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Draft ‘Make America Healthy Again’ report treads lightly on pesticides, processed foods: The Trump administration’s strategy to “Make America Healthy Again” will bypass aggressive action on farm-used pesticides or regulatory crackdowns on ultraprocessed foods, according to a draft document obtained by CNN.
The MAHA Commission, led by US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is set to release in the coming weeks its finalized recommendations for addressing chronic diseases among American children.  

 About health insurance/insurers

Employers expect 10% rise in healthcare costs for 2026: 4 notes: Employers are expecting a median healthcare cost increase of 10% in 2026, according to a survey from the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans.
Comment: Great summary of trends.

Is short-term health insurance back on the menu? Feds may allow more options: The U.S. Labor Department joined with the U.S. Treasury Department and the U.S Department of Health and Human Services to put out a statement Thursday that blesses use of "short-term, limited-duration insurance" policies that last more than three months. 

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Complaints against hospitals grow 79% in 5 years: CMS: More than 14,500 complaints were lodged against hospitals in fiscal 2024, a 79% increase in complaints compared to fiscal 2019, according to a CMS report… 

 About pharma

Lilly, Superluminal ink $1.3B pact targeting hard-to-crack GPCRs: Eli Lilly will pay Superluminal Medicines up to $1.3 billion under a collaboration to discover and develop small-molecule drugs for cardiometabolic diseases and obesity.
The deal gives Lilly exclusive rights to compounds arising from the alliance, which focuses on undisclosed G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) targets, a class long considered challenging to drug. GPCRs play central roles in a range of biological processes, but their structural complexity has stymied past drug discovery efforts. 

AstraZeneca launches at-home option for FluMist flu vaccine in US: As the number of drugmakers exploring direct-to-consumer (DTC) models in the US increases, AstraZeneca announced on Friday the launch of its at-home delivery service for the seasonal influenza vaccine FluMist. And while the majority of similar DTC initiatives aim to lower the price of drugs by eliminating middlemen in the supply chain, FluMist Home is designed to reverse the trend in declining flu vaccine rates, especially among younger people.

About healthcare IT

Understanding Model Drift and Its Impact on Health Care Policy: Model drift is when the performance of an initially accurate model degrades over time. Currently, model drift often goes unmeasured, and its impact is underappreciated…
 …2 main types of model drift that have different causes and different policy implications. The first type, dataset drift, describes either a shift in the distribution of a model’s input variables or predictors (also known as feature drift) or the distribution of a model’s output variable or outcome of a model (also known as label drift). The second type, concept drift, describes a shift in the causal relationship between the model’s input and output variables (ie, how the predictors affect the outcome). 
Comment: Read the entire article.

About healthcare personnel

States with the most, fewest licensed nurses FYI

Patient perception of physician attire: a systematic review update: This study demonstrates that physician attire consistently and significantly impacts patients’ perceptions of professionalism, trust and communication. The collective findings provide robust evidence that these perceptions are highly context-dependent, necessitating adaptable dress codes tailored to clinical environments and patient expectations to enhance trust and patient satisfaction. 

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About pharma

Lilly, Superluminal ink $1.3B pact targeting hard-to-crack GPCRs: Eli Lilly will pay Superluminal Medicines up to $1.3 billion under a collaboration to discover and develop small-molecule drugs for cardiometabolic diseases and obesity.
The deal gives Lilly exclusive rights to compounds arising from the alliance, which focuses on undisclosed G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) targets, a class long considered challenging to drug. GPCRs play central roles in a range of biological processes, but their structural complexity has stymied past drug discovery efforts. 

Eli Lilly ramps up UK price of weight loss jab Mounjaro after Trump demands: Eli Lilly said Thursday that it would increase the prices of medicines in Europe and other developed markets “in order to make them lower” in the U.S., in an apparent response to the Trump administration’s calls to do so. It singled out the list price of its popular weight-loss drug in the U.K. as part of that effort. 

About healthcare personnel

9 generational trends shaping hospital workforce planning FYI (Really worth reading)

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About health insurance/insurers

CMS’ latest ACA enrollment data: Effectuated ACA enrollment has increased 13% since 2024 and nearly 93% of enrollees qualify for enhanced premium tax credits, according to an August report from CMS.

Judge blocks HHS from sharing Medicaid data with ICE: A California federal judge has blocked Trump administration health officials from sharing people’s individual health data with the Department of Homeland Security for immigration enforcement purposes while litigation plays out, Bloomberg reported Aug. 12.

 About hospitals and healthcare systems

2025 US NFP Hospital & Health System Medians Begin Recovery; Longer-Term Uncertainty: U.S. not-for-profit hospital medians show anticipated continued improvement in operating margins alongside stable-to-strong liquidity and leverage metrics, according to a new report by Fitch Ratings.
The sector’s median operating margin rose to 1.1% from 0.4% the prior year, with gains supported by easing labor market pressures, reduced reliance on contract labor, and higher patient volumes. Operating EBITDA margins improved across all rating categories, with the ‘AA’ category at 7.2%, ‘A’ at 5.9%, and ‘BBB’ at 4.7%, illustrating a broad-based recovery, though credit quality continues to diverge at sector extremes. 

About pharma

Bayer expands oncology pipeline with $1.3B Kumquat deal: Bayer signed a deal potentially worth $1.3 billion to partner on Kumquat Biosciences' experimental KRAS G12D inhibitor, which was cleared last month by the FDA to enter clinical testing. The agreement, announced Tuesday, is the latest move by Bayer to expand its precision oncology pipeline.

Cardinal Health builds out urology focus with $1.9B deal for Solaris Health: Cardinal Health acquired Solaris Health as it continues to build out its multispecialty management services organization platform.
The pharmaceuticals and specialty products distributor announced Tuesday that its multispecialty MSO platform, called The Specialty Alliance, entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Solaris Health, a urology MSO, from Lee Equity Partners and Solaris Health physician owners.
Cardinal Health said it will provide about $1.9 billion in cash and new debt financing to The Specialty Alliance to support the acquisition.

About healthcare personnel

Physician Flash Report (2nd Q): Key Takeaways:
1.Net patient revenue per provider increased overall.
However, revenue per provider unit of work (wRVU) decreased slightly for surgical and hospital-based specialties, reflecting a shift toward more outpatient care.
2. Physician productivity rose. Corresponding increases in revenue and expenses indicate that physicians are working more, and the rise in wRVUs is not solely due to the 2021 code changes.
3. Medical support staff levels are decreasing in relation to wRVU generation. This may indicate ongoing hiring/retention challenges and could become a hindrance to future growth.

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About hospitals and healthcare systems

8 called-off hospital deals  FYI

National Hospital Flash Report: Key Takeaways
1. Revenue on a volume adjusted basis increased.
Increases in outpatient revenue indicate that hospitals that are performing well are leveraging their outpatient footprint and diversifying services.
2. Bad debt rose in June compared to May, outpacing the growth rate in previous months. This trend may reflect shifts in insurance enrollment.
3. Non-labor expenses and purchased services continue to drive increased expenses. Though revenue is rising, expenses are also increasing on a volume adjusted basis.

About pharma

Most expensive drugs in the US in 2025 The top spots are held bt gene therapy treatments.

About healthcare IT

9,200 healthcare organizations join interoperability network:  Over 9,200 healthcare organizations have joined a national network for EHR interoperability.
See the Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy/ONC blog post.

Misinformation about cholesterol ‘widespread’ on TikTok: “Our study highlights the extent of cholesterol-related misinformation on TikTok — over 40% of the top-viewed videos were inaccurate and more than a third were potentially harmful,” Khush M. Kharidia, MD, a third-year internal medicine resident at UT Southwestern, told Healio. “These findings underscore how much misleading content patients encounter online.”

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ICYMI: Trump signs order to boost federal oversight of grantmaking: President Donald Trump signed an executive order Aug. 7 that gives political appointees oversight of all federally funded grants.
The order aims to ensure award decisions undergo “more rigorous evaluation by political appointees and subject matter experts,” the White House said in a fact sheet.

How retirees can manage rising healthcare costs: Health care costs for retirees just keep rising. A 65-year-old retiring in 2025 can expect to spend $172,500 on health care costs and medical expenses throughout retirement, according to a new survey from Fidelity. Financial advisors say ignoring that number can be a costly decision for retirees.
Since Fidelity began tracking retiree health care costs in 2002 — when the estimated expense for a 65-year-old was just $80,000 — projected costs have steadily climbed, far outpacing inflation. In the past year alone, Fidelity reported a 4% increase in total expected health care spending for retirees.  

About health insurance/insurers

Nearly 6,500 providers reject $2.8B Blue Cross antitrust deal: Mayo Clinic, LifePoint Health and Trinity Health are among nearly 6,500 providers opting out of a major settlement with Blue Cross and Blue Shield insurers.
In December, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama approved a $2.8 billion agreement with providers that sued the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association in 2013 over allegations it and its member companies engaged in anticompetitive conduct.

Health insurance brokers to pay $145M to settle deceptive practice allegations: Two health insurance brokers agreed to pay a combined $145 million to resolve allegations from the Federal Trade Commission that they misled millions of consumers seeking to buy comprehensive health insurance.  

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Kaiser Permanente posts $1 billion operating income in Q2: Oakland, Calif.-based Kaiser Permanente recorded an operating income of $1 billion (3.2% operating margin) in the second quarter of 2025, up from $908 million (3.1% margin) during the same period last year, according to its Aug. 8 financial report. 

290 hospitals with 5 stars from CMS: CMS publishes its Overall Hospital Quality Star Ratings annually. Star ratings reflect a hospital’s performance across five quality measures: mortality, safety, readmission, patient experience, and timely and effective care. Read more about how CMS calculates star ratings here. 

About pharma

Changes in Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Health Care Expenditures Among Patients Prescribed Semaglutide: These findings suggest that, while semaglutide initiation is associated with improved cardiovascular risk profiles in clinical populations, its initiation is also associated with higher health care expenditures, underscoring the need to assess its long-term cost-effectiveness. 

About healthcare personnel

10 most in-demand physician specialties FYI

Today's News and Commentary

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Trump executive order seeks to centralize control of grantmaking under political appointees: A sweeping new executive order seeks to transform how the federal government awards billions of dollars in research grants by giving President Trump’s political appointees unprecedented power over the projects agencies fund.  
The order issued Thursday night, titled “Improving Oversight Of Federal Grantmaking,” aims to fundamentally rewrite the rules that for decades have guided grant decisions. Instead of experts and career civil servants setting funding decisions and priorities, the order places that authority with presidential appointees who, in coordination with the White House, are directed to use their “independent judgment” and “advance the President’s policy priorities.”  

About Covid-19

Cost-Effectiveness of 2023-2024 COVID-19 Vaccination in US Adults: Findings  This decision analytic modeling study in a simulated cohort projected that cost-effectiveness for a 2023-2024 COVID-19 mRNA vaccine using base case assumptions was cost saving for individuals older than 65 years, $25 787 per quality-adjusted life-year gained for those aged 50 to 64 years, and $115 588 per quality-adjusted life-year gained for those aged 18 to 49 years. Results were robust to changes in parameter inputs for the older age groups but sensitive to inputs for the younger age group.
Meaning  These findings suggest that vaccination is economically attractive for older adults but only under certain conditions for younger adults. 

HHS cites list of studies as scientific justification for cancellation of mRNA vaccine contracts: Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. provided only a brief explanation for the decision earlier this week, arguing the mRNA vaccines are not effective and not as safe as alternatives, and referencing a review of scientific research on mRNA by “experts,” without identifying them. On Friday, when asked if the Department of Health and Human Services had a scientific justification, a spokesperson provided a link to a 181-page list of studies compiled by a number of people, including a current Trump administration adviser who served in the president’s first administration and was the subject of controversy for pushing unproven Covid-19 treatments.

 About health insurance/insurers

Employers shifting to self-insurance will still face soaring costs, Voya says: Heather Lavallee, the chief executive officer of the New York-based company, and other Voya executives told securities analysts Wednesday that the company is continuing to fight a surge in claims that began a year ago by taking a tough approach to pricing.
Reinsurance costs are also predicted to surge. 

More insurers expect to pull some Medicare Advantage plans from the market: Aetna is the latest insurer to announce it will pull the plug on some of its Medicare Advantage plans next year.
The company said it will close approximately 90 Medicare Advantage plans across 34 states in 2026, according to Modern Healthcare. Most of the plans are PPOs, the publication said.
The news follows UnitedHealthcare’s announcement that next year it will exit some Medicare Advantage PPO plans that impact about 600,000 members. Humana revealed in its first quarter 2025 management remarks that it is likely to lose 550,000 Medicare Advantage members by the end of the year as it leaves plans and markets that aren’t profitable.

About pharma

Prescription Drug Utilization and Spending by Race, Ethnicity, Payer, Health Condition, and US State: Findings  In this cross-sectional study of 143 health conditions among persons in 50 states and Washington, DC, per capita pharmaceutical use was highest among White populations and lowest among Asian or Pacific Islander and Hispanic populations. However, after standardizing for age and disease prevalence (for 52 conditions with available data), prescription fills were substantially lower for Black populations relative to the all-population mean.
Meaning  Disparities in medication use relative to disease burden persist—especially underutilization among Black populations—highlighting the need for targeted efforts to advance pharmacoequity.

 About healthcare IT

77% of healthcare orgs targeted by ransomware in past year: More than three-quarters of healthcare survey respondents said their organizations were targeted by ransomware in the past 12 months, and 53% of those attacks were successful, highlighting the ongoing challenge of combatting healthcare cyberattacks. 

KFF Health Information and Trust Tracking Poll: Health Information and Advice on Social Media: Just over half (55%) of adults, including larger shares of young adults and Black and Hispanic adults, say they use social media to find health information and advice at least occasionally and most adults report seeing health-related content in the past month on social media, with the largest shares saying they’ve seen content about weight loss, diet, or nutrition (72%) and mental health (58%)…
Most adults are skeptical of the health information and advice they see across social media platforms. When asked to assess the health information and advice on various social media platforms, fewer than half say they find “most” or “some” of the information they see on each platform trustworthy, and less than one in ten say “most” of the information is trustworthy…
About one in six (15%) social media users (14% of the public overall) say they regularly get health information and advice from social media influencers. Among those who report regularly getting health information and advice from influencers on social media, six in ten (61%) say health influencers are mostly motivated by their own financial interests, while about four in ten (39%) say health influencers are mostly motivated by serving the public interest.

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DOJ and UnitedHealth reach settlement on $3.3 billion Amedisys deal: The Department of Justice and state officials have reached a proposed settlement agreement with UnitedHealth Group and Amedisys that would allow the companies to complete their $3.3 billion combination so long as they agree to sell 164 home health and hospice locations across 19 states. 
The settlement, which still must be approved by a judge, would allow UnitedHealth to acquire Amedisys, a large home health and hospice provider, while avoiding a trial.  

Payers ranked by digital experience-2025: FYI

8 payers recently fined by states FYI

ACA premiums set to spike: People who buy health insurance through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) are set to see a median premium increase of 18 percent, more than double last year’s 7 percent median proposed increase, according to an analysis of preliminary filings by KFF. 

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Surgery becoming safer in hospitals: AHA, Vizient: Between 2019 and 2024, the mortality risk for hospitalized surgical patients declined nearly 20%, according to an analysis from Vizient and the American Hospital Association. 
Several factors contributed to this improvement in surgical outcomes. Between the first quarter of 2019 and the fourth quarter of 2024, post-operative sepsis declined 9.2%, post-operative respiratory failure by 19% and post-operative hemorrhage by 22.3%. 
The findings come at a time when acuity is projected to continue rising for hospitalized surgery patients, according to Sg2, a Vizient company.   

About pharma

Appeals court upholds dismissal of US Chamber challenge to Medicare negotiation: The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday upheld a lower court’s ruling to dismiss a challenge to the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program brought by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, finding once again that the parties involved did not have standing to sue.

 FDA unveils ‘PreCheck’ program for drug manufacturers: As the federal government pushes for lower drug prices and more domestic production, the FDA launched a “PreCheck” program Aug. 7 to expedite approval of new U.S. drug manufacturing facilities. 
FDA PreCheck will provide drugmakers more frequent communication with the FDA at “critical development stages, including facility design, construction and pre-production,” the agency said. 
The FDA will also encourage drug manufacturers to provide comprehensive, facility-specific information, which “can be incorporated by reference into a drug application as appropriate.”
Another phase of FDA PreCheck includes pre-application meetings and early feedback.  

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RFK Jr. pulls $500 million in funding for vaccine development: The Department of Health and Human Services will cancel contracts and pull funding for some vaccines that are being developed to fight respiratory viruses like COVID-19 and the flu.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced in a statement Tuesday that 22 projects, totaling $500 million, to develop vaccines using mRNA technology will be halted. 

About health insurance/insurers

Oscar posts $228M loss in Q2, expects 2026 profitability: Oscar Health reported a net loss of $228 million in the second quarter of 2025, compared to $56 million in net income during the same quarter last year, according to its Aug. 6 financial report. 
“Oscar is well-positioned to manage through the market reset in 2025,” CEO Mark Bertolini said. “We believe the market will stabilize next year, and expect to return to profitability in 2026. We are building the individual market into a healthcare marketplace for more consumers and businesses, and continue to position the company for long-term growth.”
Total revenue was $2.86 billion for the three months ended June 30, up 29% year over year. 
The company’s operating loss was $230 million in Q2.

Aetna to adopt new Medicare inpatient payment change: 6 things to know: For eligible stays, Aetna will automatically approve the inpatient admission without requiring a medical necessity review up front. 
While an admission itself will be approved, payment will vary based on clinical severity. 

Top stats on Medicare Advantage enrollment, costs in 2025 A great review from KFF.

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Trump administration violated impoundment law by canceling NIH grants, slowing new awards, GAO finds: In a scathing report issued Tuesday, the Government Accountability Office found that the Trump administration, by abruptly canceling National Institutes of Health grants, had violated a 1974 law blocking presidents from withholding funding Congress has approved. 
The independent congressional watchdog said that in terminating over 1,800 NIH grants in response to President Trump’s executive orders directing agencies to cut off federal funding for equity-related activities, the administration illegally withheld funds. In addition, the GAO found that the NIH’s $8 billion shortfall in new and continuing awards between February and July amounted to an illegal withholding of obligated funds.

About health insurance/insurers

44 health system-owned health plans FYI

Benefits provider Alight drops on revenue decline, nearly $1B impairment: Shares in Alight, the Chicago-based human resource services provider, dropped as much as 20% this morning following the release of second quarter results showing a decrease in revenue and a nearly $1 billion impairment charge.

CMS drops 3 final payment rules for 2026: 15 things to know FYI

About healthcare IT

Change Healthcare data breach toll reaches 192.7 million: The UnitedHealth Group claims processing subsidiary revealed the number, a few million more than its last estimate, in a letter to the New Hampshire Office of the Attorney General. The company was writing to say it could not find addresses for all patients impacted in the state.

About healthcare personnel

Physician costs, revenue climb 11% in lockstep: The average revenue and expenses per full time physician increased 11.4% year over year, according to Strata’s “Monthly Healthcare Industry Financial Benchmarks.” Average physician productivity also increased in the second quarter.

The physician specialties with the highest, lowest starting salaries FYI 

About health technology

FDA formally kicks off medical device user fee negotiations: The FDA formally kicked off its quinquennial process to reauthorize the federal user fee legislation that helps fund its medical device reviews by hosting discussions with the medtech industry and patient advocates—and framing the task as an opportunity to further modernize the agency.

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Key patient experience insights for 2025 [From PressGaney]: Key patient experience insights for 2025

  • Experience is improving—but not for all. Since 2019, “Likelihood to Recommend” (LTR) scores have risen by +2.8 points in medical practices, +1.7 in ambulatory surgery centers, and +0.5 in emergency departments. Inpatient scores, however, remain down 2.2 points compared to pre-pandemic levels, despite a modest +0.9 rebound year over year.

  • Teamwork is closely linked to trust. Teamwork has become a leading predictor of inpatient experience. Patients are significantly more likely to recommend hospitals when they perceive care teams working in sync.

  • Safety must be seen and felt. When patients report feeling “very safe,” LTR scores soar to 85.3. Without that perception, scores plummet to 34.6.

  • Equity gaps remain—and matter. Disparities by race, age, setting, and admission type persist. Yet hospitals with the least variation across racial and ethnic groups are 2.8x more likely to achieve top-tier patient loyalty.

  • Unplanned admissions create complexity. Patients admitted unexpectedly report 16% lower LTR scores than those with planned stays, highlighting the need for clear communication and coordinated transitions.

  • Experience is one continuous journey. Patients don’t separate digital, clinical, and post-care touchpoints. Aligning patient, consumer, safety, and employee strategies is key to delivering seamless, human-centered care.  

About hospitals and healthcare systems

20 academic health systems acquiring hospitals FYI

About the public’s health

You Might Inhale 68,000 Microplastics Per Day : Key Takeaways

  • New research suggests that folks breathe in 100 times more microplastics than had been previously assumed

  • The finding comes after researchers tracked the tiniest particles 1 to 10 micrometers in diameter

  • The health effects of these pollutants is unclear, although they are found in many human tissue types 

About healthcare IT

Predicting Missed Appointments in Primary Care: A Personalized Machine Learning Approach Machine learning can predict with a high degree of certainty who will miss appointments: “No bias against patient characteristics was detected. Schedule lead time was identified as the most important predictor of missed appointments.” This study lends factual reasoning for appointment reminders. 

About healthcare personnel

Foreign-Born Workers Made Up Half The Increase In The Direct Care Workforce In Home And Community Settings, 2012–22: We found that foreign-born direct care workers have increasingly filled workforce gaps, particularly in the home and community-based services (HCBS) sector. The HCBS workforce grew by more than 24 percent during the period 2012–22, while the institutional workforce declined by 23 percent; this decline was primarily due to the exodus of native-born workers. Foreign-born workers accounted for approximately half of the increase in the direct care workforce in HCBS settings during this period. To address continued workforce shortages in LTSS and meet the demand for HCBS, policy makers should consider immigration reforms to support a sustainable supply of foreign-born workers, investments in training and career pathways, and improvements in job quality through higher wages and opportunities for career advancement. 

State of the healthcare workforce: 5 things to know: Healthcare gained 55,400 jobs in July, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This is above the average monthly increase of 42,000 jobs over the previous 12 months.
Here are four other things to know from the latest BLS jobs report, released Aug. 1:
1. July job growth occurred in hospitals and ambulatory healthcare services, which added 16,000 and 33,600 jobs, respectively.
2. Within ambulatory healthcare services, physician offices added 6,700 jobs in July, while home healthcare services added 14,400.
3. Job growth also occurred in nursing and residential care facilities, which added 5,800 jobs in July. 
4. Overall, the U.S. added 73,000 jobs across industries in July, including gains in healthcare.

Medical school in 2025: 3 trends to know FYI 

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Projected Savings From Reducing Low-Value Services in Medicare: Many of these services are imaging- including 4 of the top 5 low value services. Note, especially, the Figures. In summary:
Findings of this cross-sectional study highlight that reforms aimed at reducing spending for low-value services are feasible to achieve billions in savings without compromising patient health. For example, eliminating Medicare payments for 5 USPSTF grade D services could save approximately $2.6 billion annually, achievable through enforcing section 4105 of the Affordable Care Act, which grants the secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services the authority to provide no payment for a preventive service that has not received a USPSTF grade of A, B, C, or I.
Of note, the estimated savings are considered conservative, since additional costs from subsequent care cascades following low-value interventions are not included.

Perioperative Costs of Elective Surgical Procedures in Medicare Advantage Compared With Traditional Medicare: Findings  In this retrospective cohort study of 1.18 million surgical procedures among 1.11 million Medicare beneficiaries, estimated 30-day costs of surgery episodes were 3.1% lower for MA patients than for comparable TM patients. MA patients more often had outpatient surgeries, shorter inpatient hospital stays, received less postacute care, and had fewer readmissions.
Meaning  The findings suggest that lower perioperative costs and resource use offer other potential mechanisms for cost savings in Medicare Advantage.

A Closer Look at the Work Requirement Provisions in the 2025 Federal Budget Reconciliation Law: Key takeaways include:

  • CBO estimates. Of the Medicaid provisions included in the law, CBO estimates implementing work requirements will account for the largest share of federal Medicaid savings. Earlier CBO estimates found work requirements will cause the largest increase in the number of people without health insurance.

  • Verification requirements. The law requires states to verify at application and at renewal that individuals in the ACA expansion group meet work requirements (80 hours of work activities per month) or exemption criteria. States can also require verification more frequently.

  • Implementation timeline. The law requires HHS to release an interim final rule by June 2026 leaving states with limited time to develop or change implementation plans, protocols, and systems (and to test systems changes) before the January 2027 work requirement implementation deadline.

  • State implementation choices. State choices to impose more stringent requirements than the minimum federal requirements outlined in the law (e.g., requiring more frequent verification or imposing longer “look-back” periods when verifying coverage) as well as state effectiveness in using existing data to automate verification processes, will affect the number of individuals at risk of losing coverage.

  • Comparison to other waivers and proposals. The Medicaid work requirement policies included in the law are more stringent than previous policies considered by Congress and work requirements implemented under state Medicaid demonstration waivers; for example, the law makes it harder to gain coverage and to re-enroll and does not exempt older adults from requirements

Which healthcare services are driving higher costs for insurers? FYI- the answers vary somewhat by payer.

Payers ranked by Q2 profits FYI

16 health system rating downgrades FYI

About hospitals and healthcare systems

CMS finalizes 2.6% pay bump for hospitals in 2026: 8 things to know  CMS published its fiscal year 2026 Inpatient Prospective Payment System and Long-Term Care Hospital Prospective Payment System final rule on July 31.  
This article is an excellent, short summary of changes from the legislations.

Online Reviews of Health Care Facilities: Question  What words, linguistic categories, and themes correlate with highly positive or negative ratings in online reviews of health care?
Findings  In this cross-sectional study of 1 099 901 online reviews posted from 2017 through 2023, 46.3% of US health care facilities were rated 1 to 2 stars and 50.1% were rated 4 to 5 stars. The word “not” and topics related to administrative barriers were significantly associated with negative ratings, whereas the conjunction “and” and words related to support staff interactions were associated with positive ratings.
Meaning  Findings of this study suggest that assessing online-review language in real time could help clinicians and administrators identify possible emerging communication or access problems and target patient-centered quality-improvement interventions.

Variations in the Use of Outpatient Surgery: Findings  In this cross-sectional study of 456 954 participants, variations in the use of outpatient surgery were associated primarily with geographic location. Lower frequency of outpatient surgery at hospitals in the Northeast and Pacific Coastal regions was not explained by patient- or hospital-related factors.
Meaning  Recognition of geographical variations and providing benchmarking national data may improve use of resources for patients undergoing surgery.
Comment: Non-health reasons for utilization differences have been recognized for decades.

About the public’s health

AMA decries CDC's move to cut experts out of panels that develop vaccine policy: Eight medical associations, including the American Medical Association, American Academy of Pediatrics and the Infectious Diseases Society of American, are "alarmed" that the federal immunization adviser is barring them from looking at scientific evidence that is supposed to inform its decision-making process.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention told physician groups, public health professionals and infectious disease experts that they will no longer be invited to help review vaccine data and develop recommendations, according to an email viewed by Bloomberg.

State E-Cigarette Flavor Restrictions and Tobacco Product Use in Youths and Adults: Question  Are statewide e-cigarette flavor restriction policies associated with e-cigarette and cigarette use among different age groups?
Findings  In this cross-sectional study of 2019-2023 survey data on US high school-aged youths, young adults (ages 18-24 years), and adults ages 25 years or older, flavor policies were associated with reduced e-cigarette use among young adults and adults aged 25 years or older and increased cigarette use among youths and young adults, although results varied by state and year. 

Trump revives Presidential Fitness Test: President Donald Trump signed an executive order Thursday afternoon reinstating the national fitness assessment implemented in public schools from 1956 until 2013.
The role of administering the test will fall to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr….
A White House official told NBC News that Trump aims to address Americans’ declining health and physical fitness, including “crisis levels” of obesity, chronic disease, inactivity and poor nutrition.

About healthcare IT

Physician satisfaction with EHRs, by the numbers: Physicians are most satisfied with EHR reliability but least pleased with the systems’ efficiency, KLAS Research reported

Healthcare data breaches remain the costliest: 5 notes: Healthcare had the most expensive data breaches for the 15th consecutive year, according to a new IBM report.

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About health insurance/insurers

With Medical Costs Up and Earnings Down, UnitedHealth Group Leaves PPOs Behind: With medical costs increasing much higher than expected and earnings falling far short of earlier projections, UnitedHealth Group executives announced during an earnings call [yesterday] that the company is exiting Medicare Advantage plans next year that currently serve 600,000 members, most of them organized as preferred provider organizations (PPO)
During the same call, a company executive announced that its Optum division would “cease arrangements” next year for about 200,000 patients in valued-based PPO.

Fitch revises UnitedHealth’s outlook to negative : Fitch affirmed UnitedHealth Group’s “AA-” rating July 30 but revised the company’s outlook to negative from stable. 
Fitch said the revision reflects new information disclosed by UnitedHealth during its second quarter earnings call held July 29. 
“The company provided guidance on its significantly diminished operating performance for the remainder of 2025, which suggests that it will meet its financial leverage downgrade sensitivities for the year, with a partial recovery expected in 2026,” Fitch said.  

CVS posts $1B profit in Q2, raises annual outlook: CVS Health raised its annual earnings outlook following strong performance at Aetna and the pharmacy segment in the second quarter, according to the company’s July 31 financial report. 
The company reported total revenue of $98.9 billion in the second quarter, up from $91.2 billion posted during the same period last year. 
Net income was $1 billion, down from $1.8 billion during the same period last year.
The company raised its 2025 outlook, projecting an adjusted earnings per share of $6.30 to $6.40 from $6.00 to $6.20.

Cigna posts $1.5B profit in Q2: The Cigna Group reported a net income of $1.53 billion in the second quarter of 2025, compared to $1.55 billion during the same quarter last year, according to its July 31 financial report. 
Total revenue was $67.2 billion for the three months ended June 30, up 11% year over year. Cigna said the increase was primarily driven by Evernorth Health Services and includes growth of existing client relationships and strong specialty pharmacy growth.  
Adjusted income from operations was $1.93 billion, up 1% over the same period last year. 

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Hospital drug expenses soar nearly 10%: Drug expenses for hospitals continue to soar as inflation, tariffs and more hit the pharmaceutical industry, according to Strata’s “Monthly Healthcare Industry Financial Benchmarks.”
The healthcare data firm surveyed leaders from more than 1,850 hospitals across the U.S. to compile financial information and trends. In June, drug expenses increased almost 10% over the same period last year. The impact of increasing drug expenses varied by region; hospitals in the Northeast reported 17.7% drug expense increases while the West reported a 14.7% jump.
Drug expenses growth is now outpacing labor and purchased service expenses. Average labor expenses increased 3.8% year over year while purchased services were up nearly 7%.
Despite the high year over year growth, average drug expenses dropped 4.8% nationwide from May to June.  

About pharma

In latest Trump salvo, pharma giants face 60-day ultimatum on price cuts: President Donald Trump has ramped up his campaign against high prescription drug costs, sending letters to a slew of major pharmaceutical companies demanding they take steps to cut US prices to match international benchmarks within 60 days or face aggressive government intervention.
The letters, posted individually on Trump's social media platform, targeted 17 companies including AbbVie, Amgen, AstraZeneca, Bristol Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Gilead Sciences, GSK, Johnson & Johnson, Merck & Co., Merck KGaA, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Roche via its Genentech unit, and Sanofi…
Trump's demands include four specific actions: extending MFN [most favored nation] rates to all Medicaid patients for existing drugs; guaranteeing MFN pricing for newly launched medications across Medicare, Medicaid and commercial payers; requiring companies to "repatriate" increased foreign revenues to lower US prices through explicit agreements with the US; and participating in direct-to-consumer or direct-to-business distribution models that eliminate middlemen.

Pharmaceutical costs expected to rise 3.35% in 2026: Vizient: Pharmaceutical prices are expected to rise by 3.35% in 2026, according to Vizient’s latest Spend Management Outlook report, released in July. 
The report found that price pressures are easing in certain areas due to biosimilar competition, especially with respect to drugs such as Humira and Stelara. High-use inpatient medications are also expected to see price declines. Pediatric drugs are expected to have the highest inflation rate, at 3.93%, while prices in the self-administered medication segment dropped from 4.53% to 3.3%.  

Long-term data on anti-amyloid mAbs show increasing benefits for Alzheimer's patients: Eisai and Eli Lilly presented long-term data on their respective Alzheimer's disease treatments at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC) on Wednesday, suggesting that the potential for Leqembi (lecanemab) and Kisunla (donanemab) to protect against cognitive decline increases beyond the shorter timeframe used to win FDA approval for both drugs.
After three years, the degree by which Leqembi and Kisunla reduced cognitive decline roughly doubled, compared with 18-month results. 

AbbVie in talks to acquire psychiatric pharma Gilgamesh in $1 billion deal: AbbVie is in talks to acquire mental health therapeutics company Gilgamesh Pharmaceuticals in a deal highlighting growing takeover interest in the sector, according to people familiar with the matter.
A potential deal could value privately held Gilgamesh at about $1 billion, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. An announcement could be made in the coming weeks, the people said.

About healthcare IT

Illumina Inc. to Pay $9.8M to Resolve False Claims Act Allegations Arising from Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities in Genomic Sequencing Systems: lumina Inc. has agreed to pay $9.8 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act when it sold to federal agencies certain genomic sequencing systems with cybersecurity vulnerabilities. Illumina is a Delaware corporation, headquartered in California, that manufactured and sold genomic sequencing systems throughout the United States. 

Research: Gen AI Makes People More Productive—and Less Motivated:  Our findings point to two contrasting outcomes of human-Gen AI collaboration:

  • Immediate Performance Boost: Gen AI enhanced the quality and efficiency of tasks. For instance, performance reviews written with gen AI were significantly longer, more analytical, and demonstrated a more helpful tone compared to reviews written without assistance. Similarly, emails drafted with gen AI tended to use warmer, more personable language, containing more expressions of encouragement, empathy, and social connection, compared to those written without AI assistance. This highlights how gen AI can help workers deliver outputs that are polished, engaging, and well-structured.

  • Psychological Costs: Despite the performance benefits, participants who collaborated with gen AI on one task and then transitioned to a different, unaided task consistently reported a decline in intrinsic motivation and an increase in boredom. Across our studies, intrinsic motivation dropped by an average of 11% and boredom increased by an average of 20%. In contrast, those who worked without AI maintained a relatively steady psychological state. This finding reveals a critical nuance to collaborations’ benefits: While using gen AI tools can feel productive and empowering at first, it may leave workers feeling less engaged when they shift to tasks that don’t involve AI support—a common reality in workflows where not every task can or should be AI-assisted.

About health technology

Baxter stock plunges as FDA scrutiny, lingering storm fallout damage outlook: Deerfield-based Baxter International is still feeling battered by Hurricane Helene and problems with its Novum infusion pumps as it decreased its full-year guidance for 2025 this morning, resulting in a stock plunge of as much as 20%.
Baxter expects sales growth on an operational basis of 3% to 4%, down from 2025 guidance of 4% to 5% issued last quarter. The company said in a press release this morning that it expects adjusted earnings from continuing operations, before special items, of $2.42 to $2.52 per diluted share.

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About health insurance/insurers

Medicare Part D premiums to increase in 2026: CMS will increase Medicare Part D premiums in 2026 while continuing a scaled-back version of its premium stabilization program launched last year.
On July 28, the agency said it took “unprecedented” steps to reject standalone Medicare drug plan bids with steep year-over-year premium increases or reduced benefits, marking the first time it has exercised full authority to deny such bids…
In 2026, the national average monthly bid amount will be $239.27, compared to $179.45 last year…; the base premium will be $38.99, compared to $36.78 last year. 

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Variation, Overlap, and Stability in Defining Safety Net Hospitals: Findings  In this cohort study of 4531 short-term acute care hospitals, between 1% and 55% of similar hospitals were represented across pairs of definitions, with some definitions producing different samples of hospitals year to year. Different definitions produced different groups of hospitals over time, risking overinclusion and/or underinclusion of certain hospitals across different payment programs.
Meaning  The findings highlight the trade-offs when considering options to define safety net hospitals.

How HCA, CHS, Tenet and UHS fared in Q2 FYI
Comment: As health plan profits decline because of increased expenses, the reverse side of the coin is the improving finances of hospitals.
In a related article: Where hospital margins are climbing, dropping the most

Hospitals Did Not Capture Half of Patient Harm Events, Limiting Information Needed to Make Care Safer: Hospitals did not capture all OIG-identified patient harm events, nor investigate all harm events they did capture, limiting hospitals’ ability to make improvements for patient safety.

  • Hospitals did not capture half of patient harm events that occurred among hospitalized Medicare patients. In many cases, staff did not consider these events to be harm or explained that it was not standard practice to capture them. This was often because hospitals applied narrow definitions of harm.

  • Of the patient harm events that hospitals captured, few were investigated, and even fewer led to hospitals making improvements for patient safety. Some of the improvement actions hospitals took in response to the harm events included training staff and enhancing monitoring for similar events. 

About the public’s health

In a first, the Senate confirms a new CDC director:The Senate confirmed Susan Monarez, a health scientist and longtime civil servant, to run the public health agency. She is the first CDC director to be confirmed by the Senate under a law passed in 2023, and the first to serve in the role without a medical degree in more than 70 years. The vote was 51-47, along party lines. 

Just One HPV Vaccine Dose Could Protect Against Infection, Research Shows: The first randomized controlled trial of a single-dose HPV vaccine, conducted in Kenya, showed one dose was more than 97% effective against HPV16 and HPV18, which are responsible for around 70% of cervical cancer cases globally.

Risk of adolescent cigarette use in three UK birth cohorts before and after e-cigarettes: Adolescents who use e-cigarettes have a similar smoking prevalence to earlier generations. Policy and prevention should seek to prevent adolescent nicotine exposure via both electronic and combustible cigarettes.

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In other news:

The cost of giving birth, by state FYI  

About health insurance/insurers

The state of Medicare Advantage enrollment in 2025 FYI

UnitedHealth Group sets new earnings guidance amid 19% Q2 profit dip:  UnitedHealth Group posted a net profit of $3.4 billion in the second quarter of 2025, down from $4.2 billion during the same period last year, according to the company’s July 29 earnings report. 
The company also set a new 2025 earnings guidance after suspending its outlook on May 13. 

About hospitals and healthcare systems

USNews Best Hospitals annual report FYI

Joint Commission Introduces Children’s Health Strategy to Advance Specialized Accreditation and Certification: Joint Commission today announced a significant new children’s healthcare strategy designed to address gaps in how children’s hospitals are accredited and certified for the care they provide the nation’s youngest patients. This initiative marks a bold step forward in recognizing children’s unique healthcare needs, as currently, standards do not distinguish between the respective healthcare needs of adults and children.  

About pharma

Chain Drug Store Closures Create Big Opportunities for Supermarkets, Mass Merchandisers and Online Pharmacies, J.D. Power Finds: As a steadily rising number of neighborhood drug stores close their doors, more customers are turning to mail order pharmacies, mass market merchandisers and supermarkets—and finding an improved customer experience along the way. According to the J.D. Power 2025 U.S. Pharmacy Study released today, overall satisfaction with mail order pharmacies is rising steadily, with a 7-point increase (on a 1,000-point scale) in overall customer satisfaction this year. Meanwhile, chain drug stores have seen their overall satisfaction scores slide far below those of other brick-and-mortar pharmacies, such as those found in mass market retailers and supermarkets, pushing many chain drug store customers to consider switching providers. 

Novo again slashes annual guidance, as compounding continues to hit Wegovy: Novo explained that the revised guidance takes into account lower US growth expectations for Wegovy in the obesity market for the remainder of the year, as well as for Ozempic in the GLP-1 diabetes space. The company noted that Wegovy continues to be negatively impacted by "the persistent use of compounded GLP-1s, slower-than-expected market expansion and competition."

About the public’s health

Key Substance Use and Mental Health Indicators in the United States: Results from the 2024 National Survey on Drug Use and Health  This just-released report contains a wealth of information on drug use, including tobacco and alcohol.

 About healthcare IT

Athenahealth hits interoperability milestone as White House aims to promote health data sharing: Health IT software company athenahealth hit a key interoperability milestone with more than 100,000 provider customers now connected to a government-backed data exchange framework.
The company says it's the first healthcare IT company to implement the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) at scale.   

About health technology

Biopharma and medtech investments navigate Q2 challenges 2 reports from J.P. Morgan FYI.

Alzheimer’s Association Releases Its First Clinical Practice Guideline for Blood-Based Biomarker Tests:  In a landmark step toward transforming Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis in specialty care, the Alzheimer’s Association today released its first clinical practice guideline (CPG) on the use of blood-based biomarker (BBM) tests. The guideline is being reported at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference® 2025 (AAIC®) in Toronto and online, and published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia®: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.

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Judge blocks Trump administration’s efforts to defund Planned Parenthood: A federal judge on Monday ruled Planned Parenthood clinics nationwide must continue to be reimbursed for Medicaid funding as the nation’s largest abortion provider fights President Donald Trump’s administration over efforts to defund the organization in his signature tax legislation.
The new order replaces a previous edict handed down by U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston last week. Talwani initially granted a preliminary injunction specifically blocking the government from cutting Medicaid payments to Planned Parenthood members that didn’t provide abortion care or didn’t meet a threshold of at least $800,000 in Medicaid reimbursements in a given year.

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Will hospitals benefit from $50B rural health program? 8 things to know FYI

About pharma

EU drugmakers face 15% tariff on imports into US: The EU and the US reached a deal over the weekend on tariffs that will see pharmaceuticals crossing the Atlantic face a 15% surcharge effective August 1, although differing messages from the two sides left a number of questions unanswered.  

About healthcare IT

White House pushes for unified health data sharing: The White House is preparing to promote more seamless sharing of healthcare data, according to a July 26 report from Bloomberg citing people familiar with the matter.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz, MD, are scheduled to meet with technology companies July 30 to discuss health data interoperability, the report said. The individuals familiar with the discussions did not disclose which companies are expected to attend.
Comment: See this article from 2022: CMS Asks for Public Input on Establishing First, National Directory of Health Care Providers and Services 

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Hospitals boost their profit expectations for 2025 as health insurers stumble: Two major investor-owned hospital chains upped their 2025 revenue and profit forecasts this week, in stark contrast to health insurers, who’ve been doing the opposite. 
HCA Healthcare and Tenet Healthcare, for-profit chains that collectively own 240 hospitals, both said their revenue and profit came in stronger than expected in the second quarter, which ended June 30, prompting them to issue more optimistic financial forecasts for the year.  

About Covid-19

Global Estimates of Lives and Life-Years Saved by COVID-19 Vaccination During 2020-2024:  This comparative effectiveness study found that COVID-19 vaccinations averted 2.5 million deaths during 2020-2024 (sensitivity range estimates, 1.4-4.0 million) and saved 15 million life-years (sensitivity range estimates, 7-24 million life-years). The estimated benefits had a steep age gradient.
See, also:  COVID-19 Vaccination Saved Lives and This Matters in 2025 

About health insurance/insurers

Direct Primary Care Providers Get a Major Policy Win: Clinicians who provide “direct primary care” (DPC) and their patients are gaining a major windfall from the recently passed federal budget reconciliation legislation. Thanks to the “Big Beautiful Budget Bill,” patients will be able to dip into their health savings accounts (HSAs) to pay for DPC services, which are designed to offer relief from assembly-line medicine…
DPC is a healthcare delivery model that allows physicians to contract directly with patients or employers for a fixed monthly membership fee.
The DPC membership fees typically cover unlimited routine primary care services and lab work plus preventive care, basic procedures, and vaccinations — but not prescription drugs or specialty services. There are no copays…
Is DPC the Same as Concierge Care? The terms are often used interchangeably, said healthcare attorney Joanna Eimer of Glenview, Illinois, in an interview although she thinks of them as distinct. DPC is a kind of concierge care, she said, “but there are a lot of concierge services that have grown and become bigger, different kinds of models that include other services as well besides direct primary care.”
Centene posts $253M loss in Q2: Centene posted a $253 million loss in the second quarter as the company continues to face challenges across its ACA, Medicaid and Medicare Advantage businesses.

Medicaid Payment Policy and Colorectal Cancer Screening Rates: This statewide Medicaid initiative demonstrated that targeting financial incentives at managed care plans rather than individual physicians was associated with improvements in population-level CRC screening among underserved populations. The approach aligned incentives across multiple system levels, promoting operational changes that extended from plans to physicians to patients. [Emphasis added]

About hospitals and healthcare systems

760 hospitals at risk of closure, state by state FYI

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About health insurance/insurers

5 No Surprises Act updates FYI 

About pharma

FDA opens national priority fast track, offering 2-month reviews to onshoring and affordability projects: The FDA has begun accepting applications for a priority pathway designed to slash review times to between one and two months, giving developers of medicines that align with U.S. national health priorities a fast track to market. 
FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, M.D., unveiled the program last month. Tuesday, the FDA opened the Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher (CNPV) pilot program for applications and fleshed out details of the scheme, including by providing more information on the types of products that may be eligible for the initiative and how the agency plans to accelerate regulatory reviews.

 Roche considering direct-to-patient sales in US to bypass intermediaries: Roche CEO Thomas Schinecker said Thursday that the price of drugs in the US could come down "quite quickly" if intermediaries were cut out and a direct-to-patient model was introduced. The executive indicated that the company is in talks with the US government over the issue, following similar recent moves by Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk and Pfizer…
Roche is considering directly selling some of its medicines, including those for multiple sclerosis, eye disease and cancer, directly to patients, although Schinecker suggested that the model could work for all of its drugs. The executive cited the example of multiple sclerosis treatment Ocrevus, which he said had been hit with surcharges from PBMs that increased its cost even after Roche had priced it below competing therapies.

About healthcare IT

White House unveils AI strategy with healthcare focus  The article has a really good 14 point summary.

About healthcare personnel

10 medical schools where graduates incur the most, least debt: 2025 FYI

Today's News and Commentary

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In other news:

Judge partially blocks Trump administration from enforcing funding ban against Planned Parenthood:US District Judge Indira Talwani partially granted Planned Parenthood’s request for a preliminary injunction while its lawsuit against the administration plays out. The order does not apply to all Planned Parenthood members.
The Trump administration will not be allowed to enforce the funding ban against the Planned Parenthood members who cannot provide abortions because of state abortion bans, or who received less than $800,000 in Medicaid reimbursements in 2023…

About health insurance/insurers

Humana to reduce about one-third of prior authorization requirements: Humana said on Tuesday it would eliminate about one-third of prior authorizations for outpatient services by next year, the latest insurer to address the tedious paperwork process that has been a pain point for patients and providers.
The company will remove the authorization requirement for diagnostic services across colonoscopies and transthoracic echocardiograms and select CT scans and MRIs by January 1, 2026. 

About pharma

Lawmakers introduce bill to end drugmaker limits on 340B discounts: The Pharmaceutical Access to Invest in Essential, Needed Treatments & Support Act, introduced by Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Calif.) and Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) would require drugmakers to provide 340B discounts to eligible hospitals that use contract pharmacies to dispense medications, according to a July 22 press release from 340B Health shared with Becker’s. 
The bill would also ban drugmakers from placing conditions on those discounts and establish civil monetary penalties for violations, the release said. 

Federal judge halts key parts of Iowa PBM law: 3 notes: A federal judge has temporarily blocked portions of Iowa’s pharmacy benefit manager law, Senate File 383, ruling that several provisions likely conflict with federal law, the Des Moines Register reported July 22. 

FCA Draws Heavy Constitutional Fire After $1.6B J&J Verdict: The 10-figure judgment — the largest in FCA history, according to J&J — was the result of a trial last year in New Jersey federal court. There, a jury found that the J&J division defrauded Medicare and Medicaid by marketing HIV drugs Prezista and Intelence for unapproved uses.

Sanofi touts real-world Beyfortus data as Merck & Co.'s RSV rival enters field: Among infants who received Beyfortus, there were far fewer episodes of RSV lower respiratory tract disease (LRTD) — 35 compared with 462 in those who did not get the antibody. Overall, Beyfortus was 87.2% effective at preventing RSV-related lung disease, 98% effective at preventing cases that led to hospitalisation, and 71% effective against lab-confirmed RSV. Infants who were immunised but still got sick also had fewer medical visits and were much less likely to be hospitalised than those who weren't protected.
Comment: A good reason to allow RSV immunizations to continue.

2024 Gross-to-Net Realities at 9 Top Drugmakers: A New Era of Market Access: Drug Channels’ annual update on drug pricing trends at the largest pharmaceutical manufacturers.
[D]ata highlight divergent trends reshaping the gross-to-net bubble:

  • Rebates, discounts, and other fees reduced the selling prices of brand-name drugs at the biggest drugmakers to less than half of their list prices.

  • When accounting for all list price reductions, average brand-name drug prices declined at four manufacturers and increased at five others.

  • Gross-to-net difference in price changes ranged from −12.8% to +4.2%, reflecting significant differences in the manufacturers’ portfolio mix and pricing strategies.

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About health insurance/insurers

HHS to probe ‘misleading’ Medicare Advantage marketing practices: “In recent years, concerns about aggressive and deceptive marketing practices in Medicare Advantage have become more pressing,” the HHS OIG wrote in July. “These concerns have focused on agents and brokers used by Medicare Advantage plans who target and mislead seniors, at times enrolling them in plans without their knowledge or directing them to plans that substantially increase their out-of-pocket costs.”
The study will focus on complaints received by CMS from 2020 to 2024, specifically looking at the actions taken by agents and brokers that led to the complaints and the incentive structures that encouraged brokers to change individuals’ enrollments. The final study is expected to be released in 2026.
In 2023, CMS finalized a rule aimed at addressing issues related to misleading MA marketing by prohibiting ads that lack specific plan details or mislead beneficiaries through imagery and language. 

Oscar Health is latest insurer to cut earnings guidance: Oscar Health is expecting to operate at a loss in 2025 as costs climb in the individual market. 
The company reported preliminary results for the second quarter of 2025 on July 22, expecting a loss from operations of $200 million to $300 million in 2025, according to a company news release. 

State Waivers for Continuous Medicaid Eligibility to End Under CMS Guidance: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released guidance notifying states that it does not anticipate approving new state proposals or extending existing approvals for section 1115 waivers with continuous eligibility provisions for children and adults in Medicaid.
Continuous eligibility generally allows individuals to remain enrolled for a specific period even if there are fluctuations in income. The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 required all states to implement 12-month continuous eligibility for children beginning on January 1, 2024. States must use Section 1115 waiver authority to extend continuous eligibility to adults (or certain adult subpopulations), as well as to provide multi-year continuous eligibility for children.

An Attack on the Medical Establishment Buried in an 1,800-Page Regulation: The entire article is worth reading, but here is a key portion: Under the new proposal, Medicare would pay 2.5 percent less for every procedure, operation and medical test in 2026, based on data suggesting there have been improvements in “efficiency” over the years. Payments for treatments based only on time, like a consultation with a family physician or neurologist, would not be cut. Such adjustments would be repeated every three years.
The proposal also looks to change the kind of data Medicare should consider instead of the relatively small surveys, noting that new sources of health data from hospitals and electronic billing systems could offer more accurate information.

About pharma

Sanofi to buy respiratory vaccine biotech Vicebio for $1.6B: Sanofi has agreed to acquire Vicebio for up to $1.6 billion, gaining access to the UK biotech's Molecular Clamp technology platform for developing next-generation multivalent vaccines against respiratory pathogens. Under the terms, Sanofi will pay $1.15 billion upfront, with an additional $450 million tied to development and regulatory milestones.

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Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' is projected to add $3.4 trillion to the debt, budget office says: President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill,” which he signed into law this month, will add $3.4 trillion to the U.S. national debt over the next decade, according to a report the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office published Monday.
The report found that the law, which Republicans passed along party lines, will also “increase by 10 million the number of people without health insurance” by 2034.

Patient experience 2025 Results from Press Ganey’s Annual report on this topic:Key patient experience insights for 2025

  • Experience is improving—but not for all. Since 2019, “Likelihood to Recommend” (LTR) scores have risen by +2.8 points in medical practices, +1.7 in ambulatory surgery centers, and +0.5 in emergency departments. Inpatient scores, however, remain down 2.2 points compared to pre-pandemic levels, despite a modest +0.9 rebound year over year.

  • Teamwork is closely linked to trust. Teamwork has become a leading predictor of inpatient experience. Patients are significantly more likely to recommend hospitals when they perceive care teams working in sync.

  • Safety must be seen and felt. When patients report feeling “very safe,” LTR scores soar to 85.3. Without that perception, scores plummet to 34.6.

  • Equity gaps remain—and matter. Disparities by race, age, setting, and admission type persist. Yet hospitals with the least variation across racial and ethnic groups are 2.8x more likely to achieve top-tier patient loyalty.

  • Unplanned admissions create complexity. Patients admitted unexpectedly report 16% lower LTR scores than those with planned stays, highlighting the need for clear communication and coordinated transitions.

  • Experience is one continuous journey. Patients don’t separate digital, clinical, and post-care touchpoints. Aligning patient, consumer, safety, and employee strategies is key to delivering seamless, human-centered care. 
      

About health insurance/insurers

Surprise Medical Bills Were Supposed To Be a Thing of the Past. Surprise — They’re Not. many good examples and explanations about how the system is not working as expected.

About hospitals and healthcare systems

Are Hospital Acquisitions of Physician Practices Anticompetitive?: Focusing on childbirths, the most ubiquitous admission among the privately insured, we find that, on average, these mergers led to price increases for hospitals and physicians of 3.3% and 15.1%, respectively, with no discernible effects on quality measures. Using demand estimation to characterize substitution patterns for both physicians and hospitals, we construct tests that demonstrate price increases are larger among transactions with greater scope for foreclosure and recapture. 

MEDICARE TO SPEED UP CLAWBACK OF $7.8B FROM HOSPITALS: The Trump administration plans to claw back $7.8 billion in Medicare payments to hospitals a decade sooner than originally proposed, potentially sparking another legal challenge from the hospital industry. CMS also intends to send surveys to hospitals asking what their drug costs are, which could set the stage for the Trump administration to attempt to cut hospital drug payments again.

24 large health systems growing bigger FYI

About pharma

Health Cuts Would Result in Fewer Drugs for Americans, Budget Office Reports: Funding cuts to the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration could sharply reduce the number of new drugs available to Americans in the coming decades, according to an analysis released on Friday by the Congressional Budget Office.
The Trump administration has proposed shrinking the budget of the N.I.H., the world’s premier funder of medical research, by $18 billion, or nearly 40 percent. But even a 10 percent reduction would prevent roughly 30 additional drugs from coming to market in the next three decades, the budget office said. 

About healthcare personnel

Independent Physician Practices Struggle for Survival as Value-Based Care Pressures Mount, Black Book Q2 Survey Finds: As the U.S. healthcare system accelerates toward value-based care (VBC) models and consolidation surges in 2025, independent physician practices are fighting for survival. New data from a Q2 Black Book Research poll of 496 practices reveals that 70% do not expect to maintain autonomy beyond the next 18 months without major changes to their operational strategies, partnerships, or financial management.
Comment: The article also provides a good summary of what these groups are doing to try to stay independent.