Monday Roundup

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From Washington, DC

  • OPM has finalized a rule
    • “to expand eligibility for enrollment in the Federal Employees Dental and Vision Insurance Program (FEDVIP) to additional categories of Federal employees and certain Postal employees. This rule also updates the provisions on enrollment for active duty service members who become eligible for FEDVIP as uniformed service retirees pursuant to the National Defense Authorization Act of 2017 (fiscal year 2017 (FY17) NDAA). In addition, this rule adds exceptions to decrease an enrollment type and to cancel an enrollment for certain enrollees who may become eligible for dental and/or vision services from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).” 
  • Per Medscape, the Food and Drug Administration
    • “today approved quizartinib (Vanflyta) for adults with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) that carries the FLT3-ITD genetic mutation.
    • “The FDA also approved the LeukoStrat CDx FLT3 Mutation Assay to determine whether patients have this mutation.
    • “The agency granted quizartinib a first-line indication for use in combination with standard chemotherapy — cytarabine and anthracycline induction followed by cytarabine consolidation — and as maintenance monotherapy afterward, in adults whose tumors express FLT3-ITD.” * * *
    • “In a company press release, the drug’s manufacturer Daiichi Sankyo said quizartinib will be available in the US soon.”
  • Per Fierce Healthcare, the Federal Trade Commission expanded its war on prescription benefit managers by withdrawing earlier guidance that protected PBMs.

Speaking of war, STAT News reports

  • “A new lawsuit accuses Cigna of using an algorithm to automatically deny claims in bulk instead of individually reviewing each case, putting patients on the hook for bills the health insurer otherwise would have paid.
  • “The complaint filed Monday in the Eastern District of California says Cigna uses a system called PXDX to identify discrepancies between diagnoses and the tests and services it covers for those ailments. The company then allegedly denies claims in bulk without looking into each coverage request. California law requires insurers to give each claim a “thorough, fair, and objective investigation.”

For the past twenty years, health claims have been submitted and processed electronically. This is nothing new. The article adds that Cigna plans to mount a defense. The FEHBlog trusts that the court will see the light.

From the public health front,

  • MedPage Today tells us
    • “The prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections in pregnant women increased 16-fold over a 21-year period, with associated higher risks of adverse perinatal outcomes, according to a cross-sectional study.
    • “Among more than 70 million hospital admissions for childbirth or spontaneous abortion in the U.S. from 1998 through 2018, the prevalence of HCV-positive pregnancies increased from 0.34 (95% CI 0.26-0.41) cases per 1,000 pregnancies to 5.3 (95% CI 4.9-5.7) cases per 1,000 pregnancies, reported Po-Hung (Victor) Chen, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, and colleagues in JAMA Network Open. * * *
    • “Overall, our data support the recommendations for universal HCV screening with each pregnancy proposed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists,” Chen and team wrote. “Perinatal care and delivery may be the initial healthcare exposure for many women. These touchpoints represent an opportunity for health care professionals to identify HCV infection and link women and their children to appropriate specialist care.”

In medical and drug research news

  • The National Institutes of Health announced,
    • “Statins, a class of cholesterol-lowering medications, may offset the high risk of cardiovascular disease in people living with HIV by more than a third, potentially preventing one in five major cardiovascular events or premature deaths in this population. People living with HIV can have a 50-100% increased risk for cardiovascular disease. The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
    • “This research suggests that statins may provide an accessible, cost-effective measure to improve the cardiovascular health and quality of life for people living with HIV,” said Gary H. Gibbons, M.D., director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), a study funder. “Additional research can further expand on this effect while providing a roadmap to rapidly translate research findings into clinical practice.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports
    • “Roche will partner with Alnylam Pharmaceuticals to study a promising new treatment for high blood pressure, becoming the latest large drugmaker to commit in a big way to the often lengthy and expensive process of developing new medicines for the heart. 
    • “Through a deal announced Monday, Roche will pay Alnylam more than $300 million upfront to share rights to the experimental treatment, called zilebesiran. The Swiss pharmaceutical company will also fund the majority of the costs for a large clinical trial to test whether zilebesiran can lower the risk of dangerous cardiovascular events like heart attacks and strokes. 
    • “With this collaboration, we now can develop zilebesiran in a more robust way, allowing us to have cardiovascular outcomes data in hand at launch to ensure results relevant not only for health authorities but also for access and clinical practice in order to ultimately reach as many patients as possible,” Alnylam CEO Yvonne Greenstreet said in a statement.” 
  • BioPharma Dive adds
    • “Gilead Sciences has stopped a closely watched trial involving an experimental cancer drug the company acquired three years ago in a roughly $5 billion deal, marking the latest setback in the company’s plans to grow its oncology business.
    • “According to Gilead, a Phase 3 study testing its drug magrolimab in patients with the bone marrow cancer myelodysplastic syndrome, or MDS, was discontinued because treatment proved ineffective at an interim analysis. Safety findings were “consistent” with the drug’s profile and what’s typically observed with MDS patients, the company said late Friday. It didn’t provide details.
    • “Gilead acquired magrolimab through a buyout of biotechnology company Forty Seven. The drug is still being evaluated in two other pivotal trials in acute myeloid leukemia, with results expected next year. However, after Friday’s announcement, Wall Street analysts appear to be viewing those trials with more skepticism.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • MedCity News points out that “When asked what the key issues influencing benefits strategy are, 80% of employers said competition for talent, 67% said rising costs, 41% said a focus on inclusion and diversity and 39% said increasing mental health problems, according to a recent Willis Towers Watson survey.”
  • Fierce Healthcare relates
    • “While payers are facing headwinds going into the latter part of this year, the ongoing financial impacts of healthcare’s labor shortage will be felt in the hospital sector far longer, according to a new report from analysts at Moody’s Investors Service.
    • “The “acute” impacts of labor issues have tapered off, according to the report, but “the budgetary aftershocks will reverberate for years to come.” The analysts expect that the labor issues will pull down hospitals’ operating results through 2024, if not longer.
    • “For example, though conditions have improved, the industry’s nursing shortage is expected to extend through 2030, according to projections from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This will force hospitals and other providers to develop and roll out new strategies that blunt the impacts, the Moody’s analysts said.
    • “Hospitals are benefiting from some expense relief as staffing has become easier and the need to use pricey contract labor has decreased,” the analysts wrote in the report. “But it will take time for improved margins to follow, and labor issues will remain an underlying sector challenge.”

Weekend update

Photo by Michele Orallo on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

From the mental health coverage front —

  • Fierce Healthcare tells us,
    • “The United Health Foundation, the company’s philanthropic arm, each year releases America’s Health Rankings, which dive into major healthcare trends across the country. The latest analysis of that data examines how different populations are experiencing the rising tide of mental health concerns.
    • “For example, adults with disabilities were 3.5 times more likely to report frequent mental distress and 3.5 times more likely to have had a major depressive episode in the last year.
    • “This data is highlighting the need to take a closer look,” said Yusra Benhalim, M.D., senior national medical director at Optum Behavioral Health Solutions, in an interview. “I think we need to kind of lean in a little bit more and understand what the experience is like for individuals with disabilities.”
  • Health Affairs Forefront considers whether the private sector lead in addressing this mental health equity crisis. The FEHBlog thinks it can.

From the generative AI front —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “Hundreds of doctors across the U.S. have entrusted recordings of their private talks with patients to a startup promising to turn the conversations into usable medical records through artificial intelligence.
    • “The technology makes multiple errors while producing the reports, such as failing to use correct medical terminology and adding medicines a patient isn’t taking, according to current and former workers.
    • “To fix those errors, health-tech startup DeepScribe relies on 200 human contractors to listen to the medical conversations and revise the records, the company’s founders said. The workers also use Google searches to find billing codes.”
  • This reminds the FEHBlog of a situation that occurred nearly thirty years ago. A client decided to use then new scanning technology to feed paper claims into its claims system for auto-processing. The client wound up needing at least a hundred people to correct errors in the scans. Over time the technology improved, and human assistance dropped off to reasonable levels. The FEHBlog is certain that, in due time, generative AI will be able to create these reports without human assistance.

From the U.S. healthcare business front, NPR warns providers have begun to bill patients and their health plans for responding to messages posted on the provider’s patient portal. Before long, generative AI will be able to reply on the doctor’s behalf.

From the wellness front, Fortune Well shares expert advice on four habits that aging folks need to adopt, besides exercise, to stay fit.

Check out last Monday’s Econtalk episode in which Russ Roberts interviews Lydia Dugdale about her book, the Lost Art of Dying.

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From Washington, DC,

  • Govexec tells us, “The Office of Personnel Management on Friday proposed new regulations aimed at granting federal agencies greater flexibility in selecting new federal employees during the hiring process.” The public comment deadline is September 19, 2023.
  • Federal News Network offers a table of federal government return-to-office policies.
  • The Society for Human Resource Management informs us,
    • “The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced Friday a new Form I-9—which has been streamlined and shortened—that employers should use beginning Aug. 1, 2023.
    • “Employers may continue to use the older Form I-9 (Rev. 10/21/19)  through Oct. 31., 2023. After that date, they will be subject to penalties if they use the older form. The new version will not be available for downloading until Aug. 1.  
    • “Additionally, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued a final rule that allows the agency to create a framework under which employers could implement alternative document examination procedures, such as remote document examination. The new form subsequently has a checkbox to indicate when an employee’s Form I-9 documentation was examined using a DHS-authorized alternative procedure.
    • “At this time, the final rule only allows employers using E-Verify to use alternative verification methods.”
  • Healthcare Dive notes
    • “The Federal Trade Commission and the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights are warning hospitals and telehealth companies about embedding online tracking technologies on their websites or apps, saying the trackers risk exposing consumers’ personal health data to third parties. 
    • “The trackers, like the Meta Pixel or Google Analytics, collect identifiable information about users and could reveal information about health conditions, diagnoses, treatments, frequency of visits and more, the agencies wrote in a letter to about 130 health systems and telehealth providers.
    • “The warning marks the latest move from regulators regarding the healthcare industry’s use of tracking technologies, which monitor user behavior on websites. Sharing consumers’ health data with third parties, like advertisers, has been a recent target of FTC oversight.”

Following up on the tornado that struck a Pfizer factory in Rocky Mount, NC, STAT News reports

  • “Pfizer says a tornado that ripped through a key manufacturing plant in North Carolina does not appear to have caused “any major damage” to areas that produce medicines.
  • “The company reported most damage from the storm occurred at a warehouse that stores raw materials, packaging supplies, and finished medicines awaiting release by quality assurance personnel. As a result, it remains unclear about the extent to which destruction at the facility — which produces nearly 8% of all sterile injectables used in U.S. hospitals — will exacerbate a growing shortage of prescription drugs across the country.”

The Food and Drug Administration also issued a report on the incident.

From the medical malpractice front, STAT News points out

  • “A new study published this week in BMJ, * * * estimates that “371,000 people die every year following a misdiagnosis, and 424,000 are permanently disabled — a total of 800,000 people suffering “serious harm,” said David Newman-Toker, the lead author of the paper and a professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and director of its Center for Diagnostic Excellence. Settling on an exact number is hard because many cases of misdiagnosis go undetected, he said. It could be fewer than his study identified or more — between half a million and a million — though in any event, it would be the most common cause of death or disability due to medical malpractice. 
  • “He likens the issue of misdiagnosis to an iceberg, saying cases leading to death and disability are but a small fraction of the problem. “We focused here on the serious harms, but the number of diagnostic errors that happen out there in the U.S. each year is probably somewhere on the order of magnitude of 50 to 100 million,” he said. “If you actually look, you see it’s happening all the time.” 
  • “But misdiagnoses typically don’t lead to severe consequences because, most times, people aren’t visiting the doctor with a serious condition. “The risk level just walking through the door in the doctor’s office that something horrible is going to happen to you because of a diagnostic error is actually quite low,” said Newman-Toker.”

In related news “[The American Hospital Association] AHA today released its quarterly Health Care Plan Accountability Update, featuring the latest news on AHA efforts to hold commercial health insurers accountable for policies that can delay care for patients, burden health care providers and add unnecessary costs to the health care system. READ MORE.”

From the factoid front —

  • HealthEquity suggests three ways to drive health savings account plan adoption.
  • Beckers Payer Issues points out how seven payers are using artificial intelligence.
  • MedTech Dive reports, “Intuitive Surgical posted strong robotic volume growth in the second quarter and raised its full-year procedure outlook but said patient interest in new weight-loss drugs is curbing demand for bariatric surgeries.”

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington, DC —

  • Govexec informs us
    • “The Senate continues to advance spending bills without controversy and with bipartisan support, offering hope that lawmakers will avoid a lapse in appropriations this fall. 
    • “The [Senate Appropriations Committee] has now approved eight of the 12 annual must-pass spending measures, most of which have won unanimous approval. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who chairs the appropriations committee, announced Thursday her panel would hold votes on the final four funding packages next week. Murray said ahead of Thursday’s votes that she was focusing on passing bills “that can actually be signed into law.”  * * *
    • “The House Appropriations Committee has approved 10 of the 12 spending bills, all largely along party-line votes. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said on Wednesday he planned to bring those to the House floor soon, adding his intention was to have the process complete before current funding expires on Sept. 30. Without commenting on the vast differences between the two sets of bills, McCarthy called it “a positive” that the Senate was already moving its spending measures.”
  • The Affordable Care Act regulators issued a letter encouraging employers and other plan sponsors to extend the special employer-sponsored health plan enrollment period for employees who lost Medicaid or CHIP coverage for themselves or family members beyond the sixty days required by law.  
  • The Department of Health and Human Services released guidance “to clarify the prohibition at 45 CFR § 162.412(b) that a health plan may not require a healthcare provider that has been assigned an NPI to obtain an additional NPI.” However, “it does not prohibit a health plan from requiring that a subpart that does not have a unique NPI obtain a unique NPI as a condition of enrollment with the health plan.”
  • The American Academy of Actuaries posted its annual report outlining the factors likely to drive premium changes in the individual and small group insurance markets for the next plan year, in this case, 2024. 

From the public health front —

  • MedPage Today informs us,
    • “A second booster with an mRNA bivalent vaccine offered the best protection against severe COVID-19 due to the Omicron BA.5 variant in older adults, and protection appeared to wane less than with the monovalent shot, a large retrospective study out of Italy showed.”
  • The National Institutes of Health announced
    • “Omega-3 fatty acids, which are abundant in fish and fish oil supplements, appear promising for maintaining lung health, according to new evidence from a large, multi-faceted study in healthy adults supported by the National Institutes of Health. The study provides the strongest evidence to date of this association and underscores the importance of including omega-3 fatty acids in the diet, especially given that many Americans do not meet current guidelines. Funded largely by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), part of NIH, the study results were published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.” 
  • Cigna Healthcare offers five tips for healthier sleep.

From the EHR interoperability front, check out this fascinating Computer World update

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Healthcare Dive reports,
    • More than three years after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, only 1% of primary care clinicians surveyed by the Larry A. Green Center and the Primary Care Collaborative believe their practice has fully recovered from its impacts, and 61% characterize U.S. primary care as “crumbling.”
    • “Nearly 80% of respondents felt the current workforce is undersized to meet patient needs, and just 19% of clinicians report their practices are fully staffed.
    • “The results are emblematic of a “larger national crisis,” and policymakers must act to reinforce primary care, said Rebecca Etz, co-director of the Larry A. Green Center, in a statement. “ … It is not a matter of if, but when there will be another pandemic … If we don’t act soon, primary care won’t be there when it happens.
  • Beckers Hospital Review tells us,
    • “Severe winds from an EF-3 tornado on July 19 crushed a North Carolina Pfizer manufacturing plant that made nearly 25 percent of the drugmaker’s sterile injectables used by U.S. hospitals. 
    • “The facility manufactured and stored injectable drugs, and 50,000 pallets of therapies were destroyed by wind and rain, according to local news outlets, NBC affiliate WRAL and CBS affiliate WNCN
    • “At 1.4 million square feet, the facility was one of the largest sterile injectable plants in the world, according to Pfizer’s website. The site made nearly 400 million products every year, including solutions of anesthesia, analgesia, therapeutics, anti-infectives and neuromuscular blockers.
    • “The tornado touched down in Rocky Mount, N.C., at 12:36 p.m., according to a tweet from the county’s government.
    • “Pfizer said there are no reports of workers with serious injuries.” 
  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “A surge in heart procedures and higher demand for cold and flu medicines helped Johnson & Johnson report solid gains in revenue and profit for the second quarter.
    • “J&J’s quarterly earnings are regarded as a bellwether for healthcare because the company has large pharmaceutical, medical-device and consumer-health divisions. The overall improvement in J&J’s results suggests an easing of some of the challenges that have dogged health-product makers in recent years: supply-chain constraints, hospital staffing shortages and Covid-19 pandemic restrictions. “You now have hospital staffing much more on a routine cadence,” J&J Chief Financial Officer Joseph Wolk said in an interview Thursday.” 
  • Healthcare Dive adds,
    • “Abbott on Thursday posted a decline in second-quarter net earnings as demand for its COVID-19 testing supplies continued to wane, but the company raised the outlook for its base business on higher sales of its medical devices and nutrition products.
    • “Excluding COVID-19 tests, organic sales exceeded the company’s expectations with a nearly 12% increase in the quarter.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management explores the limited impact that the Supreme Court’s affirmative action in education decision may have on employer affirmative action and diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility programs.

Midweek Update

From Washington, DC,

  • Fedweek compares the House and Senate versions of the appropriations bill that funds OPM and the FEHBP.
  • The Federal Times reports,
    • “Reproductive health advocacy groups and Democratic lawmakers are pressing the Office of Personnel Management on why some insurers offer fewer infertility treatments than they’re required to in federal employee health plans.
    • “In a letter to OPM Director Kiran Ahuja obtained by Federal Times, Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) and Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) said certain providers under the Federal Employee Benefits Program — which serves 8 million beneficiaries — are denying coverage of standard fertility preservation treatments. * * *
    • “For the 2023 plan year, OPM announced it was requiring all FEHB carriers to “provide coverage for standard fertility preservation procedures for … iatrogenic infertility.” Per KFF, “Iatrogenic, or medically induced, infertility refers to when a person becomes infertile due to a medical procedure done to treat another problem, most often chemotherapy or radiation for cancer.”
  • The Federal Times article contends that FEHB plans are not fully compliant with this mandate. OPM has created a process for members to ask for OPM review of claim decisions (following internal plan reconsideration). This process can work out any compliance kinks.
  • InsiderNJ adds,
    • “Today, U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) and U.S. Representative Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) reintroduced the bicameral Access to Infertility Treatment and Care Act, legislation that would require more health insurers to provide coverage for infertility treatment, as well as fertility preservation services for individuals who undergo medically necessary procedures that may cause infertility, such as chemotherapy. * * *
    • “The full text of the bill can be found here.”
  • AHA News informs us,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice July 19 released for comment through Sept. 18 updated guidance describing how the agencies review mergers and acquisitions to determine compliance with federal antitrust laws. The agencies said the document outlines 13 principles they may use when determining whether a merger is unlawfully anticompetitive and clarifies the frameworks and tools they may use when analyzing a merger with respect to each guideline. 
    • “FTC and DOJ initiated the update with a request for public input in January 2022, and plan to use the comments to update the draft before finalizing the guidelines. For more on the draft guidelines, see the agencies’ fact sheet. AHA intends to submit comments on the proposed guidelines.”
  • Washington Technology tells us,
    • “Maximus is locked in a protest fight after the U.S. Postal Service chose Deloitte Consulting for a $175 million contract to the consulting firm to build a new health benefits system.
    • “By 2025, USPS plans to move that new system for delivering health insurance benefits to its employees. USPS tasked Deloitte Consulting to build the system that would include enrollment processing, eligibility determinations, data analytics and other features, according to solicitation documents on GovTribe.
    • “Maximus filed a protest with the Government Accountability Office on Tuesday to challenge the award. The Office of Personnel Management is managing the contract on behalf of the Postal Service. * * *
    • “A decision from GAO is due Oct. 26.”
  • Cardiovascular Business points out that “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has announced that Medtronic is recalling nearly 350,000 implantable cardiac devices due to continued issues with their ability to deliver high voltage therapy when necessary.”

From the public health front –

  • The Wall Street Journal reports,
    • “You might know a Covid-19 super-dodger who was infected with the virus but didn’t get sick. Their luck could be written in their genes
    • “A DNA variation that affects the immune system can boost a person’s odds of avoiding Covid-19 symptoms, a study found. The work, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, helps explain why some people infected with the virus that causes Covid-19 don’t fall ill
    • “The T cells of some people with the variation can find and kill the virus without having seen it before, researchers said. That is because the part of the virus their T cells home in on is similar enough to common coronaviruses they have already encountered.  
    • “There are people out there that have got strong prior immunity from their common coronavirus exposures,” said Danny Altmann, a professor of immunology at Imperial College London, who wasn’t involved in the study. The work could help researchers design better vaccines, Altmann said.” 
  • STAT News relates,
    • “Cancer drugs can burn through tumors like wildfire, killing off the vast majority of malignant cells. But a few stubborn cells often end up surviving, seeding a recurrence of the disease. The prevailing theory behind this drug resistance is built on natural selection: Among the vast and genetically diverse population of cancer cells in a tumor, some have random mutations that help these cells survive an onslaught.
    • “But this is not the full picture,” said Yogesh Goyal, a cancer researcher at Northwestern University. Goyal and his colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania demonstrated in a series of experiments that cancer cells can survive treatments just by having certain genes turned on, even if they were nearly genetically identical to cancer cells that died but had activated different genes.
    • “We think this work stands to really change how we think about therapy resistance,” said Arjun Raj, the study’s co-senior author and a bioengineer at the University of Pennsylvania.
    • “In other words, mutations alone cannot fully explain resistance to cancer therapy. Instead, researchers may need to look more closely at the assemblage of genes turned on or off at any given time in a cancer cell — what scientists call the cell’s transcriptional profile — to better understand whether it will respond to a certain drug, Goyal said.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front —

  • Healthcare Dive lets us know
    • “Elevance’s second-quarter earnings alleviated recent cost trend and utilization concerns, as the health insurer reported lower medical spending than analysts expected.
    • “The payer beat Wall Street expectations for the quarter with revenue of $43.7 billion, up 13% year over year, and profit of $1.9 billion, up 14% year over year. * * *
    • “Elevance reported a medical loss ratio of 86.4%, down 70 basis points year over year due to premium rate adjustments reflecting the post-pandemic cost of care, CFO John Gallina told investors on a Wednesday morning call.”
  • Fierce Healthcare informs us,
    • “Amar Desai, M.D., wrote in a post on LinkedIn Wednesday that he is “thrilled” to come back to the UnitedHealth Group subsidiary as the CEO of Optum Health. Desai previously spent several years in leadership roles at Optum before taking the role of president of healthcare delivery at rival CVS Health.
    • “Desai is also an associate clinical professor of medicine at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California. He previously served as president of HealthCare Partners, which was acquired in 2019 by UHG as part of DaVita Medical Group.”
  • The Society for Human Resource Management reports
    • “U.S. organizations are budgeting an average increase of 4 percent in 2024, according to consulting firm WTW, which surveyed more than 2,000 U.S. organizations for its Salary Budget Planning Survey. That number is down from the actual increase of 4.4 percent in 2023, and the 4.2 percent increase in 2022, but the projected 2024 figures remain higher than the 3.1 percent salary increase budget in 2021 as well as other increases in pre-pandemic years.”

Tuesday Tidbits

Photo by Patrick Fore on Unsplash

From the public health front,

  • Health Affairs reports
    • “National health expenditures are projected to grow 5.4 percent, on average, over the course of 2022–31 and to account for roughly 20 percent of the economy by the end of that period. The insured share of the population is anticipated to exceed 92 percent through 2023, in part as a result of record-high Medicaid enrollment, and then decline toward 90 percent as coverage requirements related to the COVID-19 public health emergency expire. The prescription drug provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 are anticipated to lower out-of-pocket spending for Medicare Part D enrollees beginning in 2024 and to result in savings to Medicare beginning in 2031.”
  • The U.S. Preventive Health Services Task Force gave an inconclusive grade to screening for lipid disorders in children and adolescents 20 years or younger.
  • The Wall Street Journal offers ways to protect yourself and your family against the ill effects of forever chemicals that may be in your tap water or else in your homes.

From the regulatory front,

  • The Food and Drug Administration “publishedsafety communication to warn consumers not to use ultrasound medical devices manufactured and distributed by RoyalVibe Health, CellQuicken, and Well-Being Reality. The devices have not been reviewed by the FDA. The safety and effectiveness of these devices have not been established to diagnose, treat, or cure medical conditions.”
  • HMFA informs us
    • “Hospital price transparency regulations are undergoing changes heading into their fourth year as CMS seeks to step up enforcement while making compliance more straightforward.
    • “As part of the 2024 proposed rule for hospital outpatient payments, CMS is adding to the requirement for hospitals to maintain a machine-readable file of their charges for services. In addition, enforcement actions against hospitals would be publicized even before assessment of civil monetary penalties.
    • “CMS said the impetus for the proposed technical requirements is feedback from “interested parties” that the files would be more beneficial if they were more standardized.
    • “In particular, IT specialists have indicated that the current flexibilities and lack of encoding specifications hinder the machine-readability of the data in the files, presenting a barrier to the intended use of the data,” CMS wrote. “Additionally, hospitals have asked us for more specificity on how they should publicly display their standard charge information, with an emphasis on how they should explain and display their payer-specific negotiated charges.”
    • “The agency also said enforcement would be easier if the files were more consistent.”

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • Fierce Healthcare lets us know,
    • “In the past 10 years, there has been a dramatic shift in physician practice ownership as less than half of doctors now work in private practices, according to a new analysis.
    • “Between 2012 and 2022, the share of physicians working in private practices fell by 13 percentage points from 60.1% to 46.7%.
    • “In contrast, the share of physicians working in hospitals as direct employees or contractors increased from 5.6% to 9.6% in the same 10-year time period, and the share of physicians working in practices at least partially owned by a hospital or health system increased from 23.4% to 31.3%, according to a benchmark analysis the American Medical Association. * * *
    • “In 2022, 4.5% of physicians worked in a practice owned by a private equity group, similar to the percentage in 2020 when the AMA first added private equity to the analysis.
    • “According to the analysis, there also has been a redistribution of physicians from small to large practices. The share of physicians in small practices (10 or fewer physicians) shrank from 61.4 % to 51.8% between 2012 and 2022. Conversely, the share of physicians in large practices (50 physicians or more) grew from 12.2% to 18.3% in the same 10-year time period.
    • “The shares of physicians in mid-sized practices (those with 11 to 24 and 25 to 49 physicians) remained relatively stable over the last decade.”
  • BioPharma Dive informs us,
    • “Biotechnology startup creator Flagship Pioneering is teaming up with Pfizer to develop 10 new drug candidates, with each company pledging to invest $50 million in the new effort.
    • “Together, Flagship and Pfizer will take stock of the technologies available to the former firm and its affiliated startups, hunting for opportunities to develop medicines aligned with Pfizer’s research priorities. Per deal terms announced Tuesday, Pfizer will fund the development of selected medicines, each of which it can choose to acquire later.
    • “The collaboration involves Flagship’s “Pioneering Medicines” initiative, which has struck similarly structured deals in the recent past with Novo Nordisk and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.”
  • Healthcare Dive relates,
    • “Teladoc Health is expanding its partnership with Microsoft, announcing plans to add artificial intelligence tools for clinical documentation to its telehealth platform for hospitals and health systems.
    • “The companies will work to integrate Microsoft Azure’s OpenAI Service and Cognitive Services and Microsoft-owned Nuance’s Dragon Ambient eXperience into its Solo platform, allowing physicians to automatically transcribe clinical notes during virtual patient exams.
    • “Teladoc’s medical group also plans to use DAX Express, a version of the medical scribe that uses the large language model GPT-4 and doesn’t require human authentication, the New York-based telehealth vendor said. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.”

From the Rx coverage front, the Drug Channel blog delves into the biosimilars’ challenge to Humira. The article illustrates the relatively new distinction between low-list drug prices and high-list drug prices. Low list prices do not include a manufacturer rebate. The FEHBlog understands that the distinction is driven by the Inflation Reduction Act.

Monday Roundup

Photo by Sven Read on Unsplash

From the public health front —

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • “Parents have a new tool to protect their newborns from a common but potentially deadly respiratory virus that sends tens of thousands of babies to the hospital each year.
    • “The Food and Drug Administration on Monday approved the first drug to protect all infants against respiratory syncytial virus. RSV is the leading cause of hospitalization of infants in the U.S., killing as many as 300 children under the age of 5 each year.  
    • “The FDA said it approved the drug Beyfortus from Sanofi and AstraZeneca based on studies that found it safely prevented the lower respiratory tract infections caused by the virus. * * *
    • “While Beyfortus isn’t a vaccine, it has a similar objective. The injection gives infants antibodies to neutralize the virus before their immune systems are mature enough to generate them on their own.  * * *
    • “Sanofi plans to make Beyfortus available in time for this year’s RSV season. Before the drug can become widely available, CDC advisers will need to recommend the drug’s use.”  
  • The FEHBlog’s favorite columnist on Covid, the New York Times David Leonhardt, let us know, “The United States has reached a milestone in the long struggle against Covid: The total number of Americans dying each day — from any cause — is no longer historically abnormal.” Consequently, the pandemic era is over.
  • In other Covid news, Medscape tells us,
    • “An air monitor made by researchers at Washington University in St. Louis can detect COVID-19 virus in a room with an infected person within 5 minutes. 
    • “The project was a collaboration among researchers from the university’s engineering and medical schools. Nature Communications published the results of their work in the journal’s Monday edition. * * *
    • “The team tested their device both in laboratory experiments where they released aerosolized SARS-CoV-2 into a room-sized chamber, as well as in the apartments of two people who were COVID-positive.
    • “There is nothing at the moment that tells us how safe a room is,” Washington University neurology professor John Cirrito, Ph.D., in a statement. “If you are in a room with 100 people, you don’t want to find out 5 days later whether you could be sick or not. The idea with this device is that you can know essentially in real-time, or every 5 minutes if there is a live virus in the air.”
    • “Their goal is to develop a commercially available air quality monitor, the researchers said.” 
  • Cigna discusses how to help women to stay on track with screenings for common cancers.
  • KFF explains why different BMI standards apply to older folks. For example,
    • “Epidemiologic research suggests that the ideal body mass index (BMI) might be higher for older adults than younger adults. (BMI is a measure of a person’s weight, in kilograms or pounds, divided by the square of their height, in meters or feet.)
    • “One large, well-regarded study found that older adults at either end of the BMI spectrum — those with low BMIs (under 22) and those with high BMIs (over 33) — were at greater risk of dying earlier than those with BMIs in the middle range (22 to 32.9).
    • “Older adults with the lowest risk of earlier deaths had BMIs of 27 to 27.9. According to World Health Organization standards, this falls in the “overweight” range (25 to 29.9) and above the “healthy weight” BMI range (18.5 to 24.9). Also, many older adults whom the study found to be at the highest mortality risk — those with BMIs under 22 — would be classified as having “healthy weight” by the WHO.
    • “The study’s conclusion: “The WHO healthy weight range may not be suitable for older adults.” Instead, being overweight may be beneficial for older adults, while being notably thin can be problematic, contributing to the potential for frailty.”
  • According to STAT News,
    • “At the turn of the century, nearly 18 million women in the United States were battling hot flashes, night sweats, and other symptoms of menopause with hormones. But in 2002, the therapy went into a free-fall when a landmark trial suggested treating menopause with estrogen and progesterone increased the risk of breast cancer and cardiovascular disease. The study was shut down early — and a year later, prescriptions had plummeted to nearly half what they had been in 2001.
    • “More than two decades later, menopause experts have come to think about the results of the trial very differently. Newer research points to more benefits than risks for many healthy women under 60 treating menopause symptoms with hormone therapy. But many women who are good fits still aren’t getting treatment. “The pendulum has been slowly — too slowly — swinging back,” said OB-GYN Mike Green, chief medical officer of menopause telehealth company Winona
    • “Winona is part of a new generation of virtual-first health care companies aiming to give that pendulum a push. In the last five years, more than a dozen telehealth companies have started up to serve women in and approaching menopause, including with hormone therapy. 
    • “Women fall through the cracks,” said internist Lisa Larkin, president-elect of The Menopause Society and founder of concierge women’s health network Ms. Medicine. “That’s why the telemedicine business is booming.” 

From the Alzheimer’s Disease front,

  • Medscape tells us,
    • “Eastern and southeastern areas of the US have the highest rates of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), new research shows.
    • “Investigators at Rush University in Chicago, Illinois, found AD prevalence was highest in Maryland, New York, Mississippi, and Florida. At the county level, Miami-Dade in Florida, Baltimore in Maryland, and the Bronx in New York were among the US counties with the highest prevalence of the disease.
    • “Such geographical variations may be due to the unique make-up of regional populations, study investigator Kumar Rajan, PhD, professor of Medicine and director of Rush Institute for Healthy Aging, Rush University Medical Center, in Chicago, told Medscape Medical News.”
  • STAT News relates,
    • Medicare on Monday proposed ending restrictions on how many PET scans patients can receive to detect amyloid plaques in their brains, which will offer physicians more options as they treat patients with a new drug to slow the progression of dementia.
    • The agency that oversees Medicare had previously restricted coverage to a single scan for patients who participated in clinical studies. Advocates had warned that it could cause issues related to a new class of Alzheimer’s drugs designed to clear those plaques.
  • BioPharma Dive calls our attention to
    • “A closely watched experimental drug for Alzheimer’s disease slowed the decline patients typically experience by about half a year in a key clinical trial, according to new results released Monday.
    • “The drug, called donanemab, is being developed by Eli Lilly and works in a similar way as two other medicines recently approved in the U.S. to treat Alzheimer’s. These therapies are designed to break up clusters of “amyloid beta,” a mutated protein that forms toxic brain plaques and has long been viewed as a root cause of the disease. * * *
    • “Along with its presentation, Lilly disclosed it had completed its approval application to the FDA and expects a verdict by the end of the year. The results were also published in the medical journal JAMA.”
  • Reuters adds,
    • “Alzheimer’s disease experts are revamping the way doctors diagnose patients with the progressive brain disorder – the most common type of dementia – by devising a seven-point rating scale based on cognitive and biological changes in the patient.
    • “The proposed guidelines, unveiled by experts on Sunday in a report issued at an Alzheimer’s Association conference in Amsterdam, embrace a numerical staging system assessing disease progression similar to the one used in cancer diagnoses. They also eliminate the use of terms like mild, moderate and severe.”

From the generative AI front, Fierce Healthcare explains how Blue Cross licensee HCSC is using AI to speed up prior authorization.

From the U.S. healthcare business front,

  • The American Hospital Association informs us,
    • “The Federal Trade Commission July 14 voted 3-0 to withdraw two antitrust policy statements related to enforcement in health care markets, calling the 1996 and 2021 statements outdated. The Department of Justice withdrew the same statements in February.  
    • “AHA is deeply disappointed that the FTC made the same mistake as the DOJ in withdrawing antitrust guidelines for hospitals and other health care providers,” said AHA General Counsel & Secretary Melinda Hatton. “Over the years, AHA has urged both federal antitrust agencies to modernize the guidelines to accommodate the need for more flexibility in enforcement actions to support hospitals’ ability to navigate a changing healthcare landscape. And AHA was instrumental in securing appropriate ACO guidance that allowed hospitals to fully participate in that important program. Withdrawing all the guidance without consultation with the field is both unnecessary and reckless.”
  • According to STAT News,
    • “Sanofi will license a new CRISPR enzyme from the startup Scribe Therapeutics in a bid to be the first to develop a safer, simpler, and more scalable cure for sickle cell disease.
    • “The French drugmaker will pay Scribe $40 million upfront and promise another $1.2 billion in potential milestones to license a DNA-cutting enzyme called CasX for use in a potential single-infusion treatment for the serious blood disorder — what’s known as in vivo therapy. CasX was discovered in CRISPR pioneer Jennifer Doudna’s lab, which subsequently spun out Scribe. * * *
    • “The company will have competition on tackling sickle cell in new ways. In 2021, Novartis started collaborating with the Gates Foundation to develop an in vivo therapy. The base editing company Beam Therapeutics has presented data on an approach that still requires cells to be edited outside the body but is much less toxic. And Sana Biotechnology has a program that hopes to target stem cells with virus-like particles. None of the companies, however, have yet begun clinical trials. 

In employment news,

  • HR Dive reports,
    • “The Occupational Safety and Health Administration published Friday its final electronic recordkeeping rule requiring employers with 100 or more employees in certain industries to submit information from the agency’s Forms 300 and 301 once per year.
    • “OSHA’s rule also updates its system for determining which industries are subject to the information submission requirement. In a departure from the proposed rule, OSHA has retained the requirement for employers with 250 or more employees to electronically submit information from Form 300A once per year. Additionally, employers with 20 to 249 employees in certain designated industries will continue to be required to electronically submit information from Form 300A once per year.
    • “Per the rule, the agency will post data gathered via these submissions on a public website, with identifying information — such as employees’ names and contact information — removed. The final rule is effective Jan. 1, 2024.”

Weekend update

From Washington, DC,

  • Both Houses of Congress will be in session this week for floor voting and Committee business. Both Houses go on month-long State / District work breaks next week.
  • HR Dive reports
    • “The U.S. Senate on Thursday confirmed the nomination of Democrat Kalpana Kotagal to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Her nomination as commissioner gives the workplace rights enforcement agency a Democratic majority. 
    • “The Senate voted 49-47 in favor of the Ohio native Thursday [July 13], after invoking cloture Wednesday. Kotagal will serve as the fifth commissioner of the agency with a term expiring July 1, 2027.” 

From the public health front,

  • Fierce Healthcare discusses an interesting United Healthcare population health program called Catalyst which operates in 28 states.
  • NPR Shots advises avoiding heat stroke and staying healthy when it’s hot outside.

From the medical research front,

  • The Wall Street Journal offers an essay about research underway to “get rid of menopause.”
    • “Imagine if women never reached menopause, that dreaded middle-age milestone—or could delay it, or decide when to have it.
    • “Women could remain fertile longer and would have more choice about when to start a family. They wouldn’t struggle with symptoms like hot flashes, mood swings and brain fog in the prime of their careers and family lives.
    • “Even more significantly, women might live longer and healthier lives. Though menopause—a full year without a menstrual cycle—is associated with the end of fertility, it also marks another profound but less recognized change. When the ovaries stop functioning and releasing important hormones, biological aging in women speeds up, increasing the risk of numerous health problems.
    • “Menopause is the single biggest accelerant of the diseases of aging for women across the board, whether it’s heart disease and stroke, autoimmune disorders, osteoporosis or cognitive decline,” says Piraye Yurttas Beim, founder and CEO of a biotech startup called Celmatix focused on improving ovarian health. “It’s the end of the function of a key organ in our body, and we should not normalize it any more than we would normalize tooth decay, osteoarthritis or cognitive decline.” * * *
    • “At Celmatix, the startup founded by Beim, researchers are seeking to develop what’s called an activator of the AMH hormone. A woman could take a drug to reduce the loss of follicles and eggs in her reserve and thus maintain optimal ovarian health and then go off the drug when she wants more eggs to be released to try to get pregnant.”

Friday Factoids

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

From the U.S. healthcare business front –

  • Healthcare Dive tells us
    • “All eyes were on UnitedHealth’s medical costs when the health insurance giant reported second-quarter financial results on Friday, but rising outpatient utilization among seniors that spooked investors left the payer’s earnings largely unscathed.
    • “UnitedHealth’s medical loss ratio — the share of premiums spent on healthcare costs — was 83.2% in the quarter, higher than the 81.5% notched in the second quarter last year but lower than analyst expectations.
    • “In the second quarter, outpatient care activity among seniors was a few hundred basis points above our expectations,” UnitedHealth CFO John Rex said on a Friday morning call with investors. “Specific orthopedic and cardiac procedures have increased far above that level of variation.”
  • The Wall Street Journal adds
    • “Americans of all ages are seeking far more mental-health care for conditions including anxiety, depression and substance-use problems.
    • UnitedHealth Group, parent of the nation’s biggest health insurer, said the percentage of people getting psychological visits and other services was up by double digits just since last year, and it believes the shift represents a long-term change. The company said people feel increasingly comfortable seeking help for behavioral-health issues, but it sees a continuing shortage of mental-health-care providers that is leading to problems with access.
    • “The rising use of behavioral-health care was one driver of higher healthcare costs flagged by the company during a call discussing its second-quarter financial results, which overall beat analysts’ expectations.”
  • BioPharma Dive reports
    • “Eli Lilly has agreed to acquire privately held biotechnology company Versanis in a deal that will add an experimental antibody to Lilly’s pipeline of medicines for obesity.
    • “The companies did not disclose a purchase price, but said in a statement Friday that upfront and milestone payments by Lilly to Versanis shareholders could be worth as much as $1.9 billion.
    • Founded in 2021 by Aditum Bio, Versanis is built around a drug licensed from Novartis. The antibody, called bimagrumab, is designed to block cellular communication via two types of protein regulators and is being studied in people who are overweight or obese.”
  • Beckers Payer Issues points out that “Competition between Blue Cross Blue Shield companies is increasing after a 2022 antitrust settlement that struck down some agreements limiting competition between BCBS Association members, according to a July 13 report from Advisory Board.
  • Per Reuters
    • “An influential U.S. drug pricing watchdog raised the price estimate of two experimental gene therapies from Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX.O)/CRISPR Therapeutics and bluebird bio (BLUE.O) to as much as $2.05 mln, saying the new price can be cost effective to treat sickle cell disease.
    • “A price of up to $2.05 million a year, higher than the prior estimate in April of up to $1.9 million would meet some commonly used thresholds for cost effectiveness, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) said.”

From the SDOH front, Healthcare IT News notes “Without the need for deep learning and neural network models, researchers were able to use machine learning to extract social determinants of health information on housing challenges, financial stability and employment status from unstructured patient data in electronic health records, a new research report from Regenstrief Institute shows.”

From the plan design front —

  • HR Executive offers six ways to make a primary care strategy blossom. Check it out.
  • Fierce Healthcare lets us know
    • “The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) has released a request for information to design a future episode-based payment model.
    • “The center is looking for feedback on questions related to care delivery, incentive structure alignment, clinical episodes, participants, health equity, quality measures and multipayer alignment, payment methodology and structure, and model overlap, according to the request.
    • “Episode-based payment models intend to address inefficiencies in traditional Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries, where providers are paid for each item or service. This leads to “volume over value and fragment care,” according to the request.”

From the mental healthcare front,

  • KFF created a brief on the success to date of the 988 national suicide and crisis number.
    • Since its launch in July 2022, the 988 national suicide and crisis hotline has received about 4 million contacts, a 33 percent increase from the year before, according to a new KFF analysis of publicly available data through May 2023. The contacts include more than 2.6 million calls, over 740,000 chats, and more than 600,000 texts. The total number of contacts rises to almost 5 million when nearly 1 million additional contacts from the Veterans Crisis Line (VCL) are included, which were reported by the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), but aren’t yet publicly available.

Thursday Miscellany

Photo by Josh Mills on Unsplash

From Washington DC —

  • The Food and Drug Administration announced
    • approve[ing] Opill (norgestrel) tablet for nonprescription use to prevent pregnancy— the first daily oral contraceptive approved for use in the U.S. without a prescription. Approval of this progestin-only oral contraceptive pill provides an option for consumers to purchase oral contraceptive medicine without a prescription at drug stores, convenience stores and grocery stores, as well as online.
  • The New York Times adds,
    • The pill’s manufacturer, Perrigo Company, based in Dublin, said Opill would most likely become available from stores and online retailers in the United States in early 2024.
  • The OTC contraceptive will be available with no member cost sharing from FEHB plan network pharmacies due to the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate. Per the New York Times,
    • The company did not say how much the medication would cost — a key question that will help determine how many people will use the pill — but Frédérique Welgryn, Perrigo’s global vice president for women’s health, said in a statement that the company was committed to making the pill “accessible and affordable to women and people of all ages.”
  • The American Hospital Association informs us
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services July 13 issued a proposed rule that would increase Medicare hospital outpatient prospective payment system rates by a net 2.8% in calendar year 2024 compared to 2023. This includes a proposed 3.0% market basket update, offset by a 0.2% cut for productivity.”
  • and
    • “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services July 13 released its calendar year 2024 proposed rule for the physician fee schedule. The rule proposes a decrease to the conversion factor by 3.34%, to $32.75 in calendar year 2024, as compared to $33.89 in CY 2023. This reflects the expiration of the 2.5% statutory payment increase for CY 2023; a 1.25% statutory payment increase for 2024; a 0.00% conversion factor update under the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act; and a -2.17% budget-neutrality adjustment.  * * * 
      “CMS also proposes several provisions to advance access to behavioral health services. For example, it would create a new benefit category for marriage and family therapists and mental health counselors under Part B. In addition, CMS would establish new payment codes for mobile psychotherapy for crisis services.”\
  • The public comment deadline for both proposed rules is September 11, 2023.
  • STAT News reports
    • “A key Senate health care panel has developed a plan to tackle reforms to middlemen in the pharmacy drug payment system, according to bill text obtained by STAT.
    • “The draft legislation, authored by Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and ranking member Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), includes several measures to regulate how pharmacy benefit managers are paid by health plans to negotiate with drugmakers.
    • “The most significant measure is a bill from Sens. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) that would prohibit PBMs from getting any income outside of service fees, and prohibits those service fees from being related to drugs’ list prices.
    • “Other provisions include a bill from Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) to require PBMs to send annual reports to Medicare insurance plans about their rebate and price negotiations, a policy that would ban PBMs from charging Medicaid more than they pay for drugs (a practice called spread pricing), and a mandate for the Department of Health and Human Services to outline acceptable performance measures for pharmacies.”

From the public health front

  • The Wall Street Journal reports
    • Two different arms of the World Health Organization released separate findings on the widely used sweetener aspartame—one calling it safe and the other identifying it as a possible cancer hazard.
    • Here’s what you need to know:
    • Is it safe to drink Diet Coke?
      • Yes, in moderate amounts. Food regulators around the world agree that aspartame is safe. Aspartame has been studied for decades. The WHO reaffirmed its recommendation that people consume no more than 40 milligrams of aspartame a day for each kilogram they weigh—which would be a lot of soda.
      • With around 200 mg of aspartame per 12-ounce can of Diet Coke, that is roughly 16 cans a day for a 175-pound person. People get aspartame from some other food sources, though, and often the presence or amounts of aspartame in them aren’t disclosed. The WHO and other health experts also caution against consuming large amounts of sweetened products, including soda. They recommend drinking water instead.
      • “This is particularly important for young children” whose tastes are developing, said Dr. Francesco Branca, director of the WHO’s department of nutrition and food safety.
    • Obviously, the article continues on with other FAQs, but this is the one that caught the FEHBlog’s attention.
  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force finalized its research plan for chronic kidney disease screening.
  • STAT News tells us
    • “Amid ongoing controversy over the cost of medicines, a key Biden administration official told Covid-19 vaccine manufacturers that their next round of shots should be priced reasonably, a move that comes after two key suppliers were accused of price gouging.”
  • The CMS Administration informed insurers and others
    • “As we look toward efforts to provide updated COVID-19 vaccines this fall, we know you may have questions about the shift away from U.S. Government purchasing of vaccines to a more traditional commercial market. To be clear, that shift has not yet occurred, and the currently authorized and approved COVID-19 vaccines continue to be free and widely available nationwide. We also wanted to send these reminders from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) about COVID-19 vaccine coverage and encourage you to start planning now for the fall vaccination campaign.
    • “[M]ost private health insurance, like employer-sponsored plans, Marketplace plans, and other individual market coverage that is subject to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) market reforms are required to cover vaccines for COVID-19 authorized for emergency use or approved by the FDA and recommended by the ACIP and their administration, without patient cost-sharing.”
  • Fierce Healthcare relates
    • The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is recommending preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with oral or injectable antiretroviral therapy to people at risk of HIV without patient cost sharing. * * *
    • Currently, Medicare beneficiaries are only guaranteed access to daily oral PrEP through Part D, facing out-of-pocket costs, said Carl Schmid, executive director of the HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute. Injectable PrEP has not been covered traditionally.
  • Roll Call points out
    • “One year after the creation of the three-digit crisis hotline known as 988, officials say the next step is expanding awareness and local crisis care.
    • “More than 4 million people have called, texted or chatted the suicide prevention hotline in the year since its creation, according to Laurel Stine, executive vice president and chief policy officer for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
    • “She estimates that number will grow in the next fiscal year to 9 million contacts.
    • “We have to be mindful that Rome was not built in a day,” she said. “We’ve had a fragmented mental health behavioral health crisis system for a number of years.”
  • Forbes reports on the “worsening” cancer drug shortage which it describes as a resolvable public health emergency.

From the generative AI front —

  • Healthcare Dive notes
    • Generative artificial intelligence could capitalize on the healthcare industry’s wealth of unstructured data, alleviating provider documentation burden and improving relationships between patients and their health plans, according to a new report by consulting firm McKinsey.
    • The report argues generative AI could help payers quickly pull benefits material for members or help call center workers aggregate information during conversations about claims denials. Providers could use AI to take conversations with patients and turn them into clinical notes, create discharge summaries or handle administrative questions from workers at health systems.
    • But healthcare leaders should start planning now if they want to use generative AI, as the risks can be high, the report said. Data fidelity and accuracy is key, so executives should begin assessing the quality of their AI tech stacks and considering potential problems like bias and privacy concerns, according to McKinsey.
  • Econtalk host Russ Roberts held an informative interview with Marc Andreessen about generative AI.