Friday Report

Friday Report

From Washington, DC.

  • Medical Economics reports,
    • Health care is in crisis, but tying physician reimbursement to inflation is one way to stabilize the American health care system, according to the American Medical Association (AMA).
    • On April 10, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission voted unanimously to recommend Congress replace current law updates to the physician fee schedule with an annual change based on the Medicare Economic Index, such as MEI minus 1%.
    • That is “a timely recommendation as lawmakers wrestle with how to handle yet another cut in physician pay,” according to AMA. Association President Bruce A. Scott, MD, issued a statement of support similar to previous ones because the issue has been under discussion for months. In fact, Scott noted MedPAC has suggested the same to Congress at least three consecutive years.
      The current baseline increase to physician reimbursement is 0.25%, or 0.75% for doctors participating in an alternative payment model. MedPAC said Congress should consider setting reimbursement at the rate of the Medicare Economic Index minus 1%, every year for the foreseeable future.
  • Fierce Healthcare lets us know,
    • “A new assessment of 18 Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation models reaffirms recent criticism of the agency’s aggregate cost savings—or more accurately, losses—while highlighting several individual payment models that appear effective in cutting down federal spending and improving care quality.
    • “The white paper published Wednesday by healthcare consulting and advisory firm Avalere Health looked at newer quality metrics for outcomes than prior CMMI model analyses and also dug into whether the agency had been transparent and provided opportunities for feedback when designing the models.
    • “The findings come in the wake of a damning late 2023 Congressional Budget Office assessment of the agency’s work, which found CMMI increased indirect spending by $5.4 billion between 2011 and 2020 (0.1% of net Medicare spending during that time) and spurred sharp scrutiny from cost-conscious lawmakers.”
  • and
    • “Disability protections against gender dysphoria implemented via rulemaking during the Biden administration will not be supported going forward, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced April 10.
    • “In a two-page clarification, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. signed off on a rule update that declares language characterizing gender dysphoria as a disability to not be enforceable because its inclusion was in the preamble—not the regulatory text—to a final rule from May 2024.
    • “The Department is nonetheless concerned there has been significant confusion about the preamble language referencing gender dysphoria in the [final rule],” the update (PDF) in the Federal Register reads. “It is well-established that where, as here, the language included in the regulatory text itself is clear, statements made in the preamble to a final rule published in the Federal Register, lack the force and effect of law and are not enforceable.”
  • Federal News Network tells us, “OPM lacks funds to relocate ‘significant’ number of remote employees in return-to-office plans. OPM is joining many agencies in giving employees another chance to take a “deferred resignation” offer before it proceeds with nonvoluntary layoffs.”
  • Tammy Flanagan, writing in Govexec, informs us about “What to know about early retirement offers to federal employees.

From the Food and Drug Administration front,

  • Fierce Pharma relates
    • “Bristol Myers Squibb has received the FDA’s green light to introduce another immunotherapy-based treatment in first-line liver cancer.
    • “The company’s combination of Opdivo and Yervoy is now approved for patients with newly diagnosed unresectable or metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma, the FDA said Friday.
    • “The immunotherapy regimen combines two well-established agents and may offer the potential for a longer life compared with traditional targeted therapy, Wendy Short Bartie, Bristol Myers’ senior VP of U.S. oncology commercialization, said in an interview with Fierce Pharma.
    • “The first-line approval also converted a previous accelerated approval for Opdivo-Yervoy as a second-line liver cancer treatment. Further, it puts BMS toe to toe with two other immuno-oncology regimens—Roche’s Tecentriq and Avastin, and AstraZeneca’s Imfinzi and Imjudo.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Intuitive said Thursday the Food and Drug Administration has cleared a stapler for use with its single-port robotic surgery system.
    • “The device, which Intuitive said is the first stapler designed for single-port robotic surgery, shares features found in the company’s multi-port products to reduce the risk of tissue damage.
    • “CFO Jamie Samath said in January that the stapler nod would trigger the start of “broad commercial efforts” for the single-port system in two indications recently authorized by the FDA.”
  • and
    • “Dexcom received Food and Drug Administration clearance for a 15-day version of its G7 glucose sensor, the company announced Thursday.
    • “Dexcom claims its continuous glucose monitor is the most accurate and has the longest wear time. The company also expects the shift from a 10-day to a 15-day sensor to improve its margins, executives said in a February earnings call.
    • “The announcement alleviated investor concerns that a recent FDA warning letter might delay the decision. Dexcom expects a full launch in the second half of 2025, giving the company time to integrate the updated device with insulin pumps.”

From the judicial front,

  • The Congressional Research Service offers a legal sidebar about the impending April 21 oral argument in the Kennedy v Braidwood Management case which concerns the Affordable Care Act’s preventive care services coverage mandate.
  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “A Maine woman can’t proceed with a suit claiming that her health insurance plan’s coverage exclusion for weight loss drugs unlawfully discriminates against obese people, a federal court said.
    • “Rebecca Holland didn’t allege any facts showing that Elevance Health Inc. ever regarded her or other obese plan members as disabled, the US District Court for the District of Maine said Wednesday. Her “bare conclusory allegations to the contrary” didn’t support a ruling that the exclusion was discriminatory, Chief Judge Lance E. Walker said.
    • “Medicare and private insurers generally cover the cost of drugs like Ozempic when used to treat Type 2 diabetes but have been reluctant to pay for it when used for weight loss purposes. Several state and federal plaintiffs are trying to change that by claiming that obesity qualifies as a disability, and the exclusions violate discrimination laws.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Center for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity continues to decline. COVID-19 and RSV activity are declining nationally to low levels.
    • “COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity is declining nationally. Wastewater levels are at low levels, emergency department visits are at very low levels, and laboratory percent positivity is stable. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are highest in older adults and emergency department visits are also elevated in young children.
      • “There is still time to benefit from getting your recommended immunizations to reduce your risk of illness this season, especially severe illness and hospitalization.
      • “CDC expects the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine to work well for currently circulating variants. There are many effective tools to prevent spreading COVID-19 or becoming seriously ill.
    • “Influenza
    • “RSV
      • “RSV activity is declining in most areas of the country. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are highest in children and hospitalizations are elevated among older adults in some areas.
    • “Vaccination
      • “Vaccination coverage with influenza and COVID-19 vaccines is low among U.S. adults and children. Vaccination coverage with RSV vaccines remains low among U.S. adults. Many children and adults lack protection from respiratory virus infections provided by vaccines.”
  • The American Hospital News points out,
    • “There have been 712 confirmed cases of measles reported by 25 states so far this year, according to the latest figures released April 11 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The agency said 93% of those cases (660 of 712) are outbreak-associated and 11% of cases have been hospitalized. The vaccination status of 97% of cases is classified as “unvaccinated or unknown.”
  • ProPublic adds,
    • “In the past six months, two babies in Louisiana have died of pertussis, the disease commonly known as whooping cough.
    • “Washington state recently announced its first confirmed death from pertussis in more than a decade.
    • “Idaho and South Dakota each reported a death this year, and Oregon last year reported two as well as its highest number of cases since 1950.
    • “While much of the country is focused on the spiraling measles outbreak concentrated in the small, dusty towns of West Texas, cases of pertussis have skyrocketed by more than 1,500% nationwide since hitting a recent low in 2021 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Deaths tied to the disease are also up, hitting 10 last year, compared with about two to four in previous years. Cases are on track to exceed that total this year.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Surgeons removed a genetically engineered pig’s kidney from an Alabama woman after she experienced acute organ rejection, NYU Langone Health officials said on Friday.
    • “Towana Looney, 53, lived with the kidney for 130 days, which is longer than anyone else has tolerated an organ from a genetically modified animal. She has resumed dialysis, hospital officials said.
    • “Dr. Robert Montgomery, Ms. Looney’s surgeon and the director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute, said that the so-called explant was not a setback for the field of xenotransplantation — the effort to use organs from animals to replace those that have failed in humans.
    • “This is the longest one of these organs has lasted,” he said in an interview, adding that Ms. Looney had other medical conditions that might have complicated her prognosis.
    • “All this takes time,” he said. “This game is going to be won by incremental improvements, singles and doubles, not trying to swing for the fences and get a home run.”
  • Health Day notes,
    • “About one in 10 U.S. adults with substance use disorder (SUD) report past-year hospitalizations, according to a research letter published online April 1 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
    • “Eden Y. Bernstein, M.D., M.P.H., from the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora, and colleagues described the prevalence of hospitalizations among U.S. adults with SUD. Adults were classified into non-mutually exclusive groups by presence of any SUD, individual SUD, and two or more SUDs. The proportion and number of U.S. adults who reported hospitalizations was estimated for each group.
    • “The researchers identified 60 million U.S. adults with SUD, of whom 5.8 million (9.7 percent) reported past-year hospitalizations. The proportion of hospitalized adults ranged from 7.3 to 23.6 percent among those with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and opioid use disorder (OUD), respectively. Among adults with SUD, those with versus without past-year hospitalizations were more likely to be older and more likely to have two or more medical comorbid conditions. Hospitalized adults with AUD, cannabis use disorder, and tobacco use disorder were also more likely to have serious mental illness. Across all groups apart from AUD, hospitalized adults were less likely to be uninsured. Hospitalized adults with OUD were less likely to be non-Hispanic Black.”
  • Per a National Cancer Institute news release,
    • “Why do some cancers come back many years after treatments had eliminated all signs of the disease? The answer may involve rogue cancer cells that spread to other parts of the body early in the disease and then enter a sleeping, or dormant, state, according to a growing body of research. 
    • “These dormant cancer cells can survive in the body undetected for months, years, or even decades, the research suggests. At some point, however, the cells may awaken and begin the process of forming metastatic tumors.  
    • “What causes disseminated cancer cells to enter, and then to leave, a dormant state is not known. 
    • “But recent studies of tumor dormancy have yielded clues that scientists believe could one day help them find ways to prevent metastases, which account for most cancer deaths.”
  • Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News adds,
    • “Cancer vaccines have been a tantalizing idea for decades, but the vast complexity of the human immune system has posed significant challenges. Now, technological advances like rapid DNA sequencing, lymph node targeting, and AI-informed antigen selection are enabling the creation of precision vaccines that target cancers effectively while minimizing harmful side effects.”
  • AHRQ’s Effective Health Care Program shares a paper about “Management of Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors in Youth: A Systematic Review.”
  • The University of Minnesota’s CIDRAP relates,
    • “A new smartphone-sized device can deliver tuberculosis (TB) test results at the point of care in less than an hour, an innovation that could improve diagnosis of the deadly disease in settings in which access to healthcare facilities and lab equipment is limited, its Tulane University developers reported yesterday in Science Translational Medicine.
    • “Over 90% of new TB cases occur in low- and middle-income countries.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review calls attention to the fact that CMS has approved seven new health systems to offer hospital at home programs.
  • Beckers Payer Issues informs us,
    • “CVS Health has named Benjamin Kornitzer, MD, as Aetna’s chief medical officer. 
    • “Most recently, Dr. Kornitzer was chief medical officer at agilon health, a primary care physician services company primarily serving Medicare Advantage patients.
    • “He also previously served as CMO of Mount Sinai Health System in New York.”
  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “A better consumer experience has implications for clinical improvements, according to a new report from CVS Health.
    • “The healthcare giant is putting a focus on innovation in this area, and to identify opportunities conducted an analysis that compared Net Promoter System (NPS) scores with clinical outcomes. It found that, for example, patients who were highly satisfied with the experience at their pharmacies were more likely to be adherent to their medications.
    • “The white paper notes that nonadherence to prescribed medications drives 16% of U.S. health spending each year, or about $500 billion.” 
  • Modern Healthcare tells us,
    • “Eli Lilly is partnering with digital health companies to boost sales of its weight loss medications.
    • “The drugmaker added hybrid weight loss startup Knownwell to its third-party marketplace of telehealth offerings earlier this month. Eli Lilly has also signed deals with Ro, Form Health and 9am Health.” 
  • BioPharma Dive recently updated its prescription drug patent tracker.
  • Bloomberg Law adds,
    • “Novo Nordisk A/S and Eli Lilly & Co. are using dense clusters of patents to extend monopolies on blockbuster diabetes and weight-loss drugs including Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro, fueling high prices and health inequities, according to an advocacy group report.
    • “The pharmaceutical companies’ adoption of a “financialized business model” prioritizes profits and shareholder returns through an aggressive strategy for securing additional patents for minor changes to extend their drugs’ market exclusivity well beyond the expiration of its original patents, according to a report released Thursday by the Initiative for Medicines, Access and Knowledge on “the heavy price” of those glucagon-like peptide 1 therapies.” * * *
    • In a statement Friday, Lilly said the “report is grossly inaccurate and includes patents that have nothing to do with tirzepatide.”
    • “To date, Lilly has only listed three patents in the Orange Book for” its two tirzepatide products, it added.
    • “Our business model is built on the fact that patents are limited in scope and duration, and when they expire, we welcome generic and biosimilar manufacturers to develop lower-cost alternatives,” the statement continued. “Lilly is already focused on developing the next innovation for patients that will eventually become generic.”
    • “The Orange Book is a US Food and Drug Administration registry listing patents that cover approved drugs that allows branded-drug makers to trigger a 30-month delay of FDA approval by filing a suit alleging infringement of a listed patent.
    • “Novo in a Friday statement said it has no more than four patents listed in the Orange Book for Ozempic , no more than eight for Wegovy, and 11 for Rybelsus.
    • “While the US healthcare system is complex and there are many factors that play a role in determining what people will pay for medicines,” Novo said, “the net price of Ozempic has declined by 40% since launch in the US and Wegovy is following a similar trajectory.”

Thursday Report

Photo by Michele Orallo on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Yesterday, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee favorably reported the President’s nominee for OPM Director, Scott Kupor, by a 7-4 vote. Mr. Kupor’s nomination will be headed for the Senate floor following the upcoming two week break from Capitol Hill.
  • Today, the American Hospital Association News let us know,
    • The House, by a vote of 216-214, passed the revised budget resolution for fiscal year 2025. This follows the Senate’s passage of the bill last week. Reps. Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., and Thomas Massie, R-Ky., joined all Democrats today in voting “no.”  
    • Notably, the resolution instructs the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has primary jurisdiction over Medicaid and other health care programs, to cut a minimum of $880 billion in spending. * * *
    • With the House and Senate’s passage of the resolution, Congress can move forward with the reconciliation process. The next step calls for specific committees to begin drafting legislation consistent with their instructions in the budget resolution. This is where the hard work begins, as House and Senate committees must decide on the specific policies to be included within the reconciliation bill.  
    • The budget resolution gives Senate and House committees until May 9 to report legislation, but this is not a binding deadline. 
  • The approved budget resolution (page 47) calls for the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee to “submit changes in law within its jurisdiction to reduce the deficit by not less than $50,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.”
  • The AHA News further informs us,
    • The Trump administration yesterday [April 9] released executive orders on reducing anti-competitive regulatory barriers and repealing certain regulations deemed unlawful.  
    • The order on reducing anti-competitive barriers directs federal agencies to review all regulations subject to their rulemaking authority and identify those that create de facto or de jure monopolies, create barriers to entry for new market participants, create or facilitate licensure or accreditation requirements that unduly limit competition, or otherwise impose anti-competitive restraints or distortions in the market.   
    • The order on repealing unlawful regulations is linked to a Feb. 25 executive order that directed agencies within 60 days to identify unlawful and potentially unlawful regulations to be repealed. The new order instructs agencies to take steps to immediately repeal regulations and provide justification within 30 days for any identified as unlawful but have not been targeted for repeal, explaining the basis for the decision not to repeal.
  • Govexec adds,
    • “On Feb. 19, Trump signed an executive order requiring agencies, within 60 days and in coordination with the Office of Management and Budget and Elon Musk-backed Department of Government Efficiency, to identify for elimination or modification regulations that are unconstitutional or unlawful. 
    • “With roughly a week-and-a-half before that deadline, the president on Wednesday [April 9] declared that such regulations can be repealed without going through the notice and comment period. When an agency promulgates a new rule, or revokes one, it must seek, respond to and potentially incorporate public comment on the proposal. The process usually takes at least a year. 
    • “The Trump administration, however, is arguing that it does not have to take this step because of the “good cause” exception in the Administrative Procedure Act, which is the law that sets rulemaking requirements. The exception provides that agencies do not have to perform notice and comment if doing so would be “impracticable, unnecessary or contrary to the public interest.”
    • “Retaining and enforcing facially unlawful regulations is clearly contrary to the public interest,” the memo said. “Furthermore, notice-and-comment proceedings are ‘unnecessary’ where repeal is required as a matter of law to ensure consistency with a ruling of the United States Supreme Court. Agencies thus have ample cause and the legal authority to immediately repeal unlawful regulations.”
  • Fierce Healthcare notes, “The American people, more than any Federal official, know which regulations stifle entrepreneurship and economic growth,” the White House wrote in its fact sheet. “You are invited to tell us which regulations impede competition and should be changed or repealed.” The FEHBlog is a big fan of deregulation.
  • The AHA News was full of Washington, DC, news today.
    • “The Government Accountability Office yesterday [April 9] released a report calling for the Department of Health and Human Services to improve its efforts responding to drug shortages. The report found that although drug shortages have decreased since 2020, shortages are lasting longer. HHS responded to the GAO report, informing the GAO that its coordinator position overseeing medical product supply chains would be eliminated in May, leaving HHS without leadership to coordinate its drug shortage activities. The GAO recommended HHS implement a method to formally conduct any drug shortage activity and collaborate with other federal agencies.”
  • and
    • “The National Counterintelligence and Security Center, the FBI, and the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Center yesterday released guidance on mitigating deceptive online recruitment activities by foreign intelligence entities, particularly groups in China, that target current and former federal government employees. The agencies said the entities are posing as legitimate consulting firms, corporate recruiters, public policy institutions and other organizations on social and professional networking websites. The actors are said to be using deceptive online job offers and other virtual approaches to target individuals with federal backgrounds who may be seeking new employment.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds,
    • “More than one-third (41%) of active drug shortages began in 2022 or earlier, according to a new report from the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. 
    • “The report tracks national drug shortage trends from January 2001 through March 2025. So far this year, the ASHP has reported 26 new drug shortages. Since an all-time high of 323 active drug shortages in early 2024, the number of active shortages is now 270. 
    • “The “[w]orkload required to manage shortages, including work to change pharmacy automation and electronic health records, adds to the challenges of pharmacy staff shortages,” the report said. 
    • “In 2024, 17% of shortages were related to manufacturing issues, 9% to Hurricane Helene, 9% to business decisions, 8% to supply and demand, and 2% to a raw material problem. Manufacturers did not or refused to provide a reason for 55% of shortages.” 
  • In an HHS press release, the new CMS Administrator, Dr. Mehmet Oz, shares his vision for CMS.
    • “I want to thank President Trump and Secretary Kennedy for their confidence in my ability to lead CMS in achieving their vision to Make America Healthy Again,” said Dr. Oz. “Great societies protect their most vulnerable. As stewards of the health of so many Americans – especially disadvantaged youth, those with disabilities, and our seniors, the CMS team is dedicated to delivering superior health outcomes across each program we administer. America is too great for small dreams, and I’m ready to get work on the President’s agenda.”
  • Per an FDA press release,
    • “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is taking a groundbreaking step to advance public health by replacing animal testing in the development of monoclonal antibody therapies and other drugs with more effective, human-relevant methods. The new approach is designed to improve drug safety and accelerate the evaluation process, while reducing animal experimentation, lowering research and development (R&D) costs, and ultimately, drug prices.
    • “The FDA’s animal testing requirement will be reduced, refined, or potentially replaced using a range of approaches, including AI-based computational models of toxicity and cell lines and organoid toxicity testing in a laboratory setting (so-called New Approach Methodologies or NAMs data). Implementation of the regimen will begin immediately for investigational new drug (IND) applications, where inclusion of NAMs data is encouraged, and is outlined in a roadmap also being released today. To make determinations of efficacy, the agency will also begin use pre-existing, real-world safety data from other countries, with comparable regulatory standards, where the drug has already been studied in humans.”

In State government news,

  • STAT News reports,
    • An Arkansas bill that would prohibit pharmacy benefit managers from operating retail and mail-order pharmacies was passed by the state senate and is now headed to Gov. Sarah Sanders, the first time such a bill has gotten this far down the legislative path in the United States.
    • “The bill is designed to eliminate what state — and some federal — lawmakers have called a conflict of interest that has forced residents to pay more for medicines and hastened the demise of independent pharmacies. And it arrives as scrutiny of pharmacy benefit managers and their role in the opaque pricing of prescription drugs has increased dramatically. A spokesman for Sanders declined to say whether she would sign the bill and, if so, when.” * * *
    • “As for CVS, the company sent us a statement saying “This bill rips medicine away from sick patients and makes it harder for people to achieve better health. A veto will protect communities, improve care, and help hundreds of thousands of Arkansans get the medicines they need. Governor Sanders should choose people over misguided policy that will lead to serious consequences.”
    • “A spokeswoman for Express Scripts directed us to a web site where the company argues state residents will lose the convenience of home delivery as well as focused care for certain diseases that are treated by medicines distributed through a specialty pharmacy operation called Accredo.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Tech Target tells us,
    • “Only half of Americans are getting regular cancer screenings and routine medical care, signaling a need for more public awareness of the importance of primary and preventive care, according to the Prevent Cancer Foundation’s 2025 Early Detection Survey.
    • “The survey of 7,000 U.S. adults aged 21 or older showed that only 51% of people are accessing routine medical care and cancer screening, a significant 10 percentage-point downswing from a similar 2024 survey.
    • “There are numerous reasons patients miss their cancer screenings, but most generally center on public awareness and information, the survey continued. For example, 43% of respondents said they weren’t aware that they needed to be screened for a certain type of cancer. Likewise, 40% said they didn’t have any symptoms of disease and another 40% said they had no family history of the illness.”
  • Per Health Day,
    • “Stroke, dementia and depression share 17 common risk factors
    • “Improving any of the risk factors can improve odds against any of the three brain health problems
    • “High blood pressure and kidney disease had the biggest impact on risk.”
  • Per the American Journal of Managed Care,
    • “Newer glucose-lowering medications glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) and sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors significantly reduced the risk of major cardiovascular events and heart failure in older adults with type 2 diabetes (T2D), according to one study.The findings suggest these treatments outperform dipeptidyl-peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors, regardless of age, and support their use in clinical guidelines for elderly populations.”
  • Per MedCity News,
    • “Solu Therapeutics, a company developing a new type of antibody drug, unveiled $41 million in financing on Wednesday for clinical testing of a therapy with the potential to bring a safer and more effective approach to blood cancers.
    • “Boston-based Solu has already begun dosing patients in a Phase 1 test of lead program STX-0712 in resistant or refractory chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) and other hematologic malignancies. The target of the drug is CCR2, a receptor that plays a role in cancer development and progression. The Solu drug is intended to eliminate CCR2-positive cells. It does so in a novel way.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Seniors across the country are wearing very expensive bandages.
    • “Made of dried bits of placenta, the paper-thin patches cover stubborn wounds and can cost thousands of dollars per square inch.
    • “Some research has found that such “skin substitutes” help certain wounds heal. But in the past few years, dozens of unstudied and costly products have flooded the market.
    • “Bandage companies set ever-rising prices for new brands of the products, taking advantage of a loophole in Medicare rules, The New York Times found. Some doctors then buy the coverings at large discounts but charge Medicare the full sticker price, pocketing the difference.
    • ‘Partly because of these financial incentives, many patients receive the bandages who do not need them. The result, experts said, is one of the largest examples of Medicare waste in history.
    • “Private insurers rarely pay for skin substitutes, arguing that they are unproven and unnecessary. But Medicare, the government insurance program for seniors, routinely covers them. Spending on skin substitutes exceeded $10 billion in 2024, more than double the figure in 2023, according to an analysis of Medicare data done for The Times by Early Read, a firm that evaluates costs for large health companies.
    • “Medicare now spends more on the bandages than on ambulance rides, anesthesia or CT scans, the analysis found.”
  • The KFF Peterson Health System Tracker identifies health spending issues to watch this year.
  • Fierce Pharma reports
    • “On the heels of similar investment pledges from Eli Lilly and Johnson & Johnson, Switzerland’s Novartis is stepping up to the plate with a major plan to grow its U.S. footprint.
    • “Novartis will spend $23 billion to build and expand 10 U.S. facilities over the next five years, the company said in a Thursday press release. Reuters first reported the news following an interview with Novartis’ CEO Vas Narasimhan.
    • “The outlay is the latest in a series of moves seemingly spurred on by the threat of import tariffs on pharmaceuticals under the second Trump administration.
    • “On the production front, Novartis will build four new manufacturing facilities in “soon-to-be-determined states,” plus establish new radioligand therapy plants in Florida and Texas. The company will also expand existing radioligand manufacturing facilities in Indiana, New Jersey and California.”
  • Per MedCity News,
    • “Teladoc Health, a virtual care company, unveiled its new Cardiometabolic Health Program on Tuesday to prevent the advancement of diabetes, hypertension and obesity.
    • “Purchase, New York-based Teladoc Health serves both employers and health plans. In addition to support for weight management and diabetes, it offers mental health care, primary care and specialty services.
    • “The new program provides a premium subscription to BetterSleep, an app that’s focused on improving sleep quality. Patients also gain access to one-on-one support with a registered dietitian, outreach from health coaches, at-home testing for cardiometabolic measures and health insights from connected devices (like blood glucose meters). The program is available to those with a body mass index of 25 or above.”
  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “Kandu Health and Neurolutions have merged and raised $30 million to support stroke recovery and rehabilitation, the companies said Tuesday.
    • “The merger brings together Neurolutions’ brain computer interface technology and Kandu Health’s telehealth services to try to improve stroke patients’ outcomes after they leave the hospital. 
    • “Patients will have access to Neurolutions’ IpsiHand, a device that is cleared for use in the U.S. The system translates brain signals to enable stroke patients to open and close their hands.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “West Orange, N.J.-based RWJBarnabas Health and the Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey plan to open the state’s first freestanding cancer facility in May.
    • “Three things to know:
      • “The $750 million, 520,000-square-foot project broke ground in 2021. It is a 12-story facility that will house inpatient and outpatient cancer services, along with research laboratories. 
      • “The freestanding cancer facility is adjacent to the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital and Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey campus in New Brunswick, N.J.
      • “The cancer pavilion is designed to serve as a leading model for cancer care on the East Coast, uniting research, education and patient care under one roof.”

Midweek Report

Thanks to Alexandr Hovhannisyan for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “President Trump told Republicans wavering on the party’s fiscal framework to “close your eyes and get there.” GOP opponents of the plan say they are heading into the budget showdown with eyes wide open, and some appear willing to block the president’s push, setting up a too-close-to-call vote late Wednesday.
    • “Trump and House GOP leaders have routinely melted internal party opposition this year with promises and appeals to Republican unity. This time, they face dug-in critics of the budget passed by the Senate on Saturday.
    • “Republican leaders are optimistic they can get the measure through the House, and Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) told reporters that he thought it would pass. The House advanced the measure past a procedural hurdle in a 216-215 tally, setting up the final debate and vote. That procedural vote contained an unrelated provision that will make it harder this year for the House to reverse Trump’s tariffs.”
  • Politico adds,
    • “House Republican leaders canceled a vote on the Senate’s budget resolution Wednesday night, as Speaker Mike Johnson came to terms with what had been clear for many hours: Too many Republicans would vote in opposition and the measure was bound to fail.” * * *
    • “Lawmakers are slated to head back to their districts Thursday for a two-week recess, meaning that the president could have to wait to see any forward motion on his “big, beautiful bill” if a compromise can’t be reached soon.
    • “Johnson said Wednesday night that House leadership will now explore either amending the Senate-adopted budget or going straight to conference with the Senate and working out differences there.
    • “We’re going to make that decision,” he told reporters just after the resolution was pulled.”
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “President Trump announced on April 9 (https://tinyurl.com/2t463edy) that reciprocal tariffs that went into effect after midnight for certain nations will be paused for 90 days, while tariffs for China would be increased to 125%. A 10% universal tariff on imported goods from all countries that began April 5 remains in effect.”
  • and
    • “The Office of Management and Budget April 9 released a notice seeking public input on rules to potentially be rescinded, requesting detailed reasons for their rescission. Comments must be received by OMB no later than 30 days after publication of the notice in the Federal Register. The notice will be published April 11. Comments can be submitted at www.regulations.gov.”

From the judicial front,

  • Federal News Network lets us know,
    • “For the second time in as many days, a higher court has paused a judicial ruling that ordered the reinstatement of federal employees who were fired en masse, leaving thousands of probationary workers vulnerable once again to potential termination.
    • “In a 2-1 ruling Wednesday, a three-judge panel of the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals temporarily set aside a Maryland judge’s injunction that had ordered agencies to reinstate employees in 19 states and the District of Columbia. The majority found the government was likely to succeed in proving that the Maryland district court had no jurisdiction over the states’ claims that federal agencies had engaged in an illegal Reduction in Force (RIF).
    • “The panel’s ruling comes one day after the Supreme Court issued a separate stay that had a similar effect on a California court’s ruling that had also ordered the reinstatement of some agencies’ fired probationary workers. In that case, the high court, in an unsigned order Tuesday, also put the preliminary injunction on hold while claims of illegal firing work their way through the appeals process.” * * *
    • “And in California, the judge is considering whether to issue another preliminary injunction that could withstand the ruling the Supreme Court issued Tuesday. In that order, the justices found that the outside organizations harmed by the mass firings didn’t have standing to sue, but explicitly left open the possibility that other plaintiffs, including federal unions, could win an injunction of their own.
    • “In a San Francisco courtroom Wednesday, Judge William Alsup heard arguments over whether unions had standing to sue and win another injunction. However, he postponed issuing a ruling until attorneys in the case provide more information, including data about how many employees were affected by the mass terminations, their relationships with the union plaintiffs, and possible evidence that would show that agencies’ firing decisions were made at the behest of the Office of Personnel Management.”
  • Bloomberg Law points out,
    • “US Chief Justice John Roberts let President Donald Trump temporarily oust top officials at two independent agencies while the Supreme Court decides how to handle a new showdown over presidential power.
    • “Roberts’ order Wednesday puts on hold a federal appeals court decision that had let National Labor Relations Board member Gwynne Wilcox and Merit Systems Protection Board member Cathy Harris go back to work. Roberts said his order will last until either he or the full court issues a longer-term decision.
    • “The case is testing a 1935 Supreme Court ruling that let Congress shield high-ranking officials from being fired, paving the way for the independent agencies that now proliferate across the US government. The legal wrangling ultimately could affect whether Trump has the power to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues notes, “A New York federal [district] judge dismissed an antitrust lawsuit against UnitedHealthcare and MultiPlan that alleged the companies conspired to reduce reimbursement rates for an anesthesia services provider.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • AP reports,
    • “A day care facility in a Texas county that’s part of the measles outbreak has multiple cases, including children too young to be fully vaccinated, public health officials say.
    • “West Texas is in the middle of a still-growing measles outbreak with 505 cases reported on Tuesday. The state expanded the number of counties in the outbreak area this week to 10. The highly contagious virus began to spread in late January and health officials say it has spread to New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas and Mexico. 
    • “Three people who were unvaccinated have died from measles-related illnesses this year, including two elementary school-aged children in Texas. The second child died Thursday at a Lubbock hospital, and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attended the funeral in Seminole, the epicenter of the outbreak. 
    • “As of Friday, there were seven cases at a day care where one young child who was infectious gave it to two other children before it spread to other classrooms, Lubbock Public Health director Katherine Wells said.”
  • Per Newsweek,
    • “Cabot Creamery is recalling 1,700 pounds of butter after testing found elevated levels of coliform bacteria in the product, a marker of potential fecal contamination.
    • “The voluntary recall, initiated by Agri-Mark Inc, Cabot Creamery’s parent company, affects the brand’s 8-ounce Extra Creamy Premium Sea Salted Butter and was distributed in seven states.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “During a recent five-year period, a substantial portion of maternal deaths in America — almost one-third — took place more than six weeks after childbirth, at a time when most new mothers think they are in the clear, researchers reported on Wednesday.
    • “The study, published in JAMA Network Open, is one of the first to track maternal health complications during pregnancy and in the year after delivery.
    • “Pregnancy-related death rates in the United States rose almost 28 percent from 2018 to 2022, the researchers found, surging at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2021 before subsiding somewhat.
    • “Our study illustrates why we can’t take our eyes off maternal health,” said Dr. Rose L. Molina, an associate professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive biology at Harvard Medical School and one of the study’s authors.
    • “Women need “access to high-quality care from the moment of conception to a full year after birth,” she added. While there has been a growing emphasis on care in the year after childbirth, “we’re not there yet.”
  • The National Cancer Institute’s Cancer Information Highlights discusses “Targeting a Gene Fusion | Fat Cells to Starve Tumors | TIL Shrinks Solid Cancers.”
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • In a massive scientific effort funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), hundreds of researchers have helped to map the connections between hundreds of thousands of neurons in the mouse brain and then overlayed their firing patterns in response to visual stimuli. This breakthrough is a critical piece of foundational science to build toward understanding how our brains process visual information to reconstruct the images we see every day.
    • “Information processing in the human brain occurs via electrical firing of 86 billion neurons that make trillions of connections with each other. The secrets of how our brain enable us to think, feel, and act lie hidden in the complexity of its wiring diagram and the barrage of electrical signals that move across it in millisecond time frames. While the current findings focus on a tiny fraction of the brain, they reveal the complex connections between the cells and show how those connections are wired to produce functional responses. This information, which was previously beyond our reach, could help us understand how the brain functions normally and offer a guide to what goes wrong as the result of various disorders or injuries.”  
  • Per UPI,
    • “Emergency room visits attributed to popular weight loss drugs such as Ozempic and Wegovy remain quite rare overall, but do show an unexpected link to hypoglycemia, according to a study released Monday.
    • “Semaglutide brand names include Ozempic, Rybelus, and Wegovy, all made by Novo Nordisk, and Mounjaro from Eli Lilly.
    • “The study, led by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Cambridge Health Alliance, was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. It provides reassuring evidence that serious adverse events associated with the burgeoning use of the drugs are uncommon.
    • “That’s impressive given the overwhelming popularity of semaglutides, which are among a class of “wonder drugs” known as GLP-1 agonists.”
  • STAT New informs us,
    • Since 2021, when the information blocking rules kicked in, health systems and patients have been reckoning with the impact of electronic medical records that allow instant access to test results — good, bad, and in between — sometimes before a doctor has ever seen them. Patients overwhelmingly prefer having their health information as soon as possible, even before it’s interpreted. But there’s a tradeoff between medical transparency and the worry that can be caused when a result is unclear, or even inaccurate.
    • new study published in JAMA Network Open on Tuesday aims to understand how health systems might find the right balance. “We were curious if refresh, refresh, refresh behavior could be measured,” said senior author Trent Rosenbloom, who directs the patient portal at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Over two years, researchers and physicians at Vanderbilt tracked how 290,000 patients at the medical center viewed their test results online. In 2022 and 2023, more than 100,000 patients — 37% of the total — refreshed the portal as they waited for results to appear. Some patients clicked to check their results as many as 16 times.  * * *
    • “Across health systems, information officers are working on other ways to ensure automatic test results are more of a benefit than a burden. At Stanford Medicine, said chief medical information officer Christopher Sharp, every primary care practice now uses large language models to generate interpretations of test results, which a doctor can sign off on to send to a patient. The system is also being piloted in specialties with more high-sensitivity results, and Stanford hopes to have it implemented across the entire organization by September.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Payer Issue lets us know,
    • “Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina reported a net income of $69 million in 2024, Business North Carolina reported April 7. 
    • “The company recorded $11.9 billion of revenue in 2024, compared to $12.2 billion in 2023.
    • “Claims and medical expenses increased 7.2% to $10.4 billion in 2024, and the company’s reserves are equal to 3.3 months of claims and administrative expenses.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Despite economic volatility, Fitch still expects healthcare providers to experience a “modest margin expansion” this year due to easing inflationary pressures and reimbursement increases, according to an April 9 report.
    • “The firm anticipates healthcare providers will see Medicare and commercial rate bumps 3% to 4% this year as rates increase and the volume of high acuity cases grows with the aging population.
    • “The workforce challenges plaguing healthcare providers over the last several years are lessening as well, according to the report.
    • “Chronic personnel shortages will continue to ease, suppressing wage inflation and reducing reliance on costlier external agency labour,” the report notes. “Wages are unlikely to exert pressure on provider margins in 2025, with revenue growth likely to match or exceed wage growth.”
    • “The healthcare providers in a more stable financial situation will be in the best position to grow over the next few years. Struggling hospitals will continue to have challenges, and some may seek merger or acquisition partners to stay operational.”
  • Per Modern Healthcare,
    • “A court ruling striking down a federal nursing home staffing mandate brought a sigh of relief from nursing home operators even as the industry still faces financial uncertainty.
    • “An end to the mandate could bring stability to nursing home budgets and valuations. However, some nursing homes still face challenges, such as tougher state staffing minimums, as well as the threat of potential Medicaid rate cuts.
    • “A federal judge in Texas on Monday tossed the controversial nursing home mandate the Biden administration rolled out last year that required nursing homes to have a registered nurse onsite 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The court also blocked a requirement that nursing homes provide at least 3.48 hours of care per resident, per day.
    • “The Health and Human Services Department said in an email it does not comment on legal matters when asked about a possible appeal. However, many in the industry had been expecting the Trump administration to roll back the regulation.”
  • and
    • “Nonprofit health insurance company CareSource has invested more than $400 million to buy struggling nonprofit insurer Commonwealth Care Alliance. 
    • “The deal adds nearly 50,000 Dual Special Needs Plan members who are eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare to CareSource’s book of business, the companies said in a news release Wednesday. CareSource also acquired Commonwealth Care Alliance’s two primary care clinics and its home care practice through the transaction. CareSource counts 2 million Medicaid, Medicare and exchange plan enrollees across seven states.
    • “CareSource CEO Erhardt Preitauer will take over as head of Commonwealth Care Alliance, replacing current CEO Chris Palmeri, who will depart the company. Palmeri currently serves on the board of directors of the insurance lobbying group AHIP. At the start of the year, he stepped down from his role as board chair of the Association of Community Affiliated Plans, a nonprofit Medicaid insurer trade group.
    • “The deal had not been previously announced.” 

Tuesday Report

From Washington, DC

  • NBC News reports,
    • “Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is facing a growing rebellion from conservative hard-liners in the House as Republicans seek to take up a budget blueprint that was recently adopted by the Senate to pass President Donald Trump’s agenda.
    • “House GOP leaders are eyeing a vote this week on the measure, which would unlock the path for committees to craft a massive bill to cut taxes, boost immigration enforcement and defense spending and lift the debt limit without Democratic votes.
    • “But a slew of House conservatives have blasted the Senate’s version for requiring just $4 billion in spending cuts. The House’s version, by contrast, called for $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion in spending cuts while largely steering clear of specifics.”
  • CBS News informs us,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has begun redeploying staff to respond to the deadly outbreak of measles in Texas, a spokesperson said Monday, a week after steep layoffs at the agency impacted its response to the spread of the virus. 
    • “A team of three deployed yesterday to meet with county and state officials to assess the immediate needs to respond to this outbreak. The team is meeting with officials again today,” CDC spokesperson Jason McDonald said in an email. 
    • “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. first said Sunday that the CDC would be redeploying to Texas at its governor’s request, after another unvaccinated child died in the measles outbreak. An 8-year-old girl was the second fatality there this year.
    • “Once the assessment is complete, more CDC staff will be sent to Texas per Sec. Kennedy’s order and the governor’s request. The first teams deployed to Texas arrived on March and returned to CDC on April 1,” McDonald said.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) still recommends primary care behavioral counseling for breastfeeding, mostly in line with its 2016 guidelines.
    • In the updated recommendation statement published in JAMA, USPSTF wrote that “providing interventions or referrals, during pregnancy and after birth, to support breastfeeding” received a B grade, indicating moderate certainty these interventions will have moderate net benefit.

From the judicial front,

  • The Wall Street Journal tells us,
    • “The Supreme Court lifted a lower-court order that directed the Trump administration to reinstate about 16,000 federal employees it fired, handing the White House the third victory in a row as it seeks the justices’ emergency action to stop district judges from slowing its policies. 
    • “The justices on Tuesday said that environmental groups and other nonprofit organizations who say they were harmed by the reduction in public services caused by the layoffs didn’t have legal standing to bring suit. 
    • “The brief order was unsigned, as is typical when the court acts on emergency requests. Two liberal justices, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, said they voted to deny the Trump administration’s request.” * * *
    • “The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed with the Trump administration that the nonprofits lacked legal standing to bring the case. The court added, though, that the order didn’t address other plaintiffs in the suit, including several labor unions and the state of Washington. Alsup’s injunction wasn’t based on their claims, although those parties may face other questions regarding their standing to bring suit.
    • “Tuesday’s order doesn’t resolve broader legal disputes over the administration’s mass layoffs of federal employees.”
  • Bloomberg Law relates,
    • “A string of lawsuits targeting the use of artificial intelligence and algorithms in claims denials is raising risks for private health insurers and employers, even as the litigation encounters early obstacles.
    • “A California federal judge’s recent decision to partially allow a case to proceed over Cigna Corp.’s alleged use of algorithms to improperly deny benefits signals that automation tools come with legal hazards.” * * *
    • “To the extent that these tools are being used to block or deny coverage across the board for medically necessary services and to a large number of beneficiaries—if that is the case and that’s how these have been used, that could expose insurers to significant risk,” said David Greenberg, partner at ArentFox Schiff LLP.
    • “Courts have allowed several lawsuits to proceed, but plaintiffs still face significant challenges in making their cases. In some instances, the insurance companies denied that the plaintiffs’ medical claims were even handled by an algorithm. Proving otherwise can be difficult.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The American Hospital Association News points out,
    • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention April 8 sent an alert to health care providers on measles prevention and treatment. The agency said that risk remains low for most individuals across the U.S. and that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine is the best way to protect against the disease. 
  • and
    • “The incidence of invasive group A strep infections increased from 3.6 to 8.2 cases per 100,000 people from 2013 to 2022, according to a study authored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published April 7 by JAMA. The authors concluded that accelerated efforts to prevent and control these infections are needed, especially among groups at highest risk of infection, which includes individuals 65 years or older, American Indian or Alaska Native persons, residents of long-term care facilities, people experiencing homelessness, and people who inject drugs.” 
  • Per Medscape,
    • “Around 38 million people in the United States — or slightly over 11% of the population — have diabetes, according to the National Diabetes Statistics Report. Experts only expect that number to increase, and research suggests that the burden will be especially significant in low to low-middle socioeconomic areas.
    • “Consider the Mississippi Delta, a swath of fertile land in the floodplain of the Mississippi River. It has a rich and diverse cultural heritage, with a minority-majority population, along with significant economic challenges and a persistently high poverty rate. The region also has one of the highest diabetes rates in the country, which has put the healthcare community on alert.
    • “We are more intensely screening almost everybody,” said Brent Smith, MD, a family physician in Greenville, Mississippi, and a member of the board of directors of the American Academy of Family Physicians.”
  • AP reports,
    • “Health care systems can reduce suicides through patient screening, safety planning and mental health counseling, a new study suggests, an important finding as the U.S. confronts it 11th leading cause of death.
    • “The “Zero Suicide Model” was developed in 2001 at Detroit-based Henry Ford Health, where the focus on people considering suicide included collaborating with patients to reduce their access to lethal means such as firearms and then following up with treatment.
    • “The approach made a difference, and for all of 2009, the health system saw no suicides among patients. The researchers then studied what happened when a different health system, Kaiser Permanente, adopted the program in four locations from 2012 through 2019.
    • “Suicides and suicide attempts fell in three of the locations, while the fourth maintained a low rate of suicides and attempts. Suicide attempts were tracked in electronic health records and insurance claims data. Suicides were measured using government death records.”‘
  • The Washington Post notes,
    • “Those who exercised the most had a 26 percent lower cancer risk than those who exercised the least in an analysis of biomedical data, according to research published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
    • “The article drew upon data from UK Biobank, a longitudinal study that enrolled 500,000 adults in Britain between 2006 and 2010. After enrolling, more than 106,000 adults were invited to participate in the sub-study on physical activity. The final sample, stratified into five groups, or quintiles, of physical activity levels, included about 85,000 participants with a median age of 63 years.” * * *
    • “The research identified an inverse relationship between overall daily physical activity and cancer risk, indicating that even modest increases in activity levels were sufficient to significantly reduce the risk of the 13 cancers. Individuals in the second-highest quintile of physical activity had a 16 percent lower risk compared with those in the lowest quintile. Higher levels of activity had a more protective effect.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Johnson & Johnson said Monday it has enrolled the first patient in a pivotal study of a device for clearing “difficult-to-cross” coronary arteries.
    • “Like other products made by J&J’s Shockwave Medical, the Javelin intravascular lithotripsy catheter uses sound pressure waves to break up calcium deposits that are blocking blood flow. 
    • “The device is differentiated from other Shockwave products, and rival catheters from Abbott and Boston Scientific, because it emits waves from its tip. Other devices send waves from a balloon catheter that must cross the blocked part of the artery to be effective.” * * *

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Hospital average operating margins dropped from 3.4% in January to 2.5% in February, but are still above 2024 averages, according to Kaufman Hall’s “National Hospital Flash Report.”
    • “Kaufman Hall, a Vizient company, gathered financial performance data from 1,300 hospitals. The average operating margin dropped 11% month over month but grew 5% year over year. The average operating EBITDA margin decreased 7% month over month but grew 1% year over year.
    • “Net operating revenue per calendar day increased 8% year over year, driven by an 11% jump in inpatient revenue. Outpatient revenue grew just 8% compared to February 2024.
    • “Expenses were also on the rise, with total expenses also up 8% year over year driven by a 10% growth in supply expenses per calendar day. Drug expenses and non-labor expenses both jumped 9% while labor expenses grew 6% year over year. Purchased services expenses also increased 13% from February 2024.
    • “Patient volume held steady, as discharges per calendar day were up 6% year over year in February. Observation days dropped 9% and the average length of stay was flat compared to the same period last year. Emergency department visits increased 4%.”
  • Modern Healthcare adds,
    • “Health systems announced five hospital merger and acquisition proposals in the first three months of the year, the lowest quarterly amount in more than a decade.
    • “Providers were reluctant to wade into hospital transactions amid the uncertainty surrounding tariffsfederal funding concerns, state and federal regulatory changes and economic volatility, according to a new report from consultancy Kaufman Hall. Four of the five proposed hospital deals involved financially distressed facilities, the report found.”
  • Specifically, Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “Northwell Health and Nuvance Health’s 28-hospital merger has cleared its final regulatory hurdle and is expected to close within the next 30 days.
    • “Tuesday, Connecticut’s Office of Health Strategy announced it had reached an agreement with the two health systems after just over two months of negotiations over their Certificate of Need application. The pair’s merger, announced 14 months ago, had received a similar all-clear from New York’s Public Health and Health Planning Council last September as well as sign-offs from each state’s attorneys general during the summer.
    • “Alongside price constraints tied in part to state and regional cost growth benchmark, Northwell—the acquirer—will invest at least $1 billion into Nuvance’s Connecticut and New York hospitals and refrain from any real estate sale leasebacks over a five-year period.”
  • Fierce Healthcare also lets us know,
    • “Rural hospital leaders are questioning whether they can continue to afford to do business with Medicare Advantage (MA) companies, and some say the only way to maintain services and protect patients is to end their contracts with the private insurers.
    • “MA plans pay hospitals lower rates than traditional Medicare, said Jason Merkley, CEO of the Brookings Health System in South Dakota. Merkley worried the losses would spark staff layoffs and cuts to patient services. So, last year, Brookings Health dropped all four contracts it had with major MA companies.
    • “I’ve had lots of discussions with CEOs and executive teams across the country in regard to that,” said Merkley, whose health system operates a hospital and clinics in the small city of Brookings and surrounding rural areas.
    • “Merkley and other rural hospital operators in recent years have enumerated a long list of concerns about the publicly funded, privately run health plans. In addition to the reimbursement issue, their complaints include payment delays and a resistance to authorizing patient care.
    • “But rural hospitals abandoning their MA contracts can leave local patients without nearby in-network providers or force them to scramble to switch coverage.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “CVS Health named a new CFO Tuesday as the healthcare giant continues to shake up its leadership team. 
    • “Brian Newman, most recently CFO of shipping and logistics firm UPS, will start at CVS on April 21. Tom Cowhey, who took on the permanent CFO position at CVS early last year, will become a strategic advisor to CEO David Joyner, effective May 12. 
    • “In addition to the leadership change, CVS said it expects financial results for 2025 to meet or exceed its previously issued guidance. In February, the company reported expected adjusted earnings for the year between $5.75 and $6 a share.” 
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Walgreens Boots Alliance reported a $5.6 billion operating loss in its fiscal second quarter, an improvement from the $13.2 billion loss in the same period last year as the troubled retailer continues to prepare for a private equity buyout. 
    • “Operating losses included a $3 billion impairment charge tied to its Village MD business, according to an April 8 company news release. 
    • “Despite ongoing challenges, Walgreens reported better than expected results in sales, with sales rising 4% to $38.59 billion. In addition, pharmacy sales rose 12% while retail sales fell by 3%. 
    • “The company announced last month that it would be acquired by Sycamore Partners in a deal valued at $10 billion. Walgreens also recently suspended its quarterly dividend part of a broader cost cutting effort.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “While much of the recent GLP-1 saga has been written in the U.S., Novo Nordisk continues to expand its semaglutide empire across the globe and make inroads into large markets like Brazil.
    • “Now, in a bid to boost its production capacity in Latin America’s most populous country, Novo is plugging 6.4 billion Brazilian reais (roughly $1.09 billion) into an expansion of its manufacturing plant in the Brazilian city of Montes Claros.
    • “The investment, which marks one of the largest ever for pharmaceuticals in Brazil, will “significantly” bolster the facility’s capacity to crank out a variety of injectables, including GLP-1 medicines like Ozempic and Wegovy, Novo said in a Portuguese-language press release.”

From the artificial intelligence front,

  • Cardiovascular Business reports,
    • “Powerful Medical, a New York-based artificial intelligence (AI) company, has received the FDA’s breakthrough device designation for its AI model designed to detect signs of an ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in electrocardiography results.
    • “The company’s PMcardio STEMI AI ECG model, nicknamed “Queen of Hearts,” identifies STEMI and STEMI-equivalent patterns in a patient’s ECG. It was trained by Stephen W. Smith, MD, an emergency physician at Hennepin County Medical Center and founder of Dr. Smith’s ECG Blog.
    • “For the last 20 years, life-saving treatment exists for heart attack patients, yet far too many still don’t receive the urgent care they need due to delays in diagnosis and inefficient triage,” said Robert Herman, MD, PhD, chief medical officer of Powerful Medical, said in a statement. “By equipping physicians and allied providers with an AI-powered tool for accurate and immediate STEMI detection, available around the clock, we can bridge this gap, ensure timely treatment, and improve patient outcomes, often preventing avoidable deaths.”
  • and
    • Artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted mammography may be able to predict a woman’s risk of developing cardiovascular disease, according to new data being presented at ACC.25, the American College of Cardiology’s annual conference.
    • “Breast artery calcifications are already visible when radiologists review mammograms, but nothing typically happens with those findings. Researchers aimed to see if AI could do some of the heavy lifting and help translate those findings into an easy-to-understand cardiovascular risk score.
    • “The group trained an advanced AI model to segment calcified vessels in mammography images and produce a risk score that calculates the patient’s risk of developing heart disease. To help make the new-look algorithm as accurate as possible, they developed it using mammography images and electronic health record data from more than 56,000 patients. The patients were all treated from 2013 to 2020 within the Emory Healthcare health system, and at least five years of follow-up data were available for each of them.
    • “Advances in deep learning and AI have made it much more feasible to extract and use more information from images to inform opportunistic screening,” lead author Theo Dapamede, MD, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow at Emory University in Atlanta, said in a statement.”
  • Per Beckers Clinical Leadership,
    • “An AI tool that analyzes nurses’ notes for subtle clinical changes helped reduce patient risk of death by 35.6%, length of stay by 11.2% and sepsis risk by 7.5%, according to research published April 2 in Nature
    • “In a yearlong, multisite study, researchers assessed the tool across 74 clinical units in two health systems. Among 60,893 hospital encounters, about half involved the early warning system and the other half did not. 
    • “The system, dubbed COmmnuticating Narrative Concerns Entered by RNs (CONCERN), is a machine learning algorithm that uses real-time nursing surveillance notes and data patterns to detect all-cause deterioration risks. 
    • ‘Other EWSs often “rely on late and noisy physiologic indicators of deterioration” such as lab results and vital signs, according to the researchers. In contrast, this tool leverages nurses’ “subtle, yet observable, clinical changes that may not be captured in physiological data or well displayed in EHRs,” including small changes in mental status from baseline or slower recovery of arterial blood pressure after turning a patient.” 

Monday Report

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “House Republicans’ moves to advance President Trump’s “one big, beautiful bill” this week have been cast into doubt by defections from GOP lawmakers worried that spending cuts are being pushed aside in a rush to enact tax reductions.
    • “Republican leaders want to vote on a fiscal framework that would unlock a fast track to legislation carrying many Trump priorities, including tax cuts and new spending on border security and the military. Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson (R., La.) are hoping to show progress on extending expiring tax cuts to counteract the market chaos sparked in recent sessions by Trump’s tariff rollout.” 
  • and
    • The Trump administration will substantially increase payment rates for Medicare insurers next year, generating more than $25 billion in additional revenue for the industry and doubling the boost proposed in January.
    • The rate increase of 5.06%, compared with 2.23% in the earlier proposal from the Biden administration, overshoots even optimistic expectations from many Wall Street analysts, and will likely lead to a rally in the shares of big Medicare insurers such as UnitedHealth GroupHumana and CVS Health, parent of Aetna.
    • The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced the increase for 2026 payment rates on Monday. Investors are expected to view the bump as a sign of the Trump administration’s support for Medicare Advantage, the program under which private insurers administer the benefits of the federal program for older and disabled Americans. 
      The Medicare agency said the increase in the planned payment rate reflected rising medical costs, and that more recent data had led to the steeper final rise compared with the January proposal. 
  • Here are links to the CMS Medicare Advantage and Medicare D 2026 rate announcement, the related CMS fact sheet, and a CMS fact sheet about final 2026 Part D program redesign instructions:
    • “In CY 2026, the structure of the Part D benefit will be updated to reflect provisions of the IRA that become effective on January 1, 2026. The CY 2026 updates include the following:
    • “The CY 2026 annual out-of-pocket (OOP) threshold of $2,100, which is the original 2025 out-of-pocket cap of $2,000, adjusted based on the annual percentage increase in average expenditures for covered Part D drugs in the U.S. for Part D eligible individuals in the previous year (API).
    • “Changes to the liability of enrollees, sponsors, manufacturers, and CMS in the new standard Part D benefit design, specifically to account for the start of negotiated prices taking effect with respect to selected drugs for initial price applicability year 2026 under the Negotiation Program; and
    • “The establishment of the selected drug subsidy program.” * * *
    • “With the enhancements to the Part D benefit under the IRA, the current simplified determination methodology no longer reflects actuarial equivalence with defined standard Part D coverage. Accordingly, CMS has developed a revised simplified determination methodology that better reflects actuarial equivalence with the richer Part D defined standard benefit under the IRA. For CY 2026 only, non-RDS group health plans are permitted to use either the existing simplified determination methodology or the revised simplified determination methodology to determine whether their prescription drug coverage is creditable. Under the revised simplified determination methodology, the group health plan coverage must be designed to pay at least 72% of participants’ prescription drug expenses, versus 60% under the existing methodology.” 
  • In another surprising Medicare development, STAT News informs us,
    • “Medicare’s financial future unexpectedly got a lot rosier, at least according to some federal budget wonks. 
    • “The Congressional Budget Office recently published its long-term predictions of the federal budget and buried a big surprise for people who follow the Medicare program. The government’s primary piggy bank that pays for Medicare [Part A hospital and other facility] benefits won’t be depleted until 2052 — 17 years later than what CBO analysts predicted last year. 
    • “Quite a few responded they don’t believe it,” he said. “But they [CBO] do have their justification there. And of course this is a long-term projection, and a lot can change.”
  • The New York Times reports,
    • “Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. kicked off a tour through southwestern states on Monday by calling on states to ban fluoride in drinking water supplies, a move that would reverse what some medical experts consider one of the most important public health practices in the country’s history.
    • “The announcement came at a news conference in Utah, the first state to enact such a ban into law. The state’s new law is set to take effect in early May, despite concerns from public health experts who consider fluoridation of water core to preventing tooth decay.
    • “It makes no sense to have it in our water supply,” Mr. Kennedy said, echoing a position he took during the 2024 presidential campaign. “I’m very, very proud of this state for being the first state to ban it, and I hope many more will come.”
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which Mr. Kennedy oversees as health secretary, has listed fluoridation as one of the 10 great public health achievements of the 20th century. After the news conference, Stefanie Spear, Mr. Kennedy’s principal deputy chief of staff, said Mr. Kennedy would direct the C.D.C.’s community preventative services task force to study fluoride and make a new recommendation.”
  • Per FedSmith,
    • “Retirement planning is a complex process for federal employees, requiring careful attention to eligibility rules and regulations. Among the many requirements that determine post-retirement benefits, the 5-year rule plays a crucial role in three key programs: Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB), Federal Employees’ Group Life Insurance (FEGLI), and Roth Thrift Savings Plan (Roth TSP). Understanding these rules can ensure a smooth transition into retirement while maintaining access to critical benefits.”
    • The article provides an understanding of these important rules.

From the judicial front,

  • Govexec relates,
    • “There’s a quorum again on the board that hears appeals of firings and suspensions of federal employees after a majority of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit vacated an earlier decision that temporarily enabled President Donald Trump to remove a Democratic appointee to the Merit Systems Protection Board. 
    • “Trump in February attempted to fire Cathy Harris, a Biden appointee, from the MSPB. A district judge blocked the removal, but that order was paused on March 28 in a 2-1 decision by a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit while it heard the Trump administration’s appeal. 
    • “On Monday, however, a majority of D.C. circuit court judges overruled that decision through en banc reconsideration, which is a rare process that can be utilized if a litigant feels a circuit panel didn’t adhere to Supreme Court precedent. Such reconsideration involves all circuit judges who are in regular active service rather than the usual three-judge panel. 
    • “The circuit court judges were split 7-4 in granting the motion for en banc reconsideration. 
    • “At issue in this case is Humphrey’s Executor, a 1935 Supreme Court decision that found the president doesn’t have unfettered authority to remove officials on multimember, quasi-judicial bodies.” * * *
    • “Monday’s decision, as well as the overturned March 28 order, also apply to Gwynne Wilcox, a Biden appointee to the National Labor Relations Board who Trump similarly fired but who was later reinstated by a district court. 
    • “In a brief, lawyers for the Trump administration said they would seek emergency relief from the Supreme Court if Wilcox and Harris were allowed to return to their positions.”  
  • Bloomberg Law reports,
    • “A federal judge in Texas on Monday vacated a Biden administration rule that would have required about 75% of US nursing homes to add direct-care workers or face administrative penalties and fines.
    • “In his order granting a motion for summary judgment for the plaintiffs, the American Health Care Association, Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, said the nation’s nursing homes suffer from “failures,” including “inadequate staffing levels, poor infection control, failures in oversight and regulation, and deficiencies that result in actual patient harm.” All of which “deserve an effectual response,” he wrote.
    • “But any regulatory response must be consistent with Congress’s legislation governing nursing homes. The Final Rule’s challenged provisions are not,” Kacsmaryk declared of the varied requirements of the mandate, which included that facilities have a registered nurse on site around the clock. “Though the Final Rule attempts to remedy chronic nursing home deficiencies, it does so deficiently.” 
    • “Although “rooted in laudable goals, the Final Rule still must be consistent with Congress’s statutes,” Kacsmaryk added. “To allow otherwise permits agencies to amend statutes though they lack legislative power. Separation of powers demands more than praiseworthy intent.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The American Hospital Association News clarifies,
    • “A second Texas child died from measles April 3 amid an ongoing outbreak in the state, the Texas Department of State Health Services announced April 6. The child was not vaccinated and had no reported underlying conditions, the agency said. The latest death follows a child that died Feb. 26. An unvaccinated adult in New Mexico that died in March also tested positive for measles after their death, but measles was not confirmed as the official cause of death.”
  • The American Medical Association News lets us know what doctors wish their patients knew about improving their mental health.
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “Biomarker and cognitive data supported treatment with the anti-amyloid agent lecanemab (Leqembi) for up to 36 months in early Alzheimer’s disease, initial findings from the CLARITY AD open-label extension study suggested.
    • “Continuous treatment led to greater changes in plasma amyloid-beta 42/40 levels, reported Christopher van Dyck, MD, of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, in a poster presented at the American Academy of Neurologyopens (AAN) annual meeting.” * * *
    • “Serious adverse events occurred in 20.5% of the total sample of 1,616 people in the core CLARITY AD trial and the open-label extension study who received lecanemab. Amyloid-related imaging abnormalities with edema (ARIA-E) occurred in 14.7%, ARIA with hemosiderin deposits (ARIA-H) occurred in 23.8%, and intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) occurred in 0.7%. Three deaths concurrent with ARIA or ICH occurred.
    • “These findings provide the first evidence for a continued benefit of lecanemab and disease modification over the long term, out to 36 months,” van Dyck told MedPage Today.
    • “They also suggest that individuals with lower pathology — no or low tau, or low amyloid — experience a particularly robust stabilization of symptoms,” he continued. “These results collectively underscore the importance of early initiation and continued long-term treatment.”
  • and
    • “In a study of people without a history of cancer, comorbidities in midlife were associated with an overall risk of cancer.
    • “There was a stronger association between comorbidities and risk of multiple individual cancer types.
    • “The findings support the incorporation of formal comorbidity screening and/or risk assessment as a routine aspect of cancer screening visits.”
  • AHA News tells us,
    • “The National Institutes of Health April 7 released a study that found twins — smaller at birth on average than singletons — develop slower in early pregnancy than what was previously known. The ultrasound study found that twins have less fat tissue and muscle mass than singletons beginning at 15 weeks. Scientists believe the smaller size could be a way of adapting to accommodate more resources for two fetuses later in pregnancy. The NIH said confirmation of the findings in additional research could help guide physicians in monitoring and managing twin pregnancies.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Rhythm Pharmaceuticals on Monday said its drug for rare obesity conditions met the main goal of a Phase 3 clinical trial, helping people with weight gain triggered by brain injury lose about one-sixth of their body weight over one year of treatment.
    • The company plans to ask U.S. and European regulators to expand approval of the drug, called setmelanotide. The once-daily shot is marketed as Imcivree after being authorized in the U.S. in 2020 to treat people with genetically driven forms of obesity.
    • Imcivree earned $130 million in 2024 sales across its currently approved uses. Stifel analyst Paul Matteis wrote in a note to clients that the new indication is “a blockbuster opportunity with the potential for a fast ramp” in sales, adding that the weight loss data look “very strong.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare points out,
    • “Emergency department use has nearly recovered to prepandemic levels, but rising acuity, insufficient capacity and a laundry list of financial roadblocks are straining their viability and threatening patients’ access to care, according to a new report from RAND’s healthcare research arm.
    • “The nonprofit, nonpartisan organization’s nearly 200-page report (PDF)—sponsored by the Emergency Medicine Policy Institute (EMPI)—paints a distressing picture of the current state of EDs, which are among the few settings where patients receive 24/7 unscheduled acute care regardless of payment thanks to the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA).
    • “EDs, the report notes, have lately faced more complex and sicker patients. Steady increases in demand and limited capacity have led to an increase in ED crowding (referred to as boarding), longer waits and potentially violence toward healthcare workers, which compromise care quality and emergency care worker attrition due to burnout. At the same time, EDs are providing more uncompensated care and expanding the scope of their work into specialties like geriatric care and care coordination.”
  • Per BioPharma Dive,
    • “Labcorp is now offering a blood-based biomarker test in the U.S. to support the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease.
    • “The immunoassay measures the ratio of ptau-217 and beta amyloid 42, two distinct biomarkers of Alzheimer’s, according to the Wednesday announcement. The Global CEO Initiative on Alzheimer’s Disease has called ptau-217 one the most promising blood-based biomarkers for amyloid status.
    • “Manufacturers of Alzheimer’s drugs have identified blood tests as a way to reduce the reliance on imaging and cerebrospinal fluid assays and to accelerate diagnosis and treatment.”
  • and
    • “GSK is betting potentially billions of dollars that a smaller drug company’s technology can help create new treatments for brain-corroding diseases.
    • “Through a licensing deal announced Sunday, GSK has gained access to drug delivery technology from South Korea’s ABL Bio. This “Grabody-B” platform is designed to shuttle medicines across arguably the trickiest obstacle in neuroscience — the blood-brain barrier or “BBB” — by using a protein that normally shepherds an important growth hormone across the divide.
    • “The platform had already caught the attention of another pharmaceutical giant, Sanofi, which in 2022 entered a collaboration with ABL to develop new therapies for diseases like Parkinson’s.”
  • KFF Health News tells us,
    • “Underscoring the massive scale of America’s medical debt problem, a New York-based nonprofit has struck a deal to pay off old medical bills for an estimated 20 million people.
    • Undue Medical Debt, which buys patient debt, is retiring $30 billion worth of unpaid bills in a single transaction with Pendrick Capital Partners, a Virginia-based debt trading company. The average patient debt being retired is $1,100, according to the nonprofit, with some reaching the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
    • “The deal will prevent the debt being sold and protect millions of people from being targeted by collectors. But even proponents of retiring patient debt acknowledge that these deals cannot solve a crisis that now touches around 100 million people in the U.S.
    • “We don’t think that the way we finance health care is sustainable,” Undue Medical Debt chief executive Allison Sesso said in an interview with KFF Health News. “Medical debt has unreasonable expectations,” she said. “The people who owe the debts can’t pay.”
    • “In the past year alone, Americans borrowed an estimated $74 billion to pay for health care, a nationwide West Health-Gallup survey found. And even those who benefit from Undue’s debt relief may have other medical debt that won’t be relieved.
    • “This large purchase also highlights the challenges that debt collectors, hospitals, and other health care providers face as patients rack up big bills that aren’t covered by their health insurance.”

From the artificial intelligence front,

  • Modern Healthcare interviewed Pat Geraghty, Guidewell’s CEO, who discusses the use of AI in prior authorization approvals
    • How do you educate consumers about the value of prior authorization? 
    • “There’s been a lot of noise around this topic recently. 
    • “We don’t want to come out and say, “let me just explain prior auth to you.” What we’re trying to do is say, “We know we can be better. We can use technology to help us be better. We can make the process quicker and smoother, and we’re going to do that and we’re committing to that.”
    • “We also want to be clear about the rest of the issues around prior auth. There is some clarification and explaining that is appropriate, but it’s not the lead thing. The lead thing is making sure we’re taking the hassle out of the process.
    • How are you using technology to improve the process? 
    • “We use AI to say yes, not deny, and that allows us to get a very quick answer to the provider. We had 2.4 million authorizations last year that were done in just seconds. About 80% of our prior authorizations are on an automated basis.
    • “But the more complex the issue is, the more it really does involve the oversight of a clinician who understands the area that is being reviewed. You wouldn’t want to give up those kinds of dialogues. Oftentimes the discussions may end up with a modified treatment plan that’s best for all involved. It also is one of the ways we have a check on fraud, waste and abuse.
    • “The thing we find that drives the highest volume for denials is when a service is not covered by the health plan.”
  • The Washington Post reports, “AI is coming to skin cancer detection. Technology is already assisting with diagnoses, but experts predict better tools for non-experts will become available in the not-too-distant future.”

Friday Report

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The American Hospital Association News reports,
    • “The Senate over the weekend is expected to cast a final vote on its revised budget resolution for fiscal year 2025. Senate Republicans April 3 voted to proceed on the resolution which kicked off debate. Today the Senate was slated to debate and process a number of amendments before holding a final vote on the resolution. The budget resolution is expected to pass and move to the House for consideration next week.” 
  • Per a CMS fact sheet,
    • The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a final rule on April 4, 2025, that modernizes and improves Medicare Advantage (MA), Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit (Part D), Medicare cost plan, and Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) programs. The Contract Year (CY) 2026 MA and Part D final rule implements changes related to prescription drug coverage, the Medicare Prescription Payment Plan, dual eligible special needs plans (D-SNPs), Star Ratings, and other programmatic areas, including the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program. This final rule also codifies existing sub-regulatory guidance in the MA and Part D programs. 
    • CMS is not finalizing certain provisions from the proposed rule at this time. CMS may address these proposals in future rulemaking, as appropriate. CMS is also announcing that it is not finalizing three provisions from the proposed rule (Enhancing Health Equity Analyses: Annual Health Equity Analysis of Utilization Management Policies, Procedures and Ensuring Equitable Access to Medicare Advantage Services—Guardrails for Artificial Intelligence, and Part D Coverage of Anti-Obesity Medications (AOMs) and Application to the Medicaid Program). 
    • This fact sheet discusses the major provisions of the CY 2026 MA and the Part D final rule. The final rule can be downloaded here: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/2025-06008/medicare-and-medicaid-programs-contract-year-2026-policy-and-technical-changes-to-the-medicare
  • The Wall Street Journal emphasizes,
    • “The Trump administration said Friday that Medicare and Medicaid won’t expand coverage of popular anti-obesity drugs, rejecting a proposal issued late last year by the Biden administration.
    • “The decision deals a blow, at least for now, to Americans who are covered by the government health-insurance programs and wanted their help paying for the popular but pricey drugs. 
    • “Yet the administration left open the possibility of revisiting the decision later.
    • “Expanding coverage of the obesity medications “is not appropriate at this time,” a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services spokeswoman said.
    • “She said CMS may reconsider the policy after more review of the drugs’ “potential benefits” and “relevant costs,” including costs to state Medicaid agencies.”
  • For perspective, STAT News pointed out last September
    • A new report from congressional budget experts this week estimated that it would cost Medicare an additional $35 billion over nine years if the program began covering GLP-1 drugs for obesity. But the report also noted that half of seniors who would qualify for obesity coverage already have access to the drugs for other conditions.
  • Per a House Budget Committee news release,
    • “House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) today appointed Budget Committee Member Rep. Blake Moore (R-Utah) to chair the Committee’s Health Care Task Force. 
    • “The Task Force will build on its work from the 118th Congress by examining opportunities to modernize and personalize the health care system and support policies to fuel innovation and increase patient access to quality and affordable care. One of the initial areas of focus for the Budget Health Care Task Force will be examining the budgetary effects of chronic disease and opportunities to Make America Healthy Again.” 
  • Per an HHS news release,
    • “HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. will embark [next Monday through Wednesday] on a multi-state tour to celebrate MAHA initiatives in the Southwest. He will meet with elected officials, tribal leaders, nutrition experts, and charter school visionaries as he works to fulfill President Trump’s promise to Make America Healthy Again.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Center for Disease Control and Prevention announced today,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity continues to decline. COVID-19 and RSV activity are declining nationally to low levels.
    • COVID-19
      • “COVID-19 activity is declining nationally to low levels. Wastewater levels and emergency department visits are at low levels, and laboratory percent positivity is stable. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are highest in older adults and emergency department visits are also elevated in young children.
      • “There is still time to benefit from getting your recommended immunizations to reduce your risk of illness this season, especially severe illness and hospitalization.
      • “CDC expects the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine to work well for currently circulating variants. There are many effective tools to prevent spreading COVID-19 or becoming seriously ill.
    • Influenza
    • RSV
      • “RSV activity is declining in most areas of the country. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are highest in children and hospitalizations are elevated among older adults in some areas.
    • Vaccination
      • “Vaccination coverage with influenza and COVID-19 vaccines is low among U.S. adults and children. Vaccination coverage with RSV vaccines remains low among U.S. adults. Many children and adults lack protection from respiratory virus infections provided by vaccines.”
  • The AHA News tells us,
    • “There are 607 confirmed cases of measles across the U.S., according to the latest data released April 4 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The majority of cases are in Texas, as an outbreak in the state has grown to 481 cases, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.  
    • “Cases have been reported by 21 states, with 93% being outbreak-associated, according to the CDC. The vaccination status of 97% of cases is classified as “unvaccinated or unknown.” 
  • Per Health Day,
    • “Strokes caused by an artery tear are landing five times as many Americans in the hospital these days, a new study says.
    • “Cervical artery dissection involves a small tear in the inner lining of an artery in the neck that supplies blood to the brain.
    • “Blood can clot at the site of the tear. If the clot breaks loose, it can travel to the brain and cause a stroke.
    • “Hospitalizations for this sort of stroke have increased nearly fivefold during the past 15 years, according to findings published April 2 in the journal Neurology.
    • “Cervical artery dissection is an important cause of stroke, especially in people under 50, so it is crucial to detect it right away,” senior researcher Dr. Shadi Yaghi, a vascular neurologist at Brown University in Providence, R.I., said in a news release.
    • “Strokes that are not fatal can lead to long-term disability, poor mental health and reduced quality of life,” he said. “Our research found a dramatic increase in the number of hospitalizations for cervical artery dissection, with rates rising steadily year over year.” 
    • “These sort of tears in the cervical artery are most often caused by a motor vehicle crash or other accident that causes neck strain, researchers said. However, activities as simple as heavy lifting has been known to cause a cervical artery tear in some people.”
  • The New York Times shares “10 Small Things Neurologists Wish You’d Do for Your Brain. Easy everyday habits can help keep you sharp. And it’s never too late to start them.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Boston Scientific’s pulsed field ablation catheter, Farapulse, was noninferior to Medtronic’s Arctic Front cryoballoon in a randomized trial, researchers found in a study published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “The study, which was published Monday and funded by a Swiss hospital, randomized 210 patients with symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation to undergo PFA or cryoablation. Atrial tachyarrhythmia, a heart rhythm disorder where the atria beat too fast, recurred in 39 patients in the PFA cohort and 53 people in the cryoablation group.
    • “Medtronic reported declines in its cryoablation business last year but said the losses were offset by growth of its PulseSelect single-shot catheter, which competes with Farapulse for the growing PFA market.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “Rural areas are quickly losing independent physicians and medical practices amid the corporatization of healthcare, a new report finds.
    • “The report was commissioned by the Physicians Advocacy Institute (PAI), a nonprofit advocacy organization focused on fair and transparent payment policies. The research, conducted by Avalere Health, used the IQVIA OneKey database, which contains physician and practice location information on health system ownership.
    • “The number of independent doctors in rural areas fell 43% from January 2019 to January 2024, with rural areas losing 5% of all practicing physicians. Meanwhile, people in rural areas had access to 11% fewer medical practices as of January 2024.
    • “Nearly 9,500 doctors left independent practice in rural areas, predominantly in the Midwest and Northeast. States like Indiana, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Ohio lost more than 50% of independent docs.
    • “This decline in rural healthcare providers has been primarily driven by a drop in independent docs and practices as well as the acquisition of these practices by hospitals and corporate entities, the report said.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “South Bend, Ind.-based Beacon Health System has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Ascension Michigan’s southwest region, which includes four hospitals, 35 outpatient clinics and an ambulatory surgery center.
    • “The hospitals include:
      • “Ascension Borgess Hospital (Kalamazoo)
      • “Ascension Borgess Allegan Hospital
      • “Ascension Borgess-Lee Hospital (Dowagiac)
      • “Ascension Borgess-Pipp Hospital (Plainwell)
    • “Expanding our reach deeper into southwest Michigan broadens access to high-quality, affordable care for communities served by Ascension, extends our service area and provides growth opportunity to further strengthen the health system,” Beacon Health CEO Kreg Gruber said in an April 3 news release. “This acquisition will create a bright future for these communities by ensuring access to quality healthcare services for generations.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “With a label expansion for Uplizna pushing the drug into an untouched rare disease market, Amgen is getting its money’s worth out of another drug from its $27.8 billion Horizon Therapeutics buy. 
    • “Uplizna is the first drug to win an FDA approval for immunoglobulin G4-related disease (IgG4-RD), a chronic inflammatory condition that can present in multiple organs and cause fibrosis and permanent organ damage, with or without symptoms.
    • “The CD19-targeted therapy made strides in treating the disease in its phase 3 MITIGATE trial. In the study, Uplizna demonstrated an 87% reduction in the risk of IgG4-RD flares over placebo during the 52-week placebo-controlled period, with 10.3% of those on Uplizna experiencing a flare-up compared to 59.7% of those taking placebo.
    • “With the approval, patients and physicians now have a “proven treatment that targets a key driver of the disease, reducing the risk of flares and reliance on harmful long-term steroid use,” Amgen’s executive vice president of R&D Jay Bradner, M.D., said in a company release. “This approval underscores Amgen’s ongoing commitment and leadership in developing innovative treatments targeting CD19+ B-cells across multiple therapeutic areas.”
    • “Now, the road ahead for Amgen’s success in IgG4-RD lays in raising awareness of the rare disease, which was only recently established with an International Classification of Diseases code in 2023. About 20,000 people are estimated to have the disease in the U.S., but the exact number is hard to pinpoint due to limited data, according to Amgen.”
  • and
    • “As the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine field grapples with a significantly reduced market size thanks to regulatory uncertainties, GSK and Pfizer have decided to lay to rest their patent feud.
    • “GSK and Pfizer have moved to scrap a patent lawsuit around their respective RSV vaccines, according to a filing in the U.S. District Court in Delaware.
    • “The settlement comes after a U.K. high court in November sided with Pfizer, ruling that two GSK RSV vaccine patents were invalid.”

From the artificial intelligence front,

  • Beckers Payer Issues discusses how health plans can use “AI to Drive Patient Outcomes & Health Plan ROI.”
  • Modern Healthcare adds,
    • “Artificial intelligence and other cutting-edge innovations could radically reshape how care is delivered, but tapping technology’s full potential and getting a return on investments is far off, according to industry executives.
    • “We need enduring, ambitious vision,” said Dr. Vivek Garg, chief medical officer at Humana’s CenterWell healthcare services division, during Modern Healthcare’s 2030 Playbook conference in Nashville Wednesday. “You’re going to need the leadership and the board to make trade-offs and to make investments. …They’ve got to do it because they know what they stand for, and they want to see what they can become and how much further they can go in their vision.” * * *
    • “More collaboration between payers and providers is imperative, said Mike Bennett, chief strategy and transformation officer at Highmark Health.
    • “If we both don’t start working together and using the tools we both have, we’re going to end up leaving [our populations] behind,” Bennett said. “AI doesn’t care whether you’re a payer or provider.”

Thursday Report

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The FEHBlog watched today’s confirmation hearing for the President’s nominee for OPM Director, Scott Kupor. Clearly, Mr. Kupor is on a glide path to Senate confirmation. The next step toward that goal will occur at a business meeting of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee on Wednesday April 9 at 10 am.
  • The American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “The Senate April 3 by a vote of 53-45 confirmed Mehmet Oz as the new administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he would reinstate some programs and federal workers cut earlier this week as part of his sweeping reorganization of the department.
    • “Some programs that were cut, they’re being reinstated,” Kennedy said Thursday. “Personnel that should not have been cut were cut. We’re reinstating them.”
  • Per Senate news releases,
  • and
    • “Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) led a markup on six bipartisan Grassley-backed bills to boost competition in the pharmaceutical industry and improve access to more affordable prescription drugs. All six bills advanced in committee by voice vote.” Five of the six bills target pharma, while the sixth bill requests an FTC study of consolidation in the PBM industry.
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “AdvaMed, one of the medical device industry’s largest trade groups, reiterated its opposition to broad-based tariffs Wednesday, saying the actions would hurt innovation, cost jobs and increase healthcare costs, after the Trump administration announced new duties on most U.S. trading partners.
    • “The medtech industry should be exempted from these tariffs,” CEO Scott Whitaker said in a statement.” * * *
    • “Meanwhile, providers have been bracing for the impact of tariffs after the American Hospital Association, alongside the Healthcare Distribution Alliance, also failed to secure carve-outs for critical medical supplies, despite months of lobbying.”
  • Stars and Stripes informs us,
    • “The Department of Defense has scheduled “listening sessions” at three U.S. military bases in Japan next week to collect feedback on a pilot program designed to connect DOD civilians with Japanese health care providers.  Anyone who has used the program — the Health Insurance Enhancement for DOD Civilian Employees in Japan — is encouraged to participate at sessions at Misawa Air Base, Camp Foster and Yokosuka Naval Base, according to a March 28 email distributed by the Defense Health Agency’s National Capital Region.”
  • The Government Accountability Office released a report about DOD’s Actions to Address Challenges with Accessing Health Care in Japan and Guam.
    • The Department of Defense relies on its civilian employees and contractors in Japan and Guam to provide services such as engineering, food service, and teaching. They may receive health care at military facilities but only on a space-available basis—after active-duty service members and their families.
    • Accessing health care through local providers can be difficult. For example, in Japan, they face language barriers and must pay for care up front. DOD started a program intended to help them find providers and pay bills. In Guam, DOD has a working group to address issues that may arise from planned growth of the civilian population on Guam.

From the judicial front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Federal Trade Commission Chair Andrew Ferguson said he will get involved in the agency’s [internal] legal action against the leading pharmacy benefit managers.
    • “In a post shared Thursday on the social media platform X, Ferguson said he no longer is recusing himself from the matter.” * * *
    • “Ferguson, a critic of PBMs, recused himself due to his prior role in advising Virginia’s attorney general on the decision to file an amicus brief in a class-action lawsuit against PBMs, he wrote Thursday in a statement shared on the social media platform. He said his stance had changed to “ensure that the case can continue.”
    • “He said he consulted with the agency’s ethics attorneys when making the decision to involve himself.
    • “The FTC did not immediately respond to questions about next steps. In the Tuesday order pausing the case, FTC General Counsel Lucas Croslow said the pause would remain in effect for at least 105 days, and an evidentiary hearing date would be scheduled 225 days after the stay is lifted.”
  • Fierce Healthcare relates,
    • “The Department of Justice is urging the courts to reject a legal expert’s report that puts its longstanding challenge to UnitedHealthcare’s Medicare Advantage billing practices in jeopardy.
    • “In a memorandum issued this week, DOJ argues that the court-appointed special master’s report, which was released in March, erred in determining that the agency had not presented enough evidence to support the main claims in the case. 
    • “In addition, DOJ alleges that the special master is also pushing to make California’s Central District Court “the first and only court in the nation to read a new requirement into the reverse False Claims Act.” In the report, it interprets a key phrase in the FCA as requiring “proof of an affirmative act of deception,” which DOJ says is “inconsistent with the text, structure and purpose of the FCA.” * * *
    • “In a statement, UnitedHealth emphasized that its “business practices have always been transparent, lawful and approved by our regulator, CMS.”
    • “After more than a decade of DOJ’s wasteful and expensive challenge to our Medicare Advantage business, the Special Master concluded there was no evidence to support the DOJ’s claims we were overpaid or that we did anything wrong,” the company said.
    • “A judge will now be tasked with ruling on whether the case will move forward.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Cardiovascular Business offers key takeaways from the 2025 conference of the American Association of Cardiologists.
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • “An artificial intelligence (AI)-driven screening tool, developed by a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded research team, successfully identified hospitalized adults at risk for opioid use disorder and recommended referral to inpatient addiction specialists. The AI-based method was just as effective as a health provider-only approach in initiating addiction specialist consultations and recommending monitoring of opioid withdrawal. Compared to patients who received provider-initiated consultations, patients with AI screening had 47% lower odds of being readmitted to the hospital within 30 days after their initial discharge. This reduction in readmissions translated to a total of nearly $109,000 in estimated healthcare savings during the study period.
    • “The study, published in Nature Medicine, reports the results of a completed clinical trial, demonstrating AI’s potential to affect patient outcomes in real-world healthcare settings. The study suggests investment in AI may be a promising strategy specifically for healthcare systems seeking to increase access to addiction treatment while improving efficiencies and saving costs.
    • “Addiction care remains heavily underprioritized and can be easily overlooked, especially in overwhelmed hospital settings where it can be challenging to incorporate resource-intensive procedures such as screening,” said Nora D. Volkow, M.D., director of NIH’s National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). “AI has the potential to strengthen implementation of addiction treatment while optimizing hospital workflow and reducing healthcare costs.”
  • Per Cardiovascular Business,
    • “New research shows early-pregnancy blood pressure trajectories are strongly associated with new-onset hypertension years after pregnancy. This may help better stratify risk for targeted surveillance and early interventions, and improve the prediction of cardiovascular disease risk in women later in life. The study was published in the American Heart Association Journal Hypertension this week.[1]
    • “Blood pressure patterns observed in the first half of pregnancy, even among women without hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP), can identify women at greater risk of developing hypertension up to 14 years after giving birth. The new findings are from a large observational study supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Among groups of women who did not develop HDP, those with higher-risk blood pressure patterns, including elevated-stable patterns during early pregnancy, were still 11 times more likely to develop hypertension years later than those women with less risky blood pressure patterns.”  
  • Per HCP Live,
    • “Bariatric surgery improves survival and is cost-effective for patients with obesity and cirrhosis, compared to lifestyle modifications alone.
    • “Sleeve gastrectomy and Roux-en-Y gastric bypass show increased expected survival and quality of life benefits, despite higher initial costs.
    • “The study emphasizes the need for greater awareness and uptake of bariatric surgery, given its long-term health improvements and potential reductions in obesity-related comorbidities.”
  • Fierce Pharma tells us,
    • “The interim results of a phase 3 trial of Merck’s pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) treatment Winrevair were so conclusive that the company not only halted the study for efficacy but did the same two months later in another trial of the first-in-class activin signaling inhibitor.
    • “Merck has revealed data from the study, providing further evidence of the value of Winrevair, which has been approved in more than 40 countries, including in the U.S. a year ago. 
    • “The Zenith trial included 172 patients at the highest risk of mortality—those in the World Health Organization Functional Class (FC) III or IV—and achieved its primary endpoint of time to clinical worsening to first morbidity or mortality event.”
  • Medscape reports,
    • “A low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level below 70 mg/dL was associated with a 26% reduced risk of all-cause dementia and a 28% lower risk of Alzheimer’s disease-related dementia (ADRD), with statin use further decreasing that risk, a new study suggests.
    • “While earlier research had suggested lower LDL levels may offer a protective advantage against dementia, these findings provide a specific target number, which investigators said could prove helpful in clinical practice. 
    • “These findings emphasize the importance of targeted LDL-C management as part of dementia prevention strategies, with potential integration into clinical guidelines,” lead investigator Yerim Kim, MD, PhD, Department of Neurology, Kangdong Sacred Heart Hospital, Hallym University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea, and colleagues wrote.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare takes a five year look back at the COVID 19 pandemic and how it impacted healthcare.
  • Beckers Payer Issues offer thoughts about “From volume to value: The shift in healthcare that’s helping put patients first.”
  • Plan Adviser lets us know,
    • “Research and investment provider Devenir LLC reported that health savings account balances rose 19% in 2024 from 2023 levels, reaching almost $147 billion. The number of accounts grew 5% last year, according to the firm’s year-end survey.
    • “The sustained growth in both assets and participation demonstrates a growing awareness among consumers and employers of HSAs’ long-term value in managing healthcare costs,” said Jon Robb, a Devenir senior vice president of research and technology, in a statement.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review
    • “California has the highest hourly mean wage for registered nurses in the U.S., and Oregon has the highest hourly mean wage for RNs after adjusted for cost of living, according to data published April 2 by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
    • “[In the article you will find] the mean hourly and annual wages for nurses in 49 states and Washington, D.C., adjusted for cost of living. Becker’s calculated these figures using May 2024 salary data from BLS and 2024 cost of living index data from the World Population Review.” 
  • and
    • “Heritage Valley Kennedy Hospital in Kennedy Township, Pa., will close on June 30 due to declining patient volume and reduced insurance reimbursements, according to an April 2 news release shared with Becker’s.
    • “Following the closure, emergency care, outpatient surgery, and diagnostic services will shift to Heritage Valley’s Sewickley and Beaver locations, according to the report. Some services, including a walk-in clinic, X-rays and physical rehabilitation, will remain available at the adjacent medical office building.
    • “Heritage Valley said it is in talks with Encompass Rehabilitation about its leased 12-bed unit at Kennedy Hospital and is exploring partnerships to sustain behavioral health services in the area.”

Tuesday Report

From Washington, DC,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “The Trump administration began broad staff cuts at the Health and Human Services Department, locking some workers out of federal buildings and reassigning others to new agencies including the Indian Health Service.
    • “Emails notifying employees of cuts and reassignments flooded inboxes on Monday night and Tuesday morning. The move is part of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s strategy to shrink and reshape the nation’s health agencies.
    • “The cuts extend far and wide, from the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institutes of Health to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 
    • “On the social-media platform X, Kennedy said what the government had been doing wasn’t working: “We must shift course. HHS needs to be recalibrated to emphasize prevention, not just sick care. These changes will not affect Medicare, Medicaid, or other essential health services.” 
    • “An HHS spokesman said the cuts wouldn’t affect drug or food reviewers or inspectors. “This critical work continues,” he said.”
  • Per a Senate committee press release,
    • “Today, U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), ranking member of the HELP Committee, sent a letter to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., inviting him to participate in a[n April 10, 2025,] HELP Committee hearing on the reorganization of HHS.”
  • Federal News Network adds,
    • “The departments of Agriculture, Defense, Energy, Transportation and Housing and Urban Development, as well as the Small Business Administration and the General Services Administration, have all restarted their deferred resignation programs, Federal News Network has confirmed.
    • “The “fork in the road” relaunch at those seven agencies comes at the same time many agencies are beginning to take on plans for conducting reductions in force (RIFs).”
  • Fierce Healthcare discusses what’s going on with Dr. Mezmet Oz’s efforts to be confirmed as CMS Director.
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., sent letters to HHS officials last week demanding the CMS and the Health Resources and Services Administration look into the growing problem of “line skipping” in organ donation, after media reports suggested patients were being passed over in the organ donation process in favor of less sick recipients.
    • “Reports from The New York Times, cited by the senators, found line skipping occurred in nearly 20% of transplants from deceased donors last year. For comparison, patients received out of order organ donations in about 2% of such donations in 2016, the letter said.
    • “The senators have charged the CMS and HRSA, which oversee organ procurement organizations, with explaining their process for monitoring organ distribution, and asked officials to provide transparency into any complaints the agencies might have received about line skipping since 2019.”
  • Per a Justice Department news release,
    • Today, Attorney General Pamela Bondi released the following statement:
      • “Luigi Mangione’s murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America. After careful consideration, I have directed federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty in this case as we carry out President Trump’s agenda to stop violent crime and Make America Safe Again.”
      • “As alleged, Luigi Mangione stalked and murdered UnitedHealthcare executive Brian Thompson on Dec. 4, 2024. The murder was an act of political violence. Mangione’s actions involved substantial planning and premeditation and because the murder took place in public with bystanders nearby, may have posed grave risk of death to additional persons.   
      • “Following federal murder charges handed down on Dec. 19, 2024, Attorney General Bondi has now directed Acting U.S. Attorney Matthew Podolsky to seek the death penalty in this case.
      • “This is in line with Attorney General Bondi’s Day One Memo as Attorney General entitled Reviving The Federal Death Penalty And Lifting The Moratorium On Federal Executions.”

From the patient safety front,

  • The American Hospital Association News lets us know,
    • “As part of the AHA’s Patient Safety Initiative, a dedicated webpage features case studies showing how hospitals and health systems across the nation are implementing effective and innovative programs to create a culture of safety, improve staff well-being and connect with their communities. READ NOW.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Cardiovascular Business reports, “Embracing a healthy plant-based diet can help patients with obesity, diabetes and heart disease live longer, according to new research presented during ACC.25, the annual conference of the American College of Cardiology (ACC).”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “A diet involving fasting on three nonconsecutive days per week yielded a 6.37 lbs greater weight loss after a year than a daily caloric deficit.
    • “Both groups aimed for a total weekly energy deficit of 34%.
    • “Weight-loss differences were likely due to greater adherence to the intermittent fasting diet.”
  • This week’s issue of NIH Research Matters discusses “Diet and healthy aging | Peptide eye drops | Bacteria use antimicrobial agent.”
  • The Washington Post takes “a closer look at vitamin D’s role in gut health. Health-care providers often recommend meeting your vitamin D requirements through food rather than sun exposure.”
  • Per an NIH news release,
    • “A new form of tumor infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy, a form of personalized cancer immunotherapy, dramatically improved the treatment’s effectiveness in patients with metastatic gastrointestinal cancers, according to results of a clinical trial led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The findings, published April 1, 2025 in Nature Medicineoffer hope that this therapy could be used to treat a variety of solid tumors, which has so far eluded researchers developing cell-based therapies.”
  • Health Day informs us,
    • “Surgery might not be needed in breast cancer patients whose tumors are wiped out by chemotherapy and radiation therapy
    • “31 women who had surgery after successful chemo and radiation treatment remained cancer-free five years later
    • “As many as 60% of early-stage breast cancers are completely eliminated by chemo and radiation prior to surgery, researchers noted.”
  • Consumer Reports, writing in the Washington Post, discusses “How to keep your memory sharp as you age. Simple habits can reduce your risk of memory loss and dementia — and slow cognitive decline.”
  • Per MedPage Today,
    • “A new blood-based test reflected Alzheimer’s tau tangle pathology.
    • “The assay measured a new plasma tau species known as endogenously cleaved MTBR-tau243.
    • “The test distinguished various stages of Alzheimer’s and separated it from non-Alzheimer’s tauopathies.” * * *
    • “This blood test clearly identifies Alzheimer’s tau tangles, which is our best biomarker measure of Alzheimer’s symptoms and dementia,” [Dr. Randall] Bateman said in a statement. The test also provides a good indication about whether a patient’s symptoms are due to Alzheimer’s or another disorder, he noted.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Hims & Hers is expanding its weight-loss offering on its telehealth platform with the addition of Eli Lilly’s LLY  Zepbound prescription and generic liraglutide.” * * *
    • “The telehealth-consultation platform on Tuesday said its aim is to bring customers more treatment options that best suit their needs.
    • “We’ve now expanded that choice even further by adding access to generic liraglutide and branded tirzepatide through our platform,” the company said.
    • “Hims & Hers’ platform already offers weight-loss brands including Novo Nordisk’s NOVO.B Ozempic and Wegovy.
    • The company said it plans to continue expanding its weight loss offering to deliver a more personalized experience to its customer base.
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Eli Lilly is broadening its direct-to-consumer approach by partnering with a digital health company, Noom, which is focused on weight management. 
    • “The collaboration connects Noom users with Eli Lilly’s pharmacy provider, GiftHealth, to facilitate access to Zepbound single-dose vials for individuals with a prescription, according to a March 31 Noom news release. 
    • “The integration also allows users to track prescription fill statuses and shipping dates within an app. Eli Lilly’s decision to offer Zepbound in a single-dose vial format for cash-paying patients is part of a broader effort to increase access to the weight loss drug.”
  • and
    • “Durham, N.C.-based Duke University Health System has completed its $284 million acquisition of Lake Norman Regional Medical Center and related businesses in Mooresville, N.C., from subsidiaries of Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems.
    • “Duke finalized the acquisition April 1. The 123-bed acute care hospital will be renamed Duke Health Lake Norman Hospital, according to a Duke Health news release.
    • “This is an exciting day for Duke Health and the Lake Norman team,” DUHS CEO Craig Albanese, MD, said in the release. “We have a bright future ahead and look forward to bringing the excellence and innovation of Duke Health to enhance the care offered at Duke Health Lake Norman Hospital and clinics.” 
  • Modern Healthcare relates,
    • “Novant Health, with MedQuest Associates, has signed an agreement to acquire 18 OrthoCarolina imaging centers in the Carolinas.  
    • “The deal, which closed March 31, involves 13 locations in the Charlotte region in North Carolina, three locations in the Winston-Salem region in North Carolina and two locations in South Carolina. MedQuest, which is owned by Novant, will manage day-to-day operations at the sites, according to a Tuesday news release.
    • “Financial details of the deal were not disclosed. 
    • “Winston-Salem-based Novant operates more than 900 care locations in the Carolinas, including 19 hospitals, about 750 physician clinics and other outpatient facilities. MedQuest operates more than 50 outpatient centers and mobile radiology units.”

Monday Report

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • The American Hospital Association (AHA) News tells us,
    • “The Department of Justice March 27 announced it is launching an Anticompetitive Regulations Task Force to advocate for “the elimination of anticompetitive state and federal laws and regulations that undermine free market competition.” The DOJ said its Antitrust Division is seeking public comments until May 26 on laws and regulations considered to be the most significant barriers to competition in markets such as health care, housing, transportation, food and agriculture, and energy.”

From the judicial front,

  • STAT News lets us know,
    • “A federal judge in Texas squashed the Food and Drug Administration’s plan to regulate lab-developed tests on Monday, ruling in favor of lab trade groups that said the agency was overstepping its bounds. 
    • “The Court VACATES and SETS ASIDE, in its entirety, the FDA’s Final Rule titled Medical Devices; Laboratory Developed Tests,” the ruling reads. “The Court remands this matter to the Secretary of Health and Human Services for further consideration.” * * *
    • “Laboratory scientists develop all kinds of tests, including ones looking for rare diseases or cancer, or examining prenatal genetics. Labs argue that their tests are not medical devices, but rather “professional health care services” that should not be subject to regulation. 
    • “Before President Trump took office, experts speculated that his administration might try to roll back the rule anyway given Trump’s deregulatory bent. But the U.S. Department of Justice attorney assigned to the Texas case robustly defended the LDT rule, indicating that the Trump administration was willing to stand by it. 
    • “The judge’s decision may have implications for FDA’s broader authority when it comes to regulating medical devices. The government may appeal the case to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.” 
  • Bloomberg Law tells us,
    • “A federal judge rejected Johnson & Johnson’s third attempt to use bankruptcy to set up a multi-billion-dollar trust fund to pay women who claim they got cancer using baby powder and other products allegedly tainted with a toxic substance.
    • “The decision ends the controversial proposal which would have forced a settlement of almost all its talc-related cancer lawsuits. US Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez dismissed the bankruptcy of a small J&J unit called Red River Talc following a two-week trial in Houston in which holdout cancer victims claimed a vote of victims was flawed.
    • “Lopez agreed and dismissed the case.
    • “The bankruptcy case is Red River Talc LLC , Bankr. S.D. Tex., No. 24-90505, 3/31/25.”

From the patient protection front,

  • Per the AHA News,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration has identified a Class I recall of Medtronic Aortic Root Cannulas due to a risk of unexpected loose material in the male luer used in the cannula. The loose material could become dislodged and cause serious injuries or death. The FDA said there have been no reports of injuries or death from the issue.”
  • Per MedTech Dive,
    • “Bausch + Lomb has recalled intraocular lenses in response to a growing number of reports that some patients are experiencing inflammatory reactions in their eyes, the company said Thursday.
    • “The company has seen a rise in reports of toxic anterior segment syndrome in recipients of its Envista Envy IOLs in the past few weeks, according to a letter to customers. In recent days, Bausch + Lomb received reports of TASS linked to Envista Aspire and Envista monofocal lenses.
    • “Bausch + Lomb is recalling all Envy and Aspire IOLs and certain lots of Envista monofocal lenses. J.P. Morgan analysts estimated 1% of total company sales could be at risk, but their counterparts at Evercore ISI outlined a scenario in which the issue could be resolved in the next six months.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The American Medical Association tells us ten things doctors wish women know about managing their health.
  • STAT News relates “Down to their heart cells, women and men have cardiovascular differences that matter. Men and women’s heart cells even prefer different kinds of fuel, new research shows.”
    • “Heart disease has long been the leading killer of adults, but beyond that stark fact, men and women diverge.
    • “From differences at the cellular level of the heart to circulatory structure to symptoms of distress and treatment, researchers are finding new manifestations of gender differences in cardiovascular disease. 
    • “Heart attacks look different in women than in stereotypically chest-clutching men, sending more diffuse pain shooting through the jaw, neck, arm, back, stomach, and more, all in ways that don’t scream “call 911.” Even where in the body a heart attack blocks blood flow is different: Microvessels in women get jammed, but it’s the larger arteries in men that starve the heart of oxygen. 
    • “The number and function of muscle cells in the heart differ, too. Women’s hearts have more cardiomyocytes than men, and their fuel tends to be more fatty acids as opposed to the sugars that male muscle cells prefer to burn, new research reveals. 
    • “All these differences have implications for diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular disease.”
  • The AHA News informs us,
    • “A study published March 31 by the National Institutes of Health found that adults living in rural areas have worse cardiovascular health than those in urban communities due to social factors such as income, education, having enough food and owning a home. The agency found that those living in rural rather than urban areas were more likely to have heart disease (7% vs. 4%), high blood pressure (37% vs. 31%), high cholesterol (29% vs. 27%), obesity (41% vs. 30%) and diabetes (11% vs. 10%).”
  • The Wall Street Journal considers “If Vaccines Don’t Cause Autism, What Does? .”The risk of autism develops before we are even born.”
    • “Part of the frustration with autism risk is there isn’t much we can do to control it. Staying healthy during pregnancy, however, can help minimize risk.
    • “Janine LaSalle, a professor of microbiology and immunity at University of California, Davis, says there is evidence suggesting that maternal health risks—such as obesity, weight gained during pregnancy and gestational diabetes—can increase the risk of having a child with autism. 
    • “Another protective action pregnant moms can consider is taking a prenatal vitamin with folic acid and iron supplementation. This is especially important in the first month of pregnancy and so should be started when a woman is trying to conceive, says LaSalle. 
    • “If there was a single smoking gun it would have been found by now,” says LaSalle. “It really is the complexity of the formation of the human brain, and there’s just so many things that can influence it.”
  • MedPage Today notes,
    • “A patient navigation program significantly increased follow-up colonoscopy among those with an abnormal fecal immunochemical test (FIT) result.
    • “Ninety-four percent of patients who received navigation completed colonoscopy at 1 year versus 14% of those who received usual care.
    • “The trial was conducted at a community health center, suggesting results are applicable to real-world clinical settings.”
  • Beckers Clinical Leadership reflects on “Bariatric surgery’s next act: What 3 leaders expect.”
  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Novo Nordisk’s diabetes pill Rybelsus, an oral semaglutide, reduced the risk of major heart-related events by 14% in adults with Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease or chronic kidney disease, according to results from a stage 3 trial. 
    • “The findings, presented at the American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session in Chicago and published March 29 in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed that patients taking Rybelsus had a lower incidence of heart attacks, strokes and cardiovascular deaths compared to those taking the placebo. 
    • “Novo Nordisk has applied for regulatory approval to expand the Rybelsus label to include cardiovascular risk reduction, according to a March 29 news release from the company. The FDA and European Medicines Agency are reviewing the application with a decision anticipated in 2025.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Patient preferences for where to seek care have shifted in the post-pandemic era.
    • “The use of retail clinics and urgent care centers declined from 2022 to 2023, while emergency department use increased. Telehealth use also declined in that period, though it was still well above levels prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a report from FAIR Health, a healthcare data company.
    • “To see where patients are going, FAIR Health analyzed its database of more than 50 billion claims records, which are provided by payers and administrators that handle claims for commercial plans. The report bases “use” on percentages of total medical claim lines, or the individual procedures listed on claims.
    • “FAIR Health Chief Operating Officer Thomas Swift said care sites are trying to find a new normal, and some of the changes in preferences may be part of the readjustment period.”
      • Retail clinic use is down.
      • Urgent care use also is down.
      • Emergency rooms are seeing growing demand.
      • Urgent care, medical offices have the highest prices.
      • Telehealth demand remains above pre-pandemic levels.
  • The Harvard Gazette adds,
    • “A new paper, published in JAMA Network Open, finds a surprising number of Americans traveling out-of-state for cancer care.
    • “The study, co-authored by Center for Geographic Analysis research associate Lingbo Liu, focuses on older adults whose treatment is covered by traditional Medicare, with the most striking results concerning rural Americans. Rural cancer patients in the study’s sample were about twice as likely as city-dwellers to cross state lines for surgical treatments. Rural residents were also three times more likely to leave the state for radiation and four times more likely for chemotherapy.
    • “These findings have important implications for healthcare fragmentation, or receiving services at more than one institution. Fragmentation, which is common with cancer care, is associated with communication gaps and decreased patient satisfaction. But telehealth has the potential to ease these concerns.
    • “When telehealth is used,” Liu offered, “it’s most likely to improve cancer care equity in rural areas and for the diverse populations within those areas.” 
  • Modern Healthcare tells us about microhospitals.
    • “What is a microhospital?
      • “A microhospital is a fully licensed, small-scale hospital that operates 24/7 and typically houses eight to 15 inpatient beds, in addition to emergency bays. There is no standard size for microhospitals, but they tend to be less than 50,000 square feet.
    • “What types of services do microhospitals provide?
      • “Microhospitals, also called neighborhood hospitals, can provide acute care, emergency services, surgeries, imaging and lab work to treat less complex conditions, such as broken bones or heart attacks. Higher-acuity trauma patients would be sent to a larger facility.
      • “Services at microhospitals fall between urgent care or ambulatory surgery centers and full-size traditional hospitals, said Joe Kight, head of healthcare for U.S. Bank’s institutional client group. The facilities are generally reimbursed for services at the same rate as a regular hospital.
    • “Who is investing in microhospitals?
      • “Many health systems, including Baylor Scott & White, Intermountain Health and CommonSpirit Health, have invested in microhospitals.”
  • Per a press release,
    • “The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today released a Final Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of suzetrigine (Journavx™, Vertex Pharmaceuticals) for the treatment of acute pain.”
    • “ICER’s report on this therapy was the subject of the February 2025 public meeting of the Midwest CEPAC, one of ICER’s three independent evidence appraisal committees. 
    • Downloads:Final Evidence Report|Report-at-a-Glance|Policy Recommendations 
    • “It has been a long time since we have had a new class of drugs for acute pain,” said ICER’s Chief Medical Officer David Rind, MD. “Suzetrigine has a different mechanism of action from prior oral therapies, and this creates options for treatment alone or in combination with existing medications. The overall value of this new drug is linked to the risk of a one-week course of opioids leading to opioid use disorder. If the risk is not zero and suzetrigine proves to be safe, we believe that suzetrigine will likely be a cost-effective, and perhaps a cost-saving, alternative from a long-term perspective. However, we note the skepticism about the evidence base from members of the Midwest CEPAC. Longer term data will help define the appropriate role of suzetrigine in practice, but a pain medicine with a new mechanism of action will create options for patients and clinicians.”
  • Per Fierce Pharma,
    • “Cigna’s Evernorth unit is expanding coverage for Neuronetics’ therapy for depression to adolescents.
    • “Neuronetics announced that Evernorth will offer coverage for its NeuroStar Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) therapy to patients aged 15 and older who have major depressive disorder. The treatment uses magnetic pulses on different parts of the brain, offering an option for severe depression that does not have the same side effects as medication-based therapies.
    • “Per its website, more than 195,000 people have been treated with NeuroStar TMS, with 83% seeing significant improvement in their depression and 62% reporting full readmission.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review points out,
    • “Cigna’s Express Scripts has emerged as the largest pharmacy benefit manager in the U.S. by market share, overtaking long-time leader CVS Caremark, according to a March 31 report from the Drug Channels Institute.
    • “In 2024, Express Scripts handled 30% of all prescription claims, up significantly from 23% in 2023. Meanwhile, CVS Health’s CVS Caremark saw its share decline from 34% to 27% over the same period. Express Scripts’ growth was largely driven by a major contract win to manage pharmacy benefits for 20 million Centene members, previously served by CVS Caremark.
    • “Together with UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Rx, which processed 23% of claims, the three largest PBMs accounted for 80% of the total U.S. prescription claims market in 2024 — a one percentage point increase from 2023.”

Weekend Update

Texas bluebonnets now blooming in central Texas

From Washington, DC,

  • On April 3, 2025, at 10 am, ET, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee will hold a confirmation hearing for Scott Kupor, the President’s nominee for the position of OPM Director. The FEHBlog looks forward to Mr. Kupor’s confirmation.
  • Fierce Healthcare reports,
    • “Over three dozen healthcare associations and organizations penned a letter this week calling on House and Senate leaders for action on a bill bolstering foreign-born physician recruitment to underserved regions.
    • “The letters—which include the American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association and the Association of American Medical Colleges as signatories—speak to the Conrad 30 Waiver Program and its role in alleviating the nation’s worsening clinical workforce shortage.
    • “It allows foreign students who come to the U.S. for medical training immediately begin practicing in the U.S. by foregoing visa requirements that would force them to return to their home country for at least two years. In exchange, program participants are required to work full-time for at least three years in a medically underserved community.” * * *
    • “A pair of bills introduced in the House and Senate late last month and referred to their respective judiciary committees would reauthorize and “make necessary updates to strengthen the program,” the groups said.”
  • CMS is holding a virtual town hall meeting on April 30, 2025, from 10 am to 3 pm ET “for clinicians and researchers as well as other interested parties, such as patient advocacy organizations, patients, and caregivers, to share input relevant to the clinical considerations related to drugs selected for the second cycle of negotiations [under the Inflation Reduction Act].”

From the judicial front,

  • Govexec reports,
    • “President Trump can once again fire a key appointee who hears appeals of firings and suspensions of federal employees, putting the board on which she sits at risk of losing its functionality as the administration is pushing out large swaths of the federal workforce. 
    • “Cathy Harris, a Democrat nominated to the Merit Systems Protection Board by President Biden, was fired by Trump last month but quickly won reinstatement from a district judge. On Friday, a panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in a 2-1 decision paused the lower court’s decision and said Trump could fire Harris. 
    • “The decision also applied to Gwynne Wilcox, a member of the National Labor Relations Board who Trump had fired, and a district court also reinstated. 
    • “If Harris is removed, MSPB would be left without a quorum. From 2017 to 2022, the board also lacked a quorum, which created a 3,500-case backlog that was only just recently eliminated. Due to an interim final rule established that same year, MSPB can conduct some actions without a quorum, though it cannot issue final decisions appealed to its central board.
    • “Zac Kurz, an MSPB spokesman, confirmed Friday evening that that the central board no longer has a quorum. While regional administrative judges can still issue initial rulings, the central board can no longer hear appeals of those rulings.”  

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “As many as one in five people — an estimated 64 million in the United States — have elevated levels of a tiny particle in their blood. It can greatly increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes.
    • “But few know about it, and almost no doctors test for it, because there was not much to be done. Diet does not help. Neither does exercise. There have been no drugs.
    • “But in the near future, that may change.
    • “On Sunday [today], cardiologists announced that an experimental drug made by Eli Lilly, lepodisiran, could lower levels of the particle, Lp(a), by 94 percent with a single injection. The effects lasted for six months and there were no significant side effects.
    • “But it is not yet confirmed that reducing Lp(a) levels also reduces the risk of heart attacks and strokes. That awaits large clinical trials that are now underway.
    • “The Lilly research was presented Sunday at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology and simultaneously published in the New England Journal of Medicine. At least four other companies are also testing innovative drugs that block the body’s production of Lp(a), a mix of lipids and a protein.
    • “Dr. David Maron, a preventive cardiologist at Stanford not involved in the Lilly research, said the evidence of profound and long-lasting reduction in lipoprotein levels with lepodisiran was “thrilling.”
    • “Dr. Martha Gulati, a preventive cardiologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center also not involved in the trial, said the study was “really elegant.”
  • and
    • “Many people use a smartwatch to monitor their cardiovascular health, often by counting the number of steps they take over the course of their day or recording their average daily heart rate. Now, researchers are proposing an enhanced metric, which combines the two using basic math: Divide your average daily heart rate by your daily average number of steps.
    • “The resulting ratio — the daily heart rate per step, or DHRPS — provides insight into how efficiently the heart is working, according to a study conducted by researchers at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University and published today in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
    • “The study found that people whose hearts work less efficiently, by this metric, were more prone to various diseases, including Type II diabetes, hypertension, heart failure, stroke, coronary atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction.
    • “It’s a measure of inefficiency,” said Zhanlin Chen, a third-year medical student at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University and lead author of the new study; his coauthors included several Feinberg faculty physicians. “It looks at how badly your heart is doing,” he added. “You’re just going to have to do a tiny bit of math.”
  • NPR Shots tells us,
    • “As a measles outbreak in West Texas and New Mexico continues to grow, and other states report outbreaks of their own, some pediatricians across the U.S. say they are seeing a new trend among concerned parents: vaccine enthusiasm.
    • “Our call center was inundated with calls about the MMR [measles, mumps, rubella] vaccine,” says Dr. Shannon Fox-Levine, a pediatrician in Broward County, Fla. She says parents are asking if their child is up to date on their vaccinations. Or “should they get another vaccine? Should they get an extra one? Can they get it early?” * * *
    • “Interest in vaccinations has ramped up ahead of the spring break travel season, says Dr. Susan Sirota, a primary care pediatrician in the Chicago area.
    • “We have many patients calling us because they are traveling to either Texas or places near Texas, or states where they suspect that vaccination rates are lower than we have in Illinois,” Sirota says. “Many families are requesting early MMR [vaccines].” 
  • MedPage Today lets us know, “Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) continued to hold its own against surgery for younger patients at low surgical risk, with the Evolut Low Risk trial now halfway to its goal of 10-year follow-up.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “GSK said on Tuesday that it is studying a group of more than a million older adults in the UK to examine whether its best-selling shingles vaccine lowers the risk of dementia.
    • “The British drugmaker is using the health data of some 1.4 million people, aged 65 to 66, some of whom received its Shingrix shot and some who did not. 
    • “GSK’s chief scientific officer Tony Wood said the data, from the state-run National Health Service’s (NHS) large database, is a unique set of information because due to a tweak in the UK’s shingles immunization program there is effectively a naturally randomized trial already taking place.”
  • and
    • “High-dose oral cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) supplementation significantly reduced disease activity in patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) suggestive of multiple sclerosis (MS) in the randomized, controlled D-Lay MS trial.
    • “Combined with data from previous studies on vitamin D as an add-on therapy, the results of the D-Lay MS trial, which show a stronger effect of vitamin D in patients with vitamin D deficiency compared to others, strongly suggest that patients with vitamin D deficiency should be supplemented, regardless of whether they are already under disease-modifying therapy,” Eric Thouvenot, MD, PhD, University Hospital of Nimes, Neurology Department, Nîmes, France, told Medscape Medical News.
    • “The study was published online on March 10 in JAMA.” 

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Modern Healthcare reports,
    • “Health Care Service Corp. was limited to selling Blue Cross and Blue Shield policies, including Medicare Advantage plans, in Illinois, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas before the deal.
    • “After the Cigna acquisition, Health Care Service Corp. has a much bigger footprint and can offer Medicare Advantage in 25 more states and the District of Columbia, Part D nationally, and Medigap in 48 states and the District of Columbia. The insurer now counts 830,000 Medicare Advantage members, about four times as many as prior to the Cigna purchase.” * * *
    • “Moving up a weight class means facing dominant for-profit Medicare Advantage carriers such as UnitedHealth Group subsidiary UnitedHealthcare, Humana and CVS Health subsidiary Aetna head on. Those three insurers collectively cover 57% of Medicare Advantage enrollees, according to an analysis of Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services data the investment bank Stephens published in February.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “Moody’s has downgraded Health Care Service Corporation’s insurance financial strength rating to A3 from A2 following the company’s acquisition of Cigna’s Medicare business on March 19.
    • “Moody’s cited likely challenges with the integration of the MA business into the company’s primarily commercial insurance operations, along with ongoing headwinds within the MA industry more broadly.  
    • “Another concern is the limited experience the company has with making and integrating major acquisitions in the recent past,” analysts wrote. “The company expects to invest an estimated $1 billion over the next two years into updating systems and for working capital to ensure its success, but this may prove to be insufficient.”
  • Kauffman Hall explains how health systems can create a sustainable approach to corporate shared services.