Tuesday Tidbits

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Maddy Weiss on Unsplash

Happy First Day of Spring!

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Lawmakers who are finishing writing six annual spending bills have resolved a last-minute roadblock over border funding, setting the stage for Congress to review and approve the legislation on a tight timeline that could take them to the brink of a partial government shutdown this weekend. 
    • “Congressional negotiators late Monday reached a deal on the provisions within the Department of Homeland Security’s funding bill. That bill got caught in an 11th-hour tangle with the White House over border spending, which has become a top issue in many swing states during the 2024 presidential-election year.
    • “In a statement Tuesday morning, Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) said an agreement has been reached on the Homeland Security funds, and House and Senate committees have begun drafting bill text to be “prepared for release and consideration by the full House and Senate as soon as possible.”
    • “President Biden said Tuesday that a path on the remaining funding legislation had been finalized and he would sign the measure immediately when it gets to his desk.”
  • Per a House Budget Committee press release,
    • “Today, the House of Representatives advanced House Budget Committee legislation, H.R. 766, the Dr. Michael C. Burgess Preventative Health Savings Act (PHSA), to the Senate by a voice vote. 
    • “The historic accomplishment marks the first time in history that a bipartisan bill with sole Budget Committee jurisdiction has been brought to the Floor under a suspension of the House rules. * * *
    • One of the major barriers to deploying modernized and innovative policies that would unequivocally curb the cost of health care is the antiquated process used for calculating congressional cost estimates on proposed health care legislation.
    • Congressional scorekeepers have traditionally focused solely only on the short-term valuation of a policy rather than capturing the long-term economic impact.
    • But today, with passage of H.R. 766, that changes. This bill seeks to improve the methodology of Congress’ broken budgetary process by providing policymakers with a more accurate cost estimate of the long-term cost savings from preventive health care policies.”
  • Per an HHS press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), announced a new voluntary model that empowers primary care providers in eligible Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) to treat people with Medicare using innovative, team-based, person-centered proactive care. A key part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s efforts to further promote competition in health care, the ACO Primary Care Flex Model (ACO PC Flex Model) will provide a one-time advanced shared savings payment and monthly prospective primary care payments (PPCPs) to ACOs. The advanced shared savings payments provide ACOs with needed resources and flexibility to cover costs associated with forming an ACO (where relevant) and administrative costs for required model activities. PPCPs will be distributed by ACOs to primary care practices, giving them improved resources and flexibility to provide care that best suits individuals’ needs.” * * *
    • “The ACO PC Flex Model is a five-year voluntary model that will begin on January 1, 2025. CMS is planning to select approximately 130 ACOs to participate in the model. Organizations interested in participating must first apply — either as new ACOs or renewing ACOs — to the Shared Savings Program. Shared Savings Program Applications are open May 20, 2024 – June 17, 2024. The ACO PC Flex Model Request for Applications (RFA) is planned to be released in the second quarter of 2024.
    • “For Frequently Asked Questions about the Primary Care Flex Model, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/priorities/innovation/innovation-models/aco-primary-care-flex-model/faqs.
    • “For a fact sheet on the model, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/aco-pc-flex-fs.pdf – PDF.”
  • Yesterday, HHS’s Office for Civil Rights offered guidance to HIPAA covered entities and business associates about their use of online tracking technologies.
    • “Compliance with the Security Rule helps lower the risk of unauthorized access to ePHI collected through a regulated entity’s website or mobile app that could lead to harm to individuals. Therefore, OCR is prioritizing compliance with the HIPAA Security Rule in investigations into the use of online tracking technologies. OCR’s principal interest in this area is ensuring that regulated entities have identified, assessed, and mitigated the risks to ePHI when using online tracking technologies and have implemented the Security Rule requirements to ensure the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of ePHI. OCR investigations are fact-specific and may involve the review of technical information regarding a regulated entity’s use of any tracking technologies. OCR considers all of the available evidence in determining compliance and remedies for potential noncompliance.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force issued the following final recommendation today:
    • “For children and adolescents younger than 18 years without signs and symptoms of or known exposure to maltreatment: The evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of primary care interventions to prevent child maltreatment. [Grade I]”
  • Beckers Payer Issues discusses what fifteen insurers and trade associations explored with Biden Administration officials yesterday about the Change Healthcare situation.
    • During the meeting, stakeholders discussed how progress has been made in reestablishing claims processing systems, though small, rural and safety-net providers specifically are still reporting issues with cash flow.
    • Many healthcare organizations will require third-party certification of Change’s cybersecurity before reconnecting to its systems, in which UnitedHealth was urged to provide a timeframe around. Payers were also asked to analyze their internal data to determine which providers need more support and to engage with them directly.
    • According to Reuters, payers said they would accelerate payments to Medicare and Medicaid providers, along with providing loans to Medicaid providers.”
  • Here is a link to the HHS readout from this meeting.
  • The U.S. Postal Service reminded its retirees with Part A only about the opportunity to enroll for Medicare Part B with no late enrollment penalty during a special enrollment period beginning April 1, 2024. The Postal Service is picking up the late enrollment penalty cost. This is a good deal.
    • “The one-time PSHB SEP is from April 1, 2024, to Sept. 30, 2024. Individuals eligible for the PSHB SEP will receive notification by U.S. Mail™ in March 2024.
    • “All required information must be returned in the envelope provided and postmarked by Sept. 30, 2024.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration announced,
    • “On Monday, the FDA launched a new portal for patients, consumers and health care professionals to report potential drug shortage issues directly into CDER’s NextGen system without creating a NextGen account. 
    • “Since 2017, NextGen has been a way for regulated industry to communicate with the FDA, including submitting information on shortages, discontinuations, and anticipated supply disruptions. Non-industry stakeholders without a NextGen account previously reported information about potential shortages to the FDA’s Drug Shortages Staff by email. The new public portal allows anyone to submit shortage information through an online form directly into NextGen.  
    • “Expanding access to NextGen’s shortage reporting beyond regulated industry will allow for greater consistency and ease of reporting by outside stakeholders, and greater efficiency in tracking and responding to these reports.” 

From the public health and medical research front,

  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “Investigation of an early signal for stroke associated with COVID-19 bivalent vaccines turned into suspicion of high-dose or adjuvanted flu shots instead, based on a large U.S. population-based study.
    • “When researchers inspected a large Medicare database, they found no evidence of a significantly elevated risk for stroke at 1-21 days or 22-42 days after vaccination with either of the mRNA COVID vaccines distributed for the 2022-2023 respiratory season when compared with the 43-90 day control window, reported researchers led by Yun Lu, PhD, a statistician of the FDA in Silver Spring, Maryland.
    • “There was a significant excess of nonhemorrhagic stroke for people with concomitant administration of Pfizer-BioNTech’s bivalent vaccine plus a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine during the 22-42 days risk window (risk difference of 3.13 out of 100,000 doses); and a significant excess of transient ischemic attack for people with concomitant administration of Moderna’s bivalent COVID vaccine plus a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine during the 1-21 days risk window (risk difference of 3.33 out of 100,000 doses).
    • “But the researchers found that people with administration of a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccine alone (without concomitant COVID vaccination) had an elevated risk for the combined outcome of nonhemorrhagic stroke or transient ischemic attack in both the 1-21 days risk window (risk difference of 1.65 per 100,000 doses) and 22-42 days risk window (risk difference of 1.60 per 100,000 doses).
    • “This finding suggests that the observed association between vaccination and stroke in the concomitant subgroup was likely driven by a high-dose or adjuvanted influenza vaccination,” the investigators reported in JAMA.”
  • Medscape lets us know,
    • “The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has cleared the twiist automated insulin delivery (AID) system (Sequel Med Tech, LLC; Manchester, NH) for people aged 6 years or older with type 1 diabetes
    • “The system comprises a novel insulin pump developed by Sequel’s research and development partner DEKA and uses the FDA-cleared Tidepool Loop algorithmthat was originally developed through patient-led, open-source initiatives.
    • “The twiist AID system has the capacity to work interchangeably with different integrated continuous glucose monitors (iCGMs), and Sequel will announce their initial iCGM partner closer to market launch, Sequel CEO and co-founder Alan Lotvin, MD, told Medscape Medical News
    • “It is the first AID system that directly measures volume and flow of insulin delivery, which enables it to rapidly detect obstructions or occlusions, usually within about 20 minutes, Lotvin explained. “

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Elevance Health has inked a deal to acquire Kroger Specialty Pharmacy.
    • “The grocery chain announced Monday that an agreement is in place, saying it’s expected to close in the back half of 2024 pending regulatory approvals. Elevance intends to add Kroger Specialty Pharmacy to its CarelonRx business, which houses its pharmacy benefit management services.
    • “Financial terms of the sale were not disclosed.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “AstraZeneca is the latest large pharmaceutical company to make a sizable bet on radiopharmaceutical drugs for cancer, agreeing on Tuesday to acquire longtime biotechnology partner Fusion Pharmaceuticals in a deal worth up to $2.4 billion.
    • “AstraZeneca will acquire all of Fusion’s shares for $21 apiece, or about $2 billion. The British drugmaker could add another $3 per share via a financial instrument known as a “contingent value right” if Fusion meets an unspecified regulatory milestone. Should Fusion hit that mark, the buyout would be worth $2.4 billion.” 
  • Beckers Health IT offers six takeaways from last month’s HIMSS conference.

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

Beware the Ides of March. Wm. Shakespeare

From Washington, DC,

  • STAT News reports
    • “A panel of expert advisers to the Food and Drug Administration on Friday voted in favor of expanding the use of CAR-T therapy in blood cancer, despite concerns about the powerful treatment’s side effects.
    • “The group voted 11-0 that the benefits of Carvykti, a CAR-T medicine from Johnson & Johnson and Legend Biotech, outweighed its risk for patients with multiple myeloma whose disease has persisted despite initial treatment. The same panel voted 8-3 in favor of Abecma, from Bristol Myers Squibb and 2seventy Bio, for multiple myeloma patients who’ve received at least two lines of therapy. Currently both medicines are approved only for patients who have been treated for myeloma with four or more medications.”
    • “In clinical trials, each drug proved to significantly delay disease progression compared to standard therapy. But zooming in on the data, the FDA observed an alarming imbalance of deaths in the early months of both studies, finding that more patients in the CAR-T group died of myeloma or side effects than those receiving the standard of care.
    • “That’s a legitimate concern, panelists said, but one that is outweighed by the potential for a single dose of CAR-T to help patients live without the need for regular, taxing cancer treatment.”
  • MedTech Dive notes,
    • “Intuitive Surgical said Thursday it received 510(k) clearance from the Food and Drug Administration for a fifth-generation robotic surgery system intended to help the company keep its dominant market share in the face of looming competition.
    • “The da Vinci 5 system incorporates features that surgeons have long sought, such as feedback that simulates the feel of the patient’s body tissue, a smaller physical footprint in the operating room, and better console ergonomics.
    • “The improvements “can help drive incremental demand for the system and raise the bar for competition in the future,” William Blair analyst Brandon Vazquez said Friday in a note to clients.”
  • One Digital offers its thoughts about “How will the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 Impact Employer-Sponsored Group Health Plans in 2025?”
    • It’s not good news, and the FEHBlog doesn’t understand why CMS is making life so difficult for plan sponsors, e.g.,
      • “[T]he Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released Draft CY 2025 Part D Redesign Program Instructions on January 31, 2024. These instructions, which are still in draft form, noted that one of the methods previously used by a majority of plan sponsors to determine the creditable nature of their plans, the creditable coverage simplified determination methodology, would no longer be a “valid method to determine whether an entity’s prescription drug coverage is creditable or not.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control informs us,
    • “The amount of respiratory illness (fever plus cough or sore throat) causing people to seek healthcare is elevated across many areas of the country. This week, 16 jurisdictions experienced high or very high activity compared to 22 jurisdictions previous week.
    • “Nationally, emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID-19, influenza, and RSV are decreasing.
    • “Influenza test positivity increased slightly nationally. COVID-19 and RSV test positivity decreased compared to the previous week.
    • “Nationally, COVID-19 wastewater viral activity levels, which reflects both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, has decreased to low.
    • Reported on Friday, March 15th, 2024.
  • STAT News gives us good news,
    • “A series of new studies are raising hopes that CAR-T, a process in which treatments are made by genetically editing a patient’s own white blood cells, can eventually be used to treat an incurable and deadly type of brain cancer, called glioblastoma multiforme, or GBM.
    • “In the most dramatic result, from a three-person study conducted by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital, a 72-year-old man saw his tumor shrink 18.5% in just two days and then decrease further over the next two months until it was 60% smaller than when treatment began. That’s notable because glioblastoma is a cancer where drugs can normally only prevent a tumor from growing. Researchers say the results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday, do not mean the treatment is ready to be used widely but give reason to think they are on the right track.”
  • Healio calls our attention to a study on the benefits of bariatric surgery.
    • Bariatric surgery was associated with reductions in body weight, blood pressure, total cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose and HbA1c.
    • Adults who underwent surgery reduced their 10-year Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease ASCVD risk by 34.4%.
  • The National Institutes of Health’s Director, in her blog, discusses a study suggesting that during sleep, a neural process helps clear the brain of damaging waste.
    • “We’ve long known that sleep is a restorative process necessary for good health. Research has also shown that the accumulation of waste products in the brain is a leading cause of numerous neurological disorders, including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. What hasn’t been clear is how the healthy brain “self-cleans,” or flushes out that detrimental waste.
    • “But a new study by a research team supported in part by NIH suggests that a neural process that happens while we sleep helps cleanse the brain, leading us to wake up feeling rested and restored. Better understanding this process could one day lead to methods that help people function well on less sleep. It could also help researchers find potential ways to delay or prevent neurological diseases related to accumulated waste products in the brain.
    • “The findings, reported in Nature, show that, during sleep, neural networks in the brain act like an array of miniature pumps, producing large and rhythmic waves through synchronous bursts of activity that propel fluids through brain tissue. Much like the process of washing dishes, where you use a rhythmic motion of varying speeds and intensity to clear off debris, this process that takes place during sleep clears accumulated metabolic waste products out.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • MedTech Dive lets us know,
    • “Most U.S. hospital executives expect low- to mid-single-digit increases in procedure volumes this year, according to a survey conducted by BTIG analysts.
    • “The forecast, which reflects the resolution of staff shortages at most surveyed sites and a small overall rise in capital equipment budgets, could benefit Boston Scientific, Medtronic and Stryker, the analysts wrote Wednesday in a note to investors.
    • “Robotic surgery jumped up the list of spending priorities, climbing from sixth to third place year over year. The change is a “good sign” for Intuitive Surgical, the analysts said, although the forecast of a continued slump in bariatric procedures has negative implications for the company.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Medicare households are spending far more on healthcare than other households, according to a new KFF analysis.
    • “Researchers analyzed data from the 2022 Consumer Expenditure Survey, tracking spending trends between 2013 and 2022. At the end of that window, health-related expenses in Medicare households averaged $7,000, or 13.6% of total household spending.
    • “By comparison, non-Medicare households spent on average 6.5% of their total on health-related expenditures, or $4,900.
    • “Healthcare expenses included insurance premiums, medical services, prescription drugs and medical supplies like crutches, hearing aids and eyeglasses.”
  • From Healthcare IT News, a Gartner expert points to AI and hospital-at-home as the biggest emerging technologies at HIMSS24. Veronica Walk, senior director analyst, healthcare and life sciences, at the consulting giant offers an end-of-the-week look at the emerging technologies at the conference that provider organization C-suite executives must grasp. Check it out.
  • Fierce Healthcare discusses why payers and providers continue to tussle over Change Healthcare cyberattack response. Hint: The reason is money.

Midweek Update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network builds on OPM’s March 12 press release about the Postal Service Health Benefits Program launch in January 2025.
  • STAT News calls attention to healthcare points that you might have missed in the President’s FY 2025 budget. For example,
    • “The budget proposes for the first time a change to the law that would let pharmacists fill prescriptions for brand-name biologics with biosimilars without doctor permission. The measure is part of the administration’s plan to lower drug costs. * * *
    • “Besides budget boosts for behavioral health services, research, and the 988 crisis hotline, the administration is asking Congress for legislative changes to make mental health care more accessible. Those include eliminating Medicare’s 190-day lifetime limit on psychiatric services in hospitals, which it estimates would cost the program $2.9 billion over 10 years. * * *
    • “Medicare would also have to cover three behavioral health visits without cost-sharing, a move that could cost $1.5 billion over a decade. Biden wants to extend this requirement to private insurers as well, at an estimated cost of $428 million over that time.”
  • HealthDay informs us,
    • The White House on Wednesday launched a nationwide call for more training and better access to the lifesaving opioid overdose drug naloxone.
    • Called the Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose, the initiative urges organizations and businesses to commit to train employees on how to use opioid overdose medications, to keep naloxone in emergency kits and to distribute the drug to employees and customers so they might save a life at home, work or in their communities.
    • “Today, we’re calling on organizations and businesses — big and small, public and private — across the country to help ensure all communities are ready to use this lifesaving tool to reduce opioid deaths,” the White House said in a fact sheet announcing the new initiative. “As the drug supply has gotten more dangerous and lethal, we’re asking allies to join us because we all must do our part to keep communities safe.”
  • The CDC is offering free webinars on the RxDC process on March 27 and April 3.

From the Change Healthcare situation front,

  • United Healthcare updated its Change Healthcare situation response website this afternoon.
  • The HHS Office for Civil Rights, which enforces the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rule, issued a Dear Colleague letter about the Change Healthcare situation and announced opening an investigation of UHC about cyberattack and its fallout.
  • The Congressional Research Service posted an insight report titled “The Change Healthcare Cyberattack and Response Considerations for Policymakers.’
  • The American Medical Association explained how providers can navigate the Change Healthcare situation.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Early detection of colon cancer can prevent a majority of deaths from this disease, possibly as much as 73 percent of them. But just 50 to 75 percent of middle-aged and older adults who should be screened regularly are being tested.
    • “One reason, doctors say, is that the screening methods put many people off.
    • “There are two options for people of average risk: a colonoscopy every 10 years or a fecal test every one to three years, depending on the type of test.
    • “Or, as Dr. Folasade P. May, a gastroenterologist at UCLA Health puts it, “either you take this horrible laxative and then a doctor puts an instrument up your behind, or you have to manipulate your own poop.”
    • “But something much simpler is on the horizon: a blood test. Gastroenterologists say such tests could become part of the routine blood work that doctors order when, for example, a person comes in for an annual physical exam. * * *
    • “A study published on Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine found that a blood test searching for such [colon cancer] DNA called Shield and made by the company Guardant Health detected 87 percent of cancers that were at an early and curable stage. The false positive rate was 10 percent.
    • “But there is a caveat to the blood test: While it detects cancers, it misses most large polyps, finding just 13 percent of them. In contrast, the fecal test detects 43 percent and a colonoscopy finds 94 percent, Dr. Carethers said.
    • “While polyps are usually harmless, a few can turn into cancers, so doctors want to find all of them and remove them to prevent cancers from forming.”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services posted a fact sheet on in vitro fertilization across our country.
  • BioPharma Dive tells us,
    • “Merck on Wednesday announced plans to start clinical trials testing a newer version of its vaccine for human papillomavirus, or HPV, as well as a different regimen of the shot it currently sells.
    • “The trials are bids to improve upon vaccines Merck currently markets as Gardasil and Gardasil 9. One will test a shot meant to provide protection against more strains of HPV. The other will evaluate a single-dose regimen of Gardasil 9. Both studies should begin in the fourth quarter of this year. 
    • “Gardasil is approved for use against genital warts and to prevent several cancers caused by stains of HPV. The vaccine is one of Merck’s top-selling products and still growing. It generated $8.9 billion in sales in 2023, up 29% from the previous year.” 
  • STAT News informs us,
    • “For four decades, researchers and companies searched for ways to replace the broken blood-clotting genes that cause hemophilia, a multibillion dollar effort designed to turn a chronic, sometimes debilitating disease into a curable one. 
    • “But the first two gene therapies have so far been met with crickets. Only a handful of patients with hemophilia B, the rarer form of the disease, appear to have been treated worldwide since Hemgenix was approved in November 2022. After Roctavian was approved for hemophilia A last June, only three patients were treated through the rest of the year.
    • “The issue doesn’t appear to be access. Hemgenix and Roctavian, marketed by the Australian biotech CSL Behring and the San Francisco biotech BioMarin, are Malibu-mini-mansion expensive: $3.5 million and $2.9 million, respectively. But current hemophilia treatments can run over $1 million per year. So most insurers have been happy to pay the lump sum.
    • “​​You can’t blame the payers this time,” said Michael Sherman, former chief medical officer of the nonprofit insurer Harvard Pilgrim.” 
  • The National Cancer Institute posted research highlights.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have discovered that symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are tied to atypical interactions between the brain’s frontal cortex and information processing centers deep in the brain. The researchers examined more than 10,000 functional brain images of youth with ADHD and published their results in the American Journal of Psychiatry. The study was led by researchers at NIH’s National Institute of Mental Health and National Human Genome Research Institute. * * *
    • “The findings from this study help further our understanding of the brain processes contributing to ADHD symptoms—information that can help inform clinically relevant research and advancements.”
  • The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review published a “Final Evidence Report on Treatments for Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria. — Independent appraisal committee voted that current evidence is not adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for iptacopan over C5 inhibitor; committee voted that the evidence is adequate to demonstrate a net health benefit for add-on danicopan compared to C5 inhibitor alone.”
  • Medscape relates,
    • “Chronic smoking remains a major cause of premature mortality on a global scale. Despite intensified efforts to combat this scourge, a quarter of deaths among middle-aged adults in Europe and North America are attributed to it. However, over the past decades, antismoking campaigns have borne fruit, and many smokers have quit before the age of 40 years, enabling some case-control studies.
    • “Among those abstainers who made the right choice, the excess mortality attributable to smoking over a lifetime would be reduced by 90% compared with controls who continued smoking. The estimated benefit is clear, but the analysis lacks nuance. Is smoking cessation beneficial even at older ages? If so, is the effect measurable in terms of magnitude and speed of the effect? An article published online on February 8, 2024, in The New England Journal of Medicine Evidenceprovided some answers to these questions.”

From the HIMSS conference front,

  • Healthcare IT News reports “Samsung focuses on intuitive mobile tech and wearables at HIMSS24. These technologies can help cure healthcare worker burnout, patient confusion and inefficient communications between care teams, says a top exec and nurse.”
  • Forbes explains why AI is taking center stage at the conference.
    • “At the HIMSS conference in Orlando, healthcare leaders, including CIOs, CMIOs, CNIOs, and other C-suite members, were focused on AI as the central theme. They explored how healthcare organizations can better utilize their clinical data. They identified security, AI platforms, and workforce optimization as the three main areas for healthcare AI development.”
  • In related news, Health IT Analytics lets us know,
    • “Researchers from Mount Sinai have been awarded a four-year, $3 million grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop artificial intelligence (AI)-driven prediction models to flag risk of cardiovascular disease events in patients with obstructive sleep apnea.
    • “The American Heart Association (AHA) indicates that obstructive sleep apnea increases patients’ risk of cardiovascular disease, including coronary artery disease, hypertension and stroke. The use of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines is often prescribed to treat sleep apnea, but evidence to suggest the benefits of CPAP use in relation to cardiovascular event rates is limited.
    • “To bridge this gap, the research team will build machine learning (ML) tools to identify obstructive sleep apnea patients at high risk for atherosclerosis progression and cardiovascular events like stroke and heart attack.”

In other U.S. healthcare business news,

  • The Wall Stree Journal reports,
    • “People seeking a popular new weight-loss drug will have a new home-delivery option from a familiar name: Amazon.com.
    • Amazon Pharmacy, which has sold prescription medicines online since 2020, will now handle some of the home delivery of anti-obesity therapy Zepbound and other Eli Lilly drugs that are ordered through the drugmaker’s new direct-to-consumer service, the companies said Wednesday.
    • “The service, called LillyDirect, connects patients with telehealth services specializing in obesity that can write prescriptions for Zepbound or another weight-loss drug. The service also arranges for a prescription to be processed and mailed directly to customers.” 
  • The Society for Human Resource Management notes,
    • “According to the latest Employer Costs for Employee Compensation report, released March 13 by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), employers spent 3.8 percent more on wages and benefits in December 2023 compared to September 2023.
    • “Total employer compensation costs for private-industry workers averaged $43.11 per hour worked in December 2023. Wages and salaries averaged $30.33 per hour worked and accounted for 70.4 percent of employer costs, while benefit costs averaged $12.77 per hour worked and accounted for the remaining 29.6 percent, according to the BLS report.
    • :That’s a significant jump from the total employer compensation costs for those same workers last fall, and one indicating that despite slowing compensation growth over the past year, bigger hikes are not yet over.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Because this is the FEHBlog, the lede tonight necessarily is OPM’s announcement naming the carriers who are currently prepared Postal Service Health Benefit Program benefit and rate proposals. Good luck to them all.
  • FedWeek notes,
    • “President Biden has issued an open letter to federal employees thanking them for their “tireless service on behalf of our country.”
  • and
    • “While seeking a January 2025 raise of 2 percent (see related story), the White House’s fiscal 2025 budget proposal cites several initiatives related to federal pay.
    • “In addition to year-to-year pay increases, the Administration is pursuing structural reforms to enhance the competitiveness of the Federal pay system,” it says.
  • Reg Jones, writing in Fedweek, fills us in on benefits available upon the death of a federal employee or annuitant.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services provided a readout from “Biden-Harris Administration Convening with Health Care Community Concerning Cyberattack on Change Healthcare. Leaders from HHS, White House, DOL, and the health care community convened to discuss ways to mitigate harms to patient and providers caused by the cyberattack.”
  • The Food and Drug Administration “advised consumers in Some Medicines and Driving Don’t Mix to make sure they know if their prescription or over-the-counter medication can cause side effects that may make it unsafe to drive. Most medications won’t affect consumers’ ability to drive safely or operate other heavy machinery, but some do.”
  • The Buck consulting firm points out why “maintaining creditable coverage may prove difficult for some employer sponsored plans in 2025.”
  • STAT News discusses the treatment impact of new federal methadone rules.
    • “The federal government is reforming methadone care for the first time in over two decades. But how far do the changes actually go?
    • “To many methadone clinics, the Biden administration’s recent refresh of the rules governing opioid treatment programs represents an unprecedented opportunity to offer care that is more compassionate and responsive to patients’ needs. To many patient advocates, however, it simply nibbles around the edges. 
    • “The reality is likely somewhere in between: It will depend, in large part, on whether state-level regulators embrace the changes, and whether individual clinics actually implement them. In reform-oriented states, and at patient-centered clinics, the new rules could make a world of difference for people seeking addiction treatment.” 
  • The Office of National Coordinator for Healthcare Information Technology, Micky Tripathi, in his blog, looks forward to “HTI-2 & ONC’s Commitment to Furthering the Vision of Better Health Enabled by Data.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • BioPharma Dive reports,
    • “Roche’s experimental Alzheimer’s disease drug trontinemab showed “best-in-class” potential based on its ability to quickly clear clumps of amyloid protein from the brains of patients enrolled in a small clinical trial, the company said Monday.
    • “A majority of patients receiving the highest dose of the drug, which is specially designed to penetrate brain tissue, saw their amyloid levels drop below detectable levels after 12 weeks, Roche executives said in an investor presentation on the pharmaceutical giant’s neurology pipeline.”
  • Reuters tells us, “Pfizer  said on Tuesday its drug, Adcetris, extended survival in patients with the most common type of lymphoma in a late-stage study, bolstering efforts to expand the use of the treatment gained through its $43 billion purchase of Seagen [in 2023].
  • MedPage Today lets us know,
    • “Pragmatic implementation of an automated online behavioral obesity treatment program that included 9 months of active maintenance helped people with overweight or obesity lose a clinically significant amount of weight by 12 and 24 months, a randomized trial showed. * * *
    • “This pattern persisted at 24 months, reported J. Graham Thomas, PhD, of the Weight Control and Diabetes Research Center in Providence, Rhode Island, and colleagues in JAMA Internal Medicine.
    • “This study shows that a fully automated online obesity treatment program can produce beneficial results for many patients in real-world primary care settings,” Thomas told MedPage Today. “We were encouraged to find that the online weight-loss program performed just as well in real-world primary care practices as it does in our previous highly controlled clinical trials.”
    • “These patients lost weight “at rates comparable” to those seen in studiesopens in a new tab or window in which the researchers were completely hands-on in every aspect of the program, he added.
    • “Because the treatment program is online and fully automated, Thomas said it is quite practical for widespread implementation across primary care practices. “The data show that the primary care clinicians were able to implement the program independently, and patients were able to use it successfully.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds,
    • “Hospital transplant departments have strict cutoffs for patients with higher body mass indexes because of the increased risk of complications, but GLP-1s such as Ozempic and Wegovy are helping more patients be eligible for surgery. 
    • “Potential transplant donors and diabetic patients who otherwise would not be able to undergo surgery because of their BMI are now quickly dropping weight. Popular GLP-1s, including Ozempic, and GLP-1s and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptides, such as Mounjaro and Zepbound, are dramatically helping these weight loss efforts.” 
  • Medscape cautions,
    • “Novo Nordisk’s CEO on Friday said the company was working with authorities in several countries to tackle counterfeit versions of its popular diabetes drug Ozempic, as new reports emerge of patient harm across the world.
    • “This is something we take very seriously,” Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen, CEO of the Danish drugmaker, told Reuters. * * *
    • “Jorgensen, echoing comments from the FDA’s Califf, also said compounded semaglutide in the United States was a serious health issue, and that the raw materials, or active pharmaceutical ingredients (API), for these products were coming from unregulated facilities in Asia and elsewhere. 
    • “We don’t know them, and we have really no insights or ability to understand what the API is in a certain compounded product,” he said.
    • “While fake drugs often do not contain any of the medication advertised, compounded drugs are custom-made medicines that are based on the same ingredients as branded drugs. Because Wegovy and Ozempic are in short supply, they can be legally produced by licensed pharmacies in the U.S.
    • “Further reports obtained by Reuters through FOIA requests show that one person died last year from abnormal blood clotting after taking a drug that was advertised as compounded semaglutide. Three others suffered severe vomiting and nausea, sensory loss in their legs, and a drop in blood platelet levels.”
  • The U.S. Census Bureau announced,
    • “An additional 573,000 people died in the United States during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic but “excess mortality” at the national level masks substantial variations by state, age, sex, and race and ethnicity, according to new U.S. Census Bureau research recently published in Demography.
    • “Excess mortality” refers to deaths from any cause above what is expected from recent mortality trends.
    • “This research shows the pandemic widened the mortality gap between the nation’s Black and White populations and completely erased the mortality advantage of the Hispanic population in relation to the non-Hispanic White population.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced‘,
    • “Two phase 2 clinical trials to test the safety and effectiveness of three treatments for adults with autonomic nervous system dysfunction from long COVID have begun. The autonomic nervous system acts largely unconsciously and regulates bodily functions, such as heart rate, digestion and respiratory rate. Symptoms associated with autonomic nervous system dysfunction have been among those that patients with long COVID say are most burdensome. The trials are part of the National Institutes of Health’s Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) Initiative, a nationwide research program to fully understand, diagnose and treat long COVID. Other RECOVER phase 2 clinical trials testing treatments to address viral persistence and neurological symptoms, including cognitive dysfunction (like brain fog), launched in July 2023. * * *
    • “People 18 years of age and older who are interested in learning more about these trials can visit https://trials.RECOVERCovid.org/autonomic or ClinicalTrials.gov and search identifier NCT06305793, NCT06305806 and NCT06305780. Please do not contact the NIH media phone number or email to enroll in these trials.”
  • The Wall Street Journal warns,
    • “Ultra-processed foods may not only affect our bodies, but our brains too.
    • “New research suggests links between ultra-processed foods—such as chips, many cereals and most packaged snacks at the grocery store—and changes in the way we learn, remember and feel. These foods can act like addictive substances, researchers say, and some scientists are proposing a new mental-health condition called “ultra-processed food use disorder.” Diets filled with such foods may raise the risk of mental health and sleep problems
    • “The science is still early and researchers say there is a lot they don’t know. Not all ultra-processed foods are equal, some scientists say, adding that some might be good for you. A diet high in ultra-processed foods has been linked with obesity, Type 2 diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular disease, but researchers are still figuring out exactly why, beyond calorie counts and nutrient composition. 
    • “Makers of foods such as processed meats and muffins defend their products, and note that there isn’t a consistent, universally accepted definition of ultra-processed food.”

From the HIMSS Conference in Orlando,

  • HIMSS offers an article about “Google Cloud’s debut of new genAI advancements for healthcare at HIMSS24. In total, the company is offering its cloud clients updates to Vertex AI Search, Healthcare Data Engine and MedLM, designed to improve patient care.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • HR Dive reports,
    • “Nearly half of U.S. workers don’t have the benefits they need at work, according to the results of a survey by Perceptyx, an employee experience company. Of the 1,500 full-time employees surveyed, 59% said they had “benefits envy” of friends’ and family members’ healthcare coverage.
    • “When it comes to benefits equity, the survey found that medical, maternity and mental health are the “magic trifecta,” Emily Killham, senior director of people analytics, research and insights at Perceptyx, said. “When employees have access to all three, women and men feel equally that their needs are met.”
    • “Yet 53% of those surveyed said they don’t have mental health coverage, 51% don’t have maternity leave, and 25% don’t have any medical benefits, per the results.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “Healthgrades recognized 832 hospitals with its 2024 Patient Safety Excellence Awards and Outstanding Patient Experience Award. Only 79 of those hospitals received both awards. 
    • “The dual recipients spanned 27 states. Texas had the most dual recipients with 13 honorees — including four Baylor Scott and White Health and four Houston Methodist hospitals.”
    • The article lists the dual recipients.
  • Beckers Payer Issues relates,
    • “Selective contracting with primary care physicians may be one factor behind lower per-patient expenses in Medicare Advantage, a study published in the March edition of Health Affairs found. 
    • “The study examined 4,456,037 traditional Medicare patients who visited 151,679 primary care physicians. The physicians who participated in Medicare Advantage networks had $433 lower costs per patient than the regional average of physicians. 
    • “The quality measures for physicians participating in Medicare Advantage were similar to the regional average, the study found. 
    • “Physicians who did not participate in any MA networks cost $1,617 more per patient per year than those participating in MA networks, and they had lower quality measures. 
    • “The findings suggest that “managed care tools, particularly selective contracting with primary care physicians” contribute to lower costs in Medicare Advantage, the authors concluded. Though the differences in cost are most likely attributable to differences in practice style, that could also serve as a mechanism for plans to select healthier patients, the authors wrote.” 
  • Health Payer Intelligence adds,
    • “The average Medicare Advantage premium has remained low and stable, with many beneficiaries choosing plans with a zero-dollar monthly premium, according to data from eHealth, Inc.
    • “eHealth’s seventh annual Medicare Index Report includes data from over 190,000 applications for Medicare insurance products submitted to eHealth during the annual enrollment period for 2024 coverage.
    • “The average monthly premium for Medicare Advantage plans chosen by eHealth customers for 2024 is $9, the same as last year and up slightly from $6 in 2022. The popularity of plans with zero-dollar premiums contributed to the low average.”
  • HealthDay informs us,
    • “The cost to American families of caring for a child with a mental health condition jumped by almost a third between 2017 and 2021.
    • “It now costs an average $4,361 more per year for a U.S. family to care for a child with a mental health condition, compared to families without such children, a new study has found.” 

Cybersecurity Saturday

TWO BIG STORIES with an interlude

  • Good news
  • Cybersecurity Dive reported on Tuesday February 20,
    • “An international group of law enforcement partners said it disrupted LockBit ransomware operations Tuesday, seizing the infrastructure of one of the most prolific ransomware groups in recent history. 
    • “The Department of Justice, working in conjunction with U.K. authorities and other international law enforcement agencies, unsealed indictments against two Russian nationals, Artur Sungatov and Ivan Kondratyev, charging them with deploying LockBit against numerous companies around the U.S. and other targets overseas. 
    • “The FBI and U.K. National Crime Agency, working with multiple partners, also seized numerous public facing websites and servers used by Lockbit. Authorities obtained decryption keys that will allow hundreds of targeted organizations and others to regain their stolen data.”
  • Cyberscoop adds more details on this important take down.
    • “A LockBit representative confirmed the operation in an online message posted on X by VX-Underground, an online malware repository. “FBI pwned me,” the representative said. 
    • “As of today, LockBit are locked out,” Graeme Biggar, the National Crime Agency Director General, said in a statement. “We have damaged the capability and most notably, the credibility of a group that depended on secrecy and anonymity.”
    • Two people were arrested as part of the operation — one in Poland and one in Ukraine — as part of the operation, Europol said in its statement.
  • Dark Reading suggests that “Hubris May Have Contributed to Downfall of Ransomware Kingpin LockBit.”
  • Interlude
  • Cybersecurity reported on Thursday February 22, 2024.
    • “Critical vulnerabilities in ConnectWise ScreenConnect are under active exploitation by threat actors, and there is an urgent need for users to patch their systems, according to security researchers.
    • “ConnectWise ScreenConnect is a remote desktop application widely used by help desks and remote workers. A critical authentication bypass vulnerability, with a CVSS score of 10, could allow an attacker access to critical systems or confidential information. A path transversal vulnerability, with a score of 8.4, could allow an attacker to execute remote code.
    • “ConnectWise on Wednesday urged on-premises partners to immediately upgrade to the latest version of ScreenConnect, after its incident response team began to investigate reports of suspicious activity. The vulnerability applies to on-premises users.”
  • Dark Reading provides more details on this massive vulnerability
    • “Just days after initial exploitation reports started rolling in for a critical security vulnerability in the ConnectWise ScreenConnect remote desktop management service, researchers are warning that a supply chain attack of outsized proportions could be poised to erupt.
    • “Once the bugs are exploited, hackers will gain remote access into “upwards of ten thousand servers that control hundreds of thousands of endpoints,” Huntress CEO Kyle Hanslovan said in emailed commentary, opining that it’s time to prepare for “the biggest cybersecurity incident of 2024.”.
  • Bad News
  • The Wall Street Journal reports yesterday,
    • Pharmacies warned of long waits for customers and U.S. military clinics worldwide have been affected after a cyberattack against one of the country’s largest prescription processors rolled into a third day of downtime.
    • Health industry experts said that a cyberattack against Change Healthcare, part of insurer 
    • UnitedHealth Group’s Optum business, could have severe and lasting consequences should outages continue past the weekend.
    • “It’s a mess, and I believe it’s our Colonial Pipeline moment in healthcare,” said Carter Groome, chief executive of healthcare-focused consulting firm First Health Advisory, referring to a 2021 cyberattack that forced the major fuel artery for the U.S. East Coast to shut down for six days, causing long lines at gas stations. * * *
    • “Parent company UnitedHealth said Thursday in a regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it identified a cyberattack affecting systems at Change Healthcare on Wednesday. The company suspects a nation-state was behind the attack, the filing said. ***
    • “The American Hospital Association urged healthcare facilities Wednesday to disconnect from Optum and to check their systems for security vulnerabilities.
      • “We recommend that all healthcare organizations that were disrupted or are potentially exposed by this incident consider disconnection from Optum until it is independently deemed safe to reconnect to Optum,” the AHA said.
    • “The association also urged members to test their data backups, check that critical patches are up-to-date and designate staff for shifts to manage manual processes.
    • “There is fragility in our infrastructure and in the lack of redundancy, the lack of rehearsals,” said Theresa Payton, CEO at cybersecurity consulting firm Fortalice.”
  • SC Media brings the stories together as follow:
    • “Security experts have warned for the past couple of days that the two flaws recently uncovered in ConnectWise’s ScreenConnect app could become the major cybersecurity story of 2024 – and that the healthcare and critical infrastructure sectors were especially vulnerable.
    • “Today, we’re inching closer to that reality as SC Media has learned that the recent cybersecurity incident at UnitedHealth’s Change Healthcare that led to slowdowns at pharmacies was caused by a strain of LockBit malware that was used to exploit the vulnerabilities in ConnectWise ScreenConnect.
    • “Toby Gouker, chief security officer at First Health Advisory, stressed that while it was a LockBit strain of malware, it doesn’t mean that the recently taken down LockBit gang was responsible. Gouker said the two flaws were discovered as part of a crowdsourced team for the ConnectWise bugs on Feb. 15 and that the vulnerability notifications went out on Feb. 19.
    • “And that’s where the problems started. As many of you know, malicious actors watch for these announcements to come out,” said Gouker. “They prey on the timeframe between the announcement and when an organization is able to apply the patch. So from the get-go, these actors are working to figure out a way to exploit the disclosed vulnerability and capitalize on it.”
    • “While Goucker stands by his comments, ConnectWise remained somewhat defensive, yet cautious, issuing this statement late Friday night:”
      • “At this time, we cannot confirm that there is a connection between the Change Healthcare incident and the ScreenConnect vulnerability. Our initial review indicates that Change Healthcare appears not to be a ConnectWise direct customer, and our managed service provider partners have yet to come forward, stating Change Healthcare is a customer of theirs.” * * *
  • Here is a link to the CISA notice adding the Connect wise known exploited vulnerability (CVE-2024-1709) to its catalog on February 22. This was the only KEV change announced this week.
  • Optum provided the following update on the Change Healthcare breach this morning
    • Change Healthcare is experiencing a cyber security issue, and our experts are working to address the matter. Once we became aware of the outside threat, and in the interest of protecting our partners and patients, we took immediate action to disconnect Change Healthcare’s systems to prevent further impact. This action was taken so our customers and partners do not need to. We have a high-level of confidence that Optum, UnitedHealthcare and UnitedHealth Group systems have not been affected by this issue.
    • We are working on multiple approaches to restore the impacted environment and will not take any shortcuts or take any additional risk as we bring our systems back online. We will continue to be proactive and aggressive with all our systems and if we suspect any issue with the system, we will immediately take action and disconnect. The disruption is expected to last at least through the day. We will provide updates as more information becomes available.

In other vulnerabilities and breaches news,

  • On February 22, 2024, the HHS Office for Civil Rights announced
    • “On February 14, 2024, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office for Civil Rights issued two Reports to Congress on Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) compliance and enforcement, specifically, on HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rule Compliance and Breaches of Unsecured Protected Health Information. These reports are required to be submitted to Congress annually by the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009. The HIPAA Rules provide the minimum required privacy and security safeguards for protected health information, and give individuals rights with respect to that information, such as the right to access their health information. These reports, delivered to Congress, help regulated entities (such as most health care providers, health plans, and healthcare clearinghouses) and their business associates in their HIPAA compliance efforts by sharing steps taken by OCR to investigate complaints, breach reports, and compliance reviews regarding potential violations of the HIPAA Rules. The reports include important data on the number of HIPAA cases investigated, areas of noncompliance, and insights into trends such as cybersecurity readiness.  * * *
    • “As in previous years, hacking/IT incidents remain the largest category of breaches occurring in 2022 affecting 500 or more individuals, and affected the most individuals, comprising 77% of the reported breaches. Network servers continued as the largest category by location for breaches involving 500 or more individuals at 58% of reported large breaches.
    • “OCR’s 2022 Report to Congress on HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rule Compliance may be found at: https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/compliance-enforcement/reports-congress/index.html
    • “OCR’s 2022 Report to Congress on Breaches of Unsecured Protected Health Information may be found at:  https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/breach-notification/reports-congress/index.html.”
  • Cybersecurity Dive tells us,
    • “Organizations with weak cloud security controls and gaps in cross-domain visibility are getting outmaneuvered by threat actors and struck by intrusions, CrowdStrike said Wednesday in its annual Global Threat Report.
    • “Cloud environment intrusions jumped 75% from 2022 to 2023, as threat actors abused unique cloud features to initiate attacks, the report found.
    • “This is not surprising,” said Adam Meyers, head of counter adversary operations at CrowdStrike. “We’ve seen more and more organizations deploying more and more cloud resources without necessarily having a cohesive or equivalent security posture for their cloud deployments as they do in their traditional enterprise deployments.”
  • Cyber Express informs us
    • “The fusion of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity has ushered in a new era of warfare, one conducted not on physical battlegrounds but in the vast expanse of cyberspace. With the global AI in the cybersecurity market projected to surge to $133.8 billion by 2030, the landscape is undergoing a seismic shift, with both promise and peril on the horizon. 
    • “At the heart of this revolution lies a paradox: while AI bolsters defenses, it also empowers malicious actors, fueling a surge in cybercrime. As cyberattacks grow in both scale and sophistication, the stakes have never been higher, with a staggering $9.22 trillion expected to be drained from the world’s internet users in 2024 alone. * * *
    • “As we navigate this tumultuous terrain, the imperative lies in striking a delicate balance between innovation and vigilance. Harnessing AI’s potential while mitigating its risks demands a multifaceted approach, one rooted in proactive defense, continuous adaptation, and unwavering resilience. 
    • “In the crucible of cyber conflict, AI emerges not merely as a technological marvel but as a beacon of hope, illuminating the path toward a safer, more secure digital future. Only by embracing the transformative power of AI can we hope to outmaneuver the adversaries lurking in the shadows of cyberspace.” 
  • CSO points out,
    • “Attackers prefer compromised valid accounts over phishing or any other infection methods to gain access into victim environments, according to an IBM report.
    • “As defenders increase their detection and prevention capabilities, attackers are finding that obtaining valid credentials is an easier route to achieving their goals, considering the alarming volume of compromised yet valid credentials available — and easily accessible — on the dark web,” IBM said in the report.
    • “The report, which is based on IBM X-Force’s penetration testing data from incidents in 2023, also found security misconfigurations and poor authentication enforcement as top application security risks opening organizations to identity-based attacks.”

From the ransomware front,

  • Tech Crunch identifies the “top 13 ransomware targets in 2024 and beyond.” Education is the top target, and healthcare is ranked number 11.
  • Cybersecurity Dive relates,
    • “The HHS has reached its second-ever settlement related to a ransomware attack, which exposed the protected health information of more than 14,000 people, the agency announced Wednesday. 
    • “Maryland-based Green Ridge Behavioral Health agreed to pay $40,000 and implement a corrective action plan after an investigation found potential violations of the HIPAA rule and lax protections after an attack reported in early 2019, according to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights.
    • “The settlement comes as ransomware has become a growing and critical threat to healthcare organizations, and regulators have signaled interest in enforcing cybersecurity standards.” 

In other cybersecurity news,

  • SDXCentral calls our attention to the fact that
    • Gartner unveiled the top cybersecurity trends for 2024, including the impact of generative artificial intelligence (genAI), boardroom communication gaps, human risks, third-party security risks, continuous threat exposure and identity-first approaches to security.

Friday Factoids

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington DC

  • Roll Call reports on the state of FY 2024 appropriations negotiations on Capitol Hill. Your guess on the impending outcome is as good as mine.
  • The U.S. Office of Personnel Management released
    • “a new Workforce of the Future Playbook today supporting a federal workforce that is inclusive, agile and engaged, and equipped with the right skills to deliver for the American people. The Playbook provides concrete actions that agencies can take to build and equip the workforce of the future, incorporating new strategies and sharing best practices across government. 
    • “OPM is 100% invested in strengthening the federal workforce,” said OPM Director Kiran Ahuja. “This Playbook is just another example of OPM’s ongoing efforts to equip federal agencies with the tools and resources to hire the right talent and strategically plan for their future workforce. The federal government works best when we leverage the full talent of our nation and workforce – this playbook is full of useful strategies to do just that. * * *
    • “Coming soon, OPM will provide guidance through webinars, training, and technical assistance from subject matter experts to support agencies in their implementation of these strategies. The Playbook will serve as the building block for a future workforce that promotes increased effectiveness and efficiency in service to the American people. Periodic updates will be posted to the Workforce of the Future webpage.” 
  • The Department of Justice announced,
    • “Settlements and judgments under the False Claims Act exceeded $2.68 billion in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, 2023, Acting Associate Attorney General Benjamin C. Mizer and Civil Division Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton announced today. The government and whistleblowers were party to 543 settlements and judgments, the highest number of settlements and judgments in a single year. Recoveries since 1986, when Congress substantially strengthened the civil False Claims Act, now total more than $75 billion. * * *
    • “Of the more than $2.68 billion in False Claims Act settlements and judgments reported by the Department of Justice this past fiscal year, over $1.8 billion related to matters that involved the health care industry, including managed care providers, hospitals, pharmacies, laboratories, long-term acute care facilities, and physicians. The amounts included in the $1.8 billion reflect recoveries arising only from federal losses, but in many of these cases, the department was instrumental in recovering additional amounts for state Medicaid programs. The recoveries in fiscal year 2023 also reflect the department’s focus on key enforcement priorities, including fraud in pandemic relief programs and alleged violations of cybersecurity requirements in government contracts and grants.”
  • Medscape informs us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has granted De Novo classification to a sleep apnea feature developed by Samsung for use via the Health Monitor app, according to a company press release.
    • “The sleep apnea feature will be available on watches in Samsung’s Galaxy series in the third quarter of 2024, according to the press release.
    • “The new feature on the app is designed to help users with no previous diagnosis of sleep apnea to detect moderate to severe symptoms over a two-night period.
    • “The sleep apnea feature allows individuals older than 22 years to track their sleep twice for more than 4 hours within a 10-day period. The feature identifies breathing disruptions.”
  • MedTech Dive adds,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration warned patients against using smartwatches or smart rings that claim to measure blood sugar without piercing the skin. 
    • “Officials published the safety notice Wednesday after learning that people are selling wearables that claim to noninvasively monitor blood glucose. The devices are “manufactured by dozens of companies and sold under multiple brand names,” according to the agency. 
    • “The FDA has never authorized a noninvasive wearable that measures or estimates blood glucose values on its own and is concerned inaccurate readings could lead to errors in the management of diabetes.”
  • Govexec reports,
    • “The U.S. Postal Service has continued to see slower mail delivery across the country, with delays picking up as the agency is in the throes of transforming its entire network. 
    • “Postal management has repeatedly pointed to isolated incidents causing temporary disruptions—rather than any systemic issues—to explain the declining performance, though the trend has now persisted for nearly six months and is causing stakeholders and advocates to question the true root of the problem.
    • “USPS is now delivering just 83% of First-Class mail on time during the current fiscal quarter, its worst rate in three years. That is down from 86% in the first quarter and 91% in both the fourth quarter of fiscal 2023 and the same period last year.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control tells us about the changing threat of Covid-19
    • What CDC knows
    • The impact of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, has changed dramatically since 2020. Although COVID-19 remains common, when compared to 2020, individual infections are less likely to result in severe illness for most people in the United States. COVID-19 poses the highest risk for older adults, infants, and people with pre-existing medical conditions, and there are multiple ways people and communities can help reduce their risk of infection.
    • What CDC is doing
    • CDC continues to partner with state and local health authorities to collect and share data on COVID-19 community spread, hospitalizations, deaths, and Long COVID.  Additionally, CDC continues to evaluate the effectiveness of prevention and treatment strategies for the virus in order to provide the public the best evidence-based recommendations for reducing their risk from COVID-19.
    • Keep reading: The Changing Threat of COVID-19
  • Medscape notes,
    • Exercising for upwards of 30 minutes most days may help relieve pain in patients who’ve been diagnosed with cancer, according to a study of exercise and pain outcomes from more than 60,000 people, including 10,000 with a history of cancer. 
    • Study participants who’d been diagnosed with cancer and surpassed 150 minutes of moderate activity a week were 16% less likely to report pain than those who did not exercise or who exercised less. Exercise was particularly helpful for those with moderate to severe pain. In general, the more people exercised, the less pain they felt — and that was true for those with and without a history of cancer.
    • “This adds to a large evidence base regarding other benefits of exercise after cancer,” said lead study author Christopher Swain, PhD, a researcher at the University of Melbourne, Australia, who studies how physical activity can protect against cancer. “It would be great for physicians to encourage physical activity” for anyone who’s ever been diagnosed with cancer. 
  • Axios reports,
    • “Americans see poor mental health as one of the biggest threats to public health, ranking just behind obesity and the long-running opioid epidemic, according to the latest Axios-Ipsos American Health Index.
    • The big picture: Almost 9 out of 10 people say their own emotional wellbeing is very or somewhat good, but they view mental health issues as a serious societal threat that now outranks access to firearms, cancer or COVID-19. 
    • “And unlike many other perceived threats, there’s a pronounced generational split about mental health, registering as a much bigger concern for younger adults.
    • “The poll also found all but a small pocket of Americans largely tuned out a winter COVID-19 wave that saw the second-largest number of cases since the start of the pandemic, and the public is skeptical about handing over their care to artificial intelligence.
    • By the numbers: Overall, 17% said mental health was the top threat to public health, while 19% said obesity, 24% said opioids and fentanyl, and 15% said it was access to guns.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Employee Benefit Research Institute announced,
    • “New findings released today from the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI)/Greenwald Research Consumer Engagement in Health Care Survey(CEHCS) reported that consumers were overall satisfied with their health plan selection and services, while high deductible plans showed a slight decline in enrollment.
    • “The CEHCS is a survey of privately insured adults that has been conducted annually since 2005. The survey provides reliable national data on the growth of high deductible health plans (HDHP), consumer driven health plans (CDHP) and health savings accounts (HSA) – and the impact on the behavior and attitudes of health care consumers.  The 2023 survey of 2,020 individuals was conducted using an online research panel between Oct. 16 – Dec. 11, 2023. All respondents were between the ages of 21 and 64. * * *
    • “This year’s survey really shows strong evidence that people overall are satisfied with their health insurance.  Satisfaction levels are steady.  We see no majority is complaining and that is key to understanding market needs,” said Paul Fronstin, Ph.D., director, Health Benefits Research, EBRI.
    • “To view the 2023 CEHCS summary report, visit https://www.ebri.org/cehcs-2023.”
  • Chief Healthcare Executive reports,
    • “Nonprofit hospitals are making some progress financially, although the gains remain modest, according to Fitch Ratings.
    • “Of course, it’s saying something that Fitch’s early projections for the 2023 calendar year continue to show operational declines, although they aren’t as steep as 2022.
    • “Overall, Fitch expects the 2023 operating margins to rise into positive territory, albeit barely. The 2023 margins are expected to rise to 0.5% to 0.7%, which remains below pre-pandemic levels.
    • “In 2024, Fitch projects margins should move up to 1.6%.”
  • MedPage Today discusses whether “Artificial intelligence can improve prior authorization.”
    • “Prior authorization has ripple effects on patients and clinicians, but artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to simplify the process, health policy experts said during an online panel discussion hosted by the Kaiser Family Foundation on Thursday.
    • “Troyen Brennan, MD, a former executive at CVS Care and an adjunct professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, defended the process, arguing that it cuts down on unnecessary care. About 15% to 30% of all care in the U.S. healthcare system is ineffective, Brennan said.
    • “Plus, there are “really not any good studies … showing actual harm,” he argued. “There are a lot of surveys from physicians, in particular, that say that there are tremendous delays, but there’s obviously a response bias associated with this.”

Happy Lincoln’s Birthday!

Our greatest President, Abraham Lincoln, was born on February 12, 1809, in Hodgenville, Kentucky.  RIP.

From Washington, DC,

  • The Federal Times reports,
    • “By the second week in February lawmakers are supposed to be busy picking apart the White House’ budget request with an eye towards policy debates in coming months. But the process hasn’t worked that way in recent years.
    • “Administration officials earlier this month announced their fiscal 2025 budget proposal would arrive more than a month late — on March 11 — marking the fourth consecutive year that Biden has missed the statutory deadline for a spending plan in early February.”
  • Federal News Network explains,
    • “For decades, Federal Executive Boards have been at the forefront of bridging together the nationwide federal workforce. Stretching from Honolulu, Hawaii, to Boston, Massachusetts — Seattle, Washington, to South Florida, and many places in between, FEBs have a large network already underway. Even so, recent changes to the decades-old program will refresh how FEBs function moving forward.
    • “Federal News Network has spent months connecting with FEB leaders all across the country to learn more about what they do, the impact they have had in their local areas, and their plans in store for the future. Over the next week, we’ll be focusing on four different regions of the country — one per day:
    • Eastern Region (Feb. 12) | Southern Region (Feb. 13) | Central Region (Feb. 14) | Western Region (Feb. 15).”
    • Check it out.
  • According to this press release,
    • “The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), announced today that two additional organizations—CommonWell Health Alliance and Kno2—have been designated as Qualified Health Information Networks™ (QHINs™) capable of nationwide health data exchange governed by the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common AgreementSM (TEFCASM). ONC has led a multi-year, public-private process alongside its Recognized Coordinating Entity®, The Sequoia Project, Inc., to implement TEFCA, which was envisioned by the 21st Century Cures Act to support nationwide interoperability. TEFCA became operational in December 2023 with the designation of the first five QHINs—eHealth Exchange, Epic Nexus, Health Gorilla, KONZA, and MedAllies.
    • “CommonWell Health Alliance and Kno2 can immediately begin supporting the exchange of data under the Common Agreement’s policies and technical requirements along with the other designated QHINs. QHINs are the pillars of TEFCA network-to-network exchange, providing shared services and governance to securely route queries, responses, and messages across networks for health care stakeholders including patients, providers, hospitals, health systems, payers, and public health agencies.”
  • STAT News reports,
    • “A federal district judge [in Austin, Texas] on Monday granted the Biden administration’s request to dismiss a lawsuit challenging Medicare’s new drug price negotiation program from the drug industry lobbying organization PhRMA. * * *
    • “However this [decision] wasn’t about the substance of those groups’ arguments. The Texas judge dismissed one of the co-plaintiffs, the National Infusion Center Association, from the case because it didn’t have subject matter jurisdiction to bring the lawsuit. And because NICA was the only party to the lawsuit in Texas, the whole case got tossed.
    • “That means the Biden administration still has to brace for battles in Washington D.C., New Jersey, and Delaware, where a judge recently heard arguments in an AstraZeneca suit against the negotiation plan.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • MedPage Today points out,
    • “Blood protein profiles predicted future dementia in healthy adults, a large longitudinal study showed.
    • “Blood samples from over 50,000 people in the U.K. Biobank showed that four proteins — glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), neurofilament light (NfL), growth differentiation factor-15 (GDF-15), and latent-transforming growth factor beta-binding protein 2 (LTBP2) — consistently were associated with subsequent all-cause dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or vascular dementia over 14 years, according to Jin-Tai Yu, MD, PhD, of Fudan University in Shanghai, and co-authors.”
  • The Hill reports,
    • A report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that the rate of preterm births rose by 12 percent nationally between 2014 and 2022. 
    • Manisha Gandhi, chair of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Clinical Practice Guidelines Committee, told The Hill’s Alejandra O’Connell-Domenech that several factors could be at play. 
    • “We are seeing more patients with obesity, higher risks for hypertension or preeclampsia … seeing more diabetes,” Gandhi said. “Potentially some of those risk factors that lead to earlier delivery could be playing a role.” 
    • Environmental factors such as exposure to hormone-disrupting chemicals and air pollution may also be contributing to the rise in preterm births. 
  • The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
    • “Uterine is the only cancer for which survival has fallen in the past four decades, the American Cancer Society said. The disease will kill some 13,250 women in the U.S. this year, the group estimates, surpassing ovarian cancer to become the deadliest gynecologic cancer. 
    • “Case rates have been increasing by about 1% annually over the past decade, with steeper rises for Black and Hispanic women. Rising obesity rates are partly to blame because excess weight increases estrogen levels that can fuel the cancer, researchers said. And fewer women are getting their uteruses removed to treat abnormal bleeding or noncancerous fibroids, leaving them exposed to the risk cancer develops in the organ as they age.
    • “But those factors alone don’t explain the rise. The disease, more common after menopause, is rising across age groups including in women under 50 for reasons that aren’t completely clear. * * *
    • “Uterine cancer, also called endometrial cancer, comes in two forms. The more common one is slow-growing, linked to elevated estrogen levels, and curable when caught early. The rarer type isn’t hormonal and is harder to treat. Cases of this more aggressive kind are increasing faster and driving rising death rates. 
    • “Chemical hair straighteners have been linked to uterine cancer risk. The Food and Drug Administration plans in July to propose a ban on formaldehyde in hair straightening or smoothing products. 
    • “I don’t think it’s just hair products, sadly,” said Dr. Premal Thaker, a gynecologic surgeon at Siteman Cancer Center in St. Louis. “There’s more diabetes, more obesity, and there’s probably something else that we just don’t know.” 
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “An “overwhelming” 88% of respondents reporting healthcare discrimination in a new screening initiative were Black, according to a new Humana study.
    • “The report focused on the structural determinants of health as opposed to the more common social determinants of health. While such social determinants center on the conditions in which people live, work, play, learn and worship, structural determinants focus on the economic and social experiences and policies that influence health such as discrimination and health literacy. Both social and structural determinants are often interrelated, according to the study authors. 
    • “The study, published in the American Journal of Managed Care, is the first of its kind by a U.S. insurer to focus on the structural determinants of health, aspects which are “critical” but often overlooked, Humana said.
    • “The healthcare discrimination finding was somewhat problematic given a small sample size and how exactly to frame and ask questions but was nevertheless quite instructive, said co-author J. Nwando Olayiwola, M.D., chief health equity officer and senior vice president at Humana.” 
  • According to an NIH press release,
    • “Scientists have identified an area within the brain’s frontal cortex that may coordinate an animal’s response to potentially traumatic situations. Understanding where and how neural circuits involving the frontal cortex regulate such functions, and how such circuits could malfunction, may provide insight about their role in trauma-related and stress-related psychiatric disorders in people. The study, led by scientists at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), a part of the National Institutes of Health, was published in Nature.
    • “Experiencing traumatic events is often at the root of trauma-related and stress-related psychiatric conditions, including alcohol use disorder (AUD),” said the study’s senior author, Andrew Holmes, Ph.D., senior investigator in NIAAA’s Laboratory of Behavioral and Genomic Neuroscience. “Additionally, witnessing others experience traumatic events can also contribute to these disorders.”
  • MedPage Today explains how patients are using artificial intelligence tools.
    • “It’s no secret that patients have been using Dr. Google for years. The introduction of ChatGPT is ushering in a new era. ChatGPT and other types of artificial intelligence have their drawbacks. Still, they can offer a range of benefits to healthcare providers and patients alike.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Kaiser Permanente wrapped up its fiscal year with $329 million of operating income (0.3% operating income), net income of $4.1 billion and more than $100 billion in both operating revenues and expenses, the Oakland, California-based nonprofit announced Feb. 9.
    • “The rebound performance follows sizable losses during 2022, when the system logged a $1.3 billion operating loss (-1.3% operating income) off of $95.4 billion in operating revenues and $96.7 billion in operating expenses. It had also weathered a net loss of $4.5 billion due to a $3.2 billion loss across “other income,” which largely reflected down investments.
    • “I want to thank the people of Kaiser Permanente for their hard work in 2023 to provide members and patients with a positive experience at all touch points while also embracing new ways to drive efficiencies, improve access, and advance health outcomes,” said Chair and CEO Greg A. Adams said in a press release sharing the year’s top-line financial results. “Together, we navigated another challenging year and are on a path to deliver on our mission and bring our distinct brand of value-based care to more people.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Gilead Sciences will acquire CymaBay Therapeutics and the biotechnology company’s liver disease drug in a $4.3 billion deal announced Monday.
    • “The proposed buyout would hand Gilead an experimental medicine for primary biliary cholangitis, or PBC, a chronic condition characterized by the toxic build-up of bile acid in the liver. CymaBay disclosed Monday that the Food and Drug Administration has accepted its application for the drug, called seladelpar, and will decide on approval by mid-August.”
  • Health IT Analytics notes,
    • “The American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) has launched its AI Resource Hub to provide healthcare and health information (HI) stakeholders with knowledge around the use of non-clinical artificial intelligence (AI) tools.
    • “In response to the rise of AI utilization in healthcare, AHIMA partnered with Alazro Consulting to interview experts in the space and AI implementers representing over 200 hospitals and 1,000 clinics across the United States. These structured interviews were then used to develop AHIMA’s newest white paper, upon which the AI Resource Hub is based.  
    • “One of the white paper’s major findings is that the use of AI in healthcare is growing as organizations turn to the technology to optimize efficiency and workflows. These tools are often deployed to support health information management, clinical care, operations, and revenue cycle management.”
  • Fierce Healthcare identified its Fierce 15 of 2024.
    • “This year’s 15 honorees recognized a significant gap in the market, whether it’s for personalized GI care, opening up access to mental health or addressing loneliness among seniors with a robot companion. They then set to work to build forward-thinking solutions to address a specific problem.
    • “They are all taking a fresh angle to long-standing problems in healthcare, such as harnessing AI to streamline clinical documentation or using virtual care to treat the root causes of obesity.”

Midweek update

Photo by Manasvita S on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The Department of Health and Human Services informs us,
    • “On Monday, February 5, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra met virtually with pharmacy CEOs, including Walgreens, CVS, Walmart, and pharmacy leaders, to discuss COVID-19 therapeutics commercialization. Secretary Becerra reconvened pharmacy leaders as a follow-up to his larger meeting with pharmacies, pharmacy benefit managers, and insurers on January 9, 2024.
    • “During the call, Secretary Becerra made it clear that no patient should be charged hundreds of dollars for Paxlovid at the pharmacy counter – stressing the importance of pharmacist education and clear communication to patients. Secretary Becerra re-iterated the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to equitable access to COVID-19 therapeutics, reminded pharmacy leaders of the pathways for access that HHS negotiated with Pfizer, and made it clear that HHS would continue to engage with pharmacist leadership as needed.
    • “While HHS is no longer managing the distribution of COVID-19 therapeutics since they transitioned to the commercial market, the Biden-Harris Administration has been closely monitoring the therapeutics commercialization process and remains committed to equitable access to lifesaving COVID-19 therapeutics, including Paxlovid. Thanks to the pathwaysthat HHS negotiated with Pfizer, all individuals on Medicare and Medicaid can receive Paxlovid for free through 2024 and individuals who are uninsured can receive Paxlovid for free through 2028. * * *
    • “To learn more about Paxlovid access, go to Pfizer’s PAXCESS Website
  • Health Payer Intelligence points out a KFF study on how various types of payer cover COVID-19 tests, treatments and vaccines post-public health emergency.
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services yesterday released FAQs clarifying coverage criteria and utilization management requirements for Medicare Advantage plans under its final rule for calendar year 2024, which includes provisions intended to increase program oversight and create better alignment between MA and Traditional Medicare. Topics addressed by the FAQs include medical necessity determinations; algorithms and artificial intelligence; internal coverage criteria; post-acute care; the two-midnight benchmark for inpatient admission criteria; prior authorization; and enforcement.”
  • STAT News adds,
    • “In recent months, the federal government has repeatedly told Medicare Advantage insurers that they cannot use artificial intelligence or algorithms to deny medical services the government routinely covers.
    • “But in finalizing a rule to that effect, it also stepped into a thicket of questions from insurers about a technology that is especially difficult to pin down: What is AI? Can it be used at all to make decisions about the coverage of older patients? If so, how?
    • “This week, the federal agency that oversees Medicare sought to boil it all down into a simple directive: Put the circumstances of the individual patient first, and your algorithm second.
    • “An algorithm that determines coverage based on a larger data set instead of the individual patient’s medical history, the physician’s recommendations, or clinical notes would not be compliant” with federal regulations, the government wrote in a memo to Medicare Advantage insurers on Tuesday.”
  • Health plans were using algorithms in claims processing long before AI exploded on the scene. On a related note, Health IT Analytics explores the benefits of predictive analytics in healthcare.
  • The FEHBlog noticed this entry on the OMB Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs website.
AGENCY: OPMRIN: 3206-AO43Status: Pending ReviewRequest EO Meeting
TITLE: Postal Service Reform Act; Establishment of the Postal Service Health Benefits Program 
STAGE: Final RuleSECTION 3(f)(1) SIGNIFICANT: No
** RECEIVED DATE: 02/06/2024LEGAL DEADLINE: None  
From Reginfo.gov
  • This notice pertains to OPM’s effort to finalize the interim final rule establishing the Postal Service Health Benefits Program issued April 6, 2023. OIRA review is the last step in the regulatory process before publication of this “final, final” rule in the Federal Register. OPM had project publishing that rule this month.
  • Drug Channels discusses
    • the latest National Health Expenditure (NHE) data, which measures all U.S. spending on healthcare.
    • As you will see, retail and mail prescription drug spending remain a consistently small share of the $4.5 trillion that we spend on U.S. healthcare. 
    • And contrary to what you might read, drug spending growth was *not* driven by purportedly “skyrocketing” drug prices. In reality, nearly all drug spending growth occurred due to growth in the number of people treated, prescriptions dispensed, and other nonprice factors.

From the public health and medical research,

  • The Washington Post offers an opinion piece by former CDC Director Thomas Frieden about the public health importance of treating hypertension.
  • The Post also provides background on stomach cancer, the disease that cause country singer Toby’s Keith’s death earlier this week.
  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • In a recent study of the brain’s waste drainage system, researchers from Washington University in St. Louis, collaborating with investigators at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), a part of the National Institute of Health (NIH), discovered a direct connection between the brain and its tough protective covering, the dura mater. These links may allow waste fluid to leave the brain while also exposing the brain to immune cells and other signals coming from the dura. This challenges the conventional wisdom which has suggested that the brain is cut off from its surroundings by a series of protective barriers, keeping it safe from dangerous chemicals and toxins lurking in the environment.
    • “Waste fluid moves from the brain into the body much like how sewage leaves our homes,” said NINDS’s Daniel S. Reich, M.D., Ph.D. “In this study, we asked the question of what happens once the ‘drain pipes’ leave the ‘house’—in this case, the brain—and connect up with the city sewer system within the body.” Reich’s group worked jointly with the lab of Jonathan Kipnis, Ph.D., a professor at Washington University in St. Louis. * * *
    • Together, the labs found a “cuff” of cells that surround blood vessels as they pass through the arachnoid space. These areas, which they called arachnoid cuff exit (ACE) points, appear to act as areas where fluid, molecules, and even some cells can pass from the brain into the dura and vice versa, without allowing complete mixing of the two fluids. In some disorders like Alzheimer’s disease, impaired waste clearance can cause disease-causing proteins to build up. Continuing the sewer analogy, Kipnis explained the possible connection to ACE points:  
    • “If your sink is clogged, you can remove water from the sink or fix the faucet, but ultimately you need to fix the drain,” he said. “In the brain, clogs at ACE points may prevent waste from leaving. If we can find a way to clean these clogs, its possible we can protect the brain.”  
  • Medscape lets us know,
    • “Dry January has come to an end — at least for those who jumped on the trendy post-holiday no-booze wagon.
    • “The benefits of drinking less alcohol are well documented. A systematic review of 63 studies, for example, found that reducing or giving up alcohol reduced people’s risk for hospitalization, injuries, and death. The lifestyle change also improved people’s physical and mental health as well as their quality of life.
    • “When it comes to cancer risk, however, the benefits of quitting or cutting back on alcohol remain much less clear, according to a new report from the cancer agency of the World Health Organization (WHO).
    • “After reviewing dozens of studies, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) concluded that, for most alcohol-related cancers, there is limited evidence to support a link between eliminating or reducing alcohol consumption and lowering of cancer risk.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “Citing elevated medical costs, CVS Health on Wednesday cut its 2024 outlook despite posting better revenue and earnings than Wall Street had expected in the fourth quarter.
    • The massive healthcare conglomerate now expects to bring in at least $8.30 in adjusted earnings per share this year, compared to prior guidance of $8.50.
    • “CVS is the latest insurer to post 2024 guidance below investors’ expectations, after Humana released a disappointing earnings outlook last month.”
  • and
    • “Amazon is cutting hundreds of jobs across One Medical and Amazon Pharmacy, the company confirmed on Wednesday.
    • “The goal of the cuts is to “realign” resources to meet the divisions’ goals, Amazon Health Services SVP Neil Lindsay said in an email to staff shared with Healthcare Dive. The company is not disclosing the number of employees or what roles are being impacted by the cuts.
    • “Affected employees will receive financial support and benefit continuation, as well as the opportunity to apply for new roles at Amazon, according to Lindsay. Amazon is not on a hiring freeze and will continue to hire providers and employees for One Medical and Amazon Pharmacy.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “More than a quarter of the top U.S. hospitals for patient experience fall under Providence’s umbrella, according to a new ranking from PEP Health
    • “The Minneapolis-based AI platform extracts behavioral insights data from patient comments shared on multiple social media and review platforms. To rank the top U.S. hospitals for patient experience in 2024, PEP Health gathered and analyzed more than 30 million online patient reviews shared between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2023.  * * *
    • “On average, the top 30 scored 30% higher in continuity of care, 22% higher in attention to physical and environmental needs, and 17% higher in fast access than their peers. 
    • “Hospitals belonging to Renton, Wash.-based Providence excelled on more than half of the assessment metrics, according to PEP’s report. Although eight of the top 30 hospitals were prefixed with “Providence” — and another, Swedish Medical Center-First Hill in Seattle, is an affiliate — the system could still show improvement in communication and emotional support, per the AI company.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Amgen is a global pharmaceutical company worth more than $160 billion. Nine of its marketed medicines are blockbuster products by annual sales.
    • “Yet, on a Tuesday conference call discussing Amgen’s fourth quarter earnings, all Wall Street analysts wanted to talk about was an experimental drug that only just cleared the first stage of human testing.
    • “More than half of the questions asked by analysts were focused on AMG 133, a promising treatment for obesity that’s drawn attention as a potential competitor to in-demand weight loss medicines from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly. While Wall Street often overlooks the present to focus on the future, the intense interest in a drug years away from the market was noteworthy.”
  • Milliman has made available its
    • “sixth annual Milliman Multiemployer Health and Welfare Study, which analyzes financial disclosures for multiemployer health and welfare plans, also known as Taft-Hartley plans. This year’s report includes data for 1,226 plans covering approximately 4.6 million members as of 2021, the most recent year for which data is available. The average plan could pay about one year and three months of benefits and expenses with its net assets, a decrease of approximately one month from 2020.”

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Tomorrow at 10 am, the House Oversight and Accountability Committee will mark up several bills including the FEHB provisions in the DRUG Act, HR 6283. It’s unfortunate that the Committee did not hold a hearing on this disruptive bill. The FEHBlog will be listening to the markup.
  • The Federal Times informs us,
    • “A pair of contracts designed to improve the quality of care in Tricare’s civilian medical networks will take effect Jan. 1, 2025, according to defense officials.
    • “The contracts are moving forward following a Jan. 31 decision in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims affirming the Defense Health Agency’s choice of TriWest Healthcare Alliance as the Tricare West Region’s new manager, denying a protest lodged by incumbent contractor Health Net Federal Services last year.  * * *
    • “Humana Government Business, the incumbent contractor for Tricare’s East Region, will continue in that role under a new deal worth up to $70.8 billion.The new contracts for the two regions have a potential combined value of $136 billion over nine years.”
  • MedTech Dive lets us know
    • “FDA panel recommends new standards for pulse oximeters amid bias concerns.
    • “Studies have found that pulse oximeters overestimated oxygen saturation in people with dark skin pigmentation, resulting in delayed care.”
  • and
    • “Hologic has received regulatory clearance to sell an artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled cervical cancer screening system in the U.S. 
    • “The product, the Genius Digital Diagnostics System, creates digital images of Pap test slides and uses an AI algorithm to identify cells that cytologists and pathologists should review.
    • “Hologic’s clearance, announced on Thursday, comes days after BD partnered with Techcyte to promote a digital, AI-enabled cervical cancer screening test that is yet to come to market.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Eli Lilly’s ingredient for Type 2 diabetes medication Mounjaro and its new weight loss drug, Zepbound, significantly lowered patients’ blood pressure by up to 10.6 mmHg, according to a new study published Feb. 5. 
    • “The study recruited about 500 adult patients with a body mass index at or more than 27, or the overweight range. Compared to a placebo, tirzepatide — the active pharmaceutical ingredient of Mounjaro and Zepbound — reduced blood pressure for participants taking 5, 10 and 15 milligrams each week. The patients were not diabetic and either had normal blood pressure or high blood pressure that was under control.” 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Amgen is trying a unique strategy with its obesity drug candidate: testing whether it can wean patients toward lower or less frequent doses over time.
    • “Very early data hints that Amgen’s candidate, called MariTide, may provide longer-lasting weight loss than highly popular obesity drugs on the market like Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Eli Lilly’s Zepbound. Amgen is already seeing if that means its drug could also be dosed differently from Novo and Lilly’s products, which are costly and expected to be taken consistently for life.
    • “In an ongoing Phase 2 trial, Amgen’s researchers will first titrate participants up on MariTide, but then after some time, see if the drug can still be effective when transitioning patients to a less intensive dosing regimen, executives said in an interview.
    • “Could there be an opportunity for an induction maintenance-type of strategy for a molecule like MariTide?” said Narimon Honarpour, senior vice president of global development at Amgen, referring to a strategy used for anti-inflammatory drugs in which high, rapid doses are given at the start and then lower or less frequent doses are used for maintenance in the long run.”
  • HHS’s Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality released a rapid evidence report about deprescribing to reduce medical harms in older adults.
    • “Deprescribing has emerged as a clinical practice to reduce polypharmacy and use of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) and serve as a mechanism for quality improvement and increased patient safety. The purpose of this rapid response is to summarize recent literature on the use of deprescribing to improve the safety of medication use among older adults (age ≥ 65 years).”
  • CBS News reports,
    • “Preterm and early-term births in the U.S. have increased from 2014 to 2022, raising risks to babies, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    • Data released Wednesday from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics shows the preterm birth rate — meaning delivery before 37 completed weeks of pregnancy — rose 12% during that time period, while early-term birth rates, at 37 to 38 completed weeks, rose 20%. 
    • “This is compared to full-term births, which are those delivered at 39 to 40 weeks.
    • “Using data from the National Vital Statistics System, the analysis only looks at singleton births, since multiple births like twins and triplets tend to be born at earlier gestational ages, the authors note.
    • “Gestational age is a strong predictor of short- and long-term morbidity and early mortality,” the authors write. “Births delivered preterm are at the greatest risk of adverse outcomes, but risk is also elevated for early-term compared with full-term births.”
  • MedCity News points out,
    • “Mayo Clinic has entered into a collaboration with TruLite Health — Mayo is helping the Phoenix-based startup develop its software platform designed to address providers’ clinical bias. The health system said it chose to collaborate with TruLite because of the platform’s potential to mitigate health inequities and enhance patient outcomes at the point of care.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Artificial intelligence can help identify easy to miss patients who might be good candidates for a palliative or hospice care referral, a recent pilot at Mass General Brigham (MGB) revealed.
    • “The results of the findings were presented Friday at the Value-Based Payment Summit.
    • “Timely end-of-life care benefits patients. Patients and their families may also be more open to a conversation about goals of care during a hospital stay, MGB said in presentation slides shown to Fierce Healthcare.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Novo Holdings, the controlling shareholder of Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk, will buy contract manufacturer Catalent for $16.5 billion in a take-private deal the companies announced Monday.
    • “In a related transaction, Novo Nordisk has agreed pay its parent company $11 billion to take over three Catalent plants in Italy, Belgium and Indiana to help expand production of its GLP-1 drugs Ozempic and Wegovy. Demand for the latter, which is approved in the U.S. for treating obesity, has greatly exceeded supply, forcing Novo Nordisk to restrict access.
    • “Novo Nordisk and Catalent already work together at the three sites, which employ more than 3,000 staff.”
  • and
    • “On Monday, Johnson & Johnson said one of its most closely watched experimental medicines appears to have positive effects on two autoimmune diseases, providing further support to a drug that, by the company’s estimates, could eventually generate billions of dollars in annual sales.
    • “J&J didn’t release any data, but rather said the drug hit the main goals of a mid-stage clinical trial testing it in patients with Sjögren’s disease as well as a late-stage study focused on generalized myasthenia gravis, a rare condition known in short as gMG. The company plans to present more detailed results from both studies at upcoming medical meetings, and to engage with regulators about the path to approval in gMG.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Cano Health filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy late Sunday, as the beleaguered primary care chain works to bolster its financials. 
    • “The filing is part of a restructuring support agreement with the majority of its lenders. Cano said it expects to emerge from restructuring during the second quarter this year, adding that the process will help it reduce debt and allow it to search for a strategic partner or buyer.
    • “Cano also announced it reached an agreement to receive $150 million in debtor-in-possession financing to fund its operations during restructuring.”
  • and
    • “Medicare Advantage rate changes proposed by regulators last week are upsetting Humana’s funding expectations for 2025.
    • “If finalized as proposed, the MA changes will lower Humana’s benchmark funding by around 160 basis points compared to a flat rate environment, the health insurer disclosed in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commissionon Monday.
    • “The discrepancy is because the CMS didn’t factor in persistently elevated medical costs into how it calculates rates, Humana said. However, regulators could do so in the final rule. Despite the uncertainty, the insurer reaffirmed its earnings outlook for 2025.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Rural providers feel financially stable, with most planning to expand existing service lines to increase revenue, a new survey has found (PDF).
    • “The survey was conducted by accounting firm Wipfli and reached 106 rural healthcare organizations across 26 states. Respondents included a mix of critical access hospitals, rural health clinics and others.
    • “Overall, most respondents are cautiously or completely optimistic about their financial viability. About 40% said their financial stability is higher than it was a year ago, and the portion of those who think they are in a better place than they were five years ago also rose compared to 2023. Despite challenges like high inflation, dwindling COVID-19 relief funds and flat reimbursement rates, growing optimism suggests rural providers learned how to manage unpredictability during the pandemic, the report said. * * *
    • Entering 2024, rural healthcare leaders are most concerned about revenue capture, digital capabilities and people management.
  • HR Morning offers nine tips on maximizing core health benefits.
  • The Society for Human Resource Management discusses best practices for hybrid work models.

Cybersecurity Saturday

From the cybersecurity policy front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday,
    • “The U.S. government said it had disrupted a uniquely dangerous and potentially life-threatening Chinese hacking operation that hijacked hundreds of infected routers and used them to covertly target American and allied critical infrastructure networks.
    • “Senior officials described the operation in unusually blunt terms as part of an evolving and increasingly worrisome campaign by Beijing to get a foothold in U.S. computer networks responsible for everything from safe drinking water to aviation traffic so it could detonate, at a moment’s notice, damaging cyberattacks during a future conflict, including over Taiwan.
    • “Wednesday’s announcement was part of an effort by senior Biden administration officials to underscore what Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Wray called the “apocalyptic scenarios” animating their fears about China’s advanced and well-resourced hacking prowess. Western intelligence officials say its skill and sophistication has accelerated over the past decade. Officials have grown particularly alarmed at Beijing’s interest in infiltrating U.S. critical infrastructure networks, which they say poses an unrivaled cybersecurity challenge.”
  • Here’s Cybersecurity Dive’s story on this chilling development.
    • “The FBI and Department of Justice disclosed Wednesday a court-authorized disruption of a botnet linked to the Volt Typhoon threat campaign from 2023, which Wray noted during his testimony. The hackers installed KV Botnet malware on hundreds of small office/home office routers in the U.S., in a plan to target critical infrastructure providers through the compromised hosts. * * *
    • “Volt Typhoon is very focused on targeting U.S. critical infrastructure by staying below the radar, and works hard to reduce the signatures we use to hunt them across networks,” Sandra Joyce, VP, Mandiant Intelligence, Google Cloud, said in a statement. “They are making use of compromised systems to blend in with normal network activity and constantly change the source of their activity.”
  • Cyberscoop adds,
    • “Any federal agency running Ivanti Connect Secure or Ivanti Policy Secure devices must disconnect them from their networks before midnight Friday [February 2], the United States’s top civilian cyber defense agency said Wednesday amid reports the vulnerable devices are being targeted by espionage operations linked to China. 
    • “Last month, CISA warned that the vulnerable Ivanti devices were subject to “widespread exploitation of vulnerabilities by multiple threat actors.” On Wednesday, the agency issued new instructions for how to update and bring those devices back online. 
    • “A CISA spokesperson did not immediately respond to a question about how many instances of Ivanti’s affected product are present in federal networks. * * *
    • “Chinese hackers appear to be exploiting the Ivanti vulnerabilities to carry out espionage. Researchers with Google’s Mandiant wrote in a blog post Wednesday that they’d identified “broad exploitation activity” by suspected Chinese-linked espionage hackers they track as “UNC5221,” as well as other uncategorized attackers.” 
  • and
    • “The Office of the National Cyber Director has work to do to improve the implementation of President Joe Biden’s national cybersecurity strategy, according to a watchdog report.
    • The Government Accountability Office said in a report released Thursday that the national cybersecurity strategy lacks performance measures and estimated costs, which the watchdog believes is essential for a national strategy.
    • “The GAO said that “neither the strategy nor the implementation plan included outcome-oriented performance measures for the initiatives or for the overall objectives of the strategy to gauge success.” The initiatives outlined in the implementation planinclude milestones and expected completion dates, but lacked assessments in “the extent to which the initiatives are achieving outcome-oriented objectives” like information sharing or updated federal cyber defenses, GAO said.
    • “ONCD staff told the GAO said it wasn’t actually feasible to develop outcome-oriented measures, simply because those measures do not yet exist in the broader cybersecurity field. “They acknowledged the value of having meaningful outcome-oriented performance measures to assess cybersecurity effectiveness but stated that such measures do not currently exist in the cybersecurity field in general,” the GAO wrote.”
  • On Wednesday Cybersecurity Dive tells us,
    • The Biden administration came out forcefully this week against a congressional effort to undo the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recently adopted rule requiring public companies to disclose cybersecurity incidents.
    • President Joe Biden would veto the joint resolution, S.J. Res. 50, if it comes to his desk, the administration said Wednesday in a policy statement.
    • The legislation to disapprove the SEC’s authority to require companies to quickly disclose material cyber incidents and describe how they manage cyberthreats in annual reports was introduced by Republican senators in November alongside a companion resolution by House Republicans.
  • Federal News Network offers an interview with “Kirsten Moncada, OPM’s chief privacy officer and a longtime federal privacy expert, [who remarked that] the rise of AI tools in government is sure to create more work for privacy officials across the government.”

From the cybersecurity vulnerabilities and breaches front,

  • Cybersecurity Dive informs us
    • “An identity-based attack Cloudflare previously declared contained and unimpactful turned out to be quite the opposite. The threat actor that intruded Cloudflare’s Okta environment in mid-October regained access to some of the content delivery network’s systems in mid-November, the company said Thursday in a blog post.
    • “The threat actor used one access token and three service account credentials Cloudflare failed to rotate after the environment was compromised by an early October attack against Okta, the company said. The Okta incident ultimately exposed data on all of the single sign-on provider’s customer support system clients.
    • “We want to emphasize to our customers that no Cloudflare customer data or systems were impacted by this event,” CEO Matthew Prince, CTO John Graham-Cumming and CSO Grant Bourzikas said in the blog post.”
  • Dark Reading points out,
    • “Security researchers have sounded the alarm on a new cyberattack campaign using cracked copies of popular software products to distribute a backdoor to macOS users.
    • “What makes the campaign different from numerous others that have employed a similar tactic — such as one reported just earlier this month involving Chinese websites — is its sheer scale and its novel, multistage payload delivery technique. Also noteworthy is the threat actor’s use of cracked macOS apps with titles that are of likely interest to business users, so organizations that don’t restrict what users download can be at risk as well.
    • “Kaspersky was the first to discover and report on the Activator macOS backdoor in January 2024. A subsequent analysis of the malicious activity by SentinelOne has showed the malware to be “running rife through torrents of macOS apps,” according to the security vendor.”
  • On Wednesday, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) announced “New Software Updates and Mitigations to Defend Against Exploitation of Ivanti Connect Secure and Policy Secure Gateways.”
  • CISA added a known exploited vulnerability to its catalog on January 31 and another later the same day.

From the ransomware front,

  • Security Week discuses why the ransomware threat continues to grow.
    • “The volume of ransomware attacks is not a constant and can be affected by many short term factors (take downs, criminal retirements, retooling, etcetera). 2022 showed a reduction, and some commentators suggested that the tide was turning against ransomware. 2023 has demonstrated this was a false dawn, with more than twice the number of victims in 2023 compared to 2022. 
    • “Anyone who believes ransomware will go away doesn’t understand the nature of criminality. Extortion has and always will be a primary criminal business plan. The current Delinea report demonstrates that the delivery of extortion can be fine-tuned (the evolution from encryption to data exfiltration), but the purpose remains the same, and the incidence will continue to increase.
    • “The success of this business plan is demonstrated by an increase in the number of victims who have paid the ransom — up from 68% to 76% (and remember that is 76% of a higher number of victims). What cannot be measured is the effect of cyberinsurance on ransomware delivery and response. Some commentators believe that attackers look for victims with cyberinsurance, and the report notes, “One reason for the willingness to pay may be the rise of cyberinsurance.”
  • Bleeping Computer’s The Week in Ransomware returns this week.
    • “Attacks on hospitals continued this week, with ransomware operations disrupting patient care as they force organization to respond to cyberattacks.
    • “While many, like LockBit, claim to have policies in place to avoid encryping hospitals, we continue to see affiliates targeting healthcare with complete disregard to the disruption they are causing patients in trying to receive care.”

From the cybersecurity defenses front,

  • TechTarget identifies “sixteen common types of cyberattacks and how to prevent them.”
  • CISA announced,
    • “CISA and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) published guidance on Security Design Improvements for SOHO Device Manufacturers as a part of the new Secure by Design (SbD) Alert series that focuses on how manufacturers should shift the burden of security away from customers by integrating security into product design and development.
    • “This third publication in CISA’s SbD Alert series examines how manufacturers can eliminate the path threat actors—particularly the People’s Republic of China (PRC)-sponsored Volt Typhoon group—are taking to compromise small office/home office (SOHO) routers.” 
  • An ISACA expert writes about “Navigating the Treacherous Waters of IT Risk: The MOVEit Transfer Exploit as a Case Study.”