Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Medicare Advantage and Medicare Prescription Drug Programs to Remain Stable as CMS Implements Improvements to the Programs in 2025 “Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that average premiums, benefits, and plan choices for Medicare Advantage (MA) and the Medicare Part D prescription drug program will remain stable in 2025. Average premiums are projected to decline in both the MA and Part D programs from 2024 to 2025. Enhancements adopted in the 2025 MA and Part D Final Rule, as well as payment policy updates in the 2025 MA and Part D Rate Announcement, support this stability and increase enrollee protections and access to care for people with Medicare.” 

About pharma

J&J to forgo 340B rebate plan implementation “Johnson & Johnson has decided to terminate implementation of its 340B rebate plan, according to an internal email 340B Health shared with Becker's.
In late August, the drugmaker planned to replace upfront 340B discounts with a rebate plan.
The Health Resources and Services Administration notified J&J that it would initiate proceedings to terminate the company's participation unless it halts its 340B rebate policy, which the agency said violates federal law, according to a Sept. 27 news release.”
 

About the public’s health

U.S. Preterm Births Are on the Rise “Over the past decade, rates of preterm birth in the United States jumped more than 10%, a new study of more than 5 million births shows.
The rise dovetailed with an increase in some factors that make an early delivery more likely, including rates of diabetes, sexually transmitted infections and mental health conditions, along with a corresponding decline in factors that protect against it.
Meanwhile, racial and economic disparities persist.”  

About healthcare IT

HEALTHCARE RANSOMWARE ATTACKS CONTINUE TO INCREASE IN NUMBER AND SEVERITY “Across all industry sectors, the number of organizations that reported suffering a ransomware attack in the past 12 months fell from 66% in 2023 to 59% in 2024. Sophos surveyed 402 healthcare organizations, and 67% said they had experienced a ransomware attack in the past 12 months, up from 60% the previous year, and on a par with the 66% that experienced ransomware attacks in 2022.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

A Snapshot of Sources of Coverage Among Medicare Beneficiaries KEY HIGHLIGHTS:

  • In 2022, Medicare enrollment was split equally between Medicare Advantage and traditional Medicare. Overall, more than 4 in 10 Medicare beneficiaries (44%), including beneficiaries in traditional Medicare and Medicare Advantage, had additional coverage from an employer or union sponsored plan (24%) or Medicaid (19%).

  • Nearly 90% of people in traditional Medicare had some form of additional coverage, such as Medigap (42%), employer or union-sponsored retiree health benefits (31%), or Medicaid (16%), but 11% (three million Medicare beneficiaries) had no additional coverage.

  • More than 40% of all Medicare Advantage enrollees also had some form of coverage from Medicaid (23%) or a union/employer sponsored retiree health plan (18%) in 2022.

  • Beneficiaries in traditional Medicare with Medigap and employer-sponsored insurance had higher incomes, were in relatively good health, had more years of education, and were less likely to be under age 65 with disabilities than all traditional Medicare beneficiaries.

  • As more beneficiaries have shifted to Medicare Advantage plans, the number of Medicare beneficiaries in traditional Medicare with no additional coverage has declined from 5.6 million in 2018 to 3.2 million in 2022. Traditional Medicare beneficiaries with no supplemental coverage were more likely to be under the age of 65 and have relatively lower incomes compared to traditional Medicare beneficiaries overall.

  • Medicare Advantage enrollees were more likely to be Black or Hispanic, self-report relatively poor health, have incomes below $20,000 per person, and have lower levels of education, compared to traditional Medicare beneficiaries in 2022.

  • Dual-eligible individuals accounted for a larger number and share of Medicare Advantage enrollees (7.0 million; 23%) than traditional Medicare beneficiaries (4.6 million; 16%) in 2022. Dual-eligible individuals in both traditional Medicare and Medicare Advantage were more likely to have lower incomes, self-report relatively poor health, identify as Black or Hispanic, and be under age 65 with disabilities than the overall Medicare population.” 


Nearly 7 in 10 Medicare Beneficiaries Did Not Compare Plans During Medicare’s Open Enrollment Period “Key Takeaways

  • Overall, nearly 7 in 10 (69%) Medicare beneficiaries did not compare their own source of Medicare coverage with other Medicare options offered in their area during the 2021 open enrollment period, while 31% did so. A larger share of beneficiaries in traditional Medicare than in Medicare Advantage did not compare their own source of coverage with other plans (73% vs 65%).

  • Among Medicare Advantage enrollees, more than 4 in 10 (43%) did not review their current plan’s coverage to check for potential changes in their plan’s premiums or other out-of-pocket costs, while the remainder (57%) did so. A similar share (44%) did not review their current plan for potential changes in the kinds of treatments, drugs, and services that would be covered in the following year.

  • Most enrollees in Medicare Advantage prescription drug plans (82%) and stand-alone prescription drug plan (PDPs) (69%) did not compare their plan’s drug coverage with drug coverage offered by other plans in their area.

  • Medicare’s official information resources are used by half or fewer of Medicare beneficiaries, with just a quarter (26%) reporting calling the toll-free number, 4 in 10 (42%) reporting visiting the Medicare website, and slightly more than half (54%) reporting reading some or parts of the Medicare & You handbook.”

Healthcare costs at a post-pandemic high, US employers prioritize affordability and wellbeing “WTW’s 2024 Best Practices in Healthcare Survey found that U.S. employers project their healthcare costs will increase by 7.7% in 2025, compared with 6.9% in 2024 and 6.5% in 2023. As a result of this uptick in costs, employers are reaching beyond traditional cost-shifting strategies to improve healthcare affordability and employee health. More than half of employers (52%) plan to implement programs that will reduce total costs, and just as many (51%) intend to adopt plan design and network strategies that steer to lower-cost, higher-quality providers and sites of care. Only 34% expect to shift costs to employees through premium contributions, and just 20% will promote account-based health plans or high-deductible health plans.” 

About pharma

FDA approves a novel drug for schizophrenia, a potential game changer “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration late Thursday approved a new kind of drug to treat schizophrenia, a breakthrough after 70 years of incremental innovation that appears to avoid side effects that cause many patients to stop taking their medication.
The new drug, Bristol Myers Squibb’s Cobenfy, targets a different area of the brain than traditional antipsychotic drugs to relieve symptoms like delusions without causing patients to gain weight, fall asleep and experience involuntary muscle jerking.”

 About the public’s health

Raising Taxes On These Products Could Generate $3.7 Trillion, Says New Report “‘Health Taxes: A Compelling Policy for the Crises of Today’ just released on September 24 described what could happen if such taxes were raised so that prices of these products would be increased by 50% around the world. Such higher prices could discourage the use of these products and thus prevent the noncommunicable diseases or NCDs that tobacco, alcohol and sugary beverages may cause. At the same time, doing so could end up generating an additional $3.7 trillion in revenue over the next five years. And having an extra several trillion dollars available could be kind of helpful.”

WHO director general: A breakthrough global agreement on combatting antimicrobial resistance “At the U.N. General Assembly in New York on Thursday, all countries approved a major new political declaration to radically scale up efforts to combat antimicrobial resistance (AMR) — a major threat to modern medicine.” 

The Uneven Surge in Diabetes in the United States “Takeaway

  • The overall prevalence of diabetes increased by 18.6% (P < .001) from 2012 to 2022, with the highest prevalence observed among non-Hispanic Black individuals (15.8%) and people aged ≥ 65 years (23.86%).

  • The likelihood of being diagnosed with diabetes was 1.15 times higher in men than in women, 5.16 times higher in adults aged 45-64 years than in those aged 18-24 years, and 3.64 times higher in those with obesity than in those with normal weight.

  • The risk for being diagnosed with diabetes was 1.60 times higher among Hispanic individuals, 1.67 times higher among non-Hispanic Asian individuals, and 2.10 times higher among non-Hispanic Black individuals than among non-Hispanic White individuals.

  • Individuals with a college education and higher income level were 24% and 41% less likely, respectively, to be diagnosed with diabetes.”

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Free covid tests by mail program revived by Biden administration Use this site to order your free Covid tests.

About health insurance/insurers

Insurers Expand Coverage Of Prescriptions Written By Pharmacists “Health insurance companies are beginning to pay for more prescriptions written by pharmacists as more states ease prescribing rules.
The expansion of reimbursement and health insurance coverage of prescriptions written by pharmacists comes following so-called “test to treat” legislation, which bestows prescribing status on pharmacists. Such state laws are sweeping the country as more lawmakers pass legislation that expands the role of pharmacists to prescribe certain medicines.”

About hospitals and healthcare systems

AGE-FRIENDLY HOSPITAL RATING “The Age-Friendly Hospital Rating is a new structural measure included in the CMS 2025 IPPS Final Rule. This measure is designed to assess hospitals' commitment to delivering high-quality care to patients 65 and older. The rating focuses on five key domains: patient goals, medication management, frailty screening, social vulnerability, and leadership commitment.”

Estimation of Tax Benefit of US Nonprofit Hospitals “Analyzing data from Medicare Cost Reports, a total of 2927 US nonprofit hospitals received a $37.4 billion total tax benefit in 2021. Tax benefit varies widely across states and is highly concentrated among a small number of hospitals. More than half of the total tax benefit was received at the state and local levels.”
This research invites the question: Are these hospitals providing community benefit commensurate with these tax breaks?

About the public’s health

EPA must address fluoridated water's risk to children's IQs, US judge rules “A federal judge in California has ordered the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to strengthen regulations for fluoride in drinking water, saying the compound poses an unreasonable potential risk to children at levels that are currently typical nationwide.
U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in San Francisco on Tuesday sided with several advocacy groups, finding the current practice of adding fluoride to drinking water supplies to fight cavities presented unreasonable risks for children’s developing brains.”
Comment: USPHS recommends water concentration of fluoride of 0.7mg/L. Adverse effects on children begin at 1.5mg/L.

Almost 200 Chemicals Linked to Breast Cancer Are Found in Food Packaging “Key Takeaways

  • Food packaging materials contain nearly 200 chemicals linked to breast cancer

  • Researchers identified 143 suspected carcinogens in plastic packaging, and 89 in paper or cardboard

  • There’s strong evidence that humans are regularly exposed to at least 76 of these chemicals “

 

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Jury finds BCBS Louisiana shortchanged surgical center by $400M “BCBS Louisiana was accused of shortchanging the center on thousands of breast reconstruction surgeries. The jury determined that BCBS committed fraud when it authorized around 7,800 surgeries from 2015 to 2023 and then paid only about 9% of the related claims.”

Affordable Care Act Marketplace Coverage for the Self-Employed and Small Business Owners A good review from the Treasury Department.

Employees prioritize better health benefits over higher salary, survey finds “…more than half of employed Americans strongly or somewhat agree they would take a lower salary for employer contributions to health savings and spending accounts (59%), and better access to voluntary benefit offerings such as critical illness, hospital indemnity, disability income and accident insurance (54%)."

About the public’s health

 Pentagon to spend $500M on women’s health research “First lady Jill Biden announced Monday that the Pentagon intends to commit $500 million to women’s health research as part of a broader White House push to increase funding for the study of women’s health.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Resource Use and Care Quality Differences Among Medicare Beneficiaries Undergoing Chemotherapy Question  Are there differences in resource use and quality of care between patients with cancer undergoing chemotherapy who are enrolled in Medicare Advantage (MA) vs traditional Medicare (TM)?…
In this cohort study of Medicare beneficiaries with cancer undergoing chemotherapy, MA enrollment was associated with lower resource use but not shorter survival.”
For an editorial comment, see: The Promise and Perils of Oncology Care in Medicare Advantage

 Additional Oversight of Remote Patient Monitoring in Medicare Is Needed 
What OIG Found
Taken together, our findings demonstrate the need for additional oversight to ensure that remote patient monitoring is being used and billed appropriately.
—The use of remote patient monitoring in Medicare increased dramatically from 2019 to 2022.
—About 43 percent of enrollees who received remote patient monitoring did not receive all 3 components of it, raising questions about whether the monitoring is being used as intended.
—OIG and CMS have raised concerns about fraud related to remote patient monitoring.
—Medicare lacks key information for oversight, including who ordered the monitoring for the enrollee.
What OIG Recommends
OIG recommends that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) take the following steps to strengthen oversight of remote patient monitoring:
—Implement additional safeguards to ensure that remote patient monitoring is used and billed appropriately in Medicare.
—Require that remote patient monitoring be ordered and that information about the ordering provider be included on claims and encounter data for remote patient monitoring.|
—Develop methods to identify what health data are being monitored.
—Conduct provider education about billing of remote patient monitoring.
—Identify and monitor companies that bill for remote patient monitoring.”

About the public’s health

NIH establishes pandemic preparedness network, plans up to $100M in yearly funding for work on new treatments and vaccinesThe Research and Development of Vaccines and Monoclonal Antibodies for Pandemic Preparedness network (ReVAMPP) will research pathogens that currently lack effective treatments and vaccines, with the NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) committing up to $100 million per year to the effort so long as funds are available…”

Quality Indicators for Pain in Adults: A Review of Performance Measures by the American College of Physicians The opioid epidemic spurred a backlash to curb use of these medications for pain. This article suggests appropriate measures to measure the quality of appropriate pain control.
“Six pain performance measures relevant to internal medicine were identified (See Table). One assesses the overuse of imaging for low back pain (CMIT 746), 4 address treatment of pain using opioids (CMIT 150, CMIT 748, CBE 2950, and CBE 2951), and 1 evaluates the patient experience of receiving their desired help for pain (CBE 3666). The latter 3 performance measures have never been used in a national accountability program and do not have CMIT numbers. ACP supports the performance measure about imaging for low back pain (CMIT 746) and the 2 that monitor the use of opioids (CMIT 748 and CBE 2950). The other performance measures (CMIT 150, CBE 2951, and CBE 3666) are not supported (See Figure 1).”

Only 45% of older adults will get updated COVID vaccines “Only 45% of Americans age 50 and older say they're likely to get the updated COVID-19 vaccine this season, according to a poll today from the University of Michigan. 
The poll shows many at high risk of severe illness appear unlikely to seek the vaccine, and interest in an updated vaccine varies widely by age-group, education level, and other factors.
The results come from the National Poll on Healthy Aging conducted in August. At the time of polling, new COVID vaccines were not yet widely available, but they had been approved for use and endorsed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 
Among adults 75 and older, 59% said they were likely to get the updated COVID-19 shot, with 49% of them saying they’re very likely and 10% saying they're somewhat likely. Among adults 65 to 74, 51% said they were likely to get the vaccine.” 

Today's News and Commentary

Mirror, Mirror 2024: A Portrait of the Failing U.S. Health System An excellent review by the Commonwealth Foundation. At minimum, look at the Exhibits. Unfortunately, measures to “improve” our healthcare system are almost exclusively directed at financial changes and not a restructuring of the way care is delivered.

About healthcare quality/safety

Bringing PREMs and PROMs Into Value-Based Care “During a Sept. 17 panel discussion, Susannah Bernheim, M.D. , M.H.S., chief quality officer and acting chief medical officer with the CMS Innovation Center, described how CMS alternative payment models are evolving to include patient-reported measures. 
Bernheim, who was previously senior director of quality measurement at the Yale-New Haven Hospital Centers for Outcomes Research and Evaluation (CORE), was speaking at an Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality meeting about bringing patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) into value-based care. “

White House unveils sweeping healthcare safety efforts: 8 notes A good summary of some items mentioned in last week’s Blog. 

About health insurance/insurers

Marking 50 Years of ERISA A reminder from AHIP

Healthcare billing fraud: 10 recent cases As usual, notice the preponderance of these acts against public programs.  

About the public’s health

FDA approves first nasal spray flu vaccine for use at home “The Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved the first at-home flu vaccine, a nasal spray that consumers with a prescription will be able to order online starting next year.
Health experts say the convenience of the spray — FluMist — could lead to increased flu vaccination rates.
The maker of the vaccine, AstraZeneca, said it will supply the vaccine to a third-party online pharmacy where people can complete a screening assessment to determine if they are candidates. The pharmacy will then evaluate patients’ eligibility and decide if they are able to administer the vaccine.”

About healthcare finance

Cardinal Health acquiring Integrated Oncology Network for $1.1B “Healthcare supply and services company Cardinal Health has a deal in place to acquire Integrated Oncology Network, a collection of more than 50 community oncology centers, for just over $1.1 billion, the companies announced Friday.
The pickup will see ION’s practices, over 100 providers and other practice management and practice growth services join Navista, Cardinal’s cancer unit.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Walmart workers sue over higher premiums from 'unfair' tobacco surcharge “The workers said the surcharge raises premiums for certain employees, violating anti-discrimination provisions in the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) based on tobacco use.
Walmart charged employees that used tobacco $30 to $195 per biweekly pay period. Households with more tobacco users and health plan type were factors that determined how much extra individuals paid.
These funds were withheld from paychecks and deposited in the health plan’s trust account. On average, this totaled $1,150 annually per plaintiff in the lawsuit.”
Comment: The ACA exchange plans allow for companies to charge smokers more for their insurance.

An Examination of Medicaid Renewal Outcomes and Enrollment Changes at the End of the Unwinding “Key Takeaways

  • During the unwinding of the Medicaid continuous enrollment provision, over 25 million people were disenrolled and over 56 million had their coverage renewed. Overall, 31% of people whose coverage was redetermined during the unwinding were disenrolled, but that share ranged widely across states. For example, five states—Montana, Utah, Idaho, Oklahoma, and Texas—have disenrollment rates over 50%, while five states—North Carolina, Maine, Oregon, California, and Connecticut—have disenrollment rates under 20%.

  • Despite millions of disenrollments during the unwinding, nationally, nearly 10 million more people are currently enrolled in Medicaid/CHIP than at the start of the pandemic. While enrollment among adults is over 20% higher than in February 2020, child enrollment has nearly returned to pre-pandemic levels and is only 5% higher.

  • Several factors likely explain the net growth in Medicaid enrollment. The pandemic may have encouraged some people who were previously eligible for Medicaid but not enrolled to newly enroll, and during the unwinding, many states took steps to improve their renewal processes to reduce the number of people who were disenrolled despite remaining eligible. In addition, several states expanded eligibility for certain groups, including five states that adopted Medicaid expansion since the onset of the pandemic.

  • Similar to the national trend, Medicaid/CHIP enrollment in most states is higher than it was in February 2020; however, total Medicaid/CHIP enrollment has fallen below pre-pandemic enrollment in three states, Montana, Colorado, and Arkansas, and child enrollment is lower in 12 states.”


Indiana insurers, hospitals accused of Medicaid fraud in giant whistleblower lawsuit “Major Indiana managed care organizations and health systems are blamed for defrauding the state Medicaid system by tens, if not hundreds, of millions of dollars, says a newly unsealed whistleblower lawsuit.
Implicated in the lawsuit is Anthem, the largest managed care company in Blue Cross Blue Shield Association; CareSource, one of the country’s largest managed health plans; and Coordinated Care, a subsidiary of Centene; and MDwise.
Health systems named are Indiana University Health, Ascension Health, Lutheran Health Network and other regional hospitals…
The insurers are accused of misusing Medicaid funds by violating standard hospital billing rules, paying for services after patients already died, improperly paying chiropractic office visits and improperly bundling dental and opioid treatment claims. Insurers knew reporting higher expenditures in the encounter data would result in greater capitated payments in the future, the lawsuit said.” 

About pharma

FTC formally sues PBMs over insulin prices and warns manufacturers “The Federal Trade Commission is suing the titans of the pharmacy benefit manager industry for anticompetitive practices and artificially raising the price of insulin drug prices, the agency announced Friday.
The complaint alleges that Optum Rx, Express Scripts and Caremark — all vertically integrated with UnitedHealth Group, Cigna and CVS Health, respectively — caused patients to pay more for life-saving drugs and engaging in ‘rigging pharmaceutical supply chain competition in their favor.’”

 About healthcare IT

Tech Trends 2025 An interesting monograph covering:
AI Avatars
Quantum Advantage
Expert Models 
Deepfake Defense
Post-Quantum Cryptography
AI Sovereignty 
Digital Humans
Pre-Quantum Foundations
Exponential AI

­‑About healthcare personnel

Examining Physician, Resident and Student Wellbeing and Impact of the Current Healthcare Landscape “Highlights of the key findings identified this year include:
—Six in 10 physicians and residents, and seven in 10 medical students reported often experiencing burnout
—More than half of physicians know of a physician who has ever considered, attempted or died by suicide
—Seven in 10 physicians and medical students, and at least six in 10 residents agree that consolidation is having a negative impact on patient access to high-quality, cost-efficient care
—According to physicians, negative impacts of mergers/acquisitions include job satisfaction (50%), quality of patient care (36%), independent medical judgment (35%) and patient healthcare costs (30%)

About healthcare finance

PRIVATE EQUITY’S REVENUE CYCLE:CREATING AND COLLECTING U.S. MEDICAL DEBT “KEY POINTS
Medical debt has become a significant burden on U.S. patients in recent years, impacting 14 million people and totaling at least $220 billion
—Debt collection falls within a healthcare subsector called revenue cycle management (RCM), which includes identifying, managing, and collecting medical claims and patient payments
—In recent years private equity investment in revenue cycle management companies has been elevated despite a downturn in private equity investment more generally
—Private equity firms have consolidated debt collectors, medical payments, and other revenue cycle management functions into “end-to-end” service providers, coordinated from the point of initial patient contact to aggressive follow-up on payments for services
—Some private equity-owned debt collectors have suggested that they are more aggressive than other debt collection companies
—Private equity-owned revenue cycle management companies have increasingly helped facilitate loans – through medical credit cards, installment plans, and strategic partnerships with financial service providers – to indebt patients who cannot afford to pay a full medical bill at one time
—A number of private equity-owned debt collectors have received complaints in the CFPB consumer complaint database – which includes data going back to late 2011 – primarily around attempts to collect debts that are not owed or collecting wrong amounts
—There are measures lawmakers can take to address potential harms from private equity’s ownership of companies creating the debt crisis, including limitations on medical debt, restrictions on medical debt collectors, and increased ownership transparency.

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

Scientists again link covid pandemic origin to Wuhan market animals “An international team of scientists published a peer-reviewed paper Thursday saying genetic evidence indicates the coronavirus pandemic most likely originated with a natural spillover from an animal or animals sold in a market in Wuhan, China, where many of the first human cases of covid were identified.
The paper, which appears in the journal Cell, does not claim to prove conclusively that the pandemic began in the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, and it is unlikely to end the acrimonious and politicized debate over the coronavirus’s origin.”

About health insurance/insurers

Oak Street Health pays $60M to settle insurance agent kickback allegations “Chicago-based health care firm Oak Street Health has agreed to pay $60 million to resolve allegations from the U.S. Department of Justice that it paid kickbacks to third-party insurance agents in exchange for recruiting seniors to Oak Street’s primary care clinics.” 

About healthcare systems

2024: A Portrait of the Failing U.S. Health System From the Commonwealth Fund, another indictment of our healthcare system. “The top three countries are Australia, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, although differences in overall performance between most countries are relatively small. The only clear outlier is the U.S., where health system performance is dramatically lower.”
Look at comparisons in Exhibit 1. 

About the public’s health
American Association for Cancer Research:CANCER PROGRESS REPORT 2024 An excellent report on the status of cancer in the U.S. For example: “…the overall cancer death rate in the United States has fallen by 33 percent between 1991 and 2021, a reduction that translates into averting more than 4.1 million deaths from cancer. The drop in overall cancer mortality is attributable to reductions in smoking, as well as improvements in early detection and treatment of certain cancers….Even though significant progress has been made, cancer continues to be an ongoing public health challenge in the United States and around the world. In the United States alone, it is estimated that more than two million new cancer cases will be diagnosed in 2024. Among the challenges we face is that the advances have not been uniform for all types and stages of cancer. As one example, while the overall cancer incidence in the United States has stabilized in recent years, cases of certain cancer types, such as pancreatic cancer, uterine cancer, and human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated oral cancers, are increasing.”
A NY Times summary of the report notes: “The report estimates that 40 percent of all cancer cases are associated with modifiable risk factors. It recommends reducing alcohol consumption, along with making lifestyle changes such as avoiding tobacco, maintaining a healthy diet and weight, exercising, avoiding ultraviolet radiation and minimizing exposure to pollutants.” 

About healthcare personnel

Biden-Harris Administration Announces Nearly $100 Million to Grow the Health Workforce “Today’s announcement includes the following HRSA investments:

  • Growing the nursing workforce for acute and long-term care: HRSA is awarding more than $19 million over four years to five schools, including two community colleges, to increase the nursing workforce practicing in acute care settings and long-term care facilities.

  • Increasing the primary care physician workforce in high-need areas: HRSA is providing nearly $12 million in 2024 to three medical schools to help boost the number of primary care physicians in medically underserved rural, and tribal communities.

  • Responding to the nation’s opioid crisis: HRSA is awarding more than $63 million over four years to 32 organizations to train and increase the number of peer support specialists and other community-based providers, such as community health workers, to provide mental health services and family support to children whose parents or guardians are impacted by opioid use disorders and other substance use disorders.  

  • Integrating mental health care in pediatric care: HRSA is providing an additional $4.6 million to existing grantees to expand their efforts to provide pediatricians mental health training and to support pediatricians in conducting tele-consultations with psychiatrists to provide real-time behavioral health support to their child and adolescent patients.”  

Today's News and Commentary

About healthcare quality and safety

Biden administration unveils multi-agency patient safety programs, industry commitments “The Biden administration met World Patient Safety Day with a blitz of new programs, panel discussions and commitments from government agencies as well as healthcare industry organizations all focused on reducing harm within healthcare.
At the top of that list is the formation of a cross-agency, public-private National Action Alliance for Patient and Workforce Safety.
Headed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), the initiative is planning to develop and release a National Healthcare Safety Dashboard to display nationwide progress against preventable patient and workforce harm. The dashboard will reflect all settings of care but will begin with hospitals.”

CDC unveils program to reduce diagnostic errors “The agency partnered with CMS and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality to develop the resources, which include tools tailored for hospitals as well as for patients and their families. The tools, outlined in a Sept. 17 news release shared with Becker's, include:
—A guide, titled "The Core Elements of Hospital Diagnostic Excellence Programs," that outlines key action items for hospitals to improve diagnostic safety
—A set of diagnostic excellence assessment tools to support hospitals in implementing the core elements
—A checklist empowering hospitalized patients and their families to ask questions regarding their diagnosis” 

About health insurance/insurers

State of Medicare Advantage 2024 A great update on the program. 

About pharma

The Science of Biosimilars—Updating Interchangeability A good review of the subject.

About the public’s health

NPR Exclusive: U.S. overdose deaths plummet, saving thousands of lives “National surveys compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention already show an unprecedented decline in drug deaths of roughly 10.6 percent. That's a huge reversal from recent years when fatal overdoses regularly increased by double-digit percentages…
While many people offered theories about why the drop in deaths is happening at unprecedented speed, most experts agreed that the data doesn't yet provide clear answers.” 

About healthcare personnel

 The physician shortage isn’t going anywhere “Approximately 35 percent of physician respondents indicate they are likely to leave their current roles in the next five years, of which roughly 60 percent say they are likely to leave clinical practice entirely. This upcoming shift is not just restricted to physicians nearing the traditional retirement age. Of those surveyed who say they are likely to leave, 59 percent of those aged 54 to 64 note that early retirement or leaving the care delivery workforce is their most likely next step, and 13 percent share that they would prefer to move to an administrative role within the care delivery workforce.” 

About health technology

Apple Watch sleep apnea detection gets FDA approval “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration Monday published approval for sleep apnea detection on the Apple Watch Series 9, Series 10, and Watch Ultra 2. The green light comes four days ahead of the Series 10’s September 20 release date.
The feature, announced at last week’s iPhone 16 event, will arrive as part of the imminent watchOS 11 release. Once enabled, it requires 10 nights of sleep tracking data spread out over a 30-day span to determine whether a user may have the condition. During that time, it also offers insights into nightly sleeping disturbances, utilizing the on-board accelerometer.”

The FDA Calls Them ‘Recalls,’ Yet the Targeted Medical Devices Often Remain in Use An excellent review, whose message is that device “recalls” are not like other product recalls.

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

NCQA annual report You can search by state and/or number of stars. Only 5 Five star plans this year.

About pharma

DIY medicine draws frustrated patients to online forums An interesting article about how patients are looking to lower costs for medications by adopting DIY solutions.

About the public’s health

Global burden of bacterial antimicrobial resistance [AMR] 1990–2021: a systematic analysis with forecasts to 2050 “Our findings show the importance of infection prevention, as shown by the reduction of AMR deaths in those younger than 5 years. Simultaneously, our results underscore the concerning trend of AMR burden among those older than 70 years, alongside a rapidly ageing global community.” 
For more details, read the “Findings” section. Unfortunately antibiotics are much less profitable than other medications, so the desire to invest in these medications is not great. Government intervention would be helpful in promoting drug development.

Vaping Is Harming College Students' Brains, Study Shows “Students who vaped 10 to 20 puffs per day had scores 9% lower than those who did not vape or smoke, while those who vaped more than 20 puffs a day had scores nearly 14% lower, researchers found.”

Microplastics in the Olfactory Bulb of the Human Brain “The presence of microplastics in the human olfactory bulb suggests the olfactory pathway as a potential entry route for microplastics into the brain, highlighting the need for further research on their neurotoxic effects and implications for human health.”

Evidence for widespread human exposure to food contact chemicals[FCCs] “Over 1800 food contact chemicals (FCCs) are known to migrate from food contact articles used to store, process, package, and serve foodstuffs. Many of these FCCs have hazard properties of concern, and still others have never been tested for toxicity. Humans are known to be exposed to FCCs via foods, but the full extent of human exposure to all FCCs is unknown…
Based on two subsets totalling 410 FCCs, this study further identifies 105 FCCs of high concern due to their hazard properties and highlights the many data gaps related to hazards and human health risks. We make these data accessible in the user-friendly, freely accessible FCChumon dashboard

UK urged to tax ‘unhealthy’ food companies to boost national health “Reduced illness could save NHS £18bn per year by mid-2030s, says think-tank.
The UK should increase tax on tobacco, alcohol and “unhealthy food companies” to raise £10bn a year by the end of the decade to boost the nation’s health, a leading think-tank has said.”
Such taxation works to reduce unhealthy consumotion, but the push-back from affected interest groups makes their enactment very difficult.

About healthcare IT

Healthcare IT spend balloons “Healthcare providers and payers increased their IT spend in the last year and many see additional budget bumps in the future, according to a report compiled by KLAS and Bain & Co.

The report surveys 150 healthcare provider and payer executives across the U.S. More than half of providers said software and technology investments were in the top three priorities for their organizations, and around 80% indicated their IT budgets increased in the last 12 months.

The top five software and digital technology priorities for providers this year include:
1. Infrastructure and services (with cybersecurity)
2. Clinical workflow optimization
3. Data platforms and interoperability
4. Revenue cycle management
5. Patient engagement
EHRs were No. 6 on the list and telehealth was No. 8. The top pain points for new technology were costs, EHR integration and streamlined data access. The leaders surveyed also cited interoperability and cybersecurity vulnerability as big challenges for new technology integration.”

About healthcare personnel

Future of the U.S. Healthcare Industry:Healthcare Labor Market Projections by 2028 You can download the full report from this site; but first look at the excellent interactive map.

About health technology

Class I Recalls of Cardiovascular Devices Between 2013 and 2022: A Cross-Sectional Analysis “Cardiovascular devices with Class I recalls were infrequently subjected to premarket or postmarket testing, with recalls affecting thousands of patients annually.” 

Today's News and Commentary

About Covid-19

US COVID activity remains elevated, though some markers decline “Hospitalization levels for COVID are still elevated but have been declining since early August. The CDC said the highest levels are in seniors and in children younger than 2 years old.
Deaths declined 8% compared to the previous week, and fatalities from COVID currently make up 2.3% of all deaths. The CDC received reports of 534 COVID deaths last week, based on provisional data. During the preceding week, 954 deaths were reported.” 

About health insurance/insurers

The best-rated health plans of 2024: NCQA See the list.

About hospitals and healthcare systems

AT CATHOLIC HOSPITALS, A MISSION OF CHARITY RUNS UP AGAINST HIGH CARE COSTS FOR PATIENTS KEY TAKEAWAYS
To maintain their tax-exempt status, all nonprofit hospitals are required to spend on community benefits, but federal law doesn't specify how much or which services qualify.
Health systems like CommonSpirit Health, Ascension, PeaceHealth, Trinity Health, and Providence St. Joseph pay their chief executives millions of dollars a year.
CommonSpirit Health's then-CEO Lloyd Dean earned roughly $28 million in 2022; Rod Hochman, CEO of Providence St. Joseph Health, earned $12.1 million and; Ascension CEO Joseph Impicciche was paid $9.1 million.”
The entire article is worth reading.

About pharma

One-Year Weight Reduction With Semaglutide or Liraglutide in Clinical Practice “In this cohort study of 3389 patients with obesity, the mean percentage of body weight change from baseline to 1 year was −5.1% for semaglutide vs −2.2% for liraglutide treatment; −3.2% for type 2 diabetes vs −5.9% for obesity indications; and −5.5% for patients with persistent medication coverage vs −2.8% with 90 to 275 coverage days and −1.8% with fewer than 90 coverage days. Factors positively associated with achieving at least 10% weight reduction at year 1 included semaglutide (vs liraglutide), obesity as a treatment indication (vs type 2 diabetes), persistent medication coverage, high dosage, and female sex.” 

About the public’s health

Flu Deaths in Children Last Season Reach 199, Matching Record “CDC reported two new flu-related deaths in children last week, bringing the total for the 2023-2024 season to 199. Any number of pediatric deaths is a deeply tragic reminder that influenza can cause severe illness, and the number of deaths reported so far this season equals the previous high of 199 reported during the 2019-2020 season.
Of the 158 children who were eligible for a flu vaccine and for whom vaccination status is known, 131 (83%) were not fully vaccinated.”

Intake of sugar sweetened beverages [SSBs] among children and adolescents in 185 countries between 1990 and 2018: population based studyThis study found that intakes of SSBs among children and adolescents aged 3-19 years in 185 countries increased by 23% from 1990 to 2018, parallel to the rise in prevalence of obesity among this population globally. SSB intakes showed large heterogeneity among children and adolescents worldwide and by age, parental level of education, and urbanicity. This research should help to inform policies to reduce SSB intake among young people, particularly those with larger intakes across all education levels in urban and rural areas in Latin America and the Caribbean, and the growing problem of SSBs for public health in sub-Saharan Africa.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

US employers expect nearly 6% spike in health insurance costs in 2025, Mercer says “U.S. employers expect health insurance costs to rise an average 5.8% in 2025, largely due to increased cost of medical services as well as higher use, according to a survey released by consulting firm Mercer on Thursday.
The year 2025 is projected to be the third consecutive year in which healthcare costs for employers rise by more than 5%. Costs increased an average 3% during the decade prior, the report said.” 

About hospitals and healthcare systems

New Analysis Shows Hospitals Improving Performance on Key Patient Safety Measures Surpassing Pre-pandemic Levels Key Takeaways

  • Despite being sicker and more complex, hospitalized patients in the first quarter of 2024 were on average over 20% more likely to survive than expected given the severity of their illnesses compared to the fourth quarter of 2019.

  • Based on Vizient’s analysis, the AHA using national hospitalization data projects that while caring for sicker patients, hospitals’ efforts to improve safety led to 200,000 Americans hospitalized between April 2023 and March 2024 surviving episodes of care they wouldn’t have in 2019.

  • Hospitals cared for more patients overall in the first quarter of 2024 than in the last quarter of 2019, including providing care to a sicker, more complex patient population.

  • Hospitals’ central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI) and catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI) in the first quarter of 2024 were at rates lower than those recorded in the fourth quarter of 2019.

  • Not only did multiple key preventive health screenings rapidly rebound to pre-pandemic levels, but ongoing improvement has led to a 60%-to-80% increase in breast, colon and cervical cancer screenings in the first quarter of 2024 compared to the fourth quarter 2019.” 

About pharma

Walgreens pays $107M over prescription billing fraud claim “Walgreens Boots Alliance has agreed to pay a $106.8 million fine to the U.S. Department of Justice to settle allegations that it billed government health care programs for prescriptions never dispensed.”  

About the public’s health

New CDC Data Show Adult Obesity Prevalence Remains High New CDC population data from 2023 show that in 23 states more than one in three adults (35%) has obesity. Before 2013, no state had an adult obesity prevalence at or above 35%. Currently, at least one in five adults (20%) in each U.S. state is living with obesity.”

The 12 Cinnamon Powders You Should Never Use “12 of the 36 products measured above 1 part per million of lead—the threshold that triggers a recall in New York, the only state in the U.S. that regulates heavy metals in spices.”

Twice-a-year injection reduced risk of HIV infection by 96%, drug company says — more than daily PrEP pill “In a Phase 3 clinical trial, 99.9% of participants who took a twice-a-year injection of lenacapavir for HIV prevention did not acquire an infection, according to data from drugmaker Gilead Sciences.”

Many Americans Wary of Vaccines as Fall Flu, COVID Season Looms: Survey “More than one-third of those polled (37%) said they’d gotten vaccines in the past but don’t plan to this year, according to results from a nationwide Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center survey.
Just a slight majority -- 56% -- plan to get the flu shot this fall, researchers found.
Less than half (43%) say they’ll get the updated COVID vaccine.”

About healthcare IT

EHR Interoperability 2024 “Regardless of EHR vendor, interoperability is a major pain point for clinicians amid an already painful EHR experience. Among the 11 metrics used to calculate the Net EHR Experience Survey (NEES), clinicians are least satisfied with external integration—only 44% of respondents agree their EHR provides expected integration with outside organizations. In particular, physicians most frequently cite interoperability as a challenge and report that it is their top fix request, noting that external patient data often isn’t readily available in their EHR and, if found, is difficult to leverage (see next section). Of all clinical backgrounds measured by the Arch Collaborative, physicians have the lowest average NEES—22 points lower (on a -100 to 100 point scale) than the average NEES of other clinician types.”
The results haven’t varied significantly since 2018.

About health technology

FDA authorizes first OTC hearing aid software to be used in Apple's AirPods Pro “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Thursday authorized the first over-the-counter hearing aid software that is intended to be used with compatible versions of the Apple AirPods Pro headphones.” 

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Behavioral Health:Information on Cost-Sharing in Medicare and Medicare Advantage [From the GAO] “Behavioral health conditions were estimated to affect at least a quarter of the 66.7 million Medicare beneficiaries in 2023. There have been longstanding concerns about behavioral health services accessibility, even for those with health coverage.
This report describes what behavioral health benefits are available under Medicare and Medicare Advantage programs, what beneficiaries pay out of pocket, and more.
For example, in traditional Medicare in 2024, beneficiaries had to pay a deductible of $1,632 for any acute or psychiatric inpatient hospital stay up to 60 days long, with coinsurance payments for additional days.”

Changes in Out-of-Pocket Spending for Common Oral Cancer Medications After the Inflation Reduction Act “This economic evaluation found that the OOP cap legislated by the IRA may save patients enrolled in Part D plans a median of $7260 in 2024 for oral cancer medications. These savings will likely continue to grow as the OOP cap decreases from about $3500 in 2024 to $2000 in 2025.”

Medicare Advantage Quality Bonus Payments Will Total at Least $11.8 Billion in 2024 
Key Takeaways:

  • After increasing by more than 400% between 2015 and 2023, federal spending on Medicare Advantage bonus payments will decline by $1 billion (8%) to $11.8 billion in 2024, following the expiration of pandemic-era policies that temporarily increased star ratings for some plans. Despite the decline, total spending on Medicare Advantage plan bonuses is higher in 2024 than in every year between 2015 and 2022.

  • Most Medicare Advantage enrollees (72%) are in plans that are receiving bonus payments in 2024. Though the share declined from 2023 (85%), it is similar to the share observed in 2022 (75%).

  • The average bonus payment per enrollee is highest for employer- and union-sponsored Medicare Advantage plans ($456) and lowest for special needs plans ($330), raising questions about the implications of the quality bonus program for equity.

  • Bonus payments vary substantially across firms, with UnitedHealthcare receiving the largest total payments ($3.4 billion) and Kaiser Permanente receiving the highest payment per enrollee ($516).” 

About pharma

 Open-Label Placebo Injection for Chronic Back Pain With Functional Neuroimaging “The findings of this trial suggest that open-label placebo treatments can confer meaningful clinical benefits to patients with chronic back pain by engaging prefrontal-brainstem pathways linked to pain regulation and opioidergic function.” 

Evernorth making Stelara biosimilar available for $0 out-of-pocket “Evernorth Health Services, a subsidiary of Cigna, plans to have a Stelara biosimilar available for $0 out-of-pocket cost for eligible patients of its specialty pharmacy, Accredo, beginning in early 2025.
The interchangeable biosimilar will be produced for Evernorth's affiliate private label distributor, Quallent Pharmaceuticals, and will be available at $0 out-of-pocket for most patients through Quallent's copay assistance program.
The program is expected to save individual patients around $4,000 on average per year, according to Evernorth.”

About healthcare quality and safety

Data analysis reveals common errors that prevent patients from getting timely, accurate diagnoses “ECRI's data analysis found that most errors (nearly 70 percent) occurred during the testing process – including when healthcare staff are ordering, collecting, processing, obtaining results, or communicating results. Twelve percent of errors occurred in the monitoring and follow-up phase; with nearly nine percent during the referral and consultation phase.
Of errors that occurred during testing, more than 23 percent were a result of a technical or processing error, like the misuse of testing equipment, a poorly processed specimen, or a clinician lacking the proper skill to conduct the test. Another 20 percent of testing errors were a result of mixed-up samples, mislabeled specimens, and tests performed on the wrong patient.”

About healthcare personnel

US faces maternity care crisis, with 1 in 3 counties lacking obstetric doctors to provide care, report warns  The United States is facing an ongoing maternity health crisis in which 1 in every 3 counties does not have a single obstetric clinician, affecting women’s access to care, according to a new report.
The report, released Tuesday by the infant and maternal health nonprofit March of Dimes, says that in many parts of the country, obstetrician/gynecologists and family physicians who deliver babies are leaving the workforce, which worsens access to care.
Ob/gyns nationwide delivered more than 85% of babies born in 2022, according to the report, but the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) now projects that the nation will face a shortage of 12,000 to 15,000 ob/gyns by 2050.

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Share of Americans with insurance falls despite record Obamacare enrollment “The share of Americans who had health insurance for all or part of the year in 2023 was 92 percent, a slight drop from the 92.1 percent seen in 2022, according to a report from the U.S. Census Bureau released Tuesday.  
About 26.4 million Americans — 8 percent of the country — did not have insurance at any time last year, according to the report, which officials said was not statistically different than the year before.  
But a breakdown of uninsured rates in the report shows a drop in coverage among Americans under 45, while more older Americans enrolled in health insurance that year.”

On the other hand: Almost 50 Million Americans Have Had an Obamacare Plan Since 2014 “Nearly 50 million Americans have been covered by health insurance plans through the Affordable Care Act’s marketplaces since they opened a decade ago, according to tax data analyzed by the Treasury Department and published on Tuesday.
Federal officials said that the findings represent roughly one in seven U.S. residents, a broad swath of the population that underscores the vast, and seemingly irreversible, reach of the 2010 law.”

About pharma

Optum Rx to pull Humira from some of its preferred formularies: report “UnitedHealth Group's Optum Rx will join its peers in the big three pharmacy benefit managers by pulling Humira from some of its preferred formularies, according to a report from Reuters.
Instead, it will recommend a cheaper biosimilar as the preferred option beginning Jan. 1, 2025, according to the article. Amgen's Amjevita biosimilar will be among the options.
CVS Health's Caremark announced similar steps in April, and Cigna's Express Scripts unit followed suit in August. Prescriptions for Sandoz's Hyrimoz biosimilar spiked after CVS removed Humira from its major commercial formularies, according to a report in Stat.”

About the public’s health

Decades of national suicide prevention policies haven't slowed the deaths “Despite… evolving strategies, from 2001 through 2021 suicide rates increased most years, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Provisional data for 2022, the most recent numbers available, shows deaths by suicide grew an additional 3% over the previous year. CDC officials project the final number of suicides in 2022 will be higher.
In the past two decades, suicide rates in rural states such as Alaska, Montana, North Dakota and Wyoming have been about double those in urban areas, according to the CDC.
Despite those persistently disappointing numbers, mental health experts contend the national strategies aren't the problem. Instead, they argue, the policies — for many reasons —simply aren't being funded, adopted and used. That slow uptake was compounded by the pandemic, which had a broad, negative impact on mental health.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

White House to require insurers pay for mental health the same as physical health “Health insurers will be required to cover mental health care and addiction services the same as any other condition under a highly anticipated final rule being released Monday by the Biden administration. 
The move is part of the administration’s ongoing battle with health insurers, who officials say are skirting a 2008 law requiring plans that cover mental health and substance use care benefits do so at the same level as physical health care benefits.” 

About pharma

Rite Aid emerges from bankruptcy with $2.5B in exit financing and a new CEO at the helm “Retail pharmacy chain Rite Aid has emerged out of bankruptcy after slashing about $2 billion from its debt, the company announced last week.
The company also added about $2.5 billion in exit financing to support the business going forward, Rite Aid said.”

Pharmacy Benefit Manager Market Concentration for Prescriptions Filled at US Retail Pharmacies “In 2023, all 3 payer markets for PBM services were highly concentrated, but concentration varied and was highest in Medicare Part D. While CVS Caremark held the dominant share in all 3 payer markets, each of the PBMs appeared focused on a different payer: Express Script’s largest share was in the commercial market, while Optum Rx’s and CVS Caremark’s were in Medicare Part D and Medicaid managed care, respectively. These findings underscore the importance of considering payer-specific concentration when evaluating PBMs’ anticompetitive practices, as the 3 top PBMs may be pursuing different market strategies. The dominance of a few large PBMs across all payers and a smaller PBM (SS&C Health) in Medicare Part D alone has important antitrust implications.”

New AMA analysis of consolidation in PBM markets “The American Medical Association (AMA) today published its new annual analysis (PDF) of pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) markets confirming low competition among these middlemen in the pharmaceutical supply chain and high vertical integration of PBMs with health insurance companies…
The analysis lists national-level shares of the 10 largest PBMs. It finds that:
—The four largest PBMs collectively have a 70% share of the national PBM market.
—CVS Health is the largest PBM (21.3% market share), followed by OptumRx (20.8%), Express Scripts (17.1%), and Prime Therapeutics (10.3%).
—At the local level, the average PBM market is highly concentrated according to federal antitrust guidelines.
—Eight-two percent of PDP region-level PBM markets are highly concentrated.
—This indicates that only a few PBMs supplied insurers with PBM services and suggests low competition among PBMs…
The analysis found significant vertical integration between insurers and PBMs.
—Nationally, insurers that are vertically integrated with a PBM covered 72% of people with a commercial or Medicare Part D PDP.
—The share of people covered by an insurer that is vertically integrated with a PBM is higher in the Medicare Part D market (77%) than the commercial PDP market (69%).
—At the PDP region level, an average of 70% of people are covered by an insurer that is vertically integrated with a PBM.
—There is wide variation across PDP regions, with some having little vertical integration between insurers and PBMs, while others are almost entirely vertically integrated.”

About the public’s health

Deloitte Analysis: 50% of US Women Skip or Delay Medical Care due to Cost, Access, or Negative Experiences Key takeaways

  • Fifty percent of women surveyed report skipping or delaying medical care; women are 35% more likely to skip care than men.

  • Women surveyed are 50% more likely than men to skip care due to long wait times, and 31% more likely than men to skip care due to cost.

  • The top three types of care women skip due to cost are acute illness (e.g., cold or flu), preventive care, and care for women's health issues.

  • Women surveyed are twice as likely as men to miss medical appointments due to transportation issues.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Healthcare billing fraud: 10 recent cases Note these cases were from defrauding federal programs.

About pharma

Tern’s oral GLP-1 shows 5% weight loss at 1 month at highest dose “The small-scale, 28-day study saw 36 healthy adults with obesity or overweight receive one of three oral doses of the GLP-1 agonist, dubbed TERN-601, or placebo. The nine individuals who received the highest, 740 mg, dose of TERN-601 saw a placebo-adjusted mean weight loss of 4.9%, while those who received the 500 mg and 240 mg doses saw weight loss of 3.8% and 1.9%, respectively.”
Comment: If this drug pans out, it could disrupt its entire class of medications with respect to payment sources.

Drugmaker might be 1st healthcare company to top $1 trillion valuation “Pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly may become the first healthcare company to hit a market value of $1 trillion…”

About the public’s health

Cuffs on At-Home Blood Pressure Monitors Don't Fit Some Patients Key Takeaways”
Many Americans don’t fit standard blood-pressure cuffs
—About 18 million adults, around 7%, have arms too large or too small for standard cuff sizes
—The improper fit is likely to return unreliable results for these folks”

Almost 1 in 4 U.S. Adults Under 40 Have High Blood Pressure “Nearly a quarter of people ages 18 to 39 have high blood pressure, with readings above the healthy level of 130/80…
Nearly 14% of children ages 8 to 19 have elevated or high blood pressure…”

Time to Say Goodbye to the B.M.I.? “The body mass index has long been criticized as a flawed indicator of health. A replacement has been gaining support: the body roundness index…” Here is a calculator to figure out your BRI.

Guidelines Recommending That Clinicians Advise Patients on Lifestyle Changes: A Popular but Questionable Approach to Improve Public Health “The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in the United Kingdom recommends 379 lifestyle interventions, of which almost 100 apply to more than 25% of the general population . Of these, only 3% were supported by high- or moderate-certainty evidence that the recommended clinician intervention helps people change behavior, and another 13% by low- to very-low-certainty evidence .
We argue that even high-quality guidelines recommending lifestyle interventions often overestimate benefit, miss key limitations of the evidence, neglect possible harms, and do not adequately consider feasibility and opportunity costs. We suggest a set of questions for guideline panels to consider when making recommendations about lifestyle interventions (Table).

Table. Questions for Guideline Panels to Facilitate Evaluation of Lifestyle Interventions

1. Do the supporting studies provide direct or only linked (indirect) evidence that the recommended intervention (e.g., giving advice) will have beneficial effects? Is there direct evidence of an effect from the intervention itself on patient-important outcomes? If not, is there linked indirect evidence suggesting a beneficial effect of the intervention on patient-important outcomes:  The intervention results in the desired behavior change (ideally from high-quality randomized trials), and;  people who change behavior benefit from the changes (usually from observational studies)?
 2. How confident are we that the benefits in supporting studies will translate into clinical practice? Is the recommended intervention similar to the intervention in the supporting studies, and is it feasible to implement in clinical practice? Is the population eligible for the intervention in clinical practice as likely to change behavior as the participants in the supporting studies? Is the behavior change reported in the supporting studies measured accurately, and is it large enough and sustained over a sufficient period after the end of the intervention to plausibly improve patient-important outcomes? 
3. Does the intervention cause harm, and what are the opportunity costs? May there be psychosocial harms from receiving unrequested lifestyle advice? What proportion of clinician time would be needed to implement the recommendation?”

About healthcare personnel

States are making it easier for physician assistants to work across state lines “By 2028, the nation as a whole will be short some 100,000 critical health care workers — doctors, nurses and home health aides — according to a new report from Mercer, a management consulting firm.
The looming shortage is one reason why 13 states have joined the PA Licensure Compact, a multistate agreement that allows PAs to practice in any participating state, without having to get an additional license.”

Today's news and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

How much and why ACA Marketplace premiums are going up in 2025 “For 2025, across 324 insurers participating in the 50 states and DC, this analysis shows a median proposed premium increase of 7%, which is similar to last year. Based on a more detailed analysis of publicly available documents from insurers in 10 states and DC, growth in health care prices stood out as a key factor driving costs in 2024. In addition to inflation, some insurers also mention increased utilization of weight loss and other specialty drugs as influencing premiums. Pandemic-related costs and the unwinding of Medicaid continuous coverage are having little, if any, impact on individual market premiums for 2025.” 

About the public’s health

Food Insecurity, Hunger Increased in the United States in 2023 “The trend of food insecurity persists in the United States, with food insecurity, food expenditures, and need of assistance all reported in the country throughout 2023, according to a a new report from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA)…
The new report found that 13.5% of households in the US were food insecure, totaling approximately 18 million households. Food insecurity in this context was defined as households who had difficulty providing enough food for their residents at some point during the year. The percentage increased from 2022 when it was 12.8%, from 2021 when it was 10.2%, and 2020 when it was 10.5%.1 Low food security was reported in 5.1% of households in the country, which wasn’t different from the 2022 number but an increase from 3.8% reported in 2021. This food insecurity led to disrupted eating patterns through the year.”

About health technology

Abbott follows rival Dexcom with OTC glucose monitor launch in US “Abbott has launched its over-the-counter continuous glucose monitoring system in the U.S., the company said on Thursday, making it the second such device on the market to help people track their blood sugar levels.
The device, called Lingo, will compete with a rival from DexCom, launched last week, and will be available for adults who are not on insulin.”
Comment: The insurance industry will need to keep up on coverage of these devices, since companies paid for much more expensive items.

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Medicare Statistics And Facts In 2024 A good summary from Forbes.

 Humana exiting Medicare Advantage in 13 markets “Humana reaffirmed its full-year guidance but is leaving 13 Medicare Advantage (MA) markets next year, Chief Financial Officer Susan Diamond said during the Wells Fargo Healthcare Conference on Wednesday.
Other members will have fewer plans to choose from in certain geographies.
Diamond explained around 560,000 members, or 10% of its individual MA membership base, would be impacted by the cutbacks, but Humana anticipates it will absorb about half of those members into other plans.”

About hospitals and health systems

National Hospital Flash Report Key Takeaways

1. Hospital finances continue to stabilize with strong operating margins. Key indicators including outpatient revenue and average lengths of stay show continued improvement.
2. Decreases in average lengths of stay have also led to declines in expenses.
3. Overall hospital performance has been strong in 2024. In comparison, the performance of health systems has been trending lower than hospital performance. 

About pharma

Prescription Medication Use, Coverage, and Nonadherence Among Adults Age 65 and Older: United States, 2021–2022 “In 2021–2022, 88.6% of older adults took prescription medication, 82.7% had prescription drug coverage, 3.6% did not get needed prescription medication due to cost, and 3.4% did not take medication as prescribed due to cost. Older adults with no prescription drug coverage were more likely to not get prescription medication and to not take needed medication as prescribed than older adults with private or public prescription drug coverage. For both measures, cost-related nonadherence was six times higher among older adults who were food insecure compared with those who were food secure, and more than twice as likely among older adults reporting fair or poor health or with disabilities compared with those in excellent, very good, or good health, or without disabilities.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance/insurers

Value-Based Contracting in Clinical Care “We found saturation of the quality measure environment as a possible explanation: average physicians were incentivized to meet 57.08 different quality measures annually.”
Comment: Accrediting organizations require many of these measures, so contracting health plans have no choice but to require them.

About pharma

US will still pay at least twice as much after negotiating drug prices “A Reuters review of publicly available maximum prices set by other wealthy nations - Australia, Japan, Canada and Sweden - show that they have negotiated far lower prices for the same drugs.” The graphic is especially illustrative of the wide differences.

Antibiotic Prescribing for Respiratory Tract Infections in Urgent Care: A Comparison of In-Person and Virtual Settings “Antibiotic prescriptions were more common in virtual versus in-person urgent care, including among physicians who provided care in both platforms. This appears to be related to the high rate of sinusitis diagnosis in virtual urgent care.”

Comment: Would there be a role for enhanced virtual simulation education?

About the public’s health

The effect of exposure to radiofrequency fields on cancer risk in the general and working population: A systematic review of human observational studies “Highlights
—Exposure to RF from mobile phone use likely does not increase the risk of brain cancer.
—RF from broadcasting antennas or base stations likely does not increase the risk of childhood cancer.
—Occupational exposure to RF may not increase the risk of brain cancer.”

Coronavirus vaccines, once free, are now pricey for uninsured peopleCoronavirus vaccines, once free, are now pricey for uninsured people “The federal Bridge Access Program covering the cost of coronavirus vaccines for uninsured and underinsured people ran out of funding. Now, Americans with low incomes are weighing whether they can afford to shore up immunity against an unpredictable virus that is no longer a public health emergency but continues to cause long-term complications and hospitalizations and kill tens of thousands of people a year.”
Comment: Vaccinations are not just an individual problem but a public health issue. The same logic applies to providing care for those in this country illegally.

Supreme Court allows HHS to divert funds over abortion referrals “The Supreme Court on Tuesday cleared the way for the Biden administration to strip millions of health-care dollars from Oklahoma over its refusal to direct patients to information about abortions — a federal requirement that the state says would be at odds with its strict ban on terminating pregnancies.”

About healthcare IT

FDA's drug center to consolidate AI efforts under single council “The FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) is consolidating its artificial-intelligence-related activities under a single AI Council, in part in response to efforts from the Biden administration to ensure the safety and security of machine learning software.” 

About health technology

Association Between False-Positive Results and Return to Screening Mammography in the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium Cohort “Women were less likely to return to screening after false-positive mammography results, especially with recommendations for short-interval follow-up or biopsy, raising concerns about continued participation in routine screening among these women at increased breast cancer risk.”
Comment: In addition to  the cost and anxiety of false positives, add another factor- reduced followup.

Welcome back!

After a summer hiatus, I am back to providing periodic, significant news stories.
you will need to check stories, since I will no longer send daily notices.

National Health Expenditure Projections, 2023–32: Payer Trends Diverge As Pandemic-Related Policies Fade Annual report in Health Affairs is always worth reading. “Health care spending growth is expected to outpace that of the gross domestic product (GDP) during the coming decade, resulting in a health share of GDP that reaches 19.7 percent by 2032 (up from 17.3 percent in 2022). National health expenditures are projected to have grown 7.5 percent in 2023, when the COVID-19 public health emergency ended. This reflects broad increases in the use of health care, which is associated with an estimated 93.1 percent of the population being insured that year. In 2024, Medicaid enrollment is projected to decline significantly as states continue their eligibility redeterminations. Simultaneously, private health insurance enrollment is projected to increase because of the extension of enhanced subsidies for direct-purchase health insurance under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) of 2022, as well as a temporary special enrollment period for qualified people losing Medicaid coverage (after eligibility redeterminations).” 

About health insurance/insurers

Expanding Medicare Coverage Of Anti-Obesity Medicines Could Increase Annual Spending By $3.1 Billion To $6.1 Billion “Assuming that anti-obesity drugs were covered in 2025 and that 5 percent or 10 percent of newly eligible patients were prescribed one, annual Part D costs were estimated to increase by $3.1 billion or $6.1 billion, respectively. The marginal costs of this policy could fall by as much as 62.5 percent from baseline estimates if products were approved for additional indications in coming years because these additional conditions are common among people with obesity. This would increase Medicare spending but would occur regardless of a policy change.”

Use Of High- And Low-Value Health Care Among US Adults, By Income, 2010–19 “Among nonelderly adults, significant differences between those with high and low incomes were found for five of nine low-value services, and among elderly adults, significant differences by income level were found for three of twelve low-value services.” 

Potential US Health Care Savings Based on Clinician Views of Feasible Site-of-Care Shifts “In this survey study of 1069 clinicians surveyed in 2021 and historical claims data from 2019, 10.3 percentage points of commercial and 10.9 percentage points of Medicare volume could be shifted from the hospital to alternative sites using today’s technology without compromising clinical outcomes. Based on observed reimbursement rates, this would be associated with savings of $113.8 billion (3.2%) to $147.7 billion (4.1%) in 2019 dollars annually for the overall US health care system.”
See, also:Site-of-Care Shifts and Payments—A Viable Strategy to Control Health Care Costs?

Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Reform An excellent review of the background, current status and proposals for reform for physician payment schemes.

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Financial and Clinical Characteristics of Hospitals Targeted by Private Equity [PE] Firms “PE hospitals were, on average, not worse off financially or clinically than comparable non-PE hospitals before acquisition. On the contrary, PE hospitals carried less debt and owned more of their inherent value before acquisition, likely representing more financial stability. Financially healthier hospitals may be better able to absorb new debt and cost-cutting such as reductions in staffing. Earnings, operating margin, hospital-acquired adverse events, and in-hospital mortality were all similar before acquisition relative to controls. Changes in financial or clinical performance after acquisition may thus reflect management—of debt, personnel, and capital—more so than differences in these preacquisition characteristics… These findings do not support the notion that PE investments generally target struggling hospitals and instead support broader evidence that PE firms target successful entities for acquisition.”

About pharma

Pfizer finalizes DTC virtual health platform for streamlined access to vaccines, tests and treatments This strategy is a major departure for a pharma company and could have a major disruptive influence on such channel participants as PBMs. “Just a few months after confirming that it was in the process of developing an online service to cut out middlemen and work directly with patients to help them access vaccines, diagnostic tests and medications, Pfizer has made good on its word.
The newly launched PfizerForAll platform is designed to connect patients in the U.S. with a range of healthcare services, serving as a one-stop shop where they can make doctor’s appointments, find vaccines and order tests and treatments.
To start, according to Pfizer’s launch announcement…, the platform’s services will focus on providing access to treatments for common conditions like migraine, COVID-19 and the flu as well as vaccines for COVID, flu, respiratory syncytial virus and pneumococcal pneumonia. Those services are powered by partnerships with other direct-to-consumer providers in healthcare and beyond…”

Time From Approval to Reimbursement of New Drugs: A Comparative Analysis Between the United States, England, Germany, France, and Switzerland (2011–2022) Findings: A total of 290 drugs approved by all regulatory bodies (FDA, EMA, MHRA, and Swissmedic) were included in the analysis.
Median time from approval until reimbursement was fastest in Switzerland at 5.8 months (95% CI, 4.5 to 7.0), followed by Germany (7.4 months [CI, 7.2 to 7.6]), the United States (9.2 months [CI, 8.3 to 10.1]), France (12.9 months [CI, 10.6 to 15.4]), and England (17.7 months [CI, 13.8 to 24.9]).
One month after approval, France had the highest reimbursement rate at 25.9% (CI, 20.6% to 30.7%), followed by Switzerland (9.7% [CI, 6.2% to 13.0%]) and England (0.7% [CI, 0% to 1.6%]). The United States and Germany had 0 drugs reimbursed at 1 month.
One year after approval, Germany, the United States, and Switzerland had the highest reimbursement rates at 74.3% (CI, 68.7% to 78.9%), 70.7% (CI, 65.0% to 75.5%), and 62.8% (CI, 56.8% to 67.9%) of drugs, respectively. Reimbursement rates in England and France were 37.1% (CI, 31.3% to 42.5%) and 49.0% (CI, 42.9% to 54.4%), respectively.
All countries were faster in reimbursing cancer drugs versus noncancer drugs, with the exception of Switzerland with a median time of 7.1 months (CI, 0.9 to 12.8) for cancer drugs versus 4.5 months (CI, 3.1 to 6.3) for noncancer drugs.
At the end of the follow-up period (31 December 2023), 276 drugs were reimbursed in Germany, 266 in the United States, 242 in Switzerland, 231 in England, and 230 in France.”

About healthcare IT
Talkdesk survey reveals the right prescription of artificial intelligence and human support is vital to superior patient experienceHalf of all United States patients surveyed are optimistic that artificial intelligence (AI) will improve their overall experience with medical providers and the healthcare system in the next year and anticipate seeing more administrative efficiencies. 
4 in 5 individuals want medical advice from a human healthcare representative. Still, half of Americans like that AI chatbots don’t judge, while approximately one-third appreciate that chatbots don’t rush them or make them feel stupid.
Two-thirds of patients with sensitive health issues would be more comfortable making appointments with an online chatbot than with human staff.”