From Washington, DC
- Federal News Network reports,
- “The Postal Service is temporarily suspending payments to a governmentwide pension plan, after warning Congress that it’s less than a year away from running out of cash.
- “USPS told the Office of Personnel Management on Thursday that it will hold off paying its contributions to the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS), a move that’s expected to conserve cash in the near term.
- “The mail agency, which has posted billion-dollar net losses almost every year since 2007, has relied on these extraordinary measures before to conserve cash.”
- and
- “The Postal Service received approval to add a temporary surcharge to most of its standard package shipping options. The Postal Regulatory Commission approved an 8% across-the-board price increase for its core package and shipping services. The surcharge will go into effect on April 26 and will remain in place until Jan. 17, 2027. USPS said the surcharge is necessary to keep up with higher fuel and transportation costs. Before this, USPS only added a package surcharge during its busy holiday peak season, which runs from October through December.”
- OPM Director Scott Kupor explains how to chart your HR career path in his latest Secrets of OPM blog post which is available on Substack.
- Tammy Flanagan writing in Govexec discusses “How to ensure your federal retirement benefit is correct.”
- “OPM processed more than 33,000 retirement claims in early 2026. Learn how your FERS benefit is calculated and how to verify your creditable service.”
- Federal News Network adds,
- “More than 55,000 federal retirement applications are still pending finalization at the Office of Personnel Management. That’s after OPM managed to shave off about 10,000 applications from its total case inventory last month. During March, OPM received close to 15,000 incoming retirement applications, but processed over 22,000. Roughly half of those claims were completed digitally through OPM’s new processing system, which OPM said can finalize retirements at about double the speed as the traditional system.”
From the census front,
- Per a U.S. Census Bureau news release,
- “The nation turns 250 this year and Americans’ median age — the age at which half of the population is younger and half is older — continues to rise, climbing from 39.2 in 2024 to 39.4 in 2025.
- “We use population estimates released today to examine changes in the U.S. age structure by sex from 2001, when the median age was 35.6, to 2025.
- “One striking shift is that while women continued to outnumber men at older ages, the gap between the sexes narrowed in the past 25 years.
- “In 2001, there were 70.6 males for every 100 females age 65 and older. By 2025, the ratio had increased substantially to 81.6.
- “The gap among those age 80 and older narrowed even more dramatically — from 50.9 males per 100 females in 2001 to 68.3 in 2025.
- “Mortality rates for older men have been decreasing faster than for women and, as a result, men’s share of the older population has increased,” said Marc Perry, senior demographer in the U.S. Census Bureau’s Population Division. “But the mortality gap between men and women is still there. In fact, the current mortality rate for men age 65 and older is roughly where the equivalent rate for women was 50 years ago.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “The nation’s fertility rates hit record lows in 2025 as childbearing continued to shift toward older women, according to new federal data released Thursday. For the sixth straight year, the number of children born in the U.S. remained at roughly 3.6 million.
- “The number of births per 1,000 women ages 15 to 44—the general fertility rate—reached a record low of 53.1 in 2025, according to provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The rate has mostly headed down since 2007, a prerecession peak when millennial women started to enter their prime childbearing years.
- “One long-term trend driving the slide: a sharp decrease in birthrates for teens and women in their 20s. In 2025, birthrates for women in their late 30s exceeded those for women in their early 20s for the first time.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- STAT News reports,
- “Despite a mandate from the Trump administration to remove barriers for health artificial intelligence companies, the Food and Drug Administration has denied a proposal that would have made it easier for large developers of AI-enabled medical devices to put their products on the market.”
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “The Food and Drug Administration has sent a warning letter to Medline Industries over reported issues with syringes used in cardiac procedures and the company could face regulatory action if the issues are not corrected.
- “The company received the letter March 25 following a December inspection of its facility in Glen Falls, New York. The agency said the Namic angiographic control syringes, which are packaged into Medline’s cardiovascular procedure kits, were disconnecting from the hub that controls the flow of fluids. The letter was made public Tuesday.”
- “In the warning letter, the agency said there were 221 complaints about the syringes and 177 medical device reports, including one involving air being injected into a patient and another exposing a clinician to a biohazard.”
- MedTech Dive relates,
- The Food and Drug Administration’s device center launched an innovation challenge Tuesday to give patients access to home medical devices to reduce hospital readmissions.
- The Center for Devices and Radiological Health plans to select nine devices from different manufacturers by Dec. 4 for the challenge. Selected companies will have opportunities for early engagement with the FDA, including feedback to help refine device design and testing, and the chance to demonstrate their technology at FDA research facilities.
- The program, called the Reducing Readmissions through Device Innovation for the Home Innovation Challenge, is part of the device center’s Home as a Healthcare Hub initiative, which started in 2024. The initiative is intended to support innovation for medical devices used in the home, while considering diverse perspectives and people’s living environments.
- and
- “Philips sent an urgent field safety notice to customers in March instructing them to no longer use non-pneumatic nebulizers, including vibrating mesh nebulizers, with its Trilogy Evo ventilators.
- “The Food and Drug Administration posted the action in its database last week as a Class I recall. It applies to Philips’ Trilogy Evo, Trilogy Evo O2, Trilogy Evo Universal and Trilogy EV300 ventilators.
- “A Philips spokesperson wrote in an email to MedTech Dive that the ventilators may be used safely by following the revised instructions.”
- Radiology Business tells us,
- “Experts are sounding the alarm on a newly approved use of dermal filler in the décolleté area, citing concerns over its potential effect on breast cancer screening exams.
- “Radiesse, manufactured by Merz Aesthetics, is a subdermal filler used to smooth wrinkles and decrease the visibility of fine lines. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on April 8 approved its use for the décolleté area—the upper chest above the breasts—in adults 22 and older.
- “The filler contains hydroxylapatite microspheres, which may be visible on medical imaging. Given the location of the implant and its close proximity to imaged area, experts are concerned it could affect the visibility of breast tissue on mammograms, masking small lesions. Experts voiced these concerns to the FDA during an advisory meeting about the product last August.
- “As a breast imager, my focus is to find a cancer as small as possible,” Sandra Shuffett, MD, of Baptist Health Medical Group in Lexington, Kentucky, explained during the panel. “That is my concern, with the fillers potentially obscuring a cancer on a mammogram until it grows larger and then requires more serious treatment.”
- “Merz Aesthetics has refuted these claims, maintaining the safety and efficacy of the product. As a precautionary measure, however, the FDA is requesting that the company conduct a postmarket assessment of 30 individuals to determine whether the filler affects breast imaging. The study will require participants receiving the injections to undergo baseline breast imaging before completing three filler treatments six weeks apart; they will complete additional breast imaging one month after all the treatments have been administered.”
From the public health, medical and Rx research front,
- Per an Epic news release,
- “Epic Research now monitors health conditions across the U.S. at the county level and publishes Health Alerts when elevated rates are detected. The alerts use statistical models applied to real-world medical records to detect when the rate of a health condition in a county is higher than expected. Each alert is reviewed by the Epic Research team before it is published.
- “You can view active Health Alerts here. You can also subscribe to receive Health Alerts by email. Subscribers receive new alert notifications when an elevated rate is first detected in a state and weekly summaries of all active, new, and resolved alerts.”
- NBC News reports,
- “Regular exercise and about seven hours of sleep a night could protect brain health in the long term, a study published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One found. Long bouts of sedentary behavior may increase dementia risk.
- “It’s the latest data to show that people don’t need elaborate and expensive longevity hacks to stay mentally sharp as they age. Simple lifestyle changes could reduce a person’s risk of late-onset dementia by as much as 25%, according to the study.
- “About 1 in 9 people in the United States will develop Alzheimer’s disease, according to the Alzheimer’s Association, meaning a person’s overall risk is about 11%. With the suggested changes in lifestyle, the average person’s risk decreases to about 8%.
- “The reduction is “fairly comparable to the effect sizes sometimes seen with medications for chronic diseases,” said Akinkunle Oye-Somefun, a researcher at York University in Toronto, who led the study.
- “Breaking up longer periods of sitting had the greatest effect, the study found.”
- MedPage Today adds,
- “People who followed a high-quality plant-based diet had a lower risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementia, while those with a low-quality plant-based diet had a higher risk, prospective data showed.
- “At baseline, people who ate the most plant foods overall had a 12% lower risk of dementia over nearly 11 years of follow-up compared with those who ate the least (HR 0.88, 95% CI 0.85-0.92), reported Song-Yi Park, PhD, of the University of Hawaii at Manoa in Honolulu, and co-authors.
- “However, not all plant-based diets performed equally well. People with a high-quality plant-based diet at baseline had a lower dementia risk (HR 0.93, 95% CI 0.89-0.97), while those with a low-quality plant-based diet had a higher dementia risk (HR 1.06, 95% CI 1.01-1.10), Park and colleagues wrote in Neurology.”
- BioPharma Dive relates,
- “Invivyd said Thursday it has discovered and is preparing for human testing an antibody drug for measles, infections of which have spiked as of late in the U.S. due in part to rising vaccine hesitancy.
- “The Connecticut-based biotechnology company also provided an update for its lead program, an antibody for COVID-19 prevention, alongside its plans for the new drug’s development. Invivyd sees the antibody, known as VMS063, as a possible treatment for the disease or a preventive option for those who can’t, or won’t, get vaccinated.
- “VMS063 uses a similar strategy as approved antibody drugs for respiratory syncytial virus, which work by latching onto a surface “fusion” protein and blocking entry into cells. Invivyd said VMS063 could be the “first precision therapy” for measles and address the “immunity gap” emerging due to lower vaccination rates.”
- Health Day notes,
- “In pediatric patients, influenza vaccine effectiveness (VE) varied across 2021 to 2024 seasons, but did help prevent influenza-associated hospitalizations and outpatient visits, according to a study published online April 6 in Pediatrics.” * * *
- “Our study shows influenza VE ranged, but overall, was effective at preventing influenza-associated hospitalizations and outpatient visits in children aged 6 months to 17 years,” the authors write. “Higher pediatric influenza vaccine coverage could amplify the benefits of vaccination among children.”
- Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News tells us,
- “The biological connection between a pregnant woman and her developing baby—the human maternal–fetal interface—is a specialized, transient organ composed of uterine cells from the mother and fetal cells that acts as a barrier, supports fetal growth, and maintains the mother’s health. The cellular complexity of the maternal-fetal interface has limited scientists’ ability to study how healthy pregnancies develop and why complications arise. The underlying cellular, molecular, and spatial programs of the interface—which forms about a week after fertilization and lasts until birth—has remain incompletely defined.
- “Now, the human maternal–fetal interface has been mapped in unprecedented detail by scientists at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), revealing new cell types and providing insights into conditions such as preeclampsia, preterm birth, and miscarriage.
- “By examining this tissue cell by cell across pregnancy, we can begin to understand both normal development and what may go wrong,” said Susan J. Fisher, PhD, professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences at UCSF.”
- Endocrinology Advisor notes,
- “Elevated BMI in infancy and early childhood has a nearly null effect on pubertal timing. In contrast, high BMI in mid-childhood (starting around 6 years of age) and late childhood shows a strong, direct association with earlier onset.”
From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,
- STAT News reports,
- “At first blush, it might seem like Charleston, W.Va., New York, N.Y., and Janesville, Wis., have little in common.
- “But those three metros were flagged in a new report as having some of the country’s highest per-person health care spending. And there are other surprises, too. Three metros in California — a state known for its high prices — are among the lowest spenders, and two in West Virginia are among the highest.
- “The Health Care Cost Institute, a nonprofit, independent research group, released the report today along with a new data tool called Health Cost Landscape, which allows users to search for specific U.S. metro areas and examine the factors behind health spending there.
- “The tool and accompanying report rely on 1.3 billion medical claims from 2018 to 2022 from employer-sponsored health plans, representing more than 38 million people with employer sponsored insurance each year.
- “The fact that there’s not a consistent theme among the 10 highest and lowest spending metros speaks to the “irrationality” of health care spending in the U.S., said Katie Martin, HCCI’s CEO. Spending will always be a combination of price and utilization, but figuring out why each region landed on the list requires drilling down into its specific characteristics.”
- KKaufman Hall released its National Hospital Flash Report for February 2026.
- “Key Takeaways
- “Cost pressures are driving a tenuous financial outlook. Hospital expenses are elevated in early 2026 compared to 2025, while revenues are pressured by an eroding payer mix and remain below sustainable levels.
- “Hospital performance is bifurcating. There is significant variation in hospital performance by size, geography, and market position.
- “Softer, uneven volumes reflect shifting care patterns. Patient days have softened in early 2026 while the average length of stay remains relatively steady, reflecting both demographic shifts and changes in where care is delivered.
- “Outpatient revenue is rising in early 2026. Outpatient care offers significant benefits to both patients and health systems, though hospitals must manage both revenue dilution and a greater concentration of high-acuity patients as a result.”
- “Key Takeaways
- Kaufman Hall also posted its “M&A quarterly activity report: Q1 2026.”
- “The Q1 2026 trends reflect an industry undergoing transformation. Health systems are repositioning by withdrawing from underperforming or non-core markets, building capital to invest in new capabilities, proactively seeking partners to increase resilience or enhance access to care and services, and placing big bets on new combinations of resources and capabilities. A return to more robust levels of deal-making is a sign that organizations remain well aware of the need to seek combinations and partnerships to face the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead.”
- Fierce Healthcare tells us,
- “Advocate Health notched a strong 2025 with more revenue, patients, operating income and bottom line gains than the year prior.
- “The nation’s third-largest nonprofit health system reported Wednesday over $38.9 billion in total revenue during the year ended Dec. 31, 2025, a nearly 12% increase over the year before.
- “Total expenses rose a hair slower, by about 11%, to $37.4 billion, leaving the organization with more than $1.5 billion in operating income (4.0% operating margin). It had reported a $1.2 billion operating income (3.5% operating margin) in 2024.”
- Beckers Hospital Review points out four hospitals that closed in the first quarter of 2026.
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “Eli Lilly’s Foundayo weight-loss pill is now available in the U.S. following the Food and Drug Administration’s approval.
- “The drug is available through Eli Lilly’s direct sales platform, telehealth providers, and is shipping to retail pharmacies.
- “Foundayo’s starting dose costs $149 a month, matching the price of Novo Nordisk’s competing GLP-1 pill.”
- Beckers Hospital Review adds,
- “Novo Nordisk’s recently approved high-dose Wegovy formulation has entered the U.S. market and is available for $399 per month for self-paying patients, the drugmaker said April 7.
- “In March, the FDA approved Wegovy HD, a 7.2-mg injection of semaglutide, as a weight loss medication. Prior to the approval, the highest dose of injectable Wegovy was 2.4 milligrams.
- “Wegovy HD’s launch comes days after the FDA approved Eli Lilly’s GLP-1 pill, Foundayo, which is the second FDA-approved GLP-1 pill for weight loss — the first is Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy pill.
- “Novo Nordisk’s direct-to-consumer platform offers self-paying patients to fill injectable Wegovy prescriptions for $199 per month’s supply of the 0.25-, 0.5-, 1-, 1.7- or 2.4-mg dosages. Wegovy HD is offered for $399 per month’s supply.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Humana is teaming up with digital health company b.well Connected Health to make it easier for members to access their health data across multiple providers, health plans, pharmacies and digital health apps.
- “The partnership aligns with a broader push by the Trump administration to give patients easier access to their health information.
- “As part of the partnership with b.well, Humana will also be able to access its members’ data in real-time at the point of claims processing and securely respond to data requests from providers and other health plans, supporting care coordination and quality improvement, the insurer said in an April 9 press release.”
- and
- “Amazon is expanding its health conditions program with two recently announced partnerships focusing on nutrition therapy and sleep care.
- “The retail giant launched its Health Benefits Connector program in January 2024, which aims to help connect customers with virtual care benefits. Teladoc, Rula Health, Talkspace, Omada Health and Hinge Health are several of the organizations involved with the program.
- “The most recent to join is virtual sleep clinic Dreem Health.
- “Eligible customers can enroll in the care provider’s sleep services, which include sleep diagnostics using Sunrise Group’s FDA-approved home sleep test. Dreem Health will be the first sleep health provider on the platform, according to the April 9 announcement.
- “Artificial intelligence-driven nutrition therapy platform Berry Street also announced March 31 it would be joining Amazon’s program. The platform has a network of more than 1,500 registered dietitians providing nutrition therapy for weight loss, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and maternal health.”
- MedTech Dive informs us,
- “One year after President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” declaration in a White House Rose Garden ceremony unleashed a tariff policy targeting top U.S. trading partners, medtech companies are still absorbing the shocks.
- “Tariffs on imports from China, Mexico, Canada, the European Union and other key trade partners were meant to boost domestic manufacturing, but in the medtech sector, where integrated global supply chainsdesigned for efficiency can take years to establish, reshoring has not been the primary response. That’s in contrast to the pharmaceutical industry and certain other sectors, where companies are pouring billions of dollars into building new production facilities in the U.S.
- “To manage the extra expenses brought by tariffs, medtech companies have tried to avoid raising prices for hospitals and health systems or cutting R&D budgets, according to industry advisers and analysts. Instead, they are accelerating efforts to drive down costs across their organizations.
- “They have to find levers elsewhere,” said Glenn Hunzinger, PwC’s U.S. health industries leader. “They’re not passing the prices on to customers. They’re just bearing the brunt of it and trying to find efficiency, which was always the focus.”
