Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

AHA, AAMC press appeals court for rehearing on site-neutral payments case: “The American Hospital Association (AHA) and Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) announced Friday they are seeking a rehearing on the ruling earlier this month from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. The ruling upheld the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) authority to install Medicare payment cuts to off-campus hospital clinics to bring them to the same payment level as physician offices.”

About pharma

Trump signs orders to lower prescription drug prices: As announced in Friday’s blog, Trump signed executive orders aimed at lowering drug prices.
”One order would allow for the legal importation of cheaper prescription drugs from countries like Canada, while another would require discounts from drug companies now captured by middlemen to be passed on to patients, Trump said. 
Another measure seeks to lower insulin costs while a fourth, which may not be implemented if talks with drug companies are successful, would require Medicare to purchase drugs at the same price that other countries pay, Trump said.” Pharma companies have until August 25 to come up with a plan.
For White House texts of the orders, see: Executive Order on Access to Affordable Life-saving Medications and Remarks by President Trump at Signing of Executive Orders on Lowering Drug Prices.

The top 20 drugs by global sales in 2019: Leading the group is Humira's $19.74 billion in sales.

1 in 3 hospital pharmacies face shortage of remdesivir, survey funds: “A new report from the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists polls 112 respondents on a number of concerns related to the pandemic. While some expressed concern about supply of remdesivir, supplies of intensive care medications are improving, the survey found.”

About the public’s health

FDA authorizes first COVID-19 test for screening people without symptoms: “Previously, the agency’s testing green lights were reserved for people showing early signs of an infection, such as a fever, as well as high-risk individuals and front-line healthcare workers…
The new regulatory expansion goes to LabCorp’s coronavirus diagnostic test…. The agency also endorsed its use for batch testing, which allows up to five samples to be combined and analyzed at once to stretch testing supplies and speed up screening efforts.”

Coronavirus Vaccine Put To Final Test In Thousands Of Volunteers: “The world’s biggest COVID-19 vaccine study got underway Monday with the first of 30,000 planned volunteers helping to test shots created by the U.S. government —… developed by the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc….”

Flu, Pneumonia Vaccinations Tied to Lower Risk of Alzheimer's Dementia: Another reason to get these vaccinations. The research found:

  • “At least one flu vaccination was associated with a 17% reduction in Alzheimer’s incidence. More frequent flu vaccination was associated with another 13% reduction in Alzheimer’s incidence.

  • Vaccination against pneumonia between ages 65 and 75 reduced Alzheimer’s risk by up to 40% depending on individual genes. 

  • Individuals with dementia have a higher risk of dying (6-fold) after infections than those without dementia (3-fold).”

About healthcare IT

10 concerning trends in health IT: A nice summary of some current trends, including problems.

Today's News and Commentary

Sunday, July 26, 2020, marks the 30th anniversary of the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act. 

About the public’s health

Renewal of Determination That A Public Health Emergency Exists: Starting tomorrow, HHS Secretary Azar will extend the COVID-19 public health emergency status for another 90 days.

U.S. coronavirus deaths top 1,100 for a third day in a row: Total cases have now reached 4 million.

Impact of self-imposed prevention measures and short-term government-imposed social distancing on mitigating and delaying a COVID-19 epidemic: A modelling study: “Based on our results, we conclude that handwashing, mask-wearing, and social distancing adopted by disease-aware individuals can delay the epidemic peak, flatten the epidemic curve, and reduce the attack rate. We show that the rate at which disease awareness spreads has a strong impact on how self-imposed measures affect the epidemic… For all measures, a large epidemic can be prevented when the efficacy exceeds 50%. Moreover, the effect of combinations of self-imposed measures is additive. In practical terms, it means that SARS-CoV-2 will not cause a large outbreak in a country where 90% of the population adopts handwashing and social distancing that are 25% efficacious (i.e., reduce susceptibility and contact rate by 25%, respectively)…
The potential second wave could be prevented altogether if the coverage of a self-imposed measure in the population and its efficacy are sufficiently high (e.g., 90% and 50%, respectively). Our sensitivity analyses showed that lower or higher efficacies can be required to prevent a large epidemic for countries with smaller or larger basic reproduction numbers…”

Estimated County-Level Prevalence of Selected Underlying Medical Conditions Associated with Increased Risk for Severe COVID-19 Illness — United States, 2018: This report from the CDC was published today and has a shocking revelation: “The median model-based estimate of the prevalence of any of five underlying medical conditions associated with increased risk for severe COVID-19–associated illness among U.S. adults was 47.2% among 3,142 U.S. counties. The estimated number of persons with these conditions followed population distributions, but prevalence was higher in more rural counties.” The five conditions are chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, and obesity.

Why COVID-19 is killing U.S. diabetes patients at alarming rates: “At the microscopic level, high glucose and lipid counts in diabetes patients can trigger a ‘cytokine storm,’ when the immune system overreacts, attacking the body. Damaged endothelial cells, which provide a protective lining in blood vessels, can lead to inflammation as white blood cells rush to attack the virus and may cause lethal clots to form, emerging research suggests.”

‘It’s Like Groundhog Day’: Coronavirus Testing Labs Again Lack Key Supplies:”Pipette tips aren’t the only laboratory items in short supply. Dwindling stocks of machines, containers and chemicals needed to extract or amplify the coronavirus’s genetic material have clogged almost every point along the testing workflow.”

Neonatal management and outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic: an observation cohort study:”Of 1481 deliveries, 116 (8%) mothers tested positive for SARS-CoV-2; 120 neonates were identified. All neonates were tested at 24 h of life and none were positive for SARS-CoV-2…. Our data suggest that perinatal transmission of COVID-19 is unlikely to occur if correct hygiene precautions are undertaken, and that allowing neonates to room in with their mothers and direct breastfeeding are safe procedures when paired with effective parental education of infant protective strategies.”

Coffee, Caffeine, and Health: Excellent article from the NEJM on this topic. (Can access by signing up for 3 free articles/month). Among the benefits: “coffee consumption was associated with a reduced risk of cardiovascular diseases, with the lowest risk for 3 to 5 cups per day. An inverse association has been observed between coffee consumption and coronary artery disease, stroke, and death from cardiovascular causes.” Filtered coffee is best, then espresso, then unfiltered. The article also discussed tea and “energy drinks.”

Evidence-based prevention of Alzheimer's disease: systematic review and meta-analysis of 243 observational prospective studies and 153 randomised controlled trials: A number of interventions are discussed with their recommendation confidence based on the scientific literature. “With credible though inconclusive evidence, the suggestions targeted 10 risk factors including diabetes, hyperhomocysteinaemia, poor BMI management, reduced education, hypertension in midlife, orthostatic hypotension, head trauma, less cognitive activity, stress and depression.”

China offers $1 billion loan to Latin America and the Caribbean for access to its Covid-19 vaccine:”The virtual meeting on Wednesday was led by Mexico's Foreign Affairs Minister, Marcelo Ebrard, and [Chinese Foreign Minister] Wang Yi. Their counterparts from Argentina, Barbados, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Panama, Peru, Trinidad and Tobago and Uruguay also joined.”

About hospitals and health systems

General and Targeted Distribution Post-Payment Notice of Reporting Requirements Relief Fund (PRF) recipients that received one or more payments exceeding $10,000 in the aggregate from the PRF must report by Feb. 15, 2021 how they spent the relief grants. The reporting will be available strait October 1, 2020. Detailed instructions regarding these reports will be released by August 17, 2020.

About pharma

Trump likely to sign executive orders on drug pricing Friday:”The exact details of the orders remain unclear, but sources say one order is likely to include a version of a proposal to reduce some U.S. drug prices by tying them to the lower prices paid in other countries. 
An idea that had been in the mix earlier in the week, to eliminate the rebates drugmakers pay to negotiators known as pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), is now unlikely to be included, sources say.”

U.S. clears way for drugmakers to share COVID antibody capacity: “The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday said it will not stand in the way of efforts by companies, including Eli Lilly and Co and Amgen Inc, to share information to help scale up capacity to manufacture antibody treatments for COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus….
The DOJ did not include Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc, which expects to have definitive trial results for its dual-antibody treatment by late summer or early fall. The Department of Health and Human Services in June awarded Regeneron a $450 million contract and the company has cleared the way for U.S. manufacturing of its antibody cocktail by moving production of its other products to a plant in Ireland.”

AstraZeneca confirms Russia vaccine deal days after COVID-19 hacking accusations surface:”Last week, Western intelligence officials pegged Russian hackers with an attempt to rip off leading research for a COVID-19 vaccine, linking the would-be thieves with the country's intelligence services.
Russia itself denies involvement in any of those attacks—and with a new licensing deal for AstraZeneca's COVID-19 shot, the country says it doesn't need the secrets anyway.
Russian drugmaker R-Pharm has signed a licensing deal with Britain's AstraZeneca to produce and distribute doses of its University of Oxford-partnered adenovirus-based COVID-19 shot, AZD1222.”

Hydroxychloroquine with or without Azithromycin in Mild-to-Moderate Covid-19: Do we really need another study showing lack of effectiveness? Here is one anyway (from Brazil): “Among patients hospitalized with mild-to-moderate Covid-19, the use of hydroxychloroquine, alone or with azithromycin, did not improve clinical status at 15 days as compared with standard care.”

U.S. sets global benchmark for COVID-19 vaccine price at around the cost of a flu shot:”The U.S. government has set a benchmark for COVID-19 vaccine pricing in a $2 billion deal announced on Wednesday with Pfizer Inc and German biotech BioNTech SE that will likely pressure other manufacturers to set similar prices, industry analysts told Reuters.
The deal, which is contingent on an approvable product, secures enough vaccine to inoculate 50 million Americans for about $40 a person, or about the cost of annual flu shots, and is the first to provide a direct window into likely pricing of successful COVID-19 vaccines.”

Biotech Startups Cash In With IPOs in First Half: “Drug startups capitalized on soaring interest in biotechnology to stage 26 initial public offerings globally in the first half of this year, putting 2020 on pace to be one of the strongest ever for new stock offerings in the sector.”

FDA Poses March Deadline for Reporting Unapproved Drug Use: “Drug companies would have until the end of March to tell the FDA which unapproved drugs they offered sick patients through the federal Right to Try law and whether they caused serious side effects under a proposed rule the agency released Thursday.
The rule is aimed to give the Food and Drug Administration a clearer picture of how patients are using experimental drugs through the law’s annual reporting requirements. It would also help provide the first comprehensive look at how effective the law has been at getting terminally ill patients access to the latest medications.”

Moderna loses US patent challenge that could affect COVID-19 vaccine:”Shares in Moderna fell as much as 10% Thursday after the company failed in an attempt to invalidate a US patent on vaccine technology held by Arbutus Biopharma. SVB Leerink analyst Mani Foroohar suggested the decision by an administrative court run by the US Patent and Trademark Office opens the door to debate around Moderna's entire pipeline, with the near-term concern being its experimental coronavirus vaccine mRNA-1273, which is due to enter Phase III testing later this month.”

About health insurance

Aetna aims to offer alternative to high-deductible plans in 2 new benefit designs:”The new designs, called Upfront Advantage and Flexible Five, offer members coverage for some preventive services before they meet their deductibles. In Upfront Advantage, members will have access to services worth up to $500 for an individual and $1,000 for a family for free before their deductible is met. 
In Flexible Five, members will instead be offered five coupons per person for these services; a family of four, for example, would receive 20 coupons that can be applied to services such as primary care visits, behavioral health visits, urgent care, lab tests or x-rays conducted during those visits and generic drugs.”

Nearly 11M paid premiums for ACA exchanges at beginning of 2020, a slight increase:”The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) reported Thursday that 10.7 million ACA customers paid their premiums as of March 15, a slight increase from the 10.6 million who paid through February 2019. The data include both state and federally run insurance exchanges.”

Humana plans to send 1 million home screening kits to its members: “Humana said it will send 1 million test kits to its members to allow them to access preventive screenings at home. The insurer said it would send its Medicare Advantage members at-home colorectal cancer screenings and diabetic management test kits. Humana’s Medicaid members will also have access to the diabetic management test kits.” One advantage to the insurer is maintenance of quality scores for screening, which affects payment levels.

Association Between Switching to a High-Deductible Health Plan and Major Cardiovascular Outcomes: In a finding consistent with other studies on high deductibles and serious illness, the authors found that: “Mandated enrollment in high-deductible health plans with typical value-based features was not associated with increased risk of major adverse cardiovascular events.”

About healthcare IT

In Push for Better Cybersecurity, U.S. Energy Department Outlines a National Quantum Internet: While not strictly applicable to healthcare, this development can have profound benefits in the sector. For example, the public’s confidence in enhanced security would help allay fears of a unique patient identifier.
“A group led by the U.S. Department of Energy and the University of Chicago plans to develop a nationwide quantum internet that could be functional in about a decade and with the potential to securely transmit sensitive information related to national security and financial services…
The project will be funded by a portion of the $1.275 billion budget allocated as part of President Trump’s National Quantum Initiative, an effort to accelerate research and development in quantum information science, an area of study that includes quantum-based communication and quantum computing.”

Clinical, Legal, and Ethical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence–Assisted Conversational Agents in Health Care: With the rapid growth in telemedicine, this article is a great summary of the issues mentioned in the title. By way of definition: “Conversational agents (CAs) are artificial intelligence (AI) programs that engage in a dialogue with users by interpreting their questions or concerns and replying to them in a text message, image, or voice format. Conversational agents typically imitate human conversation by applying natural language processing and machine learning and stand in contrast to text-based engagement platforms that accept discretely formatted human inputs and reply with preset messages.”

 Abbott receives FDA approval for neurostimulator-controlling iPhone app, for personalizing therapies for pain, Parkinson's disease: “The FDA approved a new smartphone app from Abbott allowing people to personalize their own neuromodulation therapies, including regimens for chronic pain and movement disorders such as Parkinson’s disease.
Compatible with Apple products, the devicemaker’s NeuroSphere Digital Care platform and its newly approved patient controller app are also designed to encourage more virtual connections with healthcare providers, and allow interactions to take place remotely in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Cerner inks partnership with point-of-care decision-making platform: “Cerner announced July 23 a new agreement to deploy Holon Solutions' point-of-care platform that can extract relevant patient information from Cerner's population health platform and deliver it into the clinician's EHR workflow.”

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Feasibility of Separate Rooms for Home Isolation and Quarantine for COVID-19 in the United States: “More than 1 in 5 U.S. homes, housing about one quarter of all Americans, lack sufficient space and plumbing facilities to comply with recommendations to isolate or quarantine to limit household spread of COVID-19. This proportion is particularly high among homes occupied by minority and poor individuals and among apartments…”

Poll: 3 In 4 Americans Support Mask Requirements: According to a NORC-AP poll: “Three out of four Americans, including a majority of Republicans, favor requiring people to wear face coverings while outside their homes, a new poll finds, reflecting fresh alarm over spiking coronavirus cases and a growing embrace of government advice intended to safeguard public health.”

COVID-19 screening strategies that permit the safe re-opening of college campuses: Note, this article has not yet been peer reviewed. This simulation was a cost-effectiveness analysis of “campus screening using tests of varying frequency (daily-weekly), sensitivity (70%-99%), specificity (98%-99.7%), and cost ($10-$50/test)…Across all scenarios, test frequency exerts more influence on outcomes than test sensitivity. Cost-effectiveness analysis selects screening every {2, 1, 7} days with a 70% sensitive test as the preferred strategy for Rt = {2.5, 3.5, 1.5}, implying a screening cost of {$470, $920, $120} per student per semester. Conclusions & Relevance: Rapid, inexpensive and frequently conducted screening (even if only 70% sensitive) would be cost-effective and produce a modest number of COVID-19 infections. While the optimal screening frequency hinges on the success of behavioral interventions to reduce the base severity of transmission (Rt), this could permit the safe return of student to campus.”

Over half of U.S. companies plan virus contact tracing for employees: survey: In this study by Mercer of more than 300 companies, “54% are planning to implement a contact tracing program or had already started one…
Among those who responded, the survey found that 42% of companies said they are using existing employees to do contact tracing and 9% are training employees now. In addition, about 4% said they will be hiring more staff and/or a vendor for their contact-tracing efforts, and about 3% plan to use a smart phone app or wearable device to track employee contacts.”

About health insurance

Another Problem on the Health Horizon: Medicare Is Running Out of Money: Medicare Trustees recently said the hospital trust fund will go bankrupt in 2026 (unchanged from previous estimates). Dr. David Shulkin (former undersecretary for health at the Department of Veterans Affairs and now now a senior fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania)  did his own projections. “Given even a conservative estimate of how many workers and businesses would not be contributing payroll taxes that finance Part A spending, he said, the trust fund could become insolvent as early as 2022 or 2023.”

About pharma

Roche suffers double whammy as biosimilars, COVID-19 joined hands in weak quarter: The three drugs are Avastin, Rituxan and Herceptin. The first half of year impact is $2.3 billion.

About healthcare IT

Lessons from year one of Blue Shield of California's Wellvolution program: The article provides encouragement for other insures who want to implement similar programs.
“Over the past year, Blue Shield of California has grown its Wellvolution digital and community health network into the largest in the nation.
The platform includes close to 60 digital apps and covers services at 30,000 locations. About 26,000 Blue Shield members are currently enrolled in Wellvolution, the insurer said. Through the platform, members are matched with customized programs and digital coaching for a number of health conditions, including diabetes, hypertension, obesity and behavioral health needs.”

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Deciding Who Should Be First in Line for the Coronavirus Vaccine: Here is the text of my NY Times letter published today:

“The debate in the article centers on who should get priority to receive the coronavirus vaccine when it first comes out. Another consideration is where it should first be deployed. Politics may dictate that it go to states that currently have the highest incidence, i.e., many red states. However, many places in those states are not prudently practicing quarantine, masking and social distancing.

Would it be fair to those states with sensible policies that they have to wait for the vaccine?”

The comment is meant to spur debate between two rationales for allocating the vaccine.
Recall that the vaccine is targeted to be 50-75% effective. Now that evidence points to the need for two injections, it may prove to be even less effective. This concern raises the further question of the overall effectiveness in a setting without social distancing and mask wearing. In other words, we need to ask: Would the vaccine be “wasted” in that setting? Would the vaccine be more useful in accomplishing the goal of zero infections if it were part of a portfolio of measures? To answer some of these questions, it is nice to see the following announcement: National Academies Launch Study on Equitable Allocation of a COVID-19 Vaccine – First Meeting July 24: “As part of the study, the committee will consider what criteria should be used to set priorities for equitable distribution among groups of potential vaccine recipients, taking into account factors such as population health disparities; individuals at higher risk because of health status, occupation, or living conditions; and geographic distribution of active virus spread.  In addition, the committee will consider how communities of color can be assured access to COVID-19 vaccines in the U.S. and recommend strategies to mitigate vaccine hesitancy among the American public.”

HHS Coronavirus Data Hub:This dashboard replaces the CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) for reporting COVID-19 related data, such as intensive care unit capacity, ventilator use, personal protective equipment (PPE) levels, and staffing shortages.

Trump shifts rhetoric as he urges mask-wearing, warns of worsening pandemic: “President Donald Trump, in a shift in rhetoric and tone, encouraged Americans on Tuesday to wear masks if they cannot maintain social distance and warned that the coronavirus pandemic would get worse before it got better.”

Former CDC chief: Most states fail to report data key to controlling the coronavirus pandemic: “Not a single state reports on the turnaround time of diagnostic covid-19 tests…Six months after the first coronavirus case  appeared in the United States, most states are failing to report critical information needed to track and control the resurgence of covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, according to an analysis released Tuesday” by former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Tom Frieden. “His team and other public health leaders are recommending that states and counties report 15 indicators they say are essential for an effective response.”

How long will immunity last after COVID-19 infection?While the data is not yet clear, here are a couple articles that try to answer the question:

Sweden Says Covid Immunity Can Last 6 Months After Infection: “Sweden’s top health authority says people who have had the novel coronavirus are likely to be immune for at least six months after being infected, whether they’ve developed antibodies or not…’We don’t see cases of people falling ill twice from Covid-19,’ state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell said during a press conference in Stockholm. ‘Hence, our assessment is that if you do get Covid-19 you are immune, even if you don’t develop antibodies.’”

Rapid Decay of Anti–SARS-CoV-2 Antibodies in Persons with Mild Covid-19: “The protective role of antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 is unknown… Given that early antibody decay after acute viral antigenic exposure is approximately exponential, we found antibody loss that was quicker than that reported for SARS-CoV-1… Our findings raise concern that humoral immunity against SARS-CoV-2 may not be long lasting in persons with mild illness, who compose the majority of persons with Covid-19. It is difficult to extrapolate beyond our observation period of approximately 90 days because it is likely that the decay will decelerate. Still, the results call for caution regarding antibody-based ‘immunity passports,’ herd immunity, and perhaps vaccine durability, especially in light of short-lived immunity against common human coronaviruses. Further studies will be needed to define a quantitative protection threshold and rate of decline of antiviral antibodies beyond 90 days.”

Genes May Influence COVID-19 Risk, New Studies Hint: A nice summary of this issue from Scientific American. “Combing through the genome, researchers have tied COVID-19 severity and susceptibility to some genes associated with the immune system’s response, as well as a protein that allows the disease-causing SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus into our cells. They have also turned up links between risk and a person’s blood type—A, B, AB or O. The findings are not cut-and-dried, however. “

Polio vaccination campaigns restart after modelers warn about risk of ‘explosive’ outbreaks:”In a sad knock-on effect of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) abruptly halted all mass vaccination campaigns in March, worried they could inadvertently spread the novel coronavirus. The move further imperiled the troubled 3-decade drive to wipe out polio.
But now, armed with new data and perspective, GPEI and the countries it supports are resuming vaccination campaigns.”

Poor diets threaten US national security — and it's serious: “Diet-related illnesses are a growing burden on the United States economy, worsening health disparities and impacting national security, according to a white paper published Monday in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Poor nutrition is the leading cause of illnesses in the US, with unhealthy diets killing more than half a million people each year, a group of experts who have formed the Federal Nutrition Research Advisory Group wrote in the paper.
About 46% of adults in the country have an overall poor-quality diet, and this number goes up to 56% for children…
The paper's authors called for the expansion of federal investment in nutrition science by creating a new Office of the National Director of Food and Nutrition or a new US Task Force on Federal Nutrition Research, with the goal of improving coordination within the agencies that budget for research in this topic.”

Physicians’ progress toward ending the nation’s drug overdose and death epidemic: A couple important takeaways from the report:
—”37.1% decrease in opioid prescriptions from 244.5M in 2014 to 153.7M in 2019…
—Despite these efforts, illicitly manufactured fentanyl, fentanyl analogues and stimulants (e.g. methamphet- amine, cocaine) are now killing more Americans than ever. The use of these illicit drugs has surged and their overdose rate increased by 10.1% and 10.8%, respectively.”

US signs contract with Pfizer for COVID-19 vaccine doses: “The Trump administration will pay Pfizer nearly $2 billion for a December delivery of 100 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine the pharmaceutical company is developing, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar announced Wednesday. 
The U.S. could buy another 500 million doses under the agreement…”

About health insurance

Are Employers Satisfied that Their Health Plans Drive Quality, Safety, and Value?:This report from the Leapfrog Group polled “174 employers representing an estimated 4 million insured lives… Respondents cited their experience with health plans including Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, as well as a range of BlueCross and BlueShield (BCBS) plans, including Anthem and over a dozen state BCBS plans.” The results were divided over 4 criteria:

  1. Responsiveness of the health plan to employer concerns;

  2. Transparency in helping employers and employees choose the best providers;

  3. Payment reform initiatives that incentivize excellence in the market; and

  4. Value strategies driven by health plans.

You should read the whole study but here are some pertinent facts:
”The final question asked of the employers was to grade their health plan, from A to F, on their ability to direct their employees to high-quality health care. Overall, employer respondents gave their plans a C-plus (2.57 GPA). The larger employers were tougher on the health plans than the mid-size to small employers….

Among the plans reported in the survey, Cigna was a clear leader in the movement for value. Employers gave UnitedHealthcare the lowest ratings, with the most room for improvement in driving for value, reducing costs and improving quality. Aetna led among plans for putting a focus on quality.”

California Blues earned $1B ACA risk adjustment payment last year. Here's how other insurers fared:”Risk adjustment transfers totaled $10.8 billion in 2019, with some insurers on the ACA's exchanges earning substantial payouts, according to new data from the Trump administration.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services released (PDF) its annual look at the Affordable Care Act's risk adjustment program, and said that 561 insurers participated in 2019. The $10.8 billion was split evenly between payments made to insurers and payments to CMS to maintain budget neutrality.
The individual market accounted for the largest share of transfers, or about $7.98 billion.”

Insurers worry drug companies could game changes to Medicaid rebate program in new rule:”Several insurer groups commented on the proposed rule that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released last month to get states and drugmakers to create more value-based payment arrangements.
If finalized, the rule would relax some of the requirements for the average manufacturer price and best price that manufacturers must provide for Medicaid. Under the new rule, a manufacturer could report multiple best prices for a therapy under the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program, but any best price has to be tied to a value-based purchasing agreement.
A manufacturer could also use a ‘bundled sales’ approach that allows a manufacturer to calculate a weighted average for discounts across a drug class. If there is a performance-based failure for the drug, it is allocated proportionally for all products sold in the bundle.
But payers were concerned manufacturers could game the new multiple “best price” provision. For instance, the manufacturer could offer a variety of rebates based on a patient’s response to a drug, but questions remain on how states will track those outcomes.”

About pharma

How COVID-19 could be crippled by an age-old blood thinner:Scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute “discovered that SARS-CoV-2 binds tightly to heparin, making the drug a potential ‘decoy’ that could serve as a way to neutralize the virus before it can infect healthy cells. They reported the finding (PDF) in the journal Antiviral Research.”

Novartis' second-quarter sales, profit fall as COVID-19 stockpiling reverses: Many healthcare institutions stockpiled medications in the first quarter. Now pharma performance results will show the effect of reduced 2nd quarter purchases.

10 most valuable R&D projects in the pharmaceutical industry pipeline: The headline is self explanatory.

COVID-19: EMA sets up infrastructure for real-world monitoring of treatments and vaccines:”EMA has now set up an infrastructure to support the monitoring of the efficacy and safety of COVID-19 treatments and vaccines when used in day-to-day clinical practice. This is underpinned by three contracts for observational research that EMA has signed with academic and private partners over recent months, to be ready to effectively monitor vaccines in the real world as soon as they are authorised, and support the safe and effective use of COVID-19 vaccines and medicines.
The latest contract was finalised in mid-July with Utrecht University and the University Medical Center Utrecht as coordinators of the CONSIGN project (‘COVID-19 infectiOn aNd medicineS In preGNancy’).”
Do we have a similar entity in this country?

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

How long should you isolate if you test positive for the coronavirus? At least 10 days after symptom onset:”The CDC had previously recommended people who test positive isolate until they had two negative swabs for the coronavirus — but that turned out to be impractical given the shortage of tests. It now advises most people with active cases of covid-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, to isolate for 10 days after symptoms begin and 24 hours after their fever has broken. After that, they are free to leave isolation.”

President Trump defends response to COVID crisis in exclusive interview with Chris Wallace: This article is a transcript of the “Fox News Sunday," July 19, 2020 interview with the President. Read it in its entirety.

Trump Says He ‘Aced’ a Cognitive Test. What Does That Really Mean?: The article is not really a political comment but a good summary of the value of cognitive testing.

Erythrocyte omega-3 index, ambient fine particle exposure and brain aging: As we age, brain white matter shrinks. Air pollution makes it worse. In this study of women ages 65-80, consumption of omega-3s (largely from fish) mitigated these changes.

Blue states sue HHS over controversial transgender coverage rule:”A collection of 23 states is suing the Trump administration over a rule the states say eliminated healthcare protections for transgender Americans.
The states, which are led by California, Massachusetts and New York, argue in the lawsuit filed Monday that the rule finalized last monthviolates the Affordable Care Act (ACA)—which prohibits discrimination in federal healthcare such as Medicare, Medicaid and the exchanges—and the equal protection guarantee within the U.S. Constitution.”

We'll need enormous numbers of Americans to test COVID-19 vaccines; a 'very encouraging' 138,600 have signed up: The headline speaks for itself.

Social determinants of health amplify stroke risk in adults younger than 75 years:”Among adults younger than 75 years, those with multiple social determinants of health were at more than a 2.5-fold greater risk for stroke than those without any, according to new data from the REGARDS study. 
Determinants most strongly associated with stroke were race, education, income, ZIP code poverty, health insurance, social isolation and residence in one of the 10 lowest-ranked states for public health infrastructure.”

Race, Postoperative Complications, and Death in Apparently Healthy Children: “Among 172 549 apparently healthy children, the incidence of 30-day mortality, postoperative complications, and serious adverse events were 0.02%, 13.9%, and 5.7%, respectively. Compared with their white peers, AA [African American]children had 3.43 times the odds of dying within 30 days after surgery (odds ratio: 3.43; 95% CI: 1.73–6.79). Compared with being white, AA had 18% relative greater odds of developing postoperative complications (odds ratio: 1.18; 95% CI: 1.13–1.23) and 7% relative higher odds of developing serious adverse events (odds ratio: 1.07; 95% CI: 1.01–1.14)…Mechanisms underlying the established racial differences in postoperative outcomes may not be fully explained by the racial variation in preoperative comorbidity.”

Double-Shot Covid Vaccines Multiply Immunization Challenges: “When it comes to protecting the world from the coronavirus, two doses of a vaccine may be better than one. But doubling the number of jabs each person needs could complicate efforts to immunize billions of people.
The latest results from front-runners in the sprint to come up with a vaccine, including the University of Oxford-AstraZeneca Plc partnership and Modern Inc.., highlight that prospect. Both efforts are conducting final-stage testing with two doses.”

Testimony of Macaya Douoguih, M.D., M.P.H. Head of Clinical Development and Medical Affairs, Janssen Vaccines and Prevention Johnson & Johnson: Submitted to the Oversight & Investigation Subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives Energy & Commerce Committee: In today’s prepared statement, J&J gave an update on its vaccine progress and made a promise that: “Johnson & Johnson is committed to bringing an affordable COVID-19 vaccine to the public on a not-for-profit basis for emergency pandemic use… We are committed to one price globally, regardless of country or income tier. The not-for-profit price will be for the emergency pandemic period.
Our not-for-profit framework is consistent with established vaccine costing methodologies. Our price will be determined based on one cost structure, with all appropriate costs included. We are pursuing external validation of our not-for-profit calculation approach and external audit / certification of not-for-profit price.”

Two Chinese Hackers Working with the Ministry of State Security Charged with Global Computer Intrusion Campaign Targeting Intellectual Property and Confidential Business Information, Including COVID-19 Research: This announcement came today from the Department of Justice. It is on the heels of the Russian hack last week.

About health insurance

Administration Eases Rules to Give Laid-Off Workers More Time to Sign Up for COBRA:”Under the federal law known as COBRA, people who lose their job-based coverage because of a layoff or a reduction in their hours generally have 60 days to decide whether to continue their health insurance. But under the new rule, that clock doesn’t start ticking until the end of the COVID-19 “outbreak period,” which started March 1 and continues for 60 days after the COVID-19 national emergency ends. That end date hasn’t been determined yet.
By extending the time frame to sign up for COBRA coverage, people have at least 120 days to decide whether they want to elect COBRA, and possibly longer depending on when they lost their jobs.”

About hospitals and health systems

The Effect of COVID-19 on Hospital Financial Health: KaufmanHall prepared this report for the AHA. —Before COVID-19 the median hospital margin was 3.5%
—Funding from the CARES Act (distributed April, May and June) is mitigating the negative financial “impact to a certain degree. Median margins are forecast to drop to –3% in the second quarter of 2020; however, those margins would have been –15% without CARES Act funding.”
—”In the most optimistic scenario, median margins could be –1% by the fourth quarter of the year. In a less optimistic scenario, margins could sink to –11%.” By then, half of all hospitals could have negative margins.

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

FDA gives green light on 'pool testing' to increase diagnostic capacity: “The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued an emergency use authorization for Quest Diagnostics to begin pooled testing — a testing technique increases capacity, allowing up to four test samples to be tested at once…
Pooled testing is relatively straightforward: If the pooled test comes back negative, then all four samples are negative. If it comes back positive, then each sample is individually tested.”

Contact Tracing during Coronavirus Disease Outbreak, South Korea, 2020: There is a lot of information in this CDC-published study. The most important finding may be that researchers “found the highest COVID-19 rate (18.6% [95% CI 14.0%–24.0%]) for household contacts of school-aged children and the lowest (5.3% [95% CI 1.3%–13.7%]) for household contacts of children 0–9 years in the middle of school closure.”

Challenge Trials for COVID-19: 125 scientists signed an open letter to NIH head Dr. Francis Collins highlighting the “vast importance of human challenge trials as a method to help develop vaccines.” They stress the need for properly chosen test subjects and clinical protocols.

Dozens of Florida labs still report only positive COVID tests, skewing positivity rate: “A review of state data shows many small, private labs have been reporting only their positive results to the state -- skewing the positivity rate higher. 
Even after this issue came to light… several dozen labs are still reporting 100% positivity rates, according to a review of Friday's DOH data.”

Pre-fab vaccine facilities aim to help fill production gap: “The German engineering group Exyte has developed modular Covid-19 vaccine manufacturing facilities that can be delivered within six months, to supply pharmaceutical companies rushing to expand their production sites on the back of encouraging clinical trial data. The Stuttgart-based business, formerly known as M+W Group, has joined forces with Siemens and Belgian group Univercells Technologies to offer bespoke facilities that meet European and US regulations, and can be transported on the back of a lorry.”

About health insurance

Appeals court upholds Trump administration's expansion of short-term plans: “A federal appeals court upheld the Trump administration's expansion of short-term health plans.
A panel of judges for the District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that  while opponents of such plans may be correct that they're a poor option for consumers, the Department of Health and Human Services was within its statutory authority to expand them regardless.”

Hospitals Appeal Decision Upholding Disclosure of Rates Negotiated With Insurers: “The American Hospital Association on Friday appealed a decision upholding a Trump administration rule that requires hospitals disclose the rates they negotiate with insurance companies that aren’t made public.
The trade group argued the rule goes against congressional intent and is based on an unlawful interpretation of federal law, according to its filing with the U.S. District Court Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.”

About pharma

AstraZeneca's eagerly awaited COVID-19 vaccine passes large test, but confirmation needed:”As Moderna, Pfizer and BioNTech have this month been busy releasing early data out of their COVID-19 vaccine programs, AstraZeneca is now joining the July data drop…
The trial of the vaccine, known as AZD1222 and being developed by AstraZeneca and scientists at the University of Oxford, was generally safe (fevers and headaches hit the majority but could be controlled), and it saw both antibody and T-cell immune responses.”

Synairgen's inhaled interferon beta cuts chance of developing severe COVID-19 disease:
”Synairgen announced Monday that its inhaled formulation of interferon beta, dubbed SNG001, significantly reduced the chance of developing severe disease compared to placebo in hospitalised COVID-19 patients…According to Synairgen, results showed that the odds of developing severe disease during the treatment period were cut by 79% for hospitalised patients receiving SNG001 compared to those given placebo. In addition, patients who received SNG001 were more than twice as likely to recover over the course of the treatment period versus those in the placebo group.”

Remdesivir: Recommendations for Hospitalized Patients With Severe COVID-19: The NIH updated its recommendations on Friday:

  • “In situations where remdesivir supplies are limited, the COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines Panel (the Panel) recommends that remdesivir be prioritized for use in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 who require supplemental oxygen but who are not mechanically ventilated or on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) (BI).

The following recommendation statements for the use of remdesivir are currently being revised and will be updated soon:

  • The Panel recommends administering the investigational antiviral agent remdesivir for 5 days for the treatment of COVID-19 in hospitalized patients with SpO2 ≤94% on room air (at sea level) or those who require supplemental oxygen (AI).

  • The Panel recommends remdesivir for the treatment of COVID-19 in patients who are on mechanical ventilation or ECMO (BI).”

Possible vaccine protein for COVID-19 made in silkworms: “Kyushu University has used silkworms to develop a protein that could become a candidate vaccine for COVID-19, with the hope of starting clinical research for the vaccine as early as fiscal 2021… the vaccine could be mass-produced at an ‘insect plant,’ keeping down the cost per inoculation to only several thousand Japanese yen.” [The Yen is trading at about 107/1US$]

Today's News and Commentary

About healthcare quality

Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Application From the Joint Commission for Continued Approval of its Hospital Accreditation Program: CMS had granted The Joint Commission (TJC) approvals for six years at a time to certify hospitals for Medicare and Medicaid participation. CMS is now shortening it to two year periods. Here is the summary statement explaining why the change is occurring:

“… we [CMS] approve TJC as a national accreditation organization for hospitals that request participation in the Medicare program. The decision announced in this final notice is effective July 15, 2020 through July 15, 2022 (2 years). In accordance with § 488.5(e)(2)(i) the term of the approval will not exceed 6 years. This shorter term of approval is based on our concerns related to the comparability of TJC's survey processes to those of CMS, as well as what CMS has observed of TJC's performance on the survey observation. Some of these concerns stem from the level of detail TJC provides in the daily briefings it provides to facilities, as well as TJC's processes surrounding its staff interview practices. Additionally, we are concerned about TJC's review of medical records and surveying off-site locations, in particular for the Physical Environment condition of participation.”

About hospitals and health systems

Appeals court rules HHS has authority to implement site-neutral payments, dealing blow to hospitals: This ruling (which will undoubtedly be appealed) could have the largest impact on hospital finances of this generation. “A federal appeals court ruled the Department of Health and Human Services has the authority to cut Medicare payments to off-campus clinics to bring them in line with independent physician practices, reversing a lower court’s decision.”

Hospitals overbilled Medicare $1B by upcoding claims, inspector general finds:”Hospitals overbilled Medicare $1 billion by incorrectly assigning severe malnutrition diagnosis codes to inpatient hospital claims, according to a report from HHS' Office of Inspector General. 
The inspector general did the review after previous claims audits found that hospitals had incorrectly billed Medicare by using several malnutrition diagnosis codes when they should have used codes for other forms of malnutrition or not used a malnutrition code at all.”

Virginia Mason in acquisition talks with CommonSpirit's CHI Franciscan: “Thursday, the two health systems announced they signed an agreement to explore combining through the formation of a joint operating company.”

Not-for-Profit [NFP] Hospital Medians Improved Prior to Coronavirus: From Fitch: “Audited data show that the sector had stabilized after a period of prior operational softness, with improvements first seen in our 2019 medians (2018 audited data). The 2020 medians are expected to show operating margin expansion driven by higher revenues and targeted cost reductions along with improvement in liquidity and debt service ratios due in part to a favorable investment market in 2019 and increased cash flow….The NFP healthcare sector is unlikely to stabilize until an effective coronavirus vaccine is widely available…”

About the public’s health

July 2020 update: scientific terminology of Covid-19: From the Oxford English Dictionary [OED]. This article is an excellent source of definitions about COVID-19 related terms. For example: “While the official name for the disease caused by the coronavirus Sars-CoV-2 is Covid-19, the terms CovidC-19CV-19CV, and corona are also used to refer to the virus and the disease.” COVID-19 (all caps) has also become an acceptable designation for the illness.

Reconstruction of the full transmission dynamics of COVID-19 in Wuhan: This article provides a model for when it is safe to “open up” after cases of COVID-19 start to decline. The important variable is how many undetected cases exist in the population. Re-opening 2 weeks after a decline in detection of new cases could result in another wave if the undetected numbers are not low enough. We therefore need universal testing to determine re-opening times.

U.S. infant mortality rate hits all-time low, CDC reports: Finally, some good news. Infant mortality has reached an all-time low in the United States, according to data released Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In 2018, 21,498 infant deaths were reported across the country, a decline of 4% from the 22,341 deaths reported in 2017, the agency's analysis said.”

U.S. prepares push to reduce 'unnecessary' COVID-19 testing: official:”Details of the guidance are still being hammered out but it would be aimed partly at discouraging COVID-19 patients who have completed home quarantine from getting retested before returning to work or school, said Brett Giroir, assistant secretary for health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 
Speaking on a call with reporters, he said such unnecessary tests were ‘clogging up the system.’”

Covid-19 Infections on the Rise in Kids and Teens With School Approaching:”In response to questions from Bloomberg, the CDC cited a chart, updated today, with data from the states showing children make up 6.4% of those infected, though information isn’t included on almost 1 million cases. The numbers are rising, epidemiologists say, as testing has become more available to those with mild or no symptoms, encompassing many of the pediatric cases, and as those under 18 are increasingly involved in social activities.”

Working memory [WM] capacity predicts individual differences in social-distancing compliance during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States:”We found that participants’ social-distancing compliance at this initial stage could be predicted by individual differences in WM capacity, partly due to increased awareness of benefits over costs of social distancing among higher WM capacity individuals. Critically, the unique contribution of WM capacity to the individual differences in social-distancing compliance could not be explained by other psychological and socioeconomic factors (e.g., moods, personality, education, and income levels).Furthermore, the critical role of WM capacity in social-distancing compliance can be generalized to the compliance with another set of rules for social interactions, namely the fairness norm, in Western cultures. Collectively, our data reveal contributions of a core cognitive process underlying social-distancing compliance during the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting a potential cognitive venue for developing strategies to mitigate a public health crisis.”

CVS, Walmart lead retailers adding requirements for face masks in all stores: “Walmart, including its Sam's Club stores, and CVS Pharmacy announced this week that they would both institute the mask policies. The two companies are likely set a trend in the retail and pharmacy industries, and several other chains followed in Walmart's footsteps, including grocery chain Kroger and retail giant Kohl's.”

Cigarette Use Before and After the 2009 Flavored Cigarette Ban:”Findings support the effectiveness of flavored cigarette bans at reducing cigarette use among young people and suggest a substitution effect between flavored tobacco products.”

Deep immune profiling of COVID-19 patients reveals distinct immunotypes with therapeutic implications: Not everyone’s immune systems reacts the same to COVID-19. “These analyses identified three ‘immunotypes’ associated with poor clinical trajectories versus improving health. These immunotypes may have implications for the design of therapeutics and vaccines for COVID-19.”

About pharma

Hydroxychloroquine in Nonhospitalized Adults With Early COVID-19: Recent studies focus on hospitalized patients. This study concluded: “Hydroxychloroquine did not substantially reduce symptom severity in outpatients with early, mild COVID-19.”

About health insurance

Use of Health Savings Accounts Among US Adults Enrolled in High-Deductible Health Plans: “These findings suggest that many US adults enrolled in an HDHP lack an HSA, and few with an HSA saved for health care in the last year. Targeted interventions should be explored by employers, health plans, and health systems to encourage HSA uptake and contributions among individuals who could benefit from their use.”

About healthcare IT

Early Impact Of CMS Expansion Of Medicare Telehealth During COVID-19: CMS has relaxed and expanded terms for telemedicine use and reimbursement during the COVID-19 pandemic. CMS administrator Varma discusses these changes and what will likely become permanent. Particular attention needs be paid to providing such services when an in-person visit is possible and the terms of payment.

Federal COVID-19 data-reporting change leaves states scrambling to adjust: “The Missouri Hospital Association is among several state-based organizations working to develop new COVID-19 data-reporting methods and dashboards after the federal government changed its requirements….
While the CDC director and HHS CIO said in a joint media briefing that state public health officials will still have access to the data reported to HHS, they did not say whether the information would still be publicly posted.”
Dave Dillon, a spokesperson for the Missouri Hospital Association said the group “does not have access to the new HHS system, and the system is different from the CDC's.” Maine and Idaho are in the same situation.

Today's News and Commentary

Today is the 75th anniversary of the first atomic bomb test.

For a brief review, see: ‘Now I Am Become Death’: The Legacy of the First Nuclear Bomb Test

About healthcare IT

Prepared Remarks from HHS Media Call with CDC Director Redfield and CIO Arrieta on COVID-19 Data Collection: These statements are a followup to yesterday’s story about the CDC being cut out of the loop on data reporting. The explanation of streamlining the process does not seem credible, since there are other places hospitals may report data. Also, CDC will continue to collect nursing home and long term care facility data. Why the split?

Here is another “curious” fact about the information transfer:
‘Sole Source’ Contract for Covid-19 Database Draws Scrutiny From Democrats:” A $10.2 million ‘sole source’ contract to run a centralized Covid-19 database for the Trump administration drew sharp criticism on Wednesday from congressional Democrats, who demanded that the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention be reinstated as the primary repository of coronavirus data.
The contract drew scant public attention when it was awarded in April to TeleTracking Technologies, a Pittsburgh company whose core business is helping hospitals manage the flow of patients.” I could not find any evidence of donations by CEO Michael Zamagias to the Trump campaign or RNC.

About health insurance

COVID-19 and the Medicare Trust Funds: From the American Enterprise Institute:
”The 2020 Medicare trustees’ report released in April did not incorporate how the coronavirus pandemic would affect program finances. Even so, the trustees project that the Medicare Hospi- tal Insurance (HI) trust fund will be unable to fully cover its obligations beginning in 2026. While the cost of treating patients with COVID-19 might be offset by a delay or reduction in patient use of other medical services, the deep recession now underway will erode payroll tax revenue and hasten the depletion of HI reserves. The Supplementary Medicare Insurance trust fund, which accounts for the cost of physician and other services and the drug benefit, adds an even larger burden on taxpayers. Congress and the administration should reform the entire program to lower long-term costs while protecting the quality of services provided to the nation’s elderly.”

Hospitalized care for COVID-19 averages $34,662 to $45,683, varying by age: “Nationally, the median charge amount – the amount for people without insurance or who went out-of-network – for COVID-19 inpatient care was $45,683 for people aged 51 to 60 and $34,662 for those in the 23 to 30 age bracket, according to a new study
The highest average allowed amount paid to the provider under an insurance plan was $24,012 for people aged 51 to 60 and, at its lowest, $17,094 for people above age 70.”

Lawsuit accuses UnitedHealth of 'looting' billions from employer plans through cross-plan offsetting: “The suit alleges that UnitedHealth uses money brought in from self-funded employer clients to resolve overpayment disputes in its fully funded employer plans.” The basis for the claim is that this procedure is illegal according to ERISA.

Inspector general: Medicare chief broke rules on her publicity contracts: “A top Trump administration health official violated federal contracting rules by steering millions of taxpayer dollars in contracts that ultimately benefited GOP-aligned communications consultants, according to an inspector general report set to be released today.
The contracts, which were directed by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services chief Seema Verma, were only halted after a POLITICO investigation raised questions about their legality and the agency had paid out more than $5 million to the contractors.”

About the public’s health

Opioid overdoses have skyrocketed amid the coronavirus, but states are nevertheless slashing addiction treatment program budgets: The headline is self- explanatory. A related article: New peak of 71K US overdose deaths in 2019 dashes hopes. The figure is pre-COVID-19; experts think the numbers will be higher when pandemic numbers are calculated.

Views on Firearm Safety Among Caregivers of People With Alzheimer Disease and Related Dementias:”In this survey study of US adults (aged ≥35 years) living in homes with firearms, 2.6% reported being caregivers of a person with Alzheimer disease and related dementias, and 41% of these caregivers lived with that person. Although most caregivers were open to health care professional counseling about firearm safety for persons with Alzheimer disease and related dementias, few caregivers had ever received any such counseling.”

Men should limit alcohol to 1 drink a day, experts say: “In a report [not yet online] released Wednesday, a committee of experts noted there isn’t adequate evidence to support different alcohol recommendations for men and women, and that research supports tightening the limit for men. U.S. health agencies that issue dietary guidelines aren’t required to adopt the committee’s recommendations.”

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp forbids cities, counties from requiring masks as coronavirus surges in the state: “Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) signed an executive order Wednesday night explicitly banning cities from enacting their own mask mandates, even as the state experiences a sharp rise in coronavirus cases and other Republican governors are turning to mask orders to try to quell the surge.” Should Georgia be a priority state for a vaccine if it does not take simple precautionary measures?

About pharma

Chief Vaccine Scientist Will Not Be Forced to Disclose Pharmaceutical Stocks:”As the chief adviser for the vaccine program — called Operation Warp Speed — Dr. Slaoui is working on a contract that pays him $1. Under the arrangement, he is exempt from federal disclosure rules that would require him to list his outside positions, stock holdings and other potential conflicts of interest.”

Johnson & Johnson to start human testing of COVID-19 vaccine next week:”A phase 1/2a study in more than 1,000 adults ages 18 to 55 will start by enrolling in Belgium next week and open to U.S. participants the week after. The study will also include an arm testing the vaccine in people 65 and older…”

Vaccine-makers’ ‘no profit’ pledge stirs doubts in Congress: “Some of the pharmaceutical companies developing Covid-19 vaccine candidates have pledged to not take a profit.
But neither the companies nor the U.S. government bankrolling a great deal of the vaccine research has defined precisely what forgoing a profit means or how long that will last. And that’s feeding skepticism and uncertainty among industry watchers and doubts in Congress about who will end up paying what could be a very large tab.” In a related article: Novartis to provide 15 drugs at zero-profit for treating COVID-19 symptoms:”Under the latest initiative, the portfolio of 15 drugs will be available to governments in up to 79 eligible countries during the pandemic and until a vaccine or curative treatment is available. Novartis explained that the medicines were chosen based on clinical relevance and availability to ensure global demand can be met.”

Coronavirus Drug and Treatment Tracker: The article is a really good summary of 20 COVID-19 treatments and their evaluated effectiveness.

U.S. Says Russian Hackers Are Trying To Steal Coronavirus Vaccine Research: “The Western intelligence agencies say they believe the hackers are part of the Russian group informally known as Cozy Bear. The intelligence agencies refer to it as APT29.
That group has been linked to Russian intelligence and was blamed for hacking Democratic Party emails in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.”
Why do we have to keep such data secret when it benefits everyone to get a successful product out as soon as possible?

About hospitals

Results from 2017 Tax-Exempt Hospitals’ Schedule H Community Benefit Reports: According to an American Hospital Association report issued yesterday: “In tax year 2017, exempt hospitals spent on average 13.8% of their total annual expense on benefits to the community. Benefits include financial assistance, Medicaid and other means-tested government program underpayments, community health improvement services, research, health professions education, subsidized services, bad debt expense attributable to financial assistance, Medicare shortfall, and other community benefits and building activities. These are the financial costs hospitals incurred in providing particular benefits to their community, but do not reflect all the tangible and intangible benefits of improving their communities’ health and well-being.” The benefit is about $100 billion.

Today's News and Commentary

About healthcare IT

Surescripts teams up with CDC, providers to accelerate COVID-19 case reporting: “Surescripts has teamed up with public health officials and laboratories to accelerate case reporting on COVID-19 cases.
The electronic prescribing company has rolled out a clinical direct messaging service to support electronic case reporting (eCR) of coronavirus and other infectious diseases to the public health surveillance systems.
The service replaces the often burdensome manual process of reporting diseases to public health agencies.” Not clear how this partnership will go forward with the CDC out of the reporting loop (see yesterday’s blog).

About the public’s health

3M pairs with MIT to develop a paper-based coronavirus diagnostic test: “3M is working with researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to develop a fast COVID-19 diagnostic using a simple, paper-based test that they hope will be easy to mass produce.
The test would detect the coronavirus’ antigens, or the specific proteins coating the walls of the virus, providing a result in minutes without needing any laboratory equipment.” Could be a breakthrough to help increase access and number of needed tests at a lower cost.

WHO officials say coronavirus antibodies may wane after several months: “Emphasizing that scientists don't yet have a complete answer, Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, head of the WHO's emerging diseases and zoonosis unit, said patients ‘do mount some level of an immune response.’
In the case of the Covid-19 virus, health officials have said there is insufficient data to indicate that antibodies ensure immunity against the virus.” Obviously, antibody protection is essential if vaccines are to work.

First COVID-19 vaccine tested in US poised for final testing: “The experimental vaccine developed by… the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc., will start its most important step around July 27: A 30,000-person study to prove if the shots really are strong enough to protect against the coronavirus.”And in two related articles: Moderna has started turning out COVID-19 vaccine doses for quick shipment if approved[the headline speaks for itself]; and Merck CEO Frazier says COVID-19 vaccine hype a 'grave disservice' to the public: ”Frazier said officials are doing a ‘grave disservice’ to the public by talking up the potential for vaccines later this year. There are massive scientific and logistical obstacles to achieving such a feat, he said.”

COVID-19 in Children and the Dynamics of Infection in Families: Results of an important study on the topic of whether children transmit SARS-CoV-2:”In 79% of households, >1 adult  family member was suspected or confirmed for COVID-19 before symptom onset in the study child, confirming that children are infected mainly inside familial clusters. Surprisingly, in 33% of households, symptomatic HHCs [household contacts] tested negative despite belonging to a familial cluster with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases, suggesting an underreporting of cases. In only 8% of households did a child develop symptoms before any other HHC, which is in line with previous data in which it is shown that children are index cases in 10% of SARS-CoV-2 familial clusters; however, with our study design, we cannot confirm that child- to-adult transmission occurred.”

Iowa offers free Narcan at pharmacies: “The Iowa Department of Public Health and the Iowa Board of Pharmacy joined forces to offer free Narcan nasal spray kits to reduce financial barriers to access the potentially life-saving drug.”

Developing Primary Care–Based Recommendations for Social Determinants of Health: Methods of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force:”This article highlights social determinants already included in USPSTF recommendations and proposes a process by which others may be considered for primary care preventive recommendations. In many ways, incorporating social determinants of health into evidence-based recommendations is an evolving area. By reviewing the evidence on the effects of screening and interventions on social determinants relevant to primary care, the USPSTF will continue to provide recommendations on clinical preventive services to improve the health of all Americans.”

About health insurance

Supreme Court unlikely to hear GOP case to kill ACA before 2020 election: “The Supreme Court will not hear oral arguments in the Republican-led case seeking to dismantle the Affordable Care Act during the month of October, making it unlikely to be heard before the 2020 presidential election. The high court's October schedule… did not include the case that will ultimately decide the fate of the landmark health law.”

UnitedHealth's earnings double in Q2 as patients deferred elective procedures: “UnitedHealth recorded $9.2 billion in earnings from operations in the second quarter ended June 30, nearly double the $4.7 billion it posted in the same period last year. UnitedHealth said the spike is ‘due primarily to the unprecedented, temporary deferral of care.’ The company said the results will be offset in future quarters as patients resume deferred care and future COVID-19 costs arise, as well as through assistance measures the company has already taken. “

Trump administration asks Supreme Court to reinstate Arkansas Medicaid work requirements:”The Department of Justice in a filing said a federal appeals court was wrong to block the Department of Health and Human Services from approving work requirements in Arkansas, and the decision ‘reflects a fundamental misreading of the statutory text and context.’
According to the administration, work requirement demonstrations help a state stretch its ‘limited resources’ by keeping borderline populations out of Medicaid.”

Today's News and Commentary

About the pubic’s health

COVID-19 Guidance for Hospital Reporting and FAQs: For Hospitals, Hospital Laboratory, and Acute Care Facility Data Reporting Updated July 10, 2020: This HHS guidance specifies what facilities need to report with respect to COVID-19 treatment, e.g., demographics of treated patients and personnel shortages. What is changed is where the reporting can go: The state; HHS at https://teletracking.protect.hhs.gov; health IT vendor or other third-party which will share information directly with HHS; and the hospital or facility’s website in a standardized format, such as schema.org.
However, facilities may no longer send the data to the CDC. “As of July 15,, 2020, hospitals should no longer report the Covid-19 information in this document to the National Healthcare Safety Network site.” According to its website: “CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network is the nation’s most widely used healthcare-associated infection tracking system. NHSN provides facilities, states, regions, and the nation with data needed to identify problem areas, measure progress of prevention efforts, and ultimately eliminate healthcare-associated infections.
In addition, NHSN allows healthcare facilities to track blood safety errors and important healthcare process measures such as healthcare personnel influenza vaccine status and infection control adherence rates.”
I would have loved to see the politics behind this change.

CDC's 'best estimate' is 40 percent COVID-19 infections are asymptomatic:”A person with COVID-19 is still 'likely to infect' 2.5 other people…The government agency added a new part to its report, an ‘Infection Fatality Ratio,’ which ‘takes into account both symptomatic and asymptomatic cases and may therefore be a more directly measurable parameter for disease severity for COVID-19.’ The new metric states that 0.65 percent of those with COVID-19 are estimated to die.”

About pharma

Boehringer Ingelheim-backed COVID-19 researchers identify new antibodies to fight the virus: Researchers discovered in pre-pandemic blood samples “precursors of potent SARS-CoV-2-neutralizing antibodies in every single individual,” … suggesting that the immune systems of healthy people may already be primed to ramp up the production of COVID-19 neutralizing antibodies in response to treatment with the drug candidates they identified.” Good news for vaccine development.

New chemical could potentially lead to a cure for neglected tropical diseases: “Scientists say they are a step closer to developing a drug to kill the trypanosome parasite that causes human African trypanosomiasis, otherwise known as sleeping sickness, paving the way for a potential cure.
The University of York researchers deciphered the mechanism by which the compound, known as AB1 works. AB1 was identified by researchers at the Novartis Institute for Tropical Diseases and similar compounds have been developed as an anti-cancer drug by the company.
The researchers found that AB1 blocks the division of the parasite by interfering with the function of an essential enzyme in a structure called the kinetochore. The way in which the compound kills the parasite is different from the way it kills cancer cells, such that the breakthrough could potentially lead to a cure being found for the neglected tropical disease and others including Chagas disease.”

The top 15 pharma companies by 2026 sales: According to these projections, Roche will be #1.

About health insurance

Hospital Inpatient Prospective Payment Systems for Acute Care Hospitals and the Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System and Proposed Policy Changes and Fiscal Year 2021 Rates: The American Hospitals Association is challenging a proposed change in calculation of Medicare DRG payments. Currently those payments are calculated from treatment of Medicare patients. CMS wants to include private payers as well. In this letter to CMS, the Association explains the issue:
“Market-based” MS-DRG Data Collection and Weight Calculation
CMS proposes to require hospitals to include on their Medicare cost report what the agency calls ‘market-based payment rate information.’Specifically, hospitals would be required to report, by Medicare-severity diagnosis-related group (MS-DRG), the median payer-specific negotiated charge for Medicare Advantage (MA) organizations and the median payer-specific negotiated charge for all of the hospital’s third-party payers. The agency also is considering incorporating this information in the inpatient PPS MS-DRG relative weights beginning in FY 2024. We believe both proposals are unlawful and urge CMS not to finalize them [emphasis in the original]. CMS does not cite authority on which to base the payer-specific data collection requirement or the MS-DRG weight recalculation. In addition, the rule on which CMS relies remains under legal challenge.”

NJ Hospitals Say Insurance Companies Have Denied More than 1,000 Claims for COVID-19 Care:”Thirty acute care facilities reported more than 1,000 claims related to coronavirus patients were denied by various health insurance companies between March and the end of June, according to the New Jersey Hospital Association. In half the cases, the company questioned the medical necessity of the treatment…
One hospital alone also reported nearly 1,500 denials related to testing services, regardless of the requirements these services be covered, the association said. More than half of these denials involved an invalid payment code, the hospital told the association, and others were connected to patients who tested negative for COVID-19.” If it is happening in NJ it is happening elsewhere.

About health facilities

Amazon Makes Health Care Access Even Easier for Employees with Launch of New Third-Party Health Centers:”The launch of the new Neighborhood Health Centers will provide a range of quality primary care services exclusively for Amazon employees – further strengthening Amazon’s industry-leading benefits program, which provides comprehensive healthcare for employees starting on day one of employment. Through this initial pilot program, Amazon expects to establish 20 health centers in five cities across the U.S., improving access and care for more than 115,000 associates and their families.” Services will be provided by Crossover Health.

About healthcare IT

Telehealth Guidance for Electronic Clinical Quality Measures (eCQMs) for Eligible Professional/Eligible Clinician 2021 Quality Reporting: “Guidance provided within this document is intended to provide stakeholders with clarity on eCQM telehealth-eligible codes that appear within the eCQM specifications for the 2021 quality reporting performance period. This guidance is specific to the 2021 quality reporting performance period.” For a summary of the 39 measures see this website.

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About health insurance

Grandfathered Group Health Plans and Grandfathered Group Health Insurance Coverage: This proposed rule from the Departments of Labor, HHS and Treasury (IRS) will be issued for comment on Wednesday. If finalized, it would “amend current rules to provide greater flexibility for certain grandfathered health plans to make changes to certain types of cost-sharing requirements without causing a loss of grandfather status.” Recall that when the ACA was passed, certain group health plans were grandfathered so they could keep the terms of coverage. If anything subsequently changed, plans would lose that exemption. These changes would allow the plans to retain their grandfathered status.

MultiPlan and Churchill Capital Corp III Reach Agreement to Combine: “Churchill Capital Corp III, a public investment vehicle, and MultiPlan, Inc., a market-leading, technology-enabled provider of end-to-end healthcare cost management solutions, announced today that they have entered into a definitive agreement to merge. The combined company will operate as MultiPlan and will be listed on the NYSE. The transaction implies an initial enterprise value for MultiPlan of approximately $11 billion or approximately 12.9x estimated 2021 Adjusted EBITDA. The transaction will bring to MultiPlan up to $3.7 billion of new equity or equity linked capital to substantially reduce its debt and fund new value-added services.”

Oak Street Health files to go public: “Oak Street is a tech-enabled, value-based care primary care company that specifically targets Medicare-eligible patients, particularly those in underserved communities..”

Judge vacates CMS rule forcing ACA insurers to bill separately for abortions: “A federal judge in Maryland has vacated the Trump administration's 2019 rule that would require Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace insurers to bill separately for abortions.
Judge Catherine Blake for the District Court for the District of Maryland ruled Friday that the restrictions were "arbitrary and capricious" and violates the ACA. The case was brought by Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union.”

State of Medicare Advantage: Report July 2020: An excellent review of the current state of the Medicare Advantage program looking at cost, quality and access issues. The reason these plans are important is because:
”In June 2020, there were 24.2 million Medicare Advantage beneficiaries, and over 68 million people eligible for Medicare. While the total number of enrolled beneficiaries in Medicare in 2020 has not been released, based on CMS’s projections Medicare Advantage penetration will reach 40% of overall enrollment in 2020…
In 2020, 99% of Medicare beneficiaries have access to at least one Medicare Advantage plan, with on average, 39 plan choices per county.”

About the public’s health

White House takes aim at Fauci as he disagrees with Trump on virus: A good summary of the rift. The part that caught my eye was:
“In an interview on NBC's ‘Meet the Press’ Sunday, Adm. Brett Giroir, a member of the White House coronavirus task force, said there is ‘open discourse’ within the team.
‘I respect Dr. Fauci a lot, but Dr. Fauci is not 100% right and he also doesn't necessarily -- and he admits that -- have the whole national interest in mind. He looks at it from a very narrow public health point of view,[emphasis added]’ Giroir said.”
In the end, what other view matters?

Long delays in getting test results hobble coronavirus response: “The long testing turnaround times are making it impossible for the United States to replicate the central strategy used by other countries to effectively contain the virus — test, trace and isolate. Like catching any killer, speed is of the essence when it comes to the coronavirus.” The article is a current update on the problem we have had from the beginning of the pandemic.

New U.S. dietary guideline recommendations take aim at sugar for children and adults: “The committee, a group of 20 doctors, registered dietitians and public health experts, recommends reducing added sugars to 6 percent of daily calories, from 10 percent….
And for the first time, the committee made recommendations for children up to 2 years old, suggesting a ban on sugar-sweetened beverages. The experts argued that calories from sugar-sweetened beverages may displace those from nutritious foods and increase the risk of the child becoming overweight.”

About hospitals and health systems

UHS settles false claims allegations for $122M:”As part of the settlement, announced July 10, UHS and UHS of Delaware Inc. agreed to pay $117 million to resolve allegations that the hospitals and facilities knowingly submitted false claims to government insurers, including Medicaid, Medicare and Tricare. 
Prosecutors alleged that the company billed for inpatient behavioral health services that were not medically necessary or failed to provide adequate services for patients admitted to its facilities. The alleged billing scheme occurred between January 2006 and December 2018, prosecutors said.“

About pharma

Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA prepares for resumption of domestic inspections with new risk assessment system: From the FDA: “At this time, we are working toward the goal of restarting on-site inspections during the week of July 20. However, resuming prioritized domestic inspections will depend on the data about the virus’ trajectory in a given state and locality and the rules and guidelines that are put in place by state and local governments. In order to move to the next phase, we must see downward trends in new cases of COVID-19 and hospitalizations in a given area. Our ability to resume is also affected by other services that have been curtailed by the pandemic, such as public transportation. The availability of these services will be an important factor in how we determine resuming domestic inspections.”

About healthcare IT

Doximity Telehealth App Becomes One of the Most Used Telemedicine Tools in the U.S.:After you get through some self-promotion, there are a couple interesting findings of their research:

  • “Physician adoption by age: Physicians in their 40’s and 50’s are using telemedicine more often than younger colleagues in their 30’s.

  • Physician adoption by gender: A gender disparity was identified among physician users, showing female doctors adopting telemedicine at a much higher rate (25%) than their male colleagues.”

4 AI systems outperforming medical experts: Interesting summary of four AI technologies.

 

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About health insurance

Comparing Private Payer and Medicare Payment Rates for Select Inpatient Hospital Services: Among the findings of this Kaiser Family Foundation study: “Private insurance payment rates were between 1.6 and 2.5 times higher than Medicare rates, with some variation among the ten DRGs included in our analysis…Private insurance paid at least $10,000 more than Medicare rates on average for four of the seven other diagnoses we analyzed.” A perfect example of cost-shifting.

Exchanges May Add More than 1 Million New Enrollees due to COVID-19:The latest projections from Avalere.

Accountable Care Organizations and Patient-Centered Medical Homes: Health Expenditures and Health Services: Researchers compared “total health expenditures and health services utilization of patients receiving care in stand-alone accountable care organization (ACO only), stand-alone patient-centered medical home (PCMH only), hybrid (ACO + PCMH), and standard (neither ACO nor PCMH) facilities.” The study concluded that care “received in ACO and PCMH facilities is associated with lower total health care costs compared with standard care. However, hybrid models are associated with slightly higher total health care costs compared with stand-alone models. Integrating innovations in health care delivery and health care reimbursement warrants further evaluation.” The last sentence is noteworthy- higher costs are perhaps due to lack of coordination in the hybrid model.

About the public’s health

The next two articles have a common theme- making healthcare information understandable

How to Read Covid-19 Research (and Actually Understand It): A really good explanation of this topic with examples like hydroxychloroquine effectiveness evaluations. When you finished with this article, read: U.K. megatrial outshines other drug studies.

Americans Are Bewildered by Patchwork of Social-Distancing Rules: “A growing number of public health experts agree that there needs to be more nuanced guidelines for Americans that allow some liberties. Public-health non-profit Vital Strategies has suggested color-coded alerts that communicate to the public how severe the virus is in a given region so that people can adjust their activities appropriately on any given day. (Vital Strategies has received funding from Bloomberg Philanthropies, the charitable foundation of Michael Bloomberg, the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News’s parent company.) The Texas Medical Association has an activity guide citing camping, tennis and take-out as low-risk, while movie theaters and gyms are high.”

Preschooler's Month of Birth Influences Odds of Becoming Ill With the Flu: “Preschoolers have a higher risk of being diagnosed with the flu if they are born before September, an analysis of insurance claims from more than 1.1 million children has concluded.
The reason: children with birthdays in July and August are less likely to receive the annual influenza vaccine when they are 2 to 5 years old because they often have their annual checkup close to their birthday, before the seasonal vaccine is available.”

Want to defeat COVID-19? Deliver a 70% effective vaccine—and get 70% of people to take it, FDA official says: “To eradicate SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 illness, we'll need a vaccine that's 70% effective—and 70% of the population will need to receive it, an FDA vaccine official said Wednesday.
That's a higher bar than the FDA set last week. To pass muster at the agency, a COVID-19 vaccine will need to be at least 50% more effective than placebo, according to new FDA guidelines.”

Oxford researchers develop portable COVID-19 test costing less than $25:”The University of Oxford and its research center in China are launching a new company to develop a rapid COVID-19 test that could cost no more than £20, or about $25 U.S.”

Independent evaluation of global COVID-19 response announced: Amid criticisms over its slow response, the WHO Director-General “announced the initiation of the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response (IPPR) to evaluate the world’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

New WHO guidance calls for more evidence on airborne transmission: “The World Health Organization on Thursday released new guidelines on the transmission of the novel coronavirus that acknowledge some reports of airborne transmission of the virus that causes COVID-19, but stopped short of confirming that the virus spreads through the air…
The report follows an open letter from scientists who specialize in the spread of disease in the air - so-called aerobiologists - that urged the global body to update its guidance on how the respiratory disease spreads to include aerosol transmission.”

About healthcare IT

Telemedicine is booming during the pandemic. But it’s leaving people behind.:”Unless health-care systems commit to deploying video technology that is explicitly designed to provide care for our most vulnerable patients, telehealth will further entrench health disparities.” The article provides examples of care disparities created by usual telehealth systems.

Most physicians predict fewer than 10% of their visits will be virtual by next year :The article provides some details of projected telemedicine use by specialty.

Doctor on Demand lands $75M to invest in virtual primary care, behavioral health: “Doctor On Demand wasn't planning to raise capital this year, but the company has seen demand for virtual visits surge during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The venture-backed telemedicine company raised $75 million in series D financing led by General Atlantic, a global growth equity firm, with participation from existing investors.”
See the above story about projected lower use of telemedicine.

Teladoc sued due to robocalls: “April Hale and Len Cline filed suit on July 8 in the Southern District of New York after receiving multiple unsolicited robocalls, attempting to sell its $29.99 membership package. Teladoc contracted with Health Insurance Innovations to place the calls, which the defendants claim violates the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. Both companies would share in the profit from sales, according to the lawsuit.”

The tradeoffs between safety and alert fatigue: Data from a national evaluation of hospital medication-related clinical decision support: “Although hospitals improved overall from 2017 to 2018, there is still important room for improvement for both fatal and nuisance orders. Hospitals that incorrectly alerted on one or more nuisance orders had slightly higher overall performance, suggesting that some hospitals may be achieving higher scores at the cost of overalerting, which has the potential to cause clinician burnout and even worsen safety.”

A new AI tool to fight the coronavirus: “Members of the newly formed Collective and Augmented Intelligence Against COVID-19 (CAIAC) announced today include the Future Society, a non-profit think tank from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, as well as the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence and representatives from UN agencies. 
Within six to eight weeks, CAIAC's platform will produce a decision-making tool that will initially focus on digital contact tracing of coronavirus infections, ferreting out misinformation about the pandemic and identifying second and third-order effects of COVID-19 that go beyond illness and death.”

About pharma

Drug Giants Create Fund to Bolster Struggling Antibiotic Start-Ups: “Twenty of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies on Thursday announced the creation of a $1 billion fund to buoy financially strapped biotech start-ups that are developing new antibiotics to treat the mounting number of drug-resistant infections responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths each year.
The fund, created in partnership with the World Health Organization and financed by drug behemoths that include Roche, Merck, and Johnson & Johnson, will offer a short-term but desperately needed lifeline for some of the three dozen small antibiotic companies, many of them based in the United States, that have been struggling to draw investment amid a collapsing antibiotics industry.”

Trump will sign three executive orders on lowering drug prices: chief of staff: “President Donald Trump will sign three executive orders on lowering prescription drug prices, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said on Thursday.” No details were given.

FDA Approves Mylan and Fujifilm’s Humira Biosimilar: Further competition will lower prices for this often-used specialty medication.

About hospitals

Tenet hospital agrees to $72.3M settlement with DOJ over kickback suit: “The Department of Justice (DOJ) announced this week that the Oklahoma Center for Orthopaedic and Multi-Specialty Surgery (OCOM)—as well as its part-owner management company, which includes USP OKC and USP OKC Manager (USPI), Southwest Orthopaedic Specialists (SOS) and two SOS physicians—agreed to the settlement to resolve of false claims. Tenet owns 95% of USPI.
The DOJ alleged improper relationships between OCOM and SOS resulted in the submission of false claims to the Medicare, Medicaid and TRICARE programs.”

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About pharma

A flawed Covid-19 study gets the White House’s attention — and the FDA may pay the price: This article explains critiques of the recently reported Henry Ford system study that claimed benefit for hydroxychloroquine use earlier in hospitalized patients. “Not only was it not randomized, outside experts noted, but patients who received hydroxychloroquine were also more likely to get steroids, which appear to help very sick patients with Covid-19. That is likely to have influenced the central finding of the Henry Ford study: that death rates were 50% lower among patients in hospitals treated with hydroxychloroquine.” Experts fear that the President will mandate retesting of the drug even though all other major studies have failed to prove a benefit.

Walgreens swings to a quarterly loss as coronavirus drives up costs, lowers doctor visits; shares fall: “Walgreens said its profits were squeezed by a shift in sales to low-margin items, increased supply-chain costs and higher expenses for labor and store cleaning.”

Live Updates: July 2020 Drug Price Increases: The 42 drugs that have price increases in July “add to the 857 brand and generic drugs that already increased in price by an average of 6.8% from January 1 to June 30, 2020.”  The article has a list of the medications.

CVS Pharmacy introduces new app feature for reading “talking” prescription labels: “By the end of 2020, 1,500 CVS Pharmacy locations will be equipped to affix special RFID labels to prescription vials. When the RFID labels are scanned by Spoken Rx in the CVS Pharmacy app, which can be accessed by users using Siri or Google Assistant on their phones, prescription label information will be spoken out loud.”

Becton Dickinson Gets $42 Million HHS Contract for Injection Device: “HHS’ Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) has granted Becton Dickinson a $42 million contract to manufacture hundreds of millions of syringes and needles for delivery of COVID-19 vaccines.”

About the public’s health

Best Hospital Cities Ranking 2019: This study ranks cities by the infrastructure, quality and accessibility of their hospitals. Included is an international list…#1 is Tokyo. The only US city in the international top 20 is Boston.

ACS Updates HPV Vaccination Recommendations to Start at Age 9: The latest American Cancer Society recommendation for HPV vaccination.

About health insurance

Walmart launching insurance agency in Dallas with focus on Medicare: Another case of cross functional diversification: “Job listings show the company has quietly formed Walmart Insurance Service, LLC., focusing initially in the Dallas-Fort Worth market. The listings indicate that the initial focus will be on selling Medicare plans, though it's unclear if that means Medicare Advantage plans, Medicare supplemental plans or both.”

Medicare Beneficiaries’ Race and Ethnicity Data Inaccurate: “Significant inaccuracies exist in Medicare beneficiaries’ race and ethnicity data, which could exacerbate disparities in healthcare access and quality, according to a study published in Medical Care.
Administrative data, including insurance plan enrollment and demographic information, are contained in the Medicare Beneficiary Summary File (MBSF), the team stated. In contrast to administrative data sources, national surveys of Medicare beneficiaries include self-reported race and ethnicity…
 ‘The inaccuracy of state-level data on Medicare beneficiaries’ race and ethnicity is staggering,’ said Irina Grafova, assistant professor at Rutgers School of Public Health.
‘We found that, in 19 states, about 20 percent of Hispanic Medicare beneficiaries were misclassified as belonging to another ethnic group. In 24 states, more than 80 percent of American and Alaskan Native beneficiaries of Medicare were misclassified. And in the majority of states, at least one-fourth of Asian American and Pacific Islander beneficiaries were misclassified.’”
Authors suggest self-reporting is far more accurate than assigned race; the latter was done in the Medicare home-care setting.

About healthcare IT

VA inks 10-year, $100M deal with Philips for remote critical care services:”The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has inked a $100 million contract with Philips to extend its remote intensive care capabilities.
As part of the 10-year contract, the VA will work with Philips to enhance telehealth technology and services including tele-ICU, diagnostic imaging, sleep solutions and patient monitoring to improve care for veterans.”

About healthcare quality

COVID19 Impact & Mitigation Strategies for Payer Quality Improvement 2021: This AHIP-commissioned study found that because of delayed preventive care and reduced ambulatory visits, COVID19 will have a negative impact on 74 percent of the NCQA HEDIS quality measures. By far, the highest impact is on behavioral health.

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About health insurance

Supreme Court sides with Trump administration on rules to create more exemptions to ACA birth control mandate: “The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has the ability to create a religious and moral exemption to the Affordable Care Act’s birth control mandate.”

98% of physicians avoid MIPS penalties: 5 things to know: CMS released results of the 2018 MIPS performance, which determines 2020 payments. Among the results:
” Most clinicians in MIPS — 98 percent — avoided a negative payment adjustment in 2018. A year earlier, 5 percent of clinicians received a negative payment adjustment.
Most clinicians — 84 percent — earned an "exceptional performance" designation, resulting in positive payment adjustments ranging from 0.2 percent to 1.68 percent.”

California surgeon charged in $600M billing fraud scheme: “Randy Rosen, MD, his girlfriend and four others were allegedly involved in a fraud scheme that involved hiring body brokers to pay patients at sober living homes to undergo medically unnecessary surgeries. He is also accused of requiring patients to undergo unnecessary drug tests which he sent to a laboratory owned by his girlfriend.”

 About pharma

Startup PBM Capital Rx, Walmart partner to shed light on specialty, mail-order drug prices: Walmart is teaming up with a pharmacy benefits manager (PBM) . The alleged reason is increased transparency but it is obvious Walmart wants to get into the pharmacy benefits business to service payers or corporations that are self-insured.

Walgreens Boots Alliance invests $1B in VillageMD to open 500+ medical clinics, expand telehealth: 6 details: “Clinics will accept several health insurance options and offer telehealth 24/7 as well as at-home visits. VillageMD and Walgreens already made telehealth available to providers on Walgreens Find Care, an online platform that connects patients with virtual services.”

Sandoz to supply Civica Rx with 6 injectable drugs: Civica Rx is expanding its source for pharmaceuticals.

About healthcare IT

Digital behavioral health startups scored $588M in funding amid COVID-19 pandemic: “Digital health is on pace to have its largest funding year ever thanks to the rising demand for virtual care and disease monitoring.
U.S. digital health companies raised $5.4 billion in venture funding across the first six months of 2020. The first half of 2020 saw more funding than any previous first half of the year from 2011 to 2019 and beat the prior record of $4.2 billion set in the first half of 2019…”

VA panel proposes $1.1B more for $16B Cerner EHR upgrade: “The House Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Subcommittee proposed a $104.8 billion discretionary budget for the VA, according to the July 6 report. The budget proposal is $12.3 billion more than the fiscal year 2020 budget and would approve $4.9 billion for IT modernization, up 12 percent from last year's budget.”

About the public’s health

Fauci favors mandatory mask orders:”Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Diseases, says the United States is in a resurgence of new coronavirus cases, with daily cases nearly double the country’s previously high baseline. Infection rates have been rising in the South and West…’What is alarming is the slope of the curve,’ Fauci said of cases in Alabama. He added, ‘the signal should be wear a mask, period.’”

Health panel may open lung cancer screening to more smokers: In a draft statement, the US Preventive Task Force said “it’s time to expand screening to those who’ve smoked less -- 20 pack-years -- and to start a little sooner, at age 50. The proposed change comes after a newer study found those people are about as likely to benefit as the heavier, older smokers.
If finalized, the new recommendations would make about 15 million Americans eligible for screening, nearly double today’s number…
Importantly, more women and African Americans would qualify…”

.Trump to launch short-term 'surge' COVID-19 testing in hot spot cities:”The Trump administration is launching new "surge" coronavirus testing sites in some of the hardest-hit communities in Florida, Texas and Louisiana.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said the free COVID-19 testing sites will be located in Jacksonville, Fla., Baton Rouge, La., and Edinburg, Texas, beginning Tuesday. 
The surge will last between five and 12 days, and the sites will be able to conduct 5,000 tests per day in each city. It should take between three and five days for someone who is tested to get their results.”

Study: ‘Silent’ Transmission the Top Driver of COVID Outbreaks:”Just over half of new coronavirus infections are tied to people who don't have symptoms, according to a new study from infectious disease modelers.
People sick with COVID-19 can be infectious before they start to show symptoms, while some don't show symptoms at all. The study, published this week in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, estimates that these presymptomatic and asymptomatic cases account for 48% and 3.4% of virus transmissions, respectively – meaning ‘silent disease transmission’ can fuel outbreaks even if everyone who has symptoms is immediately isolated.”

UN chief reviewing whether US has met conditions for WHO withdrawal: “The official withdrawal would take effect on July 6, 2021, due to a one-year notification period required by WHO’s constitution.” However, will will have to see if the President ignores this requirement.

Protective gear for medical workers begins to run low again:The headline speaks for itself.

Volunteers can now sign up for large coronavirus vaccine studies: “The Covid-19 Prevention Trials Network, which knits together the existing federal clinical trial infrastructure developed largely to test HIV vaccines and treatments, launched with a website for volunteers to sign up to be considered when the first trials begin later this month.”

Association of Exposure to Court-Ordered Tobacco Industry Antismoking Advertisements With Intentions and Attempts to Quit Smoking Among US Adults: “Industry-sponsored antismoking advertisements were associated with increased intentions to quit smoking; however, they have not been effective in stimulating attempts to quit among current smokers.”

Association of a Public Health Campaign About Coronavirus Disease 2019 Promoted by News Media and a Social Influencer With Self-reported Personal Hygiene and Physical Distancing in the Netherlands: The researchers “leveraged the power of social norms by having an influencer and a newspaper model appropriate behavior to their audiences. By exposing individuals from the target group to our public health campaign through personalized messaging about their gaps in behavior, we aimed to bridge their intention-behavior gap, which usually results in greater behavioral change.” They found that this campaign “was associated with an approximately 2-fold increase in the odds of washing of all required hand areas and longer duration of handwashing.” Applicability to the US needs to be determined, but it is still an interesting approach.

About hospitals

Introducing the Best Hospitals for America: Here is a different ranking methodology and list hospitals, based on “institutions that save lives, save money, and serve social justice.” In a related article: US News updates hospital ranking methodology: 5 things to know.

Industry Voices—Hospitals will face a new labor shortage after the pandemic: Before the COVID-19 pandemic, there were shortages of many professionals staffing hospitals. With an anticipated rebound in service volume caused by pent-up demand, the shortages may look even worse.

Hospital Merger and Acquisition Activity Withstands COVID-19 Slum: The headline speaks for itself.

Hospital Concentration Index: Interesting analysis by the Healthcare Cost Institute that looked for concentration as a causet of healthcare cost increases. “While metro areas varied in their levels of concentration, by 2017, the majority of metros would be categorized as highly concentrated markets. This reflects the fact that most metros became increasingly concentrated over time.”

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Trump administration begins formal withdrawal from World Health Organization: “The Trump administration has notified Congress and the United Nations that the United States is formally withdrawing  from the World Health Organization, multiple officials tell CNN, a move that comes amid a rising number of coronavirus cases throughout the Americas in the last week alone.” See, also: Letter to Congress on WHO Withdrawal from Public Health, Law and International Relations Leaders.

BD Launches Portable, Rapid Point-of-Care Antigen Test to Detect SARS-CoV-2 in 15 minutes, Dramatically Expanding Access to COVID-19 Testing: “BD clinical studies performed at more than 20 sites across the U.S. demonstrated that the test is capable of achieving 84% sensitivity and 100% specificity…” A related article: A New Generation of Fast Coronavirus Tests Is Coming.

Comparing SARS-CoV-2 with SARS-CoV and influenza pandemics: An excellent, comprehensive article that should be required epidemiology course reading. “The objective of this Personal View is to compare transmissibility, hospitalisation, and mortality rates for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) with those of other epidemic coronaviruses, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) and Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), and pandemic influenza viruses.”

FDA warns about 5 additional toxic hand sanitizers: “Consumers should avoid five additional brands of hand sanitizer that tested positive for methanol, a substance that can be toxic when absorbed through the skin or ingested, the Food and Drug Administration said. The warning comes after the agency last month cautioned against any of nine brands of possibly toxic hand sanitizer that may contain methanol.”

More Mask Use, Worry About Lack of Social Distancing in U.S.: Some people are finally “getting it.'‘ This latest Gallup poll found:

  • “54% worried about lack of social distancing in local area, up from May

  • 86% of U.S. adults have used a mask in public in past week [This and the above finding are new highs]

  • Democrats [98%] much more likely than Republicans [66%] to worry and wear masks”

Life-saving HIV drugs risk running out as COVID-19 hits supplies: WHO: “More than a third of the world’s countries say they are at risk of running out of life-saving AIDS drugs because of disruptions to supply lines and other problems caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Health Organization said on Monday.
Twenty-four out of those 73 nations have already reported critically low supplies of the vital antiretroviral drugs, the agency said.”

About health insurance

CMS proposes Medicare payment updates to increase use of home dialysis: “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued an add-on payment last year to offer higher reimbursement for eligible home dialysis machines. In a rule proposed Monday, the agency said it would enhance that payment further, allowing for coverage for additional new and innovative home dialysis machines.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

What COVID means for voluntary benefits might surprise you: The leader of Willis Towers Watson’s voluntary benefits practice, Mark Hebert, “has seen ‘tremendous'‘ growth in voluntary benefits in the last several years.” Such benefits include hospital indemnity, critical illness and accident/injury insurance, pet insurance, identity theft insurance, and legal insurance. “Research from Willis Towers Watson shows that 12% of employers surveyed by the consulting firm have enhanced voluntary benefits in the wake of COVID. Just 1% say they’ve reduced voluntary plans, although the vast majority haven’t made any changes.”

About the public’s health

239 Experts With One Big Claim: The Coronavirus Is Airborne: “…in an open letter to the W.H.O., 239 scientists in 32 countries have outlined the evidence showing that smaller particles can infect people, and are calling for the agency to revise its recommendations. The researchers plan to publish their letter in a scientific journal next week.”

Zoonoses: beyond the human–animal–environment interface: “World Zoonoses Day on July 6 marks the day, in 1885, when a young boy received the first vaccine against rabies—a zoonosis, a disease caused by a pathogen transmitted from animals to humans.”

6 COVID-19 Social Determinants of Health Payers Pivoted to Meet: Interesting article that outlines how payers are addressing issues ranging from housing to food to employment.

To prep for a complicated flu season, FDA greenlights CDC’s combined influenza & COVID-19 test: “The FDA issued a new emergency authorization to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for a combination influenza and COVID-19 diagnostic test—as the U.S. prepares to enter its annual flu season later this year in the midst of a global pandemic.
The test is designed to help tell the difference between patients with one of the two diseases, who may present with similar respiratory symptoms. It’s the third diagnostic authorized by the FDA for this purpose, following panels from Qiagen and BioFire Diagnostics, which also cover additional viruses.”

Trial of Moderna Covid-19 vaccine delayed, investigators say, but July start still possible: “Moderna did not respond to multiple emails asking about how long the delay will last, the nature of the protocol changes, or whether they have anything to do with the vaccine’s safety or manufacturing.” This vaccine was supposed to be the soonest to market.

Rush to reopen led to spikes in cases that threaten to overwhelm hospitals in some states, officials say: “‘We’re right back where we were at the peak of the epidemic during the New York outbreak,’ former Food and Drug Administration commissioner Scott Gottlieb said on ‘Face the Nation’ on CBS. ‘The difference now is that we really had one epicenter of spread when New York was going through its hardship, now we really have four major epicenters of spread: Los Angeles, cities in Texas, cities in Florida, and Arizona. And Florida looks to be in the worst shape.’”

About healthcare IT

Telehealth can be life-saving amid COVID-19, yet as virus rages, insurance companies look to scale back: The headline tells the story. The article has many examples of this cutback.

About healthcare quality

Hospital ratings often depend more on nice rooms than on health care: Nice summary of the fact that patients’ assessment of the technical quality of care and appreciation for the amenities do not jibe.

About pharma

Treatment with Hydroxychloroquine, Azithromycin, and Combination in Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19: This study from Henry Ford Health System showed that “use of hydroxychloroquine alone and in combination with azithromycin was associated with a significant reduction in-hospital mortality compared to not receiving hydroxychloroquine.” The result is contrasted with the lack of benefit in a large NY study because that latter “study included patients who were initiated on hydroxychloroquine therapy at any time during their hospitalization. In contrast, in [the Henry Ford] patient population, 82% received hydroxychloroquine within the first 24 hours of admission, and 91% within 48 hours of admission. Because treatment regimens [in the NY study] likely varied substantially (including delayed initiation) across the 25 hospitals that contributed patients to the study, it is not surprising that the case-fatality rate among the New York patients was significantly higher than in our study.” It was a bit unusual that none of this study’s patients had a common hearth rhythm disturbance common in other studies. The authors caution that their “results should be interpreted with some caution and should not be applied to patients treated outside of hospital settings. Our results also require further confirmation in prospective, randomized controlled trials that rigorously evaluate the safety, and efficacy of hydroxychloroquine therapy for COVID-19 in hospitalized patients.”

About healthcare technology

StartUp Health’s 2020 Midyear Funding Report Shows a Robust, Diversified Health Innovation Market: Despite (or perhaps because of) the COVID-19 pandemic, “total health innovation funding for the first half of 2020 hit $9.1B, up nearly 19% compared to the same period in 2019…
At 377 deals, 2020’s midyear deal totals exceeded 2019…” The article also lists the top deals so far this year; a diversified list from different health sectors.

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Fever checks are a flawed way to flag Covid-19 cases. Experts say smell tests might help: “‘My impression is that anosmia is an earlier symptom of Covid-19 relative to fever, and some infected people can have anosmia and nothing else,’ said physician Andrew Badley, who heads a virus lab at the Mayo Clinic. ‘So it’s potentially a more sensitive screen for asymptomatic patients.’
In a recent study, Badley and colleagues found that Covid-19 patients were 27 times more likely than others to have lost their sense of smell. But they were only 2.6 times more likely to have fever or chills, suggesting that anosmia produces a clearer signal and may therefore be a better Covid-catching net than fever.”

Characteristics of Adult Outpatients and Inpatients with COVID-19 — 11 Academic Medical Centers, United States, March–May 2020: “In a multistate telephone survey of 350 adult inpatients and outpatients who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection, only 46% reported recent contact with a COVID-19 patient. Most participants’ contacts were a family member (45%) or a work colleague (34%). Two thirds of participants were employed; only 17% were able to telework.” In other words, 54% of infected persons did not know where they got the disease.

Healthcare added 358K jobs in June with hospitals adding jobs after dip in May: “Healthcare employment continued to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic in June with 358,000 jobs added to the industry and hospital jobs started to increase, according to the latest federal jobs report. The report released Thursday represents a slight increase from the 315,000 jobs the industry added in May. It showed that hiring in physician and dentist offices continues to recover, and hospitals added 6,000 jobs after declining by 26,000 in May.”

Discrimination and Hypertension Risk Among African Americans in the Jackson Heart Study: An interesting and timely study on the Social Determinants of Disease: “Higher stress from lifetime discrimination was associated with higher hypertension risk after adjustment for demographics (hazard ratio for high versus low, 1.19 [95% CI, 1.01–1.40]), but the association was attenuated after adjustment for hypertension risk factors (hazard ratio, 1.14 [95% CI, 0.97–1.35]). Lifetime discrimination may increase the risk of hypertension in African Americans.”

Trump says he's 'all for masks' despite reluctance to wear one: “‘I’m all for masks. I think masks are good,’ Trump told Fox Business in an interview, adding that he would wear a face covering if he were in a ‘tight situation’ with other people.
Trump noted that he hasn’t had to wear a mask because people who come in contact with him are tested for the coronavirus. Asked whether he would wear a mask publicly, Trump said he would have ‘no problem’ with doing so.”

Estimation of Excess Deaths Associated With the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United States, March to May 2020:”In this cohort study, the number of deaths due to any cause increased by approximately 122 000 from March 1 to May 30, 2020, which is 28% higher than the reported number of COVID-19 deaths…
Official tallies of deaths due to COVID-19 underestimate the full increase in deaths associated with the pandemic in many states.”

COVID-19 strain in Beijing outbreak may have come from Southeast Asia: Harvard study:”The outbreak in Beijing has raised concerns about China’s vulnerability to a ‘second wave’ of infections. The virus found in Beijing cases is an imported strain of COVID-19, according to the China Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.” The three genome samples “showed the greatest resemblance to cases in Europe from February to May, and to cases in South and Southeast Asia from May to June.”

About health insurance

The COVID-19 Pandemic: Insurer Insights into Challenges, Implications, and Lessons Learned: Among the findings from these Urban Institute interviews of insurance executives:

  • “Insurers appear well-positioned financially to navigate the COVID-19 crisis, at least for now.

  • While insurers expect the economic downturn to have a significant impact on their employer business, to date, most insurers report that their employer block of business remains surprising stable. Still, there are concerns that small employers, in particular, will begin to drop coverage in the coming months.

  • Medicaid enrollment is on the rise, but expected increases in individual market enrollment have yet to materialize in a significant way.

  • Most insurers are concerned that the financial impact of COVID-19 on some medical practices will lead to further consolidation among providers.

  • Though insurers face a significant degree of uncertainty, they believe the crisis will have less of an impact on 2021 premiums than initially feared.

  • Most insurers feel that the COVID-19 crisis has not prompted a need to change benefit designs to any great degree, though they believe telehealth benefits are here to stay.

  • Insurers acknowledge that further changes to the health care system are needed to address health disparities, especially racial and ethnic disparities.”

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Humana to offer home COVID-19 testing, drive-thru testing at Walmart: “Humana will now offer LabCorp’s home COVID-19 tests to its members and is teaming up with Walmart and Quest Diagnostics to provide access to drive-thru tests.
Members enrolled in the insurer’s Medicare Advantage, Medicare supplement, Medicaid and employer group plans are eligible for either type of test, and out-of-pocket costs will continue to be waived.”

Labs warn of test result delays amid coronavirus surges:”Commercial and clinical labs are warning that there may be extended turnaround times for COVID-19 test results amid an uptick in demand for testing as cases rise across the U.S.
Quest Diagnostics said June 29 that the average turnaround time for nonpriority patients' test results will be three to five days due to the increase in demand. It used to be a one-day turnaround. 
The commercial lab said it will still be a one-day turnaround for priority patients.”

Just 50% of Americans plan to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Here’s how to win over the rest: A must-read article that has an update of different market segments’ opinions on their likelihood of getting a COVID-19 vaccine. It also analyzes the objections. The main obstacle is concern over safety. In this case the fear of loss (or harm) is more powerful than the allure of upside gain (in this case prevention of serious illness). So the campaign for vaccination needs to address that main concern. For example, expert opinion may not be as persuasive as celebrity endorsements.

A Dire Warning From COVID-19 Test Providers:”The American testing supply chain is stretched to the limit, and the ongoing outbreak in the South and West could overwhelm it, according to epidemiologists and testing-company executives. While the country’s laboratories have added tremendous capacity in the past few months—the U.S. now tests about 550,000 people each day, a fivefold increase from early April—demand for viral tests is again outpacing supply.”

Suppression of a SARS-CoV-2 outbreak in the Italian municipality of Vo’: The important take-away: “Notably, 42.5% (95% CI 31.5-54.6%) of the confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections detected across the two surveys were asymptomatic (i.e. did not have symptoms at the time of swab testing and did not develop symptoms afterwards).”

Hollowed-Out Public Health System Faces More Cuts Amid Virus: At a time when public health is crucial, we face a neglected and shrinking resource. “Since 2010, spending for state public health departments has dropped by 16% per capita and spending for local health departments has fallen by 18%, according to a KHN and Associated Press analysis of government spending on public health. At least 38,000 state and local public health jobs have disappeared since the 2008 recession, leaving a skeletal workforce for what was once viewed as one of the world’s top public health systems.”

HHS extends partnership with retailers to boost COVID-19 testing:”The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said on Tuesday it would extend its partnership with private pharmacies and grocery chains to provide better access to COVID-19 testing. 
The partnership with CVS Health Corp, Rite Aid Corp, Walgreens boots Alliance Inc, Kroger and Walmart Inc has been scaled up to more than 600 COVID-19 testing sites across the country. 
About 70% of the testing sites under the program are located in areas that have moderate-to-high vulnerability to the virus.”

As Coronavirus Surges, How Much Testing Does Your State Need To Subdue The Virus?: While the testing volume is very different across the country, we need to be doing 4.3 million tests per day for COVID-19 suppression and 1.2 million tests per day for “mitigation.” We are only doing close to 600,000 per day.

The radical technologies to keep offices clear of coronavirus: Interesting technology explanations ranging from self-cleaning surfaces to ventilation changes.

About health insurance

Oklahoma voters approve Medicaid expansion as coronavirus cases climb: The significance of the story is this Red State’s decision at the same time the Republicans are pushing for the ACA’s repeal and the prospect that Oklahoma was to be the first state to try a block grant system for Medicaid.

10 indicted in $1.4B rural hospital fraudulent billing scheme: DOJ: “The Department of Justice (DOJ) has indicted 10 people, including a Miami-based hospital executive, in connection with a pass-through billing scheme that used rural hospitals as shells to submit fraudulent bills for lab tests.
Between November 2015 and February 2018, private plans were billed for $1.4 billion in tests and paid out $400 million, according to the DOJ. The indictment was unsealed Monday.”

Society of Actuaries tool allows payers to model COVID costs: “For example, researchers at SOA estimate that for each month that there is a high level of social distancing, annual insured healthcare costs decrease by 4%.”

About emerging science

Malaria's secret to surviving in the blood uncovered: This discovery provides a new method to attack malaria.
“When the malaria parasite enters a red blood cell it digests haemoglobin, leading to the release of a compound called haem, which is toxic to the parasite if it is left loose inside the cell. 
The researchers found that to overcome this, the parasite uses a protein, called PV5, to control a process where free haem molecules are joined together into insoluble crystals which are not harmful. This is vital to the survival of the malaria parasite.
When the researchers blocked this protein in the lab, they found that the human-infecting malaria parasite  made fewer and highly misshapen crystals. When the protein was blocked in mice that had been infected with a rodent strain of malaria, the parasite became more sensitive to several antimalarial drugs.”

Re­search­ers have found a prom­ising ther­apy for car­diac re­gen­er­a­tion:”The tissue-engineered approach relies on a local transplantation of minute pieces of autologous atrial appendage tissue, termed atrial appendage micrografts (AAMs), to the surface of the ischaemically stressed myocardium…
’We demonstrated not only preservation of heart's pumping function following critical ischemic insult but also improved functional recovery following AAMs transplantation during follow-up,’ says Docent Maciej Lalowski from University of Helsinki.”

About hospitals and health systems

Hospitals and Health Systems Continue to Face Unprecedented Financial Challenges due to COVID-19: The AHA updates projected losses from COVID-19 (emphases in the original):
“Hospitals and health systems currently report average declines of 19.5% in inpatient volume and 34.5% in outpatient volume relative to baseline levels.
The AHA estimates an additional $120.5 billion in total financial losses from July 2020 through December 2020 should hospitals and health systems reach baseline patient volumes by July 2021, or an average of $20.1 billion per month. These estimates are in addition to the $202.6 billion in losses the AHA estimated between March 2020 and June 2020 bringing the total projected losses to hospitals and health systems in 2020 to at least $323.1 billion.

Mayo Clinic And Tech Firm Launch ‘Hospital Care At Home’ Venture: This article is in this section because of the substitution of inpatient services at home. “The Mayo Clinic and the technology company Medically Home are partnering to launch a new healthcare delivery model that will deliver ‘advanced care’ typically available inside a hospital into patient homes.”

About healthcare IT

UCSF pays hackers $1.1M to regain access to medical school servers: These problem are still very much with us.

Where Telemedicine Falls Short: An HBR article by Dr. David Blumenthal, president of the Commonwealth Fund and former National Coordinator for Health IT.  The essence of his message: “I also know that well-trained clinicians use all their senses — not just hearing and vision. They appraise the whole patient: Is there a new limp, a shift in posture, a new pallor? Often, it’s what patients don’t notice or complain about that is essential. And there is no diagnostic test more cost-effective than the laying on of hands. I have found treatable cancers multiple times in routine exams that would be impossible to replicate in the virtual world. Could a Zoom visit detect a lymph node too firm, a spleen or liver too large, or an unexpected prostate nodule (with a normal PSA)?”

About pharma

US buys up world stock of key Covid-19 drug remdesivir: This article is the “other side” of the previous report on our federal government buying up the remdesivir supply for the next few months.
”The US has bought up virtually all the stocks for the next three months of one of the two drugs proven to work against Covid-19, leaving none for the UK, Europe or most of the rest of the world.
Experts and campaigners are alarmed both by the US unilateral action on remdesivir and the wider implications, for instance in the event of a vaccine becoming available. The Trump administration has already shown that it is prepared to outbid and outmanoeuvre all other countries to secure the medical supplies it needs for the US.”

Walgreens testing smaller store format: 8 things to know:The headline is the story. For example: “In the small stores, there are fewer items for sale in the front of the store and fewer over-the-counter medications. They are about a quarter of the size of a typical Walgreens store, which sits at 13,500 square feet.”

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

FDA Outlines Its Conditions for Approving a Covid-19 Vaccine: “The Food and Drug Administration released guidance Tuesday outlining its conditions for approving a Covid-19 vaccine, including a requirement that any vaccine be at least 50% more effective than a placebo in preventing the disease.
The FDA said that no vaccine would be approved unless a vaccine company had ‘clearly demonstrated’ proof of a vaccine’s safety and effectiveness through a clinical study, according to the guidance.
The FDA also said a vaccine wouldn’t be approved simply if it leads to antibodies in the bloodstream of patients, on grounds that it is not known what level of antibodies will confer protection to patients.” The 50% seems low but is in line with acceptable effectiveness of flu vaccines.

Big Pharma Hikes Drug Prices in the Midst of COVID-19 Crisis: “ According to a new analysis by Patients For Affordable Drugs, drug companies raised the list prices of 245 drugs by an average of 23.8 percent since the first case of the novel coronavirus in the U.S. was reported in January. The research found that 75 percent of those price hikes were drugs directly linked to COVID-19 treatment or conditions that place people at higher risk of the virus.”

CVS Health reportedly launching a GPO called Zinc: “While very few details about the plan were revealed, Zinc is expected to be similar to Ascent Health Services, a Switzerland-based GPO that Express Scripts launched in 2019, according to the report.
Ascent helps conduct rebate negotiations for Express Scripts. Prime Therapeutics also has relied on Ascent for rebate negotiations, according to the report.”

Houston pharmacist dubbed 'Compound King' gets 10-year prison sentence in $21M fraud case: “According to court documents, Tompkins and his co-conspirators billed the Department of Labor for about $21.8 million in compounded gels and creams that were not medically necessary and were predicated on kickbacks. The scheme specifically targeted injured state and federal employees, according to the DOJ.” Again, note that it was governmental units that were defrauded not private entities.

Biopharma tackles COVID-19, HIV and other viruses with gene and cell therapies: Interesting summary of how these therapies are being developed to treat COVID-19.

Pharma giants to unveil major $1 billion venture to push novel antibiotics:”Amid escalating concerns over antibiotic resistance, several big drug makers are creating a new $1 billion for-profit venture to acquire or invest in small antibiotic companies and their nascent products, according to two people familiar with the plans.
The effort will be announced on July 9 by the chief executive officers at Pfizer, Merck, Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bayer Pharmaceuticals, and Merck KGaA, among others. Also on hand will be government officials from Germany, Sweden, the U.K., and France, as well as representatives from Wellcome Trust and Pew Charitable Trusts.”

About hospitals and health systems

IBM Watson Health Recognizes Top-Performing U.S. Hospitals and Health Systems: “IBM Watson Health® today announced its 2020 Fortune/IBM Watson Health 100 Top Hospitals list and 15 Top Health Systems award winners, naming the top-performing hospitals and health systems in the U.S. Extrapolating the results of this year's studies, if all Medicare hospitalized patients received the same level of care as those treated in the award-winning facilities, more than 100,000 additional lives and billions of dollars in inpatient costs could be saved. The lists of the top hospitals and health systems were published by Fortune.”

About health insurance

House fires back at Trump by passing ObamaCare expansion: “The legislation, which passed in a largely party-line vote of 234 to 179, would increase the 2010 health law’s subsidies that help people afford their premiums and add more federal funding for Medicaid expansion.
Democrats timed the vote to contrast with the Trump administration’s legal brief filed with the Supreme Court last week calling for the ACA to be struck down, a move Democrats said would be even more harmful during the coronavirus pandemic.” Obviously no chance for passage in the Republican-controlled Senate.

About the public’s health

Flu virus with 'pandemic potential' found in China: “The new flu strain that has been identified in China is similar to 2009 swine flu, but with some new changes…Current flu vaccines do not appear to protect against it, although they could be adapted to do so if needed.”

CDC says U.S. has ‘way too much virus’ to control pandemic as cases surge across country: “The coronavirus is spreading too rapidly and too broadly for the U.S. to bring it under control, Dr. Anne Schuchat, principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Monday.
The U.S. has set records for daily new infections in recent days as outbreaks surge mostly across the South and West. The recent spike in new cases has outpaced daily infections in April when the virus rocked Washington state and the northeast, and when public officials thought the outbreak was hitting its peak in the U.S.”

Fauci testifies new coronavirus cases could 'go up to 100,000 a day if this does not turn around’: “‘“We are now having 40-plus thousand new cases a day. I would not be surprised if we go up to 100,000 a day if this does not turn around. And so I am very concerned,’ Fauci said in response to questioning from Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on what the overall U.S. death toll is likely to be.” The article also has a summary of updates on the pandemic, including the growing Republican acknowledgement of the need to wear masks.

HHS will renew public health emergency: “HHS spokesperson Michael Caputo on Monday tweeted that HHS intends to extend the COVID-19 public health emergency that is set to expire on July 25.
The extension would prolong the emergency designation by 90 days. Several payment policies and regulatory adjustments are attached to the public health emergency, so the extension is welcome news for healthcare providers.”

Today's News and Commentary

About healthcare professionals

The Complexities of Physician Supply and Demand: Projections From 2018 to 2033: This pre-COVID-19 survey is the latest estimates of the title’s topic and worth a read. The bottom line is:

  • A primary care physician shortage of between 21,400 and 55,200 is projected by 2033.

  • A shortage of non-primary care specialty physicians of between 33,700 and 86,700 is projected by 2033.

About the public’s health

Supreme Court Hands Abortion-Rights A Victory In Louisiana Case:”A sharply divided U.S. Supreme Court on Monday stood by its most recent abortion precedent. Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court's four liberals, citing the Supreme Court's adherence to precedent, to invalidate a Louisiana law that required doctors at clinics that perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital. 
Louisiana's law is virtually identical to one struck down by the court in 2016, which found that the admitting privileges law in Texas was medically unnecessary and that it significantly limited access to abortion.”

How the World Missed COVID-19’s Silent Spread:Excellent article in the NY Times with many examples : “The two-month delay was a product of faulty scientific assumptions, academic rivalries and, perhaps most important, a reluctance to accept that containing the virus would take drastic measures. The resistance to emerging evidence was one part of the world’s sluggish response to the virus.”

Some US states return to previous restrictions to slow surges of coronavirus cases: A good summary of the headline’s topic.

How the Coronavirus Short-Circuits the Immune System: This well-written article explains the current knowledge of what happens to the immune system in COVID-19 infection.

This coronavirus mutation has taken over the world. Scientists are trying to understand why.: In January, SARS-CoV-2 infections “bore the same genetic signatures as a germ that emerged in China weeks before.” But as the virus spread, it has mutated “in the part of the genome that codes for the all-important ‘spike protein’ — the protruding structure that gives the coronavirus its crownlike profile and allows it to enter human cells the way a burglar picks a lock.”

 America’s Shifting Covid-19 Epidemic in Five Charts: A really good graphic representation of current pandemic trends. National trend are being driven by a few states where rates are rising. Overall cases are in an upward trend that should surpass the previous peak.

Japanese startup creates 'connected' face mask for coronavirus new normal: For your interest, or amusement. Wonder how good it is at containing infection.

About health insurance

CPT code approved for SARS-CoV-2 antigen testing: This AMA article is a good example of how codes are added with emerging diseases and technology.

About pharma

Gilead's long-awaited remdesivir price is $3,120, in line with watchdog estimates: “For private insurance plans, Gilead set a list price of $520 per vial, Gilead CEO Daniel O’Day revealed Monday. The cost for a five-day treatment course using six vials, which most patients are expected to receive, would add up to $3,120. For governments of developed countries, including the U.S., the price will be lower, at $390 per vial or $2,340 per course.”

HHS secures 500K courses of remdesivir for distribution to hospitals: “The amount secured represents 100% of drugmaker Gilead's projected production for July (94,200 courses), 90% of production projected for August (174,900 courses) and 90% of production projected for September (232,800 course).”

Pfizer sues for U.S. permission to assist patients needing expensive heart drugs: “The drugmaker said the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General is blocking it from offering financial aid to patients unable to afford copayments for its Vyndaqel and Vyndamax drugs, because it views such aid as an illegal kickback.” The drugs can cost $225,000 per year.
The issue is that drug company payments for out of pocket expenses have allowed them to raise prices to payers for the remainder of the bill.

Socioeconomic and Demographic Characteristics of US Adults Who Purchase Prescription Drugs From Other Countries: ““Among 61 238 US adults taking prescription medications… the estimated prevalence of purchasing of medication outside the US was 1.5%... Those who purchased medications outside the US were more likely to be older (age >64 years…), to be from Hispanic…or immigrant populations, and to have higher educational attainment (bachelor's degree…), lower family income…, and lack of insurance…  Data analyses indicated that online health information–seeking behavior… or use of an online pharmacy… was associated with a greater likelihood of medication purchases outside the US. Individuals who skipped medications…or delayed filling a prescription… (also had higher odds of purchasing medication outside the US.” It is estimated that more than 2 million Americans buy their drugs from sources abroad.

AstraZeneca, Moderna ahead in COVID-19 vaccine race: WHO: The headline speaks for itself and provides an update on vaccine progress against SARS-CoV-2.

About healthcare IT

CMS issues its first proposal to continue telehealth flexibilities, in home health proposed rule: “CMS has issued a proposed rule to make permanent regulatory changes to telecommunications technologies in providing care under the Medicare home health benefit beyond the expiration of the public health emergency for the COVID-19 pandemic.”

About emerging technology

Using laser-welded sugar, Rice bioengineers build 3D vessel networks for lab-grown tissues: The headline speaks for itself. Fascinating!