Midweek Update

Midweek Update

Thanks to ACK15 for sharing their work on Unsplash.

From Washington, DC

  • Govexec informs us,
    • “A new website has made available a database of anyone serving in a top-ranking position in the federal government, offering new insight that advocates said will boost transparency and better prepare new administrations to transition into power.  
    • “The Office of Personnel Management launched the site to comply with the Periodically Listing Updates to Management (PLUM) Act, which so far includes the names, roles and pay levels of more than 8,000 executives in government.
    • “OPM said that figure will grow to 10,000 as it ensures compliance and updates the list over the coming months. It will include senior leaders at every federal agency, including all 4,000 political appointees, Senior Executive Service members and other top or non-competitively appointed officials. “
  • The Department of Health and Human Services tells us,
    • On Wednesday, January 3, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra met virtually with long-term care facility (LTCF) leaders to express concerns about low vaccination rates among nursing home residents and remind industry leaders of their obligations to offer the COVID-19 vaccine to residents and staff.
    • Today’s conversation was a follow-up call from a previous HHS virtual meeting on December 21 with LTCF leaders to discuss the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) December 2023 report finding that just 33% of long-term care facility residents were up to date with their COVID-19 vaccinations. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) requires all nursing homes to offer COVID-19 vaccines to residents and staff and educate them on their benefits.
  • FedWeek notes,
    • “Fraud against the federal retirement program is continuing, an inspector general report has said, with lack of reporting to OPM on the deaths of beneficiaries the most common means.
    • “These unreported deaths may allow payments to continue because of program vulnerabilities or intentional fraud on the part of bad actors. Sometimes, CSRS or FERS improper payments continue for years and cost tens of thousands of dollars before discovery,” says the IG’s latest summary of its investigative activities.”
  • FEHBlog note — The government needs a better system to keep track of deaths.

From the U.S. public health and medical research front,

  • The New York Times reports,
    • “The holidays have come and gone, and once again Americans are riding a tide of respiratory ailments, including Covid. But so far, this winter’s Covid uptick seems less deadly than last year’s, and much less so than in 2022, when the Omicron surge ground the nation to a halt.
    • “We’re not seeing the signs that would make me think that we’re heading into another severe wave,” said Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “So far, we’re in relatively good shape.”
    • “Still, * * * just a fraction of the most vulnerable people have received the latest Covid shots, she noted.
    • “It’s not too late,” Dr. Rivers added. “We have not even reached peak yet for Covid, and once you reach peak, you still have to get down the other side.” That leaves plenty of time for the vaccine to provide some protection.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review adds,
    • “COVID-19 and flu admissions continue to climb across the country, with the majority of states now reporting high levels of respiratory virus activity. 
    • “Overall, 31 states reported high levels of respiratory virus activity for the week ending Dec. 23. Included in this total are a growing number of states seeing “very high” activity levels: Alabama, California, Colorado, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and New York City. Two weeks ago, just five states reported very high levels.” 
  • Medscape notes
    • “While COVID has now claimed more than 1 million lives in the United States alone, these aren’t the only fatalities caused at least in part by the virus. A small but growing number of Americans are surviving acute infections only to succumb months later to the lingering health problems caused by long COVID.
    • “Much of the attention on long COVID has centered on the sometimes debilitating symptoms that strike people with the condition, with no formal diagnostic tests or standard treatments available, and the effect it has on quality of life. But new figures from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that long COVID can also be deadly.
    • “More than 5000 Americans have died from long COVID since the start of the pandemic, according to new estimates from the CDC.”
  • STAT News alerts us,
    • “One in three heart patients live with anxiety, depression, and ongoing stress, according to a 2023 meta-analysis of over 100 studies. But even in the age of 24/7 monitoring via implantable loop recorders and wearables, many patients are without professional support for the mental and emotional social aspects of coping with heart disease.
    • “The technology of cardiology is locked down. People get that. What’s not locked down is the patient experience,” said Sam Sears, professor of health psychology at East Carolina University, and the author of over 200 research studies on psychological interventions for heart health. “The human factors in all this just don’t get addressed as a standard of care.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Cigna is in advanced talks to sell its Medicare business in an about-face for the health-insurance giant, which had been expanding its footprint in the fast-growing sector. 
    • “Cigna, which has been running an auction for the business, known as Medicare Advantage, is now in exclusive talks to sell it to Health Care Service Corp. for between $3 billion and $4 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. 
    • “Should there be a deal, it would mark a major expansion for HCSC, a big nonprofit health insurer that is the parent of Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in five states including Texas and Illinois. HCSC has long been a powerful player in its home states, but the deal would give it a significant Medicare business and far broader reach. Cigna is offering Medicare plans in 29 states for 2024.
  • Drug Channels offers its annual “reality check on U.S. drug pricing.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • Solera Health, a chronic condition management platform for payers and employers, is expanding its platform to include virtual specialty care facilitated by several new clinical partners.
    • “Solera’s HALO Platform is an omni-condition management tool that aims to address high-cost chronic conditions, mostly serving commercial populations. The latest expansion into virtual specialty care furthers the company’s value-based care mission by widening access to specialist docs in a low-cost setting, executives told Fierce Healthcare.
    • “The new capabilities leverage partnerships with two new partners, 9am.health and Vori Health, as well as an existing partner, Oshi Health.
    • “Each partner specializes in addressing high-cost conditions, from obesity and diabetes to musculoskeletal pain to GI conditions. They offer a health coach, nutritionist, peer support and other support services while also coordinating with a patient’s primary or in-person care doc.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence looks at employer-sponsored plan trends for 2024.

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Federal News Network informs us
    • “As part of a big push from the Biden administration to conduct a governmentwide AI hiring surge, the Office of Personnel Management is trying to make it easier for agencies to recruit experts in the field.
    • “OPM has authorized direct hire authority for a handful of governmentwide occupations — IT specialist, computer scientist, computer engineer, and management and program analyst — according to a memo the agency published Friday.
    • “This authorization will assist agency efforts to increase AI capabilities in the federal government,” OPM said in the memo.”
  • The Washington Post explores efforts to improve access to primary care in the US.
    • “Primary care is one of the few interventions that has been shown to improve health outcomes,” said Shantanu Nundy, a primary care physician who works for a virtual care company and at a federally qualified health center. The current system devalues routine preventive care in favor of expensive treatments, he said, and “Americans are living poorer-quality and shorter lives as a result.” * * *
    • “In September, Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Roger Marshall (R-Kan.) announced a $26 billion legislative bill aimed at expanding primary care and reducing staffing shortages. The impact of that bill is likely to be limited, partly because it is focused almost exclusively on federally qualified health centers, which cater to less than 10 percent of the population, while the problems with primary care are far more extensive.
    • “The HHS initiative also does not change an essential flaw in the current financial structure, which relies on a physician visit to initiate the billing process. If a community health worker first knocks on somebody’s door, there is no way to reimburse that visit. Those problems became clearer during and after the pandemic, which put a spotlight on how few people have a lasting relationship with a primary care doctor. The challenge is to figure out ways to pay for entry-level services and care providers beyond the family doctor.
    • “Given the shortages and trust issues, it makes much more sense for people to be allowed to see those other health professionals first,” Nundy said. “The whole system bottlenecks on the physician.”
    • FEHBlog note: So PCP gatekeepers are now bottlenecks.

From the public health front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control’s Fluview tells us,
    • “Seasonal influenza activity is elevated and continues to increase in most parts of the country.
    • “Outpatient respiratory illness is above baselinenationally for the eighth consecutive week and is above baseline in all 10 HHS Regions.
    • “The number of weekly flu hospital admissions continues to increase.
    • “During Week 51, of the 875 viruses reported by public health laboratories, 748 (85.5%) were influenza A and 127 (14.5%) were influenza B. Of the 391 influenza A viruses subtyped during Week 51, 309 (79.0%) were influenza A(H1N1) and 82 (21.0%) were A(H3N2).”
  • Medscape points out,
    • “The COVID-10 pandemic may no longer be a global public health emergency, but millions continue to struggle with the aftermath: Long COVID. New research and clinical anecdotes suggest that certain individuals are more likely to be afflicted by the condition, nearly 4 years after the virus emerged. 
    • “People with a history of allergies, anxiety or depression, arthritis, and autoimmune diseases and women are among those who appear more vulnerable to developing long COVID, said doctors who specialize in treating the condition.”
  • STAT News reports on three addiction stories to watch next year:
    • Will methadone access expand?
    • Will there be a return to police-first drug policy?
    • Will telehealth be given a role in recovery?
  • The American Medical Association tells us what doctors wish their patients knew about their family health history.

From our U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Though often associated with gaming, virtual reality (VR) is a technology rapidly evolving in healthcare. From pain management to enabling more efficient surgeries to gamifying physical therapy, VR use cases continue to proliferate. 
    • “It especially holds promise in revolutionizing the behavioral health space, with substantial research supporting its effectiveness. VR is being used to treat a number of conditions, including anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance use disorders and autism.
    • “VR therapy is not a new concept. It was formally studied more than two decades ago, though it wasn’t until the last few years that the field became prominent, with new companies moving into the space. And as technology has improved and gotten more intuitive to use, it has also become less expensive. And in 2022, the American Medical Association approvedthe first-ever CPT code for VR-mediated therapy. 
    • “There is no question mark in my view about the clinical validity and clinical value the technology can bring to the market,” Eran Orr, CEO at XRHealth, told Fierce Healthcare, pointing out there are more than 15,000 published papers on VR’s efficacy across modalities.
    • “Not only can VR expand a provider’s arsenal of treatment tools, Orr said, but it also offers a wealth of insights on engagement, biofeedback, wellness and other data. “VR is the technology for mental health,” Orr said.
    • “Despite its potential, the technology still faces hurdles to adoption, like reimbursement, logistical challenges and regulatory pressures.” 
  • Beckers Hospital Review shares the top ten trending Google health searches of 2023 with us.

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Roll Call reports,
    • “The House [of Representatives] voted Thursday to clear the fiscal 2024 National Defense Authorization Act and send it to President Joe Biden for his signature.
    • “The conference report was considered under suspension of the rules, which requires a two-thirds majority. The bipartisan package easily cleared that threshold on a 310-118 vote. * * *
    • “The conference report is notable for authorizing a 5.2 percent pay raise for all military personnel, the biggest in two decades, as well as an increase in troops’ basic allowance for housing payments.”
  • Govexec adds that “Under a provision of the fiscal 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, federal agencies would be required to incorporate veterans’ military service when determining eligibility for paid leave.”
  • Back to Roll Call,
    • “The Senate planned to delay its holiday recess and stay in session next week as lawmakers signaled they could be close to a bipartisan border security deal that would clear a path for aid to Ukraine and Israel.
    • “The change in schedule came after several days of intense negotiations among senators of both parties and White House staff who were struggling to reach a deal on immigration policies designed to curb the flow of migrants at the southern border. Republicans have insisted on tougher border security as their price for additional Ukraine aid, part of a broader $110.5 billion supplemental funding package.
    • “We can get this done before we leave,” said Connecticut Sen. Christopher S. Murphy, the lead negotiator for Senate Democrats, after a Thursday morning negotiating session. “I just think if . . . the border is an emergency, if Ukraine is an emergency, then let’s act like it.” ***
    • “Even if the Senate can agree to a package combining border security with military aid to Ukraine and Israel, the measure is unlikely to become law this month. The House recessed for the year Thursday and Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., appeared unlikely to call the chamber back into session before January.”
  • MedPage Today reviews several drug pricing developments that the Biden Administration announced this morning.
  • What’s more,
    • “HHS released a new data strategy to enhance data capabilities and accelerate progress on cancer moonshot goals,”
  • and
    • “The Biden-Harris Administration announced voluntary commitments from leading healthcare companies to harness the potential and manage the risks posed by AI.”
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “The Office of Personnel Management on Wednesday urged supervisors at federal agencies to take a more active role in managing the performance of new federal employees, including removing those who perform poorly and improving engagement to ensure they have the tools to succeed.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Centers for Disease Control issued a health alert.
    • “to alert healthcare providers to low vaccination rates against influenza, COVID-19, and RSV (respiratory syncytial virus). Low vaccination rates, coupled with ongoing increases in national and international respiratory disease activity caused by multiple pathogens, including influenza viruses, SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19), and RSV, could lead to more severe disease and increased healthcare capacity strain in the coming weeks. In addition, a recent increase in cases of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) following SARS-CoV-2 infection in the United States has been reported
    • “Healthcare providers should administer influenza, COVID-19, and RSV immunizations now to patients, if recommended. Healthcare providers should recommend antiviral medications for influenza and COVID-19 for all eligible patients, especially patients at high-risk of progression to severe disease such as older adults and people with certain underlying medical conditions.
    • “Healthcare providers should also counsel patients about testing and other preventive measures, including covering coughs/sneezes, staying at home when sick, improving ventilation at home or work, and washing hands to protect themselves and others against respiratory diseases.”
  • Mercer Consulting notes,
    • “With the release in August of the first orally administered medication for postpartum depression, now is a good time to review plan coverage and overall employer support for maternal health. While there are risk factors, postpartum mental health issues can happen to anyone within a year of birth and are often made worse by a lack of social support, including from the workplace. Sadly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that mental-health conditions have become the leading cause of maternal death, contributing to nearly one in four pregnancy-related deaths.” 
  • The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation shares its five best health equity stories of 2023.
  • EHR Intelligence adds, “The Regenstrief Foundation has awarded LOINC and Health Data Standards at Regenstrief Institute a $4.4 million grant to support a global initiative to standardize social determinants of health (SDOH) data into EHR systems.”
  • The CDC reports about “Teenagers in the United States: Sexual Activity, Contraceptive Use, and Childbearing, 2015–2019.”
    • “In 2015–2019, 40.5% of never-married female teenagers (3.8 million), and 38.7% of never-married male teenagers (3.8 million) had ever had vaginal intercourse with an opposite-sex partner. For females this percentage was stable across the four time points, but for males this percentage decreased from the 2002 (45.7%) and 2011–2015 (44.2%) time points.
    • “For teen males, use of any contraception at first sex increased across the four time points, from 82.0% in 2002 to 92.1% in 2015–2019, while no consistent trend was seen for teen females.
    • “Nearly four out of five female teenagers (77.3%) in 2015–2019 used a method of contraception at first sex. Among female teenagers, ever-use of long-acting reversible contraception, which includes intrauterine devices and contraceptive implants, increased from 5.8% to 19.2% from 2011–2015 to 2015–2019.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review lets us know,
    • “Results from a phase 2 trial found a drug-vaccine combination developed by Merck and Moderna cut the risk of recurrence or death in patients with severe melanomas by 49%.
    • “The experimental therapy involves an mRNA vaccine from Moderna in combination with Merck’s cancer drug Keytruda. Patients with resected stage 3 or 4 melanoma who received the combination therapy were 49% less likely to die or have their cancer return within three years, compared to those who received only Keytruda.
    • “The findings build on results from an earlier phase study that followed patients for two years, the drugmakers said in a Dec. 14 news release.” 
  • Bloomberg Prognosis informs us,
    • “Obesity researchers are only beginning to explore what happens after people lose weight with GLP-1 drugs such as Wegovy or Zepbound. Most trials of the drugs have only lasted a year or so. While some type of long-term drug therapy is likely to be needed — just as it is with other diseases like high blood pressure — exactly what form it will take is a big unknown, says Robert Kushner, an obesity doctor at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
    • “This whole idea of maintenance is a huge black hole,” Kushner told my colleague Madison Muller in a recent interview. “We’re going into this area but we don’t have the long-term game figured out.”
  • Per Medscape,
    • “For researchers involved with sleep disorders, developing a pharmacologic treatment for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a bit like searching for the holy grail. P K Schweitzer and colleagues have published the results of the randomized MARIPOSA study assessing a combination of two medicinal products known as AD109, one of the products having an antimuscarinic effect (aroxybutynin), and the other a noradrenergic effect (atomoxetine), in treating this condition. These molecules increase the activity of the dilator muscles in the upper airways by activating the genioglossus muscle with a synergic effect on the upper respiratory tract during sleep. * * *
    • [T]hese results herald important scientific benefits if we consider that Colin Sullivan’s original 1981 research paper, which ushered in the CPAP era, presented the results of just five participants. 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “A year and a half of treatment with the new Alzheimer’s drugs has been shown to reduce the chance of progression to mild stage dementia by about 10%. This benefit comes with notable risks, including small patches of brain bleeding and swelling, which can cause falls and confusion and may require stopping the drug. And there are other barriers. The new Alzheimer’s therapies are very expensive—one year of lecanemab therapy is priced at $26,500. They are difficult to deliver, require an extensive work-up to determine eligibility and involve intensive monitoring for side effects. As many as 8 million Americans are estimated to be living with mild cognitive impairment, but only about 8% to 17.4% will meet all the criteria to take one of these drugs, according to a study published last month in the journal Neurology.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Merck Consulting looks back at top benefit trends from 2023 that it expects to carry over into 2024.
  • Beckers Hospital Review explains
    • “Healthcare leaders have been talking about the transition to value-based care for years, but without significant movement away from fee for service. That could all change in the next three years.
    • “The current economic climate, with tightening margins and increased costs, is pushing health systems to finally make a move.
    • “We will continue to see margin pressure resulting from reimbursement rates not keeping pace with inflationary trends that are escalating staffing and supply chain costs,” said Cliff Megerian, MD, CEO of University Hospitals in Cleveland. “As a result, you will see health systems optimizing their operations, which may include footprint re-evaluation, increasing focus on value-based care and greater utilization of digital technology, such as remote monitoring and telehealth services.”
    • “Dr. Megerian also sees more partnerships and expanded services as the growth mechanism for health systems instead of the traditional brick-and-mortar projects and acquisitions.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Most insurer markets are highly concentrated, including many regions where a single payer dominates at least half of the market share, according to a new analysis from the American Medical Association.
    • “The AMA [hardly a neutral observer] released an updated look at concentration in payer markets and found that across product lines, 73% of metropolitan statistical areas were highly concentrated in 2022. In most (90%) regions, a single payer owns a 30% market share, and in 48% of markets, one payer controls at least 50% of the share.
    • “In 11% of markets, a single insurer has a 70% or higher market share, according to the report.”
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Private equity firm KKR is in talks to buy a 50% stake in healthcare data analytics firm Cotiviti from Veritas Capital, according to The Wall Street Journal. 
    • “The deal, which sources familiar said could be finalized in the coming weeks, would value the health technology company at about $11 billion. Veritas acquired Cotiviti in a take-private deal valued at $4.9 billion in 2018
    • “If the purchase is finalized, it would also rate among the largest U.S. private equity deals announced this year, according to the WSJ.” 

Weekend update

From Washington, DC,

  • The American Medical Association reports,
    • “As of today, patients and physicians have a clear-eyed view on how to protect Medicare from injurious cuts. A bipartisan group of House members— led by Reps. Greg Murphy, M.D., (R-N.C), Danny Davis, (D-Ill.), Brad Wenstrup, D.P.M. (R-Ohio), Jimmy Panetta (D-Calif.), Larry Bucshon, M.D. (R-Ind.) and Michael Burgess, M.D. (R-Texas)—introduced HR 6683 that would eliminate the pending 3.37 percent cuts to Medicare payments. These cuts threaten healthcare access for seniors as well as the viability of physician practices, including many in rural and underserved areas. Canceling the cut is a good new year’s resolution.”
  • The Federal Benefits Open Season ends tomorrow, December 11.
    • OPM explains that “The Federal Benefits Open Season ends at 11:59 pm Eastern Time on Monday, December 11, 2023, for the Federal Employees Dental and Vision Insurance Program (FEDVIP) and the Federal Flexible Spending Account Program (FSAFEDS). Open Season for the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHB) ends at 11:59 pm, in the location of your electronic enrollment system, on Monday, December 11, 2023.”

From the public health front,

  • Fortune Well provides background on pneumonia, the lung disease that is the number one cause of hospital admission in children and adults.
  • Bloomberg Prognosis delves into the old saying, “Feed a cold and starve a fever,” which dates back to the 16th century. Well, it turns out that your best bet is to feed colds and fevers according to Bloomberg.
  • The Washington Post reports,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday warned clinicians and the public about an outbreak of a rare but deadly tick-borne disease that hospitalized five patients in Southern California, killing three of them, after they traveled to or lived in a Mexican border city in recent months.
    • “Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is transmitted by the bite of infected ticks that live primarily on dogs. It’s rare in the United States but it has emerged at epidemic levels in northern Mexico, where more than 2,000 cases, resulting in hundreds of deaths, have been reported in the past five years.
    • “In a health advisory issued late Friday, the CDC said the five patients had been diagnosed since late July. All had traveled to or lived in the city of Tecate, in the northern Mexican state of Baja California, within two weeks of getting sick. All five sought care in hospitals in Southern California, including four pediatric patients. CDC officials declined to provide more details about the individuals to protect their privacy. Three of the patients were U.S. residents, and two were siblings who lived in Mexico. Two deaths were pediatric patients and one was an adult, CDC officials said.”
  • The Post also discusses nitazenes, a street opioid more potent than fentanyl.
    • “Naloxone, the commonly used overdose reversal drug, can revive nitazene users. But nitazenes may complicate rescue efforts if users or medical personnel do not know the drugs have been consumed. In a study published in August, researchers found that a small group of emergency room patients who had taken nitazenes needed more naloxone than people overdosing on fentanyl. Two patients who ingested a compound known as metonitazene suffered heart attacks. One died, according to the study in JAMA Network Open.
    • “The concerns about nitazenes being more potent than fentanyl were confirmed by the study,” said Alex F. Manini, a study co-author and a professor of emergency medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.”

We have big news from the U.S. healthcare business front.

  • The Wall Street Journal reported this afternoon,
    • Cigna abandoned its pursuit of a tie-up with  Humana that would have created a roughly $140 billion giant in the health-insurance industry.
    • “The companies couldn’t come to an agreement on price and other financial terms, according to people familiar with the matter. In the near term, Cigna is turning its focus toward smaller, so-called bolt-on acquisitions. * * *
    • “Instead, Bloomfield, Conn.-based Cigna plans an additional $10 billion of stock buybacks, bringing its total planned repurchases to $11.3 billion. * * *
    • “Humana, the No. 2 Medicare insurer, remains in the midst of its own succession handoff. Humana said in October that Jim Rechtin—previously chief executive of Envision Healthcare—would take over as president and chief operating officer, effective Jan. 8. Rechtin is then to take over as chief executive officer from Bruce Broussard in the back half of 2024.” 

Happy Hanukkah

Hanukkah greeting template. Hand-drawn sketch illustration. Unsplash.

From Washington, DC,

  • The White House posted a fact sheet on the steps that the Administration is taking to lower health and prescription drug costs.
  • Following up on yesterday’s post, BioPharma Dive adds
    • The White House on Thursday took steps to pressure pharmaceutical companies to lower the price of drugs developed with federal funding, backing a plan that would enable the government to sidestep patent protections for those medicines.
    • New draft guidelines published by the National Institutes of Standards and Technology permit government agencies to consider “reasonableness of the price” when evaluating whether to invoke so-called march-in rights, which permit the government to suspend patents when federally funded inventions aren’t made available to the public.
    • The newly published framework gives agencies the power to act “if it appears that the price is extreme, unjustified, and exploitative of a health or safety need.” One example is a “sudden, steep price increase in response to a disaster,” although the initial cost of a drug when it’s launch can also be considered, the guidance said.
    • The agency is seeking further comment on its guidance — the product of an interagency review that began early this year — before publishing a final version.
  • The Senate Finance Committee leadership announced that “the Committee has reported legislation that was marked up in the committee in November. The “Better Mental Health Care, Lower-Cost Drugs, and Extenders Act” addresses a number of important health care priorities in the committee’s jurisdiction.”
    • “The final reported legislative text can be found here. A section by section summary can be found here.”
  • American Hospital News tells us,
    • “The House Energy and Commerce Committee Dec. 6 advanced 19 health care bills, including legislation (H.R. 6364) that would prevent Medicare from publicizing a telehealth provider’s home address when the provider delivers telehealth services from their home. AHA has additionally urged Congress to remove a requirement that these telehealth providers report their home address on Medicare enrollment and claims forms effective Jan. 1, 2025. 
    • “The committee also advanced H.R. 6545, as amended, which included provisions that were part of two other bills that had previously moved through the health subcommittee: H.R. 6366, to extend for one year the Geographic Practice Cost Index floor for physician work under the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule; and H.R. 6369, to extend the 3.5% incentive payment for eligible Advanced Alternative Payment Model participants for the calendar year 2026 period. AHA supports the extension, but would prefer Congress to restore the incentive payment to 5% and remove the legislation’s payment reductions for longstanding participants.”
  • MedPage Today offers insights into a December 5 Senate Finance Committee hearing on drug shortages.
  • The Government Accountability Office issued a report on “improper payments and fraud: how they are related but different.” OPM has focused FEHB carrier attention on this topic in 2023.

In federal benefit news,

  • FedWeek discusses how FEHB premiums compare for retirees versus employees.
  • Govexec reports,
    • “For the third time this year, the federal government’s backlog of pending retirement claims filed by departing federal workers hit a six-year low, as the Office of Personnel Management continues its focus on improving a process that has long pestered agencies and retirees alike.
    • “OPM reported Tuesday that its retirement backlog fell to 15,826 pending cases at the end of November. That’s the second time the inventory fell below 16,000 this year, and the third time this year that the backlog reached a six-year record low, dating back to when it briefly felt to around 14,000 in 2017. OPM’s goal is a “steady state” of 13,000 pending claims at any given time.
    • “In 2023, the retirement backlog has fallen in seven out of 11 months. Last month, the average processing time fell across multiple metrics. Measured on a monthly basis, the average processing time of a retirement claim fell from 73 days in October to 66 last month. And the average processing time so far this fiscal year—or since Oct. 1—fell from 73 at the end of last month to 69 days.”

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Washington Post offers helpful advice on wounds that aren’t healing properly.
  • JAMA Network posts observations on GLP-1 drugs from last October’s Obesity Week meetings. Of note,
    • “Jacinda Nicklas, MD, MPH, gave a talk at the conference showing that females often respond better to newer antiobesity medications than males.
    • “Something that we’re gradually becoming more aware of over time is that GLP-1s, in general, seem to work better in females,” Nicklas, an associate professor of internal medicine at CU School of Medicine who specializes in obesity and women’s health, said in an interview with JAMA.
    • “Nicklas did not present new research, but instead combed through past studies of GLP-1 agonists. She said sex differences haven’t often been separated out in studies and that the majority of participants in the clinical trials are females.
    • “Digging into the data from the STEP trials of semaglutide, she said females had greater weight reduction than males. The same was true in a phase 2 clinical trial of retatrutide for treatment of obesity without type 2 diabetes. Participants who received the highest dose lost an average of 24% of their body weight but females lost much more: about 29% compared with about 20% for males.”
  • MedPage Today tells us that an “Alzheimer’s Blood Test Predicts Who Might Benefit Most From Anti-Amyloid Drugs — Novel two-cutoff approach may reduce need for confirmatory PET scans.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Beckers Hospital Review points out that “U.S. News and World Report released a list December 5 recognizing hundreds of hospitals for maternity care.” Becker’s article includes that list.
  • Beckers Health IT notes,
    • “CVS is planning to release a new mobile healthcare app designed to function as a central hub for its healthcare services.
    • “The app, teased in a video at the company’s Dec. 5 investor meeting, can help consumers manage their prescriptions while providing access to informative health tips. 
    • “Some of the app’s other features include an augmented reality store navigation and a function that allows consumers to schedule appointments at CVS MinuteClinics and CVS-owned Oak Street Health. 
    • “An AI-powered chatbot will also be integrated into the app so consumers can get their questions answered.  
    • “CVS did not detail when the app would be released.”
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • Merck & Co. is ending a late-stage study of the combination of Keytruda and Lynparza in certain lung cancer patients due to an expected failure of the trial.
    • “The Rahway, N.J., drugmaker, which was evaluating Keytruda in combination with maintenance Lynparza in a Phase 3 study in patients with metastatic squamous non-small cell lung cancer, said it is stopping the trial for futility based on the recommendation of an independent data monitoring committee.”

Midweek update

Photo by Hugo Clément on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • STAT New reports,
    • “The White House is throwing its support behind a controversial authority that allows the government to claw back patents for certain high-priced medicines, according to three sources familiar with the plans. It’s an early step that could have major ramifications for the American pharmaceutical industry, depending on whether and how federal officials actually use the authority.
    • “The administration will on Thursday issue a framework for the National Institutes of Health to more broadly use so-called “march-in rights” — a policy that allows it to seize patents from drugmakers whose products rely on federally funded research, according to the three people familiar with the plans. The framework will lay out when the agency might assert this authority, and endorse using a drug’s price in that determination, the sources said. * * *
    • “[T]he framework will likely include a number of conditions limiting its use, two sources said. The public — including pharmaceutical companies — will also get the chance to weigh in on the idea before it is finalized.”
    • Neverthless, the FEHBlog hears the litigation turbobillers revving up.
  • American Hospital Association News tells us,
    • “A bipartisan group of senators this week introduced the Protect Rural Seniors’ Access to Care Act, AHA-supported legislation that would prohibit the Health and Human Services Secretary from finalizing a proposed rule on minimum staffing for long-term care facilities.
    • “AHA has urged the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services not to finalize the rule and instead develop more patient- and workforce-centered approaches focused on ensuring a continual process of safe staffing in nursing facilities.
    • “Over 90 organizations have endorsed the bill, introduced by Sens. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., Roger Marshall, R-Kan., Jon Tester, D-Mont., James Lankford, R-Okla., Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., Roger Wicker, R-Miss., Kyrsten Sinema, I-Ariz., Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Angus King, I-Maine.
    • “Rep. Michelle Fischbach, R-Minn., introduced a House version of the bill in September.”
    •  Fingers crossed for the bill to enacted. The HHS rule is short sighted.

In FEHB Open Season news, Govexec, Federal News Network, and FedWeek offer tips for last-minute shoppers as we approach the end of the Federal Benefits Open Season next Monday. What’s more, FedWeek offers advice on protecting your survivor’s access to FEHB coverage.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Covid-19 test positivity rates increased over the summer and then stabilized earlier this fall. They have recently ticked back up, rising 1.2% for the latest week, according to the CDC’s most recent data. Emergency department visits and hospitalizations are up about 10% over the same period. 
    • “Scientists and public-health officials say that data understates the current virus spread and point to elevated levels of the virus detected in wastewater. Wastewater levels are an early warning for infections, with levels up nationally since mid-October. * * *
    • [Variant] JN.1 * * * is growing rapidly on a global level, says Jesse Bloom, a virologist and professor at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle. It has quickly spread in countries such as France and England. JN.1 has been detected in the U.S., though only as a blip.
    • Epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, a scientific adviser to the CDC and author of the “Your Local Epidemiologist” newsletter [available on Substack], says that while JN.1 isn’t growing as fast as the original Omicron in the winter of 2021-22, its current rate of growth could fuel a wave in Covid-19 cases. 
    • “If that rate continues, we should see dominance in the U.S. around Christmastime, which means that it would really jump-start a wave around New Year’s,” she says.
    • The good news, says Bloom, is that research indicates the new booster—developed to protect against the XBB variants that were dominant this summer—appears to work for the more mutated newer variants, too.
  • Here’s a link to the National Cancer Institute’s research newsletter.
  • Beckers Hospital Review informs us,
    • “More than a third of mothers — around 40 million women — are affected by lingering health issues after giving birth, according to a new study published Dec. 6 in The Lancet Global Health.
    • “However, many of the issues they report experiencing after giving birth extend long after they stop receiving postpartum care, which is where the major issues lie, according to the researchers.
    • “The authors found that after giving birth, 32% of women report low back pain, 19% experience anal incontinence, 11% experience perineal pain, 8-31% are affected by urinary incontinence, and around 11% are affected by secondary infertility issues. Mental health issues like anxiety and depression are also pervasive.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Bloomberg reports,
    • Eli Lilly & Co.’s new weight-loss drug Zepbound is now available at US pharmacies, offering an alternative to rival medications like Novo Nordisk A/S’s Wegovy as supply issues persist. 
    • “Zepbound was approved by the US Food and Drug Administrationin early November as a treatment for people with obesity. Patients with a prescription from their doctor will now be able to get the drug, which was added to the list of available drugs for Express Scripts and Cigna Healthcare this month, Lilly said in a statement Tuesday.”
  • BioPharma Dive points out,
    • “AbbVie is restocking its drug pipeline in a big way, announcing Wednesday an $8.7 billion deal to buy neuroscience-focused Cerevel Therapeutics, just days after agreeing to a similar sized acquisition of the cancer biotechnology company ImmunoGen.
    • “Per the deal, AbbVie will pay $45 per share of Cerevel, which is developing medicines for schizophrenia, dementia and Parkinson’s disease. The buyout price is 22% higher than Cerevel stock’s closing price Wednesday and 73% above what shares closed at Friday, before rumors of a pending deal emerged. 
    • “Both companies’ boards of directors have agreed to the acquisition, which they expect will close sometime around the middle of next year.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • “Elevance Health’s pharmacy benefit manager is launching a new digital pharmacy that aims to make it easier for members to track their prescriptions.
    • “CarelonRx Pharmacy will launch on Jan. 1, and members will be able to connect with pharmacists via text, chat or phone around the clock. The platform will also allow them to check the price of medications for comparison and track their prescriptions throughout the order process, similar to how a customer may follow a pizza order.
    • “The pharmacy will also use push notifications to keep members up-to-date on their prescriptions and will allow them to use text messaging to connect directly with representatives.”
  • and
    • “Many of the past year’s buzziest topics and omnipresent struggles will likely rear their heads as major talking points across 2024, per the year-ahead predictions of Deloitte’s healthcare industry heads.
    • “A disruptive pandemic, rapid digital transformation and mounting cost pressures have taken their toll on the industry’s decisionmakers, Deloitte’s healthcare sector leader Tina Wheeler and senior manager of its health solutions center Wendy Gerhardt wrote in a Wednesday outlook writeup.
    • “The pair highlighted a recent annual survey of 60 executives that found that only 3% of health system executives and 7% of health plan executives had a “positive” outlook for the coming year—down from the respective 15% and 40% of the prior year’s survey.
    • “However, there are some bright spots to consider as the industry undergoes convergence,” which the authors described as “the disruption of traditional health care stakeholders, entrance of new players like retailers and tech companies and the reassembly of a new ecosystem that creates opportunities.”
  • Health Payer Intelligence lets us know,
    • “Cardiovascular, diabetes, and obesity treatments are a critical part of women’s health, and employers can take steps to ensure that women have access to information and care related to their hearts, a flipbook from Northeast Business Group on Health (NEBGH) emphasized.
    • “With women comprising more than half of today’s workforce, employers are making women’s health and well-being a top priority, and rightfully so,” Candice Sherman, chief of executive officer of NEBGH, said in the press release.
    • “Cardiovascular disease in women is underdiagnosed and undertreated. Employers can play an important role in raising awareness and educating employees about heart disease and risk factors like diabetes and obesity as well as providing wellness and benefit programs that support women’s health. We developed this guide to give employers a tool to develop ways to improve the overall heart health of their workforce.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • The Medicare open enrollment period ends on Thursday, December 7. The Federal Benefits Open Season ends next Monday, December 11. While the Affordable Care Act open enrollment period continues into next month, December 15 is the last day to enroll if you want your coverage to begin on January 1, 2024.
  • FEHB open season changes take effect on January 1, 2024, for annuitants and on January 14, 2024, for federal employees. January 14 is the beginning of the first pay period in 2024.
  • Govexec tells us,
    • “In a memo to agency heads on Friday, OPM Associate Director for Workforce Policy and Innovation Veronica Hinton announced that the government’s HR agency had added shared certification functionality to the agency-facing portion of USAJOBS through a tool called Talent Pools.
    • “The Office of Personnel Management is proud to announce a new USAJOBS feature, Talent Pools, to ‘advertise’ available shared certificates of candidates across government,” Hinton wrote. “These certificates, issued under delegated examining procedures through the Competitive Service Act or an OPM-run cross government hiring action, contain candidates who have applied to an open announcement, have been assessed and are available for agencies’ consideration.”
    • “Hinton argued that the new feature should be a boon to agency hiring managers and job applicants alike by removing unnecessary and often duplicative red tape.”
  • Federal News Network informs us,
    • “Federal employees working in cyber now have a way to develop skills, while also seeing what it’s like to work at another agency.
    • “In the hopes of boosting retention of cyber employees, the Office of Personnel Management launched a new platform Monday for agencies to advertise openings in the cyber workforce rotation program.
    • “The rotation program lets agencies offer temporary assignments to federal employees who are currently working in IT, cyber or cyber-related positions in government. Eligible employees can apply for and work at a different agency for between six months and one year before returning to their home agency.
    • “The cyber rotations will advance career opportunities and support employee engagement, satisfaction and retention,” OPM said.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force released two draft recommendation statements for public comment.
    • “Grade B — The USPSTF recommends exercise interventions to prevent falls in community-dwelling adults age 65 years or older who are at increased risk for falls.
    • Grade C — The USPSTF recommends that clinicians individualize the decision to offer multifactorial interventions to prevent falls to community-dwelling adults age 65 years or older who are at increased risk for falls. Existing evidence indicates that the overall net benefit of routinely offering multifactorial interventions to prevent falls is small. When determining whether this service is appropriate for an individual, patients and clinicians should consider the balance of benefits and harms based on the circumstances of prior falls, presence of comorbid medical conditions, and the patient’s values and preferences.”
    • The public comment period on the draft recommendation statements and the related draft evidence reviews ends on January 8, 2024. These recommendations would continue the current grades for these recommendations, last issued in 2018.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Per Beckers Hospital Review,
    • “Leapfrog is winding down 2023 by recognizing 132 hospitals with its Top Hospital Award, a distinction for hospitals that demonstrate the highest performance in the U.S. on quality and patient safety. 
    • “Awarded hospitals are divided into four groups: general hospitals (34), children’s hospitals (8), rural hospitals (15) and teaching hospitals (75). Methodologies for the awards in each category can be found here. Seventeen more hospitals were awarded this year compared to last.”
    • The article lists all 132 recognized hospitals by state.
  • and
    • United Health Foundation released its 2023 America’s Health Rankings Dec. 5, which analyzes the overall health of the 50 states and this year identifies a record-high and rising prevalence of chronic conditions. 
    • For the 2023 rankings, UHF analyzed 87 measures across five categories of health: social and economic factors, physical environment, behaviors, clinical care and health outcomes. This year, eight chronic conditions — arthritis, depression, diabetes, asthma, cancer, cardiovascular diseases, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic kidney disease — reached their highest levels since America’s Health Rankings began tracking these measures in 1990. 
  • STAT News reports,
    • “Given the widespread acceptance that the current flu vaccines could use improvement, are mRNA shots the answer? As the scientific world waits for published data on which to formulate conclusions, STAT spoke to influenza and vaccine experts who see some significant benefits of applying mRNA technology to the production of flu vaccine — but also some serious challenges mRNA manufacturers will face breaking into this already crowded market.” 
    • In short, it’s messy.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “CVS Health, the nation’s largest drugstore chain, will move away from the complex formulas used to set the prices of the prescription drugs it sells, shifting to a simpler model that could upend how American pharmacies are paid. 
    • “Under the plan, CVS’s roughly 9,500 retail pharmacies will get reimbursed by pharmacy-benefit managers and other payers based on the amount that CVS paid for the drugs, in addition to a limited markup and a flat fee to cover the services involved in handling and dispensing the prescriptions. Today, pharmacies are generally paid using complex measures that aren’t directly based on what they spent to purchase specific drugs.
    • “A similar payment model, sometimes known as “cost plus,” has been promoted by entrepreneur Mark Cuban’s eponymous pharmacy company, among others, which have said it brings greater clarity and accountability to drug pricing.  * * *
    • “The company will call the payment model CostVantage. When it starts rolling out next year, the new prices will first become available to consumers paying cash for their prescriptions using an array of drug discount cards. 
    • “In 2025, the setup will be incorporated into CVS pharmacies’ contracts with pharmacy-benefit managers covering drugs paid for under employer plans.
    • “CVS will also introduce a new option for clients of its PBM, CVS Caremark, that will work in tandem with the new retail pharmacy-payment scheme. The new PBM product, called TrueCost, will be based on the net cost of drugs with defined fee structures, the company said. Employers and other clients will have the choice to use it or not.”
  • Fierce Healthcare adds,
    • “After spending nearly $20 billion to pick up Signify Health and Oak Street Health this year, CVS rebranded its health services business to “CVS Healthspire” as it plots its long-term growth strategy.
    • “During the Forbes Healthcare Summit in New York City on Monday, CVS chief executive officer Karen Lynch said Healthspire will encompass CVS’ pharmacy services business, its care delivery assets, including home health company Signify Health and Medicare-focused primary care player Oak Street Health, as well as its new Cordavis operation. Cordavis is a new segment CVS launched in August that aims to work with drugmakers to bring additional biosimilars to market.”
  • BioPharma Dive points out,
    • “Johnson & Johnson expects its pharmaceuticals division will bring to market 20 new therapies for cancer, immune and neurological diseases by 2030, an outlook that underpins the industry giant’s forecast for sales growth of between 5% and 7% through the end of the decade.
    • “Seven of those anticipated drugs have the potential to earn more than $5 billion each in peak annual sales, J&J said Tuesday as part of a business review held three months after the company split off its consumer division. The separation left J&J slimmer, but focused on its higher-margin pharmaceuticals and medical device businesses.
  • Per Healthcare Dive,
    • “Next year is set to be another “make or break” year for nonprofit hospitals as they continue to weather staffing shortages and heightened inflation, according to a report from credit ratings agency Fitch Ratings released on Tuesday.
    • “The outlook for the sector is still “deteriorating” — a rating that’s been in place since August 2022. Fitch does not forecast credit downgrades en masse in the coming year. However, downgrades and negative outlooks will likely continue to outpace upgrades and positive outlooks.
    • “The single largest differentiator in performance will be hospitals’ ability to attract and retain staff in a hypercompetitive landscape, said Kevin Holloran, Fitch senior director and sector head, in a statement.” 

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • STAT News informs us,
    • “The Senate health care committee will consider a sweeping bill next week meant to combat the opioid epidemic, according to four lobbyists and a congressional aide familiar with the legislation. 
    • “The proposal would reauthorize a number of programs first created by the SUPPORT Act, an addiction-focused bill that Congress first passed in 2018. Many of those programs’ authorizations expired earlier this year, however, leading addiction treatment advocates to fret that lawmakers — and specifically the committee’s chairman, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) — no longer view the issue as a priority.    
    • “If passed, the legislation would mark Capitol Hill’s first major action this year on the addiction crisis. Current data shows that roughly 110,000 Americans are dying of drug overdoses each year. Roughly 85,000 of those overdoses involve opioids.” 
  • The Department of Health and Human Services announced,
    • “Today, United States Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is launching the 5-for-5 Connection Challenge, calling on Americans to take five actions over five days to build more connection in their lives. Dr. Murthy recently issued this challenge to students across the country on his “We Are Made to Connect” College Tour, which concluded just last week. Now, as we enter the holiday season, the 5-for-5 Connection Challenge aims to inspire people of all ages to build, strengthen, and prioritize their relationships.
    • “For the next two weeks, from December 4th – December 15th, the Surgeon General will encourage people to take five actions over five days that express gratitude, offer support to, or ask for help from people in their lives. These types of actions are outlined in the Surgeon General’s Advisory on Our Epidemic of Loneliness – PDF as some of the ways that people can catalyze social connection. As outlined in the Advisory, social connection can advance physical, mental, and cognitive health, and it is even associated with a decreased risk of mortality.”
  • MedTech Dive tells us,
    • “The Food and Drug Administration is evaluating the potential for plastic syringes made in China to suffer problems such as leaks and breakages.
    • “Officials began the investigation after receiving information about quality issues associated with “several Chinese manufacturers of syringes” that made them concerned that some devices “may not provide consistent and adequate quality or performance.”
    • “The FDA is advising consumers and healthcare providers to check where syringes are made and “consider using syringes not manufactured in China, if possible.” The advice applies to plastic syringes used for injecting fluids into, or withdrawing fluids from, the body.”

In FEHB Open Season news, Govexec offers helpful, last-minute advice from Kevin Moss.

From the public health and medicare research front,

  • U.S. News and World Report points out,
    • “After a period of limited change, COVID-19 activity is increasing again especially in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions,” the CDC said in a report published Friday.
    • “Federal health officials are likely watching the increase given that they expect a “moderate” winter wave of coronavirus and this could be the start of it. Holiday gatherings and travel are also typically followed by an increase in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.
    • “COVID-19 vaccination rates, meanwhile, have been disappointing for many.
    • “CDC Director Mandy Cohen told Congress this week that about 16% of Americans have gotten the updated COVID-19 vaccine.
    • “That’s not enough,” Cohen said.”
  • Beckers Hospital Review notes,
    • “So far this year, the CDC estimates there have been at least 1.8 million illnesses, 17,000 hospitalizations, and 1,100 deaths from flu in the U.S. 
    • “Influenza A continues to be the dominant strain in circulation, making up around 82% of cases, while influenza B is only accounting for around 18%. 
    • “Louisiana and South Carolina are still reporting the highest levels of flu activity in the country. 
    • “Nine states are experiencing high activity levels, but less than the two states above, including: California, New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Colorado, Florida and Tennessee. 
    • “Cases are also high in New York City and Puerto Rico.”
  • The Journal of the American Medical Association presented the following study results:
    • Question  Is smoking still decreasing among US adults and do the trends vary by age, income, and race and ethnicity?
    • Findings  In this cross-sectional study of 353 555 adults responding to the 2011 to 2022 National Health Interview Surveys, adults younger than 40 years had dramatic declines in smoking prevalence during the last decade, especially among those with higher incomes. In contrast, relatively slow declines were observed among adults aged 40 to 64 years, with no decrease in smoking among those 65 years or older.
    • Meaning  These findings suggest that the precipitous decline in smoking among younger adults should be maintained, but that additional efforts are required to further reduce smoking in older adults.”
  • The American Medical Association explains “What doctors wish patients knew to improve their mental health.”
  • Per Endocrinology Advisor, “Decreased mortality risk is associated with concomitant reductions in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and body weight among patients with type 2 diabetes, according to study results published in Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare profiles ten women of influence in U.S. healthcare. Check it out.
  • BioPharma Dive reports
    • “Roche on Monday agreed to acquire biotechnology company Carmot Therapeutics in a deal that bulks up the Swiss pharmaceutical giant’s pipeline with a group of weight loss drugs in early clinical testing.
    • “Roche will pay $2.7 billion upfront for the Berkeley, California-based Carmot. Roche could owe as much as $400 million more in future payments to Carmot shareholders, among them The Column Group and RA Capital, if certain milestones are met. The companies expect the acquisition to close next year.
    • “The deal hands Roche a trio of drugs in human testing for obesity, an area of pharmaceutical research that has been catalyzed by the success of weight loss medicines like Wegovy and Zepbound. Their progress has fueled a gold rush among large drugmakers, a number of which are either advancing in-house medicines or inking deals to acquire new prospects.”
  • and
    • “The Food and Drug Administration granted conditional approval to Eli Lilly’s oral cancer drug Jaypirca in two types of blood cancer, expanding its use from a rare type of lymphoma to people with leukemia and lymphoma patients who have previously received two other treatments, the company said Friday.
    • “Jaypirca is the fourth of a group of drugs called BTK inhibitors, a class that includes AbbVie and Johnson & Johnson’s Imbruvica and AstraZeneca’s Calquence. It gained approval earlier this year and posted $42 million in sales through Sept. 30.
    • “With this approval, Jaypirca can now be used in chronic lymphocytic leukemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma after patients have been treated with AbbVie and Roche’s Venclexta and another BTK inhibitor. Lilly said a Phase 3 trial meant to confirm Jaypirca’s accelerated approval has already met its primary goal.”
  • HR Dive discusses “Why EAPs go unused despite growing mental health awareness; Many factors contribute to the historic underutilization of employee assistance programs, despite their value as an access point to quality care.”
  • Medscape offers an infographic on how doctors grade their EHR systems while MedCity News explains how improved coding quality by healthcare providers can prevent denials and improve cash flow.
  • Health Payer Intelligence adds,
    • “Payers are investing in healthcare IT resources to support cost optimization and improve member experience, according to a study from EY-Parthenon and KLAS Research.
    • “As payers face operational and financial pressures, they are turning to healthcare IT solutions for help. Researchers sought to understand what strategies payers prioritize, how much they spend on healthcare IT resources, and what future investments look like.
    • “The study findings reflect responses from over 100 executives across payer entities serving commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid populations. Around 70 percent of respondents were traditional payers; the remaining were provider-sponsored, third-party administrators, and management services organizations.”
  • According to Healthcare Dive,
    • “A merger between major health insurers Cigna and Humana would go through the wringer of an intense antitrust review, but could come out finalized, experts say.
    • “Though, to receive the regulatory green light, a combined company would probably have to emerge looking different from the Cigna and Humana of today. * * *
    • “Gaining regulatory approval — especially if a challenge further ties up the process in the courts — could set a deal’s finalization back by a year or more. But, due to a lack of direct competition between the two, Cigna and Humana could be allowed to combine, creating a healthcare powerhouse with roughly $300 billion in annual revenue.”
  • and
    • “For-profit hospital chain HCA Healthcare’s Houston affiliate announced last week it completed its acquisition of 11 free-standing emergency departments from SignatureCare Emergency Centers. 
    • “HCA Houston Healthcare, which operates a network of 13 hospitals and nine outpatient surgery centers, now has 26 free-standing emergency departments in the area in addition to hospital-based emergency rooms, according to a Friday press release.
    • “The SignatureCare centers will be re-branded to HCA Houston ER 24/7. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
  • and
    • “Rural hospital chain Lifepoint Health and Ascension Saint Thomas announced a joint venture last week to co-own Highpoint Health, a four-hospital system in Tennessee currently operated by Brentwood, Tennessee-based Lifepoint.
    • “The hospitals and care sites will be co-branded with Ascension Saint Thomas, but will be majority-owned and operated by Lifepoint, according to the release. The companies declined to comment on the cost of the buy-in.
    • “The health systems have partnered before. Ascension Saint Thomas partnered with Kindred Rehabilitation Services, a Lifepoint business unit, in 2022 to jointly own Ascension Saint Thomas Rehabilitation Hospital in Nashville.” 

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Yesterday, OPM’s Office of Inspector General posted its Semi-annual Report to Congress for September 30, 2023. OPM has not yet posted its Management Response thereto.
  • The HHS Office of Inspector General also issued its latest Semi-annual Report to Congress.
  • Federal News Network reports that federal employees in Japan continue to experience healthcare access problems.
  • The Director of HHS’s Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality explains how the Biden Administration is tackling financial strains on healthcare consumers.

From the public health and medical research front,

  • Beckers Clinical Leadership tells us,
    • “CDC Director Mandy Cohen, MD, said the season of respiratory syncytial virus is in “full swing” as flu slowly begins and COVID-19 leads the most hospitalizations and deaths, CNN reported Nov. 30. 
    • “What to know about COVID-19, RSV and flu:
      • COVID-19: Dr. Cohen said while COVID-19 is “relatively low,” it remains the primary reason for new respiratory admissions and deaths. In November, each week saw between 14,000 and 18,000 hospitalizations and about 1,000 deaths. 
        • “The CDC revealed a new wastewater data tracking dashboard to track local and national trends per variant, and the dashboard also tracks mpox viruses. 
        • “Between Nov. 1 and Nov. 20, the most recent CDC information available, the proportion of wastewater sites reporting high increases of SARS-CoV-2 samples grew from 22% to 32%. During the same time, the proportion of wastewater sites finding decreasing samples slimmed from 60% to 49%. 
      • RSV: “Hospitalizations for RSV have been slightly rising, with RSV accounting for 0.5% of all hospitalizations in late October and 0.8% as of Nov. 18, according to the CDC. Ten states and New York City are reporting high levels of respiratory virus activity. Louisiana and South Carolina reported “very high” respiratory virus activity levels and Alabama, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, New Mexico and Texas are seeing “high” levels.
      • Flu: “The flu season is beginning as national estimates reveal 3.9% of healthcare visits were for flu for the week ending Nov. 25, a 0.2 percentage point increase from the prior week.  Most of the U.S. is reporting an increase in flu, with hot spots appearing in the South Central, Southeast, Mountain and West Coast regions. Twenty-five states and territories are reporting minimal flu activity.
        • “Hospitalizations for flu have grown for the third consecutive week.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging people to avoid eating certain cantaloupe products amid a salmonella outbreak that has resulted in at least two deaths in the U.S.
    • “At least 117 people across 34 states have become sick after eating contaminated cantaloupe since mid-October, according to the CDC. At least 61 people have been hospitalized and two have died in Minnesota. The federal agency said the number of people sickened by the outbreak is likely much higher.
    • “The agency said it’s particularly concerned about the outbreak because the illnesses have been severe and some have occurred in long-term-care facilities and child-care centers. Fourteen people in long-term-care facilities and seven children who attended child-care facilities have been sickened, the CDC said.”
  • STAT News informs us,
    • “Advances in treatments for congenital heart abnormalities mean more patients are living into adulthood, with over 2 million adults estimated to have the condition in the U.S. But that means more are also developing heart failure as they grow older — and many aren’t receiving proper care.
    • “A new study published this week in the Journal of the American Heart Association found that while hospitalizations of adults with congenital heart disease stayed stable from 2010 to 2020, the proportion of admissions for those who have heart failure more than doubled from 6.6% to 14%.
    • “These patients with heart failure also had worse outcomes after hospitalization, with an 86% higher risk of death, a 73% higher risk of major heart and brain complications, and a 26% higher risk of hospital readmission.
    • “The findings suggest that adults with congenital heart disease who also have heart failure are an especially high-risk population, and they may need closer monitoring and unique treatment regimens.”
  • Health Day offers these key takeaways from recent study results:
    • “Sticking to your scheduled mammograms can significantly reduce your risk of death from breast cancer
    • “Women who got all their scheduled mammograms had a 66% to 72% reduced risk of breast cancer death
    • “Regular mammograms make it more likely that breast cancers can be caught early, when they are more treatable.”
  • Mercer Consulting discusses why an end to HIV in our country is in sight and shares five ways to address HIV in the workplace.
  • The American Hospital Association News adds
    • “Nine out of 10 people receiving medical care for HIV through the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program in 2022 were virally suppressed, meaning they cannot sexually transmit the virus if they take their HIV medication as prescribed, according to the latest annual data from the Health Resources and Services Administration program.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • EBRI posted Fast Facts about the changing nature of primary care in our country.
    • “Among users of primary care, 95–97 percent utilized it in an office setting prior to 2020, but only 86 percent did so from 2020–2021 as employees began using telemedicine (7–8 percent) and urgent care clinics (3–4 percent) with greater frequency due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • “There has been a consistent downward trend in the share of employees whose primary care office visits are at a general/family practice, falling from 42 percent in 2013 to 37 percent in 2021. In addition, primary care office visits at internal medicine providers have fallen from 21 percent in 2013 to 17 percent in 2021.
    • “Finally, the provision of primary care by a medical doctor has fallen from 9 percent in 2013 to 4 percent in 2021. In contrast, primary are provision by nurse practitioners and physician assistants has risen over time. The share of employees whose primary care office visits have been with a physician assistant rose from 2 percent in 2013 to 6 percent in 2021.
    • “The corresponding change for nurse practitioners has been from 4 percent in 2013 to 16 percent in 2021.”
  • BioPharma Dive lets us know,
    • “Pfizer will not advance a twice-daily dose of an experimental obesity drug into further testing after results from a mid-stage study showed high rates of gastrointestinal side effects and participant dropout. 
    • “Treatment did lead to significant weight loss compared to placebo over the course of the Phase 2b study. Placebo-adjusted reductions in body weight ranged from 8% to 13% at 32 weeks, Pfizer said in a statement Friday. Discontinuation rates were more than 50% on some drug doses, however.
    • “Moving forward, Pfizer will turn its focus to a once-daily version that’s currently being tested in a study meant to determine how the drug’s processed by the body. Data are expected in the first half of next year.”
  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • “Community Health Systems announced on Friday it has completed the sale of three Florida hospitals to Tampa General Hospital for about $294 million in cash.
    • “The deal includes 120-bed Bravera Health Brooksville, 124-bed Bravera Health Spring Hill and 128-bed Bravera Health Seven Rivers, as well as their associated assets, physician clinic operations and outpatient services, according to a press release.
    • “The sale allows the for-profit hospital operator to “deliberately focus our resources in markets that we deem as most investable and that can produce greater growth and returns over the long term,” CHS CEO Tim Hingtgen said during a call with investors shortly after the divestiture was announced this summer.” 
  • MedCity News explains how payers can break down barriers that prevent access to value-based virtual care.
  • Per Fierce Healthcare,
    • Daniel Jones, who pens the investment newsletter Crude Value Insights, wrote in an analysis that because Cigna and Humana have fairly different focuses despite both being large health plans, there is potential that the merger could be viewed as more of a vertical deal than a horizontal one, which is less likely to stymie competition.
    • Cigna is a far smaller player in the Medicare Advantage space while Humana’s insurance business is overwhelmingly centered in MA. Humana, meanwhile, has limited reach in the commercial market, where Cigna has a far greater footprint.
  • Beckers Payer Issues adds,
    • “The sale of Cigna’s Medicare Advantage business would remove one hurdle in the company’s reported goal to merge with Humana, and Health Care Service Corp. might be part of that equation, Bloomberg reported Nov. 29.”

Thanksgiving Weekend Update

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

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

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

From the public health front,

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

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

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