence-based decisions with U.S. payers and could enable Medicare coverage.”
- Cardiovascular Business relates,
- “eMurmur, an Ontario-based artificial intelligence (AI) startup, has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)clearance for its suite of algorithms designed to evaluate heart recordings captured by digital stethoscopes.
- “The newly approved offering, eMurmur Heart AI, was designed to detect both the presence and absence of heart murmurs. In addition, it can provide hemodynamic data that helps care teams as they develop patient management strategies. eMurmur Heart AI can be accessed through the company’s own standalone software—available as a web platform or mobile app—or through a third-party system.”
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- The AHA News reports,
- “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released its annual progress report on health care-associated infections Jan. 29, which found continued decreases in hospitalizations from multiple infections last year. Among the findings, there was an 11% decrease in hospital-onset Clostridioides difficile, or C. difficile, infection; a 10% decrease in catheter-associated urinary tract infections, or CAUTI; a 9% decrease in central line-associated bloodstream infections, or CLABSI; and a 7% decrease in hospital-onset methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA.
- “Among inpatient rehabilitation facilities, there was an 18% decrease in hospital-onset C. difficile infections and an 8% decrease in CAUTI. For long-term care hospitals, there was a 23% decrease in ventilator-associated events and a 15% decrease in hospital-onset C. difficile. The report recommended providers continue reinforcing prevention practices, review HAI surveillance data to identify areas for improvement and address any gaps in prevention practices.”
- Cardiovasular Business relates,
- “Researchers have developed a new injectable therapy that could help protect a patient’s brain after they experience a stroke. The team behind this new treatment shared a look at its early progress in Neurotherapeutics.
- “The therapy in question was built to cross the blood-brain barrier and help repair brain tissue, limiting the risk of permanent brain damage and encouraging a healthy recovery following an ischemic stroke. Co-author Samuel Stupp, PhD, founding director of Northwestern University’s Center for Regenerative Nanomedicine, previously found that supramolecular therapeutic peptides (STPs) technology could reverse paralysis and repair tissue in mice after a single injection. This analysis took those observations related to the potential benefits of STPs and transferred them to a new area of medicine.
- “Current clinical approaches are entirely focused on blood flow restoration,” co-author Ayush Batra, MD, an associate professor with the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and co-director of the NeuroVascular Inflammation Laboratory at Northwestern, said in a statement. “Any treatment that facilitates neuronal recovery and minimizes injury would be very powerful, but that holy grail doesn’t yet exist. This study is promising because it’s leading us down a pathway to develop these technologies and therapeutics for this unmet need.”
- MedPage Today informs us,
- “Use of single maintenance and reliever therapy (SMART) for moderate-to-severe asthma saved money by improving outcomes, according to a meta-analysis.
- “While SMART is recommended by guidelines, combination inhalers aren’t FDA approved for both rescue and maintenance therapy, and thus insurance coverage has been a struggle in the U.S.
- “Finding an economic advantage should influence payer decisions, the researchers suggested, calling for broader formulary inclusion of SMART.”
- and
- “All hypertensive disorders of pregnancy were tied to increased long-term cardiovascular risk, but superimposed preeclampsia carried the highest risk.
- “All subtypes were significantly associated with higher risks of heart failure and stroke, and most were associated with higher risk of cardiovascular death.
- “Unspecified hypertension was associated with myocardial infarction, while chronic and unspecified hypertension were both associated with atrial fibrillation.”
- The Endocrinology Advisor lets us know that “the fit-fat index (FFI), which calculates the ratio of cardiorespiratory fitness to various adiposity measures (BMI, WHR, or WHtR), is significantly associated with lower risks for cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.”
- Genetic Engineering and BioTechnology News points out,
- “Evidence has been rising over the past few years that the gut microbiome can significantly influence how well cancer treatments work, especially immunotherapies. But the underlying mechanism has remained unclear. Now, a new study reveals how bacteria in the gut can help determine whether the amino acid asparagine (obtained from diet) will increase tumor growth or activate immune cells against the cancer.
- “The findings, published in Cell Microbe and Host in the paper, “Microbiota utilization of intestinal amino acids modulates cancer progression and anticancer immunity,” could lead to a novel cancer treatment approach and monitoring strategy; instead of targeting tumors directly, clinicians may one day be able to reshape the gut microbiome or diet to starve tumors while supercharging immune cells.
- “Our study suggests that we need to think about how the interplay of diet, gut microbiota and tumor-infiltrating immune cells could affect cancer growth and response to therapy. We can’t overlook this key level regulation,” said Chunjun Guo, PhD, associate professor of immunology at Weill Cornell.”
- Per BioPharma Dive,
- “Novo Nordisk’s experimental combination shot CagriSema helped people with diabetes and obesity lower their blood sugar and lose more weight than the blockbuster drug Wegovy in a Phase 3 trial, the company said Monday, building the case for regulatory approval.
- “The results come from one of several studies Novo has underway in obesity and diabetes for CagriSema, which adds a second metabolic drug to the active ingredient from Wegovy in a fixed-dose injection. The Denmark-based drugmaker has already asked the Food and Drug Administration to approve the shot in obesity.
- “The data could sharpen Novo’s rivalry with Eli Lilly and its obesity drug Zepbound, which has overtaken Wegovy to become the biggest-selling obesity treatment in the world. Looking at all participants enrolled in the trial, CagriSema’s weight loss and blood-sugar reductions fall numerically short of Zepbound’s, but a head-to-head trial comparing the two hasn’t been completed yet.”
- and
- “An experimental rare disease drug from Sanofi succeeded against one so-called lysosomal storage disorder but failed against another, the French pharmaceutical company said Monday.
- “According to Sanofi, the drug, dubbed venglustat, missed its primary objective in a Phase 3 study testing it against Fabry disease. However, in another study in a form of Gaucher disease, the drug met its main goal and three out of four key secondary endpoints. Sanofi didn’t provide details — they’ll be shared at medical meeting this week — but said it intends to submit the Gaucher results to global regulatory authorities.”
From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,
- MedCity News reports,
- “Access to primary care is collapsing in the U.S., creating an opening for new models that lower costs and improve outcomes.
- “This week, Premise Health and Crossover Health moved to capitalize on that opportunity, announcing an agreement to merge into a single company focused on scaling primary care access. The combined organization will provide onsite, nearsite and virtual care for more than 400 employers with millions of members, operating nearly 900 wellness centers across the country.
- “The new entity will be led by Premise CEO Stu Clark. He framed the deal as a convergence of two companies with the same thesis: advanced primary care is the lever to disrupt U.S. healthcare. Both companies define advanced primary care as an integrated bundle of primary care, behavioral health, pharmacy services and care navigation.
- “Crossover and Premise have proven that a few things happen when you deploy our advanced primary care models: access goes up, health improves and costs go down. Costs go down for the employer as well as for the family,” Clark stated.
- “The company’s target customers will be large self-insured employers, mainly Fortune 1000 companies, unions, Native tribes and government entities, he said.”
- Healthcare Dive relates,
- “Tenet has regained full ownership of Conifer Health Solutions, acquiring the remaining stake in its revenue cycle management business from CommonSpirit Health.
- “CommonSpirit will pay Tenet almost $1.9 billion over the next three years to get out of its existing services contract, according to the deal announced Monday. That’s offset by $540 million that Conifer will pay CommonSpirit for its almost 24% equity stake and to eliminate CommonSpirit’s capital account.
- “All told, Tenet executives said the deal creates almost $2.7 billion in total value to the system through the cash payments, the reduction of liability on its balance sheet and the value of the additional Conifer equity. Tenet’s stock rose 2% in morning trade Monday following the news.”
- Fierce Healthcare informs us,
- “Community Health Systems (CHS) has wrapped a deal to divest its 80% interest in two joint ventures to Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC), the organizations announced Monday morning.
- “The joint ventures own and operate Tennova Healthcare – Clarksville, a 270-bed hospital with 1,100 staff, and other ancillary businesses in the major Tennessee city. CHS received $623 million before certain transaction expenses for the interests, with CHS also paying $23 million of owed balances to the subsidiaries upon completion of the transaction.
- “VUMC, in its announcement, said it will be renaming the hospital and a freestanding emergency room to Vanderbilt Clarksville Hospital and Vanderbilt Emergency Sango, respectively. It also highlighted physician practices in Clarksville plus nearby Dover, Pleasant View and Tiny Town that were included in the deal.”
- and
- “Community Health Systems (CHS) has sold its Commonwealth Health system to nonprofit Tenor Health Foundation, the for-profit chain announced.
- “The sale, effective Feb. 1, comes just days after the parties received regulatory clearance from the state and in the wake of community and government efforts to keep the facilities open despite financial losses (see that story below).
- “The announcement also makes public the three-hospital system’s price tag: $33 million of cash plus a $15 million promissory note from Tenor, with additional cash considerations possible depending on collections of certain patient accounts receivable during the following 90 days.”
- Healthcare Dive adds,
- “Healthcare bankruptcies declined in 2025, even as the sector faces financial headwinds on the horizon, according to an analysis published last week by restructuring advisory firm Gibbins Advisors.
- “The industry recorded 45 bankruptcy filings for debtors with liabilities of at least $10 million last year, down 21% from 2024 — and a steep drop from the 79 cases logged in 2023. However, hospital bankruptcies rose.
- “Another year of falling Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings doesn’t necessarily signal financial health in the sector, the report cautioned. Healthcare remains under “significant pressure” as the industry faces looming challenges like historic cuts to Medicaid, according to Gibbins.”
- The New York Times tells us,
- If you wind up at an urgent care center in America, it’s increasingly likely you will be treated by a P.A. For a long time, P.A. meant the same thing everywhere: “physician assistant,” a licensed medical professional who can perform patient care, including prescribing medicine, under the supervision of a doctor.
- But that might be changing. In Oregon, New Hampshire and Maine, P.A. now means “physician associate,” and other states may follow this year.
- “Assistant” versus “associate” might sound like a trivial semantic debate, but to many practitioners, and to the American Academy of Physician Associates (which changed its own name in 2021), it’s an important part of the expanding role of P.A.s in health care. * * *
- “Since 2000, the number of P.A.s has quadrupled, while many parts of the country face a shortage of doctors. That means P.A.s are becoming more numerous — and visible — in all fields of medicine, from primary care to dermatology. And along with the name change, they are seeking the ability to operate more independently from doctors.”
- Per The Wall Street Journal,
- “Eli Lilly plans to open a $3.5 billion weight-loss drug manufacturing plant in Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley, creating 850 permanent jobs.
- “Pennsylvania is investing $100 million in tax credits and grants for the project, plus $5 million for a pharmaceutical training center.
- “Lehigh Valley manufacturing jobs have grown by 28.8% since 2010, triple the national rate, despite recent U.S. manufacturing job contractions.”
- Per Beckers Health IT,
- “Oracle Health is expanding its Clinical AI Agent to help clinicians automate the creation of clinical orders during patient appointments.
- “The tool now supports automated order creation for laboratory tests, imaging and diagnostic studies, new and refilled prescription medications, follow-up appointments and referrals. Oracle Health said in a Feb. 2 news release that the update builds on the product’s existing note-generation feature and uses ambient listening during visits to draft clinical orders for physician review and approval.
- “The technology is designed to reduce the administrative burden of repetitive manual tasks, such as order entry, which can pull providers away from direct patient care and contribute to burnout.”
