Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Harvard Study Finds Older Insulins Are Safe as Well as Cheaper: The big story in the popular press today is a report on research looking at costs and benefits of the “newer” (analog) insulins versus older synthetic human insulins. Bottom line: except for slight increase in low blood sugar at night, the older insulins are just as good clinically as the newer ones and at 50% lower cost. With analog insulin prices increasing so rapidly (see past posts), it is important to know there are options. It will be interesting to see how pharma companies refute the study. Note: In researching this news, I came across a JAMA article from 2003 that came to the same conclusion.

Read the article in Bloomberg
Read the editorial in JAMA (May need subscription)

Anthem moves up launch of its PBM to second quarter of 2019: Musical PBMs? Because of recent mergers and acquisitions, the PBM industry has had some major reshuffling. Cigna recently acquired Express Scripts, Anthem’s PBM. So Anthem is starting its own: IngenioRx. Watch the effect of this consolidation on free-standing PBMs like Walgreens. That company can survive on its retail business but the same may not be true for others.

Read the article

About the public’s health

Quality and Experience of Outpatient Care in the United States for Adults With or Without Primary Care: The message of this research is that patients who have primary care physicians do better than those without them. I am not sure why this research was done. This finding has been in the literature for decades. In fact, a recent NY Times article touted the primary care system in Cuba. It’s time to stop doing this kind of research and put the funding into making sure people have a regular source of care.

Read the research
Read the recent NY Times Article

CBO: Budget and Economic Outlook 2019-2029: The deficit outlook predicted by this study looks grim. “Over the 2020–2029 period, deficits are projected to average 4.4 percent of GDP, totaling $11.6 trillion. Such deficits would be significantly larger than the 2.9 percent of GDP that deficits averaged over the past 50 years.” A major reason for these deficits are mandatory spending through Medicare and Social Security. (Interesting to note that Medicare spending has exceeded that for Social Security since 1984.) For example, the Medicare Hospital Insurance (Part A) Trust Fund is due to be bankrupt by 2026. What is being done to correct this problem besides passing it to the next generation?

Read the CBO study

Today's News and Commentary

About healthcare IT

Medical devices are woefully insecure. These hospitals and manufacturers want to fix that: As the “internet of things” expands in healthcare, we need to be particularly aware of hacking medical products like pacemakers, pumps and diagnostic devices. They do not have the same regulatory requirements as traditional IT devices, like computers. A consortium of hospitals and manufacturers has issued a joint security plan to address this problem.

Read the article
Read the plan (Content starts on page 7)

New App Displays What Original Medicare Covers: Beneficiaries are often confused about what Medicare covers. This new app will help explain their benefits. We still need to see how CMS will announce this site to the general public.

Read the announcement

About insurance

HHS Sets New Priorities for Physician-Focused Payment Models: The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) established criteria for physicians to bundle services to qualify as an Advanced Alternative Payment Model. This qualification permits exemption from some reporting requirements and sets up potentially more favorable payment models. This article is a nice review of recent HHS clarification of the application process. The government hopes to reduce annual avoidable events by 10% and costs by $10Billion.

Read the article

Medicare for all?: Many legislators and health policy advocates have been calling for a program that gives Medicare benefits to all. The explanation is vague because the details of these proposals are very different. They range from a true single payer system with elimination of private insurance to an option for those who cannot afford or access other options. Here are a series of articles that should give you an idea about this debate:
How to build a Medicare-for-all plan, explained by somebody who’s thought about it for 20 years It nicely frames the issue and provides a framework for analyzing proposals.
45% of the uninsured population is out of the ACA's reach: KFF report This article highlights the reason we need more options for healthcare insurance.
Harris backs 'Medicare-for-all' and eliminating private insurance as we know it: Kamala Harris announced her support for this proposal and would even favor eliminating private insurance.

Transparent Hospital Pricing Exposes Wild Fluctuation, Even Within Miles: As previously mentioned, since January 1, hospitals have been required by the federal government to post their charges. This article compares prices for various services among hospitals close to one another in both Oakland, CA and LA. It is interesting that each location’s listing has a Kaiser facility—care is essentially free there if the patient has a referral from a primary care physician; this fact highlights the uselessness of the federal requirement.

Read the article

About the public’s health

Coca-Cola emails reveal how soda industry tries to influence health officials: Industry often tries to influence public policy, particularly in the healthcare field. (Think tobacco and pharma, for examples.) This case documents how Coca-Cola tried to influence the CDC to make exercise the primary tool to combat obesity- thus taking pressure off sugar-filled drinks. This article nicely documents this effort.

Read the article

About pharma

AstraZeneca's latest value-based pact serves up Brilinta at generic-level copays: AstraZeneca has cut a deal with UPMC Health Plan regarding its “blood thinner” Brilinta. The drug will be priced like a generic, allowing lower out of pocket copays for patients and a lower price for the plan. Also, the price will be based on how well the drug performs (upward or downward payments). This scheme is part of a trend in pharma and elsewhere toward value-based payments.

Read the article

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Steep Climb In Benzodiazepine Prescribing By Primary Care Doctors: Are benzodiazepines (like Valium) the new opioids? The study found that from “2003 through 2015, the use of benzodiazepines in ambulatory care increased substantially from 3.8% to 7.4% of visits, including coprescribing with other sedating medications. Use among psychiatrists was stable (29.6% vs 30.2%) but increased among all other types of physicians, including primary care physicians (3.6% vs 7.5%), who as a group accounted for about half of all benzodiazepine visits.” These drugs are used for anxiety, insomnia and seizures; however, this research found that the biggest increase in prescriptions was for back pain and other types of chronic pain. Is this class of drugs replacing opioids? What is being done to make sure we don’t repeat the same mistakes?

Read the news story from NPR
Read the original research

Use compulsory license and put ceiling to curb prices of patented medicines: Government panel: One way countries can get around international patent agreements is by declaring a public health emergency and using a “compulsory license” for drugs that will help address the crisis. The “loophole” was meant to help developing countries afford branded treatments in the face of epidemics. This article provides a recent example (India) of countries that stretch the purpose of these licenses to cover very expensive drugs to treat cancers and rare diseases.

Read the article

About the public’s health

Outbreak of Salmonella Infections Linked to Pet Hedgehogs: I didn’t know “this was a thing.” People who keep pet hedgehogs have been warned by the CDC to be very careful not to kiss or cuddle them, since many are infected with a salmonella species. Wash your hands after touching!

Read the CDC warning

CHOP opens first food pharmacy for patient families in West Philadelphia: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia has opened a “food pharmacy” to provide neighborhood children with a food bank and nutritional counseling. Add this initiative to the others I have mentioned that document how hospitals are addressing social determinants of health.

Read the announcement

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Governor Baker has plan to rein in soaring drug costs in state Medicaid program: Joining California, Massachusetts will negotiate Medicaid drug prices directly with manufacturers to save a projected $80million per year.

Read the story

Humira biosimilars catch fire in Europe and could take half the market in a year: Availability of biologically- derived generics are increasing at a rapid rate as patents for their branded “parents” expire. AbbVie’s blockbuster drug Humira is due to go off-patent next year and the company’s lost market share was supposed to be twenty percent. Instead, estimates are for a 50% loss. This article reviews bio similars’ impact on the market.

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New Coalition to Lobby Against Patent Misuse by Branded Companies: “The Coalition Against Patent Abuse (CAPA) aims to stop Big Pharma from gaming the system to extend their monopolies at consumers’ expense.” This coalition is comprised of such organizations as AHIP and Kaiser Permanente. Its website details the tactics pharma  uses to keep patent, and thus drug price, protection.

Read the announcement
Connect to CAPA website

Not-for-profit to offer 20 generic drugs in 2019 to alleviate shortages: As previously-mentioned, the large hospital consortium CivicaRx was formed to supply generics to its members. The news now is that the organization has listed 14 drugs it will have produced for them. The products are those that are frequently are in short supply, ranging from saline to propofol.

Read the article

About information technology

Can Blockchain Solve the Mess of Medical Records? IBM Announces Tie-Up With Healthcare Providers: CVS Health Corp’s Aetna  Inc, Anthem, Health Care Service Corp and financial services company PNC Bank are partnering with IBM to set up blockchain applications for their companies. This technology and Artificial Intelligence (in which IBM’s Watson is a big player) are seen as two of the biggest IT initiatives in healthcare.

Read the announcement

About health insurance

What’s Behind 2018 and 2019 Marketplace Insurer Participation and Pricing Decisions?:
2019 results for the ACA Exchanges are more stable than those of 2018. Last year saw very high premium raises as out of pocket subsidies were eliminated. Due to marketplace and regulatory uncertainties, the number of available plans on exchanges was reduced. This year, premium prices moderated and there was an increase in available plans. One way participating plans have reduced costs is by narrowing available provider networks.

Read the study

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Cell-based screen identifies a new potent and highly selective CK2 inhibitor for modulation of circadian rhythms and cancer cell growth: Don’t be put off by the technical title. This research demonstrates that cancer cells go through circadian rhythms (like human sleep-wake cycles) and that chemically interrupting these rhythms can help kill them. Cancer treatments are advancing beyond standard chemotherapy.

Read the research

South Africa’s drug ATMs offer formula to treat chronic illness: In addition to cost, access is often a problem for people who need medications. This example from South Africa provides one solution- drug dispensing from an ATM-like machine.

Read the article (Subscription required)

Pharma firms to be incentivised to develop new superbug drugs: British Health secretary Matt Hancock is to announce his country’s plans to encourage appropriate use of antibiotics. The statement will be at the at World Economic Forum in Davos, so it will have an international audience. Details are not clear yet but will involve paying for pharmaceuticals based on their value rather than volume sold. This change will also hopefully increase research into medicines that will combat drug-resistant bacteria.

Read the article

About insurance

38 hospitals sue HHS over site-neutral payment policy: After CMS issued its final rule to pay the same fees regardless of where the service is rendered, 38 hospitals sued HHS saying it overstepped its authority. The issue is that hospitals claim they should be paid more than, for example a physician’s office, for performing the same service. Hospitals have used this differential payment to fund their purchase of physicians’ practices- raising charges after the acquisition. The government claims hospitals should provide services as efficiently as the outpatient sector.

Read the article
Read the lawsuit

About devices

FDA finalizes new 510(k) guidance, shifts away from aging predicate devices: The comment period is over and the FDA has announced its new guidelines for approving devices under the 510(k) process. In the past, applications for a device’s approval could cite its similarity to a previously approved product (predicate). But those products could be outdated and the new one could have significant changes. The new criteria require “objective, transparent and well validated safety and performance metrics.”

Read the article

About the public’s health

NCQA Launches New Population Health Management Programs: The statement was posted to the NCQA website last month but only made the news today. This organization announced two new programs to accredit population health programs using the following measures: Data integration; Population assessment; Population segmentation; Targeted interventions; Practitioner support; and Measurement and quality improvement.

Read the announcement

About insurance

Poll: 56 percent of public supports 'Medicare for all': This poll highlights the principle that the answer you get depends on the question you ask. “When people are told that Medicare for all would ‘guarantee health insurance as a right for all Americans,’ support shoots up to 71 percent. But when people are told that the proposal would ‘require most Americans to pay more in taxes,’ support plummets to just 37 percent.”

Read the article

About Information technology

More Funds, Better Data Needed to Help Medicaid Patients: Identifying social determinant-based needs is essential before those needs can be addressed. However, the data is not being routinely captured. ICD-10 codes Z56 and Z59 can be used to identify patients who have “ issues with employment and with homelessness/food insecurity/other social needs, respectively.” This article stresses the need to gather such data using those codes.

Read the article

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

U.S. top court rejects Helsinn over anti-nausea drug patent in win for Teva:The specifics of this story are not as important as the general message. In this case, a company was selling a drug as part of a license deal but violated “a provision in U.S. patent law that forbids sales of an invention before applying for a patent…” This decision will affect many small companies who participate in such licensing deals.

Read the story

Walgreens pays $269.2 million to settle U.S. civil fraud lawsuits: Settling two separate suits, Walgreens was fined for dispensing insulin “pens” to patients who did not need them as well as over-billing Medicare and Medicaid programs.

Read the story

U.S. insulin costs per patient nearly doubled from 2012 to 2016 -study: Speaking of insulin treatment, this story documents the rapidly rising costs over the past several years. While the study stopped in 2016, the costs for insulin have continued to rise. The question is what kind of public sector controls should be placed on life-saving medications?

Read the article

About devices

High-tech hospital R&D focuses on controlling costs: This article from the Financial Times looks at a number of new tech advances that not only improve care but will lower cost. For example, ICU room and bed designs can lower rates of “ICU psychosis” and help patients recover faster. Another program seeks to enhance 3D imaging so that invasive procedures can be executed more precisely. The market costs of these programs are not specified so whether they will be cost-saving overall remains to be seen.

Read the article(Subscription required)

Alphabet’s health division gets FDA clearance to test EKG smartwatch feature: Add this product to the Apple watch as FDA approved devices for monitoring heart rhythms. Unlike the Apple product, this one is not a consumer watch. Announcement of this product was about 2 years ago but it just received FDA approval.

Read the announcement

About insurance

Medicare reimbursement falls short of care delivery costs: This study, conducted by the Medical Group Management Association, found that 67% of survey responders said Medicare payments were falling behind actual costs of delivering care. Two of the major reasons were: 1) payment updates are falling below inflation rates and 2)costs of compliance with regulations (such as those dealing with quality measures) are increasing without compensating bonuses for performance. Since Medicare rates are often the starting point for private insurance fee negotiations, this concern has far-reaching implications.

Read the study

Uninsured rate at highest level since 2014: The ACA was supposed to reduce the number of uninsured. At its lowest point in 2016, the uninsured accounted for 10.9% of the population. Now that figure is 13.7%- the highest it’s been since the start of the ACA in 2014 when it was 18%. The increase from 2016 to 2018 represents 7 million people. The exact contributions of each of several causes are not clear. These reasons include: repeal of the insurance mandate; government cuts in “navigator programs” that helped people choose plans; rising premiums; removal of federal help with out of pocket expenses; and start of short term plans in some states with lower premiums but worse benefits when compared to ACA exchange coverage. Balancing those changes are increases in the number of states expanding Medicaid programs. Stay tuned for other changes that will affect these numbers.

Read the article

Rural Hospitals in Greater Jeopardy in Non-Medicaid Expansion States: Lack of Medicaid doesn’t only affect those without that coverage. This article points out that in states that did not expand such coverage, rural hospitals are closing in greater numbers. We are thus creating an access problem for all, not just Medicaid recipients.

Read the article

About the public’s health

Why Cigna is looking to subscription boxes as inspiration for addressing childhood hunger: Now some good news. To address food insecurity, Cigna is developing a program to deliver boxes to eligible children that not only contain food, but also cookbooks, cooking tools and other resources to help them learn to cook healthy meals. One presumes that the adults in the house also have the same food insecurity issues so it will be interesting to see if this targeted program succeeds. This initiative is part of Cigna’s Healthier Kids for Our Future program.

Read the story

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Vaccine researchers are preparing for Disease X: Throughout history we have faced diseases that no-one had ever seen- for example, AIDS. As a public health measure, how do we prepare for these crises in a systematic fashion as opposed to one-offs as they arise? The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), a charity in Oslo, Norway, is coordinating such efforts. Read the story to learn what is being done in this area.

Read the article

About insurance

Health systems begin offering waivers for care to furloughed federal workers: During the government shutdown, federal employees retain their health insurance. However, while they are not being paid, they still have out of pocket responsibilities. Particularly, this time of year is when deductibles are most onerous. This article explains how some health systems are pitching in to help these workers. The remaining question is what happens to independent contractors who are not being paid? They will have a hard time even paying their premiums.

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Medicare experiment could put more pressure on insurers to save money on prescription drugs: Continuing the government’s efforts to save money from pharma payments, CMS announced a new voluntary program for Medicare D plans. After a patient has spent $5100 out of pocket, he or she is responsible for an additional 5% of costs. The rest of the amounts are picked up by CMS (85%) and the insurance plan (10%). CMS is offering insurers the opportunity to share more of the savings in this category if they do a better job of controlling costs (though how much is yet to be determined). The plan is voluntary and starts next year.

Read the story

UnitedHealthcare, fueled by federal probes, sues generics makers for price fixing: As previously reported, the federal government is suing a group of generic drug manufacturers for price fixing. Now UnitedHealthcare is joining other insurers (like Humana) seeking to recover overpayments due to the collusion. Between the antitrust action and the insurer suits, the manufacturers could be responsible for billions of dollars in payments.

Read the story

Comparison of Wait Times for New Patients Between the Private Sector and United States Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Centers: The Federal government is offering more private care options to veterans in order to make services more accessible. However, this study found that over the past few years the VA has shortened waiting times to the point where, on average, many service are provided more quickly than in the private sector. The reasons are twofold- the VA is getting better and the private sector is getting worse. Now the question is how can the private sector learn from the VA?

Read the article

Trump Proposals Could Increase Health Costs for Consumers: I previously reported on the government’s proposal to allow insurance companies to increase out of pocket expense maximums. To this initiative is being added changes in the calculation of what counts to that maximum. Particularly, if a patient buys a branded drug when a generic is available, only the lower copay for the generic will count toward the annual maximum. Further, coupons will not be allowed to count at all.
These changes are possible because the government has the authority to impose its calculation for healthcare cost inflation. The new computation will also reduce the number of those eligible for ACA exchange subsidies. According to the article: “ The Trump administration estimated that the changes would save the government $900 million annually in subsidies in 2020 and 2021 and $1 billion a year in 2022 and 2023. In addition, it predicted that 100,000 fewer people would have coverage through the insurance exchanges created under the Affordable Care Act.”

Read the article

Toady's News and Commentary.

“Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane” –
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. March 25, 1966

About information technology

App may work 'like Ritalin' on brain to focus ADHD sufferers: University of Cambridge scientists have announced an app for people with ADHD that focuses attention just like using Ritalin. This interesting article explains the process. The question is how will it be regulated if it makes it to the US?

Read the article

5 healthcare predictions that didn't come true in 2018: This article cuts across many topics, but three involve IT: death of the FAX, widespread secure communication among physicians, and the ability to get real-time pricing information.

Read the article

About devices

Microrobots could one day deliver drugs inside the body: This article explains one of the most fascinating technologies I have ever seen. Microrobots will change shape depending on the character of the fluid in which they are traveling in order to deliver treatments to their targets. The video in this article shows how this transformation occurs in different settings.

Read the article
Read the original scientific paper

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

CVS Health and Walmart Announce New PBM Pharmacy Network Agreement: The two corporate giants have reconciled in a multiyear contract whereby Walmart pharmacies will continue as retail outlets for CVS’s PBM business.

Read the announcement

DTC tax deductions back on the chopping block—and this time, the ax might just fall: To give you an idea of how mad Congress is at pharma companies, senators are now reintroducing legislation to make Direct to Consumer advertising a non-deductible expense. This change would include all media types.

Read the article

Grassley, Klobuchar Introduce Bill to Allow Importation of Canadian Drugs: One solution to lower pharmaceutical costs is purchasing them from cheaper sources abroad. This bipartisan proposal would set conditions for Canadian pharmacies from which Americans could purchase their medications. But there are a few potential problems: First, one can expect Canadian prices for export to increase as demand increases. Second, Canada does not have enough drugs in its entire system to supply US needs. Finally US manufacturers will see a drop in profit (because sales prices are lower outside this country) and export less to Canada. As usual, the concept seems good and it plays well politically, but in practice it is not even a short-run solution.

Read the announcement

Stakeholders Offer Feedback on New National Drug Code Format: The five digit National Drug Codes are used as a HIPAA standard to specify medications. However, the FDA says it will run out of numbers in the near future and is considering expanding designations using more digits. This change would involve reassignment of existing drugs as well as adopting a new system for new ones. The expanded digital format also needs to be incorporated in standard reporting systems, like fields in electronic billing.

Read the announcement

About Insurance

CMS seeking feedback on ways to address ACA exchange ‘silver loading’: Silver-level plans are the ones for which the federal government, is, by law, required to subsidize premiums for eligible enrollees. Since the Trump administration did away with cost sharing subsidies in 2017, health plans reacted by raising premiums substantially for these subsidized products. Now the government wonders why so many are signing up for these plans and is seeking ways to reduce the numbers. CMS just announced its proposed payment and benefit parameters for 2020. Comments are open until 2/19/19. Among other items, the proposal increases the individual maximum deductible by $200 and for family coverage by $400; its also raises premiums about one percent .

.Read the announcement
Also read this article

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Meeting Individual Social Needs Falls Short Of Addressing Social Determinants Of Health: On the continuing theme of addressing social determinants of health, this article is a nice summary that defines terms and gives examples of initiatives.
Read the article

Kaiser Permanente Unveils Housing Program to Address SDOH: Picking up on the theme of the previous article, this one provides an in-depth explanation of what Kaiser is doing in Oakland to address homelessness.
Read the article

Appropriateness of outpatient antibiotic prescribing among privately insured US patients: ICD-10-CM based cross sectional study: Inappropriate prescription of antibiotics is a major problem that has led to increased pharmaceutical costs and emergence of drug-resistant bacteria. How big a problem is it? According to this study: “Among all outpatient antibiotic prescription fills by the cohort, 12.8% were appropriate, 35.5% were potentially appropriate, 23.2% were inappropriate, and 28.5% were not associated with a recent diagnosis code.” But the data was gathered using diagnosis codes. The accuracy of coding is notoriously poor; for examples: coding the wrong precise code, but listing a related diagnosis because it is quicker to retrieve; coding a more severe diagnosis to justify treatment and possible higher billing codes; or forgetting to add a diagnostic code when the patient was seen for more than one reason. Read the study and draw your own conclusions about its accuracy.
Read the study

Medscape National Physician Burnout, Depression & Suicide Report 2019: Given the shortage of physicians in many specialties and geographic areas, it is important to retain those we have. Yet the stresses of practice can be overwhelming. According to this survey, “burnout has been defined as long-term, unresolvable job stress that leads to exhaustion and feeling overwhelmed, cynical, detached from the job, and lacking a sense of personal accomplishment.” 44% of surveyed physicians reported having those feelings with another 15% reported feeling depressed. The results varied by specialty, ranging from a high of 54% for urology to a low of 28% for public health and preventive medicine.

Read the report for more details on reasons for burnout and what physicians are doing about it

About information technology

Apple is in talks with private Medicare plans about bringing its watch to at-risk seniors: The watch can now detect changes in heart rhythm (such as atrial fibrillation) and falls. It can also tally the number of steps the wearer takes. Are these benefits worth the cost ($399)? Should the watches be given to all seniors or be available only for those at high risk? When does the information capability violate privacy? What happens when insurance companies require members to wear this or similar devices as a condition of insurance (or incur a large penalty/increased premium for not doing so)?
Read the article

About pharma

The FDA has five weeks till money runs out for approving new drugs:Pharma companies may be hard hit if the budget crisis is not resolved. The FDA has stretched its resources but only has five weeks of funding left to review new drug applications (NDAs). The patent protections, however, continue to run- meaning the lost revenue by delayed approval could be substantial.

Read the article

Forget to take your medication? A new digital pill will alert you — and your doctor: Patients do not always take their medications. Reasons vary from high costs to being unable to open the bottle. This technology targets patients who do not take their medication- leaving the reasons to be determined. After they are ingested, pills containing sensors will transmit to a receiver on the abdomen. The receiver will then transmit via a mobile app to the physician.

Read the article

About insurance

Medicare Advantage industry sees slower growth for 2019: Despite “slower growth,” Medicare Advantage plans added 1.4 million more members in the past year. Now about 22.4 million beneficiaries belong to these private plans. The article has more details about growth and who the major players are.

Read the article

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Gottlieb Says User Fees Will Pay for Post-Market Surveillance Amid Shutdown: As previously mentioned, the budget impasse has affected FDA activities. One activity not mentioned is the so-called Phase IV studies, i.e., post-marketing surveillance for adverse drug problems. Since there is not money available for this important activity, FDA Commissioner says the user fees (normally used for drug approvals) will be diverted for this purpose.

Read the announcement

Rising Drug Prices Said to Strain Hospitals, Force Budget Cuts: I have commented on the issue in previous posts, but this article summarizes a recent NORC survey of 4200 hospitals. The two main problems are rising costs and shortages. The article also highlights that the increased costs are forcing some hospitals to cut back on expenses for key functions, like staffing.

Read the article

Fragile pharmaceutical supply chain increases costs, compromises care: On the same theme as the above article, this one also draws on the NORC study but focuses more on the shortages and how hospitals are “massaging” the supply chain to alleviate the problem.

Read the article

Walmart Could Leave CVS Caremark Pharmacy Networks Amid Dispute: CVS Caremark is a pharmaceutical benefit manager (PBM) that uses Walmart pharmacies as outlets. (It also uses CVS pharmacies). The two are now set to split as early as February. According to the article, the reasons are in dispute but one is that Walmart is raising its fees for filling prescriptions. The Walmart outlets are a small part of the CVS PBM but it will be interesting to see if these giant companies can come to terms.

Read the article
About information technology

Approaches and Challenges to Electronically Matching Patients’ Records across Providers: This report is from the Government Accountability Office. Everyone agrees on the benefits of being able to link patient medical records from a variety of sources and also agrees that computer system interoperability problems impede that effort. One issue being avoided is using a single patient identifier to help with this linkage. The single identifier was part of the HIPAA data standardization but was removed over privacy concerns. There is good reason for this concern given the large numbers of people involved in data breaches. Until security issues are largely resolved and the public feels comfortable, patient information will probably not flow seemlessly.

Read the GAO report
Read a commentary

2019 Interoperability Standards Advisory: Continuing the theme of interoperability, the Office of the National Coordinator has issued standards for nomenclature. This document is very technical but is worth a cursory look-through to get an idea of the extent of what interoperable data needs to look like. It also highlights that data sets are overseen by different organizations.

Read the report

About insurance

Optum breaks $100B in revenue for the first time, boosting UnitedHealth's growth in 2018: Somehow I think this headline should read “tail wags dog.” United Health Group started out as an insurance company- now called United Healthcare. It added another division (now called Optum) to furnish support services for health insurance companies- including banking for Health Savings Accounts, actuarial services and analytics. This year Optum broke $100B in revenue for the first time and accounted for a significant portion of its parent’s profitability.

Read the announcement

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s Health

Ten threats to global health in 2019: This list from the WHO ranges from the very specific (Dengue) to general system issues (weak primary care systems). Perhaps these threats will provide opportunities for entrepreneurs.

Read about the list

Seven in 10 Maintain Negative View of U.S. Healthcare System: In the latest Gallup poll, 70% of those surveys said the US healthcare system was in crisis or had major problems. Of not is that this figure has been largely unchanged for the past 14 years. A surprising finding is that despite Republican calls to dismantle the ACA and Democratic attempts to protect it, 84% of democrats have a negative view of the system while only 56% of Republicans share that opinion. Of course peoples’ opinions about “the system” have always been at odds with their personal experiences.

Read the study

CVS pledges $100 million for community health programs: On the heels of its purchase of Aetna, CVS is launching Building Healthier Communities “ to improve access to affordable health care, manage health challenges like chronic conditions and opioids and partner with communities.” CVS has been very proactive about health initiatives- recall the company removed cigarettes from its stores for health reasons.

Read the announcement 

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FDA resuming some food inspections halted by shutdown: As previously reported, because of the budget impasse, the FDA stopped inspecting domestic food plants. The agency announced that it will resume inspections for such “high risk” items as cheeses, produce and infant formula.

Read the announcement

About pharma

Want to win over payers, pharma? Forget the 'me-too' drugs, CSL chief says:The title of the article says it all: be innovative if you want payers to support your R&D pipeline. One tactic not mentioned is to ask payers what they need for their members.

Read the interview

Effect of Medication Co-payment Vouchers on P2Y12 Inhibitor Use and Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events Among Patients With Myocardial Infarction: Platelet inhibitors (like Plavix) are used to prevent recurring heart attacks and strokes. These medicines can be costly, however. In this study, investigators found that use of coupons to help with expenses “increased persistence with a guideline-recommended therapy but did not improve clinical outcomes at 1 year.” Pharma marketers claim coupons increase affordability so patients will fill their prescriptions and improve their health. We need to see a longer term effect of coupons before the practice is stopped for lack of healthcare improvement evidence.

Read about the study

Analysis of Proposed Medicare Part B to Part D Shift With Associated Changes in Total Spending and Patient Cost-Sharing for Prescription Drugs:One way the federal government has tried to save Medicare from going bankrupt is by playing a shell game- shifting benefits from one part to another. The latest is a proposal to shift some Medicare Part B pharmaceutical costs to Part D. Drugs now under Part B include those administered in a physician’s office (like chemotherapy or immune system modulating medications); they are subject to a 20% coinsurance covered by supplemental insurance policies. Part D is the self-administered drug program purchased by Medicare beneficiaries and subject to different types of out of pocket expenses, depending on the plan.
This study’s results say that the government will save money by making these changes but they may cost patients more. The authors call for changes where both CMS and patients benefit.

Read the study

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Ohio Passes Law Allowing EpiPen Alternatives: While the specifics of this article are not important, the overall issue is: whether pharmacists can substitute medications with or without permission of the prescribing physician in order to save money. Different jurisdictions in the US (and other countries) have different laws with respect to this action. Do you know what is allowed where you live?

Read the announcement

Italian Agency Hits Chinese Heparin Manufacturer for GMP Violations: This article is another reminder that India and China are the world’s leading sources for raw materials that go into pharmaceutical manufacturing. China was the source of the heparin contamination that hit Baxter several years ago.

Read the announcement

About hospitals

Hospitals' solution to surprise out-of-network bills: Make physicians go in-network: Patients ending up in hospitals that are contracted with their health plan often receive bills from physicians who have not signed such agreements. The problem is that many hospitals have not insisted that physicians who practice full time in the institution sign up with the same plans as the do. These physicians include practitioners in pathology, radiology, anesthesiology, and emergency medicine. Now some hospitals are finally catching on and requiring such arrangements.

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Memorial Sloan Kettering Curbs Executives’ Ties to Industry After Conflict-of-Interest Scandals: What happens when a hospital executive (particularly a physician) is a highly compensated board member of a healthcare company and a conflict of interest arises from those dual roles? This situation unfolded in the past few weeks at Memorial Sloan Kettering. This new policy addresses the outside activities.

Read more about this story and hospital policy

Just looking for a problem? That's Providence St. Joseph's strategy for its new $150M venture fund:Since at least the 1980s, hospitals diversified their services and investments in an attempt to capture additional revenue. These investments ranged from real estate to starting their own health insurance companies. Now one hospital has started its own venture fund.

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About insurance

Judge pauses appeal of ObamaCare ruling, cites government shutdown: Democratic state attorneys general, the House of Representatives, and the Executive Branch are all appealing the ruling that would invalidate the ACA. On Friday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit granted a pause in the appeals process because of the government slowdown from the budget impasse.

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Medicaid is reducing poverty over time, study finds: Is Medicaid having an impact on poverty levels or is it just providing health coverage for its recipients? The study, published in Health Affairs, showed that Medicaid expansion reduced the rate of poverty among states who chose to expand the program under the ACA by 0.917 percentage points, or by 690,000 people. The reduction in poverty of that number of people provides another reason for program expansion.

Read the article summary

Trump Administration Plans Effort to Let States Remodel Medicaid: The Trump administration is again considering replacing current Medicaid payments with block grants. This scheme was part of the Republican’s failed attempt to repeal the ACA in 2017. Details of how the system would be implemented and its payments calculated are not yet clear. Funding would need to be approved by the House, so chances of significant overhauls are slim.

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V.A. Seeks to Redirect Billions of Dollars Into Private Care: This article was on the front page of yesterday’s New York Times. It is a well-done summary of the very long-standing debate about whether care for veterans should be privatized or stay in VA facilities. The current debate started when the last Congress passed the “Mission Act.” Its purpose was to increase access to medical care for veterans who lived far from a VA facility. Now, the current administration is trying to expand the private access to more veterans, regardless of their proximity to care. Proponents of this change will face a very powerful veterans lobby.

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Today's News and Commentary

About insurance

Senator Ben Cardin seeks to expand Medicare to include dental benefits: Medicare does not pay for dental benefits; nor does any private health insurance plan (unless problems are due to trauma or medical conditions). Recognizing that dental care is important for proper nutrition and overall health, from where is the money for these services coming? The proposal claims it will pay for itself in longterm savings. We have heard that one before.
Read the announcement

About information technology

Annual Update on the Adoption of a Nationwide System for the Electronic Use and Exchange of Health Information: The Office of the National Coordinator has submitted to Congress its annual report. Briefly, it says interoperability is still a problem and “we’re working on it.” The news here is that there is nothing new or groundbreaking that will finally have a significant impact on interoperability.

Read the report

Walgreens Tests Digital Cooler Doors With Cameras to Target You With Ads: Although this technology is geared to purchasers of soft drinks from the drugstore coolers, it raises issues about what else is being monitored. For example, if you go to a Walgreens and pick up a prescription, then get a drink from the cooler, are those two purchases linked? Read the article and think about other privacy issues as your preferences are tracked in a pharmacy.

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AI approach outperformed human experts in identifying cervical precancer: A NIH-developed algorithm does better than physicians in visually identifying precancerous cervical disease after acetic acid application. This visual inspection can link to the algorithm via cell phone/camera, so it can be used in areas remote from medical care. Obviously, medical followup must be available if an abnormality is found.

Read the announcement

About the public’s health

Total Fertility Rates by State and Race and Hispanic Origin: United States, 2017: This annual CDC document reveals that the US has its lowest birthrate since 1978. However, average statistics are not valuable because of the large geographic and racial differences. (The report has maps showing these divisions by state.) This document is an important planning source for healthcare professionals ranging from those in public health to marketing managers.

Read the report

About pharma

Louisiana adopts ‘Netflix’ model to pay for hepatitis C drugs: File this one under “old wine in new bottles.” Louisiana’s plan is to pay pharmaceutical companies a subscription fee in return for access to medications when needed by patients. This model was named after Netflix because of the subscription financing. More than 25 years ago, managed care organizations paid Pharmaceutical Benefit Management (PBM) companies a per member per month fee in return for unlimited pharmaceutical use. Many arrangements had upper and lower limits to the deals whereby PBM profits and losses were limited. It is nice to see that one more good idea from the past has been rediscovered.

Read the article

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Antibiotic Prescribing for Children in United States Emergency Departments: 2009–2014: This study found that when children go to a non-pediatric ER, they are more likely to receive inappropriate antibiotics. What to do with such information? Increase pediatric ERs or enhance training of all ER physicians to prescribe appropriately?

Read the original article

Social Determinants of Health Key to Value-Based Purchasing Success: I have previously written about the importance of considering social determinants in caring for individuals and populations. This article is a nice overview of this topic and highlights the need to incorporate social determinant dimensions when designing and evaluating value-based services.

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Associations of Income Volatility With Incident Cardiovascular Disease and All-Cause Mortality in a US Cohort: 1990 to 2015: Associations between health and wealth, as well as socioeconomic status are well-known. This study takes those concepts a step further. The volatility of income also plays a role, increasing morbidity and mortality by nearly twofold.

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Government shutdown: In addition a previous blog entry about the effect of the shutdown, add two more problems. FDA Commissioner Gottlieb has resorted to Tweets to communicate important messages, such as drug recalls. Further, according to the Washington Post, the FDA, “which oversees 80 percent of the food supply, has suspended all routine inspections of domestic food-processing facilities…” The irony is that imported food will still be examined. So much for encouraging purchase of American products.

About pharma

Partisan stances remain on how to lower drug costs: Today Sen. Bernie Sanders is set to announce the liberal Democratic plan for reducing drug prices. Measures are expected to include: pegging prices agains international benchmarks; CMS contracting directly with pharma manufacturers to get best prices (rather than relying on on private Medicare Part D plans to do so); and allowing Americans to import “safe” drugs from other countries. On the other side of Congress, Republican Senator Chick Grassley (who is chair of the senate finance committee) has come out against direct negotiations with manufacturers.
These two opposing stances on drug company negotiations have been going on since passage of the Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) in 2005, which created the Part D program. Democrats have always favored federal purchasing while Republicans have defended the ability of “free markets” to control prices. If Democrats gain control of both chambers and the White House in 2020 we may see their wish become reality.

Read about the Sanders proposal

Read about the Grassley statement

Prescription Drug Pricing: An Overview of the Legal, Regulatory, and Market Environment: Continuing the above theme, this paper, from the American Enterprise Institute, is an excellent topical review.

Read the monograph

‘Marketers are having a field day’: Patients stuck in corporate fight against generic drugs: In a Washington Post front-page story today, reporters tell how drug companies are spreading stories that generic biologically-derived drugs are inferior to the branded versions. In an interview, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said: “I am worried that there are either deliberate or unintentional efforts by branded companies to create confusion” about the safety and effectiveness of unbranded biologic drugs… The messages “can potentially undermine consumer confidence in biosimilars in ways that are untrue.’’
Of course, the motive is profit. How much is the difference if the generics are used? According to the article, “savings to the U.S. health-care system that have been estimated at $54 billion to more than $200 billion over 10 years.”

Read this in-depth article

Novartis puts AI on the job to help reps say the right things to the right doctors: Continuing a theme of marketing, Novartis’ pharma CEO Paul Hudson announced at this week’s annual JP Morgan conference that the company is using artificial intelligence in its marketing efforts, but in a novel way. The AI
will help drug reps  “plan better, move better and make sure when they show up to see a healthcare professional, they are talking about the things that the healthcare professional is absolutely interested in…” Perhaps in addition to educating themselves about their products, salespeople will have to bone up on certain sports or esoteric hobbies that interest their customers.

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New strategy may curtail spread of antibiotic resistance: Antibiotic resistance has become a huge health problem worldwide. This phenomenon relies on bacterial ability to share genes in small packages (called plasmids) that confer the protection. If the plasmids can be modified so they cannot be spread among bacteria, resistance can be reduced. This article explains what researchers at Washington University are doing in this area of research. It could create a new category of antibacterial agents that would be used with traditional antibiotics.

Read the announcement
Read the original article (Subscription required but the abstract is available)

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Medical Marketing in the United States, 1997-2016: This article is a nice review about how much medical marketing has grown in the US, despite restrictions on direct physician marketing practices. According to the research:
”From 1997 through 2016, spending on medical marketing of drugs, disease awareness campaigns, health services, and laboratory testing increased from $17.7 to $29.9 billion. The most rapid increase was in direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising, which increased from $2.1 billion (11.9%) of total spending in 1997 to $9.6 billion (32.0%) of total spending in 2016. DTC prescription drug advertising increased from $1.3 billion (79 000 ads) to $6 billion (4.6 million ads [including 663 000 TV commercials]), with a shift toward advertising high-cost biologics and cancer immunotherapies.” Sadly, one of the authors, Dr. Lisa Schwartz recently died.

Read the original study 
If you cannot access the original, read the Kaiser Health News comments

Drugmaker Eli Lilly to start publishing list prices of drugs: In October, members of the trade group PhRMA agreed to post prices for advertised drugs. But the prices are so different among pharmacies and insurance plans that it would be impossible to give the information in a short commercial message. (Recall that side effects must also be given.) So companies are going to give website addresses and toll-free numbers where patients can get an idea of what the medication might cost. Lilly has touted itself as the first company to comply with this industry guideline by making prices about its diabetes treatment Trulicity available.

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Prescription Drug Costs Driven By Manufacturer Price Hikes, Not Innovation: Recall that expenses are driven by price, volume and intensity (in this case, innovation). The study quoted in this article from Health Affairs(Subscription required) concluded that: “The rising costs of generic and specialty drugs were mostly driven by new product entry, whereas the rising costs of brand-name drugs were due to existing drug price inflation.” It should be noted that drug costs will be higher if enough people who should be taking medication were doing so- particularly for diabetes and high blood pressure.

Read the commentary article

New California governor tackles drug prices in first act: New California Governor Gavin Newsom has already started to shake up the healthcare landscape. He announced that instead of using managed care models, the state would act as purchaser for all 13 million Medicaid recipients. Additionally, his executive order creates a mechanism allowing “private companies and other governmental agencies to participate in the process of negotiating drug prices with pharmaceutical companies.” The entity would be the biggest single purchaser of pharmaceuticals in the US. (Read below about what is happening with insurance in California.)

Read the article

About information technology

Rush working with AT&T to be the first 5G-enabled U.S. hospital: The latest push in technology is implementation of 5G-enabled equipment that will greatly increase speeds of transmission. This technology can help in the healthcare field by, among other activities, enhancing telemedicine and device communication capabilities. The joint venture should be carefully followed to assess the future of this advance on healthcare delivery.

Read the article


About the public’s health

Facts & Figures 2019: US Cancer Death Rate has Dropped 27% in 25 Years: Now some good news. The reasons for this drop are not only increases in early detection and treatment, but reductions in smoking. But like many other health statistics, the results show benefits are uneven in the population.

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Prevalence of and Factors Associated With Patient Nondisclosure of Medically Relevant Information to Clinicians: Technology and delivery systems will not help healthcare if patients lack trust. This article looks at what patients withhold and why. “ …most participants reported withholding at least 1 of 7 types of medically relevant information, especially when they disagreed with the clinician’s recommendations or misunderstood the clinician’s instructions. The most commonly reported reasons for not disclosing information included not wanting to be judged or hear how harmful their behavior is.” In one of the two studies reviewed in this article those most likely to withhold information were female, younger, or had worse self-rated health. An association was not found for: those who have a chronic illness; with educational level : or with race.

Read the original article
Read the popular media version

About insurance

Announcements about insurance expansions: As Republicans have tried to dismantle the ACA, Democratic jurisdictions have come up with their own plans to extend benefits to the uninsured. These efforts now include California, Washington State and NY City.

Read the article about NY City
Read the article about California
Read more about the Washington announcement

Today's News and Commentary

This week is the 37th annual JP Morgan Healthcare conference, a large meeting about the healthcare industry.

For updates and keynote addresses see this website

About pharma

FDA plans to create a new office to leverage cutting-edge science: The FDA will be launching a new 52-person group, called the Office of Drug Evaluation Science (ODES). It will be part of “the Office of New Drugs, which is itself part of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research [CDER}, which oversees the approval of new medicines.” Its tasks will include a cloud-based, standardized reporting mechanism for drug development and approval applications as well as patient reporting of side effects.

Read about the announcement

All seven of the FDA’s recent commissioners agree it should be independent — but not on how to accomplish it: The FDA is part of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). Both the DHHS Secretary and FDA Commissioner are political appointees. The seven recent FDA commissioners recount how they faced political pressures in their job and call for an independent agency. While the likelihood of independence is slim, this important agency must be able to make decisions based on science rather than politics.

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Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine: Will the Phoenix Rise Again? Every year, pharma companies try to anticipate the viral strains that will cause illness in the upcoming flu season. This projection allows for manufacture of appropriate vaccines. Many different vaccine versions are available. One of the differences among products is between the inactivated injected vaccine and the live attenuated version that is inhaled through the nose. Last year, the CDC did not recommend the inhaled version because it lacked effectiveness. For this flu season it is back on the approved list. This article (an editorial about the subject in Pediatrics) highlights the importance of annual evaluation of these vaccines. While I do not endorse one product over another, it has always been OK to get an inactivated form. The choice is yours in consultation with your physician. By the way, research is still ongoing for a “universal” flu vaccine that will not depend on the seasonal strain.

Read the article

Report: Drug prices drive up insurance premium costs: Yesterday I reported the California study about specialty pharmaceuticals causing rapid rise in drug prices. I mentioned that the situation was similar in other states. Coincidentally, this article verifies that assertion for Vermonters. “Using average wholesale prices as of January 2018, the care board found that prescription drugs accounted for $81.65 in monthly premium charges per consumer. That’s up 11.4 percent from the previous year.” Again, specialty pharmaceutical were largely responsible for those figures.

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Life, Death and Insulin: This article is a great piece of investigative journalism and commentary from the Washington Post. It summarizes what happens to diabetics when they can no longer afford their insulin. The problem is that the price of this essential medication has been rising rapidly. It raises the issue of what has been called value-based pharmaceutical benefits. Some advocate that life saving or sustaining medications should be available at no cost to patients. Other medications with less critical value should have graduated out of pocket spending requirements. Other countries (like Italy ) already tier their medication payments in such a fashion. Unfortunately this country does not even allow cost-effectiveness to be a criterion for drug approval. We have a long way to go before we are philosophically ready for value based payments.

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IPO bonanza as biotechs get in while the iron’s hot (or before it cools): For years, many viewed biotech companies as a separate industry from large pharma. Industry experts, however, knew they were just part of the business’ s spectrum. With more acquisitions, this expert opinion is becoming more obvious. Further, the recent stock market downturn has not seemed to dampen IPO interest. This article highlights some of the current and upcoming activities in this field.

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How Takeda's $62 Billion Shire Deal Reshapes Pharma World: Continuing the theme of large acquisitions was this announcement yesterday. The article is a nice summary of what is happening in the field and the new list of the biggest players..

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Measuring the return from pharmaceutical innovation 2018: One reason for the mergers and acquisitions is that R&D productivity had markedly declined and companies are looking outside for new products. This annual Deloitte report quantifies this problem: “R&D returns have declined to 1.9 percent, down from 10.1 percent in 2010—the lowest level in nine years. Returns have been impacted by the growing cost of bringing a drug to market which now stands at $2,168 million – almost double the $1,188 million recorded in 2010.” Are the benefits of these combinations sustainable or are they short-term fixes?

Read the report

Civica Rx adds 12 more health systems, including NYU Langone, Memorial Hermann: To combat rising pharmaceutical costs, last year some hospitals got together to form a generic drug company called Civica Rx. The number of participants is now up to 750. Read this summary of where this venture is now.

Read the article

Court Rejects Trump’s Cuts in Payments for Prescription Drugs: In 2005 the Medicare Modernization Act changed the way outpatient pharmaceuticals were paid- from an Average Wholesale Price basis to 106% of the drug’s national average sales price. Providers (such as hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers) who care for uninsured and large proportions of Medicaid patients can purchase pharmaceuticals from manufacturers at a large discount and bill insurers at retail rates under what is called the 340B plan. Last year the Trump administration unilaterally cut 340B payments from 106% to 77.5% of average sales price. Washington DC federal district court judge Rudolph Contreras ruled that this cut overstepped executive authority. According to the article: Under the Medicare law, Judge Contreras said, federal officials have the power to “adjust” reimbursement rates. But, he said, they abused that power and “fundamentally altered the statutory scheme established by Congress for determining” reimbursement rates. [HHS Secretary] Azar “may either collect the data necessary to set payment rates based on acquisition costs, or he may raise his disagreement with Congress,” but he may not circumvent the mandate of Congress… The government had acknowledged that it did not know the precise amount of the difference between what hospitals were paying for the drugs and what Medicare was reimbursing them.

“The court is still considering how to compensate hospitals for the money lost, estimated at $1.6 billion for last year.”

Read the article

About the public’s health

Medicaid plans cover doctor visits, hospital care—and now GEDs:Picking up on a theme I have mentioned before- social determinants of health- this article highlights another way insurers can help their members. “AmeriHealth Caritas, a Philadelphia-based insurer with 2 million Medicaid members in Pennsylvania and five other states, helps connect members with nonprofit groups providing GED test preparation classes, offers telephone coaching to keep members on track and pays the testing fees.” Maybe the model can be expanded.

Read the story

About quality

Association of Extending Hospital Length of Stay With Reduced Pediatric Hospital Readmissions: Readmission rates are a measure of hospital quality of care. This retrospective study looks at the association between length of stay and readmission rates for pediatric patients across diagnoses. Only 6 diagnoses were found to have higher 15 day readmissions with shorter initial hospital stays. However, the authors concluded that: “the number of additional hospital bed-days and costs needed to avoid 1 readmission may neither be reasonable nor cost-effective to pursue.” For example, for newborns with high bilirubin,  “134 additional hospital bed-days and $104 000 were required to prevent 1 readmission.” Their final recommendation was: “efforts to avoid readmissions should focus on other aspects of hospital discharge care.”

Read the original article (Subscription required)
Read a media summary

Two-Year Evaluation of Mandatory Bundled Payments for Joint Replacement: Continuing the theme of cost/quality issues, this study looked at the Medicare program, which requires bundled payments for hip and knee replacement surgeries. The good news is that in the first two years of this initiative, “there was a modest reduction in spending per hip- or knee-replacement episode, without an increase in rates of complications.”

Read the study

Today's News and Commentary

About marketing:

2019 Healthcare Consumer Trends Report: Healthcare providers are increasingly focused on patient perceptions when designing products and services. This thoughtful report has some interesting insights, especially: “51.3% of patients say that convenient, easy access to care is the most important factor in their decision-making. Convenience matters more than brand reputation (39.8%), more than quality of care (34.6%), more than the interpersonal conduct of doctors and nurses (44.2%)—even more than insurance coverage (46.4%). In fact, 80% of patients say that they select providers based on convenience factors alone”. Do patients assume providers are interchangeable with respect to quality?

Read the report

About insurance

The $9 Billion Upcharge: How Insurers Kept Extra Cash From Medicare: In this front page Wall Street Journal article, the authors document the systematic overestimation of expenses when companies involved in Medicare Part D (drug benefit) submit their bids to CMS. These bids include administrative expenses as well as profits. If expenses turn out lower than estimates, the companies keep a portion of the overage. They are at risk for some of the losses should they occur. However, so far the industry has reaped $9 billion extra. This article does a great job of investigative journalism and explains the process very well. One further piece of data not in the article: Future Medicare Part D liabilities are more than those for Social Security.

Read the article(Subscription required- but worth finding the article)

About the public’s health

Prevalence and Severity of Food Allergies Among US Adults: Ask adults if they have a food allergy and about one in five will answer yes. But only about 11% of the population truly has a true allergy. The article claims this misinformation causes unnecessary lifestyle restrictions and possible adverse nutritional consequences. Authors call for better documentation of these allergies through testing.

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Health advocates say schizophrenia should be reclassified as a brain disease: Other than the specific recommendation in the title, this article highlights the importance of definitions and framing in healthcare. How we define and classify a disease determines (among other things) how research is done, how treatment is funded and who provides the care. For example, epilepsy is caused by “electrical” phenomenon in the brain and is considered a neurological disease treated by neurologists. Schizophrenia is a “chemical” disease in the brain considered to be a psychiatric disease treated by psychiatrists. These differences are the result of tradition…with modern understanding should we change the models?

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About devices

The FDA is still letting doctors implant untested devices into our bodies: This article highlights the problems with medical devices that the FDA approves based on older technology- 510(k) process. The problem is that these devices may be truly new and have unanticipated adverse effects or are based on outmoded treatments. The overarching issue, however, is the FDA’s bringing products to market as soon as possible so they can benefit patients versus assuring their safety. This is a great summary of this problem.

Read the article

About pharma

5 Things About the Orphan Drug Act: January 4 was the 36th anniversary of passage of the Orphan Drug Act. The purpose of this legislation was to give pharma companies financial incentives to develop drugs for “rare” diseases. One problem is that drugs can be used for more than one reason. If only one is an orphan indication, the manufacturer receives benefit for all uses. This article summarizes where we are now with the results of the Act.

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Johns Hopkins, Bristol-Myers must face $1 billion syphilis infections suit: In 2010 a professor at Wellesley College discovered that in the 1940s, experiments were conducted in Guatemala on patients with syphilis to test penicillin’s effectiveness. These experiments were echos of the Tuskegee Study, in which African American men were observed for progression of their syphilis long after penicillin was available. The court decision says that the trial may progress to the discovery phase.

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Insurers blame specialty drug costs for rising premiums. This report from California shows why: This study from California reflects a national trend: “Specialty drugs made up about 3% of prescriptions in California in 2017 but accounted for more than half of the prescription drug spending that year.. insurers reported that per member per month [pmpm] drug spending reached about $81 last year, or about 16.5% of premiums in 2017…” Specialty drugs (like biologicals) are driving the pharma cost trend. Without the ability to approve drugs based on cost/benefit criteria, these costs will continue to rapidly rise. To put these costs into another perspective, the pmpm spending in many cases is more than what is paid to primary care physicians in capitated arrangements.

Read the article

Today's News and Commentary

About healthcare professionals

4 Physician Assistant Trends to Watch in 2019: The US faces uneven physician shortages: by specialty and geography. One way we are attempting to address this problem is by using what used to be called “physician extenders,” such as nurse practitioners and physician assistants. One of the areas of need is primary care. Yet only about 20% of physician assistants are in family medicine and general practice. As this growing field saturates, we will see if these professionals help fill the specialty shortage needs. It is unclear how they will address the geographic problem.

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Dealmaking stayed hot in 2018, with a focus on physician practices: Most of the healthcare deals last year focused on hospital, insurance and pharma mergers/acquisitions. Physician practices were also a hotbed of activity. Purchasers ranged from hospitals systems to insurance companies to private equity firms. This article provides a good overview of this trend, which is on track to continue in the coming years.

Read the article

About insurance

House Democrats plan to hold hearings on Medicare for All: Liberal Democrats have been talking about this program for sometime. Now, new (returning) House Speaker Pelosi has given her endorsement to the idea of holding hearings on the matter. No one disagrees that everyone should have health insurance. The problem is when they realistically come up with the costs of an open-ended system that is based on volume of services rendered and with no consideration of evaluations of the benefits of new technology. By the way, future liability for Medicare is $29.2 trillion and Social Security is $19.8 Trillion. Neither are “funded,” meaning it is a future promise without the current money to deliver.

Read the article

Final Healthcare.gov enrollment numbers show drop due to cancellations: While analysis about the details is a couple months away, CMS says ACA exchange enrollment was down 4% from the previous year- about 2.1 million new customers and about 6.3 million renewals. As mentioned in a previous blog, it is unknown whether these figures are good or bad news. Are people opting out of insurance entirely or signing up for short term coverage, or are more people covered by employer-sponsored plans due to increased employment? Wait until March to find out.

Read the announcement

DOJ Reclaimed $2.5 Billion from Healthcare-Related False Claims Cases in Fiscal 2018: Healthcare fraud continues as an important added expense of our healthcare system. It is one more result of the fact that we largely pay by volume rather than value. As a thought experiment, think about how you would commit fraud in a capitated system.

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House Democrats vote to defend ACA in court — and jam Republicans: Continuing yesterday’s post about the House’s intent to join in the appeal over the ACA, representatives voted to make the action official.

Read the story


About hospitals

AHA data show hospitals' outpatient revenue nearing inpatient:The gap between hospital inpatient and outpatient revenue has narrowed over a number of years. Those figures are now closer than ever. There are many reasons for this trend: inpatient revenues have decreased or been flat as outpatient revenues (particularly diagnostics) have grown rapidly. Further, technology had allowed more procedures to be done on a same-day basis. According to The American Hospital Association's 2019 Hospital Statistics report (which analyzes 2017 data), “hospitals' net outpatient revenue was $472 billion and inpatient revenue totaled nearly $498 billion… creating a ratio of 95%, up from 83% in 2013." Many people expect outpatient revenue to surge past inpatient revenue in the near future. Is the core function of inpatient services now intensive care?

Read the story [Subscription required]


Hospitals See Opportunity in Bringing Care Facilities to Patients: Many hospitals and healthcare systems have expanded through merger and acquisition. But what if the hospital has a market niche that precludes such tactics? Past examples have included the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic expansions to other locales. This article focuses on the Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) in NY City. In contrast to the general capabilities of the Mayo and Cleveland Clinics, the HSS’s expertise is orthopedic care. This article analyzes its strategy to open facilities in other markets. It is an interesting move since “6% of patients who visit the primary Upper East Side Hospital for Special Surgery campus come from the immediate neighborhood. Some 94% of patients who are seen by the hospital drive in or fly to the hospital.”

Read the article

About pharma

The 20 most expensive pharmacy drugs in 2018, featuring names big and small: Enough has been said about the high cost of branded pharmaceuticals. This article gives you the facts about the 20 therapies that topped the list.

Read the article

About information technology

Most U.S. patients not using online medical portals: Healthcare providers rely on patient portals as a secure method of communication. Despite this feature being a requirement for “meaningful use” of electronic records, most patients are not using this method to connect with healthcare providers. According to this article, which draws on research published in Health Affairs [Subscription required]: “Overall, 63 percent of survey participants reported not using a patient portal during the past year, and 60 percent reported not having been offered access to a portal. Nonusers were more likely to be men, aged 65 or older, to be unemployed, live in a rural location, have public insurance through Medicaid, have a high school diploma or less education and to lack a regular doctor. Similar characteristics, as well as being non-white, were seen among people who said they weren’t offered access to a patient portal.”
This article also brings to mind many studies about how an overwhelming percent of people now prefer to use online tools to access medical care and communicate with providers. If available, the methodology description of those studies will reveal that they generally rely on….yes, online surveys.

Read the article describing the research

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Bristol-Myers bulks up cancer portfolio with $74 billion Celgene deal: The new year is only three days old and a blockbuster acquisition has been announced. You can read the details about what the companies said were strategic reasons for the purchase. Historically these combinations have made financial sense because of the economies of scale gained by the business functions of each company. Products lose patent rights and economies of scale do not apply to R&D… So what is the attraction of megamergers/acquisitions other than “short term” revenue enhancement?

Read the announcement


About the public’s health

How the government shutdown affects health programs: As previously noted, because HHS and VA programs had been funded, the budget impasse has left governmental healthcare programs largely unaffected. Now that the the problem is dragging on, it is worthwhile to look at the areas where healthcare is affected because lack of financing :
Insuring food safety falls under the FDA, but a large part of that effort is funded by the Agriculture Department.
HHS oversees The Indian Health Service, but funding comes from the Interior Department.
”The Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Health Affairs assesses threats posed by infectious diseases, pandemics and biological and chemical attacks.”
The Environmental Protection Agency is likewise on the list of Departments whose funding is being withheld.

Read the article

Sex differences in GBM revealed by analysis of patient imaging, transcriptome, and survival data:
STOP and read!
I know this article seems really esoteric (it comes from Science Translational Medicine) but I include it to highlight a problem. By and large, clinical research has under-represented women. It was originally assumed that what was found true in men also applied to women. Many studies have shown the incorrectness of this supposition. Hormonal differences have been given as the cause of this variance. However, according to the study’s authors: “Sex differences play a role in patient outcomes, and… in the case of the brain tumor glioblastoma, these go beyond hormonal influences and appear to be intrinsic to the tumor cells themselves… the sex of the patient correlates not only with prognosis but also with responses to different treatments, suggesting that it may be an important factor to consider when optimizing the therapeutic regimen for each patient.” With the increased focus on individualized medical treatment, the patient’s sex must also be considered a biological variant.

Read the article

How far Americans live from the closest hospital differs by community type: The focus on costs and quality (including patient experience) often overshadows the problems with access to healthcare. This study highlights the access problems faced by those living in rural areas. Note the figures are averages, so many people face longer distances to get to care. Remember that not all access issues involve transportation- for example, scheduling delays also contribute to this problem.

About Information technology

Health Industry Cybersecurity Practices:Managing Threats and Protecting Patients: HHS has made cyber security a top priority for the coming year. As a result of The Cybersecurity Act of 2015 (CSA) (Public Law 114-113), a task force was convened that looked at this growing problem. This document is the culmination of this effort. It is an excellent summary and resource.

Read the task force report

11 best practices for protecting connected medical devices:This article draws on the above report to highlight the issue of peripheral device vulnerability. Diagnostic equipment as well as implantable electronics (like pacemakers) are more easily hackable than, for example, electronic records. We need to pay more attention to this oft-overlooked security exposure.

Read the list with brief explanations

HL7 Releases FHIR Version 4.0 for Healthcare Interoperability:Other than security, the biggest IT problem is interoperability. HL7 is supposed to be a platform for aiding seamless communication among different IT systems. but there are several versions of this product. One advance is Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR). This version claims to be a large step forward in enabling this connectivity. The reading gets technical very quickly but at some point a cursory knowledge for all healthcare management professionals is necessary.

Read the announcement

Read more about FHIR 4.0


About pharma

Aurobindo Pharma USA recalls 80 lots of blood pressure drug from America:The specifics of this article are less important than the overall message. Last year a number of drugs were pulled from the US market because of impurities. This announcement highlights the fact that a large majority of chemicals used in manufacturing of pharmaceuticals for the US market come from India and China. Further, there are large numbers of generic medicines sourced from abroad. The FDA does not have the resources to inspect all these foreign plants and so relies on local enforcement- which is often inadequate.. Until local authorities can be trusted and rapid analytic devices are developed for use at point of inspection, this perennial problem will inevitably recur.

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FDA says certain antibiotics could rupture main artery:In the mid 1980s, the quinolones came on the market as a new class of antibiotics. Use rapidly increased for such conditions as urinary tract infections and community acquired pneumonias. As early as 1983, an association between quinolone use and Achilles tendon rupture was reported. Recognition of this problem has been growing as use of this class of drugs has continued to increase. In 2008, the FDA mandated that all these products have a black-box warning. Now it appears that connective tissue in general is at risk— aortic ruptures or tears have been associated with quinolone use. The obvious message: no drug is always safe and use must include consideration of risk/benefit tradeoffs and informed patient participation in decision making.

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Give it to us straight, doctors tell pharma advertisers—but being funny is OK, too: Have you ever read an advertisement or seen a commercial on TV and asked yourself either: What was that about? or Why don’t I understand the message? The problem of understandability is also prevalent in pharma advertising. According to a recent study: “More than one-third (39%) of doctors said they are sometimes confused by messaging, and another 35% reported being overwhelmed on occasion by the language used in the ads.” Despite all the regulatory requirements advertisers face, 76% of doctors recommend the Keep It Simple strategy. Humor helps as well.

Read about the study

About quality

Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS):As providers enter another year of Quality Payment Program requirements, this link provides a great resource for understanding and complying with the MIPS.

Connect to the resource

About insurance

House Democrats seek authorization to intervene in ACA lawsuit:The Democrats in the House of Representatives have crafted rules giving that body the authority to participate in appeal of the recent ACA ruling in Texas. If it passes, they will join Democratic state attorneys general in that effort.

Read the announcement