Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

J&J's COVID-19 vaccine remains paused in US as advisory panel seeks more data: “Advisers to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said Wednesday that they need further data in order to make recommendations on how to respond to reports of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) in some people administered Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine Ad26.COV2.S. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) is expected to meet again within a week to 10 days.”

Novavax Admits Supply Shortages Will Delay Vaccine Production: “Novavax said it does not expect to hit its target of manufacturing 150 million COVID-19 vaccine doses per month until the third quarter of this year.
The production delay is caused in part by problems with the bioreactors used to grow cells needed for manufacturing the vaccine.”

Former world leaders call on Biden to suspend Covid-19 vaccine patents: “A group of 175 former world leaders and Nobel laureates is urging the US to take “urgent action” to suspend intellectual property rights for Covid-19 vaccines to help boost global inoculation rates. A measure to allow countries to temporarily override patent rights for Covid-related medical products was proposed at the World Trade Organization by India and South Africa in October, and has since been backed by nearly 60 countries. Doing so would allow developing countries to make their own copies of the vaccines that have been developed by pharmaceutical companies without fear of being sued for intellectual property infringements.”

AstraZeneca vaccine elicits stronger T-cell response in elderly than Pfizer jab: “The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine induced a stronger cellular immune response in elderly adults than the BioNTech/Pfizer shot, potentially providing more protection against severe Covid-19 and new virus variants. In the first head-to-head comparison of the two vaccines, scientists discovered that both shots elicited an antibody response in the group of over-80s, tested five to six weeks after the first shot. However, participants who received the AstraZeneca jab were more likely to also have a T-cell response.”

Many millions have been vaccinated against the coronavirus; 396 were later hospitalized with Covid-19: “About 5,800 people who have been vaccinated against coronavirus have become infected anyway, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tells CNN. 
Some became seriously ill and 74 people died, the CDC said. It said 396 -- 7% -- of those who got infected after they were vaccinated required hospitalization.
This is the CDC's first public accounting of breakthrough cases, and the agency is searching for patterns based on patient age and gender, location, type of vaccine, variants and other factors.”

About healthcare IT

Coding to Hide Health Prices from Web Searches Is Barred by Regulators: “Federal regulators said healthcare pricing data that health insurers must post under a new requirement shouldn’t be blocked from web searches, issuing new guidance after The Wall Street Journal reported that hospitals used special coding that shielded such information from Google and other search engines.
Under new federal requirements, both hospitals and insurers must reveal long-confidential pricing data, including the rates that insurers pay for services. Hospitals were supposed to post data at the start of this year, while insurers must comply beginning in 2022. The hospital industry had fought the requirement in court but lost.”

IBM finds more cyberattacks against COVID-19 vaccine supply chain: “A hacking campaign detected by IBM tried to attack the organizations involved in manufacturing, transporting and storing COVID-19 vaccines last year. Now it has been found to be a much bigger operation than was originally thought.”

VA pauses $16B Cerner EHR rollout for 3rd time: 6 details: The long saga continues: “The Department of Veterans Affairs is pausing deployment activities for its new $16 billion Cerner EHR system at a second site until it has completed a strategic review of the project and shared the results with Congress, according to an April 14 Federal News Network report.”

About the public’s health

Explore the Management Top 250: How does your company rank in the 2020 analysis of well-run companies for customers, employees and investors?: By far the #1 company is Microsoft. The highest ranked healthcare company is Merck (#11).

About health insurance

What if the American Rescue Plan’s [ARPA]Enhanced Marketplace Subsidies Were Made Permanent? Estimates for 2022: “We find the number of people uninsured would drop by 4.2 million, or almost 14 percent, in 2022 if the ARPA’s enhanced marketplace subsidies were permanent and consumers, employers, and insurers responded to the new subsidy schedule as if it were fully phased in. We estimate subsidized marketplace enrollment would increase by 5.1 million people, an increase of 60 percent in 2022. Because of our different assumptions and models, our estimates differ from those by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).”

Change Healthcare shareholders approve $13B UnitedHealth deal: ”Shareholders of Change Healthcare approved a $13 billion deal to become part of UnitedHealth Group's OptumInsight…
The approval comes as the deal is facing scrutiny from the Department of Justice. The American Hospital Association had urged the department to investigate the deal, which the association claims is anticompetitive.“

Patient Recruiter Sentenced to Prison for $3.3 Million Cancer Genetic Testing Fraud Scheme: “According to court documents, [Andre] Scott was the owner of Scott Global, a telemarketing call center located in Orlando. The evidence showed that Scott targeted Medicare beneficiaries with telemarketing phone calls falsely stating that Medicare covered expensive cancer screening genetic testing, or ‘CGx’ tests. Each test cost as much as $6,000. After beneficiaries agreed to take the test, the evidence showed Scott paid unlawful bribes and kickbacks to telemedicine companies to obtain doctor’s orders authorizing the tests.”

About pharma

Biologics Legislation Is Headed to Biden's Desk for Signature: “The Advancing Education on Biosimilars Act would require more robust federal efforts to educate the public about biosimilars, and the Ensuring Innovation Act would impose more restrictions on what biologics and generics drugs qualify for product exclusivity protections.” The latter Act cuts the ability of pharma companies to maintain exclusivity by using patents on all chemical entities in the product. For non-biologics, the Act strikes ‘‘‘active ingredient (including any ester or salt of the active ingredient)’ each place it appears” and inserts ‘‘‘active moiety (as defined by the Secretary in section 314.3 of title 21, Code of Federal Regulations)…’” The Acts await Presidential signatures.

Thermo Fisher Scientific to Acquire PPD, Inc., a Leading Clinical Research Organization: “Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc….and PPD, Inc….,a leading global provider of clinical research services to the pharma and biotech industry, today announced that their boards of directors have approved a definitive agreement under which Thermo Fisher will acquire PPD for $47.50 per share for a total cash purchase price of $17.4 billion plus the assumption of approximately $3.5 billion of net debt…
Upon close of the transaction, PPD will become part of Thermo Fisher's Laboratory Products and Services Segment.”

 

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Inhaled steroid speeds recovery in Covid patients at home, study finds: “A widely available asthma drug has been found to reduce the recovery time for Covid-19 patients treated at home by an average of three days, according to a large clinical study in the UK led by Oxford university. The interim results for the inhaled steroid, known as budesonide, provide the first statistically powerful evidence for a drug speeding recovery in people who are not hospitalised.”

Moderna study finds COVID-19 vaccine 90 percent effective six months after dose: “Moderna announced on Tuesday that their coronavirus vaccine was 90 percent effective six months after a person receives their second dose.
’Vaccine efficacy starting two weeks following the second dose and based on the updated adjudicated cases remains consistent with prior updates, including greater than 90% against all cases of COVID-19, and greater than 95% against severe cases of COVID-19,’ the company announced.
Moderna is working for its vaccine to be fully approved by the U.S. as it is only under emergency authorizations from the Food and Drug Administration.”

Pfizer expects to meet US supply target ahead of schedule as authorities halt use of J&J shot: ”Pfizer can meet its supply target with the US government two weeks early as it boosts production, the company's chief executive said on Tuesday.”

Regeneron Says Its COVID-19 Antibody Combination Cuts Symptomatic Infections:”Regeneron Pharmaceuticals said its COVID-19 antibody cocktail, REGEN-COV (casirivimab with imdevimab) reduced the risk of symptomatic infections by 81 percent in a late-stage trial…
Those treated with the antibody combination who suffered from symptomatic infection generally saw their symptoms end in one week vs. three weeks for the placebo arm in the study conducted with the NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.” Here are the latest NIH treatment recommendations, including use of monoclonal antibodies.

A Guide To The 1st Appellate Clash Over COVID-19 Coverage: “On Wednesday, the Eighth Circuit will become the first appellate court to consider whether COVID-19 closures trigger business interruption insurance when it hears an Iowa dental clinic's appeal of an order that Cincinnati Insurance doesn't have to cover its pandemic-related losses.” The article provides an overview of this important, contentious issue.

Europe won't renew AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine contracts next year: report: “The European Commission has opted against renewing its vaccine contracts with AstraZeneca and J&J once they expire at the end of the year, Italian newspaper La Stampa reported Wednesday, citing an unnamed source from the Italian health ministry…
Both shots have come under scrutiny over rare but serious cases of blood clots in people who had received the vaccines, prompting several countries to halt use of the AZ shot while the European Medicines Agency completed a follow-up safety review. Meanwhile, AstraZeneca has struggled to meet the delivery targets it originally laid out, while J&J just this week said it would delay its vaccine rollout in the bloc over safety concerns.”

About healthcare IT

Biden outlines health IT funding priorities: “The extensive list includes billions in funding for public health data modernization, broadband and 5G expansion, social determinants of health, cybersecurity and more.” See the article for spending details.

Anthem, K Health, Blackstone launching joint digital health venture: “Hydrogen Health is backed by investment from Blackstone and Anthem, and K Health CEO Allon Bloch will serve as the new company's chief executive. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The new venture will harness K Health's artificial intelligence tools to bring new digital health offerings to the consumer and employer markets, according to an announcement from the companies. Hydrogen Health will develop new platforms targeting the direct-to-consumer, direct-to-employer and direct-to-insurer markets.”

CMS bans coding hospitals use to hide prices from web searches: The update is that: “Leaders of the House Energy and Commerce Committee sent a letter April 13 to HHS calling for strict enforcement of the price transparency requirements. The letter cited evidence of hospitals' lack of compliance, including the Journal's analysis of more than 3,100 sites that use the search-blocking code, according to the report.”

100 Million More IoT Devices Are Exposed—and They Won’t Be the Last: Not strictly healthcare-related, but this Wired e-zine article explains details of why the systems are vulnerable.

About the public’s health

Syphilis Cases in California Drive a Record-Setting Year for STDs Nationwide: “In California and the U.S., about half of syphilis cases are in men who have sex with men. More than a third of women in the West who have syphilis also use meth, which has surged in recent years. These are just some of the trends causing overall national cases of sexually transmitted diseases to hit an all-time high for the last six years in a row, reaching 2.5 million. And the consequences are now trickling down to babies, who are contracting syphilis from their mothers: Congenital syphilis rates nearly quadrupled between 2012 and 2019.”

6th Circ. OKs Ohio Down Syndrome Abortion Law: “The majority of the Sixth Circuit has undone a block on an Ohio law that criminalizes abortion based on a Down syndrome diagnosis, ruling that ‘the right to an abortion before viability is not absolute.’ In a divided Tuesday decision, the appellate court reversed a lower court's preliminary injunction blocking H. B. 124, with the majority saying that the state is allowed to regulate previability abortions so long as those regulations don't put too much of a burden on women who want an abortion.”

2021’s Best & Worst States for Children’s Health Care: FYI. The best is DC. The worst is Texas.

High number of meals consumed in U.S. have low nutritional value: “About 65% of adult meals and 80% of children's meals from restaurants had low nutritional value In 2018, the most recent year for which information is available…” Anyone surprised?

About pharma

US agency says women can get abortion pill via mail: “Women seeking an abortion pill will not be required to visit a doctor’s office or clinic during the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. health officials said Tuesday in the latest reversal in an ongoing legal battle over the medication.
The Food and Drug Administration announced the policy change a day earlier in a letter to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, one of several medical groups that has sued over the restriction put in place under the Trump administration.”

Rethink specialty pharma benefits: A good, current review of specialty drugs and the methods companies are using to hold down costs.

About health insurance

House passes bill to avert Medicare cuts: “The House on Tuesday approved a bill that would put off automatic cuts to Medicare provider payments until the end of the year.
The bill passed with a strong bipartisan majority of 384-38…
The automatic cuts were originally put into place by the 2011 Budget Control Act, which set up an annual 2 percent reduction in Medicare payments as one of its mechanisms for reducing the debt. Congress has never allowed the cuts to take place, however, voting to overturn them regularly over the past decade.”

Medicaid, CHIP Enrollment Increased After 2 Years of Decline: “Actual data, as opposed to projected data, showed the Medicaid and CHIP combined enrollment from February 2020 to October 2020 reached 7.2 million. Using preliminary data, experts anticipate that in November 2020 that number rose half a million to hit 7.7 million enrollees.”

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Today’s top story:

Joint CDC and FDA Statement on Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 Vaccine: “CDC and FDA are reviewing data involving six reported U.S. cases of a rare and severe type of blood clot in individuals after receiving the J&J vaccine. In these cases, a type of blood clot called cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) was seen in combination with low levels of blood platelets (thrombocytopenia). All six cases occurred among women between the ages of 18 and 48, and symptoms occurred 6 to 13 days after vaccination. Treatment of this specific type of blood clot is different from the treatment that might typically be administered. Usually, an anticoagulant drug called heparin is used to treat blood clots. In this setting, administration of heparin may be dangerous, and alternative treatments need to be given.
CDC will convene a meeting of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) on Wednesday to further review these cases and assess their potential significance. FDA will review that analysis as it also investigates these cases. Until that process is complete, we are recommending a pause in the use of this vaccine out of an abundance of caution. [Emphasis added] This is important, in part, to ensure that the health care provider community is aware of the potential for these adverse events and can plan for proper recognition and management due to the unique treatment required with this type of blood clot.”

Studies Confirm Racial, Ethnic Disparities In COVID-19 Hospitalizations And Visits: “Days after declaring racism a serious public health threat, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a pair of studies further quantifying the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on communities of color. 
The studies, published Monday in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, examine trends in racial and ethnic disparities in hospitalizations and emergency room visits associated with COVID-19 in 2020.”

B.1.1.7 variant more transmissible but does not increase disease severity, two new studies suggest: “Two new studies suggest that the B.1.1.7 coronavirus variant, which was first identified in the United Kingdom, is more transmissible, but the variant does not appear to impact disease severity…
One of the studies, published on Monday in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, found no evidence in a sample of hospitalized patients that the B.1.1.7 variant is associated with severe Covid-19. However, the variant was associated with increased viral load, which supports the growing evidence that it is more easily transmitted.
The other study, also published Monday in The Lancet Public Health, found no statistically significant association between the B.1.1.7 variant and the types or duration of Covid-19 symptoms people said that they experienced.”

Recent Rise in U.S. Covid-19 Cases Driven by Younger People: “In addition to school sports, large outbreaks have been tied to the recent Easter holiday and spring breaks.” Also, this group is the last to be immunized.

About health insurance

HHS approves waiver for Illinois to expand Medicaid postpartum coverage to one year: “The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced it approved a waiver for Illinois to ensure Medicaid eligibility for pregnant and postpartum women for 12 months [from 60 days], the first state to get such a waiver.
HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra said during a press conference Monday that the wavier approval is part of a series of measures the agency is taking to address maternal health outcomes. Becerra also said HHS has made $12 million in funding available for improving rural health maternal outcomes.”

Beneficiaries in Medicare Advantage Receive Better Value and Spend 40% Less than Beneficiaries in Medicare FFS: The study was done by UnitedHealth, but the numbers ring true: “The annual health care spending—on individual premiums and out-of-pocket (OOP) cost sharing for medical, pharmacy, and ancillary services—by a 73 year-old beneficiary of average health in MA ($3,558) is as much as 41% less than for a comparable beneficiary in FFS.”

Fifth Circuit Court Will Not Reconsider Decision Reversing Ruling That Would Have Awarded Nearly $500 Million To States In A Lawsuit Over ACA’s Insurance Provider Fees: Modern Healthcare reports the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit voted 11-5 to ‘not reconsider its decision to reverse a ruling that would have awarded nearly $500 million to states in a lawsuit over the ACA’s insurance provider fees.’ Modern Healthcare adds, ‘The provision required that states--on behalf of their Medicaid Managed Care Organizations--pay the fee to the federal government,’ but ‘the fee was repealed by Congress in 2021.’”

Rectifying the ACA Family Glitch Could Drive ACA Premiums Down: Approximately 5.1 million individuals are caught in the Affordable Care Act’s ‘family glitch,’ according to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) analysis.
Under the Affordable Care Act, an employee may qualify for subsidized marketplace coverage if their employer-sponsored health plan’s premium costs more than 9.83 percent of their household income.
However, only the cost of the individual employee’s coverage is taken into account. Dependents are excluded from the calculation.
Thus, if an employee’s premium falls below 9.83 percent of their household income but the cost of adding their dependents puts them above that threshold, the employee nevertheless would not be eligible for lower-cost Affordable Care Act coverage.”

Data Note: 2021 Medical Loss Ratio Rebates: “The ACA requires health insurers to publicly report the portion of their premium dollars spent on health care costs, quality improvement, and other activities in each state they operate in. MLR rebates are based on a 3-year average, meaning that 2021 rebates will be calculated using insurers’ financial data in 2018, 2019, and 2020. Rebates issued in 2021 will go to consumers who were enrolled in rebate-eligible plans in 2020.
Using preliminary data reported by insurers to state regulators and compiled by Mark Farrah Associates, we find that insurers estimate they will be issuing a total of about $2.1 billion across all markets – the second-largest amount since rebates were first issued in 2012 under the ACA. This year’s rebates are roughly $400 million lower than last year’s record high of $2.5 billion, but more than 50% higher than the amount in 2019 ($1.4 billion, which, at the time, was a record high). These amounts are preliminary estimates, and final rebate data will be available later this year. Some insurers have not yet filed their 2021 rebate estimates.”

About healthcare IT

Supreme Court Ruling May Help Providers With mHealth Messaging Strategies: “The court earlier this month sided with Facebook in a case involving the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), ruling that the company didn’t have to adhere to TCPA guidelines because it doesn’t use a messaging system that randomly or sequentially stores or generates a telephone number. In doing so, the court essentially redefined an automatic telephone dialing system, or autodialer.
Writing in the Health Care Law Today blog, attorneys for the Foley & Lardner law firm said the court’s ruling will allow healthcare providers to send out ‘health care messages’ by text without needing prior written consent from patients.”

Optum's 8 biggest health IT acquisitions, investments in the past year: FYI.

31 numbers that show how big Epic, Cerner, Allscripts & Meditech are in healthcare: FYI.
One impressive statistic is that more than 250 million patients have an electronic record in Epic.

Direct-To-Consumer Telemedicine Visits For Acute Respiratory Infections Linked To More Downstream Visits: “Use of direct-to-consumer telemedicine—on-demand virtual care for minor medical issues—is growing rapidly. Although it may yield immediate savings by diverting health care from higher-cost settings, these savings could be countered if direct-to-consumer telemedicine increases follow-up care and, therefore, episode costs. Comparing downstream care utilization data from a large, commercial payer for the period 2016–19, we found that patients with initial visits for acute respiratory infection were more likely to obtain follow-up care within seven days after direct-to-consumer telemedicine visits (10.3 percent) than after in-person visits (5.9 percent)…The telemedicine cohort had fewer (0.5 percent versus 0.6 percent) emergency department visits—a small but statistically significant difference—but more subsequent office, urgent care, and telemedicine visits.”

Use of Online Physician Ratings and Reviews by Older U.S. Adults: Results of a National Survey: “In this nationally representative survey, we found that more than 4 in 10 U.S. adults aged 50 to 80 years have now used online physician rating sites. These sources of information are more likely to be used by women, persons with higher levels of education, and those with a chronic medical condition. Numerous other factors seem to be much more influential among older adults when they select a physician, as suggested by previous research. Yet, online ratings and reviews were perceived to be very important nearly as often as word-of-mouth recommendations from family and friends and more often than where a physician trained or attended medical school.”

About pharma

FDA Revokes Five ANDAs for Generic Opioids: “The companies repeatedly failed to file required annual reports for the ANDAs and to ‘satisfy the requirement to have an approved risk evaluation and mitigation strategy (REMS), the agency said.
The drugmakers whose ANDAs were revoked are Lavipharm Laboratories of East Windsor, N.J., Scherer Laboratories, based in Plano, Tex., and Everylife of Seattle, Wash.”

FDA names Patrizia Cavazzoni as permanent director of CDER: “The FDA disclosed Monday that Patrizia Cavazzoni was appointed the permanent director of the agency's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). She had been heading the division on an interim basis since last year when Janet Woodcock, currently the FDA's acting commissioner, relinquished the role to help lead an effort to accelerate COVID-19 therapies under Operation Warp Speed.”
The Biden administration has been slow to appoint permanent personnel at the FDA, so this action is an important step.

Biden picks former New Jersey attorney general to lead DEA: “President Biden has selected Anne Milgram, a former state attorney general, prosecutor and longtime advocate for reform of the criminal justice system, to lead the Drug Enforcement Administration, the White House announced on Monday.”

MIT and UCSF researchers create CRISPR 'on-off switch' that controls gene expression without changing DNA: Fascinating technology that could, in some cases, bypass some of the “cutting errors” of CRISPR procedures.
”The gene editing system CRISPR-Cas9 makes breaks in DNA strands that are repaired by cells—a process that can be hard to control, resulting in unwanted genetic changes. Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) designed an alternative technology that changes gene expression without damaging DNA, and they believe it could be useful for both research and drug development.
The researchers used their system, dubbed CRISPRoff and CRISPRon, to induce pluripotent stem cells to transform into neurons. They also used it to silence the gene that makes the protein Tau, which has been implicated in Alzheimer’s disease. They described their research in the journal Cell.”

2021 Global RepTrak 100: Pharma, biotech and life sciences rank 8th among 13 industries. This reputation survey is fascinating. The overall #1 company is LEGO.

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

As vaccinations keep rising, so do Covid-19 hospitalizations among those who aren't vaccinated: “First, the good news: The United States reported a record-high 4.6 million doses of vaccines administered in one day, according to data published Saturday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention…
Now the bad news: For the third straight week, new Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations are increasing, according to CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walenky.”

Nearly half of new US virus infections are in just 5 states: “New York, Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania and New Jersey together reported 44% of the nation’s new COVID-19 infections, or nearly 197,500 new cases, in the latest available seven-day period, according to state health agency data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Total U.S. infections during the same week numbered more than 452,000.”
Those states account for 22% of the total US population.

States have been slow to order allotted vaccine doses, spurring calls for new approach: “States have delayed ordering hundreds of thousands of vaccine doses available to them even as coronavirus outbreaks escalate — a sign the nation is moving past its supply pinch and now faces more acute challenges related to demand, staffing and inoculation of hard-to-reach populations…
State and county officials offered different explanations for not ordering their full allocations each week. Many cited the difficulty of matching first and second doses. Others pointed to reduced demand, staffing challenges and inadequate communication between state and local officials.”

AWS [Amazon Web Services] to distribute $12 million in 2021 and expand scope of its initiative to fight COVID-19.: “In the first phase of the initiative, AWS helped 87 organizations in 17 countries ranging from nonprofits and research institutions to startups and large businesses. We have awarded $8 million supporting a range of diagnostic projects, including molecular tests for antibodies, antigens, and nucleic acids; diagnostic imaging; wearables; and data analytics tools that use artificial intelligence and machine learning to detect the virus.
As we launch the next phase, we are excited to broaden the AWS Diagnostic Development Initiative’s scope and distribute the remaining $12 million this year. Starting April 12, we are expanding the scope to three new areas: 1) early disease detection to identify outbreaks at the individual and at the community level; 2) prognosis to better understand disease trajectory; and 3) public health genomics to bolster viral genome sequencing worldwide.”

Japanese drug regulator to fast track any modified vaccines to fight variants: “The Japan Times reported that modified vaccines against new variants of COVID-19 will not require clinical trials in Japan if the production process and handling are similar to those of the original authorised vaccine.
The Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA) said companies will still need to submit data from clinical trials overseas that shows immune response to the variants when they apply for Japanese approval.”
This move is unusual for the VERY cautious PMDA.

Here's how the U.S. compares to other countries on the coronavirus pandemic: A really good review and analysis of the current status of this topic.

South African variant may evade protection from Pfizer vaccine, Israeli study says: “The South African variant, B.1.351, was found to make up about 1% of all the COVID-19 cases across all the people studied, according to the study by Tel Aviv University and Israel’s largest healthcare provider, Clalit.
But among patients who had received two doses of the vaccine, the variant’s prevalence rate was eight times higher than those unvaccinated - 5.4% versus 0.7%.”
The study had very small numbers and the results make no sense. Why would vaccination increase infection almost 8 times more than in those unvaccinated?

Regeneron says antibody cocktail prevented Covid when given as simple injection, not an IV: “The study enrolled 1,500 healthy volunteers, each of whom shared a home with someone who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, and randomized them to receive a single dose of its antibody treatment, given subcutaneously as four shots, or placebo. After 29 days, 11 patients in the treatment group developed Covid-19 compared to 59 on placebo. And for the subjects who got Covid-19 despite treatment, their symptoms resolved after one week, compared to three weeks for those on placebo. In 204 patients who had already tested positive for the SARS-CoV-2 virus at the study’s outset, the injection reduced their chances of progressing to symptomatic Covid-19 by 31%.”

More Black Americans open to vaccines after outreach efforts: “A poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research in late March found that about 24% of Black American adults said they will probably or definitely not get vaccinated. That’s down from 41% in January. The latest number shows Black Americans leaning against getting shots in almost the same proportion as white Americans at 26% and Hispanic Americans at 22%.
Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, said attitudes toward the vaccine among Black Americans have taken “almost a 180-degree turnaround” as outreach campaigns have worked to combat misinformation.
He credited Black physicians, faith leaders and other community organizers for being trusted messengers during the pandemic, which has killed more than 550,000 Americans.”

About healthcare IT

How Americans Feel About Telehealth: One Year Later: A quick-read survey that highlights how much has changed in one year.

In a change, patients can now read the clinical notes written by their physicians: This “spring, new federal rules went into effect that will allow patients to see the clinic notes physicians write, which advocates say will improve patients’ knowledge of their own health….
But not all doctors are as enthusiastic, concerned that patients might misinterpret what they see in their doctors’ notes, including complex descriptions of clinical assessments and decisions.”

Microsoft accelerates industry cloud strategy for healthcare with the acquisition of Nuance: “Microsoft Corp and Nuance Communications, Inc. today announced they have entered into a definitive agreement under which Microsoft will acquire Nuance for $56.00 per share, implying a 23% premium to the closing price of Nuance on Friday, April 9, in an all-cash transaction valued at $19.7 billion, inclusive of Nuance’s net debt… Mark Benjamin will remain CEO of Nuance, reporting to Scott Guthrie, executive vice president of Cloud & AI at Microsoft. The transaction is intended to close this calendar year….
Nuance’s products include the Dragon Ambient eXperience, Dragon Medical One and PowerScribe One for radiology reporting, all leading clinical speech recognition SaaS offerings built on Microsoft Azure.”

Google is exploring a health record tool for patients: ”After 13 years, Google is coming back for patient health records. The tech giant has launched an early user feedback program aimed at exploring how patients might want to see, organize, and share their own medical record data.
The work could inform the creation of a consumer-facing medical records tool along the lines of Apple’s Health Records app.”
Stand-alone apps are way behind current trends for interoperable systems and data exchange (see recent postings on anti-blocking laws). From the provider standpoint, any system that does not also have a financial (billing/collections) component is worthless.

FDA clears its first plug-in AI video system for spotting polyps during colonoscopy: “The GI Genius, developed by Cosmo Pharmaceuticals and distributed internationally by Medtronic, is designed to be compatible with all agency-approved endoscopy video systems. On the physician’s feed, the add-on system highlights areas of interest, allowing for closer visual inspections, tissue biopsies or ablation, with the goal of finding cancers when they may be easier to treat.”

About healthcare tech

Medline Industries Explores Sale:”Medline Industries Inc. is exploring a sale that could value the big medical-supply company at as much as $30 billion and mark the latest in a recent string of large leveraged-buyout bids.
The family-owned company has hired Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to run the process, according to people familiar with the matter. There is no guarantee the company will ultimately be sold. The process is at an early stage, the people said, with some adding that an IPO or minority investment is also a possibility.”

The top 10 medtech M&A deals of 2020: FYI

About pharma

Ohio Expects To Save $240 Million In Medicaid Drug Costs By Running Its Own PBM: “Ohio officials expect that consolidating the seven private pharmacy benefit managers that run its Medicaid managed-care system into a single, state-regulated PBM will save more than $240 million every year. The change will go in effect starting in early 2022.
Officials will administer PBM services through Gainwell Technologies, a state-regulated PBM that will replace the seven PBMs currently operating in the managed-care system.”

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

In addition to production problems, J&J’s vaccine now has other issues that will decrease its use:

2 health systems pause J&J vaccinations after adverse patient reactions: “Centura Health in Centennial, Colo., said April 7 it temporarily closed a mass vaccination site in Commerce City, Colo., that it runs with the state after 11 people had adverse reactions to Johnson & Johnson's vaccine.
Colorado's public health department said that the 11 people who had adverse reactions at Centura Health's vaccine site experienced symptoms including nausea and dizziness…
UNC Health in Chapel Hill, N.C. said April 8 it paused administering Johnson & Johnson's vaccine after a small number of patients experienced adverse reactions…
According to a statement emailed to Becker's from UNC Health, less than 1 percent of people who have received Johnson & Johnson's vaccine at the health system's clinics have reported lightheadedness or fainting.”
Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine under scrutiny at EMA after 4 'serious cases' of unusual blood clots: “So far in the J&J vaccine’s U.S. rollout, EU officials have tracked three cases of unusual blood clots with low blood platelets following vaccination, the European Medicines Agency’s (EMA's) Pharmacovigilance Risk Assessment Committee said Friday. Another case came in a clinical trial. One of the cases was fatal.”

Blood clot warning added to AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine by EMA: The lead article in this link has a really good graphic showing risks and benefits for the AZ vaccine by age groups. It is clear from this display why many countries are only using this vaccine in those > 60 yrs old.

Hologic inks its largest COVID-powered acquisition yet with $795M for test maker Mobidiag: “After reaping a windfall from COVID-19 diagnostic demand, Hologic’s spending spree continues with its largest acquisition yet: It’s claimed Mobidiag, the Finnish-French molecular test maker, with a $795 million deal.
Hologic saw its diagnostic sales jump 450% over the last quarter alone, built on the back of its high-throughput Panther and Panther Fusion laboratory hardware and coronavirus kits. Now, adding Mobidiag promises to bring in molecular tests for various infectious diseases used at the point of care.”

About health insurance

April 2021 MACPAC Public Meeting: MACPAC met yesterday and today and issued the following reviews and recommendations [click on the pdf tab when you access each site]:

  1. High-Cost Specialty Drugs Review of Draft Chapter and Recommendations

  2. Strategies for State Contracts with Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans

  3. Access to Mental Health Services for Adults: Draft Chapter and Recommendations

  4. Access to Behavioral Health Services for Children and Adolescents: Draft Chapter and Recommendations

  5. Electronic Health Records as a Tool for Integration of Behavioral Health Services

  6. Mandated Report: Non-Emergency Medical Transportation Benefit

  7. Progress on Rebalancing: Lessons from States

  8. Ensuring Medicaid and CHIP Quality

  9. Update on Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System (T-MSIS)

  10. Panel Discussion: What States are Learning from Expanded Use of Telehealth

CMS selects applicants for opioid use disorder treatment model: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has selected 61 applicants for the Value in Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Demonstration, a four-year Medicare payment model beginning this month for selected health care providers who agree to participate.
Participants will test whether a new care management fee and performance-based incentive payment for OUD treatment services reduces hospitalizations and improves health outcomes for Medicare fee-for-service patients with OUDs, including those dually eligible for Medicaid. The Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment for Patients and Communities Act of 2018 authorizes $10 million annually in fiscal years 2021-2024 to pay for the treatment services.”

Global and Professional Direct Contracting (GPDC) Model: “The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (Innovation Center) is excited to announce that 53 Direct Contracting Entities (DCEs) are participating in the first Performance Year (PY2021) of the GPDC Model, which runs from April 1, 2021 through December 31, 2021. A list of all PY2021 participating DCEs (including DCEs continuing participation from the Implementation Period and DCEs beginning participation in PY2021) is available here. The Innovation Center no longer intends to solicit applications from new organizations interested in participating in the GPDC Model beginning on January 1, 2022…
The GPDC Model was previously called the Direct Contracting Model for Global and Professional Options. As part of the Direct Contracting initiative, CMS has also announced the Geographic Direct Contracting Model, which is currently under review.”

 About healthcare IT

Cyberattack exposes 1.2 million California health plan members' data: The California insurer, whose parent company is Centene, is part of a nationwide attack on data transfer file service provider Accellion… 
Breached information may include birthdates, insurance numbers, addresses and more.”

New information-blocking rules: What doctors should know: A good, clear source of information about this topic.

About hospitals and health systems

Healthcare Merger & Acquisition Activity Report: Q1 2021: From KaufmanHall: “One year ago, Q1 2020 was closing with an emerging awareness of the pandemic that was about to occur. The quarter ended with a relatively high number of announced transactions, but with very few large transactions, leaving average seller size by revenue at just $172 million for the quarter. This year, however, as the pandemic seems closer to being contained, the reverse is true. The number of transactions is down in Q1 2021, but the average size of those transactions is significantly larger. Average seller size by revenue is $676 million, which is the third highest quarterly figure for average seller size we have recorded in the past 10 years…”

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

States with the Fewest Coronavirus Restrictions: Iowa continues its top spot on the least restrictive list. The most restrictive is Vermont.

J&J vaccine shortage to hit states next week: This shortage is the result of the manufacturing contamination last week.

About health insurance

More than a half million Americans gain coverage under Biden: “More than a half million Americans have taken advantage of the Biden administration’s special health insurance sign-up window keyed to the COVID-19 pandemic, the government announced Wednesday in anticipation that even more consumers will gain coverage in the coming months.
The reason officials expect sign-ups to keep growing is that millions of people became eligible effective Apr. 1 for pumped-up subsidies toward their premiums under President Joe Biden’s coronavirus relief legislation. The special sign-up opportunity for Affordable Care Act plans will be available until Aug. 15.”

CMS Resumes All Hospital Surveys As COVID-19 Cases Lessen: “The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has announced the immediate resumption of all hospital survey activities, including those related to Medicare compliance and patient safety.
This comes after the agency hit pause on the surveys while hospitals worked to mitigate the COVID-19 crisis.”

CMS proposes boost in pay rates to psychiatric, rehab facilities: 5 details:
“ Inpatient psychiatric facility [IPF] payment rate. CMS is proposing to increase IPF payment rates 2.3 percent over this year in fiscal year 2022.  This would increase total payments to the facilities by about $90 million, the agency said. 

—Inpatient rehabilitation facility [IRF] payment rate. CMS is proposing to increase IRF payment rates by 2.2 percent in fiscal year 2022. CMS estimates this rate increase would increase total payments to the rehab facilities by $160 million.”

About the public’s health

Overdose deaths may have topped 90,000 in 2020: “Commonwealth researchers estimated the year’s total overdose deaths could have exceeded 90,000 — up from 70,630 in 2019. That would be the largest single-year percentage increase in the past two decades.”

About pharma

J&J Commits Up to $780 Million for Flu Drugs, Readies Itself for Next Pandemic: “Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Janssen has agreed to pay up to $780 million for the global rights to Cidara Therapeutics’ Cloudbreak antiviral conjugate (AVC) candidates being developed for preventing and treating seasonal and pandemic influenza.
The collaborative agreement will see Cidara, a San Diego, Calif., biotech, handle the initial development and manufacturing of CD388, its long-acting antiviral immunotherapy candidate, while Janssen will be responsible for late-stage development, manufacturing, regulatory submissions and international commercialization. Janssen will also provide all future funding for the candidate.”

Did pharma overshoot digital sales rep calls? Study charts decline in effectiveness: “Last month, 44% of healthcare professionals said face-to-face sales visits are their preferred option for pharma promotions, according to the latest study from healthcare consultancy ZoomRx.
Even more encouraging for reps is that the face-to-face visits are garnering positive prescription intent—17% higher than before the pandemic began.
However, the bad news is that the opposite is true for digital interactions. Only 24% of doctors now prefer a virtual sales detail. Effectiveness, measured by Zoom Rx as physician likelihood to prescribe after a sales rep encounter, is also waning. It dipped to 50% in March, which is even lower than the pre-pandemic level, when six in 10 HCPs said sales rep meetings had a positive impact on prescribing the detailed product.”

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Several articles have been published in the past couple days about vaccine passports:
White House rules out involvement in 'vaccine passports': “‘The government is not now, nor will we be supporting a system that requires Americans to carry a credential. There will be no federal vaccinations database and no federal mandate requiring everyone to obtain a single vaccination credential,’ [Press Secretary] Psaki told reporters at a briefing.”
Likely Legal, ‘Vaccine Passports’ Emerge as the Next Coronavirus Divide: “Can businesses require employees or customers to provide proof — digital or otherwise — that they have been vaccinated when the coronavirus vaccine is ostensibly voluntary?
Can schools require that students prove they have been injected with what is still officially an experimental prophylaxis the same way they require long-approved vaccines for measles and polio? And finally, can governments mandate vaccinations — or stand in the way of businesses or educational institutions that demand proof?
Legal experts say the answer to all of these questions is generally yes, though in a society so divided, politicians are already girding for a fight. Government entities like school boards and the Army can require vaccinations for entry, service and travel — practices that flow from a 1905 Supreme Court ruling that said states could require residents to be vaccinated against smallpox or pay a fine.”
Texas governor bans state, some businesses from requiring vaccine passports and
Digital Health Passes in the Age of COVID-19: This article explores the legal, ethical and equity issues of such passes.

CDC distributes $3 billion for vaccine preparedness: “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is doling out more than $3.1 billion in federal funding under the last round of coronavirus relief legislation to help states and major cities administer vaccinations to their populations.
In press releases to local media, the CDC said it would distribute tens or hundreds of millions of dollars, based on a state’s population, to prepare for mass vaccination campaigns set to begin this month.”

Army-Developed Vaccine Begins Testing: “The U.S. Army will start testing among adult volunteers an Army-developed Covid-19 vaccine that researchers say may protect against a variety of coronavirus variants.
Army doctors planned to start testing on Tuesday the protein-based shot in as many as 72 adults ages 18 to 55 at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Silver Spring, Md., the institute said. The team will test whether the vaccine safely induces the desired immune response in study subjects.
Initial results of the study could become available by midsummer. If the data are positive, the Army likely would try to join with a drug company to further test and develop the vaccine, said Kayvon Modjarrad, director of the institute's emerging infectious-disease branch.”
If the federal government has the capability to produce a vaccine, what took it so long to start?

FDA grants first COVID-19 antibody green light for at-home, fingerprick blood test: “The COVID-19 Self-Collected Antibody Test System, developed by Symbiotica, Inc., is the first home-collected antibody test to receive the FDA’s emergency use authorization, though 75 other antibody tests have been approved for use on samples collected in point-of-care settings. 
Once the test is prescribed, fingerstick blood samples can be taken from individuals as young as 5 years old (with help from an adult for anyone under the age of 18). The sample will be processed for evidence of COVID-19 antibodies at one of Symbiotica’s labs.”

Are youth sports an engine of B.1.1.7 outbreaks?: “Officials say they believe transmission may be happening through athletic activities, rather than in the classroom, because some sports such as wrestling, basketball and volleyball involve close indoor contact. They have also wondered whether outbreaks may be triggered by related interactions such as carpooling, sleepovers and team celebrations, when people let their guard down, rather than from the practices and games themselves.”

Why you can’t compare Covid-19 vaccines: The article provides a YouTube video link to explain what is important in evaluating the vaccines.

6-month neurological and psychiatric outcomes in 236 379 survivors of COVID-19: a retrospective cohort study using electronic health records: “Among 236 379 patients diagnosed with COVID-19, the estimated incidence of a neurological or psychiatric diagnosis in the following 6 months was 33·62% (95% CI 33·17–34·07), with 12·84% (12·36–13·33) receiving their first such diagnosis.”
The incidences were higher for more severe disease.

Oxford Stops Test Of Vaccine On Youths: “The University of Oxford said it has paused administering doses of the Covid-19 vaccine it developed with Astra-Zeneca PLC in a small U.K. study to test the shot in children and teenagers, pending further information about rare blood-clotting issues in adults who have received it.”

About pharma

MIT team uses machine learning to find nanoparticles with high drug-loading capacities: “Efforts to develop nanoparticle formulations have been held back by the inability to predict which mix of ingredients will have high loading capacities. To address that limitation, MIT researchers used machine learning and high-throughput experimentation to identify effective nanoformulations.”
These formulations can carry therapeutic concentrations of drugs to target sites (like tumors) and may even be able to bypass allergic mechanisms if the patient is allergic to one of the active drug components.

About health insurance

CVS Health affordable housing investments in California surpass $200 million: Just a reminder that insurers are making significant investments into addressing Social Determinants of Disease.

Biden rescinds Medicaid work rules in 2 more states: “CMS sent letters to health officials in Michigan and Wisconsin April 6 withdrawing their approval to implement work requirements for Medicaid beneficiaries. In both letters, CMS noted that combined with the COVID-19 pandemic, the work rules risk ‘significant coverage losses and harm to beneficiaries.’”

2020 AMA prior authorization (PA) physician survey: Keeping in mind that physicians do not like the PA process, below are some of the findings of this just-published survey:

“94% report care delays

79% report that PA can at least sometimes lead to treatment abandonment

While 98% of health plans report they use peer- reviewed evidence-based studies when designing their PA programs, 32% of physicians report that PA criteria are rarely or never evidence-based”
Read the short article for the rest of the opinions.

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

SARS-CoV-2 and Surface (Fomite) Transmission for Indoor Community Environments: The latest on this topic from the CDC: “People can be infected with SARS-CoV-2 through contact with surfaces. However, based on available epidemiological data and studies of environmental transmission factors, surface transmission is not the main route by which SARS-CoV-2 spreads, and the risk is considered to be low. The principal mode by which people are infected with SARS-CoV-2 is through exposure to respiratory droplets carrying infectious virus. In most situations, cleaning surfaces using soap or detergent, and not disinfecting, is enough to reduce risk. Disinfection is recommended in indoor community settings where there has been a suspected or confirmed case of COVID-19 within the last 24 hours. The risk of fomite transmission can be reduced by wearing masks consistently and correctly, practicing hand hygiene, cleaning, and taking other measures to maintain healthy facilities.”

Secretary Antony J. Blinken Remarks to the Press on the COVID Response: The only new information in the announcement was the appointment of Gayle Smith to head this country’s global
Covid-19 response. She was the administrator of USAID for President Obama, and served on the National Security Council for both President Obama and President Clinton.

Researchers Are Hatching a Low-Cost Coronavirus Vaccine: A fascinating explanation of the technique for providing a low cost and highly effective Covid-19 vaccine. The article is from The NY Times, so if you cannot access it, try this site for a briefer overview.

About pharma

The top 10 pharma R&D budgets in 2020: “The roughly $70 billion total from the top 10’s budgets combined over the past five years swelled to $96 billion, with almost all seeing boosts in their research budgets (bar Novartis and Sanofi). Back in 2018, for the first time, the top 15 largest pharma companies (by sales) funneled more than $100 billion into research. Three years down the line, and our top 10 have nearly met that number on their own.”
Roche leads the pack with $13.9 billion.

Appropriate Use of Short-Course Antibiotics in Common Infections: Best Practice Advice From the American College of Physicians: Extended use of antibiotics can cause drug resistance. These gildelines for some common bacterial infections generally recommend a 5 day course of therapy with extensions if clinically warranted.

AbbVie drops Humira TV spend; Sanofi and Regeneron, Novo Nordisk step up on March pharma list: “AbbVie’s Humira dropped out of the top spot on the pharma TV ad spenders list in March for the first time in years. Sanofi and Regeneron’s Dupixent took over the No. 1 position, followed by Novo Nordisk’s Rybelsus, leaving Humira in third place, according to data from real-time TV ad tracker iSpot.tv.
Humira’s downward move has been in the works; spending has been declining over the past few months as AbbVie re-directed some of Humira’s advertising budget from the longtime blockbuster to its new generation of immunology products in rheumatoid arthritis Rinvoq and psoriasis med Skyrizi.”

FDA OKs first new ADHD drug in over a decade for children: “The Food and Drug Administration late Friday OK’d Qelbree (KELL’-bree) for treating attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children ages 6 to 17. It comes as a capsule that’s taken daily. 
Unlike nearly all other ADHD medicines, Qelbree is not a stimulant or a controlled substance, making it harder to abuse than older drugs. That’s been a problem with earlier ADHD treatments like Ritalin, nearly all of which contain the stimulants amphetamine or methylphenidate. 
Qelbree, developed by Supernus Pharmaceuticals of Rockville, Maryland, carries a warning of potential for suicidal thoughts and behavior, which occurred in fewer than 1% of volunteers in studies of the drug.
Supernus wouldn’t disclose the drug’s list price, but it’s sure to be higher than the many cheap generic ADHD pills.”
This drug is one to watch. A great case for appropriate pricing. What if it were the same price as the stimulants on the market? Would it grab a huge share?

Drug prices: the lucrative world of not-so-cheap imitations: Many good examples in this article that highlights the fact that biosimilars only sell for a 10-35% discount from the branded drug, so savings are not as pronounced as with traditional chemical compounds.

Drug companies keep merging. Why that’s bad for consumers and innovation.: “In 1987, the combined market share of the eight largest drug companies stood at a relatively low 36 percent. By the conclusion of the first merger wave, it had grown to 42 percent; by 2012, in the wake of the second merger wave, the ratio had climbed to 53 percent. All told, between 1995 and 2015, the 60 leading pharmaceutical companies merged to only 10.
As a result, now only a handful of manufacturers are responsible for sourcing the vast majority of prescription drugs: Just four companies, for example, produced more than 50 percent of all generic drugs in 2017…
But the newly consolidated pharmaceutical industry actually stifled innovation. In the period following merger waves…, the industry generated fewer new molecular entities each year compared to pre-merger levels. Merged drug companies also spent proportionally less on research than their non-merged competitors.”

The Biden-Harris Administration’s Statement of Drug Policy Priorities for Year One: “The priorities are:

  • Expanding access to evidence-based treatment;

  • Advancing racial equity issues in our approach to drug policy;

  • Enhancing evidence-based harm reduction efforts;

  • Supporting evidence-based prevention efforts to reduce youth substance use;

  • Reducing the supply of illicit substances;

  • Advancing recovery-ready workplaces and expanding the addiction workforce; and

  • Expanding access to recovery support services.”

Cigna's $500 gift to psoriasis patients who switch to Eli Lilly's Taltz is 'rehearsal' for Humira biosimilars: analyst: “Last summer, pharmacy benefits giant Express Scripts tossed Novartis’ psoriasis drug Cosentyx out of its 2021 formulary in favor of Eli Lilly’s lower-cost Taltz. Now Cigna, which owns Express Scripts, is offering $500 to some patients who make the switch—an offer that could set a precedent as the anti-inflammatory market approaches a major biosimilar shakeup, one analyst suggested.
In a letter to doctors in March, some plans run by Cigna Pharmacy said patients could receive a $500 debit card if they switch from Cosentyx to Taltz or an older biologic before Aug. 31 and then refill the prescription before the end of this year. The letter was obtained by the American Journal of Managed Care.
The move comes as biosimilar developers prepare to launch low-cost rivals to another psoriasis remedy that happens to be the world’s best-selling drug—AbbVie’s Humira—in 2023. Bernstein analyst Ronny Gal called Express Scripts' offer to Taltz switchers a ‘general rehearsal for Humira’…”

Startup Raises Cash For Genome System: ““Startup Inscripta Inc. raised $150 million in new venture capital to roll out a genome-editing instrument that could help researchers in healthcare and other industries biologically engineer new products…
Scientists use new gene-editing techniques to make precise changes in the genetic code of organisms to study how genes function, and to genetically program cells or microbes to produce specific proteins, enzymes and other molecules…
Today, Crispr-based genome editing is a manual, labor-intensive process... It frequently requires large numbers of 96-well plates, along with gene-editing reagents, to make changes to the genetic code. Inscripta's system includes an instrument that sits on a lab bench and automates genome editing. Scientists load microbes to be edited and gene-editing reagents into the machine, and edits are made over the next two to four days… 
In addition to the instrument, Inscripta's system includes reagents and software used to make the genome edits and to analyze the results.

About healthcare IT

Verizon jumps into virtual care market with BlueJeans Telehealth: “BlueJeans Telehealth, which launched Monday, was designed from the ground up for healthcare organizations to simplify the virtual experience and offer greater access to care, Verizon executives said in a press release…
The telecommunications giant says its telehealth solution address two key challenges for providers and patients: tech literacy and efficiency.
The BlueJeans platform offers one-click, download-free access to a video telehealth experience via mobile device or desktop to minimize technology complications. The platform also expedites information sharing through a customizable landing experience that includes patient onboarding and education materials, according to the company.”

Characterizing physician EHR use with vendor derived data: a feasibility study and cross-sectional analysis: “For every 8 hours of scheduled patient time, ambulatory physicians spend more than 5 hours on the EHR. Physician gender, specialty, and number of clinical hours practicing are associated with differences in EHR time.”

Is Telehealth The Next Frontier For Net Neutrality Action?: “A recent controversy over whether California's net neutrality law will block a free telehealth app for veterans is calling attention to consumer access problems that still plague the broadband industry, but advocates of the new statute say the law shouldn't pose a threat to the health care app. News reports surfaced in late March suggesting that some
U. S. Department of Veterans Affairs officials were concerned that internet service providers may stop supporting VA Video Connect, an app that provides free telehealth services to veterans and doesn't count against subscribers' mobile data caps.”

About hospitals and health systems

Analysis Suggests Government And Nonprofit Hospitals’ Charity Care Is Not Aligned With Their Favorable Tax Treatment: “Using 2018 Medicare Hospital Cost Reports, we compared charity care provision across 1,024 government, 2,709 nonprofit, and 930 for-profit hospitals. In aggregate, nonprofit hospitals spent $2.3 of every $100 in total expenses incurred on charity care, which was less than government ($4.1) or for-profit ($3.8) hospitals…Using different kinds of analyses, we also found wide variation in charity care provision within ownership types and a lack of a consistent pattern across ownership types. These results suggest that many government and nonprofit hospitals’ charity care provision was not aligned with their charity care obligations arising from their favorable tax treatment.”

Emergency Physicians Recover A Higher Share Of Charges From Out-Of-Network Care Than From In-Network Care: “Physicians collected 65 percent of the charged amount for likely surprise bills compared with 52 percent for other cases. Patients who likely received a surprise out-of-network bill for emergency care paid physicians more than ten times as much as other emergency patients paid, on average.”
The authors focus on high charges for out-of-network bills; however, that practice is only half the story of the difference. In-network contracts require providers not only to adhere to a fee schedule, but prohibit them from balance billing patients beyond agreed-upon copays and coinsurance; no such limits exit with out-of-network care.

About health insurance

Reinventing the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation: An excellent review of the first 10 years of the CMMI and recommendations for its “reinvention” to make it more effective.



Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

England pitches free, nationwide COVID-19 testing twice per week: “The plan includes two tests per week starting April 9, with results expected at home within 30 minutes, regardless of whether a person is showing symptoms. The plan is part of the country’s road map to lift wider lockdowns by the end of June, depending on the continuing rollout of vaccines and lower rates of infections and hospitalizations.”

EDVA Seizes Seven Websites Used to Collect Personal Information and Illegally Profit from the COVID-19 Pandemic: “The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Virginia announced today the seizure of seven websites as part of ongoing efforts by Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) to combat online fraud schemes that seek to exploit the increased interest in vaccines, treatments, and employment opportunities associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to court records, the United States obtained court authorization to seize four domains that purported to be the legitimate websites of Pfizer, Inc. (‘Pfizer’)—specifically, ‘pfizermx.com,’ ‘pfizer-vaccines.com,’ ‘pfizerstockrate.com,’ and ‘pfizerksa.com.’ In addition, the government seized three websites claiming to be associated with the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF)—specifically, ‘unicefcovid19relief.com,’ ‘unicefeverychild.com,’ and ‘unicefinternship.com.’”

Walgreens Not Following U.S. Guidance on Pfizer Vaccine Spacing: “People are supposed to get two doses, three weeks apart. Walgreens, however, separated them by four weeks because that made it faster and simpler for the company to schedule appointments.”

About healthcare IT

Accelerated antimicrobial discovery via deep generative models and molecular dynamics simulations: “The de novo design of antimicrobial therapeutics involves the exploration of a vast chemical repertoire to find compounds with broad-spectrum potency and low toxicity. Here, we report an efficient computational method for the generation of antimicrobials with desired attributes…Within 48 days, we identified, synthesized and experimentally tested 20 candidate antimicrobial peptides, of which two displayed high potency against diverse Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens (including multidrug-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae) and a low propensity to induce drug resistance in Escherichia coli.”

Mastercard makes healthcare move with digital ID solution patients can use on their smartphones: “In its first major move into healthcare, Mastercard is teaming up with b.well Connected Health to launch a digital solution that enables patients to verify their identity using their mobile phones.
The ID verification service gives patients a simpler and more secure way to prove their identity online and in person when accessing healthcare services. Rather than relying on username and password credentials, the service employs a password-less authentication process through the use of smart biometrics, the companies said in a press release.”

Digital health's red-hot quarter: $6.7B raised in 147 deals: “In the first quarter of 2021, investors doubled down on digital health, pouring $6.7 billion into the sector and making it the most-funded quarter to date, according to investment firm Rock Health.
This year is clearly on track to pass the record-breaking amount of capital raised in 2020 as first-quarter funding approached nearly half of the $14 billion raised through all of last year.”

About diagnostics

Accuracy of Practitioner Estimates of Probability of Diagnosis Before and After Testing: “This survey study suggests that for common diseases and tests, practitioners overestimate the probability of disease before and after testing. Pretest probability was overestimated in all scenarios, whereas adjustment in probability after a positive or negative result varied by test. Widespread overestimates of the probability of disease likely contribute to overdiagnosis and overuse.”
See also, the accompanying editorial.

Global Media Coverage of the Benefits and Harms of Early Detection Tests: “In this study, we examined how innovative early detection tests are covered in the media. The findings are important because of the potential of such tests to harm healthy people, in contrast to tests promoted for investigation of symptoms. Yet coverage emphasized benefits far more than harms, and the risk of overdiagnosis received little coverage. Our findings align with other medical media coverage studies.”
Social media comments were not included in the study.

About hospitals and health systems

The Insanity of U.S. Health Care Pricing: An Early Look at Hospital Price Transparency Data: A good look at how large systems are (not) complying with price transparency regulations. The article also provides examples of how payments for the same service not only vary widely among insurers, but also with the same insurer across different facilities in the same system.

Rep. Miller-Meeks Pushes for Hospital Transparency but Warns of 'Adverse Effects': The point of the article is to emphasize the different ways to report and analyze revealed data. One example of the ‘adverse effects’ in the title is that rural hospitals may not appear to perform as well as other groups and could face shut-down as a result.



Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Fully vaccinated people may travel, CDC says: “But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that even though fully vaccinated individuals are at lower risk of infection, travel is still not recommended due to the rising number of cases in the United States and globally.”

Emergent plant that ruined Johnson & Johnson vaccine doses had prior FDA violations: “In April last year, an investigator from the Food and Drug Administration reported problems he had discovered at a Baltimore plant operated by Emergent BioSolutions, a major supplier of vaccines to the federal government.
Some employees had not been properly trained. Records were not adequately secured. Established testing procedures were not being followed. And a measure intended to “prevent contamination or mix-ups” was found to be deficient.
Soon after the inspection, Emergent’s Baltimore plant was given an important role in Operation Warp Speed, the government’s program to rapidly produce vaccines to fight the coronavirus pandemic. Emergent was awarded $628 million by the government and also secured deals totaling more than $740 million with Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca to produce coronavirus vaccines for both companies at the Baltimore site.”

Updated data show 91% efficacy for Pfizer, BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at six months: “Pfizer and BioNTech on Thursday said updated topline results from a pivotal Phase III study of their COVID-19 vaccine BNT162b2 show it was 91.3% effective at preventing the disease up to six months after the second dose. The new analysis of 46,307 participants in the trial is based on 927 confirmed symptomatic cases of COVID-19 observed through March 13…”
The effectiveness percentage just confirms previous data, but the 6 month duration is great news.

COVID-19 tracker: U.S. may not need AZ vaccine, Fauci says; FDA tweaks Moderna shot authorization: “NIAID Director Dr. Anthony Fauci said the United States may not need the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine because contracts with other suppliers are sufficient to vaccinate the entire population and perhaps provide booster shots in the fall…
The FDA has tweaked its emergency use authorization for Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, allowing it to sit longer at room temperatures and for it to be delivered in larger vials.”

State of COVID-19: What you should know about the CDC's 5 variants of concern: A good, concise review of what we know about the variants.

‘Where the magic happens’ — inside BioNTech’s innovative vaccine plant: Why does an mRNA vaccine take so long to produce? “It takes up to 13 days to formulate a batch. The more time-consuming part is testing: each batch needs a few weeks of analysis and quality control.”

About health insurance

Repayment of COVID-19 Accelerated and Advance Payments Began on March 30, 2021: CMS explains how it will recoup the advanced payments it made to providers to keep them fiscally sound.

Billing errors resulted in $23.6M in overpayments to HCA hospital, inspector general finds: “Las Vegas-based Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center, owned by Nashville, Tenn.-based HCA Healthcare, failed to comply with Medicare billing requirements for 54 of 100 inpatient and outpatient claims reviewed by the HHS Office of Inspector General, according to an inspector general's report released March 31.
The billing errors, 50 of which were in inpatient claims and four of which were in outpatient claims, resulted in overpayments of $999,950 for the audit period of January 2017 to December 2018, according to the report.
Based on review of the 100-claim sample, the report estimates that the Las Vegas hospital received overpayments of at least $23.6 million.”

Doctors Accuse UnitedHealthcare of Stifling Competition: “A multistate group of anesthesiologists filed cases in Texas and Colorado, accusing the insurance giant of squeezing them like a ‘boa constrictor.’”
United responded that the group was trying to demand unreasonable rates.
This conflict is very typical of payer-provider reimbursement issues.

New ACA subsidies go into effect as HHS announces $50M boost to outreach funding: “The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced the availability of the lower subsidies, which were passed as part of the American Rescue Plan Act, on Thursday. HHS also announced an additional $50 million for outreach for the latest special enrollment period that ends Aug. 15.”
As previously mentioned, premium support and open re-enrollment just provide access. Out-of-pocket expense help is needed to guarantee affordability.

New Data Show the Highest Prevalence of Medical Liability Premium Increases in 15 Years: From the AMA: “The main and most significant finding in this year's PRP is that more premiums increased than in any year since 2005. The proportion of premiums that went up in 2018 almost doubled in 2019— from 13.7% to 26.5%. Then in 2020, this share grew again, as 31.1% of premiums increased from the previous year. This appears to be the beginning of an upward trend in increases in premiums—a trend not seen in over 20 years.”
Tort reform will not be addressed by Democrats at any level of government because of the significant lawyer-lobby contributions.

MedPAC’s Public Meeting April 1-2, 2021: Check here for its agenda and briefs about what it will recommend to CMS. Among these recommendations are:
1. Streamlining the (too) many alternative payments methods (see the book starting on page 614) and
2. Changing the Medicare Advantage benchmark process (see the book starting on page 299 for an explanation of the MA competitive bidding process).

About pharma

Prescriptions to cost more than £10 in just four years: Obviously a British article, complains about the rising cost of pharmaceuticals. The pound closed today at $1.38.
I hope one day we can make a similar complaint.

Bristol Myers Squibb Settles Medicaid Rebate Suit For $75M: “Bristol Myers Squibb has agreed to pay $75 million to settle a whistleblower's False Claims Act suit over claims it shorted its payments to government insurance programs, Deputy U. S. Attorney Louis Lappen announced from Philadelphia Thursday. The settlement ends claims that Bristol Myers paid less than it owed for dozens of drugs under the Medicaid Drug Rebate Program, where a drugmaker pays states incentives for their Medicaid programs to cover its products, by reducing what it told the state and federal governments the average prices were for the covered drugs.”

About diagnostics

Illumina Agrees To Delay $8B Grail Deal During FTC Challenge: “ Illumina Inc. has agreed to delay closing its planned $8 billion acquisition of cancer detection firm Grail Inc. until as late as September while the Federal Trade Commission challenges the deal in D. C. federal court.”

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

CDC: COVID-19 was third-leading cause of death in U.S. in 2020: From the CDC: “The virus caused nearly 378,000 deaths, or 11%, of the estimated 3.36 million deaths nationally in 2020, the data showed.”

The C.D.C. and N.I.H. launch a rapid, at-home testing initiative in Tennessee and North Carolina: “The program will make rapid at-home antigen tests freely available to every resident of two communities, Pitt County, N.C., and Hamilton County, Tenn., enough for a total of 160,000 people to test themselves for the coronavirus three times a week for a month.”

Large employers are eyeing on-site COVID-19 vaccines, survey shows: “The National Alliance of Healthcare Purchaser Coalitions surveyed 151 employers and other purchasers and found that 80% of very large firms, or those with more than 10,000 employees, anticipate offering vaccines to employees on-site.
While larger companies are considering on-site vaccine clinics, just 8% of those surveyed said they anticipate making COVID-19 vaccines mandatory for workers…”
While getting immunizations into people as quickly as possible is critical, we should think about the tracking and documentation problems with distribution at so many different types of venues.

'More confidence about the results': FDA authorizes two rapid COVID-19 tests for home screening: “Consumers will soon be able to buy rapid COVID-19 tests at chain pharmacies and grocers without a prescription after the Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday authorized two home tests. 
The BinaxNOW COVID-19 self-test will include two tests per kit for serial screening, with the no-prescription test delivering results in 15 minutes which does not require a lab. The FDA also authorized the Quidel QuickVue COVID test that delivers results in 10 minutes and can be used without a prescription.”

‘We can do this’: Biden unveils pro-vaccine TV ads, network of grass-roots leaders to push shots: “The Biden administration on Thursday will unveil its first television advertisements to encourage Americans to get vaccinated against the coronavirus, part of a series of pro-vaccine messages as the White House pushes to achieve the president’s goal of returning the country to some normalcy by July Fourth.
The ‘We Can Do This’ campaign will air across cable and broadcast stations nationwide and include targeted multimillion-dollar ad buys for Black and Spanish-language media.”
Two YouTube videos (English and Spanish with different messages) are in the article.
Think about whether the messages are effective for social marketing. Bob Stevens (my friend and co-author of the text Strategic Marketing for Health Care Organizations) offers the following questions about effectiveness:

“Ad effectiveness can be measured by answering the following questions with primary marketing research data.  

  • What are the specifice ad campaign objectives?

  • What is the competition - not getting a vaccine?

  • Who exactly is the target?

  • What are their levels of vaccine awareness and intent-to-obtain pre and post seeing the ad?

  • The ad and media spending are $10 miilion. We need a positive ROI. How is this measured (e.g, lives saved, health care costs saved, etc.).

Unfortunately, the federal government doesn’t usually take this approach.”

 About pharma 

An Accidental Disclosure Exposes a $1 Billion Tax Fight With Bristol Myers: The full story defies summary…it is a good read that illustrates complex tax laws that affect pharma patents.

AHA [American Hospital Association], ASHP [American Society of Health-System Pharmacists] seek meeting with FDA to address insurer 'white bagging' policies: “Payers use white bagging to dispense drugs to hospitals, requiring these medications come from select network specialty pharmacies. AHA and ASHP said in the letter that doing so circumvents hospital supply chain protocols aimed at patient safety.
The practice also ‘challenges’ the supply chain security issues that are addressed in the 2013 Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA).”
The corollary, where health plans send these drugs to physician offices is called “brown bagging.”

CVS wants to facilitate 65B healthcare interactions by 2030. Here's how: “CVS Health has set a goal to facilitate 65 billion healthcare interactions over the next decade…
The key strategies? Continuing to grow the reach of its HealthHUB concept stores, taking lessons learned from the pandemic to rethink care delivery and investing in social needs and community health…
Over the course of 2020, CVS became the largest private provider of COVID-19 testing, administering 15 million tests at 4,800 drive-thru sites. The pandemic also drove the healthcare giant to launch E-Clinic, a new telehealth solution for its Minute Clinics, which conducted nearly 20,000 visits.”

About hospitals and health systems

Mayo Clinic raises $500M as it looks to growth: “Mayo Clinic has not designated the bond sale for a specific project, but the system noted it is planning large capital expenditures. Over the next five years, the system expects capital spending of $6.5 billion…”

Some of America’s wealthiest hospital systems ended up even richer, thanks to federal bailouts: The article provides a helpful chart of the grant’s impacts on many large systems.

About healthcare IT

FCC ADOPTS REPORT AND ORDER TO IMPLEMENT ROUND 2 OF COVID-19 TELEHEALTH PROGRAM: The program’s support comes with expense reimbursement, rather than grant funding. The first round was not as successful as expected, so it has been modified for a second round. For example, applicants will be rated focusing on those in hardest-hit and low-income areas, those with provider shortages and Tribal communities.

Scalpel, tongs . . . WiFi? The rise of virtual surgery: Fascinating look at remote surgery.

About health insurance

Millions Could Lose Out on Mammograms, Cancer Screenings Because of ‘Incredibly Concerning’ Lawsuit: “With a challenge to the Affordable Care Act still pending at the Supreme Court, conservatives are continuing to launch legal attacks on the law, including a case in which a Texas federal judge seems open to ending the requirement that most Americans must receive preventive services like mammograms free of charge.
Businesses and individuals challenging the ACA’s first-dollar coverage mandate for preventive services have legal standing and legitimate constitutional and statutory grounds to proceed with their lawsuit to overturn it, U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor ruled late last month in Fort Worth. O’Connor, who previously found the entire ACA to be unconstitutional, denied most of the federal government’s motion to dismiss the case, Kelley v. Azar.
The plaintiffs cite religious and free-market objections to the ACA requirement in their class action suit against the government seeking to halt enforcement of the requirement.”
This change would be a huge blow to public health, particularly in light of this Gallup Poll published yesterday: In U.S., An Estimated 46 Million Cannot Afford Needed Care

Biden infrastructure package includes $400B to expand Medicaid home services: “President Joe Biden is expected to include $400 billion for expanding Medicaid beneficiaries' access to home- and community-based care for seniors and the disabled as part of a larger infrastructure package.”

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Pfizer says its COVID-19 vaccine is 100% effective in children ages 12-15: “In a placebo-controlled trial of 2,260 adolescents, none of the participants who received the real vaccine developed COVID-19, the companies said.
Eighteen adolescents who received placebo, or fake, doses became infected with the virus, they said.”
The numbers are still small but consistent with the robust immune responses in younger persons.

Coronavirus: Nations call for independent probe into virus origin: “A group of 14 countries including the US, UK, Japan, Canada and Australia issued a joint statement on Tuesday that expressed “shared concerns” over the World Health Organization’s study on the origins of the coronavirus outbreak and called for an independent probe
The countries voiced concerns that the ‘international expert study on the source of the Sars-Cov-2 virus was significantly delayed and lacked access to complete, original data and samples.’”
WHO site visitors insist their Chinese hosts were transparent and forthcoming, but other nations are not convinced.

Johnson & Johnson COVID- 19 Vaccine Manufacturing Error Affects 15 Million Doses:”Amanufacturing error at a plant involved in COVID-19 vaccine production affected 15 million doses worth of an ingredient for Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, according to two sources familiar with the matter, but the company downplayed the situation and said it met its most recent vaccine delivery target…
“This quality control process identified one batch of drug substance that did not meet quality standards at Emergent Biosolutions, a site not yet authorized to manufacture drug substance for our COVID-19 vaccine. This batch was never advanced to the filling and finishing stages of our manufacturing process, J&J said.”

CDC director says data 'suggests that vaccinated people do not carry the virus': “CDC director Rochelle Walensky said data suggests fully vaccinated people don't carry COVID-19.” However, Two-thirds of epidemiologists warn mutations could render current COVID vaccines ineffective in a year or less

Justice Department Takes Action Against COVID-19 Fraud-Historic level of enforcement action during national health emergency continues: “As of [Friday], the Department of Justice has publicly charged 474 defendants with criminal offenses based on fraud schemes connected to the COVID-19 pandemic. These cases involve attempts to obtain over $569 million from the U.S. government and unsuspecting individuals through fraud and have been brought in 56 federal districts around the country. These cases reflect a degree of reach, coordination, and expertise that is critical for enforcement efforts against COVID-19 related fraud to have a meaningful impact and is also emblematic of the Justice Department’s response to criminal wrongdoing.”
Each new crisis creates new opportunities to commit fraud.

Humanigen's COVID-19 phase 3 hits goal, sending stock soaring: “A phase 3 clinical trial of Humanigen’s lenzilumab in hospitalized COVID-19 patients has met its primary endpoint. Humanigen plans to use the data to seek emergency use authorization from the FDA. 
Lenzilumab targets GM-CSF, a cytokine associated with negative outcomes in COVID-19 patients. By neutralizing the cytokine, drug developers including Humanigen and GlaxoSmithKline have predicted that they may be able to counter life-threatening complications that arise when the immune system reacts particularly strongly to the virus.”

COVID-19's fourth wave is hitting the US hard: “The United States has reported an average of 65,000 new cases in the last seven days, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), up about 10,000 cases per day since the most recent nadir two weeks ago.
Those figures are well below the January apex of the third wave of infections, when a quarter-million people a day were testing positive for the virus.”

Covid Vaccine Hesitancy Drops Among All Americans, New Survey Shows: “A new poll of attitudes toward covid vaccinations shows Americans are growing more enthusiastic about being vaccinated, with the most positive change in the past month occurring among Black Americans.
About 55% of Black adults said they had been vaccinated or plan to be soon, up 14 percentage points from February, according to a poll released Tuesday by KFF. The rate now approaches that of Hispanics, at 61%, and whites at 64%. (Asian Americans were not polled in sufficient numbers to compare their responses with other racial and ethnic groups.)
But the poll found that 13% of respondents overall said they will ‘definitely not’ be vaccinated, signaling that significant hurdles remain in the nation’s vaccination campaign. (KHN is the editorially independent newsroom of KFF, an endowed nonprofit organization providing national information on health issues.)
Among all groups, Republicans and white evangelical Christians were the most likely to say they will not get vaccinated, with almost 30% of each group saying they will ‘definitely not’ get a shot.”

T cells induced by COVID-19 infection respond to new virus variants -U.S. study: “‘Our data, as well as the results from other groups, shows that the T cell response to COVID-19 in individuals infected with the initial viral variants appears to fully recognize the major new variants identified in the UK, South Africa and Brazil,” said Andrew Redd of the NIAID and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine who led the study.”

Germany suspends use of AstraZeneca’s Covid shot for the under-60s, dealing another blow to drugmaker: “Germany has suspended use of the coronavirus vaccine created by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford in the under-60s, due to renewed concerns over reports of blood clots.” And in a related story: Amid rollout imbroglio, AstraZeneca's COVID vaccine has at least one fresh start: A new brand name: “AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine has an official name, Vaxzevria, now approved in Europe. But is a new name enough to hurdle its rollout communication glitches and now wavering vaccine confidence?”

Digital papers, please? New York becomes first state to roll out IBM's digital COVID-19 vaccine passport: IBM and New York state launched the Excelsior Pass. “Built on the tech giant’s Digital Health Pass platform, it combines a smartphone wallet app for individual use and a scanner app for businesses. The official launch comes after two pilot programs and a beta test proved its efficacy.”
Debates about HIPAA compliance fall on the side of this types of proof card does not violates theses laws.

White House weighs temporarily lifting intellectual property shield on Covid-19 vaccines: “The White House is weighing whether to suspend intellectual property protections for Covid-19 vaccines and treatments, in response to pressure from developing nations and subsequent support from progressive lawmakers, according to three sources familiar with the matter.
A temporary suspension of intellectual property protections would apply to all medical technologies to treat or prevent Covid-19. South Africa and India made a formal request to the World Trade Organization to waive the protections until the pandemic is over, but the issue was tabled without a resolution.”
Mentioned in previous blogs, the concept is called a “compulsory license” or “walk in” rights.

About health insurance

CMS to pause Medicare payments until Congress passes sequester fix next month: “The Biden administration is temporarily holding Medicare claims with service dates on or after April 1 to ensure providers aren't impacted by a 2% cut to payments set to go back into effect on that date…
The agency also notified Medicare Advantage and Part D plans that ‘CMS will resume standard sequestration reductions beginning with April 2021 payment for Medicare Advantage organizations and Prat D sponsors.’”

Epic, Humana ramp up partnership to focus on streamlining prior authorizations: “In this next phase of the collaboration, EHR vendor Epic and Humana will connect their software to manage prior authorizations electronically and make Humana member information available to providers at the point of care, the companies said.”
It is amazing that something so needed took so long to be recognized and developed.

As Medicare Advantage Enrollment Booms, Healthcare Entities Need to Plan Around Key Trends: Chartis’ 2021 Medicare Advantage Competitive Enrollment Report. Among the findings:

  • “Medicare Advantage grew 9.6 percent this year, while enrollment in Original Medicare fell 2.6 percent, pushing Medicare Advantage penetration to 42 percent[up from 32% five years ago],

  • For-profit plan growth continues to outpace Blue and non-profit plans. For-profit plans now account for 71 percent of all enrollees, up from 69 percent last year.

  • Among for-profit plans, UnitedHealthcare and Centene saw the greatest gains, adding 1.6 million lives between the two, and pushing their combined share up 4 points.”

  • The article also ranks top MA plans based on enrollment (United is #1)

Medicare Advantage beneficiaries save more money on out-of-pocket costs than Medicare fee-for-service: This research shows why the popularity of these plans continues to grow. “Beneficiaries in MA reported out-of-pocket and premium spending of $3,354 a year in 2018, compared with $4,994 in fee-for-service, the analysis added. That was a $42 increase since 2017.”

Here are the payment models the Biden administration has pulled for review or delayed: A good review of this topic.

DOJ taking a closer look at Optum-Change deal amid antitrust concerns: “The Department of Justice (DOJ) is digging further into UnitedHealth Group's planned $13 billion acquisition of Change Healthcare…The deal was first announced in January, with UnitedHealth saying it would purchase the revenue management company for $7.84 billion in cash and $5 billion in debt. The healthcare giant intends to fold it into its Optum subsidiary.”

About healthcare IT

Digital health's top 10 money raisers in 2021—so far: FYI

Why experts say the information blocking ban will be game changing for patients: “Starting next week, a new regulation goes into effect that will give patients easier access to their digital health records through their smartphones.”

Assessment of Diagnosis and Triage in Validated Case Vignettes Among Nonphysicians Before and After Internet Search
: “Results of this study suggest that, contrary to concerns of its harmfulness, an internet search was associated with modest improvements in diagnosis but had no association with triage.”

About pharma

Pumped by a big year for its flu shots, Sanofi lays out €600M for new vaccine manufacturing plant: “The French drugmaker plans to splash out €600 million to build a new flu vaccine factory in Toronto to increase supply of its Fluzone High-Dose vaccine. The plant will turn out the vaccine, which contains four times more antigen than standard-dose vaccines, for Canada, the U.S. and Europe.”
In the current and post-Covid-19 eras, vaccines are recognized as valuable (and profitable) products.

Characteristics of Copayment Offsets for Prescription Drugs in the United States: Offsets are “coupons, vouchers, and other types of copayment… that reduce patients’ out-of-pocket drug spending...
In this analysis of patient-level pharmacy claims from 2017 to 2019, approximately half of all offsets involved pharmacy-PBM contractual arrangements, and half were offered by manufacturers. All offsets were associated with a significant reduction in patients’ out-of-pocket costs, were highly concentrated among a few drugs, and were generally not more generous among individuals in counties with lower income or larger Black or uninsured populations.”

The top 20 pharma companies by 2020 revenue: FYI

Novartis Can Provide CAR-T Therapy for Free, OIG Says: “HHS’ Office of Inspector General (OIG) said Novartis is free to pay for low-income patients to receive its pricey CAR-T therapy Kymriah (tisagenlecleucel), and those payments will not be considered illegal.
OIG told Novartis that while payments for the $475,000 one-time gene therapy could in theory compel doctors or treatment centers to use the treatment or influence patients to choose it, patients are able to get the drug at many different healthcare centers so they would be unlikely to accept the payment simply to get the drug at one specific place or from one specific doctor.”
The issue here is illegal inducement.

About the public’s health

Births: Final Data for 2019: Yes, this data is the latest published and has a wealth of information.
”A total of 3,747,540 births were registered in the United States in 2019, down 1% from 2018. The general fertility rate declined from 2018 to 58.3 births per 1,000 women aged 15–44 in 2019. The birth rate for females aged 15–19 fell 4% between 2018 and 2019. Birth rates declined for women aged 20–34 and increased for women aged 35–44 for 2018–2019. The total fertility rate declined to 1,706.0 births per 1,000 women in 2019. Birth rates declined for both married and unmarried women from 2018 to 2019.”

Declines in Prevalence of Human Papillomavirus Vaccine-Type Infection Among Females after Introduction of Vaccine — United States, 2003–2018: Latest report on this subject form the CDC. “Nationally representative data through 2018 indicate that HPV vaccine-type prevalence continues to decline among females aged 14–19 (88%) and 20–24 (81%) years compared with before vaccination. The findings also show evidence of indirect protection of unvaccinated females through herd effects in these age groups.”

2021's Most & Least Stressed States: Topping the list of most stressed is Nevada. Least stressed is South Dakota. Check the rankings for further states.

Secondhand Smoke Is Sending Kids to the ER: “Compared to other kids, those exposed to secondhand smoke were more likely to have had an urgent care visit over a one-year period, and to incur higher costs for such visits. They also were nearly twice as likely to be admitted to the hospital.”
Do we need yet another reason to ban smoking?

Black Patients Are More Likely Than White Patients to Be in Hospitals with Worse Patient Safety Conditions: “Black patients experienced higher rates of adverse patient safety events on 6 of 11 patient safety measures, including 5 of 7 surgery-related patient safety measures. For 9 of 11 patient safety indicators, including 6 of 7 surgery-related patient safety indicators, Black patients were significantly less likely to be admitted into hospitals classified as “high quality” (i.e., hospitals best at minimizing patient safety risks based on the median value of each patient safety indicator). These findings suggest that current policies aimed at reducing adverse patient safety events have been ineffective in addressing inequities in the quality of inpatient care. “
The question now is why black patients need to go to those hospitals. Obviously, proximity is a major factor. This research would make a great discussion topic to root out the “why’s” and offer solutions.

About healthcare professionals

US News published its latest grad school report, including medicine, nursing, pharmacy, public health and health administration: FYI


Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

More than 40 states say they will meet or beat Biden’s May 1 deadline for vaccine eligibility for all adults: The headline is the story.

AZD1222 US Phase III primary analysis confirms safety and efficacy: After the past couple days’ criticisms about data problems, Astra Zeneca reported its vaccine’s corrected stats:
“76% vaccine efficacy against symptomatic COVID-19

100% efficacy against severe or critical disease and hospitalisation

85% efficacy against symptomatic COVID-19 in participants aged 65 years and over”

India detects several variants including a new double mutant strain: The headline is the story. But the good news may be:
The Coronavirus Variants Don't Seem to Be Highly Variable So Far: “SARS-CoV-2 may be settling into a limited set of mutations.” The article discusses the concept of convergent evolution to explain this phenomenon.

Global COVID-19 cases rise for 4th straight week:”In its latest weekly snapshot of global COVID-19 activity, the World Health Organization (WHO) said yesterday that cases rose for the fourth week in a row, led by cases in the Americas and Europe, with deaths now leveling off after a 6-week drop.
Though much of the rise was spread across four of the WHO's regions, rises were especially steep in certain countries, such as India, where cases were up by 35% over the previous week.”

Carcinogen Found in Hand Sanitizers That Plugged Covid Gap: “An assortment of hand cleaners that flooded into the market after mainstays disappeared from retail outlets contain high levels of benzene, according to Valisure, a New Haven, Connecticut-based online pharmacy that tests products for quality and consistency.” See the article for a list of these products.

'I don’t want to be the one who gives it to people': Many Americans won't eat out, fly until COVID-19 herd immunity arrives: “A growing share of Americans would feel safe resuming activities like  dining out or flying within a few weeks of their second dose of COVID-19 vaccine, but 25% to 30% would wait until the nation reaches herd immunity, according to a Harris Poll survey for USA TODAY.
Their attitudes bode well for what’s expected to be a historically robust recovery from the coronavirus recession. But the sizeable share of people who prefer to wait until at least 70% of the population is immune could mean a less roaring launch to the rebound as some activity shifts to late summer and fall from midyear.”

Krispy Kreme’s ‘sweet’ vaccine promotion leads to bitter Twitter war: I won’t give away the details of the story…but this article is a great social/cause marketing case study.

Thermo Fisher deploys sensors for detecting airborne COVID-19: “The company said its AerosolSense Sampler is designed to help hospitals, nursing homes, schools, offices and other locations surveil high-traffic areas for elevated levels of the pathogen, providing an early-warning layer of screening that can be combined with individual diagnostic tests after the pandemic begins to subside.
The toaster oven-sized machine collects aerosol samples and traps any pathogens on a removable cartridge—with the ability to completely filter the air of a 1,000-square-foot room in under 20 hours—which is then analyzed in a laboratory using Thermo Fisher’s established TaqPath COVID-19 molecular test kit.”

About pharma

Opioid Industry Documents Archive: Just placed online from UCSF and Johns Hopkins University: “The archive contains emails, memos, presentations, sales reports, budgets, audit reports, Drug Enforcement Administration briefings, meeting agendas and minutes, expert witness reports, and depositions of drug company executives. The archive serves as a living repository of information that can be used to learn from the opioid epidemic so as to improve and safeguard public policy and public health, and to ensure that the opioid-related harms that have taken place never occur again.”

The Tuskegee Legacy Project: Willingness of Minorities to Participate in Biomedical Research: “The broad goal of the Tuskegee Legacy Project (TLP) study was to address, and understand, a range of issues related to the recruitment and retention of Blacks and other minorities in biomedical research studies. The specific aim of this analysis was to compare the self-reported willingness of Blacks, Hispanics, and Whites to participate as research subjects in biomedical studies, as measured by the Likelihood of Participation (LOP) Scale and the Guinea Pig Fear Factor (GPFF) Scale….The findings revealed no difference in self-reported willingness to participate in biomedical research, as measured by the LOP Scale, between Blacks, Hispanics, and Whites, despite Blacks being 1.8 times as likely as Whites to have a higher fear of participation in biomedical research on the GPFF Scale.”

CVS launches new mental health initiative: “In an effort to simultaneously alleviate the strain on providers and expand access to mental health resources, CVS is adding virtual and in-person behavioral healthcare offerings in select HealthHUB locations.”
This step is not only an expansion of services, it is a departure from “quick care” models in retail outlets.

FDA slaps new warning on GlaxoSmithKline's Shingrix based on post-marketing findings: “Wednesday, the FDA alerted the public that it has added to the ‘warnings and precautions’ section of the shingles vaccine’s label language about an increased risk for a rare neuro autoimmune disorder called Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS). [Antibodies attack peripheral nerves.]
The update came after a post-marketing observational study by federal health agencies noted the risk during the 42 days following vaccination with Shingrix. The FDA stressed that ‘available evidence is insufficient to establish a causal relationship,’ and that the ‘benefits of vaccination with Shingrix continue to outweigh its risks.’”

About hospitals and health systems

National Hospital Flash Report Summary: March 2021: From Kaufman Hall and the AHA: “Operating Margin fell 30.8% (3 percentage points) from February 2020 to February 2021 without the federal aid, while Operating EBITDA Margin was down 22.6% (3.2 percentage points). With CARES, Operating Margin fell 23.4% (2.6 percentage points) and Operating EBITDA Margin fell 18.3% (2.4 percentage points) year-over-year (YOY). Looking at year-to-date (YTD) results, Operating Margin declined 48.0% (4.2 percentage points) without CARES and 36.0% (3.3 percentage points) with CARES.”
But not all facilities and systems are losing money: Advocate Aurora posts $558M in earnings in 2020, down from $1.4B in 2019: The not-for-profit, 26-hospital system said in its latest earnings report, posted Monday, that it generated $13.1 billion in total revenue for 2020, up 2.6% from 2019. Advocate Aurora is the latest hospital system to end 2020 in the black.”

About healthcare IT

Most pediatricians believe telehealth is here to stay: “An independent study commissioned by a pediatric virtual care company found that 92% of pediatricians and clinicians believe that telemedicine will remain part of health practices in the future.  
Virtually all of the 787 pediatricians and clinicians who responded to an online survey reported currently using a telemedicine platform, with 96% saying they offered telemedicine during regular business hours.”

About the public’s health 

Dr. Rachel Levine makes transgender history in confirmation as assistant secretary of HHS: The headline is the story.

About health insurance

Avoid these 8 types of health insurance, 30 patient organizations say: Great advice!
”Here are the eight health plans the coalition highlighted and asked lawmakers to review:

  • Short-term, limited-duration insurance

  • Healthcare sharing ministries

  • Farm bureau plans

  • Grandfathered plans

  • Multiple employer welfare arrangements and association health plans

  • Spurious single-employer self-insured group health plans

  • Minimum essential coverage-only plans

  • Excepted benefit plans

Read more here.”



Today's News and Commentary

About health care providers

DaVita, Fresenius team up to bring dialysis care out of their clinics and into the home: “DaVita Kidney Care will expand its use of home hemodialysis machines supplied by Fresenius Medical Care—including the smaller, portable and digitally connected devices Fresenius picked up in early 2019 through its long-awaited $1.9 billion acquisition deal for NxStage Medical.
The agreement will also grant DaVita patients access to Nx2me Connected Health, a platform that collects and shares individual treatment information with clinics and care teams—while the entire system will allow some to perform hemodialysis solo, or even while the patient and their care partner are asleep.”
What is interesting about this story is competitors are teaming up to accelerate a trend taking patients out of their facilities and into home treatment.

About the public’s health

Newly confirmed surgeon general to focus on COVID, opioids: “The Senate confirmed a soft-spoken physician as President Joe Biden’s surgeon general Tuesday. While Dr. Vivek Murthy says ending the coronavirus pandemic is his top priority, he’s also raised concerns over a relapsing opioid overdose crisis.”

About health insurance

CMS withdraws 3 proposed health rules: “The withdrawn rules include a revision to Medicare Part A enrollment requirements, altered dialysis coverage requirements for third party-payment programs and increased oversight of accrediting organizations.” For a full list and description of the executive orders under review, go to: Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) Executive Order Submissions Under Review.

Anthem to buy home nursing management company: The management company “MyNexus currently provides clinical support services to 1.7 million Medicare Advantage members across 20 states.”
Such diversification by an insurance company is very unusual.

Evaluation of Hospital Cesarean Delivery–Related Profits and Rates in the United States: “In this cross-sectional study of US nationally representative hospital discharge data, hospitals with higher profits per cesarean procedure were associated with an increased probability of delivering newborns through cesarean birth.”
Do we still need studies showing that how you pay will influence the type and volume of services provided? This fact has been known for decades in healthcare.

Obamacare enrollment period extended beyond May as new insurance subsidies kick in: ”The Biden administration is extending for three more months a special opportunity for people to sign up for government-subsidized health insurance through the federally run marketplace.
Instead of ending May 15, the special enrollment period will run through Aug. 15 to give people more time to take advantage of the expanded subsidies included in the recently passed $1.9 trillion stimulus package.”

About Covid-19

Association of Age With SARS-CoV-2 Antibody Response: “The results of this study suggest that SARS-CoV-2 viral specific antibody response profiles are distinct in different age groups. Age-targeted strategies for disease screening and management as well as vaccine development may be warranted.”
Particularly, as expected, children had much higher antibody responses than adults.

Today's News and Commentary

Today is the 11th anniversary of the ACA.

For a recap on its impact, read:
11 Years On, the Affordable Care Act Defies Opponents and Keeps Expanding

About Covid-19

AstraZeneca vaccine faces another setback after independent board questions trial data:
”On Tuesday, an independent review board of experts appointed by the National Institutes of Health said the British-Swedish pharmaceutical company may have only used partial data when it announced the results from its vaccine trial…
The company said it would “immediately engage” with health officials to discuss the most up-to-date efficacy data and promised a more detailed analysis within 48 hours of the vaccine it developed with Oxford University.”

IDSA updates treatment guidance for COVID-19, including monoclonal antibodies: “The Infectious Diseases Society of America has updated its treatment guidelines for COVID-19 for several therapies, including tocilizumab, ivermectin and bamlanivimab with etesevimab.
After an assessment of eight randomized trials, the guideline panel now recommends that tocilizumab should be used in hospitalized patients who are sick enough to have progressive, severe or critical COVID-19.”

Women's Experiences with Health Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from the KFF Women's Health Survey: A really good summary of this topic from the KFF. “Women are more likely to have gone without health care during the pandemic compared to men, and women with health and economic challenges prior to the pandemic have experienced worsening health conditions as a result of skipping health care services during the pandemic.”

Regeneron and Roche's antibody cocktail shown helping in COVID-19 cases: “New late-stage trial data show Regeneron and Roche’s antibody cocktail against COVID-19 cut hospitalisation or death by 70% versus a placebo in non-hospitalised patients, the Swiss drugmaker said on Tuesday.
The shot, consisting of casirivimab and imdevimab antibodies developed by Regeneron with financial help from the U.S. government, also met all key secondary endpoints in the phase III trial with 4,567 participants, including reducing symptom duration to 10 days from 14, Roche said.”

About healthcare technology

Alexa, do I have an abnormal heart rhythm? UW researchers use AI and smart speakers to monitor irregular heartbeats: “Researchers at the University of Washington have developed a form of contentless monitoring, allowing smart speakers to identify and monitor individual heartbeats using sonar technology. Machine learning (ML) makes this technology possible. The UW researchers published the findings on March 9 in the journal Communications Biology.”

About pharma

Post-Visit Patient Understanding About Newly Prescribed Medications: “Many patients correctly identified information related to directions for taking a newly prescribed medication, even without physician counseling, but when physicians failed to convey potential medication side effects, many assumed that a medication had no side effects. It may be sufficient for physicians to provide written information about medication directions and dosing, and tailor their limited time to discussing medication side effects.”

Democrats see a pathway for their ambitious drug pricing bill: “For example, a bipartisan group of senators are releasing a bill today that requires drug manufacturers to disclose and provide more information about planned drug price increases, [emphasis in the original] including research and development costs. 
It would require manufacturers to notify HHS 30 days before they increase the price of certain drugs. The requirement would apply to drugs costing at least $100, whose prices are increasing by more than 10 percent in one year or 25 percent over three years. Manufacturers would have to provide a justification for each price increase.”

About health insurance

DOJ Asks for Clean Slate or Clarity in Medicaid Work Rule Fight: The high court canceled oral argument but justices could still hear case…
”The court should clarify in any ruling on the merits that the Health and Human Services Secretary can allow states to try out new measures—like alternative ways to deliver care—that indirectly advance Medicaid’s main goal of providing low-income people health insurance, the Justice Department said in a brief Monday.”

About healthcare professionals

Estimated Effect on Life Expectancy of Alleviating Primary Care Shortages in the United States: “Persons living in counties with less than 1 physician per 3500 persons in 2017 had a mean life expectancy that was 310.9 days shorter than for persons living in counties above that threshold. In the low-density counties (n = 1218), increasing the density of PCPs above the 1:3500 threshold would be expected to increase mean life expectancy by 22.4 days (median, 19.4 days [95% CI, 0.9 to 45.6 days]), and all such counties would require 17 651 more physicians, or about 14.5 more physicians per shortage county.”
Past studies on thresholds for health professional/population ratios and per capital health spending tend to show that below a certain threshold, healthcare declines. However, above those cutoffs, the returns rapidly diminish. Such studies like this one need to take into account the structure and availability of the healthcare systems as well as per capita spending before making blanket recommendations about essential targets for personnel.

Today's News and Commentary

HHS delays effective date of controversial sunset rule to 2022 in response to lawsuit: “The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has delayed the effective date of a controversial rule that calls for the agency to review more than 17,000 regulations until 2022.”

About Covid-19

Covid cases are rising in 21 states as health officials warn against reopening too quickly: “The 7-day moving average of new infections plateaued at 54,666 as of Friday after declining for weeks, according to a CNBC analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University.”

AstraZeneca US trial shows 79% efficacy against Covid: “AstraZeneca’s US clinical trial of its Covid-19 vaccine developed with Oxford university has shown 79 per cent efficacy at preventing symptomatic disease and 100 per cent efficacy against severe or critical disease and hospitalisation. The results are similar to those from other Covid-19 vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna, said Sarah Gilbert, professor of vaccinology at Oxford and co-designer of the vaccine.”

FDA authorizes first AI-powered armband for COVID-19 screening: “Tiger Tech Solutions’ wearable monitor is strapped to the upper arm and uses light sensors to sense blood flow, similarly to many consumer electronics and fitness trackers. Within three to five minutes, it uses an artificial intelligence model to crunch the data on the person’s pulse rate and other factors to determine whether their blood could be clotting more easily than normal.
This state of hypercoagulation, among other signs, has been linked to coronavirus infections—and, when combined with temperature checks, it could help spot people over the age of 5 who are carrying the virus without showing any symptoms. “

Fauci: COVID-19 variant likely accounts for up to 30 percent of US infections: “Fauci specifically sounded the alarm at a White House press conference Friday over the B.1.1.7 variant, which was first discovered in the United Kingdom and has since spread across the globe.”

FDA Warns of Misleading Registration Certificates for COVID-19 Devices: “The FDA is taking action against devicemakers that have been touting phony FDA registration certificates which give the false impression their products have received the agency’s clearance…
The FDA’s Office of Regulatory Programs has sent letters to 25 manufacturers, distributors and sellers, telling them to stop producing and issuing these false certificates.”

COVID-19 antibodies can effectively last for at least nine months: Chinese study in Lancet: “Study results published in The Lancet suggest that 40% of COVID-19 patients in China's Wuhan, Hubei province have the neutralising COVID-19 antibodies that can effectively last for at least nine months…”

About hospitals and health systems

Hospitals Hide Pricing Data From Search Results: “Hospitals that have published their previously confidential prices to comply with a new federal rule have also blocked that information from web searches with special coding embedded on their websites, according to a Wall Street Journal examination.
The information must be disclosed under a federal rule aimed at making the $1 trillion sector more consumer friendly. But hundreds of hospitals embedded code in their websites that prevented Alphabet Inc.’s  Google and other search engines from displaying pages with the price lists, according to the Journal examination of more than 3,100 sites.
The code keeps pages from appearing in searches, such as those related to a hospital’s name and prices, computer-science experts said. The prices are often accessible other ways, such as through links that can require clicking through multiple layers of pages.”

14 Defendants Sentenced to 74+ Years in Forest Park Healthcare Fraud: “Fourteen defendants convicted in the Forest Park Medical Center bribery scam have been sentenced to a combined 74+ years in federal prison and ordered to pay a total of $82.9 million in restitution…
The $200 million scheme was designed to induce doctors to steer lucrative patients – particularly those with high-reimbursing, out-of-network private insurance – to the now defunct hospital.
Most of the kickbacks, which totaled more than $40 million, were disguised as consulting fees or ‘marketing money’ doled as a percentage of surgeries each doctor referred to Forest Park.”
About health insurance

House passes bill to stave off millions in Medicare sequester cuts: “The House passed a bill on Friday to extend the moratorium on 2% Medicare payment cuts caused by a federal budget sequestration and avert $36 billion in payment cuts triggered by the American Rescue Plan.
Legislators voted 246 to 175 to pass H.R.1868, which postpones Medicare sequester payment cuts until the end of the year and exempts the budgetary effects of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill from the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010.”

New cost-cutting Medicare rule may add costs to patients: “For years, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) classified 1,740 surgeries and other services so risky for older adults that Medicare would pay for them only when these adults were admitted to the hospital as inpatients. Under the new rule, the agency is beginning to phase out that requirement. On Jan. 1, 266 shoulder, spine and other musculoskeletal surgeries were crossed off what is called the ‘inpatient-only list.’
By the end of 2023, the list — which includes a variety of complicated procedures including brain and heart operations — is scheduled to be gone.
CMS officials said the change was designed to give patients and doctors more options and help lower costs by promoting more competition among hospitals and independent ambulatory surgical centers. But they forgot one thing.
While removing the surgeries from the inpatient-only list, the government did not approve them to be performed anywhere else. So patients will still have to get the care at hospitals.”

States are eyeing public option health plans. Many obstacles stand in the way.: The article offers a really good analysis of state-sponsored public option plans- focusing on Washington state. One problem is: “The high premiums for the public option plan stemmed from a failure to cap payment rates to health-care providers…” It tried to pay providers based on Medicare fee schedules but : “Even with the higher rates, the state struggled to get health-care providers to agree to participate in the plan. That’s because hospitals are used to receiving much higher payments from private insurance plans than from Medicare — an average of 247 percent more…”
Also, “Opposition to public options is fierce.
The Partnership for America’s Health Care Future, an alliance of hospital, health insurance and pharmaceutical lobbyists, is spending $1 million to combat a plan in Colorado that would trigger the creation of a public option if the health-care industry cannot bring down costs on its own before 2024.”

About pharma

Americans Struggle to Afford Medications as COVID-19 Hits Savings and Insurance Coverage:”Prescription drugs are still unaffordable for many Americans. According to a new GoodRx survey, one in three Americans saw their out-of-pocket medication costs increase in 2020. Nearly 40% of people reported difficulty affording their prescription medications, and over 20% said they struggled to pay for basic necessities like food and shelter as a result.
Patients have responded to this lack of affordability by tapping into their savings, taking on more debt, and making potentially dangerous changes to their prescribed medication regimen.”

Biotech's top 10 money raisers of 2020: FYI: “In 2020, the biotech sector raised just under $20 billion, outstripping 2018 on every measure, except the total number of financing rounds.”

About healthcare IT

Clinical data sharing improves quality measurement and patient safety: “ A total of 15% of all quality measure calculations changed (P < .001) when including HIE data sources, affecting 19% of patients. Changes in quality measure calculations were observed across measures and organizations.
These results demonstrate that quality measures calculated using single-site EHR data may be limited by incomplete information. Effective data sharing significantly changes quality calculations, which affect healthcare payments, patient safety, and care quality.”

About healthcare professionals

Match Day 2021 largest on record: 6 notes: Among the stats:
”A record 48,700 people submitted applications for 38,106 open positions at residency programs — the most available in the program's history. Of these open positions, about 95 percent were filled…. 
A record 5,915 programs participated in Match Day, 88 more than last year….
Of the 35,194 positions available for first-year residents, about half were for primary care specialties like family medicine, internal medicine and pediatrics.”



Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

European countries resume use of AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine, hoping pause has not dented confidence: “A dozen European countries [yesterday] said they will resume vaccinations with the AstraZeneca vaccine against COVID-19 after the European Medicines Agency (EMA) said its initial investigation of possible side effects has concluded the vaccine is ‘safe and effective.’ Their decisions came as a relief to many public health experts, who worried about long delays in the COVID-19 vaccination programs at a time when cases are increasing in much of Europe.”

U.S. plans to use real world and trial data to determine when vaccines need to be updated: “U.S. officials plan to use data gathered from people who have already been vaccinated against COVID-19 as well as data from ongoing clinical trials to determine when and whether current vaccines need to be updated to address viral variants.
Peter Marks, director of the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said in a hearing on Wednesday that his agency has already started getting data on vaccine safety from surveillance systems.
Those systems have been set up to gather reports of vaccine side effects from individuals and physicians and are managed in partnership with the FDA and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”

About the public’s health

Assessment of the Appropriateness of Antimicrobial Use in US Hospitals: “In this cross-sectional study of 1566 patients at 192 hospitals, antimicrobial use deviated from recommended practices for 55.9% of patients who received antimicrobials for community-acquired pneumonia or urinary tract infection present at admission or who received fluoroquinolone or intravenous vancomycin treatment…
The findings suggest that standardized assessments of hospital antimicrobial prescribing quality can be used to estimate the appropriateness of antimicrobial use in large groups of hospitals.”
What can we do to assure better compliance? Seems to need some “hard wiring,” like automatic pharmacist/infectious disease review.

HHS Tells Supreme Court It Will End Abortion 'Gag Rule': “The U. S. Department of Health and Human Services unveiled its timeline Thursday for officially rolling back the Trump administration's ‘gag rule’ prohibiting physicians from referring patients to abortion providers, telling the U. S. Supreme Court that it plans to propose new rules by mid-April.”

Today's News and Commentary

Calif. AG Wins Senate Confirmation To Lead HHS: “Thursday's 50-49 vote was among the closest in recent years for an HHS secretary. It came on the heels of Republican opposition focused largely on abortion, religious freedom and doubts about the attorney general's health care chops. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, was the only Republican to vote in favor of confirmation.”

About Covid-19

Trump urges all Americans to get COVID vaccine: 'It's a safe vaccine' and it 'works':  Announced (where else?) on a Fox News interview. We will see if it makes a difference among the large number of Republicans who refuse to get vaccinated. 

FDA grants its first full approval to a COVID-19 diagnostic test: Yes, you read that correctly.
”For the first year of the pandemic, the FDA worked hard to make it clear that each green light it gave to a COVID-19 diagnostic test kit—over 340 to date—amounted to only an emergency authorization and not a full approval, meaning it had not been reviewed to its highest standards and could only be used for a limited time as the country fought off the pandemic.
Now, the agency has granted its first official endorsement, allowing a respiratory panel test from BioFire Diagnostics to be sold into the foreseeable future. 
The diagnostic is designed to screen deep nasal swab samples for multiple infections to help identify coronavirus cases among people with symptoms similar to the flu, respiratory syncytial virus and the bugs behind the common cold.”

FDA Orders Eli Lilly, Regeneron to Evaluate COVID-19 Antibody Cocktails Against Variants:”In a revision of its Emergency Use Authorizations (EUAs) for Eli Lilly’s and Regeneron’s antibody combination therapies for COVID-19, the FDA is requiring the companies to assess the therapies against the mutant strains of the SARS-CoV-2 virus.”

Thai sniffer dogs can detect COVID-19 in sweat, project showsFascinating!

Covid-19 antibodies present in about 1 in 5 blood donations from unvaccinated people, according to data from the American Red Cross: “Between mid-June 2020 and early March 2021, the American Red Cross tested more than 3.3 million donations from unvaccinated people in 44 states for the presence of Covid-19 antibodies. Overall, about 7.5% of the donations tested in that time frame were positive for Covid-19 antibodies, meaning the donors had likely been infected with the coronavirus at some point.”

European regulator says AstraZeneca's coronavirus vaccine is 'safe and effective' but link to rare blood clots cannot be ruled out: “Europe's medical regulator said Thursday that it believed AstraZeneca's vaccine was ‘safe and effective,’ but it could not rule out a link to highly unusual types of blood clots and said a warning would be added to the product.
Many of the countries in Europe that had paused the use of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine — including Germany, France, Italy and Spain — announced they would resume Friday or early next week. Ireland said it would announce its decision on Friday and Sweden next week.”

CDC IDs new COVID-19 variants of concern as hot spots reemerge: “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said two coronavirus variants first detected in California, B.1427 and B.1429, are now considered as variants of concern. The CDC said the variants may be 20% more transmissible.”

Pelican Diagnostics Receives CE Mark for COVID-19 Saliva Test: Canary Global’s company Pelican Diagnostics has earned the CE mark for its COVID-19 Ultra-Rapid Mobile Test, a saliva test that takes under two minutes.
The test kit is comprised of a handheld reusable digital reader and disposable testing cartridges that analyze spike and nucleocapsid proteins in saliva samples to detect the virus.”

Better Covid Vaccines Are Coming, WHO’s Chief Scientist Says: Six-to-eight new immunizations may complete clinical studies and undergo regulatory review by the end of the year, Soumya Swaminathan, the Geneva-based agency’s chief scientist, said in an interview Saturday…
The current crop of experimental vaccines use alternative technologies and delivery systems, and include more single-shot inoculations, and vaccines that are administered orally, via a nasal spray, and through the skin using a type of patch. These could bring immunizations that are better suited to specific groups, such as pregnant women, according to Swaminathan.” 

Of 300-plus imaging-based AI models for COVID-19 diagnosis, zero suitable for clinical use“Out of more than 300 published machine learning models for detecting COVID-19 from chest images, zero passed a recent research review, experts detailed Monday in Nature.”

Pfizer execs discuss hiking vaccine price after pandemic wanes: Surprised?

Effectiveness of three versus six feet of physical distancing for controlling spread of COVID-19 among primary and secondary students and staff: A retrospective, state-wide cohort study: “Lower physical distancing policies can be adopted in school settings with masking mandates without negatively impacting student or staff safety.” 

Medicago Evaluates Plant-Derived COVID-19 Vaccine Candidate: “Medicago and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) have launched a global phase 3 trial evaluating Medicago’s plant-derived COVID-19 vaccine candidate when combined with GSK’s pandemic adjuvant.” 
According to Medicago’s website: “We use a plant-based platform to develop our vaccines. This approach uses living plants as bioreactors to produce non-infectious versions of viruses (called Virus-like Particles, or VLPs). Learn more about our proprietary plant-based platform here.
VLPs mimic the native structure of viruses, helping them to be easily recognized by the immune system. However, they lack core genetic material which makes them non-infectious and unable to replicate.”

New Study Shows How Mutations in SARS-CoV-2 Allow the Virus to Evade Immune System Defenses: “The research, published March 16 in Cell, shows that a mutated SARS-CoV-2 from a chronically infected immunocompromised patient is capable of evading both naturally occurring antibodies from COVID-19 survivors as well as lab-made antibodies now in clinical use for treatment of COVID-19.
The patient case was originally described Dec. 3, 2020, as a New England Journal of Medicine report by scientists at Brigham and  Women’s Hospital  a few weeks before the U.K. and South African variants were first reported to the World Health Organization.”

Assessment of protection against reinfection with SARS-CoV-2 among 4 million PCR-tested individuals in Denmark in 2020: a population-level observational study: “We used a large national surveillance dataset [approximately 4 million individuals (69% of the population of Denmark)] of individually referable PCR test results to estimate the degree to which previous infection with SARS-CoV-2 results in protection against repeat infection. We found protection in the population to be 80% or higher in those younger than 65 years, but to be approximately 47% in those aged 65 years and older.”
This type of study can inform public health policy about whom should get priority for booster shots; however, as production gears up, nearly everyone will be able to get one.

About health insurance

MEDPAC’s 2021 Report to Congress on Medicare Payment PolicyAs usual, this annual report has a great analysis of the Medicare program with recommendations to Congress for the next year. Overall, the Commission recommends many cuts to the program. See Appendix A on page 481 for a brief summary of the recommendations.  

Biden administration begins throwing out Medicaid work rules: “Federal Medicaid officials on Wednesday sent letters to Arkansas and New Hampshire officials, informing them that the administration had formally scrapped the federal government’s permission for the states to mandate that some enrollees work, volunteer or attend school as a condition of coverage.”

Part D Payment Modernization Model Calendar Year (CY) 2022 Fact SheetSome key provisions include: “Based on stakeholder feedback and other considerations, CMS is not moving forward with two Model design changes discussed in the January 19, 2021 CY 2022 RFA: (1) the Part D Formulary Flexibilities, and (2) removal of downside risk for CY 2022. For CY 2022, the PDM Model will continue to test a modernized Part D payment structure in which participating Part D sponsors take two-sided risk for CMS’ federal reinsurance subsidy spending for participating plan benefit packages (PBPs), relative to their Spending Target Benchmark(s).”
Also, Part D sponsors have the opportunity “to implement several Part D programmatic flexibilities aimed at reducing out-of-pocket costs and improving the quality of care for beneficiaries.” 

Humana introduces CenterWell brand for payer-agnostic healthcare offerings: “Health insurer Humana announced a new brand this week, CenterWell, which encompasses and connects a range of the company's payer-agnostic healthcare services offerings. The first Humana-owned care services to adopt the new brand will be its senior-focused primary care facilities that have operated as ‘Partners in Primary Care’ in several states and as ‘Family Physicians Group’ in the Orlando area.
The move comes as Humana is pushing to expand its healthcare services capabilities, from primary care and pharmacy to home care, to strengthen its payer-agnostic portfolio. The new CenterWell brand will unite these services.”
Is Humana mimicking United’s Optum? 

Highmark Makes a $220M Impact in the Fight Against Healthcare Fraud, Waste and Abuse in 2020 “Highmark’s Financial Investigations and Provider Review (FIPR) department generated more than $220 million in savings related to fraud, waste and abuse in 2020, and has made a cumulative financial impact of nearly $1.1 billion in such activity since 2015. By deploying sophisticated artificial intelligence programs and partnering with health systems, public health officials, law enforcement and other health stakeholders, FIPR is protecting Highmark customers and ensuring health care dollars are spent on high-value care.
Highmark prevented significant fraud, waste and abuse across its lines of business in 2020. That includes nearly $130 million in savings related to employer-based health insurance, $50 million from the Blue Card program (which provides Highmark customers with access to national Blue Cross Blue Shield networks), $22 million from Medicare Advantage, $9 million from the Affordable Care Act marketplace, and $8 million from the Federal Employee Program.”

Primary Care First Model Options: From CMS: “The practice solicitation period for PCF Cohort 2 opened on March 16, 2021 and will close on April 30, 2021. The payer solicitation period for PCF Cohort 2 began on March 16, 2021, and will close on May 28, 2021.”

About pharma

US regulator signals "aggressive" new approach to pharmaceutical mergers: The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Tuesday announced the formation of a working group, in collaboration with competition regulators in the EU, UK and Canada, to update how they review buyouts in the pharmaceutical industry amid concerns such deals may drive up drug prices or stifle innovation. Rebecca Kelly Slaughter, acting chair of the FTC, said ‘we intend to take an aggressive approach to tackling anticompetitive pharmaceutical mergers.’” 

Trends in fall‐related mortality and fall risk increasing drugs among older individuals in the United States,1999–2017: “The percent of persons who received at least one prescription for a fall risk increasing drug increased from 57% in 1999 to 94% in 2017 (p for trend <.0001).” Perhaps an electronic alert would be helpful; but with these percentages, massive education campaigns should also be instituted.

Judge halts 340B dispute rule, siding with Eli Lilly in lawsuit over program:  “The opinion, issued late Tuesday, grants a preliminary injunction sought by Eli Lilly, which sued the feds over the rule. The ruling comes as Lilly and several other drugmakers restricted sales of drugs discounted under the 340B program to contract pharmacies, which are third parties that dispense the products on behalf of the covered entities.
The ruling from the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana focused on whether the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) followed federal law when the rule was finalized last December.
The decision puts on hold a key mechanism that hospitals, community health centers and other 340B providers had planned to use to challenge drug companies that restricted sales of discounted products to contract pharmacies.”

Purdue Pharma unveils $10bn opioid settlement plan to exit from bankruptcy: Purdue Pharma is proposing a $10bn plan to emerge from bankruptcy that calls for it to be transformed into a company funnelling profits into the fight against the opioid crisis.
Those efforts would include a significant boost – more than $4bn – from members of the Sackler family who own the Connecticut-based pharmaceutical giant…
Most of the parties in the case are onboard. But attorneys general representing 23 states and the District of Columbia issued a statement saying the offer ‘falls short of the accountability that families and survivors deserve’. They want more money from the Sackler family members and for Purdue to wind down in a way that ‘does not excessively entangle it with states’.”

Leading Children’s Hospitals and Phlow Corp. form an Unprecedented Coalition to Deliver Essential Medicines to Address Pediatric Drug Shortages: “Phlow Corp., a U.S.-based, public benefit corporation…, today joins in announcing the launch of a groundbreaking Children’s Hospital Coalition: Powered by PhlowTM (CHC). This first-in-kind coalition brings together some of the top children’s hospitals across the nation, in collaboration with Phlow, to provide certainty in availability and access for key medicines necessary to sustain life and conquer disease and to address the nation’s broken essential medicines supply chain.”

About healthcare IT

Companies of all sizes, including Amazon’s own workforce, will be able to access Amazon Care’s on-demand healthcare service, boosting workplace benefits for employees nationwide: This article was in many media outlets today, including the front page of the Wall Street Journal. Here is what Amazon’s website said (news media copied from it):
”The service enables employees to connect with medical professionals via chat or video conference… and eliminates lengthy wait and travel times to get medical attention. Amazon Care has two components: 1) virtual care, which connects patients to medical professionals via the Amazon Care app (available for both Android and iOS) and allows patients to quickly, conveniently, and confidently chat live with a nurse or doctor, via in-app messaging or video; and 2) in-person care, where Amazon Care can dispatch a medical professional to a patient’s home for additional care, ranging from routine blood draws to listening to a patient’s lungs, and also offer prescription delivery right to a patient’s door. Until now, Amazon Care has been exclusively available to Amazon employees and their families in Washington state. Today, Amazon is announcing that Amazon Care is available to serve other Washington-based companies. Additionally, beginning this summer, Amazon Care will expand its virtual care to companies and Amazon employees in all 50 states across the U.S. Finally, Amazon Care’s in-person service will expand to Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and other cities in the coming months. To learn more, visit www.amazon.care.

Who Is (and Isn't) Receiving Telemedicine Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: “More than a 20-fold increase in the incidence of telemedicine utilization following March 13, 2020 was observed. Conversely, the incidence of office-based encounters declined almost 50% and was not fully offset by the increase in telemedicine. The increase in telemedicine was greatest among patients in counties with low poverty levels (β=31.70, 95% CI=15.17, 48.23), among patients in metropolitan areas (β=40.60, 95% CI=30.86, 50.34), and among adults compared with children aged 0–12 years (β=57.91, 95% CI=50.32, 65.49).”

FCC fines insurance telemarketers record $225M: “According to the commission, the robocalls were attempting to sell short-term, limited-duration health insurance plans. The calls falsely claimed to be selling health plans from commercial payers like Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna and UnitedHealth Group.”

The Boom in Out-of-State Telehealth Threatens In-State ProvidersA year into the pandemic, telehealth has become widely accepted. Some states are now looking to make permanent the measures that have fueled its growth. But with it have come some unintended consequences, such as a rise in fraud, potential access problems for vulnerable groups and conflicts between out-of-state and in-state health providers.”
The article provides “real world” examples. 

Doctor On Demand, Grand Rounds combine to form multibillion-dollar digital health company: “Owen Tripp, CEO of Grand Rounds, will serve as the CEO of the expanded business. Both companies will continue to operate under their existing brands for the time being, officials said in a statement.
Doctor on Demand CEO Hill Ferguson will continue to run that side of the company and will join the board.
Terms of the transaction were not disclosed…
The combination of Doctor on Demand and Grand Rounds will combine Grand Rounds’ data-driven clinical navigation platform and patient advocacy tools with Doctor On Demand’s virtual care offering. It will accelerate the adoption of virtual care in key areas including primary care, specialty care, chronic condition management, and behavioral health, the companies said.”

CMS cuts 4 telehealth services accidentally added to Medicare coverage list: “CMS released a notice March 17 walking back four telehealth service codes that the agency said were inadvertently included on its final list because of technical errors….
Here are the four telehealth codes CMS removed: 

1. 96121: Neurobehavioral status exam by physician or other qualified health professional

2. 99221: Initial hospital care 

3. 99222: Initial hospital care 

4. 99223: Initial hospital care “

About healthcare professionals

NM High Court Says Med Mal Damages Cap Is Constitutional: The $600k cap on damages was held to be constitutional in the state. Different states have come to different conclusions with respect to whether malpractice limits for non-economic damages are constitutional.

About hospitals and health systems

Low Compliance From Big Hospitals On CMS’s Hospital Price Transparency Rule: “…we collected the price transparency files for the largest 100 hospitals in the US (by certified bed count) from late January 2021 to early February 2021 and sought to determine the extent to which these hospitals were complying with the regulation…
Of the 100 hospitals in our sample, 65 were unambiguously noncompliant. Of these 65,

  • 12/65 (18 percent) did not post any files or provided links to searchable databases that were not downloadable.

  • 53/65 (82 percent) either did not include the payer-specific negotiated rates with the name of payer and plan clearly associated with the charges (n = 46) or were in some other way noncompliant (n = 7).

Of the remaining 35 hospitals in our sample, at least 22 hospitals appeared to be compliant and certain hospitals clearly exceeded the regulations in terms of the amount of information they shared.”

California hospital must pay charity care costs, appellate court rules: The ACA reduced the uninsured population, so hospitals are wondering if they still have the same charity care requirements in their states/localities. This appeals court said they do.

About the public’s health

New diabetes guidelines lower screening age to 35 for some adults: “Screening for Type 2 diabetes and prediabetes should start at age 35 for people who are considered overweight, instead of the currently recommended age 40, a draft set of guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends.
The update, prompted by the rising number of Americans who are overweight or obese, could result in millions more being eligible for the blood test as part of regular medical exams. The guidelines are specifically intended for people who are overweight — a body-mass index of 25 to 30 — or obese, a BMI of 30 or above. Excess weight is a major risk factor for diabetes.”

'Painless' glucose monitors pushed despite little evidence they help most diabetes patients: “There's little evidence continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) leads to better outcomes for most people with diabetes — the estimated 25 million U.S. patients with Type 2 disease who don't inject insulin to regulate their blood sugar, health experts say.”
The article is a really good business case study.

About healthcare technology

Roche to Purchase GenMark Diagnostics in $1.8 Billion Deal: “GenMark offers respiratory pathogen panels that identify the most common viral and bacterial organisms associated with upper respiratory infection, including SARS-CoV-2. It received FDA Emergency Use Authorization in October 2020 and a CE mark in September 2020 for a rapid molecular panel that detects more than 20 respiratory pathogens, including the coronavirus.”

GE Healthcare debuts pocket-sized, wireless ultrasound: “GE Healthcare launched a new handheld, wireless ultrasound device, capable of scanning anywhere within the body and small enough to be carried around in a clinician’s pocket.
The Vscan Air is an addition to the company’s family of portable ultrasound systems which first launched in 2010. The device connects with the user’s own smartphone, and includes a two-sided design—when flipped over, it can be used for both shallow and deep tissue without switching probes during exams.”
This device is truly a disruptive technology.

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Vaccines drive optimism about containing COVID-19 pandemic — CBS News poll: “A majority [55%] of Americans say they'll get a COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available to them or already have had at least one shot…One important change … is that today Black and Hispanic Americans are as likely as White Americans to say they'll get vaccinated if they haven't been already…. Republicans and conservatives are the most likely group to express hesitancy. However, there are clear differences by age, with older Republicans more likely to express willingness to get their shots. In fact, a majority of Republicans age 65 and older report having already been vaccinated, while most of those under age 45 express hesitancy, indicating potential hurdles ahead in maximizing the vaccinated share of the population.”

Association of Acute Symptoms of COVID-19 and Symptoms of Depression in Adults: “Among more than 3900 individuals with prior COVID-19 illness surveyed between May 2020 and January 2021, 52.4% met criteria for moderate or greater symptoms of major depression. In regression models, these symptoms were more likely among younger respondents compared with older respondents and among men compared with women as well as among those with greater self-reported overall COVID-19 severity compared with those with lower severity.
We did not replicate a prior finding among 114 individuals with COVID-19 that loss of smell and taste were associated with greater near-term depressive and anxious symptoms.”

Regular booster vaccines are the future in battle with COVID-19 virus, expert says: “Regular booster vaccines against the novel coronavirus will be needed because of mutations that make it more transmissible and better able to evade human immunity, the head of Britain’s effort to sequence the virus’s genomes told Reuters.”

Report on the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Smoking Cessation: “In 2012, the CDC began a national media campaign, Tips from Former Smokers, to promote state quitline services to tobacco users using the national portal, 1-800-QUIT-NOW. The campaign has been highly effective in increasing calls to the quitlines, with calls ranging from 700,000 to 900,000 annually since the campaign began. However, in 2020 calls to the state quitlines decreased by over 190,000 (-27%) compared to 2019 (525,609 compared to 715,624). The decrease in calls to state quitlines was not uniform over the year. Instead, the decrease mirrored the timeline of the pandemic…
Cigarette sales have been impacted by the pandemic as well. Although cigarette sales have shown a steady decline of 4-5% annually since 2015, sales increased 1% in the first 10 months of 2020 compared to the same time frame for 201910. This increase was not expected by the industry, which revised its expectation for sales mid-year in 202011. Stress and anxiety resulting from the pandemic may be factors in the increased use of tobacco, alcohol and other substances. NAQC [North American Quitline Consortium] suggests these factors also may have contributed to the decrease in calls to state quitlines.”

Potential for False Results with Roche Molecular Systems, Inc. cobas SARS-CoV-2 & Influenza Test for use on cobas Liat System: “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is alerting clinical laboratory staff, point-of-care (POC) facility staff, and health care providers that false positive results can occur with the Roche Molecular Systems, Inc. (Roche) cobas SARS-CoV-2 & Influenza A/B Nucleic Acid Test for use on the cobas Liat System.” This FDA letter explains the reasons for the false positives and measures to address these errors.

OSHA Rolls Out Biden-Ordered Virus Protection Program: “Under the program, OSHA will conduct both new inspections as well as follow-ups of work sites inspected in 2020 to make sure that potentially hazardous conditions have been corrected, the agency said in a memo.
The program beefs up OSHA's oversight of "high hazard" industries that expose the greatest number of workers to "serious risk," including hospitals, assisted living centers, nursing homes and other health care and emergency response providers treating COVID-19 patients, the agency said.”

Moderna Begins Dosing With COVID-19 Variant Booster Shot: “Moderna said participants will receive either a booster targeted at the South African variant or the company’s new multivalent vaccine candidate that targets both the original coronavirus strain and the variant strain.”

About the public’s health

Should I Get a Coronary CT Scan?: A helpful chart answers the title question.

Bombshell analysis traces new Ebola outbreak to survivor of West Africa crisis: “A survivor of the massive 2014-2016 West African Ebola outbreak almost certainly triggered an outbreak currently underway in Guinea, according to a new genetic analysis, news that has landed like a bombshell in the community of researchers who study the dangerous virus.
The analysis suggests that a survivor of the historic Ebola outbreak continued harboring the virus at least five years after being infected, eventually transmitting it to someone. Previously, the longest an Ebola survivor was believed to have shed the virus was about 500 days.”
About healthcare IT

More Than 1M Patients Had Data Exposed In Healthcare Data Breaches In February: More than 1.1 million patients “had data exposed in healthcare data breaches reported to the federal government last month.” Nearly 6.9 million patients “have had data exposed in breaches reported so far in 2021.” Healthcare providers, insurers and their business associates “reported 74 breaches in January and February combined, marking the second-highest number of breaches reported in the first two months of the year since HHS’ Office for Civil Rights began maintaining its breach database in 2010.”

About healthcare technology

Cardinal Health to sell off its Cordis device division in $1B deal: “After six years, Cardinal Health is dropping its Cordis medical device division, makers of cardiovascular catheters and diagnostic hardware, in a $1 billion deal with private equity firm Hellman & Friedman.
The healthcare services and distribution giant previously spent $1.9 billion to acquire Cordis from Johnson & Johnson in 2015, following months of rumors, with the hope of using it to grow its global footprint and deliver a broader device portfolio.
However, establishing the infrastructure needed to do so became more expensive than Cardinal Health anticipated—with large write-offs by 2018 due to expiring product inventories plus difficulties in optimizing Cordis’ manufacturing plants.”

About health insurance

CMS delays effective date of rule intended to hasten Medicare device coverage approval until May: “The delay of the rule, which also comes with a new 30-day comment period, is part of a larger regulatory freeze instituted by the Biden White House to review last-minute regulations approved under the Trump administration…
The rule would create a new pathway that would speed up the Medicare coverage process for devices that are approved via the Food and Drug Administration’s ‘breakthrough’ pathway that are intended to address an unmet medical need.
Devices approved under this pathway would get national Medicare coverage for four years simultaneously with approval by FDA. Normally it can take a year or more to get Medicare coverage for new devices after FDA approval or clearance.
A new concern laid out by the Biden administration is the volume of devices approved under FDA’s breakthrough pathway.”

About pharma

Takeda eyes sales of $9 billion from emerging, growth markets over next decade: “Takeda said it is looking to more than double revenues in its growth and emerging markets business unit, targeting sales of JPY 1 trillion ($9.2 billion) by fiscal year 2030, with expansions planned in regions such as Brazil, China and India.”
Read the articles for more details of this company’s strategy.

Two New Diabetes Drugs May Work Better in Asian People: “Two relatively-new but increasingly commonly-used diabetes drugs (with one of these classes also now approved for used in heart failure in people with or without diabetes) are possibly more effective in people with an Asian background than in people with a White background, according to new research.
The study – published today in Diabetes Care and led by the University of Glasgow – found the diabetes drug classes GLP-1 receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors may work better at lowering the risk of heart attack and stroke, and heart failure and death from heart disease, respectively.”
Of interest is that drug approval in Japan, and some other Asian countries, requires testing in their own populations or, sometimes, in those of other Asian countries.

Lilly Alzheimer's drug shows benefit on cognition, function in mid-stage trial: “Eli Lilly and Co on Saturday said its experimental Alzheimer’s drug slowed the rate of decline in a measure of cognition and function by 32% compared with a placebo in a mid-stage trial of patients at an early stage of the mind wasting disease.
The drug, donanemab, also showed positive trends that failed to reach statistical significance on a range of secondary trial goals, the company said, providing details for the first time.”

Today's News and Commentary

29 best-managed healthcare companies: “Healthcare companies hold 29 spots in the top 250 best-managed companies in 2020, according to a ranking by the Drucker Institute published in The Wall Street Journal.
Customer satisfaction, employee engagement and development, innovation, social responsibility, and financial strength are five areas used to measure the organizations' performance. Companies received a score from zero to 100.”
Overall 9th and highest rated healthcare company is Johnson & Johnson.

Lawsuit claims HHS sunset rule is a 'ticking timebomb' for agency: “A new lawsuit led by several health groups seeks to strike down a last-minute rule approved under the Trump administration that will create ‘incalculable costs and chaos’ for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
The lawsuit, filed… in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, concerns a controversial rule that requires HHS to review and approve any regulations 10 years or older to ensure they are up to date. Any rule that does not get approved or reviewed will expire in 2026.”

About Covid-19

Seven European countries clamp down on AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine as safety worries threaten rollout: “AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout has gotten off to a rocky start in Europe—to put it mildly. First, a supply shortfall triggered a public back-and-forth between executives and government officials. Then several countries expressed doubts about how well the vaccine works in people over 65. Now seven countries are raising safety concerns.
Denmark, Norway, Austria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Luxembourg have halted some or all of their AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccinations over fears of blood clots, France24 reports.”
In related articles: Thailand suspends AstraZeneca vaccine because of ‘adverse symptoms’ and
Britons told to keep getting vaccines after some countries suspend AstraZeneca shots

The U.S. bought enough coronavirus vaccines for three times its adult population: “They include:

  • 100 million doses from Johnson & Johnson

  • 300 million doses from Pfizer

  • 300 million doses from Moderna

  • 300 million doses from AstraZeneca

  • 100 million doses from Novovax

  • 100 million doses from Sanofi”

Only the first three have been approved in the US.
Former President Trump ordered doses in advance of approval from all these companies.
Will we export excess vaccines or hold them in a stockpile if we find we need to administer booster shots?

Vaccine efficacy probable against COVID-19 variants: “…studies show that what appears to be magnitudes of difference in NAb [neutralization antibody] activity may not necessarily correlate with clinical immunity. As variant strains emerge, we will need to reevaluate vaccine efficacy by testing the inhibition of viral infection in vivo rather than by quantifying the antibodies produced after in vitro exposure. Reliable proof of immunity through vaccination may only come through reinfection challenge experiments or through longitudinal studies of postvaccination subjects.”

Study Says Naturally-Produced COVID-19 Antibodies and Single Dose of Pfizer/BioNTech Vaccine May Be Sufficient: “A single dose of Pfizer/BioNTech’s vaccine after prior COVID-19 infection may generate the same or higher levels of antibodies as having had two doses of the vaccine, according to a small study led by researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine’s Vaccine Center.
The study also suggests that the immune responses in most patients previously infected with the virus did not improve further after a second dose of vaccine.”

‘An accelerated cauldron of evolution’: Covid-19 patients with cancer, HIV, may play a role in emergence of variants: “Some hospitalized patients with weakened immune systems were shown to have mutating viruses months before the variants were discovered in the outside world.”

Novavax coronavirus vaccine completely prevents severe illness, but was less effective at preventing infections by variants: “In its final analysis, which has not yet been peer-reviewed or published, the company said that its vaccine was 96 percent effective against mild, moderate and severe cases of covid-19 caused by the original strain. That dropped, modestly, to 86 percent against the B.1.1.7 variant first detected in the United Kingdom. In South Africa, where a variant called B.1.351 has become dominant, the vaccine was 55 percent effective against any cases of covid-19 among participants who were not infected with HIV.
But it was 100 percent effective against severe disease, including against the variants.”

Activists, drug groups in waiver war over COVID-19 shot patents: “A World Trade Organization (WTO) council is discussing a proposal by India and South Africa that COVID-19 vaccine and other medical patents be suspended to speed up technology transfers to manufacturers with spare production capacity.”
It is unclear why debate would need to take place when the compulsory license procedure applies to vaccine manufacture. (See the Technology chapter in the book.)

Eli Lilly COVID-19 antibody combo aces study, cutting hospitalizations and deaths by a whopping 87%: “Eli Lilly’s COVID-19 antibody combo already boasts an FDA authorization for patients at a high risk of developing severe disease, but now the company has even stronger data backing the duo.
In trial data released Wednesday, the company said its bamlanivimab-etesevimab duo slashed the risk of hospitalization and death by a whopping 87% versus placebo. Investigators tested a combination of 700 mg of bamlanivimab and 1400 mg of etesevimab in a trial comprising 769 patients total…
Patients over 65, or those under 65 but who are overweight or have multiple health problems, qualify as high-risk for treatment with the drug.”

What claims from 150,000 Cigna members reveal about common diagnoses post-COVID-19:
”Here are the five most common long-term, post-COVID-19 complications Cigna found:

1. Nervous system (headache/migraine, stroke and seizures)
2. Chronic respiratory conditions 
3. Heart disease 
4. Mental health disorders
5. Renal/urinary conditions”

Majority Approves Of Biden's Handling Of Pandemic, NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll Finds: “Sixty-two percent of Americans approve of how Biden is handling the pandemic.”

About the public’s health

Biden directing $2.5B to address mental health and addiction crisis: “The funds will be broken down into two components by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. 

  • $1.65 billion will go toward the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant, which gives the receiving states and territories money to improve already-existing treatment infrastructure and create or better prevention and treatment programs.

  • $825 million will be allocated through a Community Mental Health Services Block Grant program, which will be used by the states to deal specifically with mental health treatment services.”

Life expectancy in adulthood is falling for those without a BA degree, but as educational gaps have widened, racial gaps have narrowed: “Our main aim here is to document the patterns… that the fall in period life expectancy between 25 and 75 in the US population is confined to those without a 4-y college degree, and that this is true for men and women and for Black and White people. The widening educational differences have meant that education is now a sharper differentiator of expected years of life between 25 and 75 than is race [emphasis added], a reversal of the situation in 1990.”

Coalition eyes 100-day target for new vaccines against disease epidemics: “An international coalition set up to prepare for future infectious disease threats set out what it called its ‘moonshot’ plan on Wednesday to ensure new vaccines against emerging disease epidemics are developed within 100 days.
Launching a $3.5 billion five-year strategy to tackle future pandemic risks, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) said more needs to be done urgently to mitigate the threat posed by new COVID-19 variants, and to prepare for new infectious diseases…
CEPI, which was created in 2017 with initial donor funding from Germany, Japan and Norway and from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust global health charity, has played a key role in funding early development of a range of candidate vaccines against COVID-19.”

About pharma

Senate OKs Drug Exclusivity Change To Boost Generics: “The Senate has easily approved two bipartisan bills meant to lower prescription drug prices by boosting generics and biosimilars, including one proposal to tighten eligibility for the new drug exclusivity period during which innovators can avoid competition. The Ensuring Innovation Act would codify the U. S. Food and Drug Administration's efforts to award exclusivity based on the ‘active moiety’ rather than the ‘active ingredient,’ limiting when drug companies can get new exclusivity periods related to existing drugs and avoid competition from generic versions. It passed the Senate on Wednesday by unanimous consent, meaning no senator objected to its approval…”
If this bill becomes law it could be a huge “game changer” for pharma.

FDA's pandemic-related drug inspection backlog could drag on, GAO warns: “According to the US Government Accountability Office (GAO), the COVID-19 pandemic has forced the FDA to postpone more than 1000 of its planned fiscal year 2020 surveillance inspections, and the agency will ‘likely face a backlog of inspections in future years.’ The GAO report, which was recently submitted to a US House subcommittee, indicates that in addition to affecting inspections on the domestic front, pandemic-related travel restrictions and safety concerns have also hampered the FDA's ability to ensure the safety of imported medicines.”

Dr. Reddy's pulls hundreds of thousands of bottles of Lipitor generic over impurity fears: “Dr. Reddy’s Princeton, New Jersey, outfit is pulling hundreds of thousands of bottles of the cholesterol drug atorvastatin calcium in the U.S. due to impurities that turned up in the product. The company is also recalling one batch of the hormone progesterone after stability testing revealed subpar dissolution.”

Antibiotic/Antimicrobial Resistance: “Each year in the U.S., at least 2.8 million people get an antibiotic-resistant infection, and more than 35,000 people die.” This CDC update lays out the agency’s approach to addressing this problem.

Drug Price Spotlight: WOUND DRESSING PRODUCTS: From Optum: “In the U.S., chronic wounds affect an estimated 6.5 million people, resulting in annual treatment costs of up to $25 billion…
Notably, high-cost prescription wound dressings have not demonstrated consistent clinical benefit compared to those with similar active ingredients available in low-cost prescription or over-the-counter (OTC) form.
Recently, manufacturers have launched new brand-name prescription wound dressings that include similar combinations of ingredients as OTC and lower-cost generic products. Yet, they are priced far higher than the alternatives — up to 125 times more [SIL-K PAD® Silicone pads].” [All emphases in original].

FDA grants fast track designation to stem cell therapy for type 1 diabetes: “The FDA granted fast track designation to VX-880, a human stem cell-derived therapy for patients with type 1 diabetes, according to the agent’s manufacturer.
VX-880 (Vertex Pharmaceuticals) is a first-in-class, allogeneic, fully differentiated islet cell therapy designed to regulate glucose levels by restoring a patient’s pancreatic islet cell function, including insulin production.”

Takeda to Purchase Maverick for $525 Million to Boost T-Cell Therapy Pipeline: “Takeda Pharmaceutical is expanding its immune-oncology portfolio by acquiring Brisbane, Calif.-based Maverick Therapeutics for $525 million.
The Japanese drugmaker will gain access to Maverick’s COBRA T-cell engaging platform and development pipeline. T‐cell engager technology is designed to treat cancers by connecting patients’ T-cells to cancer cells.”

5 dated drugs that are getting new indications: Interesting look at these “old” medications. The article highlights the fact that technology assessment is a continuing process of reevaluation.

About healthcare IT

Mahana Therapeutics Earns CE Mark for Digital Irritable Bowel Syndrome Therapeutic:What is interesting about this article (other than the app itself) is the FDA approval of a digital treatment.

Incremental Benefits of Machine Learning—When Do We Need a Better Mousetrap?: A thoughtful review of machine learning, how it can help with analysis and where it falls short of promises. For example, for “typical clinical prediction tasks, wherein predictions are based on a modest number of clinical variables, ML algorithms are on par with logistic regression.”
However, “in medical image processing, prediction models have reached levels of performance unimaginable only a decade ago, largely because of the success and popularization of deep convolutional neural networks.”
In a related article: Association of Clinician Diagnostic Performance With Machine Learning[ML]–Based Decision Support Systems: A Systematic Review: “This systematic review found only sparse evidence that the use of ML-based CDSSs [Clinical Decision Support Systems] is associated with improved clinician diagnostic performance. Most studies had a low number of participants, were at high or unclear risk of bias, and showed little or no consideration for human factors. Caution should be exercised when estimating the current potential of ML to improve human diagnostic performance, and more comprehensive evaluation should be conducted before deploying ML-based CDSSs in clinical settings. The results highlight the importance of considering supported human decisions as end points rather than merely the stand-alone CDSSs outputs.”

Utah COVID-19 testing company stored data on public server, exposing 52,000 patients' info: “Premier Diagnostics, a Lehi, Utah-based diagnostic testing company, left about 52,000 patients' data exposed last month after storing the information on a publicly accessible server…”

American Medical Collection Agency reaches 40-state settlement for data breach that exposed 21 million patients' info: “American Medical Collection Agency on March 11 reached a settlement with 40 states and Washington D.C., to settle a complaint following a 2019 cyberattack that exposed 21 million Americans' personal information, including Social Security numbers, diagnoses and credit card information.
The Elmsford, N.Y.-based company specializes in small-balance medical-debt collection and offers services mostly for laboratories and medical testing facilities.”

Hackers Breach Thousands of Security Cameras, Exposing Tesla, Jails, Hospitals: “A group of hackers say they breached a massive trove of security-camera data collected by Silicon Valley startup Verkada Inc., gaining access to live feeds of 150,000 surveillance cameras inside hospitals, companies, police departments, prisons and schools.”

About health technology

FDA Clears Promaxo’s Magnetic Resonance Imaging Platform for Office Settings: “The FDA has granted Promaxo 510(k) marketing clearance for its office-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system, the Promaxo MRI.
The system is now cleared for use in hospitals and physicians’ offices for guiding prostate interventions using its scanner. It is intended for use by urologists and interventional/urologic radiologists for surgical localization of prostatic lesions in the office or outpatient surgical settings.
The device is easy to install in an office because it does not need special shielding or facility upgrades, and it does not require the use of endorectal coils in patients during MRI scans.”
While only approved for limited indications, this device has huge potential for other in-office uses.

About health insurance

Biden Administration Pauses Key Value-Based Reimbursement Models: “The Biden administration has paused several prominent value-based reimbursement models run by the CMS Innovation Center (CMMI) to review model details, according to several updates provided on model webpages.
Among the value-based reimbursement models impacted are the Geographic Direct Contracting Model, Primary Care First Model’s Seriously Ill Population option, and the Kidney Care Choices Model—three models approved by the Trump administration…
A separate update was also recently provided for the CMS' largest value-based reimbursement model, the Medicare Shared Savings Program, pushing back the application process timeline for accountable care organizations (ACOs) applying to participate starting Jan. 1, 2022.”

Ohio sues Centene, claims misrepresented pharmacy expenses cost Medicaid millions: “Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost filed a lawsuit against Centene March 11, claiming the company's subsidiary, Buckeye Health Plan, used a web of subcontractors to misrepresent pharmacy costs, which led to millions of dollars in overpayments by the state's Medicaid department.”

CMS Announces Final participants in Emergency Triage, Treat, and Transport (ET3) Model, Furthers Commitment to Ensure Beneficiaries Have Access to Quality Care and Treatment: This model extends the opportunity for payment to certain ambulance services treating patients on site, not just when they are transported to a hospital.

Supreme Court cancels arguments in Medicaid work requirement case: “The Supreme Court on Thursday called off upcoming arguments over a Trump-era plan to impose work requirements on Medicaid recipients after the Biden administration said it was considering scrapping the policy.
Arguments had been slated for March 29, but were removed from the court calendar after the Biden administration asked the justices last month to put the case on hold while it undertook a policy review.”
In a related article: HHS data highlights negative effects of work requirements

Providers Blast Medicare Spending Cuts in COVID Relief Package: “Implementation of the American Rescue Plan will trigger automatic spending cuts as a deficit control measure, resulting in $36 billion in Medicare spending cuts in fiscal year 2020 alone…
The American Hospital Association (AHA) is predicting hospitals alone to be down by up to $122 billion in 2021. That is on top of the estimated $323 billion in losses the previous year.”
In a related story: House to advance bill preventing automatic Medicare cuts: “House Democrats are planning to advance a bill that would stop automatic spending cuts to programs such as Medicare next week, a necessary step after President Biden signed the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package into law Thursday.”

Government will fully cover laid-off workers’ COBRA premiums through September: “The government will pay for laid-off workers to maintain their employer-sponsored health insurance through September, thanks to a provision in the $1.9 trillion stimulus package signed into law on Thursday by President Joe Biden.
As part of the relief bill, the government will subsidize COBRA premiums for former workers of a company until the fall.”

Pharmacy owner and accountant indicted in $134M health care fraud scheme: “4M Pharmaceuticals allegedly functioned as an outbound telemarketing call center that solicited Medicare, Medicaid and commercial insurance patients nationwide… The indictment alleges call center employees offered patients medically unnecessary diabetic supplies and topical creams although many refused the solicitations. However, 4M Pharmaceuticals and pharmacies allegedly billed the patient’s insurance plan anyway. In some cases, 4M pharmacies billed for prescriptions dispensed after a patient’s death, according to the allegations.
The scheme also allegedly targeted doctors. The charges allege 4M Pharmaceuticals sent fax requests for prescriptions that patients often did not authorize. In several cases, the company billed patients for prescription drugs without a valid prescription, according to the allegations. 4M pharmacies also allegedly sent prescription requests to doctors for dead patients.”

2 Texas Doctors Agree To Plead Guilty In Tricare Fraud Case: “Two doctors charged in an alleged $100 million Tricare fraud scheme agreed to plead guilty to charges of misusing a health identifier to write prescriptions and agreed to pay a total of $851,000 in restitution to the Defense Health Agency…”
According to another article: “The alleged fraud occurred between 2014 and 2016, and involved kickbacks and a conspiracy to sell soldiers pricey pain and scar creams that were unnecessary, while the military health plan paid for the ruse. The government said pharmacies paid marketers for attracting fraudulent prescriptions to their business while defendants paid kickbacks to doctors in order to refer more prescriptions.”

About hospitals and health systems

Trinity Health posts $2.7B in net income for 2nd half of its fiscal year: “Trinity Health reported earnings of $2.7 billion for the second half of its fiscal year that ended Dec. 31, 2020, a major jump over the $805 million it generated in the same period the year before.
Trinity posted its earnings Friday for the second half of its 2021 fiscal year that started in July 2020. The earnings come amid declines in patient service revenue due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Trinity Health is the latest hospital system to post positive earnings despite patient revenue declines.”

4 recent health system credit rating downgrades: FYI. However, in a related article: Debt default risk for hospitals drops from 2020 high: “In 2020, the median default odds jumped to 8.1 percent. However, as of March 8, the probability of default rate fell to 0.9 percent.”