Last night, the FDA granted Moderna emergency use authorization for administering its mRNA based COVID-19 vaccine to Americans aged 18 and older. About an hour ago, the CDC’s Advisory Committee seconded this decision which means that health plans, including FEHB plans, must begin to provide in-network and out-of-network coverage for administration of the Moderna vaccine on January 3, 2021. That is certainly good news.
Last night, as CBS News reports, the Senate joined the House of Representatives in approving a two day extension of the continuing resolution funding the federal government, and the President signed the resolution into law. The Hill adds this afternoon that
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) told Democratic House members during a conference call Saturday that a deal is within reach as soon as negotiators hammer out an agreement on language being pushed by Sen. Pat Toomey(R-Pa.) to wind down the Federal Reserve credit lending facilities. Pelosi told colleagues that the “good news” is “we’re right within reach” of resolving that disagreement.
In other news —
The American Medical Association offers advice on which masks work best in warding off COVID-19.
The federal government’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (“CISA”) offered updated guidance today on the SolarWinds backdoor hack.
Bloomberg provided this interesting observation on the scope of this hack:
At least 200 organizations, including government agencies and companies around the world, have been hacked as part of a suspected Russian cyber-attack that implanted malicious code in a widely used software program, said a cybersecurity firm and three people familiar with ongoing investigations.
The number of actual hacking victims has been one of many unanswered questions surrounding the cyber-attack, which used a backdoor in SolarWinds Corp.’s Orion network management software as a staging ground for further attacks.
As many as 18,000 SolarWinds’ customers received a malicious update that included the backdoor, but the number that was actually hacked — meaning the attackers used the backdoor to infiltrate computer networks — is likely to be far fewer.
It’s the 250th anniversary of the birth of that great composer Ludwig van Beethoven. Speaking of birthdays, the FEHBlog heard today that Dr. Anthony Fauci turns 80 on December 24. According to the Washington Post, he is urging Americans to have a merry little Christmas. Touche.
On the omnibus/COVID-19 relief bill front, Bloomberg reports that
Congressional leaders are still haggling over the final details of nearly $900 billion in coronavirus aid as staff members try to write the legislative language needed for House and Senate votes this week.
If the aid deal, combined with a spending bill needed to fund the government, isn’t ready to get a vote in both chambers by Friday, another stopgap measure will be needed to avert a partial government shutdown after midnight Friday.
People briefed on the negotiations say the draft of the plan includes $600 in payments for individuals, $300-per-week in supplemental unemployment insurance payments and aid for small businesses, but it omits aid to state and local governments and lawsuit liability protection. It also includes roughly $17 billion for airlines.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy continued negotiations on Wednesday, although the deal is more likely to come together by Thursday, according to a lawmaker briefed on the talks.
The FEHBlog expected the legislative language today but good things come to those who wait, right?
The CMS actuary released his annual report on the previous year’s healthcare spending. “Total national healthcare spending in 2019 grew 4.6%, which was similar to the 4.7% growth in 2018 and the average annual growth since 2016 of 4.5%.” 2020 may be the outlier.
HHS began distributing the third phase of COVID-19 relief funding for providers Wednesday, with $24.5 billion to go to more than 70,000 providers through the end of January. The amount exceeds the original $20 billion planned for this tranche as officials realized more would be needed to get providers close to whole from coronavirus-related losses. HHS said up to 88% of applicants’ reported losses are being reimbursed.
In that regard, Fierce Healthcare reports that major healthcare systems which own a health insurer are weathering the COVID-19 storm better than most health systems according to a PwC report. “PwC pointed to major health systems such as Intermountain, Kaiser Permanente and Presbyterian Healthcare Services that used health plans to help bolster their finances.” It’s not surprising to the FEHBlog that hedges like this work. Large health insurers similarly are acquiring healthcare providers.
In other news —
The EEOC offers guidance for employers who want to make sure that their employee are vaccinated again COVID-19 and also want to comply with federal anti-discrimination law. This new guidance is Q&A K.
EHR Intelligence discusses the Gravity Project’s efforts to introduce social determinants of health data into electronic health records.
Health Payer Intelligence informs us about a PwC Health Research Institute report concluding that “Payers and stakeholder collaborators have the opportunity to rebuild the healthcare system into a more effective and consumer-centric system in 2021 by honing virtual care and other strategies.”
Krebs on Security details the malicious hack on the SolarWinds/Orion platform used by federal agencies and Fortune 500 companies “to monitor the health of their IT networks.”
Becker’s Health IT reports that “Healthcare workers in Indiana who tried signing up for the first round of COVID-19 vaccinations Dec. 14 overwhelmed the state’s enrollment website, resulting in down time, according to Indianapolis NBC affiliate WTHR.” Why is this good news? Because now that the COVID-19 vaccine is a reality, people will want the jab as the call it in Britain. That’s human nature.
The Wall Street Journal reports that “The Food and Drug Administration [“FDA’] said Tuesday that the Covid-19 vaccine developed by Moderna Inc. was “highly effective,” setting the stage for an emergency authorization later this week that would add a second vaccine to the arsenal against the pandemic.” Here’s a link to the Moderna briefing document for Thursday’s meeting with the FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee.
A friend of the FEHBlog pointed out the following encouraging FDA announcement
Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization (EUA) for the first over-the-counter (OTC) fully at-home diagnostic test for COVID-19. The Ellume COVID-19 Home Test is a rapid, lateral flow antigen test, a type of test that runs a liquid sample along a surface with reactive molecules. The test detects fragments of proteins of the SARS-CoV-2 virus from a nasal swab sample from any individual 2 years of age or older.
“Today’s authorization is a major milestone in diagnostic testing for COVID-19. By authorizing a test for over- the-counter use, the FDA allows it to be sold in places like drug stores, where a patient can buy it, swab their nose, run the test and find out their results in as little as 20 minutes,” said FDA Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn, M.D. “As we continue to authorize additional tests for home use, we are helping expand Americans’ access to testing, reducing the burden on laboratories and test supplies, and giving Americans more testing options from the comfort and safety of their own homes.”
The announcement today of the first fully at-home OTC COVID-19 diagnostic test follows last month’s authorization of the first prescription COVID-19 test for home use and last week’s announcement of the first non-prescription test system, in which a lab processes the self-collected sample. The FDA has authorized more than 225 diagnostic tests for COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic, including more than 25 tests that allow for home collection of samples, which are then sent to a lab for testing. The Ellume COVID-19 Home Test is the first COVID-19 test that can be used completely at home without a prescription.
On the omnibus / COVID-19 relief bill front, the Wall Street Journal reports
The top four congressional leaders discussed a coronavirus relief package and sweeping spending bill on Tuesday and planned to return for another meeting in the evening, as lawmakers raced to reach an agreement before critical support programs expire at year’s end.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.), Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) first conferred in the afternoon, with the meeting of both parties’ leaders a signal that they could be ready to make the difficult decisions needed to cut a deal.
The group will meet again late Tuesday.
“We’re continuing to work. I think there’s progress. We’ll get back together,” Mr. McCarthy said following the afternoon meeting.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who spoke to Mrs. Pelosi earlier Tuesday for more than an hour, also joined the first meeting by phone.
The legislative text must be released tomorrow if Congress want to stick with the current December 18 deadline for action.
A friend of the FEHBlog pointed out the Office of Management and Budget’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs has issued its Fall 2020 Unified Agenda of “Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions. Here’s a link to the OPM agenda. The FEHBlog noticed a FEHBP centralized enrollment proposed rule and a final FEHBAR rule involving the Truth in Negotiations Act threshold change which the FEHBlog called to OPM’s attention.
In other healthcare news
Health Payer Intelligence offers “Five Pivotal Payer Industry Trends To Watch in 2021.”
Healthcare Finance News reports that various healthcare trade associations have asked a federal district court in Maryland to preliminarily enjoin implementation of the Trump Administration’s Medicare Part B international drug price index pilot scheduled for January 1, 2021. The motion was filed on December 10 and the government filed its opposition today.
A friend of the FEHBlog pointed out this NIH press release on the state of bad teenager habits.
Findings released today from the most recent Monitoring the Future (MTF) survey of substance use behaviors and related attitudes among teens in the United States indicate that levels of nicotine and marijuana vaping did not increase from 2019 to early 2020, although they remain high. The annual MTF survey is conducted by the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor, and is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health.
In the four years since the survey began including questions on nicotine and marijuana vaping, use of these substances among teens have increased to markedly high levels From 2017 to 2019, the percentage of teenagers who said they vaped nicotine in the past 12 months roughly doubled for eighth graders from 7.5% to 16.5%, for 10th graders from 15.8% to 30.7%, and for 12th graders from 18.8% to 35.3%. In 2020, the rates held steady at a respective 16.6%, 30.7%, and 34.5%. However, somewhat encouragingly, daily, or near daily (20 occasions in the past 30 days), nicotine vaping declined among 10th and 12th graders from 2019 to 2020, by close to half — from 6.8% to 3.6% in 10th grade and from 11.6% to 5.3% in 12th grade.
STAT News offers a portrait of the COVID-19 virus at one year — what scientists know about how it spreads, infects, and sickens. Meanwhile, the AP provides its perspective on today’s first COVID-19 vaccinations, which should be view as a miracle as vaccines normally take at least four years to develop.
Healthcare Dive and Revcycle Intelligence discuss industry reaction to the bipartisan, bicameral surprise billing legislation introduced in Congress last week. The articles make it clear that neither providers nor payers are entirely happy with the legislation and that the legislators’ goal is to attach the bill to this week’s must pass omnibus spending bill (“the omnibus”). It could go.
A friend of the FEHBlog pointed out today another bill that could get attached to the omnibus. Last week the House passed H.R. 7898 which would permit HHS’s Office for Civil Rights to mitigate HIPAA fines and other remedies when the covered entity or business associate has adequately demonstrated that it “had, for not less than the previous 12 months, recognized security practices in place.” “The term ‘recognized security practices’ means the standards, guidelines, best practices, methodologies, procedures, and processes developed under section 2(c)(15) of the National Institute of Standards and Technology Act, the approaches promulgated under section 405(d) of the Cybersecurity Act of 2015, and other programs and processes that address cybersecurity and that are developed, recognized, or promulgated through regulations under other statutory authorities. Such practices shall be determined by the covered entity or business associate, consistent with the HIPAA Security rule (part 160 of title 45 Code of Federal Regulations and subparts A and C of part 164 of such title).” That’s quite reasonable and equitable.
Bloomberg reports today that legislative work on the omnibus itself remains on track. Also the FEHBlog appreciated Bloomberg’s insights into the COVID-19 relief bill which would be the key measure to be attached to the omnibus. What better time than now for Christmas tree legislation” In any event, according to Bloomberg,
[U.S Senator John] Cornyn [R TX] said the $908 billion bipartisan proposal unveiled Monday isn’t likely to go forward by itself but will be used as jumping-off point for the leaders from both parties in both chambers. ”It’s having a positive influence on what will ultimately included,” Cornyn said of the bipartisan proposal.
Forbes provides more background on the status of the COVID-19 relief legislation for those who are interested (as the FEHBlog is).
While the FEHBlog is a subscriber to the WSJ, Bloomberg and STAT News, among others, he does not subscribe to Modern Healthcare. That’s difficult at this time of year because he does get a kick out of their list of the 100 people who have most influence on U.S. healthcare. Fortunately, AHIP provided a list of their members’ executives who made the list. Congratulations to them.
The Federal Benefits Open Season for 2021 ends tomorrow. OPM explains on its website that
The Federal Benefits Open Season ends at 11:59pm Eastern Time on Monday December 14, 2020 for the Federal Employees Dental and Vision Insurance Program (FEDVIP) and the Federal Flexible Spending Account Program (FSAFEDS). Open Season for the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHB) ends at 11:59pm, in the location of your electronic enrollment system, on Monday December 14, 2020.
Both Houses of Congress have scheduled Committee hearings / meetings and floor voting for this week. The Hill reports that
A bipartisan group of lawmakers is splitting its $908 billion coronavirus relief proposal into two packages as it prepares to release text on Monday.
The plan, confirmed by a source familiar with the talks, will include a $160 billion proposal that ties together the two most controversial elements: more money for state and local governments and protections against coronavirus-related lawsuits.
The second proposal will total $748 billion and include ideas that garner broader support, including another round of Paycheck Protection Program funding for small businesses, unemployment benefits, and more money for vaccine distribution, testing and schools.
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), a member of the group, announced earlier Sunday that it would release text on Monday. “The plan is alive and well, and there is no way we’re going to leave Washington without taking care of the emergency needs of our people,” Manchin said on “Fox News Sunday.” “We’ll have a bill produced for the American people tomorrow, $908 billion.”
Congress is quickly running out of time to cut a big deal on coronavirus relief, with lawmakers having until Friday to pass a government funding bill that will act as the vehicle for any agreement. But the bipartisan group has been negotiating for weeks, including over the weekend, to try to finalize its bill after announcing a framework earlier this month.
A friend of the FEHBlog called to his attention this bipartisan, bicameral surprise billing relief proposal. The House Ways and Means Committee released the bill and the President expressed his support for it on Thursday December 11. It’s certainly not clear to the FEHBlog whether this bill will be dropped into the must pass spending bill later this week as the President suggests.
Amazon has rolled out a new data aggregation and standardization service for healthcare and life sciences organizations, the tech giant announced Tuesday.
The goal of the HIPAA-eligible tool, called Amazon HealthLake, is to make it simpler for healthcare organizations to manipulate, structure and search their data.
In other Amazon news, the e-commerce behemoth has expanded its network of health clinics for employees with four additional locations in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, the company said last week.
The House on Wednesday [December 9] passed a stopgap funding bill 343-67 that would give lawmakers an additional week to come up with full-year spending legislation and avoid a government shutdown later this month. The continuing resolution would last for one week, setting a new funding deadline of Dec. 18. The Senate must still pass the CR and President Trump must sign it by Friday to avoid a government shutdown, which both are expected to do.
The Wall Street Journal adds that “A flurry of competing proposals for another coronavirus relief package ricocheted around the Capitol Wednesday, as lawmakers hunted for ways to resolve a thorny debate over liability protections that has stymied progress for weeks.” A December 9 fact sheet on the bipartisan proposal was made available today. Check it out.
In Presidential transition news, President-elect Biden announced the following additional healthcare appointments earlier this week:
Vivek Murthy, M.D., for a second tour of duty as surgeon general
Rochelle Walensky, MD, Harvard professor, as CDC director
Marcella Nunez-Smith, MD, Yale Professor, as COVID-19 Equity Task Force Chair
Jeff Zients, Deputy OMB Director for Management in Obama Administration, as Covid-19 czar.
Anthony Fauci, MD, as Coordinator of COVID-19 response and Counselor to the President
Sidebar — Still waiting for FDA Commissioner appointment
Added Cathie McQuiston, AFGE Deputy GC, to the OPM review team
Tomorrow December 10 is the date set for the FDA Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee virtual meeting on the Pfizer-BioNTech emergency use authorization application for its COVID-19 vaccine. The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices will meet on Friday December 11 and vote on Sunday December 13 per Reuters. “
Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert and non-voting member of the CDC’s ACIP, said the gap between the two ACIP meetings will allow the FDA time to draft and issue an emergency use authorization (EUA) before the ACIP vote. That schedule could change, however, if FDA advisers have questions or request more data [tomorrow], he said.
authorized LabCorp’s Pixel COVID-19 Test Home Collection Kit for use by any individual 18 years and older without a prescription. This product, which is authorized as the first COVID-19 direct-to-consumer (non-prescription) test system, allows an individual to self-collect a nasal swab sample at home and then send that sample for testing to LabCorp. Positive or invalid test results are then delivered to the user by phone call from a health care provider. Negative test results are delivered via email or online portal.
This home sample collection kit can be purchased online or in a store without a prescription. It is intended to enable users to access information about their COVID-19 infection status that could aid with determining if self-isolation (quarantine) is appropriate and to assist with health care decisions after discussion with a health care professional.
“This is the first kit for consumers to self-collect a nasal sample for COVID-19 in their home that does not require a prescription,” said Jeff Shuren, M.D., J.D., director of FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. “While many home collection kits can be prescribed with a simple online questionnaire, this newly authorized direct-to-consumer collection kit removes that step from the process, allowing anyone to collect their sample and send it to the lab for processing.”
Blue Cross and Blue Shield is calling on payers to bolster vaccination rates by expanding access to care, connecting with members through digital platforms, hosting free flu vaccine clinics, and utilizing data to target support for at-risk communities The effort comes in response to a drastic decrease in the number of vaccinations this year, compared with 2019 data.
The Trump administration made a $916 billion coronavirus relief offer to Democrats, opening yet another front in the multi-track effort to reach an agreement in talks that rank-and-file lawmakers have been leading in the final weeks of the year. The proposal, announced in a brief statement by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, came after Democrats rejected an effort by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) to narrow the scope of a coronavirus relief bill by excluding aid for hard-hit state and local governments prioritized by Democrats and liability protections sought by Republicans.
The President’s proposal reportedly includes $600 per person direct payments. The FEHBlog will be surprised if the COVID-19 relief bill negotiations are unsuccessful, but it would be hardly be the first time that Congress surprises the FEHBlog.
Also according the Wall Street Journal, the House of Representatives tonight passed the FY 2021 National Defense Authorization Act by a veto proof 335-78 margin. As the FEHBlog noted last week this bill includes goodies for federal employees. Federal News Network identifies policy winners and losers in this must pass bill which now goes over to the Senate.
Federal News Network columnist Mike Causey touts the FEHBlog’s personal favorite health plan design the high deductible health plan with health savings account (“HSA”). Mr. Causey aptly describes the HSA as a “Roth IRA on steroids” because and HSA is triple tax favored — tax exempt on the way in and out and grows tax free while in the account. The Federal Benefits Open Season ends on Monday December 14.
The FDA has released its internal review documents ahead of the closely watched COVID-19 vaccine advisory committee meeting scheduled for Thursday [December 10] —and they bode well for Pfizer and partner BioNTech’s prospects for securing a quick emergency use authorization (EUA). The FDA meeting briefing, published (PDF) on Tuesday, confirmed the efficacy and safety profile of Pfizer and BioNTech’s BNT162b2, reiterating that the shot was 95% effective at preventing COVID-19 after two doses with no serious safety concerns.
The Moderna vaccines turn before this panel occurs one week later on December 17.
Hospitals are readying for Jan. 1, [2021] when they expect they will have to publicly disclose the negotiated prices they reach with insurers for services performed inside their facilities — barring any intervention from a federal appeals court. [Such intervention in the FEHBlog’s humble opinion, is highly unlikely.]
The policy requires hospitals to share two streams of information. First, hospitals will have to share a machine-readable format of its negotiated prices with every insurer and every insurance product — a sizable pool of information.
Then they will also have to prepare a list of 300 “shoppable services.” A total knee replacement would be a good example. It’s a procedure a consumer likely has time to plan and prepare for, unlike an emergency surgery due to an accident or failing health. The idea is to provide the price information so consumers can shop around for the best deal.
The FEHBlog attended the second day of the American Bar Association’s Washington Health Law Summit (“WLS”). It’s worth noting that every panelist (six or seven in total) who has opined on the outcome of the Supreme Court’s California v. Texas case on the ACA’s constitutionality shares the FEHBlog’s opinion that the Supreme Court will preserve the ACA expect perhaps for the individual mandate which Congress effectively repealed in 2017.
The FEHBlog listened to three hours of discussion about behavioral telehealth and artificial intelligence during the WLS. It turns out that two types of healthcare AI exist admin AI and operational AI. AI can be assistive to the user’s decision making or can yield autonomous decisions. The Food and Drug Administration oversees the AI devices and the operational devices typically are used with imaging procedures. The FDA has approved two autonomous operational AI devices. The radiologists however has doubts about those devices.
The most interesting thing that the FEHBlog heard during this discussion was a remark from a Doctors on Demand speaker that telehealth companies are facing challenges in filling provider slots for psychiatrists and psychologists because of the enormous demand for mental health telemedicine. That’s a good thing. He noted that the explosion in telehealth use in 2020 is principally due to the government permitting a doctor or psychiatrist licensed in state A to treat a telehealth patient in state B.
The other speakers added that healthcare providers were quick to pick up on telehealth due to the licensing flexibilities and Medicare equivalent payments. They expressed their understanding that telehealth changes the personal dynamics between doctors and patients. Patients feels more in charge in a tele heath setting than they do in the office setting, and providers get social determinants of health data from seeing where the patient lives.
Bloomberg reports that “[COVID-19 relief bill] talks over the weekend and on Monday have not made enough progress to release final details yet, according to congressional aides.” “Senate Republican leaders made clear Monday evening that the package must have liability reforms [to protect businesses from COVID-19 lawsuits] that [Senate Majority Leader Mitch] McConnell supports in order for Republicans to consider any state and local aid [which is a Democrat priority]. Accordingly as Forbes reports, “The House [of Representatives] will vote on a one-week stopgap spending bill Wednesday, pushing back a looming December 11 government shutdown deadline to give lawmakers more time to come to an agreement on a new coronavirus relief package.”
The FEHBlog is attending the American Bar Association’s virtual Washington Health Law Summit (“WLS”) which runs from today through Wednesday. (Ermer & Suter is a bronze sponsor.) He heard one of the speakers tout the Health Care Cost Institutes’s Healthy Marketplace Index.
Using nearly 2.5 billion commercial claims from 2013 to 2017, HCCI tracks drivers of health care spending across 124 U.S. cities through the Healthy Marketplace Index (HMI) project. Our full report presents an interactive exploration of each HMI metric and a deep dive into each metro area. Collectively, they comparing how spending drivers varied across and even within cities, as well as over time
HMI is easy to navigate, and the information is on point but somewhat dated. Not bad for free though.
TechRepublic courageously offers seven predictions for how technology will shape healthcare next year. One of the predictions is continued demand for telehealth. One of the WLS speakers sagely commented about the public health importance of mental health services provided by telehealth She noted that while four out of five doctors in medical / surgical practices join health plan networks, only one out of five psychiatrists and psychologists join those networks. Telemedicine makes the in-network psychiatrists and psychologists more widely available. That’s an important consideration.
Another WLS speaker predicted that Congress will pass a big infrastructure bill next year that will include healthcare priorities such as expanding reliable internet access in rural areas of the country in order to facilitate telehealth there.
While the continued climb of COVID-19 cases in the U.S. is pushing many Americans’ resiliency to the limits, there are signs that some are adapting to the challenging circumstances, a new study from Cigna shows.
Daniel Ober, M.D., chief medical officer for Cigna Global Health Benefits, told Fierce Healthcare that because the U.S. never really entered a lull in the pandemic that allowed it to reopen the way some other regions did, many Americans have “adapted somewhat” to life under COVID-19. For example, people who are unwilling to wear masks in public, as is recommended by experts, are largely an exception to the rule, not the norm, he said. “We’re adapting to this new normal and will continue to do so,” he said.
It’s nice to read encouraging news on this first Monday in a while without big COVID-19 vaccine news. The FDA committee considers the Pfizer BioNTech application for emergency use authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine on Thursday.
Congress is in session this week for committee business and floor voting. The big item is the omnibus spending bill which is expected to include the bipartisan COVID-19 relief package. The legislative language for this bill should be released tomorrow if everything remains on track. An omnibus or short term spending measure must be passed by 11:59 pm on December 11. The FEHBlog thought that both Houses of Congress were set to adjourn this week but it turns out that the Senate is scheduled to continue working through December 18.
The Federal Employee Benefits Open Season continues through next Monday December 14, while the Medicare Open Season ends tomorrow December 7. Let’s not forget that December 6 though 12 is the Centers for Disease Control’s (“CDC”) National Flu Vaccination Week.
The press is reporting tonight that President-elect Biden intends to appoint California Attorney General Xaxier Becerra to be his Secretary of Health and Human Services, which is a very powerful position when it comes to healthcare in the U.S. Speaking of healthcare leaders, Fierce Healthcare identifies six health plan executives to watch in 2021.
The CDC released updated COVID-19 protection guidance on Friday.
Summary What is already known about this topic?
The United States is experiencing high levels of SARS-CoV-2 transmission.
What is added by this report?
COVID-19 pandemic control requires a multipronged application of evidence-based strategies while improving health equity: universal face mask use, physical distancing, avoiding nonessential indoor spaces, increasing testing, prompt quarantine of exposed persons, safeguarding those at increased risk for severe illness or death, protecting essential workers, postponing travel, enhancing ventilation and hand hygiene, and achieving widespread COVID-19 vaccination coverage.
What are the implications for public health practice?
These combined strategies will protect health care, essential businesses, and schools, bridging to a future with high community coverage of effective vaccines and safe return to more activities in a range of settings.
The FEHBlog ran across a Bloomberg report which adds
Harvard disease expert Willam Hanage says that the science to date points to the primary risk coming from what he calls the three C’s — close contact, closed spaces and crowds. He says in Japan, where they’ve had few Covid-19 deaths, people are advised to avoid these — not just to wear masks in these situations but to limit them or avoid them altogether.
In much better but nevertheless thought provoking news, the Wall Street Journal reports that
Drug development for sickle-cell disease, largely overlooked for decades, is becoming a crowded field: Two papers published Saturday in the New England Journal of Medicine report promising results from studies of experimental therapies, including Crispr gene editing, for the disease.
In addition, Beam Therapeutics Inc. on Saturday presented lab and mouse data at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting to support the safety of another approach to using Crispr gene editing for sickle-cell disease. The company said it hopes to open a trial next year.
The article points that Crispr gene editing is an expensive technology. “What good are new therapies for a disease if many patients suffering with it are unable, or choose not, to access them?” That is an issue for health plans to contemplate now, in the FEHBlog’s opinion.
The FEHBlog took a look at the CDC’s Center for National Health Statistics website today, and he ran across these interesting recent reports
The FEHBlog was surprised by the facts that “Prepregnancy obesity [measured as body mass index of 30 or higher] in the United States rose from 26.1% in 2016 to 29.0% in 2019 and increased steadily for non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, and Hispanic women” and that “In 2019, more than one in four children had one or more visits to an urgent care center or retail health clinic (26.4%) in the past 12 months.” These reports further find that college educated women are less likely to be obese and that insured children are more likely to us retail health clinics.
The prepregnancy obesity report led the FEHBlog to consult OPM’s available statistics on federal employee demographics which date back to 2017. Roughly 52% of federal employees have at least college degree. The FEHBlog also found a May 2020 Pew Research report on Postal Service employee demographics which does discuss Postal employee education levels but does point out that
About six-in-ten of the agency’s employees – including mail carriers, postal clerks, and mail sorters and processors – are non-Hispanic white (57%), compared with 78% of the overall U.S. workforce. Around a quarter (23%) of Postal Service workers are black, 11% are Hispanic and 7% are Asian. In contrast, black Americans make up 13% of the national workforce, Hispanics 17% and Asian Americans 6%.
In 18 states and the District of Columbia, women make up half or more of Postal Service employees. In D.C., 74% of Postal Service workers are women, and women account for around six-in-ten postal workers in Idaho, Alabama and South Dakota. Nationally, slightly fewer than half of postal workers are women (45%), in line with the U.S. workforce.
The Postal Service, as of 2018, employs more than 100,000 military veterans, who make up 16% of its workers nationally. Veterans account for just 5.8% of all employed Americans, according to data for 2019.
The percentage of women Postal employees basically aligns with the percentage of women federal employees. However, the percentage of military veteran Postal Service employees is nearly double the percentage of military veteran federal employees. (The FEHBlog also found this recent, helpful Congressional Research Service report on “Federal Workforce Statistics Sources: OPM and OMB.”)
The FEHBlog points this out because as the COVID-19 public health emergency has ably illustrated race, ethnicity, age and gender, among other demographic factors, impact healthcare and while OPM provides age and gender information to FEHB plans, the agency does not provide race or ethnicity date to those FEHB plans.
Finally the Salt Lake City [UT] Tribune reports that
More than a week after Sanford Health parted ways with its longtime CEO, the health system announced that it has indefinitely suspended merger talks with Utah-based Intermountain Healthcare. Sanford Health and Intermountain Healthcare made the announcement Friday [December 4], saying that with the leadership change, Sanford decided to put merger talks on hold while other organizational needs are addressed.
Intermountain offers an FEHB plan under the SelectHealth name.
Based on the CDC’s Cases in the U.S. website, here is the FEHBlog’s chart of new weekly COVID-19 cases and deaths over the 20th through 48th weeks of this year (beginning May 14 and ending December 2; using Thursday as the first day of the week in order to facilitate this weekly update):
and here is the CDC’s latest overall weekly hospitalization rate chart for COVID-19:
The dip of the right side of this chart always happens and is not indicative of a drop in hospitalizations.
The FEHBlog has noted that the new cases and deaths chart shows a flat line for new weekly deaths because new cases greatly exceed new deaths. Accordingly here is a chart of new COVID-19 deaths over the same period (May 14 through December 2):
This week’s dips on the right sides of the COVID 19 new cases and deaths charts are valid.
It’s worth adding that as of November 28, 2020, the Centers for Disease Control’s Fluview reports that “Seasonal influenza activity in the United States remains lower than usual for this time of year.” If anything proves that people are using masks and social distancing effectively this statistic does. COVID-19 simply is a stronger virus than the flu but it would be bad news to have a twin pandemic.
From the COVID-19 vaccine front, Fierce Healthcare reports that
After a bombshell report Thursday from the Wall Street Journal claiming Pfizer and BioNTech suddenly scaled back distribution targets for their mRNA-based coronavirus vaccine in 2020, the drugmaker said those revised plans were nothing new and, in fact, had been laid out last month. In announcements since, the company has quoted the new numbers. * * *
Pfizer is planning to distribute up to 50 million doses of its shot, dubbed BNT162b2, by the end of the year, a significant cut from the 100 million doses the drugmaker initially intended. Back in November, those plans were revised due to a slower-than-expected manufacturing scale-up and raw material shortages, a Pfizer spokesman said.
Also, on the bright side, “Antibody levels stayed elevated in the 90 days after people received the second dose of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, raising hopes that the prophylactic can provide protection for one year.” Keep hope alive.
From the COVID-19 relief front, the Wall Street Journal reports that “A sharp decline in job growth in November further prodded lawmakers to reach an agreement on coronavirus relief, as negotiators hurried to craft a bill before a government funding deadline at the end of next week. * * * Rank-and-file lawmakers are still negotiating the details of the bipartisan proposal, including the language specifying how to distribute aid to state and local governments and the duration of a legal liability shield for businesses, health-care providers and schools. They are expected to continue crafting the text of the agreement, which also puts money toward schools, vaccine distribution and small business, through the weekend.” It will be telling if the negotiators release legislative language on Monday.
Also from Congress, Federal News Network informs us that
Federal employees who put off travel plans or simply didn’t have the time or flexibility to take time off this year will have a little more leeway with their unused annual leave in 2021. The latest version of the National Defense Authorization Act includes a provision that will allow federal employees to carry over an additional 25% of their annual leave into 2021. Conferees unveiled the details of their agreement for the 2021 NDAA, which is considered must-pass legislation, Thursday evening. * * *
[Also, ]Nearly a year after Congress passed paid parental leave benefits into law for federal employees, lawmakers are poised to correct a few mistakes with the original bill and expand coverage to the entire workforce.
The final NDAA agreement includes a provision that will ensure paid parental leave coverage to workers at the Federal Aviation Administration, non-screener personnel at the Transportation Security Administration and health professionals at the Veterans Health Administration, as well as any other Title 38 employees. Congressional employees, Article I judges, presidential appointees and employees of the District of Columbia courts and Public Defender Service are also covered in the final NDAA provisions.
The provision would go in effect as if they were immediately enacted after the passage of last year’s NDAA, meaning that an FAA or VHA employee expecting a new child on or after Oct. 1 should be entitled to receive paid parental leave benefits.
Finally, the Health and Human Services Department announced today “the creation of a False Claims Act Working Group (Working Group) that enhances its partnership with the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) to combat fraud and abuse by identifying and focusing resources on those who seek to defraud the American taxpayers. HHS regulates over a third of the United States economy. In 2020, HHS provided over $1.5 trillion in grants and other payments to public and private recipients, including for healthcare items and services. In addition, HHS is one of the largest government contractors, paying over $170 billion in 2020 to thousands of contractors. In combating COVID-19, HHS has administered unprecedented levels of taxpayer support for private individuals and organizations.” OPM and its Inspector General, to their credit, have maintained a similar working group with FEHBP carriers for decades.
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