From Washington, DC,
- Roll Call reports,
- “Republicans and Democrats sparred Wednesday on the potential real-world harms of a partial shutdown for the Department of Homeland Security, as Congress marched toward a funding deadline for the agency amid a dispute over immigration enforcement policies.
- “The House Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee held a hearing with officials from five national security and emergency management agencies to highlight what would happen if a continuing resolution expires Saturday without further action from Congress.”
- and
- “Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle on Wednesday came down hard on various sectors of the U.S. prescription drug supply chain during a hearing to shed light on the reasons for rising costs.
- “At a House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee hearing, Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., touted changes in the fiscal 2026 spending package enacted this month to improve pharmacy-benefit manager pricing transparency and reduce incentives for PBMs to promote higher-priced drugs to Medicare Part D beneficiaries.
- “But Guthrie stressed that further changes could be forthcoming.
- “Historic PBM reform is just the beginning,” said Guthrie, who chairs the full Energy and Commerce panel. “More needs to be done throughout the drug supply chain to improve affordability.”
- “Rep. Morgan Griffith, R-Va., chair of the Health Subcommittee, said after the hearing that he hopes to mark up affordability legislation before Memorial Day, but acknowledged the appetite for bipartisan cooperation will be “tough” given the political climate.”
- Beckers Payer Issues adds,
- “Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Josh Hawley, R-Mo., have introduced legislation that would ban health insurers and pharmacy benefit managers from owning medical providers, and would force companies in violation to divest within one year of the bill’s enactment.
- :The “Break Up Big Medicine Act” would also prohibit a parent company of a prescription drug or medical device wholesaler from owning a medical provider or management services organization.”
- The American Hospital Association tells us,
- “The Senate Special Committee on Aging held a hearing Feb. 11 on issues impacting physician burnout. The AHA provided a statement for the hearing and urged Congress to pass legislation to address burnout, including the Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act (H.R. 3514/S. 1816), legislation that would streamline prior authorization requirements under Medicare Advantage plans by making them simpler and more uniform, and the Save Healthcare Workers Act (H.R. 3178/S. 1600), a bill that would make it a federal crime to assault a hospital employee. The AHA also urged Congress to pass the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act of 2025 (H.R. 3890/S. 2439), which would add 14,000 Medicare-funded residency positions over seven years.”
- “The Senate Special Committee on Aging held a hearing Feb. 11 on issues impacting physician burnout. The AHA provided a statement for the hearing and urged Congress to pass legislation to address burnout, including the Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act (H.R. 3514/S. 1816), legislation that would streamline prior authorization requirements under Medicare Advantage plans by making them simpler and more uniform, and the Save Healthcare Workers Act (H.R. 3178/S. 1600), a bill that would make it a federal crime to assault a hospital employee. The AHA also urged Congress to pass the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act of 2025 (H.R. 3890/S. 2439), which would add 14,000 Medicare-funded residency positions over seven years.”
- Per OPM news releases,
- [On February 10, 2026], the US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) convened senior administration officials, federal agency leaders, and industry executives at the White House for a US Tech Force (Tech Force) roundtable focused on strengthening the federal government’s technology workforce and accelerating innovation across agencies.
- and
- “US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Director Scott Kupor appeared on Fox Business to discuss the administration’s launch of the U.S. Tech Force, a new initiative aimed at strengthening the federal workforce with top technical talent and modernizing critical government systems.” You can watch the Director’s appearance here.
- Govexec discusses the tax implications of making Roth IRA conversions in the Thrift Savings Plan.
- “Beginning Jan. 28, the Thrift Savings Plan now allows participants to convert traditional (pre-tax) balances into Roth (after-tax) balances inside the TSP itself. This long-awaited change gives federal employees and retirees more flexibility over how and when they pay taxes on retirement savings.
- “While the mechanics of the change are straightforward, the implications are not. A Roth in-plan conversion is a tax event and not just a retirement planning decision. Once it is made, it cannot be reversed. Knowing this beforehand helps you choose effective planning tools and avoid costly errors.”
- Per an HHS news release,
- “Today, HHS, through the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy/Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ASTP/ONC), announced progress made in executing on President Trump’s, Secretary Kennedy’s, and Deputy Secretary O’Neill’s directive to lower the cost of healthcare for all Americans by leveraging and coordinating the nation’s strategic advantages in technology, artificial intelligence (AI), and healthcare infrastructure.” * * *
- “Today, HHS, through the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy/Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ASTP/ONC), announced progress made in executing on President Trump’s, Secretary Kennedy’s, and Deputy Secretary O’Neill’s directive to lower the cost of healthcare for all Americans by leveraging and coordinating the nation’s strategic advantages in technology, artificial intelligence (AI), and healthcare infrastructure.” * * *
- “ASTP/ONC released the draft USCDI v7 on January 29, 2026, proposing 29 new data elements and one significantly revised element to strengthen nationwide interoperability. Draft USCDI v7 expands standardized health data to support more efficient adverse event reporting, nutrition information exchange, and quality improvement, ultimately modernizing how health information is used across the entire health care system to Make America Healthy Again.”
- “In the coming days, ASTP/ONC will launch the EHIgnite Challenge, a two-phase prize competition to improve the usability, readability, and actionability of single-patient electronic health information (EHI) exports. The EHIgnite Challenge will catalyze the development of tools and workflows, focused on the application of AI, that transform raw EHI into clear, usable information to better support care transitions, provider onboarding, and patient understanding and engagement. Awards will support both concept development and prototype solutions through 2027.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- Fierce Pharma reports,
- “For all its success across a wide range of cancer types, Merck’s PD-1 superstar Keytruda has never been able to crack the code for one of the toughest-to-treat indications in oncology—ovarian cancer.
- “But now, 13 years after the FDA initially blessed it for skin cancer, the U.S. regulator has approved Keytruda as a second- or third-line treatment for patients with a certain type of ovarian cancer.
- “With the green light, Keytruda becomes the first immune checkpoint inhibitor approved for this indication.
- “Keytruda is to be used in combination with the chemotherapy paclitaxel and with or without Roche’s targeted cancer therapy Avastin. The endorsement covers those with platinum-resistant recurrent ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal carcinoma with PD-L1-positive tumors.
- “The nod also covers infused Keytruda and its subcutaneous version, Keytruda Qlex, which the FDA blessed five months ago.”
From the public health and medical / Rx resarch front,
- STAT News reports,
- “Food fights pitting low-carbohydrate diets against low-fat diets are off the mark when they aim at heart health, a large new study suggests. To reduce heart disease risk, it’s the quality, not the quantity, of those carbs or fats that matter. Diets high in plant-based foods, whole grains, and unsaturated fats led to better heart health, the researchers found. Low-fat dairy also got a nod when part of a diet featuring whole grains, vegetables, and fruits.
- “Not all carbs are created alike; nor are all fats. Whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts, legumes, and olive oil are associated with lower risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), whether they contain carbohydrates or fats. But diets high in refined carbohydrates and animal proteins and fats were associated with a higher risk of heart disease, according to the new study, published Wednesday in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.”
- MedPage Today relates,
- “The CDC excludes homicide, suicide, and overdose in defining “maternal mortality,” instead focusing on more medical causes.
- “An analysis of 2018-2023 data showed that drug overdoses, homicides, and suicides accounted for more than a quarter of all deaths among pregnant and postpartum women.
- “Violence and overdose accounted for 2,018 deaths, while cardiovascular causes, hypertension, infection, and hemorrhage together accounted for 2,141 deaths [over the period 2018-2023].” * * *
- “Maeve Wallace, PhD, MPH, of the Mel & Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health at the University of Arizona in Tucson, told MedPage Today that the results were not surprising.
- “Research dating back decades finds that rates of violent death exceed obstetrical causes of death for pregnant women,” Wallace said. “What is disheartening is that this continues to be the case.”
- “This analysis “can help policymakers concerned with maternal health understand pregnancy as a dangerous condition,” and can encourage policy-level solutions to promote women and girls’ health and safety, she added.”
- and
- “A meta-meta-analysis of randomized trials showed exercise reduced depression and anxiety symptoms.
- “Group aerobic exercise appeared to be most effective for depression, while exercise of shorter duration and lower intensity was most associated with reductions in anxiety symptoms.
- “The researchers concluded that tailored exercise programs are an “accessible and cost-effective” treatment option for depression and anxiety.”
- Healio informs us,
- “Statin use had a statistically significant protective effect against acute asthma exacerbations in mild asthma among Black adults and adults with obesity, according to data published in Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology.
- “The pleiotropic effects of statins may extend beyond cholesterol control due to their anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties, prompting interest in their potential use for chronic airway diseases, William Crawford, MD, physician with the department of allergy, Kaiser Permanente Southern California, and colleagues wrote.
- “But mixed results in prior research including beneficial and null effects in asthma outcomes indicate that determining the patient subgroups that may benefit most from treatment is vital in determining the role that statins may have in asthma management.”
- The American Journal of Managed Care observes,
- “More than half of patients with long-term conditions (LTCs) surveyed said they preferred a remote consult vs an in-person visit with their referring physician, particularly for discussion of results and medication renewal, according to a new study
published in JAMA Network Open.”
- “More than half of patients with long-term conditions (LTCs) surveyed said they preferred a remote consult vs an in-person visit with their referring physician, particularly for discussion of results and medication renewal, according to a new study
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “The U.S. economy added 130,000 jobs in January, its strongest growth in over a year, and a sign that the labor market may be shaking off its recent stagnation.
- “January’s robust gains surprised forecasters, blowing far past consensus expectations, while solidifying expectations the Federal Reserve will keep rates on hold for the foreseeable future. The unemployment rate dipped to 4.3% from 4.4% in December, the Labor Department said Wednesday. And workers’ wages rose.
- “The gains were highly concentrated in healthcare and social-assistance fields, which includes jobs like home health aides and residential care workers. Such jobs tend to grow regardless of the economy’s health and have long been an engine of U.S. job growth.”
- Fierce Healthcare relates,
- “Humana CEO Jim Rechtin acknowledged the noise around the latest Medicare Advantage rate notice and said that while the flat proposal is a concern, the company will continue to push forward on its performance improvements.
- “He said that part of the challenge for policymakers, regardless of political alignment, is managing the program as it “sits at the intersection of U.S. fiscal pressures and a program that is incredibly popular with seniors.”
- “Every administration wrestles with how to balance these two forces,” Rechtin said.
- “We are committed to always protecting our consumers the best we can, and we are very aware that we must do that within the constraints of the annual funding environment,” he continued. “If that funding environment cannot fully support our benefit structure, then we will adapt as we have in the past.” * * *
- “Humana reported a $796 million loss in the fourth quarter of 2025, with its losses growing year over year as increased utilization continues to drag Medicare Advantage (MA) plans.
- “By comparison, Humana reported a $693 billion loss in the fourth quarter of 2024. The company did post a profit for the full year of $1.2 billion, flat from the company’s $1.2 billion haul in 2024.”
- and
- “Hinge Health’s shares were up 13% in after-hours trading Tuesday after the digital health company reported a strong fourth quarter and a bright outlook for 2026.
- “The digital musculoskeletal (MSK) care provider, which went public in late May, brought in fourth-quarter revenue of $171 million, up 46% from the same period a year ago and easily topping Wall Street analyst estimate of $155 million for fourth-quarter revenue. The company posted fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 49 cents per share, significantly exceeding analyst estimates of 14 cents per share. Hinge Health’s non-GAAP income from operations increased 124% to $48 million during quarter.
- “Free cash flow for the quarter was $61.5 million, representing a free cash flow margin of 36%.
- “The company’s full-year 2025 revenue jumped 51% year over year to reach $588 million compared to revenue of $390 revenue in 2024, according to its fourth-quarter and full-year financial results.”
- KFF lets us know,
- “National spending on health has increased rapidly over time—rising to $5.3 trillion and 18% of GDP in 2024—and is projected to continue to do so into the future. Growth in health spending contributes to higher costs for families, employers, Medicare, Medicaid, and other payers. In 2025, average annual premiums for employer-sponsored family coverage reached $26,993, with workers paying $6,850 for their coverage, according to KFF’s annual survey of employers. Hospital care accounted for nearly one-third of national health expenditures in 2024, and more than doubled in nominal terms over the preceding two decades, making hospitals a major driver of health spending growth over time.” * * *
- “National health expenditures increased by $692 billion between 2022 and 2024, from $4.6 trillion to $5.3 trillion. During this period, spending on hospital care alone accounted for $277 billion of spending growth, or 40% of the total increase in national health spending (Figure 1). The large contribution of hospital care to overall health spending growth reflects the fact that hospital spending accounted for nearly a third of national health expenditures in 2022 (30%) and grew more quickly than national health expenditures overall in both 2023 (10.6% versus 7.4%) and 2024 (8.9% versus 7.2%).”
- FEHBlog note — Hospitals and health systems are not included in the Break Up Big Medicine bill discussed above.
- Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
- “Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare reported $21.3 billion in revenue in 2025, up from $20.7 billion in 2024, as the system posted strong fourth-quarter results and outlined a positive outlook for 2026. For the fourth quarter, Tenet reported net operating revenue of $5.5 billion, compared to $5.1 billion during the same period in 2024.
- “2025 extended Tenet’s track record of strong revenue growth, disciplined operations, improved margins and robust free cash flow generation,” Tenet Chair and CEO Saum Sutaria, MD, said in a Feb. 11 news release. “We see continued demand for acute care and ambulatory surgical services in our markets and are confident in our ability to execute on our strategy and achieve our full-year 2026 expectations.”
- and
- “There are 417 rural hospitals that are vulnerable to closure, according to a Feb. 10 report from Chartis, a healthcare advisory services firm.
- “Chartis’ Rural Hospital Vulnerability Index assesses more than a dozen indicators to identify which are statistically significant for determining the likelihood of closure.
- “The number of overall rural hospitals vulnerable is down from 432 last year, but Chartis said there are “notable shifts at the state level.” In Tennessee, the percentage of vulnerable hospitals increased from 44% to 61%. In South Dakota, the percentage increased from 28% to 42%. Mississippi, which Chartis said has long been a “weak spot in the rural health safety net,” saw an improvement from 49% to 42%. Kansas also saw an improvement from 47% to 44%.
- “”Chartis’ analysis found that 17 states have 10 or more rural hospitals vulnerable to closure this year. Texas has the most with 50, followed by Kansas (44), Tennessee (27), Georgia (25), and Mississippi (24). These states are receiving a combined $1.1 billion in the first round of CMS’ Rural Health Transformation Fund initiative.”
- BioPharma Dive informs us,
- “Shares of Gilead Sciences slid after the stock market closed Tuesday in spite of a fresh earnings report in which the company’s top products beat Wall Street forecasts.
- “Gilead recorded $7.9 billion in product sales over the final three months of 2025, a 5% increase from the same period a year prior. Brian Abrahams, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, called it a “strong commercial quarter” with “major beats” in Gilead’s HIV business, which was up 6% year-over-year.
- “Biktarvy, a three-in-one pill for HIV treatment, and Descovy, a daily tablet often used to stave off infections from the virus, respectively brought in $4 billion and $819 million during the quarter. That’s higher than the roughly $3.84 billion and $720 million the average analyst had penciled in, according to Abrahams.”
- MedTech Dive notes,
- “Edwards said study data supporting earlier use of its Sapien heart valves to treat patients who have severe aortic stenosis without symptoms is changing clinical practice and helping to accelerate sales of the devices.
- “The company on Tuesday posted a second consecutive quarter of double-digit sales growth in its transcatheter aortic valve replacement business.
- “CEO Bernard Zovighian said momentum is coming from long-term data presented last fall confirming the durability of the Sapien valves and the “practice-changing” EARLY TAVR trial results that showed asymptomatic patients who had the procedure fared better than those who remained under clinical surveillance alone. Edwards is the only TAVR system with asymptomatic approval.”
