FEHBlog

Thanksgiving Weekend Update

We are halfway through the Federal Employee Benefits Open Season, which will end on December 11.

The Senate and the House of Representatives will be engaged in Committee business and floor voting this week.

Axios brings us a dental coverage update for Affordable Care Act plans and Medicare. Of note, Axios tells us that “earlier this month, the Biden administration expanded all Medicare beneficiaries’ access to dental services when they’re necessary for other medical care, like cancer treatment.”

From the public health front,

  • Axios reports
    • The big picture: In the two years since Omicron emerged, it has continued to rank as the predominant strain in the U.S., and its subvariants are now driving most of the country’s coronavirus infections.
    • State of play: COVID-19 is circulating in every country and remains a threat, Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, said in an update Tuesday.
      • “Infection from the variants now in circulation can cause anything from asymptomatic infection to severe disease, pneumonia and death, she explained.”Infection from the variants now in circulation can cause anything from asymptomatic infection to severe disease, pneumonia and death, she explained.
      • “Luckily, she added, most people are experiencing less severe symptoms because they have population-level immunity from vaccination, prior infection, or both.
    • Zoom in: Case rates are not as high as this summer, but experts expect they may rise during the winter as they have the past three years, given colder weather that drives people indoors and holiday gatherings.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds,
    • “Flu and RSV killed thousands of people on their own during typical winters before the pandemic. Covid isn’t killing people as it once did, but it remains the deadliest of the three—in part because it is more active year-round. 
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention predicts hospitalizations this year will be about the same as last year: well above pre-pandemic levels. Even a milder season with the three viruses circulating together would likely mean more hospitalizations than a severe season of just flu and RSV, said Jason Asher, who directs a CDC forecasting department.
    • “More illness means more disruptions to life and work. The flu alone is responsible for billions of dollars in medical and economic costs and millions of lost workdays. Covid has added to worker absences in recent winters.  * * *
    • “There’s one more virus out there for you to get,” said Justin Lessler, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of North Carolina. “Your risk of getting sick has probably gone up.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “About half of all people are in hospice at the end of their lives, but more than 25 percent of hospice patients enroll in the final week, according to 2021 data from the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, which advises Congress on Medicare issues.
    • “Others among the 1.7 million Medicare patients who used hospice that year availed themselves of its services for much longer. That is reflected in data that reveal the dual nature of hospice: The median stay is only 17 days, meaning half of patients were in hospice less than 17 days and half longer than that. But the average is 92 days, which shows that some patients were in hospice for many months.”
  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • A healthcare hiring boom is helping offset weaker job growth in other areas of the softening U.S. economy, boosting its chances of skirting a recession.
    • The industry could serve as a strong job generator for years to come as an aging population and Covid-19 fuel widespread worker shortages and greater needs for healthcare services. 
    • Healthcare providers—including hospitals, clinics, pharmacies and doctors’ offices—accounted for 30% of U.S. job gains in the six months through October, though less than 11% of the country’s total employment, Labor Department figures show. 
    • “As behavior returns to normal—as kids go back to germ-factory indoor play spaces and daycare centers, and as people schedule elective procedures and catch up on routine scans delayed during the height of the pandemic—providers are having to staff up to keep up with demand,” said Julia Pollak, chief economist at Ziprecruiter.”

Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity vulnerabilities and breaches front,

  • HHS’s Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center posted a Sector Alert about a “Critical Vulnerability in Fortinet FortiSIEM Platform” on November 22, 2023.
    • “Fortinet has identified a vulnerability in its FortiSIEM platform, which is utilized by the Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) sector. This vulnerability enables a threat actor to execute commands on the target system, allowing for a potentially wide-scale and impactful cyberattack. HC3 recommends that all healthcare organizations operating FortiSIEM prioritize the upgrade of these platforms in a timely manner.”
  • The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency added one more known exploited vulnerability to its catalog on November 21, 2023.
  • Dark Reading points out,
    • “A widely popular social engineering campaign previously only targeting Windows systems has expanded and is now using fake browser updates to distribute Atomic Stealer, a dangerous information stealer, to macOS systems.
    • “Experts say this could be the first time they’ve observed a dominant social engineering scam previously aimed specifically at Windows make the shift to macOS.
    • “The malware, also referred to as AMOS, surfaced earlier this year on a dedicated Telegram channel. Criminals, who can rent the malware on a subscription basis for about $1,000 a month, have used a variety of means to distribute the malware since then. The most common tactic has been to distribute the malware via installers for popular apps or via purportedly cracked versions of Microsoft Office and other widely used applications.”
  • Health IT Security notes,
    • “The HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR) completed a HIPAA investigation into New York-based Saint Joseph’s Medical Center following claims that the organization had impermissibly disclosed COVID-19 patients’ protected health information (PHI) to a news reporter. Saint Joseph’s Medical Center agreed to pay $80,000 to OCR and implement corrective actions.
    • “OCR launched the investigation following the publication of an article by the Associated Press about the academic medical center’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The article included photographs and information about three COVID-19 patients, including diagnoses, current medical statuses and prognoses, vital signs, and treatment plans.
    • “Further investigation determined that Saint Joseph’s had provided the information to the Associated Press without first obtaining written consent from the three patients.”
  • The HHS Inspector General warns us “about a fraud scheme involving monthly billing for remote patient monitoring.”

From the ransomware front,

  • Cybersecurity Dive reports on November 22, 2023,
    • “Criminal threat groups and nation-state actors are exploiting a critical vulnerability in Citrix Netscaler ADC and Netscaler Gateway to launch attacks, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and FBI warned on Tuesday.
    • “Affiliates of LockBit 3.0 exploited the vulnerability — dubbed CitrixBleed by researchers — to gain access into Boeing’s parts and distribution unit and exfiltrate data, as part of a suspected ransomware attack, according to federal authorities.
    • “CISA, through its ransomware vulnerability warning program, has notified almost 300 organizations they were running vulnerable instances of the devices and needed to take mitigation measures before they were attacked, Eric Goldstein, executive assistant director of cybersecurity at CISA, said during a conference call with reporters.” 
  • Here is a link to the CISA analysis of CitrixBleed.
  • Cyberscoop provides its perspective on this and related schemes.
    • “Jon DiMaggio, the chief security strategist with Analyst1 who has written extensively on the internal workings of LockBit, said that while there are only a few groups with the “skill and talent and creative ability to do some of these more advanced attacks,” these crews, particularly those associated with the AlphV attacks, are becoming much better at social engineering.
    • “Many major companies still have problems with the cybersecurity basics, DiMaggio said, let alone building help desks that are tough to manipulate. “It’s tough, but they have to change,” DiMaggio said. “Trying to focus on helping people and helping your clients can’t always be number one anymore.” 
    • “That might slow response times, he noted, but that’s “a lot better than having to lose ungodly amounts of money, having your reputation destroyed and everything else.”

From the cybersecurity defenses front,

  • CISA discusses how the agency has re-envisioned its Cybersecurity Insurance and Data Analysis Working Group to help reduce cybersecurity risk.
    • “When we re-launch the CIDAWG in December, the working group will partner with Stanford’s Empirical Security Research Group, a research lab in Stanford’s Computer Science Department, with the intent to correlate data with cybersecurity controls to understand their effectiveness. CISA will ask working group members to collaborate with Stanford to improve analysis of the aggregated, anonymized loss data and link it with controls effectiveness. This analysis will be a resource both for insurers to inform their risk analysis and for CISA to better understand whether efforts like the Cyber Performance Goals (CPGs) and the Secure by Design initiative are translating to reduced cyber risk exposure for organizations that adopt them.”
  • The Wall Street Journal explains why storytelling can improve cybersecurity training.
    • “I recently wrote about the “phishing tests” that many companies use to train (well, scare) employees into being more cyber-vigilant. They send around a phony phishing email, and measure how many people click on it. But my research shows that these tests can actually be harmful. They create fear, stress and distrust among employees, and in the end they don’t improve phishing resistance much.
    • “When I wrote that article, a number of readers wrote in asking a simple question: If phishing tests don’t work, what does?
    • “I believe a better way to train people is to have their peers tell them stories about their experience with scams. Humans have an innate ability to learn from stories about other people—even if they are just casual stories that fall into the middle of a conversation. My research on the topic has found just how effective stories can be when applied to cybercrime: Hearing about somebody else getting snagged by phishing, or narrowly avoiding it, makes people more likely to take security seriously and avoid the mistakes they have heard about.”
  • The Hackers News recommends six steps to accelerate cybersecurity incident response.
  • ISACA offers a report on optimizing risk transfer for systematic resilience.

Post Thanksgiving Extra

The FEHBlog noted his plan on Wednesday to hold off on future posts until Cybersecurity Saturday. A pleasant Thanksgiving holiday resulted in the FEHBlog preparing this Friday Extra.

From Washington, DC,

  • CMS issued a No Surprises Act toolkit for consumer advocates.
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “As it’s the middle of open season, those eligible have until Dec. 12 to enroll or make changes to their plans under TRICARE – the Defense Department’s healthcare system – for 2024.
    • “The two main plans eligible for enrollment are TRICARE Prime, which includes the U.S. Family Health Plan, and TRICARE Select. TRICARE Open Season does not apply to its premium plans – TRICARE Young Adult, TRICARE Reserve Select and TRICARE Retired Reserve. TRICARE Open Season also does not apply to those who are eligible for Medicare or those using TRICARE For Life. It also does not apply to active duty service members. These groups do not have to do anything during the Open Season.
    • “Open Season is an opportunity for you to evaluate the health care coverage that your family has and to see if you need to change plans or if you want to stay in the current plan that you’re in,” Zelle Zim, who’s on TRICARE’s policy and programs team, said at a TRICARE event on Wednesday. “You also have the opportunity to enroll in a new plan during TRICARE Open Season.”

In public health and medical research news,

  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Rates of completion for high-risk diagnostic tests and referrals were lower when ordered during a telehealth visit compared with an in-person appointment, according to a study published in JAMA Network Open. 
    • “For telehealth orders, 43% were completed during the designated time frame compared with 58% of tests and referrals requested during in-person appointments, and 57% of those ordered without any visit at all. 
    • “Failure to get tests or complete referrals is a leading cause of diagnostic errors, and safety risks can be a particular concern in primary care due to the large number of potential diagnoses, researchers said.” 
  • STAT News points out,
    • “Overdose deaths among pregnant or postpartum people skyrocketed between 2018 and 2021, according to new research published Wednesday in JAMA Psychiatry.
    • “The study, conducted by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and the National Institutes of Health, compared the incidence of maternal deaths for overdose of commonly misused psychotropic drugs (such as heroin and other opioids, including synthetic ones, or cocaine) among girls and women aged 10 to 44.
    • “The spike in overdose deaths was especially high among women ages 35 to 44. In 2018, the rate was 4.9 overdose maternal deaths per 100,000 mothers with a live birth; in 2021, the rate was 15.8 per 100,000. The rate of overdose death for all age groups also increased significantly, from 6.9 per 100,000 mothers in the first half of 2018 to 12.2 in the second half of 2021.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review reports, “There’s been a slight slowdown in reports of new drug shortages before the winter holiday season, but six medications recently entered the list of ongoing shortages, which includes about 300 drugs.” Becker’s article lists those six drugs.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues notes that Blue Cross licensees are “diving into” direct healthcare delivery. “BCBS plans have spent 2023 reorganizing to better compete with larger insurers through corporate restructuring, M&A or the launch of healthcare delivery subsidiaries.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Pharmacy benefit management giant Optum Rx is aiming to address maternal and fetal health by leaning on the power of independent pharmacies.
    • “The Road to Healthy Baby program launched earlier this year in three states—Louisiana, Michigan and New Mexico—and offers pregnant patients prenatal checkups and vitamins at an independent pharmacy. The initiative is part of a broader push by the PBM that seeks to harness the power of these pharmacies.
    • “Through the program, a pregnant person who maintains their prenatal vitamins across three prescriptions or a 90-day supply will receive a care kit with key items that help during pregnancy and after the baby is born.
    • “Optum has also deployed grants to local diaper banks to ensure new mothers have access to necessary supplies. Katie McCarey, vice president of pharmacy strategy and product innovation at Optum Rx, told Fierce Healthcare that the company has found in some markets that new mothers often have just one or two diapers available each day for their babies.”
  • and
    • “UPMC’s operations dipped into the red this quarter as volumes and their associated care delivery costs and insurance claims continue to climb.
    • “The Pittsburgh-based integrated nonprofit system reported Tuesday a $191 million operating loss (-2.8% operating margin) and a $421.8 million change in net assets (without donor restrictions) for the three months ended Sept. 30. During the same time a year prior, UPMC had logged a $114.5 million operating income (1.8% operating margin) and $272.6 million drop in its net assets (without donor restrictions).
    • “The organization is now sitting at a $176.5 million operating loss (-0.9%) year to date despite its strong start to 2023. Its bottom line reflects a $244.7 million net decline over nine months.
    • “In a release announcing the financial results, UPMC Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer stressed that the system is “staying to true its commitments” surrounding capital investments ($517 million year to date) despite industry-wide workforce challenges and other headwinds.”
  • Healthcare Dive highlights five major healthcare company bankruptcy filings in 2023. “Bankruptcies have spiked this year as federal COVID-19 funding lapsed and heightened interest rates, regulatory changes and labor shortages squeezed the sector.”

Happy Thanksgiving!

Following this post, The FEHBlog will reappear on Saturday for Cybersecurity Saturday. The FEHBlog wishes his readers a Happy Thanksgiving.

From Washington DC

  • Thanks to Bloomberg, the FEHBlog learned about this Congressional Research Service report on FY 2024 USPS Appropriations. To wit,
    • “On September 30, 2023, Congress passed the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2024 and Other Extensions Act (H.R. 5860; P.L. 118-15), which provides continuing FY2024 appropriations to federal agencies through November 17,
    • “Section 126 of the act increases the rate of funding for the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to approximately $219.1 million, which is about $28.3 million above its FY2023 funding.
    • “The additional OPM funding is provided for the implementation of the Postal Service Health Benefits Program (PSHBP), a new health benefit program for eligible postal employees and retirees. Under the PSRA, OPM is required to establish and administer the PSHBP.”
  • FEHBlog note — The Postal Service also is on the financial hook for funding implementation of the PSHBP.
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Senate Democrats, led by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), on Tuesday mounted a public pressure campaign to get the executives of Merck, Johnson & Johnson, and Bristol Myers Squibb to testify in a January hearing on why the United States pays more for prescription drugs than other countries.
    • “All three companies have sued the Biden administration over the new Medicare drug price negotiation that congressional Democrats passed last year. Bristol Myers Squibb’s blood thinner Eliquis; Johnson & Johnson’s blood thinner Xarelto, anti-inflammatory medicine Stelara, and blood cancer treatment Imbruvica; and Merck’s diabetes drug Januvia were selected as part of the first 10 drugs to go through the negotiation process.
    • “It’s unclear whether the executives will agree to testify at the hearing, which is titled “Why “Does the United States Pay, By Far, The Highest Prices In The World For Prescription Drugs?” Sanders also put out a fundraising email just before the letter was announced, with the subject line: “The greed of the pharmaceutical industry is out of control.” It featured an op-ed he wrote for the Guardian Monday.”

In FEHB Open Season and federal retirement news,

  • Fedweek provides Reg Jones’ observations on FEHBP and Medicare Parts A and B. The Federal Times offers articles titled “A Procrastinator’s Checklist for Choosing Open Season Benefits” and “What’s driving rate hikes for federal employee health premiums?
  • The second Federal Times article is a topic that the FEHBlog follows throughout the year. In that regard, Mercer Consulting released the following survey findings last week:
    • “Mercer, a business of Marsh McLennan (NYSE: MMC), released the findings of its 2023 National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans, which found the average per-employee cost of employer-sponsored health insurance rose by 5.2% in 2023 to reach $15,797. * * *
    • “In 2022, cost rose by 3.2%, well below general inflation, which averaged 8% that year. Because healthcare providers typically have multi-year contracts with health plans, employers did not feel the full brunt of inflation last year. “Rather, inflation-driven cost increases are phasing in as contracts are renewed,” says Sunit Patel, Chief Health Actuary, Mercer. The survey shows employers project another sharp increase of 5.2% for 2024.
    • “It may take another couple of years for price increases stemming from higher healthcare sector wages and medical supply costs to be felt across all health plans,” Mr. Patel says.
    • “At the same time, inflation is only one factor behind this year’s higher cost increases. In 2023, spending on prescription drugs rose sharply. “While the effects of inflation may be relatively short-lived, new and ongoing developments in the pharmaceutical market seem likely to have a longer-term impact on health benefit cost.”
  • The Federal Times adds,
    • “Federal employees’ retirement applications take almost twice as long to process when they contain errors, leading to further delays in processing and dispensing annuities, according to a watchdog report published Monday.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management’s inspector general found that “healthy” application packages took on average 53 days to process, and “unhealthy” ones containing errors took more than 108 days, according to a random sample of applications the inspector general studied.
    • “That discrepancy needs be reflected in the data OPM reports monthly to accurately monitor whether retirement processing is improving, the IG report said.
    • “The lack of transparency for healthy versus unhealthy ‘incomplete’ application packages limits the quality of information being provided to external parties as the main cause for why Retirement Services has not met its goal for processing retirement application packages within 60 days,” according to the report.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Beckers Clinical Leadership tells us,
    • “Hospital and public health officials are urging people to take precautions and be mindful of where they seek care to limit capacity strain on emergency departments as respiratory virus activity heats up heading into the holiday season. 
    • “Since early September, COVID-19 metrics had mostly been trending downward or remained flat. Now they are on the rise again, though they remain far below levels seen in previous surges. There were 16,239 new admissions for the week ending Nov. 11, up 8.6% from the previous week. 
    • “Meanwhile, most of the country is seeing an uptick of flu and respiratory syncytial virus cases. Hospitalizations associated with the two infections are also ticking up, particularly among children and older adults. 
    • “The more concerning thing is the severity of some of the illness,” Hany Atallah, MD, chief medical officer Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, told ABC affiliate WPLG. “And we are also seeing some patients come in with more than one viral infection, so they may have RSV and flu, for example. We’re constantly trying to follow the science and encourage people to get vaccines.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal points out,
    • “Ozempic, Wegovy and their counterparts have exploded in popularity over the past year, earning billions for the drugs’ makers, transforming the American approach to weight-loss, and sparking widespread cultural discussion in a country that is already obsessed with weight
    • “That conversation lands on Thanksgiving tables this week, where some people say the drugs have boosted their confidence around food, and others say they are worried about facing questions about what they’re eating, what they’re not eating, and changes in their appearance.
    • “It’s a hot topic, and people have a lot of judgments,” says Dr. Gauri Khurana, a psychiatrist in private practice in New York City and a clinical instructor at Yale University who has prescribed the medications and helped patients manage them. * * *
    • “Doctors advise people to listen to their bodies—not their family members—when it comes to serving sizes. A balanced plate that gives priority to protein and high-fiber foods over carbohydrates and fatty foods, which tend to sit in the stomach and exacerbate the medication’s effects of delayed gastric emptying, can help patients avoid filling up too quickly or feeling nauseous.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Just in time for the holiday season, the Biden administration is offering Americans a fresh round of free at-home coronavirus tests through the Postal Service.
    • “The administration revived the dormant program in September, announcing then that households could order four free tests through a federal website, covidtests.gov.
    • “Beginning Monday, households may order an additional four tests. Households that have not placed an order since the program resumed can submit two orders, for eight tests in total.”
  • The University of Minnesota informs us,
    • “A new survey of 158 hospital executives, conducted by the Sepsis Alliance, found that 90% see antimicrobial resistance (AMR) as a threat, and 88% think the problem is getting worse. The survey, conducted by Sage Growth Partners on behalf of the Sepsis Alliance, also dug into executives’ views on other related AMR issues. An 11-page report on the findings was published on the Sepsis Alliance websiteon November 17.
    • “Another top concern is the public’s lack of knowledge about AMR, with 59% of executives saying that public education of clinicians as well as patients is the largest barrier to antibiotic stewardship. Respondents recommend public service announcements covering the need for early treatment, the importance of completing treatment, and storing the drugs properly.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive asks “Where are all the nurses? Hospitals, advocates disagree on crisis; Hospitals and nursing unions disagree about what’s driving sluggish application rates for open registered nurse positions — a lack of qualified candidates or a lack of interest.”
  • BioPharma Dive notes,
    • “Roche’s Genentech unit is partnering with computing giant Nvidia in a multiyear deal that highlights the pharmaceutical industry’s growing hopes of using artificial intelligence to speed up the process of designing and developing new drugs. 
    • “By collaborating with Nvidia, Genentech expects to “significantly enhance” its existing AI research and potentially improve on the chip designer’s own software, such as its “BioNemo” platform for drug discovery. 
    • “Our teams will be continuously exchanging expertise on the advancement of science and the state-of-the-art methods emerging in accelerated computing, AI and simulation across this entire drug discovery process,” said Kimberly Powell, vice president of healthcare at Nvidia, in a briefing with reporters.” 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC (note the FEHBlog is back in Texas after a productive week in DC)

  • The Society for Human Resource Management tells us,
    • “The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) announced it will extend the effective date of its joint employer rule to Feb. 26, 2024, to facilitate resolution of legal challenges to the rule.
    • “The NLRB released the final rule on Oct. 26 with an implementation date of Dec. 26. The rule was published in the Federal Register on Oct. 27.
    • “U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., sent a letter informing the NLRB that it was out of compliance with the Congressional Review Act’s 60-day threshold rule, which mandates that the implementation of all major federal rules must be delayed 60 days from when they are received by Congress.
  • The Internal Revenue Service posted for public comment a draft version of the 2024 Employers’ Tax Guide to Fringe Benefits.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Associate Press reports,
    • “The U.S. flu season is underway, with at least seven states reporting high levels of illnesses and cases rising in other parts of the country, health officials say.
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted new flu data on Friday, showing very high activity last week in Louisiana, and high activity in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, New Mexico and South Carolina. It was also high in the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, the U.S. territory where health officials declared an influenza epidemic earlier this month. * * *
    • “Traditionally, the winter flu season ramps up in December or January. But it took off in October last year, and is making a November entrance this year.”
  • STAT News offers its observations on this development.
    • “The early signals from influenza suggest the virus is settling back into the seasonal pattern it followed — to the degree the always mercurial bug follows any pattern — before the pandemic, said Alicia Budd, team lead for domestic flu surveillance at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “All I can say is at this point we are at a pretty typical point in flu activity,” she told STAT.
    • “Overall, the signs to date appear to portend a winter more like what we knew before the arrival of Covid, said Megan Culler Freeman, an assistant professor of pediatrics specializing in infectious diseases at the University of Pittsburgh.
    • “Last year as early as August, children’s hospitals across the country were full to the gills … because there were so many children with respiratory distress,” Freeman said. “And I would say that this season is starting to feel a lot more normal. Only now, as we’re getting into November — even towards mid- to late- November — we’re starting to see more of our winter volume starting to begin. * * *
    • “The scientific consensus is still out about whether Covid will be a seasonal virus, transmitting primarily during cold-and-flu season. Many experts think it is heading that way, but hasn’t yet settled into that pattern.”
  • The American Medical Association explains what doctors wish their patients knew about diabetes 2. Check it out.
  • KFF informs us,
    • Research suggests that the Novavax [Covid] vaccine is about as safe and effective as the mRNA shots. Its main disadvantage is arriving late to the scene. Vaccine uptake has plummeted since the first shots became widely available in 2021. Nearly 70% of people got the primary vaccines, compared with fewer than 20% opting for the mRNA covid boosters released last year. Numbers have dwindled further: As of Oct. 17, only 5% of people in the United States had gotten the latest covid vaccines, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.
    • “Daniel Park, an epidemiologist at George Washington University, said low rates might improve if people who felt lousy after their last mRNA shots gave Novavax a try. It protects against severe illness, but researchers struggle to specify just how effective this and other vaccines are, at this point, because studies have gotten tricky to conduct: New coronavirus variants continuously emerge, and people have fluctuating levels of immunity from previous vaccines and infections.
    • “Still, a recent study in Italy suggests that Novavax is comparable to mRNA vaccines. It remained more than 50% effective at preventing symptomatic covid four months after vaccination. Some data suggests that mixing and matching different types of vaccines confers stronger protection — although other studies have found no benefit. 
    • “Given all this, Park held out for the Novavax vaccine on account of its potentially milder side effects. “Between a demanding full-time job and two young kids at home, I wanted to stay operational,” he said. His arm was sore, but he didn’t have the 24-hour malaise accompanying his last mRNA shot.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • MedCity News notes,
    • “Eli Lilly’s cardiometabolic drug portfolio is expanding with newly approved therapies. To meet demand for those therapies and additional products to come, the company is building a new $2.5 billion manufacturing site in Germany.
    • “Construction on the new plant is on track to begin next year. Lilly expects the site will start operations in 2027, becoming its sixth manufacturing site in Europe. The company said it has invested more than $11 billion in its global manufacturing capabilities in the past three years to support the production of medicines across its portfolio.
    • “Some of Lilly’s capital investments have been closer to the Indianapolis-based drugmaker’s home. Last year, the company committed more than $2 billion to two new facilities in Lebanon, Indiana for the manufacturing of existing products and future ones, the company said in its annual report. Lilly also invested more than $1 billion in a new facility in Concord, North Carolina, for the manufacturing of injectable products and devices. Earlier this year, Lilly pledged to spend an additional $450 million to expand capacity at a site in Research Triangle Park that also makes injectable products, including new blockbuster medicine Mounjaro.”
  • Healthcare Dive points out,
    • “AstraZeneca’s new health-tech business, Evinova, launched Monday, with several big-name partnerships already in place and a goal to “better meet the needs of healthcare professionals, regulators and patients.”
    • “Evinova’s main focus will be helping to optimize their clinical trials for biotechnology companies, pharmaceutical firms and CROs, or contract research organizations, in an effort to reduce the time and costs associated with developing new medicines.
    • “Two CROs, Parexel and Fortrea, have agreed to offer Evinova’s digital health solutions to their customers. Evinova is also collaborating with Accenture and Amazon Web Services to “accelerate industry adoption and sustain and expand the global reach of its digital products.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The financial outlook for major health plans is stable in the face of notable potential headwinds heading into the end of the year, according to a new report from Moody’s Investors Service.
    • “The Moody’s analysis said earnings in the third quarter were on par with reports from the second quarter and that the industry’s stability is in line with expectations. However, the researchers said they were expecting payers to face different challenges as 2023 got underway.
    • “A notable trend that emerged in the second quarter was increased utilization in Medicare Advantage (MA), which peaked in the second quarter thanks to a boost in outpatient care. While the trend did stabilize in the third quarter, “it did not get better,” the Moody’s analysts wrote.
    • “Centene was the lone exception, and it reported a lower medical loss ratio for MA in the third quarter of 2023 compared to the prior-year quarter, according to the report.”
  • and
    • “As the industry continues to debate the promise and risks of artificial intelligence in healthcare, patients are bullish on the potential for generative AI to improve access and even lower healthcare costs.
    • “More than half (53%) of U.S. consumers believe generative AI could improve access issues and shorten wait times for medical care, according to a survey by Deloitte’s Center for Health Solutions. A little less than half of consumers (46%) say it has the potential to make healthcare more affordable.”

Weekend update

Thanks to ACK15 for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC,

  • Congress is back home this week to celebrate Thanksgiving. Roll Call has made available a tentative 2024 Congressional calendar.
  • FedSmith reports that the U.S. Office of Personnel Management issued a final 2024 calendar year locality pay rule last week.
    • “For 2024, four new locality pay areas have been established by the final regulations. These are:
      • “Fresno-Madera-Hanford, CA; 
      • “Reno-Fernley, NV; 
      • “Rochester-Batavia-Seneca Falls, NY; and 
      • “Spokane-Spokane Valley-Coeur d’Alene, WA-ID. 
    • “The President will set locality pay rates for these four areas. This usually occurs in late December.”
  • MedPage Today suggests that Medicare coverage of GLP-1 anti-obesity drugs is the key to lower prices. Medicare coverage would benefit FEHB plans with Medicare Part D EGWPs. While Medicare would pay lower prices for these drugs, the FEHBlog doubts that Medicare coverage will help payers without Medicare Part D EGWPs.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times states,
    • “Shortly after a baby is born, doctors clamp the umbilical cord linking the infant to the placenta, which is still inside the mother’s uterus, and then cut it. New research shows that if doctors wait at least two minutes after the birth to clamp the cord, they significantly improve in-hospital survival rates for premature infants.
    • “Delayed cord clamping — an intervention that can be introduced at relatively little cost — is believed to help because it allows umbilical cord blood, which is rich in iron, stem cells and antibodies, to flow back to the baby. Some experts say that it’s not entirely clear why the strategy seems to help, but that the data is convincing.”
  • Fortune Well tells us what super-agers can teach us about living longer.
    • “One hundred year-old Maureen Paldo still lives in the same Chicago home that she and her husband purchased when they married after World War II. Paldo, who’s been widowed for about 30 years, says she still manages the stairs, takes walks as often as possible, and loves to have people come to visit. * * *
    • “Paldo is participating in a a large, genetic study of elders, called the SuperAgers Study, to help researchers answer some key questions about life span and health span. It may even lead to a longevity pill that could help more of us live healthier, longer lives.
    • “We still don’t really know why some people live well into their ninth or tenth decades of life with few physical or cognitive problems, while others show decline much sooner. While genetics plays a role, we are still learning about all of protective inherited and natural factors, according to Dr. Sofiya Milman, the study’s chief investigator and Director of Human Longevity Studies at the Institute for Aging Research at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. SuperAgers all seem to have the APoE2 gene variant in common, which protects against Alzheimer’s or dementia, but that’s only a partial explanation.
    • “In one analysis, Milman’s team compared the lifestyle of centenarians to the lifestyle of a general population group from the same birth years. Those in the general population group didn’t live as long, despite similar rates of tobacco and alcohol use, diet, and exercise.
    • “What is it that makes the difference?” she asks. “We know enough to know that this is a very valuable group to study because looking at smaller groups of superagers and centenarians have indicated that there’s definitely heritability for healthy aging and healthy longevity.”

Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity policy front,

  • Cyberscoop reports,
    • “Former National Security Agency Executive Director Harry Coker is one step closer to being the next national cyber director after the Senate Homeland and Governmental Affairs Committee advanced his nomination Wednesday.
    • “Coker, also a former CIA officer, told the panel during the initial nomination hearing that he would plan on continuing the work of his potential predecessors.
    • “Coker’s nomination comes after the White House was criticized by experts and policy wonks for not nominating Kemba Walden, the current acting national cyber director, to the permanent role. The Washington Post reported that Walden’s personal debts were the White House’s rationale for declining to nominate her.
    • “Walden’s last day as the acting cyber chief is Friday, according to an ONCD spokesperson.”
  • On November 14, 2023, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) released
    • “its first Roadmap for Artificial Intelligence (AI), adding to the significant DHS and broader whole-of-government effort to ensure the secure development and implementation of artificial intelligence capabilities. DHS plays a critical role in ensuring AI safety and security nationwide.”its first Roadmap for Artificial Intelligence (AI), adding to the significant DHS and broader whole-of-government effort to ensure the secure development and implementation of artificial intelligence capabilities. DHS plays a critical role in ensuring AI safety and security nationwide.
    • “Last month, President Biden issued an Executive Order that directed DHS to promote the adoption of AI safety standards globally, protect U.S. networks and critical infrastructure, reduce the risks that AI can be used to create weapons of mass destruction, combat AI-related intellectual property theft, and help the United States attract and retain skilled talent, among other missions. As part of that effort, CISA’s roadmap outlines five strategic lines of effort for CISA that will drive concrete initiatives and outline CISA’s responsible approach to AI in cybersecurity.”
  • Federal News Network observes,
    • “When federal government agencies were breached by Chinese hackers due to a Microsoft Azure vulnerability, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency released an advisory calling for the use of more enhanced monitoring tools to build resilience against increasingly sophisticated attacks. This latest advisory was further amplified by the National Cybersecurity Strategy, which reinforced the need to make the government’s critical infrastructure more resilient by modernizing federal networks.  
    • “Despite these measures, a recent study shows that only 26% of the public sector (compared to 40% of the private sector) have a formal approach to building resilience. Moreover, federal agencies whose mission-set centers on critical infrastructure, such as the Departments of Energy or Transportation, still face challenges to maintain legacy toolsin contrast to the public sector as a whole.   
    • “This is because federal agencies need more support to implement modern monitoring tools that help improve their threat detection and response. Without the proper technology in place to match the challenges of today’s threat landscape, it is difficult to remain resilient when faced with an attack. But how might an organization begin to achieve the resilience required for today’s cyber threats?  
    • “It starts with federal agencies prioritizing observability strategies. Despite its growing popularity, observability is a fresh concept – one that can be difficult to define and see as a path to resilience without first understanding its foundation. The roots of observability can simply be traced down to a collection of logs, metrics and traces by which monitoring systems can more proactively mitigate potential threats.”

From the cybersecurity vulnerability and breaches front,

  • The HIPAA Journal offers its October 2023 Healthcare Data Breach Report.
    • “For the second consecutive month, the number of reported data breaches of 500 or more healthcare records has fallen, with October seeing the joint-lowest number of reported data breaches this year. After the 29.4% fall in reported data breaches from August to September, there was a further 16.7% reduction, with 40 data breaches reported by HIPAA-regulated entities in October – the opposite trend to what was observed in 2022, when data breaches increased from 49 in August 2022 to 71 breaches in October 2022. October’s total of 40 breaches is well below the 12-month average of 54 breaches per month (median:52 breaches).”
  • Federal News Network reports,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management faces a tight deadline to set up a new health insurance marketplace for Postal Service employees and retirees to enroll in new plans, starting next year.
    • “Now OPM is addressing watchdog concerns about whether the IT infrastructure supporting this new USPS marketplace is following federal cybersecurity requirements.
    • “OPM’s Office of Inspector General, in a flash audit released Friday, raised concerns about the cybersecurity steps OPM took before launching the IT systems that will run the Postal Service Health Benefits (PSHB) Program. * * *
    • “The IG report focuses on the steps OPM took to launch Carrier Connect, a system OPM uses to communicate and share data with health care providers. [FEHBLog note — FFF presumably refers to sharing data with FEHB plans.]
    • “According to the report, OPM officials acknowledged the agency started the assessment and authorization process too late in the security development lifecycle — in the summer of 2023 — and knew they would have to launch Carrier Connect under a provisional authority to operate (ATO).
    • IT security was not integrated at the beginning, and as a result, many of the required elements of an authorization to operate (ATO) package were not completed before the system was authorized to operate and placed into production,” the IG report states.”
  • HHS’s health sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) posted a PowerPoint presentation about Emotet malware, which HC3 describes as “the enduring and persistent threat to the health sector.”
  • This week, CISA added six known exploited vulnerabilities to its catalog on November 13, then another three on November 14, and then finally another three on November 16.
  • Get a load of this Dark Reading article.
    • “The ransomware group ALPHV (aka “BlackCat”) has filed a formal complaint with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), alleging that a recent victim failed to comply with new disclosure regulations. * * *
    • “Putting aside the sheer audacity of the move, ALPHV may be out of luck with the SEC for two reasons.
    • “For one thing, in a statement provided to BleepingComputer on Wednesday, MeridianLink stated that it wasn’t yet sure if any consumer personal information was compromised, adding that “based on our investigation to date, we have identified no evidence of unauthorized access to our production platforms, and the incident has caused minimal business interruption.” Exactly what data ALPHV stole and published may affect whether the breach is “material,” per SEC language.
    • “Second, as noted in its original press release, the new SEC disclosure rule only takes effect on Dec. 18. (Smaller companies will have even more leeway, with an extra 180 days before they have to get on board).
    • “Future victims of similar attacks will have fewer breaks to count on.
    • “Using the threat of filing a ‘failure to report’ complaint against its own victim to the SEC is a compelling tactic that could weaponize a government regulation for a cybercriminal group’s benefit,” Tiquet warns. “Disciplinary action from the SEC is not to be taken lightly and fines can be very steep.”

From the ransomware front

  • Cybersecurity Dive reports,
    • “The group of threat actors claiming responsibility for major attacks against MGM ResortsCaesars Entertainment and Clorox is composed of experts in social engineering, and federal cyber authorities are prodding more victims to come forward.
    • “Scattered Spider, which deploys AlphV ransomware in some of its attacks, uses multiple techniques and tools to gain remote access or bypass multifactor authentication, federal cyber authorities warned in a Thursday advisory.
    • “The FBI and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency shared technical details and data gleaned from investigations as recently as this month to help organizations thwart and mitigate attacks. Yet, officials say more information is needed, as a lack of reporting hinders law enforcement’s ability to take action.
    • “Scattered Spider’s high level of activity underscores the importance of prevention and the need for more victim organizations to report cyberattacks to CISA or the FBI, agency officials said.”
  • The American Hospital Association News adds,
    • “Scattered Spider’s sophisticated technical cyberattacks begin with sophisticated psychological attacks,” said John Riggi, AHA’s national advisor for cybersecurity and risk. “Scattered Spider employs social engineering techniques to deceive end users into providing their credentials, authentication codes or downloading ‘help desk’ tools on their computers that allow the adversary to gain and maintain persistent access to computer networks. Staff should be advised of help desk verification protocols and that help desk personnel should not be asking staff to divulge their credentials or multi-factor authentication codes. Conversely, the help desk should enhance its verification protocols and challenge questions to ensure they do not improperly reset staff credentials and to help staff distinguish valid help desk interaction from social engineering attempts.
  • On November 15, 2023, CISA issued a #StopRansomware Advisory regarding Rhysida Ransomware.
  • On November 13, 2023, CISA posted an update to its Royal Ransomware Advisory.
    • “The updated advisory provides network defenders with additional information on tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) and indicators of compromise (IOCs) associated with Royal ransomware variants. FBI investigations identified these TTPs and IOCs as recently as June 2023.”
  • Bleeping Computer’s The Week in Ransomware is back this week.

From the cybersecurity defenses front,

  • On November 17, CISA postedthe Mitigation Guide: Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) Sector as a supplemental companion to the HPH Cyber Risk Summary, published July 19, 2023. This guide provides defensive mitigation strategy recommendations and best practices to combat pervasive cyber threats affecting this critical infrastructure sector. It also identifies known vulnerabilities for organizations to assess their networks and minimize risks before intrusions occur.”
  • Forta tells us about Amazon Web Services’ Six Pillars of Cybersecurity.
  • Dark Reading explains how to build a resilient incident response team.

Friday Factoids

From Washington, DC,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • President Biden on Friday named W. Kimryn Rathmell to be the next director of the National Cancer Institute, where the prominent researcher will help oversee several White House-backed initiatives intended to reduce cancer deaths and accelerate clinical breakthroughs.
    • Rathmell, an expert in kidney cancer, is the chair of medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville. The Stanford University-trained physician and scientist has been a member of the National Cancer Institute’s board of scientific advisers since 2018, providing guidance to the institute’s leaders on its scientific research and operations. Rathmell’s new role as head of the cancer institute, which the White House said would begin in December, does not require Senate confirmation.
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management faces a tight deadline to set up a new health insurance marketplace for Postal Service employees and retirees to enroll in new plans, starting next year.
    • “Now OPM is addressing watchdog concerns about whether the IT infrastructure supporting this new USPS marketplace is following federal cybersecurity requirements.
    • “OPM’s Office of Inspector General, in a flash audit released Friday, raised concerns about the cybersecurity steps OPM took before launching the IT systems that will run the Postal Service Health Benefits (PSHB) Program.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • The Office of Personnel Management this week proposed new regulations delegating its authority to waive the caps on recruitment and relocation incentive payments to federal employees and job candidates to the agencies themselves, a move the federal government’s HR agency says will ease administrative burdens and accelerate the hiring process. * * *
    • “Under the new process, each agency would be required to designate an official who would be tasked with reviewing and adjudicating waiver requests. Additionally, the new regulations would eliminate the minimum service period required to receive an incentive payment. Currently set at six months, OPM argued that removal of the minimum time period would allow short-term, yet still difficult to fill positions such as paid internships to become eligible for recruitment and relocation incentives.
    • “Retention incentive payments would not change under the regulatory proposal, as OPM reported that such changes would require the passage of legislation by Congress.”
  • The Government Accountability Office issued a report on the composition of the federal workforce.
    • “The federal government aims to hire and promote a workforce that reflects the diversity of the U.S. population.
    • “We looked at a decade of federal employment trends. For example, from 2011-2021 there were minor changes in the representation of historically disadvantaged racial groups—like Black or African American and Asians—in the federal workforce. But several of these groups made gains in senior executive service positions.
    • “The percentage of Hispanic federal workers also increased. But in FY 2021, Hispanic individuals made up 10% of the federal workforce, even though they represented 18% of the civilian labor force.”
  • Reuters reports,
    • “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Thursday it has expedited the release of more than 77,000 additional doses of Sanofi (SASY.PA) and AstraZeneca’s (AZN.L) respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) drug Beyfortus.
    • “The additional doses, which the CDC said will be distributed immediately to physicians and hospitals, will help improve the availability of the drug at a time when a surge in cases of the disease is outpacing supply.
    • “Beyfortus was approved earlier this year to prevent the disease in infants and toddlers.
    • “CDC said the agency, along with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, will continue to be in close contact with the manufacturers to ensure availability of additional doses through the end of this year and early 2024 to meet the demand.”

In FEHB News, Federal News Network offers a lengthy and informative exchange with Kevin Moss from Consumer Checkbook.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News points out,
    • “Flu activity in many parts of the United States is starting to rise more rapidly, signaling that flu season is on the horizon, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Friday.
    • “With Americans set to travel for Thanksgiving gatherings next week, people who’ve been waiting to get a flu shot should think about acting now, Alicia Budd, the CDC’s team lead for domestic flu surveillance, told STAT.
    • “Really what we’re seeing is a more sharp increase in activity, week over week, and we know from experience when that happens often times we are entering into that period of even more increased activity,” Budd said. “It’s a great time for people to get vaccinated, if they’ve been holding off.”
  • ABC News states,
    • An estimated 36 million adults in the United States have received the updated COVID-19 vaccine as of Monday according to new data from the federal government.  Additionally, about 3.5 million children have also gotten the updated shot, according to the survey, which is a sample size of the U.S. population, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This is roughly equal to the number of Americans who had received the bivalent booster — which was targeted against different COVID variants — by this time last year.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration said it is screening cinnamon shipments from several countries as part of its investigation of illnesses potentially linked to pouches of cinnamon-flavored applesauce.
    • “The federal agency said this week it believes the cinnamon used in these products could be the source of lead contamination. There have been 34 reports of lead-related illnesses potentially tied to the recalled products. 
    • “The FDA, which has been investigating the lead illnesses since October, said they are potentially linked to contaminated children’s fruit puree and applesauce pouches. WanaBana,  Weis Markets and Schnucks brands have recalled cinnamon-flavored fruit puree and applesauce pouches.”
  • CNN reports,
    • “The rate of premature birth in the United States remains high, especially in the southern region of the country, according to the infant and maternal health nonprofit March of Dimes.
    • “The group’s annual “report card” on US maternal and infant health, released Thursday, says that the nation’s preterm birth rate – the rate of babies born before 37 weeks gestation – was 10.4% in 2022, down only 1% from 2021’s rate, which was the highest in more than a decade.
    • “We went from 10.5% to 10.4%. It’s flat,” said Dr. Elizabeth Cherot, president and chief executive officer of March of Dimes. “A slight change is just not big enough in that direction.”
  • Per NBC News,
    • The rate of child and teen cancer deaths in the U.S. fell 24% from 2001 to 2021, according to a CDC report released Thursday. The report looked at death rates, for Black, Hispanic and non-Hispanic whit youths up to 19 years old. These groups comprised 92% of all youth cancer deaths in 2021, the report noted.
  • Per STAT News, while Wegovy and Zepbound ride high, interest in weight loss drugs that preserve muscle is surging.
    • [B]iotech startups are hoping to use those [earlier Johns Hopkins] findings to create what they believe will be better weight loss medications. In the last several months, multiple companies have disclosed they are testing drugs that preserve or grow muscle while reducing fat, as shown in the updated STAT Obesity Drug Tracker. They hope that their drugs, possibly when used in conjunction with existing obesity treatments, will result in healthier weight loss.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • Rochester, Minnesota-based Mayo Clinic reported increased year-over-year operating revenue and income in its third-quarter earnings, on higher outpatient visits and surgical cases.
    • The nonprofit posted $4.5 billion in operating revenue, up 8.2% year over year, and $302 million in operating income. Operating expenses rose 4.8% year over year, totaling nearly $4.2 billion.
    • The earnings mark the third quarter Mayo has posted net income after the operator struggled last year. The health system reported profits last year that were half its 2021 returns, after contract labor expenses increased 37% year over year. 
  • and
    • For-profit operator Tenet Healthcare has agreed to sell three of its hospitals in South Carolina for about $2.4 billion in cash to Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Novant Health. 
    • Proceeds from the deal, which is expected to close in the first quarter in 2024, will primarily go toward paying debt, Tenet said in a news release. 
    • Under the agreement, Dallas-based Tenet’s financial services subsidiary Conifer Health Solutions will also provide revenue cycle management for the hospitals and their related operations under an expanded 15-year contract. 
  • and
    • CommonSpirit Health reported a $441 million operating loss in the first quarter of the 2024 fiscal year on increased expenses.
    • The system expects a California assistance fund — due to be approved later this fall — to offset its operational losses slightly. However, CommonSpirit’s net loss ballooned to $738 million in the quarter as investments faltered, compared to a $413 million loss same time last year, according to its earnings report filed Wednesday
    • In the report, CommonSpirit also outlined plans to expand its ambulatory care footprint next year after a string of recent outpatient acquisitions in multiple states, despite liquidity concerns.

Thursday Miscellany

From Washington, DC,

  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management released its Fiscal Year 2023 Agency Financial Report today. Worth reading is the OPM Director’s response to the OPM Inspector General’s Top Management Issues letter.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued its proposed 2025 benefit and payment parameters notice. Here is the government’s fact sheet on the proposed rule. Published alongside the proposed rule is HHS’s final guidance on Maximum Annual Limitation on Cost Sharing for the 2025 Benefit Year, which does apply to FEHB plans.
    • “Under 45 CFR 156.130(a)(2), for the 2025 calendar year, cost sharing for self-only coverage may not exceed the dollar limit for calendar year 2014 increased by an amount equal to the product of that amount and the premium adjustment percentage for 2025. For other than self-only coverage, the limit is twice the dollar limit for self-only coverage. Under § 156.130(d), these amounts must be rounded down to the next lowest multiple of $50. Using the premium adjustment percentage for 2025 of 1.4519093322, and the 2014 maximum annual limitation on cost sharing of $6,350 for self-only coverage, which was published by the Internal Revenue Service on May 2, 2013, the 2025 maximum annual limitation on cost sharing is $9,200 for self-only coverage and $18,400 for other than self-only coverage. This represents an approximately 2.6 percent decrease from the 2024 parameters of $9,450 for self-only coverage and $18,900 for other than self-only coverage.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Congress included a one-year delay to Medicare reimbursement cuts for clinical laboratory services in the short-term funding bill passed this week, granting a reprieve in targeted payment reductions of up to 15%.
    • “The stopgap bill to keep the government open, passed by the House on Tuesday and the Senate on Wednesday, provides a one-year reprieve from Medicare cuts that would have gone into effect in January for about 800 laboratory services.
    • “The American Clinical Laboratory Association (ACLA), a trade group whose members include Labcorp and Quest Diagnostics, called the delay “critically needed” to preserve patient access to many of the most commonly ordered lab tests.”
  • HHS also reminds us that
    • “Today [the agency] celebrates National Rural Health Day and recognizes the creativity and innovation of leaders across the country working to ensure access to high quality care for over 60 million Americans living in rural communities. National Rural Health Day is the third Thursday of every November and recognizes the efforts of rural providers, communities, organizations, state offices of rural health, and others dedicated to addressing the unique health care needs of rural America.” 

In FEHB Open Season news, Tammy Flanigan discusses Open Season and tax savings in Govexec.

From the public health and research front,

  • The New York Times points out the differences between Influenza A and Influenza B.
  • NCQA released its Quality Talks newsletter.
  • STAT News informs us,
    • “History just happened.
    • “For the first time, a regulator has cleared a treatment using CRISPR, the gene-editing technology, for patients. The regulator is the United Kingdom’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. The product is Casgevy, a treatment for sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia, two blood disorders. It was developed by CRISPR Therapeutics, the Swiss company co-founded by Nobel laureate Emmanuelle Charpentier, and Vertex Pharmaceuticals, a large Boston-based biotech firm.”
    • The article covers questions and answers about this significant development.
  • Smileyscope has made history by becoming the first virtual reality (VR) device to receive FDA Class II clearance for acute pain. This approval recognizes Smileyscope’s innovative Procedural Choreography™ technique, which uses positive virtual stimuli to reduce pain and anxiety during medical procedures. With this milestone, Smileyscope aims to revolutionize pain and anxiety management, partnering with hospitals and clinicians globally to enhance patient experiences and improve clinical workflows.”

Midweek update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Senate passed legislation Wednesday to extend funding for federal agencies, sending the bill to avert a government shutdown to President Biden’s desk just days before the weekend deadline.
    • “The bill, which passed by an 87-11 vote, represents a marked de-escalation between congressional Democrats and new House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.). Without the new spending measure, called a continuing resolution or CR, the government would have shut down just after midnight Saturday, forcing federal workers — including military members and airport security agents — to work without pay or go on furlough on the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday.”
  • Roll Call informs us,
    • “House lawmakers left town Wednesday for Thanksgiving after a GOP revolt that led to defeat of the rule for floor debate on the final two pieces of legislation the chamber was scheduled to consider.
    • “Nineteen Republicans voted against the rule for the fiscal 2024 Commerce-Justice-Science spending bill and separate legislation dealing with frozen Iranian assets.
    • “Combined with all Democrats voting “no,” the measure was rejected on a 198-225 vote, leaving the House with no further business to attend to after dispensing with a series of pending amendments to the fiscal 2024 Labor-HHS-Education appropriations bill.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “taking the next step in working to ensure greater access to the life-saving services that it provides for people with Limited English Proficiency (LEP) and people with disabilities. In releasing the HHS Language Access Plan, HHS joins agencies across the federal government in prioritizing communication in services to the public. Today’s action supports President Biden’s Executive Orders to advance racial equity and support for underserved communities, which aims to improve access to benefits and services across the Administration, including for people with LEP.”
  • and
    • On November 15, 2023, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) placed on display at the Federal Registera final rule that will implement portions of section 6101 of the Affordable Care Act, requiring the disclosure of certain ownership, managerial, and other information regarding Medicare skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) and Medicaid nursing facilities, commonly known as nursing homes. It also defines the terms private equity company and real estate investment trust, about which information must be disclosed on Form CMS-855A, the Medicare enrollment application. This final rule continues a series of initiatives the Biden-Harris Administration announced in February 2022[1], designed to improve care and accountability at such facilities.
  • Per Govexec,
    • “The U.S. Postal Service lost $6.5 billion in fiscal 2023 despite initial projections it would break even for the year, and leadership cautioned the agency will once again be in the red in fiscal 2024. 
    • “Looking at only the parts of the operation that USPS leadership considers within its control, losses spiked to $2.3 billion compared to just $500 million in fiscal 2022 and a controllable profit of $1.5 billion in fiscal 2021. At the start of fiscal 2023, USPS forecasted a $4 billion loss. The negative financial numbers occurred despite the Postal Service growing its total revenue by $500 million. 
    • “Postal leadership attributed much of the losses—about $5.6 billion—to two factors: ongoing inflation and a miscalculation of what it must statutorily contribute toward its pension fund. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy also noted USPS is incurring upfront costs as it updates its network as part of his 10-year Delivering for America plan.” 
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • granting marketing authorization to LetsGetChecked for the Simple 2 Test. This is the first diagnostic test for chlamydia and gonorrhea with at-home sample collection to be granted marketing authorization. Prior to today’s authorization, the only cleared tests for either condition were used with samples collected at the point of care, such as a doctor’s office. The Simple 2 Test is available over-the-counter (OTC) and is intended for use in adult patients ages 18 years and older. It is the first FDA-authorized test with at-home sample collection for any sexually-transmitted disease other than HIV.

In Open Season news, Reg Jones discusses the FEDVIP and FSAFeds offerings in Fedweek.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News reports from London,
    • Clinical trials have shown that lifestyle programs — which include diet, exercise, and behavioral coaching — can help people in danger of developing type 2 diabetes from tipping into a diagnosis of the condition. But there’s been a nagging question of whether such intensive regimens work in the real world.
    • A study published Wednesday backs up the idea that they can. Researchers behind the work relied on novel statistical approaches to analyze millions of records from England’s National Health Service and found that participants in the NHS’s Diabetes Prevention Program saw improvements in risk factors for type 2 diabetes, indicating that patients can benefit from such initiatives even outside the confines of a controlled experiment.
  • The Washington Post points out,
    • “Lung cancer survival rates have increased over the past five years, but serious disparities remain among Black and Latino communities, according to the American Lung Association’s 2023 “State of Lung Cancer” report released Tuesday.
    • “The report highlights the need for better messaging about screening for lung cancer, which is still the nation’s leading cause of cancer-related deaths. The disease claims more than 120,000 lives each year, according to the American Cancer Societyin part because it is most often diagnosed at later stages when the cancer is harder to treat.
    • “The national survival rate for lung cancer jumped nearly five percentage points, from 21.7 to 26.6 percent, over the last five years, said report author Zach Jump, the national senior director of epidemiology, statistics and research at the American Lung Association.”
  • KFF lets us know,
    • “The U.S. spends huge amounts of money on health care that does little or nothing to help patients, and may even harm them. In Colorado, a new analysis shows that the number of tests and treatments conducted for which the risks and costs exceed the benefits has barely budged despite a decade-long attempt to tamp down on such care.
    • “The state — including the government, insurers, and patients themselves — spent $134 million last year on what is called low-value care, according to the report by the Center for Improving Value in Health Care, a Denver nonprofit that collects billing data from health plans across Colorado. The top low-value items in terms of spending in each of the past three years were prescriptions for opiates, prescriptions for multiple antipsychotics, and screenings for vitamin D deficiency, according to the analysis.”
  • McKinsey and Company discusses how
    • “Clinical factors are responsible for just 20 percent of individuals’ health outcomes; the remainder can be attributed to factors such as health-related social needs (HRSNs).1 Increasing recognition of the impact of these needs on consumers’ health and livelihoods is driving momentum across the healthcare ecosystem to integrate health and social care, creating opportunities for healthcare entities to design consumer-centric models of care tailored to individual needs and preferences.
    • This article synthesizes insights gleaned from a survey of more than 5,000 US consumers that highlights how HRSNs are evolving; their potential impact on healthcare use, preferences, and outcomes; and actions healthcare entities may consider to effectively support consumers’ needs.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Researchers are coming up with new ways to make medical studies less white.
    • “They are building trust in groups long ignored by science and working with doctors and patients of color to design better studies. They are opening research sites in more diverse communities and providing stipends to help people participating in their studies pay for gas and child care.
    • “The efforts are starting to work: More people of color are participating in medical research. That is good news for everyone. Data from clinical trials—used to approve drugs and train artificial intelligence on medical decision-making—until recently failed to include swaths of the population. In the future, more diverse data sets will lead to better treatments and prevention of diseases in people of different backgrounds.
    • “Without diversity, we lose the ability to address fundamental problems that lead to suffering and loss of life,” said Dr. Carol Horowitz, director of Mount Sinai’s Institute for Health Equity Research.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Amazon’s One Medical inked a major partnership with Health Transformation Alliance, expanding access to its primary care services to 67 employers and nearly 5 million employees.
    • HTA is a collective of large U.S. employers, and its member companies include Coca-Cola, American Express, Marriott, Boeing and Intel.
    • “Employers are grappling with rising healthcare costs and expect health benefit expenses to climb 5.4% in 2024, according to Mercer.
    • “HTA, on behalf of its member companies, saw an opportunity to partner with One Medical to provide access to high-quality primary care services while also addressing inefficiencies and costs in the healthcare system, according to HTA CEO Robert Andrews.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Gilead is expanding its collaboration with cancer cell therapy developer Arcellx, announcing Wednesday that subsidiary Kite Pharma has used an option to license a second experimental drug. The partners will also broaden their collaboration on a cell therapy that was the subject of the initial partnership.
    • “Per deal terms, Gilead will buy $200 million of Arcellx shares, giving it a 13% stake, as well as pay an $85 million cash fee. Arcellx will be owed undisclosed payments on achievement of development milestones “to offset prespecified development costs,” according to Gilead.
    • “Last year, Gilead paid $225 million upfront and made a $100 million investment in Arcellx to secure access to the first drug in the collaboration, a type of cancer treatment called CAR-T therapy, which engineers a patient’s own immune cells to attack tumors.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence notes,
    • “Members with diabetes spend between $3,300 and $4,600 per year in out-of-pocket costs for chronic disease management, including lost wages, according to a new report from GoodRx Health.
    • “These out-of-pocket cost estimates accounted for health insurance coverage but still represented 6 to 8 percent of the typical yearly wage in the US.
    • “The researchers addressed the cost of managing diabetes separately from the cost of complications. They used data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) for 2021 and prices across online diabetes medical device suppliers to assess healthcare spending among patients with diabetes.”