Simplicity is a virture.
From Washington, DC,
- Roll Call reports,
- “Republican James Gallagher took the oath of office Wednesday, filling the seat of the late Rep. Doug LaMalfa in California’s 1st District and giving House leaders some breathing room in what has been a tumultuous year of deaths and resignations in Congress.
- “A former state Assembly GOP leader, Gallagher ran with endorsements from President Donald Trump and congressional leadership, easily winning the June 2 special open primary for the remainder of LaMalfa’s term.
- “Gallagher gives the House GOP another vote after the April resignation of Texas Rep. Tony Gonzales. Democrats have seen several recent departures of their own, including two scandal-driven resignations and the unexpected death of Georgia Rep. David Scott.
- “The addition of Gallagher bumps up the GOP’s hold on the majority to six, including California Rep. Kevin Kiley, who is an independent but caucuses with Republicans.”
- Federal News Network informs us,
- “House appropriators are backing the Trump administration’s proposed pay raise for troops in fiscal 2027 as part of a $1.1 trillion defense spending bill released Wednesday.
- “Military service members could see their paychecks grow by 5% to 7%, depending on their rank. Enlisted troops, particularly those at the lowest levels, would receive the largest raises.”
- The American Hospital Association News relates,
- :The House Appropriations Committee June 9 approved their version of the FY 2027 appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and related agencies by a 34-28 vote. The bill provides a total discretionary allocation of $110.8 billion for HHS, representing roughly $4 billion, or 4%, below the FY 2026 enacted level. Within that total, the Health Resources and Services Administration was allocated $8.35 billion, marking an $873 million decrease overall. However, the agency provided $1.44 billion for workforce initiatives, a roughly $25 million increase, and $576 million for rural health, marking a $158 million increase.
- “The bill also maintains funding for Children’s Hospitals Graduate Medical Education ($400 million), National Institutes of Health ($48.8 billion), as well as other key initiatives within the healthcare workforce, behavioral health, and maternal and child health programs. The committee recommended $70 million, a $237 million decrease, for the Hospital Preparedness Program. The Senate Appropriations Committee will release its version of the FY 2027 appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and related agencies at a later date.”
- and
- “The AHA provided a statement to the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health today for a hearing titled “Lowering Health Care Costs for All Americans: Examining Policies to Increase Health Care Transparency.” Lawmakers considered a range of legislative proposals, including a measure to codify existing price transparency regulations for hospitals and health plans, a bill requiring hospitals to post pricing physically on their walls, a bill requiring health insurers to share overhead costs and claim payments, a measure requiring insurers to publicly display claim denial rates and more.
- “The hospital field takes transparency compliance seriously, and we want to continue the work of providing patients with essential information on their care,” the AHA wrote. “We would caution, however, against codifying regulations that do not meet the goals sought by either patients or health care purchasers and instead result in ‘transparency in name only.’ Before Congress considers additional legislative solutions, it will be important to understand how existing policies are performing, as well as the tremendous financial costs of compliance, to ensure that any future policymaking retains what is working and improves upon what is not delivering true transparency.”
- and
- “The Hospital Insurance Trust Fund has been projected to become insolvent in 2033, according to the Medicare Board of Trustees’ annual report released June 9. The fund pays benefits under Medicare Part A, which covers inpatient hospital services, care provided by skilled nursing facilities, home health care and hospice care. The projections assume that the trust fund will receive lower levels of revenue due to recent tax law changes. “The projections in this year’s report continue to demonstrate the need for timely and effective action to address Medicare’s remaining financial challenges — including the HI trust fund’s projected depletion, this fund’s long-range financial imbalance, and the rapid growth in Medicare expenditures,” the trustees wrote.”
- “The Hospital Insurance Trust Fund has been projected to become insolvent in 2033, according to the Medicare Board of Trustees’ annual report released June 9. The fund pays benefits under Medicare Part A, which covers inpatient hospital services, care provided by skilled nursing facilities, home health care and hospice care. The projections assume that the trust fund will receive lower levels of revenue due to recent tax law changes. “The projections in this year’s report continue to demonstrate the need for timely and effective action to address Medicare’s remaining financial challenges — including the HI trust fund’s projected depletion, this fund’s long-range financial imbalance, and the rapid growth in Medicare expenditures,” the trustees wrote.”
- MedCity News adds,
- “CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz is optimistic about Washington’s ability to bend the healthcare cost curve, he said during a Tuesday address at the HFMA Annual Conference in National Harbor, Maryland.
- “It’s not all rosy, but there’s some opportunities. As a clinician, I’ll tell you, if you have an opportunity to fix a problem, it gives you more hope than if you think the issue is terminal. We’re definitely not terminal,” he declared.
- “During his talk, Dr. Oz outlined a few key areas that CMS is targeting to make healthcare more affordable. Below are the main pillars of the agency’s affordability agenda.”
- Fraud, waste and abuse
- Drug pricing reform
- Tech modernization
- Preventive health and nutrition
- Deregulation
- Per an OPM news release,
- “The US Office of Personnel Management (OPM) today announced a new series of initiatives to combat fraud, waste, and abuse across the Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) Program and Postal Service Health Benefits (PSHB) Program. OPM is undertaking this effort as part of its ongoing work with the White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, led by Vice President JD Vance.
- “President Trump has made eliminating fraud, waste, and abuse across the federal government a top priority,” OPM Director Scott Kupor said. “Working alongside the White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, OPM is taking additional steps to safeguard the premiums paid by federal employees and taxpayers, protect beneficiaries, and ensure health insurance companies are meeting the highest standards of accountability.” * * *
- “OPM is also building a data science and audit team that will review de-identified claims data in partnership with the OPM Office of Inspector General to proactively identify cases of fraud, waste, and over-billing. This will end the practice of relying upon retrospective reviews of data to find and address fraud and will be a proactive approach in identifying problems as they arise and implementing corrective mechanisms that save hard-earned premium dollars paid by federal employees.”
- The FEHBlog expects that OPM will find that FEHB and PSHB carriers are doing a good job preventing fraud waste and abuse because they hold the insurance risk, not the federal government.
- Fedscoop tells us,
- “The Office of Personnel Management on Wednesday awarded its anticipated contract to modernize and consolidate federal human resources functions to Oracle, capping a process that’s been over a year in the making.
- “The nearly $400 million award puts Oracle in charge of a process to bring over 100 HR systems under one single platform that the agency is calling its Core Human Capital Management system. OPM says it believes the project will make significant reductions in the overall cost of HR platforms to taxpayers.
- “Historically, federal agencies have relied on fragmented, aging HR systems that are costly to maintain and difficult to scale,” OPM Director Scott Kupor said in a written statement included in a press release.
- “He called the award “a foundational investment in the future of federal workforce management.”
- OPM Director Scott Kupor, writing in LinkIn, adds a post about this contact award to his Secrets of OPM blog.
- STAT News points out,
- “The National Institutes of Health has appointed researcher John Powers III to lead its infectious disease institute on an acting basis, after weeks of being in leadership limbo following reports that the previous director, Jeffery Taubenberger, had stepped down.
- “The appointment of Powers, previously a senior adviser at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and Taubenberger’s deputy, comes at a moment of heightened attention for the institute.
- “The NIH’s second-largest agency, responsible for $6.5 billion worth of funding, has been without a permanent leader since the ousting of Jeanne Marrazzo last March. In recent weeks, a handful of other top leaders have also been reassigned to other posts, causing lawmakers to express concern about the bench of infectious disease expertise at a time of alarm over the recent hantavirus outbreak and the Ebola outbreak in Central Africa.”
From the Food and Drug Administration front,
- MedPage Today reports,
- “The FDA issued a drug safety communication approving a label change that warns about the risk of kidney stones or kidney injury with the over-the-counter (OTC) weight loss drug orlistat (Alli), the agency saidopens in a new tab or window Wednesday.
- “The label now recommends that consumers with a history of kidney disease or kidney stones consult a healthcare provider before using the drug.
- “The FDA advised clinicians to inform patients about reports of acute kidney injury (AKI), hyperoxaluria, calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis, or oxalate nephropathy linked to orlistat. Patients should also stop taking the drug if they develop symptoms like back or groin pain, painful urination, blood in urine, feet or leg swelling, or less frequent urination.”
- Per a Lilly news release,
- “Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) announced today [June 9] that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a regimen of one maintenance dose every eight weeks of a single injection (250 mg/2 mL) of EBGLYSS (lebrikizumab-lbkz) for subcutaneous use in adults and children 12 years of age and older who weigh at least 88 pounds (40 kg) with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis. EBGLYSS is already approved for a once-monthly maintenance dose, with long-term data showing durable disease control. Now, EBGLYSS gives patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis the option to manage their condition with as few as six maintenance injections per year.1
- “Today’s approval builds on EBGLYSS’ established long-term durability, with a new option for one maintenance dose every eight weeks. For people living with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis, that means a treatment they only need to take as few as six times a year—without prescription topicals from the start,” said Adrienne Brown, executive vice president and president of Lilly Immunology. “EBGLYSS now gives patients the opportunity to flare less and live their lives with fewer interruptions from atopic dermatitis.”
From the judicial front,
- Per a Justice Department news release,
- “Ahold Delhaize USA Inc. (Ahold Delhaize), headquartered in Quincy, Massachusetts, has agreed to pay the United States and participating states a total of $40 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act and state analogs by reporting inflated “usual and customary” prices on claims to federal healthcare programs.” * * *
- “The United States alleged that Ahold Delhaize supermarkets with in-store retail pharmacies – including supermarket chains operating under the names Giant, Hannaford, Stop & Shop, Food Lion, and others – operated prescription savings programs pursuant to which enrolled members received discounted prices on prescription drugs. The United States contends that, in light of the features and operations of those savings programs, and the applicable Medicare Part D, Medicaid, and TRICARE program requirements (including, where applicable, contractual requirements), the discounted prices should have been reported as “usual and customary” prices on claims submitted to Medicare Part D, Medicaid, and TRICARE. Reported “usual and customary” prices serve as ceiling prices on payments to pharmacies under the applicable healthcare program payment formulas. The United States contends that Ahold Delhaize pharmacies failed to accurately report their discounted prices as their “usual and customary” prices on claims to Medicare Part D, Medicaid, and TRICARE, causing those programs to pay inflated amounts on such claims.”
- Modern Healthcare reports,
- “Clover Health received higher Medicare Advantage star ratings following a legal victory against the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
- “The health insurer estimated that revised quality scores would trigger $120 million in bonus payments.
- “CMS also instructed Clover Health to resubmit its bids for the 2027 plan year.
- “The court ruling may affect similar cases from CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield and Humana.”
From the public health and medical / Rx research front,
- Health Day reports,
- “The kids are not all right, at least in the United States, according to a new report showing a nosedive in children’s well-being from 2019 to 2024.
- “In 29 states, the overall U.S. score fell from 553 to 547 on a 1,000-point scale, a decline that surpasses pre-pandemic numbers, the report found.
- “This score measures children’s well-being across four categories: economic well-being, education, health, and family and community, according to the Anne E. Casey Foundation’s 2026 Kids Count Data Book.
- “Here are some notable findings:
- “Eleven of 15 states that saw the greatest gains in children’s well-being were in the South. South Carolina had the largest spike of any state, 38 points.
- “Five of the seven states with the largest declines in well-being were in the Northeast, led by Maine.
- “Scores among the West were widely varied – ranging from 281 in New Mexico to 759 in Utah, which fared at the top in the region.
- “Four Midwestern states — Nebraska, North Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota — followed behind Maine for the biggest drops in kids’ well-being.”
- and
- “Those who prefer to go to sleep later report poorer mental health, which is partially explained by greater reported loneliness, according to a study presented at SLEEP 2026, the annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, held from June 14 to 17 in Baltimore.
- “Alec Harlow, from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, and colleagues examined how chronotype, nocturnal loneliness, and general loneliness relate to mental health. The analysis included 442 survey participants.”
- and
- “Researchers found no clear increase in pregnancy risks found with first-trimester GLP-1 exposure
- “The findings may reassure women with unintentional early pregnancy GLP-1 use
- “Although the results are encouraging, the data were less precise for rare outcomes, so additional studies are needed.”
- STAT News relates,
- “The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has released a recommended vaccine schedule for pregnant people, one that diverges from the advice currently offered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
- “ACOG is recommending four vaccines be routinely administered during pregnancy, with several other vaccines recommended under certain circumstances. The new schedule is endorsed by 13 medical societies and health organizations.
- “Changing national recommendations coupled with rampant vaccine misinformation are resulting in confusion for both patients and health care professionals,” ACOG President Camille Clare said in a press release. “It is incredibly important for the public to have access to reliable, evidence-based information on maternal immunizations from a trusted source. ACOG is proud to be that source.”
- “The current CDC vaccine schedule for pregnant people includes only two recommendations, one for a vaccine to protect against tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis, known as Tdap, and one to generate protection against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, in the developing fetus.”
- MedPage Today notes,
- “Despite being more commonly diagnosed in women ages 40 or younger, an estimated 10% to 15% of early triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) cases are diagnosed in patients over 70.
- “Current guidelines recommend the use of adjuvant chemotherapy in early-stage TNBC regardless of a patient’s age; however, recent data published in JAMA Network Open indicated that underutilization of adjuvant chemotherapy may have contributed to worse outcomes in this patient population in the past.
- “When we use these treatments for elderly patients it is a very well-known fact that most of the time we undertreat,” said Ahmed Elkhanany, MD of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “This may lead to a decrease in their outcomes compared with other patients.”
- The Wall Street Journal points out,
- “Sanofi stopped a late-stage study of its experimental drug, riliprubart, for a rare immune disorder due to insufficient efficacy.
- “The decision marks an early setback for Sanofi’s newly appointed Chief Executive Belen Garijo, who took office last month.
- “Sanofi will evaluate continuing other riliprubart studies and expects no significant cost or change to its 2026 guidance.”
From the U.S. healthcare business and artificial intelligence front,
- Fierce Healthcare reports,
- “CAQH has rebranded as DataSpring, a name leaders say reflects the organization’s push toward a more modern and innovative future.
- “The Council for Affordable Quality Healthcare was founded more than 25 years ago and has evolved from its initial mission to make healthcare work better for patients, now offering critical data services to both providers and payers.
- “The DataSpring name “reflects the organization’s central role in delivering a connected healthcare ecosystem through accurate, authorized data from providers and payers,” per an announcement. The group announced the rebrand at the AHIP 2026 conference this week, with signage across Las Vegas reflecting the new identity.”
- and
- “Despite steady demand for obesity medications, 49% of payers who do not currently cover GLP-1s for obesity would not do so at any price, a new report from Pharmaceutical Strategies Group (PSG) found.
- “The 2026 Trends in Drug Benefit Design report drew insights from a survey of 237 benefits leaders across employers, health plans and unions.
- “Nine in 10 respondents in the survey report being moderately or very concerned about the affordability of GLP-1 medications. Moreover, 72% report discontinuation rates are at least moderately influential in coverage decisions.
- When asked the top reason for excluding coverage for obesity, 45% report coverage is too expensive for all members who would be prescribed the medication. Other factors include view of the medications as lifestyle drugs (24%), ongoing cost exposure (18%) and high discontinuation rates resulting in a lack of ROI (5%). Analysts note 9% of respondents selected “other” and described different reasons for excluding coverage.
- Healthcare Dive tells us,
- “The American Medical Association has appointed its 181st president: Dr. Willie Underwood, a New York-based surgeon who was sworn in during the prominent physician lobby’s annual meeting this week.
- “Unhttps://healthcostinstitute.org/all-hcci-reports/most-spending-on-imaging-services-went-to-ct-scans-x-rays-and-ultrasounds/derwood will be the second urologist and third Black physician to serve as the AMA’s president.
- “Dr. Sandra Fryhofer also won the office of president-elect on Tuesday. She will be inaugurated as AMA president next June after serving as president-elect for a year.”
- The American Medical Association shares highlights from the Association’s House of Delegates meeting.
- The Wall Street Journal informs us,
- “Johnson & Johnson aims to be the No. 1 oncology company by 2030, with its CEO stating a cure for some cancers is a realistic goal.
- “J&J agreed to acquire biotech company Firefly Bio for $1 billion in cash, adding new cancer-fighting platforms to its portfolio.
- “Artificial intelligence is helping J&J develop medicines faster, though its impact on the company’s bottom line is yet to be seen.”
- The Health Care Cost Institute lets us know,
- “Total spending on a health care service is the result of the price of that service and how frequently it is used. High spending could be the result of high prices, high utilization, or both. Within imaging, the highest priced service (MRI) was one of the less commonly used. The most frequently used imaging service (x-rays), in contrast, was the lowest price service. It could stand to reason, then, that they would be the imaging services with the most spending.
- “Instead, in 2022, the imaging category with the highest spending per person was CT scans ($116 in 2022). CT scans were the second highest priced service, and only the third most commonly used service. Ultrasounds were the service with the next highest spending per person ($113). They were the second lowest priced imaging service but were the second most commonly used service. X-rays made up the third highest spending per person in 2022 ($112). X-rays were the most used imaging service and the least expensive.”
- Per Fierce Healthcare,
- “Almost two-thirds of Americans who have asked artificial intelligence tools for medical advice acted on the guidance without consulting a doctor, an eHealth survey of more than 1,000 people found.
- “Half of respondents had turned to AI for medical advice. More than four-fifths of AI users said they trust the medical advice the tools provide, with 29% of Americans saying they have complete faith in the outputs. EHealth found 17% of AI users mostly distrust the medical advice the technology provides, while 1% completely distrust the outputs.
- “While a minority of people using AI for medical advice are skeptical of the tools’ outputs, most users are confident enough in the information to use the technology to shape their care decisions. More than 70% of AI users changed their decision to seek medical care based on a tool’s medical advice. The figure includes 36% of AI users who opted against seeking medical care based on the advice.”
