Pre-holiday weekend report

Simplicity is a virtue

Note — The FEHBlog will be writing his weekly cybersecurity report tomorrow and will resume regular FEHBlog posts on Sunday July 5. Happy Independence Day! We are so blessed to be Americans.

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call reports,
    • “As America gets ready to celebrate its 250th birthday, Congress is taking a road trip back to the place where it all began — Independence Hall in Philadelphia. 
    • “Led by Pennsylvania Democratic Rep. Brendan F. Boyle, members will gather for a ceremonial event Thursday in his hometown, an effort Boyle said was two years in the making. 
    • “This is going to be truly one of the highlights of my tenure in Congress, to be sitting there where our Founding Fathers sat exactly 250 years prior, to the exact day,” Boyle said, adding he hoped it could be a rare “unifying moment.” 
    • “While July 4 gets most of the fanfare, Boyle said its lesser-known neighbor, July 2, deserves more attention as the day the Second Continental Congress voted to declare independence from Great Britain in 1776. 
    • “It was always the date that John Adams thought would be celebrated as America’s birthday. Unfortunately, this was another instance in which Adams lost to [Thomas] Jefferson — because Americans came to, of course, celebrate two days later the Fourth of July, which is the date Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence,” he said.” 
  • OPM Director Scott Kupor added a third post (OPM.gov link) to his Secrets of OPM blog this week. In this post, Director Kupor commemorates the new paperless federal retirement system by spurning the altar of Michael Scott, the fictious paper czar of Scranton, PA.
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “The CMS proposed a rule on Thursday that would slash Medicare payment rates for a program [known as 340B] that hospitals use to buy discounted drugs and implement site-neutral payments for some imaging services next year.
    • Reforming the 340B drug discount program and better equalizing payments between sites of care have been priorities in the second Trump administration. Thursday’s proposed rule builds upon those agendas, including by expanding the services subject to site-neutral payments and more aggressively tamping down on discounts given to hospitals in the 340B drug program, which regulators previously tried to overhaul before dialing down their efforts in the face of opposition from the industry.
    • Medicare officials said the proposed rule would control costs and ensure Medicare money is directed toward “clinically appropriate” care. * * *
    • “The 2027 Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System and Ambulatory Surgical Center rule proposes to increase pay for outpatient care by 2.4%, slightly less generous than the 2.6% rate update finalized last year.
    • “The rule would request information from stakeholders about how hospitals post publicly available price data, an ongoing priority for the Trump administration. Additionally, if finalized, the rule would allow certain accrediting organizations to assess hospitals on their compliance with laws regarding emergency care.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The House Education and Workforce Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions July 1 examined whether direct health care contracts between employers and providers could help address rising health care costs. During the hearing, lawmakers from both parties expressed interest in arrangements that bypass traditional insurers, with supporters citing lower costs, reduced administrative burdens and improved access to care. Witnesses highlighted advantages such as simplified billing, price transparency and direct primary care services, while lawmakers also discussed the need for greater insurer transparency and access to health plan data. The committee did not signal specific legislative proposals following the hearing.”
  • and
    • “The Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement Recognized Coordinating Entity published updated standard operating procedures for the individual access services exchange protocol and new FAQs. The revised SOP removed references to “TEFCA IAS Consent” workflows and associated patient matching methodologies, retaining the ability for providers to verify requests for access and use of data. Updates were made based on recommendations that the AHA and other stakeholders provided to SOP proposals. The SOP will be effective Aug. 3, 2026.”

No Surprises Act news

  • Federal Hearings and Appeals Services, which is certified IDR entity, tells us about
    • “The Cooling Off Period: What Providers and Health Plans Need to Know
      • “What is actually changing with the cooling off period under the final rule for the federal IDR program? To help clarify both the ongoing rules, the coming changes, and their timing, FHAS is offering two new tools to support parties.
        • “First, a new guide to the cooling off period explains which claims are subject to the cooling off period, how long it lasts, what will change under the final rule, and when those changes are coming.
        • “Second, FHAS has launched a new Cooling-Off Calculator which parties can use today to determine cooling off period dates and new dispute initiation timeframes. FHAS can help your team understand, anticipate, and implement changes directed by the final rule.”

From the judicial front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Elevance is suing the CMS after the agency recalculated the Medicare Advantage star ratings of a competitor in a more favorable way than it did for other plans.
    • “After losing a lawsuit earlier this year, the CMS reran 2026 quality scores for Clover Health, dropping 20 measures that a judge ruled could not be factored in. Regulators then recalculated stars for other MA insurers last month, but cut out extra measures, too — measures that Elevance performed well on, the insurer argued in its complaint filed Wednesday in Georgia district court.
    • “Elevance says it lost out on $115 million in bonus payments as a result. The company is asking the court to force CMS to redo its own ratings using the same methodology as for Clover.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • “In a victory for the pharmaceutical industry, a federal judge blocked a Colorado state panel from placing a cap on the price of a blockbuster drug sold by Amgen after deciding the company is “likely to be significantly harmed.”
    • “The ruling pauses a controversial, first-in-the-nation move by the Colorado Prescription Drug Affordability Board, which was created four years ago in response to the rising cost of prescription medicines and is permitted to set upper payment limits on what most state residents will pay for selected drugs.” * * *
    • “Last October, the board then voted to limit what health plans in the state will pay for the drug. The board capped Enbrel prices at $600 for a ​50-milligram weekly dose, or $30,350 a year per person, effective on January 1, 2027. That compared with roughly $53,000 that the average plan in the state paid in 2023, according to a state claims database.
    • “The drugmaker then quickly filed a second lawsuit, reiterating its earlier arguments. Meanwhile, the company had until July 5 to decide whether to continue selling the treatment, which has a list price exceeding $100,000 a year and generated $2.23 billion in sales last year, in Colorado.
    • “But Judge Daniel Domenico of the U.S. District Court in Denver agreed with the company. In his ruling, which was issued on Wednesday, he noted that the state has a ​legitimate interest in helping patients afford Enbrel, but “capping the price of a patented drug” is not an ​option.”

From the public health and medical / Rx research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The U.S. overall death rate in 2025 fell to its lowest point on record, even as influenza and pneumonia are now among the nation’s top 10 causes of death for the first time in years, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • “The death rate fell 4.6% last year, to 689.2 deaths per 100,000 people, down from 722.1 in 2024, according to the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics. The death rate declined across every age group and nearly every demographic group tracked in the provisional report.
    • “The main driver of the record low was a continued drop in drug overdose deaths, said Farida Ahmad, a health scientist at the CDC and one of the report’s co-authors. Another factor, she added, was that Covid-19 no longer contributed to as many deaths.
    • “Against that backdrop, influenza and pneumonia stood out—moving from 11th to eighth place in all age groups—with 56,511 deaths in 2025 compared with 48,139 in 2024. It is the first time the influenza category has cracked the top 10 since 2020.”
  • AAMC relates,
    • “Patients arrive in the emergency department (ED) doubled over in pain and retching uncontrollably, a brew of symptoms physicians have nicknamed “scromiting” — a combination of screaming and vomiting. The problem: an underrecognized consequence of cannabis use called cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome (CHS), and emergency medicine physicians say few conditions leave patients more obviously miserable.
    • “My heart breaks for them,” says Kathleen Clem, MD, an emergency medicine physician at Dartmouth Health in Lebanon, New Hampshire, and interim associate dean for faculty affairs at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. “They come in because they absolutely cannot keep anything down. They’re dehydrated and their belly is sore from vomiting so much. Sometimes they vomit so much, they’ll break little blood vessels in their esophagus, and little bits of blood come up with that.”
    • “The leading cause of marijuana-related ED visits, CHS is associated with the chronic and long-term use of marijuana products, and it is becoming more prevalent, likely due to the increased legalization of marijuana. Some 24 states have legalized recreational marijuana use since 2012, and 40 states allow its use as a medicinal treatment. An additional eight states allow “limited-access” medical cannabis, which refers to low-THC (tetrahydrocannabinol) products and CBD (cannabinoid) oil.
    • “In the United States, cannabis use has nearly doubled in the past decade, with 22.3% of individuals 12 years and older — 64.2 million people — reporting its use in the past year, up from 12.6% in 2013, according to data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. And research shows a 15-fold increase in the number of people reporting daily or near daily cannabis use from 1992 to 2022.”
  • The Today Show adds,
    • “Cyclosporiasis, a nasty parasitic infection that causes “explosive” watery diarrhea, has sickened dozens of people in Michigan and other parts of the United States.
    • “Cases of the gastrointestinal illness, caused by a parasite that spreads through contaminated food, have been on the rise in multiple states since May, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At least 20 people have been hospitalized nationwide so far. 
    • “The CDC is working to identify potential sources of the parasitic infection, which is commonly linked to fresh produce.” * * *
    • “The U.S. typically sees several hundred cases of cyclosporiasis annually. In recent years, the number of infections reported in the U.S. has increased significantly.” * * *
    • “The best way to prevent infection is to avoid consuming food or water that may be contaminated with feces, the CDC says. Following proper hand hygiene and safe food handling practices can also lower your risk of foodborne illness.”
  • The New York Times points out,
    • Habitual users of fentanyl have developed such a strong tolerance to the drug that standard doses of medications to manage withdrawal and initiate recovery are no longer working for many patients, a team of researchers in Los Angeles has found.
    • Their study, published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence, presents a picture of the dangerous volatility of the city’s street supply and the capacity of users to tolerate ever greater amounts of pure fentanyl, which is at least 50 times more potent than heroin.
    • “In a summary of the findings, Morgan Godvin, one of the lead authors of the study and a health services researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles, said that a seasoned user’s daily street dose of fentanyl was roughly equivalent to 1,250 hospital doses of 100 micrograms of fentanyl given during and after surgery.
    • “In any other context, that would be unsurvivable,” she wrote. “Among people who use fentanyl every day, it is routine.”
    • “The study reinforces the belief among many addiction experts that, for high-tolerance patients, the standard treatment regimens for opioid addiction have become outdated. Doses of medications such as buprenorphine and methadone, opioids that help satisfy cravings without inducing a high, were calculated to treat addictions to heroin and prescription painkillers. The results of the new research, experts said, support a growing call by clinicians for treatment guidelines to be revised to keep pace with the convulsive drug market.”
  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “A global study showed that body mass index-associated gaps in blood pressure and cholesterol have diminished from 1990 to 2024.
    • “With more medications being used, older people with obesity were metabolically similar to, and in some countries even lower risk than, people with a normal BMI.
    • “Young adults with obesity remain metabolically higher risk, however, and should be a focus of prevention and treatment, some say.”
  • Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News informs us,
    • “For nearly half a century, scientists have known that malaria parasites force their way into human red blood cells (RBCs) through a ring-shaped structure called the moving junction (MJ). What no one could work out was what it actually does. The structure assembles, does its job, and dissipates in the space of 60 seconds—gone before anyone can get a close look.
    • “A team at Columbia University has now finally caught the moving junction in the act. By freezing parasites at the onset of invasion and lifting the intact complex straight out of the cell, the researchers obtained the first high-resolution view of its three-dimensional structure. What they saw overturned a decades-old assumption about how the parasite gets in. Rather than a passive doorway, the moving junction turns out to be a molecular machine that actively remodels the host cell’s membrane to help the parasite force its way inside.
    • “The findings detail how the team obtained the structure and then used it as a blueprint to design a mini-protein, from scratch, that blocks invasion—a proof of concept for a new kind of antimalarial drug.”
  • The Washington Post lets us know,
    • “When it comes to dementia risk, certain factors, such as genetics, are out of your control. However, plenty of research suggests lifestyle behaviors— things you can change — may help improve your chances of staying sharp as you age. In a new study, people with an elevated risk of dementia were less likely to develop the condition if they followed a healthy dietary pattern, particularly a less inflammatory one.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Roche’s experimental medicine divarasib helped patients with a certain type of lung cancer live longer than two approved treatments in a new study.
    • “The Phase 3 trial compared divarasib with Amgen’s Lumakra and Bristol Myers Squibb’s Krazati in patients with KRAS G12C non-small cell lung cancer who had already received previous treatment. Researchers found significant improvements in both overall survival and progression-free survival for the group taking divarasib, Roche said Thursday.
    • “Roche did not release detailed data, saying the results would be presented at an upcoming medical meeting. There were no new safety findings of concern and most treatment-related side effects were “manageable and reversible,” the company said.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthexec reports,
    • With Election Day only four months away, healthcare is again emerging as a major source of idealistic campaign promises. Many of these are driven by widespread public angst. What sorts of changes can U.S. healthcare stakeholders realistically expect once the results are in? 
    • “Professional prognosticators at the global accounting and consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, aka PwC, have considered the policy possibilities and are sharing their thinking in writing. * * * PwC offers forward-looking insights and advice for organizations across healthcare’s four major subsectors. 
      • PROVIDERS: Policy drivers are reshaping delivery and access. 
        Healthcare providers will do well to “examine their care delivery footprints, leverage automation and technology to reimagine the workforce and operations in order to mitigate economic strain,” PwC comments. 
        ‘This should include identifying opportunities to diversify revenue sources, partnerships or M&A with other stakeholders, and prioritizing investment in new technology to reduce impacts of the increase in uncompensated care and workforce constraints.’
      • PAYERS: Policy drivers are reshaping cost structures. 
        “Healthcare payers will likely need to strengthen care management capabilities as they expand their holistic support to members, the analysts forecast. 
        ‘This will include, in the future, leveraging sophisticated data models and interactive real-time communications to understand and influence member behavior patterns, accelerate paths to appropriate cost-effective care, and drive financial savings for members and plans.’
      • PHARMA: Policy drivers are reshaping pipeline decisions, regulatory strategy and market access. 
        “In the future, pharmaceutical manufacturers, propelled by accelerating science and shifting patient expectations, “should expand from drug manufacturers to ‘lifespan partners,’ requiring more agile operating models and greater collaboration across technology, and ecosystem players,” the authors write.  
        ‘In the interim, pharmaceutical manufacturers can embrace innovative approaches to access, affordability and evidence generation to meet the needs of today’s consumer and keep pace with pipeline and pricing pressures.’
      • MEDTECH: Policy drivers are reducing federal oversight of AI-powered and wellness devices. 
        “Going forward, the subsector is expected to become a broader ecosystem player, building interoperable, intelligent systems that connect care across hospitals and the home, PwC remarks. 
        ‘MedTech should strengthen capabilities for post market surveillance as FDA shifts oversight focus from a premarket review paradigm to an emphasis on performance and safety once on the market, particularly for low risk, consumer devices.’
  • Cardiovascular News relates,
    • “The American College of Cardiology (ACC) reached a major milestone this summer; its highest honor, the HeartCARE Center National Distinction of Excellence, has officially been awarded to 100 U.S. hospitals [all of which are listed in the article]. 
    • “The ACC established the HeartCARE Center designation in 2018 to celebrate hospitals and health systems that “demonstrate ongoing excellence through comprehensive accreditation, data-driven performance measurement and continuous quality improvement initiatives.” Recipients must be “forward-thinking organizations” that participate in ACC Accreditation Services programs, NCDR registries and other quality improvement campaigns focused on cardiovascular health.
    • “Reaching 100 hospitals recognized as ACC HeartCARE Centers marks an important milestone in our ongoing effort to elevate the standard of cardiovascular care,” Steven B. Deitelzweig, MD, chair of the ACC Accreditation Oversight Committee, said in a statement. “Each of these institutions has demonstrated a deep commitment to evidence-based care, continuous quality improvement and measurable outcomes—ensuring that patients receive the highest level of cardiovascular care, no matter where they live.”
  • Beckers Hospital News tells us,
    • “The Kroger Co. will acquire supermarket chain Giant Eagle, Inc. for $1.65 billion, expanding its pharmacy footprint across northern Ohio, western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland and Indiana.
    • “Giant Eagle operates 11 standalone pharmacies, according to a July 1 news release. Kroger said the acquisition will strengthen its presence in adjacent markets and build on Giant Eagle’s pharmacy business, loyalty program and private label portfolio. 
    • “The deal adds to Kroger’s pharmacy footprint at a time when retail pharmacy access is contracting elsewhere in the industry, with Walgreens restructuring into five standalone companies following multibillion-dollar operating losses and Rite Aid’s footprint largely gone — a gap health systems have increasingly stepped in to fill by opening their own pharmacies.” 
  • MedTech Dive informs us,
    • “Guardant Health said Wednesday its Shield test for colorectal cancer is now covered by UnitedHealth, the first major private U.S. health insurer to reimburse for the screening.
    • “The decision by UnitedHealth, the largest private U.S. health insurer, expands access to the screening to about 100 million Americans, the company said.
    • “Canaccord Genuity analyst Kyle Mikson, in a note to clients, called the coverage decision a “watershed moment” for liquid biopsy-based cancer screening and for the category of blood-based cancer testing.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *