Thursday Miscellany

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • Today the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, through its Administration for Community Living, released “Aging in the United States: A Strategic Framework for a National Plan on Aging – PDF.” The report lays the groundwork for a coordinated effort – across the private and public sectors and in partnership with older adults, family caregivers, the aging services network, and other stakeholders – to create a national set of recommendations for advancing healthy aging and age-friendly communities that value and truly include older adults. The national plan on aging will advance best practices for service delivery, support development and strengthening of partnerships within and across sectors, identify solutions for removing barriers to health and independence for older adults, and more. Developed by leaders and experts from 16 federal agencies and departments working together through the Interagency Coordinating Committee (ICC) on Healthy Aging and Age-Friendly Communities, the report also reflects input from community partners and leaders in the aging services network.
  • The Assistant Secretary of Labor for Employee Benefit Security, Lisa Gomez, reminds us,
    • “May is Mental Health Awareness Month, reminding us of the critical need to prioritize mental well-being – especially in the workplace where many spend a significant portion of their time. Did you know that more than 1 in 5 adults in America live with a mental illness? Mental health issues can affect job performance, relationships and overall well-being. Understanding your rights and support systems can make a world of difference. 
    • “Here are three actions you can take to get the mental health care you deserve through your job-based health plan: 
    • Use your benefits: * * * For more information, read our publication “Understanding Your Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Benefits.”
    • Don’t take no for an answer: * * * You also can look at our publication “Filing a Claim for Your Benefits” for steps to help navigate this process. 
    • Contact the Department for help:  Know that support for your mental health journey is available – you don’t have to go through it alone. One source of support is found by contacting a benefits advisor with the Department’s Employee Benefits Security Administration at askebsa.dol.gov or by calling 1-866-444-3272 for assistance with any questions or problems you encounter when trying to use the mental health and substance use disorder benefits under your job-based health plan. The benefits advisors can help you understand your rights, your health plan and its appeal process.”
  • The American Hospital News lets us know,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention May 29 published a blog co-authored by AHA, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, highlighting efforts by federal agencies and the hospital field to address the mental health and well-being of health care workers following incidents of workplace violence. The blog contains several resources, such as AHA’s Hospitals Against Violence Initiative, the Building a Safer Workplace and Community infographic, and information about #HAVhope Friday on June 7 * * *.
  • HR Dive informs us,
    • “Employers run afoul of federal law when they fire someone for not disclosing a disability during a job interview or for waiting until after they were hired to ask for an accommodation, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission warned in a May 21 lawsuit.
    • “Per the complaint in EEOC v. All Day Medical Care Clinic, LLC, on her first day of work, a scheduling assistant for a Maryland-based healthcare provider notified the CEO she had a vision impairment and needed a magnifier and Zoomtext software as an accommodation. The CEO allegedly advised her that things would have been different if she’d mentioned her disability and accommodation needs during her interview and told her to leave, according to court documents.
    • “The EEOC sued the healthcare provider for allegedly violating the Americans with Disabilities Act. Under the ADA, “job applicants do not need to reveal their disabilities before being hired,” Debra Lawrence, regional attorney for the EEOC’s Philadelphia district office, explained in a press release. “When an employer penalizes an employee for not raising issues of disability and reasonable accommodation, it is requiring the employee to reveal information the employee legally does not have to divulge,” Lawrence said. All Day Medical Care did not respond to a request for a comment prior to press time.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “A third farmworker in the United States has been found to be infected with bird flu, heightening concerns about an outbreak among dairy cattle first identified in March.”A third farmworker in the United States has been found to be infected with bird flu, heightening concerns about an outbreak among dairy cattle first identified in March.
    • “The worker is the first in this outbreak to have respiratory symptoms, including a cough, sore throat and watery eyes, which generally increase the likelihood of transmission to other people, federal officials said on Thursday.
    • “The other two people had only severe eye infections, possibly because of exposure to contaminated milk.
    • “All three individuals had direct exposure to dairy cows, and so far none has spread the virus to other people, Dr. Nirav Shah, principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said at a news briefing.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Using a combination of cutting-edge immunologic technologies, researchers have successfully stimulated animals’ immune systems to induce rare precursor B cells of a class of HIV broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs). The findings, published today in Nature Immunology, are an encouraging, incremental step in developing a preventive HIV vaccine.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review released,
    • “its revised Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of ensifentrine (Verona Pharma) for the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).”its revised Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of ensifentrine (Verona Pharma) for the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
    • “COPD is a common cause of severe respiratory problems,” said ICER’s Chief Medical Officer, David Rind, MD. “People with COPD can experience persistent shortness of breath and fatigue that can significantly affect their daily activities. Current evidence shows that ensifentrine decreases exacerbations when used in combination with some current inhaled therapies and is well-tolerated by patients, but there are uncertainties about how much benefit it may add to unstudied combinations of inhaled treatments.” * * *
    • Key Clinical FindingsKey Clinical Findings
      • “ICER does not have significant concerns about harms with ensifentrine. We have high certainty that ensifentrine added to maintenance therapy, compared with maintenance therapy alone, results in at least a small net health benefit, and may result in substantial net health benefit (“B+”). We have somewhat greater certainty in the benefits when ensifentrine is added to the regimens studied in the clinical trials than when added to optimized modern inhaler therapies for COPD.
    • Key Cost-Effectiveness Findings
      • “Ensifentrine has not yet been approved by the FDA, and the manufacturer has not announced a US price if approved. ICER has calculated a health-benefit price benchmark (HBPB) for ensifentrine to be between $7,500 to $12,700 per year.”
  • The Centers for Medicare Services is contemplating moving coverage of PreExposure Prophylaxsis using Antiviral Therapy to prevent HIV infection from Medicare Part D to Medicare Part B.
  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • “Screens are inherently harmful to our sleep, right?
    • “It isn’t that black and white, some sleep experts now say.
    • “Spurred by recent research, sleep scientists and doctors are rethinking the conventional wisdom. In some cases, they are backing away from dogmatic approaches such as cutting out screens two hours before bedtime. And they are questioning how much the dreaded “blue light” actually delays sleep.
    • “It is becoming more evident that the tech in and of itself isn’t always the problem,” says Shelby Harris, a clinical psychologist specializing in behavioral sleep medicine in New York. “We need to figure out how to tailor the recommendations to the person.”
  • Mercer Consulting discusses “Help for opioid addiction: Some progress, much more to do.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues shares the views of 32 payer executives about changes to healthcare delivery in the next ten years. For example,
    • Bruce Rogen, MD. Chief Medical Officer of Cleveland Clinic Employee Health Plan: Longitudinal patient records on each patient accessible by providers caring for the patient having a complete history of clinical data sourced from multiple EMRs and across payers and over time going back years if not decades.
    • AI platforms that are able to access the longitudinal patient record to engage the patient in preventive care, filling gaps in care, managing medication refills, enhancing medication compliance, and obtaining prior authorization from payers when indicated.
    • Teams of healthcare providers using the longitudinal patient record and the AI platforms to provide care anywhere and everywhere (hospital, post-acute, home care, remote, virtual) and focusing on prevention. The team includes physicians, nurses, navigators, care coordinators, pharmacists, social workers, behavioral health psychologists and counselors, community healthcare workers and home care workers.
    • Ilan Shapiro, MD. Chief Health Correspondent, Medical Affairs Officer and Senior Vice President at AltaMed (Los Angeles): In 10 years, healthcare delivery will likely be more patient-centric and value-based, with AI technology playing a crucial role in both treatment and prevention of illnesses. Patients will be incentivized for proactive wellness steps, fostering a culture of health promotion. Nationwide care coordination will be streamlined, reducing constraints and enhancing accessibility. This transformation will empower patients and healthcare teams, ensuring that care is brought back to the community level.
  • Per FierceHealthcare
    • “Well-being programs continue to be a central focus for employers, and they’re evolving the reach of these offerings into new areas such as the social determinants of health, according to a new survey.
    • “The Business Group on Health and Fidelity Investments released their annual look at employers’ strategies around wellness on Wednesday, and found nearly all of the 160 surveyed firms said they view well-being programs as a being key to their overall strategy. These employers said they intend to continue funding these programs at current levels.
    • “In addition, more than half (51%) said they plan to build out their well-being programs to tackle social needs in the next three to five years.”
  • The Wall Street Journal examines the connection between private equity investments and growing healthcare costs.
    • “Consolidation is as American as apple pie.
    • “When a business gets bigger, it forces mom-and-pop players out of the market, but it can boost profits and bring down costs, too. Think about the pros and cons of Walmart and “Every Day Low Prices.” In a complex, multitrillion-dollar system like America’s healthcare market, though, that principle has turned into a harmful arms race that has helped drive prices increasingly higher without improving care. 
    • “Years of dealmaking has led to sprawling hospital systems, vertically integrated health insurance companies, and highly concentrated private equity-owned practices resulting in diminished competition and even the closure of vital health facilities. As this three-part Heard on the Street series will show, the rich rewards and lax oversight ultimately create pain for both patients and the doctors who treat them. Belatedly, state and federal regulators and lawmakers are zeroing in on consolidation, creating uncertainty for the investors who have long profited from the healthcare merger boom.”
  • STAT News considers the lack of consensus over the meaning of value-based care. Sigh.
    • “Mai Pham, president of the Institute for Exceptional Care, said her benchmark for success is not how health care providers are feeling. It’s what is actually happening to the nation’s health, and the status quo in her view is unacceptable. Life expectancy among Americans has plateaued, and life expectancy for Americans in the prime years of their lives is falling. This trend, Pham noted, started before the Covid-19 pandemic, and it’s happening across races and geography.
    • “It’s difficult to say whether value-based care has been a success. Medicare has tried a broad range of programs and strategies, each of which has involved a broad range of organizations. Some have done well, others have not.
    • “So it’s not a binary answer,” Pham said. “What I would say is that it has not lived up to the hype.”
  • mHealth Intelligence tells us,
    • “Though telehealth use skyrocketed among United States adults with private health insurance during the COVID-19 pandemic, new research reveals that rural residents utilized telehealth less than their urban peers.
    • “The research, published by the AARP Public Policy Institute last week, examined changes in telehealth use from 2019 to 2021 among people younger than 65 enrolled in private, employer-sponsored health insurance plans.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • Senators and experts on Tuesday examined the range of tools that brand-name drug manufacturers have used to keep generic and biosimilar competition at bay — from patent thickets and product hopping to “pay-for-delay” settlements — and wrestled with how to prevent such abuses.
    • “Too often the prices charged by Big Pharma do not reflect a scientific advancement,” argued Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), during a Tuesday hearing of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary. “Rather, they’re the result of skilled lawyers manipulating the patent system and skirting our nation’s competition laws.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to lowering health care costs, promoting innovation, and making sure that taxpayer investments result in advancements in biomedical research that are accessible to everyone across the country.
    • “Today, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) issued a first of its kind draft policy proposal to promote equitable access to products stemming from NIH-owned inventions. By requiring organizations partnering with the NIH through patent license agreements to outline detailed plans for patient access to drugs, biologics, vaccines, or devices developed from NIH-owned inventions, we are accelerating how breakthroughs in medical research originating from the NIH’s Intramural Research Program can translate into affordable and sustainable solutions for patients across the country. NIH has released a request for information and welcomes public input to inform this new policy.”
  • The American Hospital News informs us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services May 21 announced that individuals now have the option to file an Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act complaint directly with the agency, in addition to the traditional process of contacting state survey agencies. The new form is the latest in a series of new resources from CMS to help educate the public about EMTALA.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “The CDC is asking health officials in all 50 states to continue monitoring the prevalence of influenza as H5N1 bird flu infections among poultry and livestock increase and have begun to prompt concern over the possibility of human-to-human transmission, according to a news release shared with Becker’s.”The CDC is asking health officials in all 50 states to continue monitoring the prevalence of influenza as H5N1 bird flu infections among poultry and livestock increase and have begun to prompt concern over the possibility of human-to-human transmission, according to a news release shared with Becker’s.
    • “As of May 21, there has only been one confirmed human infection of the current H5N1 outbreak in a dairy farm employee in Texas, but no evidence of human-to-human transmission.”
  • KFF adds a report titled “Who is at Risk Amid the H5N1 Influenza Outbreak? Characteristics and Health Coverage of Animal Production Workers.”
  • The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association lets us know,
    • “Despite the explosion in demand for weight loss drugs known as GLP-1s, 58% of patients discontinue use before reaching a clinically meaningful health benefit. This is the key finding from new researchreleased by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) and conducted by Blue Health Intelligence® (BHI) based on data from nearly 170,000 commercial health plan members since the first FDA approval for a weight-loss GLP-1 in 2014.  
    • “When patients take medication, we want it to be safe and effective,” said Razia Hashmi MD, MPH, FAAFP, vice president of Clinical Affairs at BCBSA. “This study shows most people are unlikely to see lasting benefits.  Unfortunately, weight loss isn’t as simple as filling a prescription.”
    • “In the largest study using commercial data to date on this topic, BHI’s assessment also found that 30% of patients discontinued use of the medications within the first month. 
    • “This study underscores how much more we have to learn about these medications,” said Kim Keck, president and CEO of BCBSA. “The science behind these drugs is moving faster than our ability to truly understand which patients will benefit, how to sustain their success and how to pay for them. If we don’t get it right, we will drive up costs for everyone with little to show for it.” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Hundreds of genetic variants can nudge someone’s risk of breast cancer up or down or towards a particular subtype. The studies identifying those gene variants, though, have largely involved people with European ancestry and thus give a less accurate picture of breast cancer risk for people who are not white.
    • “That’s beginning to change. Last week, researchers published a genome-wide association study on breast cancer in roughly 40,000 people of African descent in Nature Genetics, marking a leap forward in scientists’ knowledge of breast cancer genetics in people of African ancestry.
    • “Before we started this study in 2016, there were just several thousand cases for Black Americans. It was a very small number,” said Wei Zheng, the study’s senior investigator and a cancer epidemiologist at Vanderbilt University. This study combined data from dozens of other studies and included genetic data for thousands of new participants, making it the largest combined breast cancer genetics study done with people with African ancestry.
    • “Specifically, the study compiled data from about 30 different studies investigating breast cancer in African or African American people. About 18,000 of them had breast cancer, while the other 22,000 were healthy controls, and investigators were able to scour their genetic data for specific variations that seemed closely related to breast cancer. The statistical power that comes with such numbers enabled the team to make two key advances.
    • “First, the team found 12 loci, or locations in the genome, that showed a significant association with breast cancer. Of those, the team identified variants of three genes that appear to increase the risk of triple negative breast cancer, one of the most aggressive subtypes. Since everyone has two copies or alleles of each gene, that means someone could have anywhere between one and six risk-related alleles of these three genes. Those who had all six risk-related alleles had roughly double the chance of getting triple negative breast cancer than those who only had three. * * *
    • “The other advance came when the researchers used the data to build a breast cancer risk prediction model for people with African ancestry. Such models take into account hundreds of different genetic variants that can slightly push breast cancer risk up, adding them all up into a polygenic risk score.”
  • The Wall Street Journal relates,
    • GSK’s experimental drug for asthma met its goals in the latest trial, moving a treatment with potential annual peak sales of more than 3 billion pounds ($3.81 billion) closer to market.
    • The British pharmaceutical company’s depemokimab drug reduced asthma attacks in late-stage trials for patients with severe eosinophilic asthma, a form of the disease caused by high levels of white blood cells, GSK said Tuesday.
    • Depemokimab could be the first approved drug to allow a long-term dosing interval, requiring only two injections a year. This would benefit patients exposed to multiple therapies, the company said.
    • GSK plans to submit the drug for approval for severe asthma in the U.S. in the second half of the year.
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration is seeking examples of artificial intelligence and machine learning models that can identify and predict freezing of gait events related to Parkinson’s disease. 
    • “Freezing of gait is a temporary loss of forward movement while walking. These episodes affect people’s quality of life and daily activities, but they can be difficult to measure because they often happen when patients are outside of a clinic or hospital setting. 
    • “By testing these models against its own data, the FDA hopes to better understand the ability of these technologies to provide digitally derived endpoints that could help with early disease detection and prevention or support treatment and care in the home.” 
  • From the U.S. healthcare business front,
  • Milliman tells us, “In 2024, the cost of healthcare for a hypothetical American family of four in a typical employer-sponsored health plan is $32,066, according to the Milliman Medical Index (MMI).”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “National drugstore chains, once resistant to the retail apocalypse that swept across the U.S., are finally succumbing to competition from online shopping and discount stores.
    • “About 3,000 fewer drugstores were open for business at the start of this year compared with the same period in 2019, according to analytics company RetailStat, which tracks 15 pharmacy chains. 
    • CVS HealthWalgreens and Rite Aid have each closed hundreds of stores since the onset of the pandemic. Online shopping has been growing and offers customers a more convenient way to buy household staples. 
    • “Competition has also increased from discount retailers such as Walmart, grocers such as Aldi, and dollar stores, which all sell many of the same items at lower prices. The spread of beauty stores such as Sephora further siphoned customers from drugstore aisles. 
    • “Everybody’s gone after a component of their business,” said Henry Fonvielle, president of the real-estate company Rappaport.”
  • STAT News notes that “Reports of telehealth’s death have been greatly exaggerated.”
    • “Virtual care isn’t in trouble. What is in trouble are the aftermarket telehealth solutions that largely function as a virtual extension of our siloed, fragmented health care system. This specific application of virtual care, which we call Telehealth 1.0, has consistently failed to bring meaningful value to patients, clinicians, and purchasers.
    • “In that sense, its collapse is a welcome development. It’s a sign that the market discerns where the real value lies in virtual care, and it validates the evolution from transactional, one-off care to more sophisticated virtual-first models.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “UnitedHealth-owned Optum Rx, one of the biggest pharmacy benefit managers in the U.S., is launching a new drug pricing model next year meant to make payers’ spending on pharmaceuticals more predictable.
    • “The model, called Clear Trend Guarantee, combines costs that used to be separated out, including retail pharmacy, home delivery, specialty drug and rebates, into one single per-member price, according to a Monday release.
    • “Clear Trend is value-based, meaning Optum Rx will share in any savings tied to patient outcomes created in the model.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “The Purchaser Business Group on Health has unveiled a new purchasing agreement that aims to improve maternal health.”The Purchaser Business Group on Health has unveiled a new purchasing agreement that aims to improve maternal health.
    • “Benefits experts at retail giant Walmart and technology company Qualcomm led the initiative as co-chairs, with the goal of establishing “a collective commitment among employers and public purchasers of healthcare” to address maternal health and birth equity, according to an announcement from PBGH.
    • “The agreement centers on five key principles: deploying evidence-based, coordinated models to ensure high-quality care; ensuring timely access; promoting equitable care built on cultural humility; transparency and accountability; and value-based care.
    • “It also establishes a consensus for employers and public healthcare purchasers as to what high-quality and high-value maternity care is and outlines expectations for both insurers and providers to follow to meet that bar.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “A decade ago, as British drugmaker AstraZeneca fought off a hostile takeover bid by Pfizer, CEO Pascal Soriot made a big promise: The company, he said, would boost sales by nearly three-quarters to reach $45 billion by 2023.”A decade ago, as British drugmaker AstraZeneca fought off a hostile takeover bid by Pfizer, CEO Pascal Soriot made a big promise: The company, he said, would boost sales by nearly three-quarters to reach $45 billion by 2023.
    • “With that goal now successfully met, Soriot on Tuesday announced a plan to push the company even higher, setting a target of $80 billion in annual sales by 2030. A slate of new medicines in metabolic and autoimmune disease headline the plan, which also involves sustaining existing businesses in respiratory disorders and cancer.
  • Beckers Hospital Review calls attention to “Fortune and PINC AI’s “15 Top Health Systems” list released May 21.”
  • McKinsey & Company discusses what’s new in consumer wellness trends.

Weekend update

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

Happy Mothers’ Day!!

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call informs us,
    • “Six months after the launch of the Biden administration’s “birthing friendly” designation for hospitals, advocates are questioning the next steps for the tool aimed at incentivizing better care for patients. 
    • “Beginning last fall, hospitals that achieved the designation received an icon on Care Compare, a federal website aimed at helping consumers pick health care providers. 
    • “But it’s not difficult for hospitals to receive the designation, with 2,225 — that is, most eligible hospitals — having received it as of April. 
    • “Of the nearly 1,000 acute care hospitals that didn’t get the designation, more than 800 said they didn’t provide delivery or labor care. 
    • “And only 135 didn’t get the designation because they didn’t meet the requirements of participating in a statewide or national perinatal quality improvement collaborative program.”  

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News reports,
    • “Rick Slayman, the first man to receive a kidney transplant from a genetically engineered pig, has died, according to a statement from his family and Massachusetts General Hospital, where he underwent the historic operation in March.
    • “Our family is deeply saddened about the sudden passing of our beloved Rick but take great comfort knowing he inspired so many,” his family said in the statement released Saturday evening.
    • “The hospital did not say how or when Slayman died. A spokesperson declined to provide further information, citing “privacy issues.”
    • “We have no indication that [Slayman’s death] was the result of his recent transplant,” Mass. General said in the statement. * * *
    • “Slayman’s family also thanked his team of doctors, “who truly did everything they could to help give Rick a second chance.”
    • “Their enormous efforts leading the xenotransplant gave our family seven more weeks with Rick, and our memories made during that time will remain in our minds and hearts,” they said.”
    • RIP and thanks for your courage, Mr. Slayman.
  • The Washington Post lets us know,
    • “A recent analysis found poor survival rates after bone fractures in older adults, with fewer than a third of men and half of women surviving five years after a fracture.
    • “Published in JBMR Plus, the study looked at a cohort of 98,474 Ontario residents age 66 and older who suffered fractures to parts of the body associated with osteoporosis between January 2011 and March 2015. The patients were grouped into sets based on the fracture site and matched to patients with a similar demographic profile but no bone breaks during the study period.
    • “The fracture cohort was mostly female (73 percent), and the median age at fracture was 80. In the year before the fracture, up to 45 percent of the women and 14 percent of the men had been treated for osteoporosis.
    • “The analysis revealed that those within a year of a hip, vertebral or proximal non-hip, non-vertebral fracture were at the highest risk of death. The survival probability was lower for the oldest patients.”
  • STAT News tells us,
    • “An ambitious effort to cure HIV with CRISPR genome editing fell short in an early clinical trial, investigators announced Friday morning.
    • “In the study, run by Excision BioTherapeutics, researchers tried to use the gene editing tool to address a chief reason HIV has been so hard to cure. While antiviral drugs can clear patients of replicating virus, HIV is able to worm its way into a patients’ own DNA in certain cells. If the patient ever stops taking medicines, those cells start pumping out HIV particles and the infection roars back.
    • “Researchers hoped they could send CRISPR to those cells and, by cutting the HIV DNA lurking there at two spots, slice out the virus. In the Phase 1 trial, investigators administered the treatment to five patients. They then took three of them off conventional antiviral treatment.
    • “In all three patients, the virus soon rebounded and they needed to resume antiviral therapy.
    • “Their approach did not work,” said Fyodor Urnov, director of technology and translation at the Innovative Genomics Institute.”
  • Fortune Well explains,
    • Parenting brings many joys, but sleep deprivation is not one of them. So, it’s no wonder that moms and dads are willing to take some drastic measures—in the form of sleep medications—when it comes to getting their kids down for the night.
    • New survey results from Sleep Doctor reveal that 79% of parents have given their child a substance to get them to sleep—with 66% using melatonin, 35% using Benadryl, and 20% turning to prescription sleep aids. Others reported using everything from herbal and over-the-counter aids to CBD, THC, and even alcohol. * * *
    • “Parents are desperate, they’re tired, they’re juggling so many things … and a child having difficulty sleeping just piles onto that,” says Dr. Nilong Vyas, pediatrician, public health specialist, and board-certified sleep expert working closely with Sleep Doctor, which conducted the survey of 1,201 parents in April. * * *
    • “Still, Vyas tells Fortune, “Ideally it’s better to change [bedtime] behaviors and modify them so a child can learn to fall asleep independently, without the need of supplements.”
  • The Wall Street Journal considers how helpful are mental health chatbots.
    • “Interest in mental-health chatbots is rising, fueled by advances in AI’s ability to conduct sophisticated conversations. But how much therapy can they really provide?
    • “Chatbots are still no substitute for a human therapist, researchers say. Not only do some of these tools have trouble helping patients in crisis, they don’t always offer a sufficient level of personalization or provide advice that is guaranteed to be accurate.
    • “Yet researchers are homing in on some of the supporting roles that chatbots and artificial intelligence could play in mental-health care. For instance, chatbots are showing promise in helping people determine whether they need care and connecting them to the proper resources, in lifting people’s moods and in practicing skills taught in cognitive-behavioral therapy. 
    • “There’s an enormous need for innovation in mental-health care,” says Olga Troyanskaya, a computer-science professor and AI expert at Princeton University, who leads Princeton Precision Health, an interdisciplinary initiative that aims to use technology to improve healthcare. At the same time, she says, it’s also important to balance enthusiasm with caution, especially when it comes to using artificial intelligence in mental health.”
  • The Journal also offers general advice on how to talk with a chatbot.

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington DC,

  • STAT News tells us
    • “A new bill set to be considered on Wednesday by the House Ways & Means Committee would extend for two years telehealth flexibilities for Medicare enrollees that were adopted during the Covid-19 pandemic, and look to reform drug industry middlemen to pay for it. [FEHBlog note — The bill focuses on PBMs serving Medicare Prescription Drug Plans.]
    • “At the end of the official public health emergency, Congress extended flexibilities that changed where and what kinds of care people could receive over telehealth, but those rules are set to expire at the end of the year.  * * *
    • “Lawmakers discussed reforming PBMs in spending talks earlier this year, but ultimately failed to come to an agreement. The December deadline will be another chance for Congress to take action. * * *
    • “The new bill language will be marked up by lawmakers and may be subject to changes before it receives a vote. A likely path to passage is inclusion in a year-end spending package.”
  • AP reports,
    • “The go-broke dates for Medicare and Social Security have been pushed back as an improving economy has contributed to changed projected depletion dates, according to the annual Social Security and Medicare trustees report Monday.
    • “Still, officials warn that policy changes are needed lest the programs become unable to pay full benefits to retiring Americans. 
    • “Medicare’s go-broke date for its hospital insurance trust fund was pushed back five years to 2036 in the latest report, thanks in part to higher payroll tax income and lower-than-projected expenses from last year. * * *
    • “Meanwhile, Social Security’s trust funds — which cover old age and disability recipients — will be unable to pay full benefits beginning in 2035, instead of last year’s estimate of 2034. Social Security would only be able to pay 83% of benefits.”
  • The New York Times relates,
    • “The White House has unveiled tighter rules for research on potentially dangerous microbes and toxins, in an effort to stave off laboratory accidents that could unleash a pandemic.
    • “The new policy, published Monday evening, arrives after years of deliberations by an expert panel and a charged public debate over whether Covid arose from an animal market or a laboratory in China. * * *
    • “The new policy, which applies to research funded by the federal government, strengthens the government’s oversight by replacing a short list of dangerous pathogens with broad categories into which more pathogens might fall. The policy pays attention not only to human pathogens, but also those that could threaten crops and livestock. And it provides more details about the kinds of experiments that would draw the attention of government regulators.
    • “The rules will take effect in a year, giving government agencies and departments time to update their guidance to meet the new requirements.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • EHS Today adds,
    • “With the FDA’s approval of naloxone as an OTC drug, workplaces now have access to a lifesaving tool. and therefore, it should be included in workplace first aid kits, says the International Safety Equipment Association (ISEA). ISEA publishes the ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 standard.
    • “According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 525 people died from overdoses at work in 2022
    • “In a March 2024 statement, the White House challenged leaders to increase training and access to opioid overdose reversal medications, keeping the medications in first aid kits, and distributing the medications to employees and customers so they might save a life at home, work, or in their communities.”  
  • Medscape informs us,
    • “All obesity interventions eventually lead to a plateau in weight, where further loss ceases despite ongoing efforts. But the duration of continuous weight loss before hitting a plateau is longer with both glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist drugs and gastric bypass surgery than with dietary restriction, primarily because they alter how weight loss affects appetite, not energy expenditure.
    • “That’s the conclusion from a new mathematical modeling study based on published data. The study showed that both GLP-1 agonists and Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery act to weaken the increase in appetite that normally occurs with time after weight loss attained through dietary restriction alone.
    • “The average time to weight loss plateau occurred within 12 months with dietary restriction vs 24 months in studies of tirzepatide (a dual glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide/GLP-1 agonist), semaglutide, and RYGB, according to Kevin D. Hall, PhD, chief of the integrative physiology section at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland.
    • The findings were published in Obesity.
    • “Both RYGB and tirzepatide resulted in greater weight loss than semaglutide, but plateau timing of the three was roughly the same at 24 months. “The timing of the plateau is a different question than how much weight they lost,” Hall told Medscape Medical News.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “Dallas-based Steward Health Care has placed its 31 U.S. hospitals up for purchase to help offload its $9 billion debt after the health system filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Reuters first reported May 7.
    • “During a court hearing May 7 in Houston, Steward attorney Ray Schrock told U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Chris Lopez that the for-profit health system is aiming to keep all of its hospitals open and to finalize the sale of the facilities by the end of this summer, the news agency reported.
    • “Our goal remains that there are zero hospitals closed on our watch,” Mr. Schrock said, according to Reuters. “There’s going to be a change in ownership in many hospitals, we recognize that. But we don’t want to see any of these communities fail to be served.”
  • Healthcare Dive offers more details on this bankruptcy proceeding.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Telehealth company Amwell continues to struggle in the stock market, and both its bottom- and top-line results in the first quarter missed Wall Street analysts’ estimates.
    • “The company, formerly American Well, brought in revenue of $59.5 million in the first quarter, down 7% from $64 million a year ago, and it reported a quarterly loss of $73.4 million, according to its first-quarter financial results (PDF). That compares to a loss of $398 million during the same quarter last year when it took a hefty impairment charge as a result of its stock market performance. * * *
    • “But, the virtual care giant is plotting accelerated revenue growth and a path to EBITDA profitability in 2026, boosted by a major contract with the Defense Health Agency (DHA).” 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec reports
    • “Weeks following the news that Office of Personnel Management Director Kiran Ahuja would step down, agency Deputy Director Rob Shriver has been appointed acting director of the federal government’s dedicated HR agency.
    • “Shriver announced the news in a post on LinkedIn. * * *
    • “According to the Vacancies Act, Shriver may serve as acting OPM director for 210 days, or until Dec. 2. If he is ultimately nominated to succeed Ahuja on a permanent basis, he likely will be able to remain in the acting director role during the Senate confirmation process, thanks to his service as her “first assistant” in a Senate-confirmed position.”
  • Federal News Network tells us,
    • “Highlighting the work federal employees and other civil servants perform, and especially noting their efforts in administrating pandemic recovery programs, President Joe Biden expressed his appreciation for public servants across the country. In keeping with tradition, the White House issued a proclamation that May 5 will mark the beginning of Public Service Recognition Week.
    • “PSRW is traditionally celebrated the first full week of May. Many federally-focused organizations, including the National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association, show appreciation for public servants during the month of May.”
  • Govexec adds,
    • “Sammie Tafoya, a foreign service officer assigned to Haiti, said she didn’t know what the State Department was when her African history professor encouraged her to apply to work there. 
    • “Whenever I wrote for his class, he said…‘I think what you are looking for — the idea of being able to push change and to be able to write to inform the people that have power to make policies — there’s actually an agency for that. It’s the State Department. It’s the Foreign Service,’” she said. 
    • “Tafoya is one of 25 finalists announced Monday for the Partnership for Public Service’s 2024 Service to America Medals. Nicknamed the Sammies after the award’s namesake, Samuel J. Heyman, who founded the nonpartisan organization, the program has been around since 2002 and honors excellence and innovation in the career federal service. 
    • “The finalists will be recognized at a reception on Thursday, and winners will be announced ahead of an awards ceremony on Sept. 11 at the Kennedy Center.  * * *
    • “A full list can be found here.” 
  • The Society for Human Resource Management informs us,
    • “On May 3, President Joe Biden vetoed a resolution to overturn the National Labor Relations Board’s (NLRB’s) joint employer rule. However, the rule has been blocked by a federal district court in Texas, and litigation might continue.
    • “Overcoming the veto by a two-thirds majority vote in the Senate and House of Representatives is unlikely. The resolution passed the House by a 206-177 vote on Jan. 12 and cleared the Senate by a 50-48 vote on April 10. SHRM had urged Biden not to veto the measure.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Time reports,
    • “Scientists are proposing a new way of understanding the genetics of Alzheimer’s that would mean that up to a fifth of patients would be considered to have a genetically caused form of the disease.
    • “Currently, the vast majority of Alzheimer’s cases do not have a clearly identified cause. The new designation, proposed in a studypublished Monday, could broaden the scope of efforts to develop treatments, including gene therapy, and affect the design of clinical trials.
    • “It could also mean that hundreds of thousands of people in the United States alone could, if they chose, receive a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s before developing any symptoms of cognitive decline, although there currently are no treatments for people at that stage.
    • “The new classification would make this type of Alzheimer’s one of the most common genetic disorders in the world, medical experts said.”
  • and
    • “A new study, published Saturday in The Journal of the American Medical Association, revealed growing disparities in child death rates across racial and ethnic groups. Black and Native American youths ages 1 to 19 died at significantly higher rates than white youths — predominantly from injuries such as car accidents, homicides and suicides.
    • “Dr. Coleen Cunningham, chair of pediatrics at the University of California, Irvine, and the pediatrician in chief at Children’s Hospital of Orange County, who was not involved in the study, said the detailed analysis of the disparities documented “a sad and growing American tragedy.”
    • “Almost all are preventable,” she said, “if we make it a priority.”
  • The Wall Street Journal discusses efforts in the U.S. to eliminate cervical cancer using the HPV vaccine.
    • “Doctors are rallying around an audacious goal: eliminating a cancer for the first time. 
    • “Cervical cancer rates in the U.S. have dropped by more than half since the 1970s. Pap tests enable doctors to purge precancerous cells, and a vaccine approved in 2006 has protected a generation of women against human papillomavirus, a sexually transmitted infection that causes more than 90% of cervical cancers. 
    • “With this evidence that the disease is preventable, groups that have worked for decades to end polio and malaria are turning to cervical cancer, plotting to take cases down to null. The World Health Organization is urging countries to boost vaccination, screening and treatment. Doctors in the U.S. are working on a national plan.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “A 12-year-old boy is the first commercial patient in the world to receive an FDA-approved gene therapy for sickle cell disease, The New York Times reported May 6.
    • “Kendric Cromer is a 12-year-old boy from the suburbs of Washington, D.C., and the first to receive Lyfgenia, a gene therapy treatment created by Somerville, Mass.-based Bluebird Bio. Kendric’s treatment, which costs about $3.1 million, is covered by his family’s insurance. He underwent the first part of treatment at Washington, D.C.-based Children’s National Hospital, in which physicians removed his bone marrow stem cells, which Bluebird will genetically modify for his treatment. The modified cells will be returned in three months.
    • “The FDA gave two companies authorization to sell gene therapy to people with sickle cell disease, a genetic disorder that affects roughly 100,000 people, most of them Black. 
    • “Bluebird estimates it can only treat 85 to 105 patients each year with sickle cell or beta thalassemia, who can receive a similar gene therapy. Children’s National, meanwhile, said it can accept only 10 gene therapy patients a year.”
  • The American Medical Association points out “What doctors wish patients knew about osteoporosis.”
  • The National Institute for Mental Health updated its website about coping with traumatic events.
  • The Washington Post notes, Ultrasound technology is used in many ways. Addiction is the next frontier. The use of the high-frequency sound waves is also being adapted to treat Alzheimer’s disease, tumors and psychiatric disorders.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare offers a look at how “major payers fared in a Q1 dragged by a cyberattack, MA challenges,” and Beckers Payer Issues ranks major payers by first quarter 2023 and 2024 medical loss ratios.
  • Beckers Payer Issues discusses major Medicare Advantage insurer plans for 2025.
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Dallas-based Steward Health Care, the largest physician-led hospital operator in the country, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this morning in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, following months of financial struggles including missed payments to its landlord and vendors.
    • “Steward operates more than 30 hospitals across eight states, according to a spokesperson for the company. The filing marks the largest provider bankruptcy in decades, according to Laura Coordes, professor of law at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University.” 

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • A Senate Finance Committee tells us,
    • “U.S. Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Chair Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) released a legislative proposal to address persistent economic problems leading to shortages of generic medicines plaguing America’s health care system, including chemotherapy drugs and ADHD medications. * * *
    • “The proposal, released as a discussion draft, would establish a new program in Medicare for hospitals and physicians to incentivize transparent, reliable, and resilient purchasing practices across supply-chain participants, including by driving health care providers, intermediaries (such as group purchasing organizations, or GPOs) and drug manufacturers to meet ambitious, proactive standards in securing a sustainable, high-quality supply of essential medicines for patients from all walks of life. * * *
    • “A one-page summary of the discussion draft can be found here.
    • “A section-by-section summary can be found here.
    • “The legislative text can be found here.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Members of Congress appear poised to advance another short-term [two year] extension of pandemic-era telehealth flexibilities instead of permanently addressing the issue, seven sources familiar with the talks said.
    • “During the Covid-19 pandemic, lawmakers allowed Medicare patients to access telehealth services in more places and with a greater variety of providers than before, but some of those flexibilities are set to expire at the end of the year. The expiration is expected to be an impetus for a broader health care package in December, when other public health programs also run out. * * *
    • “The House Ways & Means Committee is planning to mark up a two-year telehealth policy extension next week, per five sources familiar with the planning. Politico first reported the markup. According to two sources, the markup will contain entirely new language than is in the dozen or so bills that have been circulated so far.”
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management’s final Postal Service Health Benefits Program (PSHBP) implementation rule appeared in the Federal Register’s Public Inspection list today. The final rule will be published in the Federal Register on Monday May 6.
    • “OPM is making several changes between the interim final rule and this final rule:
      • “In § 890.1604, OPM is clarifying the requirements to enroll in Medicare Part B by expressly providing that the exceptions referring to events occurring “as ofJanuary 1, 2025” includes events that occur on January 1, 2025.”
      • In § 890.1604, OPM is clarifying the requirements to enroll in Medicare Part B by expressly providing that the exceptions referring to events occurring “as of January 1, 2025” includes events that occur on January 1, 2025.
      • “Section 890.1604(c) is reserved in anticipation of future rulemaking. [FEHBlog note — This provision creates exceptions from the Medicare Part B enrollment mandate for certain PSHBP enrollees and family members.]
      • “In § 890.1604(e), OPM is clarifying that a Postal Service annuitant or their family member who is required to be enrolled in Medicare Part B must promptly notify OPM or the Postal Service, in writing, if they choose not to enroll in or to disenroll from Medicare Part B.
      • “In § 890.1604, OPM is removing reference to the Postal Service as the entity to receive documentation of overseas residency to qualify for an exception to the Part B enrollment requirement.
      • “In § 890.1606(e), OPM is correcting a typographical error by removing the word “the” before “January 1 of the next year.”
  • A proposed follow-up PSHBP rule is pending review at OMB’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. OPM further explains in the preamble.
    • “Topics OPM plans to address in more detail in the proposed rule include: reconsideration of initial decisions concerning PSHB eligibility; application of the Medicare Part B requirement and associated exceptions in specific scenarios; allocation of Reserves credits; calendar year alignment of government contribution requirements; financial reporting and actuarial calculations; premium payment prioritization from the Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Fund; and Medicare Part D integration.” 
  • CMS also released a No Surprises Act user guide for resubmission of certain IDR cases.
    • “This user guide provides an overview of the “Notice of IDR Initiation – Resubmission” web form and the steps for successfully completing and submitting the web form. This user guide is intended to assist parties who have submitted a dispute through the Federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) process and received an email from Auto-Reply-FederalIDRQuestions@cms.hhs.gov with a link to the “Notice of IDR Initiation – Resubmission” web form.
    • “The “Notice of IDR Initiation – Resubmission” web form will be sent to the initiating party if the certified IDR entity’s eligibility review of a dispute determines that one or more of the dispute line items must be resubmitted because it was improperly batched or bundled. The initiating party must complete the “Notice of IDR Initiation – Resubmission” web form by the deadline specified in the email. The non-initiating party will not need to take any action.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control informs us on May 3:
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare continues to decrease across most areas of the country. This week, no jurisdictions experienced moderate, high, or very high activity. Last week one jurisdiction experienced moderate activity. No jurisdictions experienced high or very high activity.
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed influenza are decreasing. Emergency department visits with COVID-19 and RSV remain stable at low levels.
    • “Nationally, COVID-19, influenza, and RSV test positivity decreased compared to the previous week.
    • “Nationally, the COVID-19 wastewater viral activity level, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, remains low.”
  • NBC News reports,
    • “New research suggests patients with an average risk of colon cancer may only need to undergo a colonoscopy screening every 15 years instead of the recommended 10. 
    • “Swedish researchers found that waiting an extra five years after a first negative colonoscopy carried about the same risk of later having a colorectal diagnosis or dying from the disease as getting screened every 10 years. Extending screening time could reduce “unnecessary invasive examinations,” according to the study published Thursday in JAMA Oncology.  * * *
    • “In an editorial accompanying the new study, gastroenterologists suggested that future screening guidelines may safely be prolonged for some people, noting that “15 has the potential to be the new 10.” * * *
    • “We do not have enough gastroenterology doctors to do a colonoscopy every 10 years in everyone over 50,” said Dr. Otis Brawley, the Bloomberg distinguished professor of oncology and epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University, who was not associated with the new research. * * *. 
    • “Employing cheaper, less invasive screening methods 10 to 15 years after a negative colonoscopy could greatly reduce the number of missed screenings, said the study’s lead author, Dr. Mahdi Fallah, head of the Risk Adapted Cancer Prevention Group at the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg. 
    • “The best screening test is the one that is actually done. So, if a test like colonoscopy is unaffordable for a person, an alternative cheaper valid test is much better than no test at all,” said Fallah, who is also a visiting professor in the department of clinical sciences at Lund University in Sweden.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review announced on May 2,
    • “[We] will assess the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of tabelecleucel (“tab-cel”, Pierre Fabre) for the treatment of Epstein-Barr virus positive post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (EBV+ PTLD).
    • “The assessment will be publicly discussed during a meeting of the New England CEPAC in November 2024, where the independent evidence review panel will deliberate and vote on evidence presented in ICER’s report.
    • “ICER’s website provides timelines of key posting dates and public comment periods for this assessment.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Kaufmann Hall announced on May 2,
    • “[Hospital m]argins and volumes declined slightly in March, which may signal more challenges ahead. Hospital outpatient revenue also fell 5%, reflecting the competitive challenges of providing outpatient care.
    • “The median Kaufman Hall Calendar Year-To-Date Operating Margin Index reflecting actual margins for the month of March was 3.9%.
    • “The April issue of the National Hospital Flash Report covers these and other key performance metrics.
  • and
    • “Overall labor expenses and revenue continue to rise, and Q1 2024 data show that labor represented 84% of total expenses. The median investment/subsidy per provider increased 2% compared to Q1 2023.
    • “The [Q1] Physician Flash Report features the most up-to-date industry trends drawn from the same data physician groups use to track their finances and operations.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review compares Spring 2024 Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grades against CMS Star ratings for hospitals receiving high and low Leapfrog grades.
  • BioPharma Dive notes,
    • “Amgen shares soared by double digits Friday following its announcement an obesity drug it’s developing has shown enough promise to warrant advancing into late-stage testing.
    • “On an earnings call with analysts Thursday, CEO Robert Bradway said the company is “confident” in the drug’s “differentiated profile” following an internal review of interim Phase 2 study results. Full data are expected by the end of the year and should support a subsequent move into Phase 3 trials, executives said.
    • “Yet Amgen’s drug is likely at least two years away from regulators’ desks, by which time Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk may already have successors to their weight loss medicines Wegovy and Zepbound. It will take even more time to accumulate data to prove the drug can protect heart health, a key claim for convincing commercial and federal insurers to reimburse for treatment.”
  • Healthcare Dive lets us know,
    • “Walgreens has inked a clinical trial deal with major German drugmaker Boehringer Ingelheim.
    • “Under the deal, Walgreens will find candidates who are overweight or have obesity or diabetes and connect them with a Phase III clinical trial for Boehringer’s GLP-1 drug survodutide, according to a release.
    • Walgreens launched its clinical trials business in 2022 as part of the company’s broader pivot to health services. Since then, Walgreens has notched more than 35 clinical trials deals with life sciences companies, according to a spokesperson.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “Congressional leaders unveiled Thursday a $275 million bill to boost federal research, physician training and public awareness about menopause, a campaign led by prominent female lawmakers and boosted by the star power of actor Halle Berry.
    • “The bipartisan Senate bill, the Advancing Menopause Care and Mid-Life Women’s Health Act, is led by Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, and has support from Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), Susan Collins (R-Maine) and other lawmakers. The legislation has been championed by Berry, who has discussed her experience with menopause-related misdiagnoses and joined female senators at a news conference Thursday at the U.S. Capitol.”
  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “Drunken-driving deaths in the U.S. have risen to levels not seen in nearly two decades, federal data show, a major setback to long-running road-safety efforts.
    • “At the same time, arrests for driving under the influence have plummeted, as police grapple with challenges like hiring woes and heightened concern around traffic stops. 
    • “We are really stuck in some quicksand,” said James Fell, who has been studying impaired driving since 1967 and is a principal research scientist at NORC at the University of Chicago, a nonpartisan research organization.
    • “About 13,500 people died in alcohol impairment-related crashes in 2022, according to data released in April by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. That is 33% above 2019’s toll and on par with 2021’s. The last time so many people died as a result of accidents involving intoxicated drivers was in 2006.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management notes,
    • “Compensation growth kicked up more than expected in the first quarter of the year in another sign of persistent inflation.
    • “Workers were paid 1.2 percent more in the first three months of 2024 than in the fourth quarter of 2023, according to the Employment Cost Index (ECI), released April 30 by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). That’s up from the 0.9 percent climb in the fourth quarter of 2023. Wages and salaries increased 1.1 percent, as did benefits costs, from December 2023. Many economists forecasted that the ECI would rise 1 percent.
    • “Year over year, compensation costs—including pay and benefits— in the U.S. for civilian workers rose 4.2 percent, an uptick from the 4.1 percent year-over-year rise in the final quarter of 2023. Meanwhile, compensation for state and local government workers is up 4.8 percent.
    • “Wages and salaries grew 4.4 percent for the 12-month period ending in March 2024 and rose 5 percent for the 12-month period ending in March 2023, according to the BLS. Benefits costs grew 3.7 percent over the year and rose 4.5 percent for the 12-month period ending in March 2023.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • NBC News reports,
    • “The number of women dying while pregnant is returning to pre-pandemic levels following a worrisome 2021 spike, a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows.
    • “In 2022, 817 U.S. women died either while pregnant or soon after giving birth, down from 1,205 the previous year.
    • “If you look at 2021, we had such a sharp increase as we were really still in the pandemic and still dealing with disruptions of care, the fear of coming into the healthcare space and the inability to access care during that time,” said Dr. Veronica Gillispie-Bell, an OB-GYN at Ochsner Medical Center in Kenner, Louisiana. She was not involved in the new report, which was published Thursday by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.”
  • mHealth Intelligence tells us,
    • “Telehealth-based interventions can help lower the risk of readmissions and emergency department (ED) visits after abdominal surgery, according to new research published in JAMA Network Open.
    • “The study notes that amid the digital healthcare boom of the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth technologies were applied in areas where they were previously not used, including surgery. Though the use of telehealth in surgery is growing, the study authors noted that there is little research on how telehealth utilization affects patient safety in abdominal surgery.
    • “Thus, the researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to evaluate whether telehealth-based interventions reduce complications, readmissions, and postoperative ED visits among abdominal surgery patients. They searched PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science databases from inception through February 2023 to identify randomized clinical trials (RCTs) and nonrandomized studies that compared perioperative telehealth interventions with usual care and reported at least one patient safety outcome.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Cigna has written off more than half of its multibillion-dollar investment in VillageMD amid the declining value of the primary care chain.
    • Cigna invested $2.5 billion into VillageMD in late 2022, with the goal of accelerating value-based care arrangements for employer clients by tying VillageMD’s physician network with Cigna’s health services business, Evernorth — hopefully reaping profits from shared savings as a result.
    • “But on Thursday, Cigna wrote off $1.8 billion of that investment, citing VillageMD’s lackluster growth after its majority owner Walgreens elected to close underperforming clinics. The writedown drove Cigna’s shareholder earnings down to a net loss of almost $300 million, compared to profit of $1.3 billion in the same time last year.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Sales of Novo Nordisk’s obesity drug Wegovy slowed over the first three months of 2024, compared to the fourth quarter last year, as lower realized prices and continued supply constraints curbed growth from the in-demand medicine.”Sales of Novo Nordisk’s obesity drug Wegovy slowed over the first three months of 2024, compared to the fourth quarter last year, as lower realized prices and continued supply constraints curbed growth from the in-demand medicine.
    • “Still, the $1.3 billion in first quarter sales Novo reported for Wegovy was twice the total in the first quarter of 2023. The company has been working to boost supply and, in January, gradually started increasing the number of Wegovy “starter” doses.
    • “Wegovy gained competition last November with the U.S. approval of Eli Lilly’s Zepbound, which brought in $517 million in sales in its first quarter on the market. Citing data from analytics company Iqvia, Novo said that, while new prescriptions of Zepbound are tracking slightly ahead of Wegovy, its drug has larger market share.”
  • and
    • “Pfizer’s rare disease drug Vyndaqel may be its least well known blockbuster medicine. The pharmaceutical company’s COVID-19 vaccine became a household name during the pandemic, while its other top-sellers for blood clots, breast cancer and pneumococcal infections are routinely and widely advertised on TV.
    • “Yet during the first quarter, it was Vyndaqel that outperformed expectations, delivering sales that substantially exceeded Wall Street forecasts. The drug, which treats the cardiac form of a rare disease called transthyretin amyloidosis, brought in $1.1 billion between January and March, 25% higher than the consensus estimate of just over $900 million.”
  • MedCity News considers whether “Walmart’s decision to shutter its healthcare division reflects just how difficult it is to achieve profitability in the primary care and telehealth markets. Experts think retailers simply aren’t prepared to handle the bevy of challenges that come along with delivering healthcare — but could this news also be a sign of the system being broken?”
  • Bloomberg tells us,
    • “Amid the GLP-1 craze, companies including Quest Diagnostics and Labcorp are offering a suite of blood tests intended to help doctors decide if drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound are the right choice for their patients. So far, business is booming.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • American Hospital News reports
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services April 22 finalized minimum staffing requirements for nursing homes that participate in Medicare and Medicaid. As proposed in September, the final rule will require nursing homes to provide a minimum of 3.48 hours of nursing care per resident day, including 0.55 hours of care from a registered nurse per resident day and at least 2.45 hours of care from a nurse aide per resident day, as well as 24/7 onsite RN services. CMS slightly expanded the opportunity for facilities to seek exemptions from the requirements from its original proposal. AHA had urged CMS not to finalize the proposal but instead develop more patient- and workforce-centered approaches focused on ensuring a continual process of safe staffing in nursing facilities.”
  • KFF adds
    • KFF estimates that 19% of nursing facilities would meet the minimum HPRD staffing standards under full implementation of the final rule with their current staffing levels (Figure 1). Nearly 60% of facilities would meet the interim requirement of an overall requirement of 3.48 HPRD, but fewer facilities would meet the RN and nurse aide provisions that are required when the rule is fully implemented (49% and 30% respectively; data not shown).”
  • HHS’s Office for Civil Rights announced a final amendment to the HIPAA Privacy rule concerning reproductive health. The final rule
    • “Prohibits the use or disclosure of PHI when it is sought to investigate or impose liability on individuals, health care providers, or others who seek, obtain, provide, or facilitate reproductive health care that is lawful under the circumstances in which such health care is provided, or to identify persons for such activities.
    • “Requires a regulated health care provider, health plan, clearinghouse, or their business associates, to obtain a signed attestation that certain requests for PHI potentially related to reproductive health care are not for these prohibited purposes.
    • “Requires regulated health care providers, health plans, and clearinghouses to modify their Notice of Privacy Practices to support reproductive health care privacy.
    • “The Final Rule may be viewed here – PDF.
    • “View The Final Rule Fact Sheet here.”
  • AHA News adds,
    • “The rule will take effect 60 days after publication in the Federal Register and require covered entities to comply within 240 days. As requested by the AHA, OCR plans to issue a model attestation form before the compliance date.”
  • HHS’s Office of the National Coordinator of Health IT announced that
    • “Common Agreement Version 2.0 (CA v2.0) has been released. The Common Agreement establishes the technical infrastructure model and governing approach for different health information networks and their users to securely share clinical information with each other – all under commonly agreed-to rules-of-the-road. The seven designated Qualified Health Information Networks™ (QHINs™) under the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement℠ (TEFCA℠) can now adopt and begin implementing the new version. Also published today is the Participant and Subparticipant Terms of Participation, which sets forth the requirements that each Participant and Subparticipant must agree to and comply with to participate in TEFCA.”Common Agreement Version 2.0 (CA v2.0) has been released.
    • “The Common Agreement establishes the technical infrastructure model and governing approach for different health information networks and their users to securely share clinical information with each other – all under commonly agreed-to rules-of-the-road. The seven designated Qualified Health Information Networks™ (QHINs™) under the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement℠ (TEFCA℠) can now adopt and begin implementing the new version. Also published today is the Participant and Subparticipant Terms of Participation, which sets forth the requirements that each Participant and Subparticipant must agree to and comply with to participate in TEFCA.
    • ?Notably, CA v2.0 includes enhancements and updates to require support for Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources® (FHIR®) Application Programming Interface (API) exchange, which will allow TEFCA Participants and Subparticipants to more easily exchange information directly between themselves and will enable individuals to more easily access their own health care information using apps of their choice via TEFCA. These enhancements and updates mark a huge step forward for TEFCA as it meets the promise of seamless nationwide exchange at scale. Visit HealthIT.gov to view a list of key concepts that have evolved from Common Agreement v1.1 to v2.0.”
  • Federal News Network shared the results of survey of federal employee attitudes toward the push to return to office.
    • “Of the 6,300 survey respondents, about 30% said they work entirely remotely, 6% work entirely in-person and 64% were working on a hybrid schedule — a mix of in-person work and telework.
    • “Over half of employees said senior leadership at their agency had not clearly explained the purpose of returning to the office. More than a third were in strong disagreement.”
  • From MedTech Dive,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration approved Lumicell’s breast cancer imaging tool, the company said Thursday.
    • “Lumicell developed the Lumisystem imaging technology to enable surgeons to detect residual cancer in the breast cavity after performing a lumpectomy to remove the tumor.
    • “An FDA advisory committee voted in March that the benefits of Lumisystem outweigh the risks, with one expert predicting the system will have the biggest impact on surgeons who have higher re-excision rates.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times asks and considers,
    • Bird Flu Is Infecting More Mammals. What Does That Mean for Us?
    • H5N1, an avian flu virus, has killed tens of thousands of marine mammals, and infiltrated American livestock for the first time. Scientists are working quickly to assess how it is evolving and how much of a risk it poses to humans. * * *
    • “I never let my kids go to a state fair or animal farm, I’m one of those parents,” Dr. Lakdawala said. “And it’s mostly because I know that the number of interactions that we increase with animals, the more opportunities there are.”
    • “Should H5N1 adapt to people, federal officials will need to work together and with their international counterparts. Nationalism, competition and bureaucracy can all slow down the exchange of information that is crucial in a developing outbreak.
    • “In some ways, the current spread among dairy cows is an opportunity to practice the drill, said Rick Bright, the chief executive of Bright Global Health, a consulting company that focuses on improving responses to public health emergencies. But the U.S. Agriculture Department is requiring only voluntary testing of cows, and is not as timely and transparent with its findings as it should be, he said.
    • “Dr. Rosemary Sifford, the department’s chief veterinarian, said the staff there were working hard to share information as quickly as they can. “This is considered an emerging disease,” she said.
    • “Government leaders are typically cautious, wanting to see more data. But “given the rapid speed at which this can spread and the devastating illness that it can cause if our leaders are hesitant and don’t pull the right triggers at the right time, we will be caught flat-footed once again,” Dr. Bright said.
    • “If we don’t give it the panic but we give it the respect and due diligence,” he added, alluding to the virus, “I believe we can manage it.”
  • MedPage Today discusses the ready availability of human vaccines for the H5H1 avian flu virus should the need arise.
  • Precision Vaccinations reminds us,
    • “In April 2024, the United States observes the 15th Annual Oral Cancer Awareness Month, which emphasizes the significance of preventing human papillomavirus (HPV)- related oral cancers [with HPV vaccines].
  • HealthDay tells us,
    • “The right diet may be the best medicine for easing the painful symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), new research shows. 
    • “In the study, two different eating plans beat standard medications in treating the debilitating symptoms of the gastrointestinal disease. One diet was low in “FODMAPs,” a group of sugars and carbohydrates found in dairy, wheat and certain fruits and vegetables, while the second was a low-carb regimen high in fiber but low in all other carbohydrates.
    • “Published April 19 in the journal Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the findings suggest that patients should first try dietary changes before moving to drugs for relief.”
  • MedScape informs us,
    • “A new three-phase screening protocol that incorporates a PSA test, a four-kallikrein panel, and an MRI scan appears to improve the prostate cancer detection rate among men invited to participate in a single screening compared with those not invited, according to preliminary findings from the Finnish ProScreen randomized clinical trial.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “UnitedHealth’s results beat Wall Street expectations on an adjusted basis, with the company noting that overall care patterns in the first quarter were“consistent with the company’s expectations.” Nothing to worry about here, executives repeatedly told investors, who promptly sent UnitedHealth’s stock soaring and hospital shares tanking. Then on Thursday, Elevance offered more relief, saying that costs were running as expected while raising its full-year earnings guidance.
    • “Various monthly surveys are also showing a moderation in hospital volumes. TD Cowen’s survey, for instance, found that 305 hospitals reported only 1% year-over-year revenue growth in March, which was far weaker than 11% growth in February. Analysts led by TD Cowen’s Gary Taylor suggested that we could be at the start of a reversal of hospitals’ outperformance over managed care companies. 
    • “Investors will find out more this week as providers including Universal Health and HCA Healthcare, two large hospital chains, report earnings. HCA might still deliver solid results, as improvements in labor cost pressures and pricing should still positively influence earnings, notes UBS analyst A.J. Rice. 
    • And in any case, stabilization of healthcare utilization isn’t the same as a sharp drop-off. UnitedHealth and Elevance earnings may have signaled to investors that their views on providers were perhaps a bit too rosy, but they didn’t exactly demonstrate that cost pressures have eased. UnitedHealth noted that while it was no longer seeing the “aggressive acceleration” in medical utilization the industry saw in 2023, it hasn’t yet seen a major “step down.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “UnitedHealth Group provided an update late Monday on its analysis of the data accessed in the cyberattack on Change Healthcare, and said it identified files that contain personal and health information.
    • “The company said that the personal health information (PHI) and personally identifiable information (PII) found in the files “could cover a substantial proportion of people in America.” However, UHG said it has not yet uncovered evidence that full medical histories or doctors’ charts were among what was stolen.
    • “UnitedHealth added that with the complexity of the review, it will likely take months of further analysis to identify and notify impacted customers. In the meantime, it’s offering two years of credit monitoring and identity theft protection to anyone who has been effected by the breach.
    • “In addition, the company has also offered to make notifications and conduct required administrative steps on behalf of providers and customers.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb is turning to a manufacturing startup to help produce cancer cell therapies faster, announcing Monday a partnership with the South San Francisco, California-based Cellares.
    • “The deal, which reserves Cellares’ production capacity for Bristol Myers’ use, is worth up to $380 million in upfront and milestone payments. Cellares will handle technology transfer of certain Bristol Myers cell therapies to its automated manufacturing platform, dubbed the Cell Shuttle.
    • :Bristol Myers currently sells two so-called CAR-T cell therapies, Breyanzi for lymphoma and Abecma for multiple myeloma, and has several others in development. In a statement, Lynelle Hoch, head of the pharmaceutical company’s cell therapy unit, said the Cellares deal would help it meet demand for CAR-T therapies “now and in the future.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • This morning, the Senate Finance Committee held a hearing to “discuss how to update and strengthen Medicare’s guarantee of high-quality health benefits for the next generation of America’s seniors.”
  • Healthcare Dive informs us,
    • “Lawmakers lauded the benefits of telehealth during a hearing Wednesday, but House members also raised questions about cost, quality and access that still need to be answered as a year-end deadline looms.
    • “As a December deadline draws closer, legislators are working to hash out details about extending or making pandemic-era telehealth flexibilities in Medicare permanent. 
    • “During an hours-long House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing, lawmakers considered 15 different legislative proposals surrounding telehelath access, noting changes in Medicare will impact decisions of private insurers.
    • “There’s an urgent need to extend these flexibilities because it’s going to run out,” said Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif. “We need to take action on this.” 
  • STAT News adds,
    • “More than a quarter of outpatient antibiotics are inappropriately prescribed, and telehealth could exacerbate the problem: Studies have suggested that virtual visits, on average, result in more antibiotic prescribing than in-person visits. But not all telehealth is created equal — and research is beginning to untangle which approaches are more likely to result in unnecessary antibiotics. In turn, national telehealth guidelines and standards are fighting back by prioritizing safe and effective virtual prescribing practices.
    • “It’s hard to draw conclusions about antibiotic prescribing via telehealth because it comes in so many flavors, said Guillermo Sanchez, a physician assistant and epidemiologist with the office of antibiotic stewardship at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Telemedicine can be provided by direct-to-consumer companies in one-off visits or by large, integrated health systems; via message, phone, or video.
    • “In a recent literature review, Sanchez and his colleagues found studies showing antibiotics were prescribed similarly in virtual and in-person appointments, as well as research that showed higher prescribing in virtual visits — especially for upper respiratory infections that rarely need antibiotics.
    • “But one thing is clear: There’s plenty of room for improvement.”
  • American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention April 11 updated its strategy to improve data exchange with health care organizations and other public health authorities to better detect and monitor public health threats. Among other priorities for 2024-2025, the strategy calls for using the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology’s Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement to enable faster sharing of data between health care and public health; expanding core data sources to detect and monitor threats, including wastewater, hospitalization and hospital bed capacity; and prioritizing data to address health disparities and promote health equity.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Medicare for the first time has estimated that a new Alzheimer’s treatment could cost the program billions of dollars by next year — well beyond what Wall Street or even the drug’s manufacturer has projected — according to a document obtained by STAT.
    • “Medicare’s actuaries expect the drug Leqembi, made by the Japanese drugmaker Eisai and sold in partnership with Biogen, to cost the traditional Medicare program around $550 million in 2024, and the entire Medicare program $3.5 billion in 2025, a spokesperson for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services confirmed to STAT. That projection forecasts a large increase in uptake over the next year and a half.
    • “The estimate was buried in a new CMS document that addressed questions about next year’s payments for Medicare Advantage plans, which cover more than 33 million people and serve as the alternative to the traditional Medicare program.
    • “I think CMS’ estimates demonstrate an incredible demand for Alzheimer’s treatments and possibly suggest broader use than I think was originally conceived,” said Ameet Sarpatwari, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School who studies pharmaceutical costs and outcomes. “That raises the question: What are we, as taxpayers, willing to spend on this drug with limited resources?”
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management announced,
    • “The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) issued a final rule today on the Pathways Programs designed to significantly expand opportunities for early career talent in the federal government. The final rule is one of the most significant actions the federal government has taken since the program’s inception 14 years ago. Updates include expanding skills-based hiring through qualifying career programs, raising the ceiling for starting salaries for recent graduates, and easing the path for interns to be converted into permanent positions, including lowering the number of hours required to convert and expanding the time given to agencies to complete such a conversion.  
    • “In addition, OPM will soon release new web-based guidance, an updated Pathways Program Handbook, an updated Pathways Toolkit for federal managers and supervisors, and will host a series of webinars and office hours targeted at HR professionals, hiring managers, educational institutions, and other key stakeholders.”  

From the public health and medical research front,

  • MedPage Today tells us,
    • “The hunt for a signal of excess sudden cardiac deaths among young people after COVID-19 vaccination left Oregon health officials empty-handed, they reported.
    • “Investigators searched death certificates for Oregon residents 16-30 years old who died from cardiac or undetermined causes of death from June 2021 to December 2022 and tried to match these deaths with mandatory statewide records of mRNA COVID vaccination, according to Juventila Liko, MD, and Paul Cieslak, MD, both of the Oregon Health Authority’s Public Health Division in Portland, in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.”
  • The NIH Director in her blog lets us know,
    • “Colorectal cancer is a leading cause of death from cancer in the United States. We know that risk of colorectal cancer goes up with age, certain coexisting health conditions, family history, smoking, alcohol use, and other factors. Researchers are also trying to learn more about what leads colorectal cancer to grow and spread. Now, findings from a new study supported in part by NIH add to evidence that colorectal tumor growth may be driven by a surprising bad actor: a microbe that’s normally found in the mouth.
    • :The findings, reported in Nature, suggest that a subtype of the bacterium Fusobacterium nucleatum has distinct genetic properties that may allow it to withstand acidic conditions in the stomach, infect colorectal tumors, and potentially drive their growth, which may lead to poorer patient outcomes. The discoveries suggest that the microbe could eventually be used as a target for detecting and treating colorectal cancer.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “The number of ongoing drug shortages in the U.S. is at its highest since 2001 — when the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists began tracking data. There are now 323 medications in low supply. 
    • “The reasons for 3 in 5 shortages are unknown, the ASHP said in a report released April 11. Supply and demand are cited for 14% of shortages, manufacturing problems for 12%, business decisions for 12% and raw material issues for 2%. 
    • “Basic and life-saving products are in short supply, including oxytocin, Rho(D) immune globulin, standard of care chemotherapy, pain and sedation medications and ADHD [attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder] medications,” the ASHP said. 
    • “The top five drug classes in shortages are central nervous system agents, antimicrobials, hormone agents, chemotherapies, and fluid and electrolyte therapies.” 
  • Mercer Consulting alerts us,
    • “Are you ready for the 75-year plus workforce? That’s the question Dr. Charlotte Yeh from AARP Services Inc. asked our webcast participants when she sat down with Mercer’s Kate Brown to discuss how longevity is changing workforce demographics.
    • “In the last 100 years, the 65+ age group has grown five times faster than the rest of the population. What’s even more surprising are projections that people aged 75+ will constitute the fastest-growing age band in the civilian workforce between now and 2030! As an employer, are you prepared for these changing demographics?
    • “In this conversation, Dr. Yeh debunks common myths about older workers – including their inability to use technology to perform essential job functions. In fact, studies show that age-diverse workforces contribute to increased revenue and profit margins – perhaps not surprising given that people 50 and older, contribute $8.3 trillion dollars to the economy. At the same time, working later in life can provide seniors with purpose and social connections, both essential to health and happiness.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Hospitals and health systems have kicked off the calendar year with a flurry of merger and acquisition deals reflecting several different strategic trends driving providers in 2024.
    • “Twenty transactions were unveiled in the first quarter, marking the highest volume of dealmaking Kaufman Hall’s seen within the sector since 2020, according to a report from the healthcare consulting firm released Thursday.
    • “The deals involved organizations of varying sizes and types, the firm wrote, and appeared motivated by a combination of new and old health system trends — for instance, smaller community systems flocking to larger organizations with stable finances, or portfolio realignments among for-profit and non-profit systems alike.”
  • According to Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Less than 20% of the nation’s hospitals were recognized for excellent patient safety ratings and the highest level of adherence to federal price transparency rules. 
    • “On April 9, the Health Transformation Alliance, The Leapfrog Group and Turquoise Health honored 472 hospitals across 42 states. Each of the organizations received a Leapfrog “A” safety rating and the highest price transparency score from Turquoise Health. 
    • “We encourage all hospitals to look to these industry leaders in both patient safety and price transparency as a model for how to provide patient-centered, high-quality care,” Robert Andrews, CEO of Health Transformation Alliance, said in a news release. “In following their example and commitment to safety and price transparency, we believe the healthcare industry can collectively strive towards better health outcomes for all.”

From the legal news front,

  • Biopharma Dive reports,
    • “The U.S. Department of Justice on Wednesday accused Regeneron of defrauding Medicare by knowingly inflating the average sales price for its top-selling eye drug Eylea.
    • “In a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts, prosecutors alleged Regeneron failed to disclose hundreds of millions of dollars in price concessions given to drug distributors in the form of credit card fee reimbursements. As a result, they said, the average sales price for Eylea, which Medicare uses to set payment to doctors, was higher than it should have been.
    • “Regeneron’s tactics also gave it an unfair competitive advantage over rivals, the Justice Department said. Eye clinics were able to get Regeneron’s drug for the discounted cash price while at the same time reaping the benefits of credit card rewards such as “cash back.” At some practices, doctors took turns using their personal credit cards to buy the drug, the lawsuit said. * * *
    • “In a statement to BioPharma Dive, Regeneron said it believes the allegations are “without merit” and show a “fundamental misunderstanding of drug price reporting standards.” The company added that it will defend itself in court.” 
  • The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida announced,
    • “On April 10, a substance abuse facility owner was sentenced to four years in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay $4,444,417.65 in restitution, for defrauding the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) of over $4 million. The sentence comes after the defendant entered a guilty plea in February.
    • “Joseph Toro, 39, of Jupiter, Florida, owned and operated Reawakenings Wellness Center (RWC), a substance abuse facility that treated patients, including FEHBP beneficiaries, from 2013 until January 2018, when RWC was evicted from their location in Miramar, Florida. After the RWC eviction, Toro continued to submit FEHBP insurance claims, using personal identifying information of former RWC patients, for substance abuse treatment that was never provided. To do so, he called the FEHBP hotline, impersonated former patients, and changed their mailing addresses to addresses that he controlled so he could obtain the fraudulent insurance reimbursement checks. For over a year, Toro submitted fraudulent claims on behalf of 29 former RWC patients for over $6.7 million in substance abuse treatment that he knew RWC never provided. As a result of Toro’s fraudulent claims, he obtained nearly $4.2 million in proceeds from the FEHBP. Toro also applied for and obtained a $150,000 Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) from the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) during the COVID-19 pandemic. That application misrepresented that RWC had five employees and grossed over $1.4 million in 2019, when in truth RWC had shut down years prior.”

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • Govexec tells us,
  • “The House Oversight and Accountability Committee on Wednesday advanced legislation [HR 7868] aimed at preventing improper payments in the employer-sponsored health insurance program for federal workers, as well as to ensure roughly 1,200 U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers receive the enhanced retirement benefits they were promised. * * *
  • “Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., the committee’s ranking member, sought unsuccessfully to amend the bill to include language that would authorize additional funding go to OPM to cover the cost of the audit, but Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., expressed a willingness to amend the bill before it reaches the House floor authorizing a specific dollar figure, based on analysis from the Congressional Budget Office. The CBO does not “score” legislation until it has advanced out of committee.”
  • A client of the FEHBlog called to his attention today this April 1, 2024, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Part D instruction which calmed the FEHBlog’s nerves about the 2025 notice of creditable coverage which FEHB plans must issue:
    • Creditable Coverage
    • “Consistent with IRA changes, we are revising the regulatory definition of creditable coverage at § 423.56(b) to reflect that discounts paid under the Manufacturer Discount Program are not taken into account when determining actuarial value. Given various concerns raised by commenters and the significant changes to the Part D benefit for CY 2025 as a result of the redesign, CMS will continue to permit use of the creditable coverage simplified determination methodology, without modification to the existing parameters, for CY 2025 for non-EGWP group health plan sponsors not applying for the retiree drug subsidy under section 1860D-22(a) of the Act. The Final Program Instructions also specify that CMS will re-evaluate the continued use of the existing simplified determination methodology or establish a revised one for CY 2026 in future guidance.”
  • The FEHBlog loves simplicity.  
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “The Biden administration is proposing a 2.6% increase for inpatient hospitals’ payments for the coming fiscal year, a $3.3 billion increase over the current year’s payout, as well as other policy adjustments intended to shore up surgical care coordination, drug supply, emergency preparedness monitoring, maternal health and care for the underserved.
    • “The potential updates came under Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)’s proposed Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems (IPPS) rule and the Long-Term Care Hospital pay rule, which were unveiled Wednesday afternoon.
    • “Hospitals that participate in the IPPS Quality Reporting Program and meaningfully use electronic records are projected to get a 2.6% increase to payments for fiscal year 2025, which begins in October. The pay raise is based on a projected hospital market basket update of 3%, which is reduced by a projected 0.4 percentage point productivity adjustment, according to a release on the rule.
    • “Long-term care hospitals are looking at a proposed 2.8% pay increase, which is a 1.6% or $41 million bump over the current year. This is “primarily due to the proposed update to the rate partially offset by a projected decrease in high-cost outlier payments in FY 2025 compared to FY 2024,” CMS wrote in a release.”
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Environmental Protection Agency has finalized the nation’s first drinking water standard for “forever chemicals,” a group of persistent human-made chemicals that can pose a health risk to people at even the smallest detectable levels of exposure.
    • “The new rules are part of the Biden administration’s efforts to limit pollution from these per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, which can persist in the environment for centuries. Exposure to PFAS has been linked to an increased risk of certain types of cancer, low birth weights, high cholesterol, and negative effects on the liver, thyroid and immune system.
    • “EPA officials estimate that the federal rule will reduce PFAS exposure in drinking water for about 100 million people.
    • “This is the first time the EPA has set a drinking water standard for a new contaminant since 1996. Some states — including Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Washington — have already passed drinking water standards for certain PFAS.”
  • Govexec explains employer-sponsored dental benefits for federal employees and annuitants.
  • Reg Jones, writing in Fedweek, discusses “Extended Health Insurance Benefits for Children of Deceased Federal Employees and Retirees.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • STAT News tells us,
    • “Cancer vaccines have traveled a potholed road over the last decade. But as researchers from different companies and academic institutions presented promising early data at the American Association for Cancer Research annual meeting in San Diego this week, experts said there’s a collective feeling of turning a corner.
    • “There’s a lot more interest in vaccines” now that the technology is improving, said Roy Herbst, chief of medical oncology at Yale Cancer Center.”
  • MedPage Today informs us that “Taking acetaminophen (Tylenol) during pregnancy was not associated with the development of autism or attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children, a large Swedish nationwide cohort study found.”
  • The National Institutes of Health informs us,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health applied artificial intelligence (AI) to a technique that produces high-resolution images of cells in the eye. They report that with AI, imaging is 100 times faster and improves image contrast 3.5-fold. The advance, they say, will provide researchers with a better tool to evaluate age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and other retinal diseases.
    • “Artificial intelligence helps overcome a key limitation of imaging cells in the retina, which is time,” said Johnny Tam, Ph.D., who leads the Clinical and Translational Imaging Section at NIH’s National Eye Institute.”
  • Per a Neurovalens press release,
    • “Modius Stress becomes company’s second product cleared for use in US 
    • “Neurovalens, a global leader in non-invasive neuro-technology, has received medical device clearance from the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) to treat anxiety with its Modius Stress device.
    • “Based in Belfast, Neurovalens is a health-tech company that specialises in combining neuroscience and technology to tackle a range of global health challenges. 
    • “The company’s medical devices have been designed to deliver non-invasive electrical stimulation to key areas of the brain and nervous system without the need for surgically implanted electrodes. 
    • “Modius Stress is designed to treat anxiety by delivering a small and safe electrical pulse to the head for a period of 30 minutes before bed, during which users can do other activities, such as watching TV or reading.”  
  • Per a Bristol Myers Squibb press release,
    • Bristol Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY) today announced new interim results from the Phase 3 EMERGENT-4 open-label extension trial evaluating the long-term efficacy, safety and tolerability of KarXT (xanomeline-trospium) in adults with schizophrenia. Long-term efficacy data from the trial were presented in a poster titled, “Maintenance of Efficacy of KarXT (Xanomeline and Trospium) in Schizophrenia” (Poster F264) at the Annual Congress of the Schizophrenia International Research Society (SIRS) being held April 3-7, 2024, in Florence, Italy.
    • “We are pleased to see a continued and consistent meaningful reduction in symptoms of schizophrenia across 52-weeks in an outpatient setting, beyond what was seen in the short-term, in-patient five-week trials (EMERGENT-2 and EMERGENT-3),” said Roland Chen, MD, senior vice president and head, Immunology, Cardiovascular and Neuroscience development, Bristol Myers Squibb. “We look forward to continued conversations with the FDA and to sharing additional data from the EMERGENT program later this year.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Vertex Pharmaceuticals on Wednesday said it would buy biotechnology company Alpine Immune Sciences and its experimental kidney disease drug for $65 per share, or approximately $4.9 billion in cash.”Vertex Pharmaceuticals on Wednesday said it would buy biotechnology company Alpine Immune Sciences and its experimental kidney disease drug for $65 per share, or approximately $4.9 billion in cash.
    • “Through the deal, which the companies expect to close in the second quarter, Vertex will gain access to povetacicept, a therapy for IgA nephropathy, or IgAN. The drug is set to enter Phase 3 testing by the end of the year. 
    • “The acquisition is the largest in Vertex’s 35-year history and comes as the company works to expand into kidney disease treatment.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review relates,
    • “Three pharmacy benefit managers accounted for nearly 80% of all prescription claims handled in 2023, according to an April 9 report from the Drug Channels Institute.
    • “To compile the list, Drug Channels analyzed estimated total equivalent prescription claims managed across the industry in 2023. CVS Caremark, Express Scripts and OptumRX managed 79% of prescription claims last year, the same percentage as in 2022.” 
  • Beckers Payer Issues lets us know,
    • “AHIP, the American Medical Association and the National Association of ACOs have released a playbook of voluntary best practices for value-based care payment arrangements. 
    • “National Association of ACOs President and CEO Clif Gaus said that in the past decade, value-based care has grown from “almost nothing to an undeniably significant aspect of our health system,” according to a joint April 10 news release from the organizations. 
    • “This iteration of the playbook synthesizes what we’ve learned over the last decade plus, so that payers, physicians, hospitals and ACOs can implement payment and delivery models that improve outcomes and lower costs,” Dr. Gaus said.”