Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

White House Blocks New Coronavirus Vaccine Guidelines: This action is the reason many people will not trust the vaccine when it comes out. “Top White House officials are blocking strict new federal guidelines for the emergency release of a coronavirus vaccine, objecting to a provision that would almost certainly guarantee that no vaccine could be authorized before the election on Nov. 3, according to people familiar with the approval process.
Facing a White House blockade, the Food and Drug Administration is seeking other avenues to ensure that vaccines meet the guidelines. That includes sharing the standards — perhaps as soon as this week — with an outside advisory committee of experts that is supposed to meet publicly before any vaccine is authorized for emergency use. The hope is that the committee will enforce the guidelines, regardless of the White House’s reaction.”

Trump health official meets with doctors pushing herd immunity: This article is a great explanation of a strategy to open society to the least vulnerable and let COVID-19 spread in order to achieve “heard immunity.” Do you agree?

WHO: 10% of world’s people may have been infected with virus: “The head of emergencies at the World Health Organization said Monday the agency’s ‘best estimates’ indicate roughly 1 in 10 people worldwide may have been infected by the coronavirus — more than 20 times the number of confirmed cases — and warned of a difficult period ahead.”

BioNTech, Pfizer start rolling EMA approval filing for COVID-19 vaccine:”BioNTech and Pfizer have started a rolling submission of their COVID-19 vaccine BNT162b2 to the European Medicines Agency (EMA). The news comes days after EMA named AstraZeneca's AZD1222 as the first COVID-19 vaccine to start the rolling review process.
The EMA uses rolling reviews to start assessing data on an experimental candidate before all the evidence needed to make a final decision is available, cutting the time it takes to decide whether to approve a prospect once the pivotal clinical trial results are submitted to the agency.”

About pharma

8 drugs Trump has been given for his COVID-19 treatment: A good summary of the science (or lack of it) behind the drugs the President received for his COVID-19 infection.

Lopinavir–ritonavir in patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19 (RECOVERY): a randomised, controlled, open-label, platform trial:“In patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19, lopinavir–ritonavir was not associated with reductions in 28-day mortality, duration of hospital stay, or risk of progressing to invasive mechanical ventilation or death. These findings do not support the use of lopinavir–ritonavir for treatment of patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19.”

Trump’s use of Regeneron’s experimental coronavirus treatment creates ‘very tough situation,’ CEO says: In a related story:

  • “The president, who announced Friday that he tested positive for the coronavirus, was given an 8 gram dose of Regeneron’s monoclonal antibody treatment, his doctors said.

  • The company said it provided the drug to the president in response to a ‘compassionate use’ request from Trump’s doctors.

  • That means that while the president’s doctors were confident enough of the drug’s benefit to administer it to Trump, the treatment remains unavailable to most Americans.”

    Compassionate use is usually reserved for patients who have few choices left for their therapies when proven treatments have failed. The medications are in the development or testing phase and show potential promise.

About health insurance

Walmart and Clover Health team up to offer Medicare Advantage plans:”Insurer Clover Health has partnered with Walmart to offer a series of Medicare Advantage plans aimed at low-income, Medicare-eligible beneficiaries in Georgia.
This will be the first foray for Walmart into the health plan space, though the retail giant does have a co-branded Medicare Part D plan with Humana. It has also launched a series of health clinics.”

About hospitals and health systems

New Report Finds Rapid Growth of Catholic Health Systems: Among the study’s findings:
“The 10 largest Catholic health systems have grown and strengthened through mergers and acquisitions, and now own or control 394 short-term acute care hospitals, a 50 percent increase since 2001. The reach of these 10 systems extends beyond traditional acute care hospitals, with over 1,100 total inpatient health care facilities, 864 urgent care centers, 385 ambulatory surgery centers and 274 physician groups.”

About healthcare IT

With ‘nutrition labels’ and an anthropologist’s eye, Duke pioneers a new approach to AI in medicine: “If not for an anthropologist and sociologist, the leaders of a prominent health innovation hub at Duke University would never have known that the clinical AI tool they had been using on hospital patients for two years was making life far more difficult for its nurses…
The researchers are part of a larger team at Duke that is pioneering a uniquely inclusive approach to developing and deploying clinical AI tools. Rather than deploying externally developed AI systems — many of which haven’t been tested in the clinic — Duke creates its own tools, starting by drawing from ideas among staff. After a rigorous review process that loops in engineers, health care workers, and university leadership, social scientists assess the tools’ real-world impacts on patients and workers.”

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

BMS to buy MyoKardia for $13.1 billion, expanding cardiovascular franchise: “Bristol Myers Squibb announced Monday that it agreed to purchase MyoKardia for $225 per share in cash, or approximately $13.1 billion, gaining the latter's experimental heart disease drug mavacamten.”

Assessment of Availability, Clinical Testing, and US Food and Drug Administration Review of Biosimilar Biologic Products: “This study found that most comparative efficacy trials supporting the FDA approval of biosimilars appeared to be as rigorous as and often larger, longer, and more costly than pivotal trials for new molecular entities. Further research is needed into whether less costly comparative efficacy trials could provide adequate evidence of biosimilarity and whether animal studies contribute useful scientific evidence.”

Oxford researchers start new trial on the use of anti-TNF to treat Covid-19 in care homes:”Researchers at the University of Oxford are starting a new study to explore the effectiveness of the anti-tumour necrosis factor (anti-TNF) drug adalimumab [Humira] as a treatment for patients with COVID-19 in the community, especially care homes.”

Nitric oxide a possible treatment for COVID-19, study finds:”Researchers at Uppsala University have found that an effective way of treating the coronavirus behind the 2003 SARS epidemic also works on the closely related SARS-CoV-2 virus, the culprit in the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The substance concerned is nitric oxide (NO), a compound with antiviral properties that is produced by the body itself. The study is published in the journal Redox Biology.
‘To our knowledge, nitric oxide is the only substance shown so far to have a direct effect on SARS-CoV-2,’ says Åke Lundkvist, a professor at Uppsala University, who led the study.”

For the first time, drug makers and PBMs must jointly face an insulin price fixing lawsuit: “A federal judge ruled that a Texas county can proceed with a lawsuit accusing several drug makers and pharmacy benefit managers of conspiring to fix prices for insulin, the first time these companies will have to collectively defend their role in the rising cost of the life-saving diabetes medicine.”

About the public’s health

CDC says airborne transmission plays a role in coronavirus spread in a long-awaited update after a website error last month:”The long-awaited update to the agency Web page explaining how the virus spreads represents an official acknowledgment of growing evidence that under certain conditions, people farther than six feet apart can become infected by tiny droplets and particles that float in the air for minutes and hours, and that they play a role in the pandemic.
The update follows an embarrassing incident last month when the agency removed a draft that had not gone through proper review and was posted in error.”

Amid COVID-19 pandemic, less than 60% in U.S. plan to get flu vaccine: The latest survey by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases found that 59% “of people in the United States plan to be vaccinated against the flu this winter…
Although fewer than one-third of respondents said that the COVID-19 pandemic would make them more likely to be vaccinated, nearly half said they were concerned about the potential effects of the new coronavirus on the seasonal bug, the data showed.” The number is good compared to other years but still much lower than it should be.

US panel tackles race, poverty in virus vaccine priorities: “As expected, the panel recommended health care workers and first responders get first priority when vaccine supplies are limited. The shots should be provided free to all, the panel said. And throughout the vaccine campaign, efforts also should focus on disadvantaged areas to remedy racial health disparities, according to the report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.”

Only 3 states are reporting declines in new coronavirus cases as the US hits its highest daily rate in 2 months: “As of Saturday night, new cases were down in Texas, Missouri and South Carolina, while 21 states reported a rise in cases and a little more than half held steady compared with the week before.
Friday, there were 54,506 new reported cases, according to Johns Hopkins University, the highest single day case number since 64,601 cases were reported on August 14.”

COVID-19 Antibodies Decline Quickly in Donated Plasma: Study: “Antibodies against COVID-19 in people who've recovered from the disease begin to vanish about three months after they develop symptoms, researchers say.
This suggests that sooner is better for recovered COVID-19 patients to donate antibody-containing blood plasma for convalescent plasma treatment, according to the authors of a small study published Oct. 1 in the journal Blood
By about 88 days, all 15 donors had decreases in antibodies, and half of detectable antibodies dropped within 21 days after that, the investigators found.”

Effect of Face Masks on Gas Exchange in Healthy Persons and Patients with COPD: One less reason to avoid wearing a mask: “Although we did not measure changes in tidal volume or minute ventilation, this data find that gas exchange is not significantly affected by the use of surgical mask, even in subjects with severe lung impairment.”

About health insurance

UnitedHealthcare planning largest MA geographic expansion in 5 years: “The insurance giant, which currently covers more than 6.5 million people in its MA plans, will expand to 300 additional counties to reach nearly 3.2 million additional members for plan year 2021.”

Cigna expands Medicare Advantage offerings to 67 new counties in 2021: “In 2021, Cigna will expand its MA plans into 67 new counties in five new states, with both HMO and PPO plans available. The new markets will be in Ohio, Virginia, Oklahoma, Utah and New Mexico. Additionally, it is broadening its PPO offerings in more than 150 of its existing communities.” 

About hospitals and health systems

50 Best Teaching Hospitals for America: Yet another list…this one is “based on their performance in three broad categories: patient outcomes (mortality etc.), civic leadership (treating lower-income and minority patients etc.), and value of care (avoiding overtreatment).” The order of institutions and omissions are surprising.

Investors Extracted $400 Million From a Hospital Chain That Sometimes Couldn’t Pay for Medical Supplies or Gas for Ambulances: “In the decade since Leonard Green & Partners, a private equity firm based in Los Angeles, bought control of a hospital company named Prospect Medical Holdings for $205 million, the owners have done handsomely.
Leonard Green extracted $400 million in dividends and fees for itself and investors in its fund — not from profits, but by loading up the company with debt.”

Lafayette General Health Joins Ochsner Health:”The combined system includes $465 million growth plan for Acadiana and an immediate $100 million expansion at Ochsner Lafayette General Medical Center.”

American Renal Associates shares skyrocket 70% premarket on news of take-private bid: “American Renal Associates Holdings Inc. shares…jumped 70% in premarket trade Friday, after the provider of outpatient dialysis services said it has reached an agreement to be acquired by private-equity firm Nautic Partners in a deal with an enterprise value of about $853 million.”

About healthcare IT

VA considers moving to Cerner patient portal, racking up to $300M more in EHR project costs:”The Department of Veterans Affairs is in talks to retire its current EHR patient portal and switch to Cerner's tool, which could cost anywhere from $60 million to $300 million.”

Clinical evaluation and diagnostic yield following evaluation of abnormal pulse detected using Apple Watch: “A clinically actionable cardiovascular diagnosis of interest was established in only 30 (11.4%) patients, including 6 of 41 (15%) patients who received an explicit alert.” In other words, there is a very high false positive reading with these watches.

University of Minnesota develops AI algorithm to analyze chest X-rays for COVID-19: “A team of researchers at the University of Minnesota recently developed and validated an artificial intelligence algorithm that can evaluate chest X-rays to diagnose possible cases of COVID-19. Working together with M Health Fairview and Epic, the algorithm will be available at no cost to other health systems through Epic, the medical records software used by many health care organizations across the country.”

Nvidia to build the UK’s fastest supercomputer for AI drug-hunters at GSK, AstraZeneca and more: “Through a new partnership with GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca and the U.K.’s National Health Service, the chip maker Nvidia plans to build Great Britain’s most powerful supercomputer—and dedicate its use to artificial intelligence research in healthcare.
Dubbed Cambridge-1, the machine is designed to deliver 400 petaflops of performance, or 400 quadrillion floating-point calculations per second.”

HHS Renews $10.2 Million Contract For Controversial COVID-19 Data Tracking Company:”The Department of Health and Human Services decided to award a second $10.2 million, six-month contract to TeleTracking Technologies even though Congressional committees are investigating the process by which the contract was awarded and the HHS Inspector General is looking at how the company is securing the information it is gathering, an NPR Investigation has learned.”

Today's News and Commentary

Obviously today’s top story is the President and First Lady testing positive for SARS-CoV-2. His age and obesity make him at high risk for complications. She is 50 years old and, as far as we know, healthy. See: White House says Trump 'not incapacitated', working from isolation; Pence negative
Undoubtedly he will not be campaigning for at least the next couple weeks and the second presidential debate will be canceled (though not yet announced).

About the public’s health

Companies Ditch Plans for Rapid Coronavirus Spit Tests at Home“E25Bio and OraSure, two companies pursuing rapid at-home coronavirus tests, have abandoned efforts to use saliva in their products. Their tests, which detect pieces of coronavirus proteins called antigens, will for now rely on shallow nose swabs instead.” But in a related article: OralDNA Labs Wins Emergency Authorization for COVID-19 Oral Rinse Test.

Trump’s ‘early’ travel ‘bans’ weren’t early, weren’t bans and didn’t work: A really good analysis of what we did, when we did it, and whom it affected. Not quite what the President claims.

US traffic deaths fell 2% in 2019; 3rd straight yearly drop: “The agency says deaths fell 2% last year, to 36,096. That’s 739 fewer than the 36,835 fatalities reported to the agency in 2019. 
The decrease came even though vehicle miles traveled increased by nearly 1%, reducing the fatality rate to 1.1 per 100 million miles traveled. That was the lowest since 2014.” However, deaths have been up the past few months despite decreased travel.

About health insurance

Vulnerable Republicans break with Trump on ObamaCare lawsuit: “GOP Sens. Susan Collins (Maine), Joni Ernst (Iowa), Cory Gardner (Colo.) Martha McSally (Ariz.) and Dan Sullivan (Alaska) voted to advance a Democratic-sponsored bill that would block the Justice Department from advocating in court for the invalidation of ObamaCare. The measure was supported by all Senate Democrats and just one other Republican…
Recent polls show Collins, Ernst, Gardner and McSally all trailing their Democratic challengers. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who is up for reelection in 2022, also voted for the measure…
The vote itself came about under unusual circumstances.
Usually, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) controls the floor schedule, but Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) caught Republicans by surprise Tuesday when he filed a procedural motion to bring the health care bill up for a vote when no GOP senator was on the floor to object…
the measure received 51 votes, falling short of the 60 votes needed to advance.”

MedPAC supports changes to the development of MA [Medicare Advantage] plan payment benchmarks: “The group was largely in favor of creating a new payment approach that calculates MA payments based on a blend of local and national spending as opposed to the current methodology, which sets benchmarks on a county-by-county basis.
The panel did not decide on how exactly to blend the Medicare benchmarks and has yet to formalize a recommendation to Congress. But the meeting underscored the panel’s desire to make reforms to the MA payment structure. MedPAC data show that MA plan payments are on average 2% higher than traditional Medicare.”

About healthcare professionals

Physician Work Hours and the Gender Pay Gap — Evidence from Primary Care: “Female PCPs generated less visit revenue than male colleagues in the same practices owing to a lower volume of visits, yet spent more time in direct patient care per visit, per day, and per year.”

U.S. HHS announces further $20 billion funding to healthcare providers:”The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on Thursday announced a fresh round of $20 billion funding for frontline healthcare providers dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic.
The new allocation will take into account financial losses and changes in operating expenses caused by the coronavirus, the agency said, adding that providers that have already received relief fund payments can also apply for more funds.”

About hospitals and health systems

Advocate Aurora, Beaumont cancel merger“The merger plan faced criticism from some Beaumont physicians, nurses, and donors. In August, the Beaumont board of trustees confirmed it would delay a vote on the planned merger. The trustees decided to postpone the vote after seeing the results of a survey, completed by 1,500 of the system's 5,000 physicians, that revealed a lack of confidence in Beaumont's leadership and concerns about its proposed merger with Advocate Aurora.
In announcing the deal was canceled, Beaumont said it wants to focus on ‘local market priorities.’”

About healthcare IT

Digital health company Hims & Hers goes public in blank check deal: “Startup Hims & Hers is going public through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) in a blank check deal.
The three-year old telehealth company will merge with Oaktree Acquisition Corp. in a deal that will value the company at about $1.6 billion…
San Francisco-based Hims launched in November 2017 as a men's wellness brand offering skincare, hair-loss products and erectile dysfunction medication. It has since added a women’s health business, called Hers, focused on birth control, sexual health, and skin and hair care products.
The company now provides access to medical care and treatment for more than a dozen conditions with more than 50 products. It has scaled its business quickly and has facilitated more than 2 million telehealth consultations.”

6 things to know about telehealth medical malpractice concerns: A good, brief summary of this issue.

About pharma

Diabetes patients turn to underground insulin networks as Covid-19 exposes limits of copay caps: The story is about the high cost of insulin causing people to share their prescriptions with others. Apparently the medication is not yet “as cheap as water,” as the President claimed during Tuesday night’s debate.

Drug Pricing Investigation: From the Committee on Oversight and Reform, U.S. House of Representatives (Democrat’s report). Removing the political statements, here are some of the study’s conclusions:

  • A recent report found that drug companies have raised the list prices of more than 600 single-source brand name drugs by a median 21.4% between January 2018 and June 2020.

  • The Committee’s investigation… reveals new details about the specific tactics drug companies are using to raise prices, maximize profits, and suppress competition among other companies.

  • …drug companies are taking full advantage of the federal law that currently prohibits Medicare from negotiating directly with drug companies to lower prices. The drug companies are bringing in tens of billions of dollars in revenues, making astronomical profits, and rewarding their executives with lavish compensation packages—all without any apparent limit on what they can charge.

About medical equipment

Justice Department Opens Ventilator Antitrust Probe Focused on Medtronic: The story shows how complex these transactions can be.
“The probe is centered on a series of events that date to 2012, when Covidien PLC, a device maker that sold ventilators, bought Newport Medical Instruments, a small California-based manufacturer of ventilator systems, for $108 million.
Newport had secured a contract with the federal government in 2010 to develop and supply low-cost ventilators, but the project stalled after Covidien bought Newport, and the two sides eventually agreed to end the contract before any ventilators were delivered.
Nearly three years after Covidien bought Newport, Medtronic bought Covidien in a roughly $50 billion deal, inheriting Newport in the process. Both deals received antitrust clearance from the Federal Trade Commission.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

Hospitals get more time to repay Medicare loans:”President Donald Trump on Sept. 30 signed a short-term spending bill that funds the government through Dec. 11 and relaxes the repayment terms for Medicare loans hospitals received earlier this year. 
The funding bill, previously passed by the House of Representatives and Senate, extends the date for when CMS will begin recouping Medicare advance payments that were sent to hospitals to help offset financial strain tied to the COVID-19 pandemic. CMS will wait one year after the loan was issued to begin withholding Medicare payments to recoup the funds. The loans were originally due 120 days after they were issued. 
The spending bill also delays Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital payment cuts.”

National Health Care Fraud and Opioid Takedown Results in Charges Against 345 Defendants Responsible for More than $6 Billion in Alleged Fraud Losses:Largest Health Care Fraud and Opioid Enforcement Action in Department of Justice History: “These defendants have been charged with submitting more than $6 billion in false and fraudulent claims to federal health care programs and private insurers, including more than $4.5 billion connected to telemedicine, more than $845 million connected to substance abuse treatment facilities, or ‘sober homes,’ and more than $806 million connected to other health care fraud and illegal opioid distribution schemes across the country.”

Marketplace Coverage Enrollment by Metal Tier, 2016-2018: Trends in States Using the Healthcare.gov Enrollment Platform: From an Urban Institute study: “In 2017, on average, a benchmark (second lowest priced) silver premium was 21 percent higher than the lowest-priced bronze plan available to consumers.
In 2018, after federal reimbursement of cost-sharing subsidies ended, the silver plan premiums rose to an average of 38 percent above the lowest-premium bronze plan, sparking an 11-percentage-point drop in the share of marketplace enrollees buying silver plans. Most of that enrollment drop shifted into lower priced bronze plans, coverage that requires substantially higher out-of-pocket costs when using medical care.”

Health Plans Undercutting Obamacare Get Boost From Texas Ruling: “The U.S. judge in Texas who ruled that Obamacare’s individual mandate was unconstitutional has signed off on a kind of low-cost insurance alternative that could pull young, healthy people away from the exchanges and drive up health-care costs for those left behind.
U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor in Fort Worth overruled the U.S. Labor Department’s objections to novel plans proposed by two would-be providers, including a small Georgia company that proposes to offer health plans to individuals who agree to have their internet activity tracked.”
There is one error in the article: ERISA plans are subject to the essential coverage items of the ACA.

About healthcare IT

HHS urges health care sector to guard against Ryuk ransomware threat: “The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response today released an update on the Ryuk ransomware threat to the health care and public health sector, and urged the sector to take certain actions to reduce the risk of an attack.”

VA EHRM, MHS GENESIS Set to Deploy in October After Delays: FINALLY…”Following delays to both the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) Electronic Health Record Modernization (EHRM) program and MHS GENESIS, the Military Health System’s new EHR system, both are set to go-live in late October…
The agency plans for MHS GENESIS to improve patient experience and safety, enable the application of standardized workflows, integrate healthcare delivery, and increase provider efficiency. It will also provide a single EHR for veterans, service members, and their families….
Constructed by Cerner, MHS GENESIS uses the same software as the EHRM program. This allows secure interoperability between the two healthcare systems.”

More than 5.5M health records breached in September: Not a great month for IT. The list provides details by institution. By far the biggest breach was Inova Health System (Falls Church, Va.), with 1,045,270 individuals affected.

About the public’s health

New poll shows alarming coronavirus vaccine skepticism: “Lack of trust in a potential coronavirus vaccine is becoming a truly major problem, according to a new Stat/Harris Poll survey shared with Axios…
79% of respondents said they would worry about a vaccine's safety if it's approved quickly, and 75% said they worry about politics — rather than science — driving the process.”

HPV Vaccination and the Risk of Invasive Cervical Cancer: From a very large Swedish study: “The cumulative incidence of cervical cancer was 47 cases per 100,000 persons among women who had been vaccinated and 94 cases per 100,000 persons among those who had not been vaccinated.” By far the greatest benefit was in women vaccinated before age 17. 

Moderna CEO says its vaccine won’t be ready for general public until spring: “Stéphane Bancel told the Financial Times during a pharmaceutical and biotechnology conference that the company would not be ready to apply for emergency use authorization [emphasis added] for its potential vaccine from the Food and Drug Administration until Nov. 25 at the earliest…”

Health-care spending attributable to modifiable risk factors in the USA: an economic attribution analysis:From today’s Lancet Public Health:
In 2016, US health-care spending attributable to modifiable risk factors was US$730·4 billion…corresponding to 27·0%… of total health-care spending [emphasis added]. Attributable spending was largely due to five risk factors: high body-mass index ($238·5 billion, 178·2–291·6), high systolic blood pressure ($179·9 billion, 164·5–196·0), high fasting plasma glucose ($171·9 billion, 154·8–191·9), dietary risks ($143·6 billion, 130·3–156·1), and tobacco smoke ($130·0 billion, 116·8–143·5). Spending attributable to risk factor varied by age and sex, with the fraction of attributable spending largest for those aged 65 years and older (45·5%, 44·2–46·8).”

 About pharma

US congressional probe alleges Celgene, Teva schemed to drive up cost of key drugs: “The US House Committee on Oversight and Reform released two reports Wednesday outlining various tactics used by Celgene and Teva to drive up prices for their respective drugs Revlimid (lenalidomide) and Copaxone (glatiramer acetate).
… the congressional committee noted that as Medicare is prohibited from negotiating directly with pharmaceutical companies to lower drug costs, Celgene and Teva "targeted the US market for price increases, while maintaining or cutting prices for the rest of the world." For Teva in particular, the panel noted that the net price of Copaxone 40 mg/ml in 2015 was $126 per day in the US, versus $33 in Germany, $26 in Spain, $25 in the UK, and $18 in Russia.”

Remdesivir may not cure coronavirus, but it’s on track to make billions for Gilead: Nice summary odf the issues surrounding this drug. The “news” is: “The government is poised to end its control of distribution of the drug after Sept. 30, a spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services said last week, pushing it into normal drug distribution channels.” AmerisourceBergen will be the sole distributer until the end of the year.

NIAID Stops COVID-19 Trial Enrollment Over Adverse Events: “The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has stopped enrolling severely ill COVID-19 patients in a phase 3 trial of Merck’s Rebif (interferon beta-1a) with Gilead Sciences’ remdesivir because of serious adverse events.”

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Early data show Regeneron's antibody cocktail cuts viral load, eases COVID-19 symptoms:”Regeneron Pharmaceuticals said Tuesday that adding REGN-COV2 to standard-of-care reduced viral load as well as the time to symptom alleviation in non-hospitalised patients with COVID-19. The company noted that first data from an ongoing adaptive Phase I/II/III trial of its investigational dual antibody cocktail also showed "positive trends" in reducing medical visits. Regeneron indicated that it plans "rapidly" to discuss these results with regulatory authorities.”

7 former FDA commissioners: The Trump administration is undermining the credibility of the FDA:The headline speaks for itself. Read the article for details.

UnitedHealth has acquired DivvyDose, a competitor to Amazon’s PillPack:”UnitedHealth Group… has acquired DivvyDose, a start-up that helps patients with chronic illness get their medicines delivered in pre-sorted packages, according to a person familiar with the deal.
The deal price was just over $300 million, the person said…
Many of the largest retailers and health plans are snapping up start-ups in the online pharmacy space, which aim to make it easier for patients to take their medicines. Amazon acquired PillPack, a competitor to DivvyDose in 2018, and Walmart recently scooped up medication management technology from CareZone.”

6 recent drug, device recalls: Read not just the specifics but for the types of problems.

About health insurance

As insurers move this week to stop waiving telehealth copays, patients may have to pay more for virtual care: “Starting Oct. 1, several private health insurers will no longer fully pay for virtual visits under certain circumstances…” UnitedHealthcare is particularly singled out for this policy change.

Insurers offered new benefits in response to COVID-19. Where do they stand 6 months later?: In addition to the telemedicine benefits mentioned above are early medication renewals and diagnostic COVID-19 testing.

Reasons for Being Uninsured Among Adults Aged 18–64 in the United States, 2019: From the CDC- The problem of the uninsured was already an important issue before COVID-19. Here is a summary of the CDC’s findings:

  • “In 2019, 14.5% of adults aged 18–64 were uninsured in the United States.

  • Among uninsured adults aged 18–64, the most common reason for being currently uninsured was that coverage was not affordable.

  • The percentage of uninsured adults who were uninsured because coverage was not affordable increased with age, from 66.8% among those aged 18–29 to 80.9% among those aged 50–64.

  • Hispanic adults (30.4%) were more likely than non-Hispanic white adults (22.3%) to indicate that they were uninsured due to ineligibility.

  • Men (26.8%) were more likely than women (14.6%) to indicate that they were uninsured because coverage was not needed or wanted.”

About the public’s health

The first presidential debate: 7 healthcare takeaways: This article is a nice, brief summary of the healthcare points in last night’s debate. See, also: Fact-checking the first Trump-Biden presidential debate.

Is Your State Doing Enough Coronavirus Testing?: An update from the NY Times tracking- 33 states are below target for testing.

HHS ad blitz sputters as celebrities back away: “The health department’s $300 million-plus, taxpayer-funded vehicle to boost confidence in President Donald Trump’s response to the pandemic is sputtering. Celebrities are refusing to participate, and staff are arraying against it. Some complain of the unstated aim of helping Trump’s re-election. Others point to an ill-prepared video team and a 22-year-old political appointee who has repeatedly asserted control despite having no public health expertise, according to six people with close knowledge of the campaign and documents related to its operations.”

CDC director overruled on cruise ship ban:”Robert Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was overruled when he pushed to extend a ‘no-sail order’ on passenger cruises into next year, according to two sources with direct knowledge of the conversation today in the White House Situation Room…
Vice President Mike Pence, who chaired today's meeting, told Redfield that they would be proceeding with a different plan, according to two task force members.”

About healthcare IT

HHS Announces Funding for Health Information Exchanges to Support Public Health Agencies – STAR HIE Program Funds Five Organizations to Improve Interoperability of Health Data:”The HHS Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) is administering $2.5 million in funding from the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Acts (CARES Act) signed by President Trump on March 27, 2020. The funding will support local health information exchanges (HIEs) under the Strengthening the Technical Advancement and Readiness of Public Health Agencies via Health Information Exchange (STAR HIE) Program.
Each of the five recipients will work to improve HIE services so that public health agencies can better access, share, and use health information during public health emergencies. These efforts will also support communities that are disproportionately impacted by COVID-19.”
Read the announcement for more details about the five recipients.

Anthem to pay $39M to state AGs to settle landmark 2015 data breach:”The insurance giant has reached a settlement with a group of State Attorney Generals [sic] over the historic 2015 hack into its computer network.
Anthem will pay a $39.5 million settlement in connection with the state AGs' investigation.”

Trump administration may push back info blocking rule again due to COVID-19 pandemic: “The Trump administration is planning to delay the compliance deadlines for healthcare information blocking and interoperability regulations for a second time due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) sent the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) an interim final rule on September 17 that revises the timelines.”

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Trump’s drug card plan sows confusion – even within administration:”President Donald Trump’s surprise pledge to send $200 drug discount cards to older Americans has left even his top deputies and health officials scrambling to explain how it would all work — assuming it’s even legal…
Skeptics seized on the way the administration may rely on projected savings from a new drug pricing initiative still under development to justify the more than $6 billion expense as a sign the plan is built on flimsy promises.”

Calif. To Manufacture Its Own Generic Drugs Under New Law: “California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday signed legislation allowing the Golden State to manufacture its own generic prescription drugs, which is aimed at lowering the cost of prescription drugs…”

Once-weekly insulin had similar effects to daily insulin in type 2 diabetes, industry-funded trial finds: “Once-weekly treatment with insulin icodec, an investigational treatment not yet approved by the FDA, had glucose-lowering efficacy and a safety profile similar to those of once-daily insulin glargine U100 in patients with type 2 diabetes, an industry-funded study found.”

Pfizer to Supply $22 Million in Drugs to Covid Stockpile:”Pfizer Inc. will supply almost $22.2 million in drugs to the national medical stockpile to treat patients with Covid-19 and prepare for future emergencies.
The Strategic National Stockpile is purchasing the pharmaceuticals as part of a plan to restructure and resupply, known as SNS 2.0, so that there are enough in the case of future Covid-19 flare-ups.”

About healthcare IT

Efficacy of Smartphone Applications for Smoking CessationA Randomized Clinical Trial: “In this 2-group stratified, double-blind, individually randomized clinical trial of 2415 adult smokers with a 12-month follow-up and high retention, participants assigned to the smartphone application based on ACT [acceptance and commitment therapy] 1.49 times higher odds of quitting smoking compared with the participants assigned to the smartphone application based on US clinical practice guidelines.”

Health Insurer Pays $6.85 Million to Settle Data Breach Affecting Over 10.4 Million People: “Premera Blue Cross (PBC) has agreed to pay $6.85 million to the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and to implement a corrective action plan to settle potential violations of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy and Security Rules related to a breach affecting over 10.4 million people. This resolution represents the second-largest payment to resolve a HIPAA investigation in OCR history.”

Major hospital system hit with cyberattack, potentially largest in U.S. history: “Computer systems for Universal Health Services, which has more than 400 locations, primarily in the U.S., began to fail over the weekend, and some hospitals have had to resort to filing patient information with pen and paper, according to multiple people familiar with the situation.”

Drug Reimbursement Regulation in 6 Peer Countries: Drug regulation varies across countries; before we decide to import or benchmark prices, we need to understand those processes. This article is a good overview of how 6 countries handle this issue. Also, see the editorial: Sophisticated Purchasing of Pharmaceuticals- Learning From Other Countries.

About the public’s health

Feds to ship millions of tests in bid to reopen K-12 schools: “The tests will go out to states based on their population and can be used as governors see fit, but the Trump administration is encouraging states to place a priority on schools. White House officials said at a Rose Garden event that 6.5 million tests will go out this week and that a total of 100 million tests will be distributed to governors over the next several weeks.”

1 in 3 parents won't get flu shots for their child during Covid-19, study finds:”One-third of American parents have no plans to get their children vaccinated for the flu this year, according to the National Poll on Children's Health released Monday, despite the very real possibility their child could also catch the deadly Covid-19.
In addition, two-thirds of parents don't believe getting a flu shot for their child is more important this year, despite advice to the contrary from major government organizations and pediatricians.”

Pfizer urged to hold off on coronavirus vaccine until late November: “Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla and his vaccine partner BioNTech have said the companies expect phase 3 data by the end of October—and that an FDA application could soon follow. But more than 60 researchers and bioethicists urged the partners to wait for more safety data before submitting their shot for a green light…”

United Airlines teams up with Color to make COVID-19 tests available to passengers: “United Airlines is working with health technology and genomics company Color to roll out the first COVID-19 testing program for air travelers.
The airline will offer COVID-19 tests—either rapid tests at the airport or mail-in at home tests prior to travel—to passengers flying from San Francisco International Airport to Hawaiian airports beginning Oct. 15.”

Heavy consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages[SSBs] significantly declines in US: “Overall, the percentage children and adults who drank about 3.5 12-ounce cans of regular soda each day dropped in the United States during a recent 13-year period, researchers reported.”
The reason given for this decrease among all age groups is “likely due to the enforcement of beverage taxes and ordinances that require restaurants to offer only healthy beverages to children instead of SSBs with their meals.”

New U.S. COVID-19 cases rise in 27 states for two straight weeks:”The number of new COVID-19 cases in the United States has risen for two weeks in a row in 27 out of 50 states, with North Carolina and New Mexico both reporting increases above 50% last week, according to a Reuters analysis.
The United States recorded 316,000 new cases in the week ended Sept. 27, up 10% from the previous seven days and the highest in six weeks, according to the analysis of state and county data.”

Coronavirus: New global test will give results 'in minutes': “A test that can diagnose Covid-19 in minutes will dramatically expand the capacity to detect cases in low- and middle-income countries, the World Health Organization (WHO) has said.
The $5 (£3.80) test could transform tracking of Covid-19 in less wealthy countries, which have shortages of healthcare workers and laboratories.
A deal with manufacturers will provide 120 million tests over six months.”

About health insurance

12 Leading Medicare Advantage Payers by 2020 CMS Star Ratings: “Leading into 2020, twelve payers rose above the rest with their Medicare Advantage-prescription drug plans.
These plans earned five stars from CMS for delivering high quality service to their members according to 45 quality measures…
The data showed that Medicare Advantage plans continued to grow more competitive going into 2020, with the average star rating hovering around 4.16. This rise in competition may have been aided by the October 2019 executive order giving plans more flexibility with benefits and changes to payment models.
The year boasted 20 five-star Medicare Advantage-prescription drug plans, a slight decrease from 2018.”

Molina Healthcare to Acquire Affinity Health Plan:”Molina Healthcare, Inc. announced today that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire substantially all of the assets of Affinity Health Plan. The purchase price for the transaction is approximately $380 million, net of expected tax benefits and inclusive of an amount representing Molina’s target allocation of required regulatory capital. Molina intends to fund the purchase with cash on hand.”

Short-term plans spent little on medical claims in 2019: “Health insurers selling the plans reported an average medical loss ratio of 61.6%, meaning they spent roughly 62 cents of every dollar they collected in premiums on members' medical claims.”

About healthcare quality

AMA and others ask CMS not to finalize proposed ACO quality changes: “Citing the ongoing COVID-19 public health emergency, 10 leading healthcare organizations are urging CMS not to move forward with changes to how accountable care organizations and other alternative payment models are assessed on quality in the Medicare Shared Savings Program and the merit-based incentive payment system.
The proposed changes are in the 2021 proposed physician fee schedule.
CMS proposes to abruptly end the use of the Web Interface reporting mechanism, a tool that has been used since the MSSP's inception, the group said. 
The proposed rule would also remove the pay-for-reporting year currently provided to ACOs beginning an initial MSSP contract, as well as individual measures that are newly introduced to the measure set.”

About diagnostics
FDA Allows Use of CapsoVision’s Capsule Endoscope at Home: “The FDA has said it will allow CapsoVision’s CapsoCam Plus, a small bowel capsule endoscope, to be used at home during the pandemic.
The agency said it will exercise “enforcement discretion,” meaning that it won’t enforce its normal requirements for the devices because it has determined that the risk to patients is low.”

About hospitals and health systems

Common Spirit plans $2 billion bond issue amid rush to borrow: The headline speaks for itself.

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

FDA greenlights its first coronavirus antibody blood test for the point of care: “The FDA has authorized its first COVID-19 antibody test designed to be used on-site at the point of care—such as within doctors' offices, urgent care centers and emergency rooms—as opposed to having samples shipped and tested within a central laboratory.
The fingerstick blood test, which operates using only a lined strip similar to a pregnancy test, is designed to provide results for two types of coronavirus antibodies within 15 minutes.”

Young adults account for more COVID-19 cases than any other age group, CDC says: “While older Americans were the ones disproportionately affected early in the pandemic, young adults aged 20 to 29 now account for 20 percent of all cases. 
The findings suggest that young people are not as immune to the virus as some previously thought, and that young adults are contributing to the community spread of the virus, including to people at high risk for more severe illness.”

NOWHERE TO GO: MATERNITY CARE DESERTS ACROSS THE U.S. 2020 REPORT: From the March of Dimes: “Today, 7 million women of childbearing age live in counties without access or with limited accessto maternity care. These women are giving birth to more than 500,000 babies a year and this is putting them at risk of serious health complications.”

U.S. records over 7 million COVID-19 cases as Midwest outbreak surges:”The number of novel coronavirus cases in the United States topped 7 million - more than 20% of the world’s total - as Midwest states reported spikes in COVID-19 infections in September, according to a Reuters tally.”

CDC will distribute $200 million for COVID-19 vaccine preparations: “The money will be sent through CDC's existing immunization cooperative agreement and will help support 64 jurisdictions as they plan and implement COVID-19 vaccination services, HHS said.
The amount each jurisdiction receives is determined based on the size of the population there.”

Trump says White House may overrule FDA plans for stricter COVID-19 vaccine standards:”US President Donald Trump indicated that the White House could block plans by the FDA to release tougher standards for granting emergency-use authorisation (EUA) of eventual COVID-19 vaccines, claiming that such a move by the agency appears politically motivated.”

Black women with breast cancer experience delayed, longer treatment than whites: “Our study found that Black women experienced delays in both treatment initiation and duration more often than white women. Even among women with low socioeconomic status, we still saw fewer delays among white women, underscoring the disparate experience of Black women, who appear to experience unique barriers…”

Trends in Cardiovascular Disease Prevalence by Income Level in the United States: “This study found substantial and increasing disparities in CVD prevalence between the richest and poorest participants in the NHANES from 1999 to 2016, with lower CVD rate reported among the highest-resources group. Additional research into the dynamics of income inequality and health outcomes as well as policy and public health efforts to mitigate this inequality are needed.”

About pharma

Trump approves final plan to import drugs from Canada ‘for a fraction of the price’: “The final plan clears the way for Florida and other states to implement a program bringing medications across the border despite the strong objections of drugmakers and the Canadian government.
Florida, the biggest swing state in the presidential election, is one of six states to pass laws seeking federal approval to import drugs. Trump’s announcement came the same day counties in Florida began sending out vote-by-mail ballots.”

FDA updates benzodiazepine boxed warning: ”The new information, to be added to an updated boxed warning and to prescribing information for all benzodiazepine medicines, will provide a uniform method of describing the risks of misuse or abuse, as well as risks of addiction and the potential for withdrawal symptoms ‘consistently across all the medicines in the class,’ according to FDA.”

About health insurance

Trump signs U.S. healthcare executive orders that may have little impact: The President signed two executive orders, neither of which has the force of law. The first “guarantees” insurance companies cannot discriminate on the basis of pre-existing conditions. The ACA, which the administration is trying to repeal, does legally guarantee that right. The other order says Congress should work to solve the problem of surprise bills, something on which it has already been working.

Trump Administration Announces Historically Low Medicare Advantage Premiums and New Payment Model to Make Insulin Affordable Again for Seniors: “The Medicare Advantage average monthly plan premium is expected to decrease 11 percent to $21.00 (estimated) in 2021 from an average of $23.63 in 2020. Since 2017, the average monthly Medicare Advantage premium has decreased by an estimated 34.2 percent. This is the lowest that the average monthly premium for a Medicare Advantage plan has been since 2007.”

Catastrophic Health Expenditures Across Insurance Types and Incomes Before and After the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act: “ACA implementation was associated with 2 million fewer US adults with catastrophic expenditures each year. Financial protection improved for the lowest income quartile, which was one of the ACA’s principal aims. However, improvements were not observed in higher income quartiles or among the privately insured, who represent an increasing share of those experiencing catastrophic expenditures. Among individuals in the poorest quartile, the privately insured are the most vulnerable, with one-third experiencing catastrophic spending annually. These findings help to explain why so many US residents, including those with insurance, continue to worry about their ability to afford needed care.”
2020 Scorecard on State Health System Performance: The Commonwealth Fund’s three major conclusions:

”Insurance coverage gains associated with the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have stalled, and affordability and out-of-pocket costs are worsening.

Increased prices for health care services are a major driver of overall spending growth, and this has led to higher costs for consumers in commercial plans.

Premature deaths from treatable conditions and deaths from suicide, alcohol, and drug overdose continue to impact life expectancy.”

The top state was, again, Hawaii. Read the report for more details.

About healthcare quality
As hospitals look to prevent infections, a chorus of researchers make a case for copper surfaces: “As hospitals across the country hunt for ways to reduce the spread of pathogens to patients, a growing chorus of researchers is arguing that a simple swap might help: replace stainless steel surfaces with copper.”

About hospitals and health systems

100 of the largest hospitals and health systems in America | 2020: A list FYI.

16 hospitals planning upgrades, expansions: Amazing that institutions are still building.

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

Blue Health Insurers Reach Tentative Antitrust Settlement for $2.7 Billion: “The Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance group has negotiated a tentative settlement in a sweeping antitrust suit filed on behalf of customers, according to people with knowledge of the matter, in a deal that would require a payout of around $2.7 billion and curtail practices that allegedly limited competition among its three dozen member-companies.
The settlement isn’t final, according to these people. The Blue Cross Blue Shield Association has signed off on the agreement, but it hasn’t been approved by the boards of all 36 Blue Cross Blue Shield insurers.” 

About pharma

Gilead To Pay $97M To Resolve Copay Kickback Claims: Gilead used a foundation to pay patient copays, a plan HHS has banned.

Novartis sells bonds tied to expanding access to medicines in poor countries: “In a first-of-its-kind move by a large drug maker, Novartis (NVS) raised approximately $2.1 billion last week by selling bonds that are tied directly to its progress in making medicines accessible in certain low- and middle-income countries.
Specifically, the stated goal is to expand the number of patients who receive its brand-name medicines by at least 200% by 2025, as well as programs that market medicines to combat leprosy, malaria, Chagas, and sickle cell disease by at least 50% over the same period.”

CVS accused of patient steering: The National Community Pharmacists Association "conducted a survey of 412 community pharmacies between Sept. 8 and Sept. 11 and found that 79 percent of community pharmacies said patient steering happened with one or more of their patients in the past six months, and almost 78 percent said some of their patients then moved their prescriptions to CVS. 
Patient steering happens when an insurance company moves a patient's prescriptions to a different pharmacy without their knowledge or consent.” CVS denies the claim.

Pfizer partner BioNTech sees no role for its vaccine in UK challenge trial: The trial in the UK involves challenging volunteers with live Sars-CoV-2 to see if the vaccine works.

Letter to Eli Lilly and Company from the HHS General Council criticizing the drugmaker’s decision to restrict its participation under the 340b program.

About hospitals and health systems

The National Patient and Procedure Volume Tracker™: Among the findings:
”Inpatient volume has not fully recovered with inpatient procedures and surgeries still down significantly

  • Volumes now approaching 2019 levels, but lost volumes have not recovered

  • The “new normal” may be 90-95% of previous levels

  • Inpatient procedures and surgeries continue to trail 2019 levels, down 18.6% cumulatively, having a negative financial impact

  • Medical, not surgical service lines, have come back strongest as patients have focused on chronic, preventative, and screening care

Outpatient volume has recovered for some, but not for all

  • Volumes fell significantly, but have now recovered, down 56% at the start, but down only 1.5% for the past 30 days

  • Recovery is not evenly distributed, as some areas have come back strongly, while other care areas still lag

  • Volume rebound demonstrates ongoing recovery outside the inpatient setting, including new channels such as telehealth”

Trump Administration Plans Crackdown On Hospitals Failing To Report COVID-19 Data: “The federal government is preparing to crack down aggressively on hospitals for not reporting complete COVID-19 data daily into a federal data system, according to internal documents obtained by NPR.
The draft guidance, expected to be sent to hospitals this week, also adds new reporting requirements, asking hospitals to provide daily information on influenza cases, along with COVID-19. It's the latest twist in what hospitals describe as a maddening flurry of changing requirements as they deal with the strain of caring for patients during a pandemic.”

About healthcare IT

BestBuy Health, Amazon Alexa team up on new telehealth-enabled flip phone for seniors: “BestBuy Health… launched a new flip phone equipped with Amazon Alexa voice assistance and telehealth capabilities that help connect older adults to healthcare services.
The phone, dubbed Lively Flip, has Amazon Alexa capabilities so individuals can use their voice to make calls and send text messages. The device is also designed with an urgent call button, which if pressed, automatically connects the caller to a clinical urgent care team via GreatCall, a medical alert system and device provider that offers 24/7 access to urgent response agents.”

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Coronavirus Vaccine Tracker: From the NY Times…A great article on the vaccine development and what companies are at what stages in their clinical trials.

Democrats seek investigation into Pentagon’s coronavirus fund following Washington Post article: “Congressional Democrats sharply criticized a Defense Department decision to repurpose a $1 billion coronavirus fund into an economic stimulus for defense contractors, a change the lawmakers say violated congressional intent…
The funds, set aside under the Cares Act economic stimulus package passed in March, were given to the Pentagon to ‘prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus.’ But the Defense Department decided to divert most of that funding toward long-standing defense concerns such as drone technology, body armor and dress uniforms. The decision was made in consultation with the White House Office of Management and Budget, as well as other federal agencies, according to a defense official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal deliberations.”

FDA poised to announce tougher standards for a covid-19 vaccine that make it unlikely one will be cleared by Election Day: The headline speaks for itself.

U.S. News and Aetna Foundation release 2020 Healthiest Communities rankings:At the top is Los Alamos County, New Mexico. Check the article to get the compete list.

Massive genetic study shows coronavirus mutating and potentially evolving amid rapid U.S. spread:”Scientists in Houston on Wednesday released a study of more than 5,000 genetic sequences of the coronavirus, which reveals the virus’s continual accumulation of mutations, one of which may have made it more contagious.
That mutation is associated with a higher viral load among patients upon initial diagnosis, the researchers found.
The new report, however, did not find that these mutations have made the virus deadlier or changed clinical outcomes. All viruses accumulate genetic mutations, and most are insignificant, scientists say.”

Vitamin D Deficiency in Adults: Screening: In draft statement the “USPSTF concludes that the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of screening for vitamin D deficiency in asymptomatic adults.”

Trump Administration Dips Into Protective Gear, CDC Funds to Fund Vaccine Push:”The Trump administration has shifted billions of dollars previously allocated to public-health programs into its Operation Warp Speed vaccine push, reflecting the U.S. government’s increasing focus on a medical solution to ease the Covid-19 pandemic…
One of the biggest transfers came in August, with $6 billion pulled from $16.7 billion that had been allocated to the U.S. Strategic National Stockpile, which buys, holds and distributes crucial medical supplies in times of national crisis.  The money had originally been meant to replenish stocks of medical protective gear, ventilators, and Covid-19 testing supplies, all of which have experienced shortages at points during the pandemic.”

Most KN95 masks fall short of U.S. standards for effectiveness, ECRI finds: “Up to 70% of KN95 masks manufactured in China do not meet U.S. standards for effectiveness, an analysis by ECRI found. 
ECRI, a patient safety organization, said it found 60% to 70% of imported KN95 masks do not filter 95% of aerosol particulates despite the standard the KN95 mask name suggests. ECRI tested nearly 200 masks from 15 different manufacturer models purchased by some of the largest health systems in the U.S.”

About health insurance

Repeal of the McCarran-Ferguson Act would undermine states’ authority and harm millions of Americans: This article is AHIP’s response to the House passage of a bill to remove anti-trust immunity for the insurance industry.

Trump administration reimposes 'public charge' rule following court victory: “Under the the rule, any immigrant who receives at least one designated public benefit — including Medicaid, food stamps, welfare or public housing vouchers — for more than 12 months within any three-year period will be considered a “public charge” and will be more likely to be denied a green card.
The rule would make it easier for immigration officials to deny entry or legal status to people likely to rely on government assistance.”

OIG: Coding errors led to $14M in overpayments to Medicare Advantage plans: “Incorrect diagnosis codes from providers led to a $14 million windfall for some Medicare Advantage plans, a federal watchdog found.
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General audited diagnosis codes for strokes as part of an investigation into codes that are at a high risk of being miscoded. The result was that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services made an estimated $14.4 million in inaccurate payments in 2015 and 2016.”

ASCs projected to save Medicare more than $73B in next decade: analysis: “Ambulatory surgery centers reduced Medicare costs by nearly $29 billion between 2011 and 2018 by providing services in a lower-cost setting than hospital outpatient departments, according to a new analysis. 
The report also estimates ASC's saved Medicare $4.2 billion in 2018, the latest data available.”

About healthcare IT

FDA Launches the Digital Health Center of Excellence: “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced it is launching the Digital Health Center of Excellence within the Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH). The launch of the Digital Health Center of Excellence is an important step in furthering the agency’s overarching dedication to the advancement of digital health technology, including mobile health devices, Software as a Medical Device (SaMD), wearables when used as a medical device, and technologies used to study medical products.”

Economic impact of clinical decision support [CDS] interventions based on electronic health records: “Twenty-seven studies are investigated in this review. Of those, twenty-two studies indicate a reduction of healthcare expenditure after implementing an EHR based CDS system, especially towards prevalent application areas, such as unnecessary laboratory testing, duplicate order entry, efficient transfusion practice, or reduction of antibiotic prescriptions. On the contrary, order facilitators and undiscovered malfunctions revealed to be threats and could lead to new cost drivers in healthcare.”

Microsoft makes big play for healthcare cloud business in competition with Google, Amazon: “Microsoft's new cloud service designed specifically for healthcare will be generally available October 30…The Microsoft Cloud for Healthcare service bring together existing services such as Teams, Azure IoT and chatbots to help healthcare organizations manage operations.
Microsoft, Google and Amazon Web Services (AWS) are all pushing deeper into healthcare in a battle to provide cloud computing and data storage technology to hospitals.”

Epic EHR 1st to integrate with Microsoft Teams for telehealth: The headline speaks for itself.

Hospitals and health systems
Ascension records $1B annual loss: “After factoring in nonoperating items, including losses from investments of $410.2 million, Ascension reported a net loss of $1.04 billion in fiscal 2020. A year earlier, the health system reported investment gains of $1.1 billion and net income of $1.23 billion. 
The health system said its charity care costs climbed 9.8 percent year over year to $665 million. The increase was primarily attributable to more patients qualifying for financial assistance, Ascension said.” 

About pharma

GoodRx raises $1.1B in IPO as it sell shares above target: “The GoodRx IPO began trading Wednesday at $46 per share, 39% above its $33 per share offering price. GoodRx stock rose above $49 per share in early afternoon action, Investors.com reported. That boosted the consumer healthcare technology firm's market cap to about $12.7 billion.”

About healthcare quality
Updated Core Measures Focus on Improving Patient Care, Reducing Burden, and Eliminating Redundancies:”Today, the Core Quality Measures Collaborative (CQMC) released four updated core measure sets covering specific clinical areas as part of its mission to provide useful quality metrics as the nation’s health care system moves from one that pays based on volume of services to one that pays for value…
The four updated core measure sets released today cover:

  • Gastroenterology

  • HIV and Hepatitis C

  • Obstetrics and Gynecology

  • Pediatrics”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

House votes to restore the application of antitrust laws to insurance business: If passed into law, this measure would be the biggest change to health insurance law since the ACA and possibly of equal importance.
“The US House of Representatives voted Monday in favor of legislation that would amend the 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act and restore the ability of the federal government to charge health insurers under antitrust laws.
This bill, HR 1418, is part of the Competitive Health Insurance Reform Act of 2019, which was cosponsored by dozens of Democrats and Republicans in a bipartisan push to bring insurers under federal antitrust protections. It was first introduced in February 2019.
The Act states that restoring the application of ‘antitrust laws to the business of health insurance … protect[s] competition and consumers.’ The McCarran-Ferguson Act allows for antitrust exemptions to insurance businesses and gives states the power to regulate such insurance, which took insurance companies out of the protections of antitrust acts like the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act.”

About healthcare finance

Health-care stocks fall on uncertainty over Supreme Court and Obamacare: “Shares of Medicaid insurers Centene and Molina Health fell roughly 8.5%. The ACA has helped fuel the growth Medicaid in states that have expanded coverage to low-income and poor adults.
Hospital operator stocks also fell, with Tenet Healthcare sinking 13%, Universal Health Services down 8.6% and Community Health Systems off 6%. Investors worry that the repeal of the ACA could result in higher uncompensated care for the facilities, if millions were to lose health coverage.”

About the public’s health

Live updates: U.S. surpasses 200,000 coronavirus deaths: The headline, sadly, speaks for itself.

In ‘Power Grab,’ Health Secretary Azar Asserts Authority Over F.D.A.: “In a stunning declaration of authority, Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of health and human services, this week barred the nation’s health agencies, including the Food and Drug Administration, from signing any new rules regarding the nation’s foods, medicines, medical devices and other products, including vaccines.
Going forward, Mr. Azar wrote in a Sept. 15 memorandum obtained by The New York Times, such power “is reserved to the Secretary.” The bulletin was sent to heads of operating and staff divisions within H.H.S.”

CDC reverses itself and says guidelines it posted on coronavirus airborne transmission were wrong: “On Monday morning, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention edited its Web page describing how the novel coronavirus spreads, removing recently added language saying it was “possible” that it spreads via airborne transmission. It was the third major revision to CDC information or guidelines published since May.
The agency had posted information Friday stating the virus can transmit over a distance beyond six feet, suggesting that indoor ventilation is key to protecting against a virus…
The CDC shifted its guidelines Friday, but the change was not widely noticed until a CNN report Sunday. Where the agency previously warned that the virus mostly spreads through large drops encountered at close range, on Friday, it had said ‘small particles, such as those in aerosols,’ were a common vector.”

COVID-19; Federal Efforts Could Be Strengthened by Timely and Concerted Actions: An extensive analysis and recommendations from the GAO. Among the recommendations:

  • “HHS, in coordination with FEMA, should immediately document roles and responsibilities for supply chain management functions transitioning to HHS, including continued support from other federal partners, to ensure sufficient resources exist to sustain and make the necessary progress in stabilizing the supply chain.

  • HHS, in coordination with FEMA, should further develop and communicate to stakeholders plans outlining specific actions the federal government will take to help mitigate supply chain shortages for the remainder of the pandemic.

  • HHS and FEMA—working with relevant stakeholders—should devise interim solutions, such as systems and guidance and dissemination of best practices, to help states enhance their ability to track the status of supply requests and plan for supply needs for the remainder of the COVID-19 pandemic response.”
    Later in the monograph, the GAO makes 16 specific recommendations including: “As CDC implements its COVID-19 Response Health Equity Strategy, the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should involve key stakeholders to help ensure the complete and consistent collection of demographic data.”

Analysis of the 30-Pack-Year Smoking Threshold in African Americans From an Underserved Lung Cancer Screening Program: “Race was not associated with lung cancer diagnosis, but African Americans were the only race to have lung cancer if pack-years were <30. The incidence of cancer in African Americans was similar in those who reported ≥30 or <30 pack-years (2.2% vs. 2.7%; odds ratio, 1.21; 95% confidence interval, 0.39-3.75; P = .740), and the 30-pack-year threshold was not associated with lung cancer diagnosis.” The criteria for screening may need to be lowered in tis population if the results are confirmed.

Trends in Recurrent Coronary Heart Disease [CHD] Following Myocardial Infarction Among US Women and Men Between 2008 and 2017: “ Rates of recurrent MI [heart attack], recurrent CHD events, heart failure hospitalization, and mortality in the first year after an MI declined considerably between 2008 and 2017 in both men and women, with proportionally greater reductions for women than men. However, rates remain very high and rates of recurrent MI, recurrent CHD events and death continue to be higher among men than women.”

Medicare Wouldn’t Cover Costs of Administering Coronavirus Vaccine Approved Under Emergency-Use Authorization: The vaccine may be free but not the cost of administration.

About healthcare professionals

U.S. Medical School Applications Soar in Covid-19 Era: “Through the end of August, the number of applicants rose nearly 17% from a year earlier, marking an interest not seen in more than a decade, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges, which administers the main medical-school entry exam. Compared with past years, this year’s numbers are unprecedented, said Patrick Fritz, a senior director with AAMC.”

About hospitals and health systems

Moody's: Hospital financial outlook worse as COVID-19 relief funds start to dwindle: “For-profit hospitals are expected to see a financial decline over the next 12 to 18 months as federal relief funds that shored up revenue losses due to COVID-19 start to wane, a recent analysis from Moody’s said.
The analysis, released Monday, finds that cost management is going to be challenging for hospital systems as more surgical procedures are expected to migrate away from the hospital and people lose higher-paying commercial plans and go to lower-paying government programs such as Medicaid.”

About pharma

Roche Buys Up Inflammatory Disease Biotech for $447 Million: “Roche has announced that it will acquire the biotech Inflazome for $447 million as it expands its presence into drugs for the treatment of inflammatory diseases.”

About healthcare IT

Sam’s Club Teams Up with 98point6 to Offer Exclusive Subscription Plan Options with the 98point6 Mobile App: “Through the collaboration with 98point6, Sam’s Club members with either a Club or a Plus membership can purchase a quarterly subscription at a lower members-only introductory fee of just $20 for the first 3 months per participant, compared to 98point6’s regular sign-up fee of $30 per participant. The subscription includes visits for just $1, with unlimited use, and access to U.S. board-certified doctors 24 hours a day and seven days a week. After the first three months, members will pay $33.50 every three months per participant.”

Sharecare tapped by Amazon to deliver trusted health and well-being information through Alexa:”Sharecare, the digital health company that helps people manage all their health in one place through its comprehensive and data-driven virtual heath platform, today announced it is integrating its library of more than 80,000 questions and answers on various health and well-being topics into the Alexa voice service….”
For example:

  • “Alexa, when should I get screened for colon cancer?”

  • “Alexa, how long does it take your body to digest food?”

  • “Alexa, when is the peak of flu season?”

  • “Alexa, how long are you supposed to wash your hands?”

  • “Alexa, why are my feet cold?”

  • “Alexa, why do people smoke?”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

Obamacare's chances of surviving Supreme Court diminished with RBG's death: The article is an excellent summary of the possible ACA scenarios that could come from the Supreme Court’s consideration of the ACA’s constitutionality.

Radiation Oncology (RO) Model Fact Sheet: CMS is introducing bundled payments for radiation oncology services. This page provides details.

CMS Announces Transformative New Model of Care for Medicare Beneficiaries with Chronic Kidney Disease: The  End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Treatment Choices (ETC) Model “will test shifting Medicare payments from traditional fee-for-service payments to payments where providers are incentivized for encouraging receipt of home dialysis and kidney transplants. This value-based payment model will encourage participating care providers to invest in and build their home dialysis programs, allowing patients to receive care in the comfort and safety of their home. Home dialysis gives patients the freedom to choose the therapy that works best with their lifestyles, without being tied to the dialysis facility’s schedule. 
The ETC Model also incentivizes transplantation by financially rewarding ESRD facilities and clinicians based on their transplant rate calculated as the sum of the transplant waitlist rate and the living donor transplant rate.” Also see: Industry Voices—David vs. Goliath: New entrants changing the face of dialysis

New Rule Expands the Scope of Reimbursable Expenses for Living Organ Donation: “In support of President Trump’s Executive Order on Advancing American Kidney Health, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) through the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) has finalized a new rule to expand the scope of qualified reimbursable expenses incurred by living organ donors to include lost wages, child-care and elder-care expenses. The new rule amends regulations of the National Organ Transplant Act of 1984, as amended.”

About the public’s health

Cancer statistics for adolescents and young adults, 2020:Read the abstract for the specifics, which vary by age category and disease. Reasons for many of the increases are not known.

U.S. sets record with over one million coronavirus tests in a day: “The United States set a one-day record with over 1 million coronavirus diagnostic tests being performed, but the country needs 6 million to 10 million a day to bring outbreaks under control, according to various experts.”

Covid-19 Can Spread On Long Airline Flights, Per Two New Studies: The headline speaks for itself.

About pharma

Prescriptions Slowly Recovering From Pandemic Hit: “As retail prescriptions fell by 4%, mail order prescriptions increased by 5.2%…
COVID-19 has also been a contributing factor in the increase in 90-day prescription refills…The beginning of the pandemic saw a dramatic drop in 30-day retail prescriptions (down 12.5%) at the same time that 90-day retail prescriptions jumped by 7.5%. In the mail order category, both 30- and 90-day prescriptions increased, but 90-day grew by much more (16.4% compared with 4.8%).”

3 former pharmacy execs indicted in alleged $50M healthcare fraud scheme: “The three men and their conspirators prompted more than $50 million in fraudulent insurance claims for compounded medications that weren't medically necessary, the indictment states. They also took patients' names, dates of birth and other identifying information without their consent from their prescriptions and used them to make false claims to the pharmacy benefits administrator, according to the indictment.“

Illumina to pay $8B to reacquire cancer blood test maker Grail, with all eyes on 2021: “Illumina will put down a total of $8 billion to reacquire its former spinout Grail, which, after nearly five years on its own, is nearing completion of a simple blood test capable of detecting 50 different cancers in their earliest stages.
Both companies expect it all to come together in 2021: The transaction is slated to close in the second half of next year—consisting of $3.5 billion in cash and $4.5 billion in Illumina stock upfront—while Grail has on its calendar two commercial launches of tumor-screening tests. Illumina has predicted the finished deal will immediately start adding to its bottom line.”

About healthcare quality

NAACOs urges Congress to address qualifying thresholds in value-based care models:”The National Association of Accountable Care Organizations (NAACOs) surveyed 116 ACOs across a number of programs, and found that 90% were concerned they would be unable to reach qualifying thresholds in 2021, which must be met to receive bonuses under the program.
The survey shows that 96% of the responding ACOs would not meet the 2021 targets based on their 2020 performance.”

About Healthcare IT

NIH to fund 7 digital health projects aimed at COVID-19:”The National Institutes of Health has picked seven companies and academic centers to help develop digital health solutions aimed at the COVID-19 pandemic—including smartphone apps, wearables and big data programs to mitigate the personal and public health impacts of the novel coronavirus.
Each one-year contract includes two phases: an initial award for feasibility testing, followed by an option for additional development funding. If all seven progress to the second phase, the total value of awards would reach $22.8 million.”
The article has project examples.

Today's News and Commentary

BREAKING NEWS: Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died this evening. Republicans vow to fill her seat as soon as possible. The immediate health implication is what will happen to the vote on the ACA after election day. If no one is confirmed by then, the Court could be deadlocked at 4-4.

For your enjoyment

Alligator on gas snaps up Ig Nobel prize: Amusing information about this year’s Ig Nobel winners.

About the public’s health

C.D.C. Testing Guidance Was Published Against Scientists’ Objections: “A heavily criticized recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month about who should be tested for the coronavirus was not written by C.D.C. scientists and was posted to the agency’s website despite their serious objections, according to several people familiar with the matter as well as internal documents obtained by The New York Times.”
And then today: CDC reverses controversial guidance, saying tests are for anyone who contacts someone with Covid-19: “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday reversed a heavily criticized guidance it issued last month about who should be tested for the novel coronavirus. The agency updated its recommendation to call for testing anyone — including people without symptoms — who has been in close contact with someone diagnosed with covid-19, the disease caused by the virus.”

Rapid test for Covid-19 shows improved sensitivity: “A CRISPR-based test developed at MIT and the Broad Institute can detect nearly as many cases as the standard Covid-19 diagnostic…
The new test, known as STOPCovid, is still in the research stage but, in principle, could be made cheaply enough that people could test themselves every day.”

Adult Obesity Prevalence Maps: This CDC study examines obesity using discriminators of race, age, education and geography. The trend is not encouraging. For example: “All states and territories had more than 20% of adults with obesity.”

About hospitals and health systems

FTC’s Bureau of Economics to Expand Merger Retrospective Program: “The Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau of Economics has announced a revamped Merger Retrospective Program, which will expand and formalize the Bureau’s retrospective research efforts that have already produced studies analyzing the effects of a range of consummated mergers over the last 35 years.
Merger retrospective analysis seeks to determine, after the fact, whether a merger has affected competition in one or more of the markets impacted by the merger. The analysis can shed light on whether the agency’s threshold for bringing an enforcement action in a merger case has been too permissive. It can also assess the performance of a pricing pressure index, merger simulation model, or other tools used to predict the effects of a proposed merger.”
These enhanced reviews will especially affect hospitals mergers.

Poison Pill Quiets Hospitals on Defying Price Transparency Rule: “Hospitals that threatened to defy the federal government’s requirement to disclose their negotiated prices with insurers by Jan. 1 are reconsidering after a harsh new penalty—possible loss of Medicare payments—was buried in a subsequent regulation.
Some had considered not complying, protesting that disclosing prices is costly and would put some of their business practices in jeopardy. The fine set out by the initial price transparency regulation was $300 a day, whereas major hospitals project their initial costs of complying at $500,000 a year, or more than $1,300 a day, according to the American Hospital Association.
However, a recent yearly payment rule said that hospitals that don’t provide their median negotiated rates with Medicare Advantage private insurance plans could be denied any Medicare payment. That would make a rebellion difficult: A 2019 analysisfound about 18% of hospital revenue came from Medicare, according to Definitive Healthcare.”

About healthcare IT

Expanding the Use of Telehealth for Medicare Recipients During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The article is a good summary of what has happened recently with use of telemedicine in the Medicare population. And speaking of growing telehealth: Telehealth company Amwell spikes in public debut with outsized $742M IPO:”Telehealth company Amwell saw its stock spike 42% in its first day of trading Thursday after raising an outsized initial public offering.
Buoyed by strong demand for IPOs, Amwell raised $742 million Wednesday with the sale of 41.2 million class A shares at $18 apiece. That's a marked increase from plans last week to sell 35 million shares at $14 to $16 a share, according to documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).”

Security Risk Assessment Tool: “The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), in collaboration with the HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR), developed a downloadable Security Risk Assessment (SRA) Tool to help…healthcare providers conduct a security risk assessment as required by the HIPAA Security Rule and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Service (CMS) Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program.”

MassMutual Explores Health Data from Wearables: “Just like car insurance companies offer discounts to drivers who allow monitoring of their safe driving habits, health and life insurance companies may one day offer discounts to those who comply with good health habits.
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company or MassMutual is one of them. This century-plus old company is looking to pioneer the analytics of health data from wearable devices to predict long term mortality risk -- whether someone will die in 20 years or 30 years or more. Those with healthy habits could earn a health discount on their premiums.”

About pharma

Biogen stands to lose billions in Tecfidera sales next year, analyst says after new court ruling: The article highlights the value of brand protection in the biopharma sector.
”Defending its blockbuster multiple sclerosis drug Tecfidera from generics hasn't been easy for Biogen lately, and the painful trend continued this week with a court ruling that clears the way for more copycat drugs to launch.After the Delaware patent court loss this week, multiple generics will likely roll out soon, Bernstein analyst Ronny Gal predicts—and when they do, they'll siphon off most of Tecfidera's $3 billion-plus in U.S. sales.”

Trump keeps claiming he lowered prescription drug prices. But that is largely not true: This article is the fact-checked version of the President’s claims to have lowered pharma costs.

Seattle Genetics and Merck Announce Two Strategic Oncology Collaborations: “The companies will globally develop and commercialize Seattle Genetics’ ladiratuzumab vedotin, an investigational antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) targeting LIV-1, which is currently in phase 2 clinical trials for breast cancer and other solid tumors…Under the terms of the agreement, Seattle Genetics will receive a $600 million upfront payment and Merck will make a $1.0 billion equity investment in 5.0 million shares of Seattle Genetics common stock at a price of $200 per share. In addition, Seattle Genetics is eligible for progress-dependent milestone payments of up to $2.6 billion.
Separately, Seattle Genetics has granted Merck an exclusive license to commercialize TUKYSA® (tucatinib), a small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor, for the treatment of HER2-positive cancers, in Asia, the Middle East and Latin America and other regions outside of the U.S., Canada and Europe. Seattle Genetics will receive $125 million from Merck as an upfront payment and is eligible for progress-dependent milestones of up to $65 million.”

About health insurance

Trump says his terrific health-care plan is finally here. That would be news to his health advisers: The headline speaks for itself. Reminds me of NIxon’s “secret plan” to end the Vietnam War, which he said he would announce after his election.

Nationwide Evaluation of Health Care Prices Paid by Private Health Plans: From the RAND Corporation: “In 2018, across all hospital inpatient and outpatient services, employers and private insurers included in the report paid 247 percent of what Medicare would have paid for the same services at the same facilities. This difference increased from 224 percent of Medicare in 2016 and 230 percent in 2017…
High-value hospitals — those offering low prices and high safety — do exist. In at least some parts of the country, employers have options for high-value facilities that offer high quality at lower prices. However, there is no clear link between hospital price and quality or safety.”

 

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

‘Warp Speed’ Officials Debut Plan for Distributing Free Vaccines: “Federal officials outlined details Wednesday of their preparations to administer a future coronavirus vaccine to Americans, saying they would begin distribution within 24 hours of any approval or emergency authorization, and that their goal was that no American ‘has to pay a single dime’ out of their own pocket.” Manufacturers say they are gearing up production in anticipation of successful Phase III studies. CDC says it will cost $6B to distribute the vaccine to local authorities, who need to develop delivery plans of their own. Two questions remain: who will keep track of dosing if two shots are needed and will the distribution channels have sufficient capacity if special delivery conditions (like freezing) are needed.

World Health Organization announces distribution plan for COVID-19 vaccine: “The World Health Organization and its appointed Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization, or SAGE, have released a worldwide vaccine distribution plan -- it pushes back on so-called vaccine nationalism, the idea that each country should prioritize its own citizens.
Instead, the WHO touts a global approach, prioritizing vaccination among the most vulnerable people everywhere.”

CDC director says face masks may provide more protection than coronavirus vaccine:
“A potential coronavirus vaccine will likely be available in limited quantities by the end of this year, but it may only be about 70% effective, CDC Director Robert Redfield said.
A 50% effective vaccine would be roughly on par with those for influenza but below the effectiveness of one dose of a measles vaccination, which is about 93% effective, according to the CDC…
Face coverings are “the most powerful public health tool” the nation has against the coronavirus and might even provide better protection against it than a vaccine, the head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told lawmakers Wednesday.”
In a related story: Trump contradicts CDC director on vaccine, masks: 'He was confused': “‘I think he made a mistake when he said that,’ Trump said of Redfield’s testimony. ‘I don’t think he means that. When he said it, I believe he was confused.’
Trump said a vaccine may be available in a matter of weeks and that there was a plan to begin distributing it widely soon after the Food and Drug Administration approves it…
Trump also criticized Redfield for saying wearing a mask can be just as effective as a vaccine.”

Lack of antigen test reporting leaves country 'blind to the pandemic': “More than 20 states either don’t release or have incomplete data on the rapid antigen tests now considered key to containing the coronavirus, which has sickened more than 6 million Americans.”

AACR Cancer Disparities Progress Report 2020: From the American Association for Cancer Research, this monograph is a comprehensive look quantifying disparities and offering suggestions to eliminate them.

About pharma

Here's how much faster drug prices are rising compared to other healthcare services: “Drug prices are rising at a rate that outpaces other healthcare services, a new analysis from GoodRx shows.
Provided exclusively to Fierce Healthcare, the analysis finds that drug prices have increased by 33% since 2014. The next biggest cost increase was for inpatient care, at 30%.
Across the board, prices for medical services have risen 17% since 2014, according to the report.”

Eli Lilly’s Investigational Antibody Shows Promise as Outpatient COVID-19 Treatment: “Eli Lilly has announced positive results from a phase 2 trial of its investigational antibody treatment LY-CoV555 as an outpatient treatment for mild-to-moderate COVID-19.
Most patients who received a 2,800-mg dose of the antibody demonstrated near-complete viral clearance after 11 days, the company said. The trial enrolled just over 450 patients who either received a 700-mg, 2,800-mg, or 7,000-mg dose of LY-CoV555 or a placebo.”

About healthcare IT

When telehealth cost-sharing waivers expire for 5 payers: Many insurers have had out-of-pocket expense waivers during the COVID-19 pandemic. This article is a list of which plans will modify those waivers and when.

Cerner senior exec: Amazon cloud partnership is driving Cerner's shift to become digital platform company: “As part of a new deal with Amazon, Cerner is letting users of Amazon's new Halo fitness tracker share wearable data directly with their providers. It's just one example of how the health IT company is expanding beyond its traditional medical records business as part of a broader strategic partnership with Amazon.”

About health insurance

GAO report finds brokers offered false info on coverage for pre-existing conditions: “Some health insurance brokers provided misleading or false information to potential customers about whether their plans covered preexisting conditions, according to an undercover audit completed by the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office. 
The audit, requested by Senate Democrats, sought to determine whether companies selling health plans exempt from Affordable Care Act coverage requirements were being honest about the limitations of the plans, which tend to be cheaper but aren’t comprehensive and typically don’t cover preexisting conditions like cancer or diabetes.”

Emergency Triage, Treat, and Transport (ET3) Model: “Emergency Triage, Treat, and Transport (ET3) is a voluntary, five-year payment model that will provide greater flexibility to ambulance care teams to address emergency health care needs of Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS) beneficiaries following a 911 call. Under the ET3 model, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will pay participating ambulance suppliers and providers to 1) transport an individual to a hospital emergency department (ED) or other destination covered under the regulations, 2) transport to an alternative destination partner (such as a primary care doctor’s office or an urgent care clinic), or 3) provide treatment in place with a qualified health care partner, either on the scene or connected using telehealth.”

CMS innovation agency to launch risk-based model for dual eligibles: “CMS' innovation center is about to roll out a new model allowing insurance plans to take on financial risk for patients enrolled in both Medicare and Medicaid, Brad Smith, director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, said Tuesday at payer lobby AHIP's virtual conference…
Roughly 12.2 million people were dually enrolled in 2018, per CMS data. The population has high rates of chronic conditions and social risk factors, with many needing extensive long-term care. As such, they make up a disproportionate amount of spending in federal programs.
Dually eligible people make up just 20% of Medicare and 15% of Medicaid, but account for 34% and 33% of program costs respectively…”

About hospitals and health systems

FTC Expert Predicts 20% Price Hike From Pa. Hospitals Merger: Nothing new except the specifics. This article is a reminder about what happens when hospitals in the same area merge:
“A merger of two Philadelphia-area health systems could bump up some acute care hospital costs by 9% and inpatient rehab costs by as much as 20%, a government-commissioned economist testified Tuesday during the second day of a Federal Trade Commission injunction hearing. Loren K. Smith, a principal with The Brattle Group's global antitrust and competition group, said the estimated $599 million tie-up of Thomas Jefferson University health system and Albert Einstein Healthcare network was likely to have anti-competitive effects both in Philadelphia County as well as adjacent Montgomery County.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

Uninsured Americans increased even before pandemic, Census Bureau finds:”The number of people without health insurance increased last year, even before the coronavirus pandemic struck, according to new federal figures released Tuesday.
The Census Bureau found nearly 30 million people were not covered by health insurance at the time they were interviewed in 2019, up from 28.6 million in 2018. 
The number of uninsured Americans has been increasing for the past three years, after seeing a massive decline in the wake of the passage of the Affordable Care Act.”

Cigna to rebrand health services business line as Evernorth: “Cigna is rebranding its health services business line, launching it as Evernorth.
Evernorth will include a slew of Cigna segments, including pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts and specialty pharmacy Accredo, both of which will continue to operate with their existing branding under that umbrella…
The goal, Cigna said, is to offer a one-stop-shop for partners looking to harness their solutions as their reach extends beyond Cigna's membership. The Evernorth team will also continue to develop and launch new solutions through a data-driven approach.”

About the public’s health

FDA ranks the performance of 58 molecular coronavirus tests from major developers: Widely different accuracy scores. See the list here.

HHS chief overrode FDA officials to ease testing rules: In a related story from Politico: “Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar led an escalating pressure campaign against his own Food and Drug Administration this spring and summer, urging the agency to abandon its responsibility for ensuring the safety and accuracy of a range of coronavirus tests as the pandemic raged.
Then in late August, Azar took matters into his own hands. Overriding objections from FDA chief Stephen Hahn, Azar revoked the agency’s ability to check the quality of tests developed by individual labs for their own use, according to seven current and former administration officials with knowledge of the decision.”

COVID-19 has set global health progress back decades - Gates Foundation:”The knock-on effects of the coronavirus pandemic have halted and reversed global health progress, setting it back 25 years and exposing millions to the risk of deadly disease and poverty…
Because of COVID-19, extreme poverty has increased by 7%, and routine vaccine coverage - a good proxy measure for how health systems are functioning - is dropping to levels last seen in the 1990s, the report said.”

British researchers design death risk tool for COVID-19 patients: “British scientists have developed a four-level scoring model for predicting the death risk of patients hospitalised with COVID-19, saying it should help doctors quickly decide on the best care for each patient.
The tool, detailed in research published in the BMJ medical journal on Wednesday, helps doctors put patients into one of four COVID-19 risk groups - from low, to intermediate, high, or very high risk of death.”

The Road to Clean Air: Benefits of a Nationwide Transition to Electric Vehicles: From the American Lung Association:
”The widespread transition to zero-emission transportation technologies could produce emission reductions in 2050 that could add up to $72 billion in avoided health harms, saving approximately 6,300 lives and avoiding more than 93,000 asthma attacks and 416,000 lost work days annually due to significant reductions in transportation-related pollution…”
Much of the benefit would occur in what the report calls “people of color”: “For example, people of color were 1.5 times more likely to live in a county with at least one failing grade, and 3.2 times more likely to live in a county with a failing grade for unhealthy ozone days, particle pollution days and annual particle levels.”

About pharma

The Cost of Brand Drug Product Hopping: “Product hopping describes when a brand drug company with a product nearing the end of its monopolistic life works to move patients to a reformulation of the drug that has longer exclusivity. It is a lifecycle management tactic that creates quantifiable burdens on patients and the healthcare system, as generic savings cannot be realized if patients have been moved to a protected drug before generic competitors can enter the market.
This report looks at just five examples of this tactic over the last 20 years – for the brand drugs Prilosec, TriCor, Suboxone, Doryx, and Namenda – and estimates that these five product hops carried a total cost of $4.7 billion annually.”

243 House members urge HHS to stop drugmakers from blocking 340B discounts: “A bipartisan group of 243 members of the House of Representatives sent a letter to HHS Secretary Alex Azar Sept. 14 urging him to use his authority to stop drugmakers from blocking safety-net hospitals' access to 340B discounts.”

About healthcare IT

Apple steps up its focus on health with new blood oxygen sensor, population health initiative in Singapore: “The new Apple Watch Series 6 expands the health capabilities of previous Apple Watch models with a new feature that measures the oxygen saturation of the user’s blood so they can better understand their overall fitness and wellness…
Apple also has unveiled a new fitness app designed for its smartwatches, and CVS Health has signed on to offer it to select commercial Aetna and Caremark members.
The company plans to partner with the government of Singapore on a national health initiaitve using Apple Watch.
The initiative, called LumiHealth, is a personalized program to encourage healthy activity and behaviors using fitness tracking and apps.”

CVS signs on with Apple's new Fitness+ service: In a related story: “Apple's Fitness+ will launch later this year, the technology giant said Tuesday, and visualizes inputs from a user's Apple Watch on their iPad, iPhone or Apple TV to allow for a more customized workout.
It will also provide access to studio workout videos at a variety of skill levels, including "Absolute Beginner," which will coach them in ways to get moving in preparation for more advanced workouts, Apple said.
The service will be available at a monthly or annual subscription fee. CVS is currently developing plans for a yearlong subscription for its commercial and pharmacy benefit management members, the company said.”

Taskforce on Telehealth Policy: From NCQA: “The Taskforce on Telehealth Policy is an effort between the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA), the Alliance for Connected Care, and the American Telemedicine Association, uniting 22 industry experts representing clinicians, health systems, telehealth platforms, state and federal health agencies, insurers and consumer advocates – including leadership from CMS, HHS, Kaiser, Humana, AARP, among other leading stakeholders.”
Here is the link to the final report.

Today's News and Commentary

About healthcare quality and safety

‘Nudge’ letters prompt sustained drop in antibiotic prescribing: From Australia: “Comparing GP antibiotic prescribing rates to peer averages led to a 12% drop in prescribing, and the effect has now shown to be maintained a year afterwards, according to a recent update from the Federal Government’s Behavioural Economics Team (BETA).
The effect remained surprisingly strong after a year, with a 9% reduction seen – or around 190,000 fewer prescriptions.”

Safer Together: A National Action Plan to Advance Patient Safety: An IHI consensus statement. Start at least with pages 6 and 7 that summarize the areas of importance and suggested initiatives.

About the public’s health

World in Disorder. Global Preparedness Monitoring Board Annual Report 2020: From the WHO’s report on disaster preparedness. One interesting finding: “Expenditures for prevention and preparedness are measured in billions of dollars, the cost of a pandemic in trillions. It would take 500 years to spend as much on investing in preparedness as the world is losing due to COVID-19.”

Costs of COVID-19:
More than US$ 11 trillion, and counting, to fund the response. Future loss of US$ 10 trillion in earnings.
Versus: Additional US$ 5 per person annually in preparedness.

'We Had To Take Action': States In Mexico Move To Ban Junk Food Sales To Minors: “Picture this: You're 17, you walk into a corner store and grab a Coca-Cola and Doritos, but the cashier refuses to sell them to you because you're underage.
That rule is expected to soon become reality in parts of Mexico, as lawmakers in several states push legislation to keep junk food away from children, partly in response to the coronavirus pandemic.”

Cuba punches above weight with 'white coat army' during pandemic: “Nearly 40 countries across five continents have received Cuban medics during the pandemic, as the island nation - home to just over 11 million inhabitants - has once more punched far above its weight in medical diplomacy…
Not that its brigades are purely altruistic. Cuba has exported doctors on more routine missions in exchange for cash or goods in recent decades, making them its top source of hard currency.”

UK tests if COVID-19 vaccines might work better inhaled: “In a statement on Monday, researchers at Imperial College London and Oxford University said a trial involving 30 people would test vaccines developed by both institutions when participants inhale the droplets in their mouths, which would directly target their respiratory systems.”

About health insurance

CMS releases Part I of the 2022 Medicare Advantage and Part D Advance Notice: “The CY 2022 Advance Notice is being published in two parts due to requirements in the 21st Century Cures Act that mandate certain changes to Part C risk adjustment and a 60-day comment period for these changes…
For CY 2022, CMS is proposing to fully phase in the CMS-HCC model first implemented for CY 2020 (i.e., the 2020 CMS-HCC model), as required by the 21st Century Cures Act. Specifically, per the 21st Century Cures Act, the 2020 model adds variables that count conditions in the risk adjustment model (“payment conditions”) and includes for payment additional conditions for mental health, substance use disorder, and chronic kidney disease. This represents a change from the blend for 2021 of 75% of the risk score calculated using the 2020 CMS-HCC model and 25% of the risk score calculated using the older 2017 CMS-HCC model.
CMS calculates risk scores using diagnoses submitted by MA organizations and from Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) claims. Historically, CMS has used diagnoses submitted into CMS’ Risk Adjustment Processing System (RAPS) by MA organizations for the purpose of calculating risk scores for payment. In recent years, CMS began collecting encounter data from MA organizations, which also includes diagnostic information. CMS began using diagnoses from encounter data to calculate risk scores for CY 2015, and has since continued to use a blend of encounter and RAPS data-based scores through 2021, when risk scores will be calculated with 75% encounter data and 25% RAPS data. 
With the proposed full phase-in of the 2020 CMS-HCC model, which is designed to calculate risk scores using diagnoses from encounter data submissions, the Part C risk score used for payment in 2022 would rely entirely on encounter data as the source of MA diagnoses.”

Chicago church pays off $19 million in medical debt for area residents: “VIVE Chicago, a nondenominational church that is one of many VIVE campuses across the country, raised $100,000 to pay off area residents' medical debt, according to an announcement shared with The Christian Post.
The church partnered with the New York-based nonprofit RIP Medical Debt, which was able to use the donation to pay off $19 million in medical debt.”

Trump administration backing off Medicaid rule that states warned would lead to cuts: “The rule was intended to overhaul the complex payment arrangements states use to raise money for their Medicaid programs — funding that is then matched by the federal government. 
The administration argues some states use questionable methods of raising funds so they can leverage more money from Washington. One approach used by states consists of taxing providers that stand to benefit from more Medicaid funds flowing into the state.
But governors and state Medicaid directors argue those long-standing arrangements are both legal and necessary as states look for ways to keep up with escalating health care costs.”

Quest Analytics to Measure Adequate Access to Care for Medicare Advantage, Medicare-Medicaid and Pharmacy Plans: This article is not so much about the specific company but a reminder about the review process.
“CMS regulations stipulate that ‘Plans are required to maintain and monitor a network of appropriate providers, that is sufficient to provide adequate access to covered services to meet the needs of the population served’. This means that plans must maintain an adequate network of pharmacies and health care providers and facilities that are accurately listed in their Health Services Delivery Tables. CMS reviews every health plan that applies, MMPs [Medicare and Medicaid Plans] annually, and reviews participating plans every three years utilizing adequacy requirements (minimum number and time & distance criteria) applied to 40 specialties and facilities across five-county types based on population density.  CMS uses Quest Analytics solutions to score plans against the standards and to inform them of any noncompliance issues.”

2019 Medicare Shared Savings Program [MSSP] ACO Performance: Lower Costs And Promising Results Under ‘Pathways To Success’: CMS Administrator Varma reports the summary results from the MSSP for 2019.
”In 2019, 541 ACOs in the Medicare Shared Savings Program generated $1.19 billion in total net savings to Medicare, the largest annual savings for the program to date. This is also the third year in a row that the program has achieved net program savings. Consistent with prior years, ACOs with shared savings continued to reduce post-acute care spending, along with hospitalizations and emergency department visits.
The ACOs under Pathways to Success participation options performed better than legacy track ACOs, showing net per-beneficiary savings of $169 per beneficiary compared to $106 per beneficiary for legacy track ACOs. While ACOs with more experience continued to achieve greater savings, new entrant ACOs under Pathways to Success achieved net per-beneficiary savings of $150. This is the first time ACOs new to the program had lower spending relative to their benchmarks in their first performance year. We look forward to gaining further program experience to evaluate program dynamics, benchmark incentives, and counterfactual program impacts…
ACOs (both legacy track and those in the new participation options established under Pathways to Success) that took on ‘downside risk’ or responsibility for additional costs under the program continued to outperform ACOs that did not [emphasis added], with net per beneficiary savings of $152 per beneficiary compared to $107 per beneficiary. These legacy track ACO trends informed our approach in Pathways to Success to encourage ACOs to take on downside risk sooner. And similarly, ACOs under the Pathways to Success policies that took on downside risk performed better than those that did not, achieving net per beneficiary savings of $193 per beneficiary compared to $142 per beneficiary for those that did not…
92 percent of eligible ACOs earned quality improvement reward points in 2019, with ACOs showing the greatest improvements in the patient safety and care coordination quality domain. ACOs continued to show comparable or better quality performance on measures compared to other physician group practices.”
See, also, 10 ACOs with the most shared savings in 2019.

With no legal guardrails for patients, ambulances drive surprise medical billing: The article is a good summary of the problems with relatively unregulated billing for ambulance services.

About pharma

Eli Lilly's drug cuts COVID-19 recovery time in remdesivir-combo study: “Eli Lilly and Co said on Monday its rheumatoid arthritis drug shortened the time to recovery in hospitalized COVID-19 patients when used along with Gilead Sciences Inc’s remdesivir.
The drug baricitinib, branded as Olumiant, cut the median recovery time by about a day when added to remdesivir, compared to patients treated with the antiviral alone, Lilly said…
Lilly said it plans to discuss the potential for an EAU for baricitinib with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, based on the results from the trial, which tested more than 1,000 patients.”

Non-Prescription Fentanyl Abuse Up During Pandemic: “Abuse of non-prescription fentanyl was up during the first 2 months of the pandemic shutdown over earlier in the year and 2019, according to an analysis of Quest Diagnostics data.
As presented at the virtual PAINWeek conference, the study showed that non-prescription fentanyl abuse increased by 35% across a time spanning March 15 to May 16, 2020 (P<0.01).”

Merck & Co. pays $600 million upfront for rights to Seattle Genetics' ladiratuzumab vedotin: “Merck & Co. agreed to pay $600 million upfront as part of a deal to develop and commercialise Seattle Genetics' experimental antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) ladiratuzumab vedotin…”

MIT researchers tap liquid dopamine for easier drug delivery in the gut: Fascinating new technology that enables coating of the small intestine to enhance medication delivery.

List prices for newer diabetes drugs up to 360 times higher than older ones: The headline speaks for itself; the article has examples.

About healthcare IT

Centene and Samsung Team up to Enable Virtual Care Options for Underserved Communities: “Centene Corporation today announced it is working with Samsung Electronics America to expand access to telehealth for individuals living in rural and underserved communities. The initiative will supply providers with Samsung Galaxy A10e smartphones to disseminate to patients who would not otherwise have the ability to receive their healthcare virtually. Additionally, some providers will receive Samsung Galaxy tablets to use to conduct telehealth visits.”

Trinity Health, Texas Children's + 7 more health systems affected by Blackbaud breach: An update on the previously reported huge breach.

Industry Voices—Why digital quality measurement should become healthcare's next tech goal: A good review of the topic with examples.

Today's News and Commentary

About pharma

Executive Order on Lowering Drug Prices by Putting America First: The President issued an executive order to peg federal drug pricing to lowest comparable medications in other OECD countries. The new part is inclusion of Medicare Part D, in addition to previous statements about Part B. Another online version does not include Part D. Before the order takes effect there is a mandatory 90 day comment period to change the regulations. Obviously that date will be well after the election.
Here is the essential portion of the order:
Sec2.  Policy.  (a)  It is the policy of the United States that the Medicare program should not pay more for costly Part B or Part D prescription drugs or biological products than the most-favored-nation price.
(b)  The “most-favored-nation price” shall mean the lowest price, after adjusting for volume and differences in national gross domestic product, for a pharmaceutical product that the drug manufacturer sells in a member country of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development that has a comparable per-capita gross domestic product.
Sec3.  Ensuring the Most-Favored-Nation Price in Medicare Part B.  To the extent consistent with law, the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall immediately take appropriate steps to implement his rulemaking plan to test a payment model pursuant to which Medicare would pay, for certain high-cost prescription drugs and biological products covered by Medicare Part B, no more than the most-favored-nation price.  The model would test whether, for patients who require pharmaceutical treatment, paying no more than the most-favored-nation price would mitigate poor clinical outcomes and increased expenditures associated with high drug costs.”

Experts: Revamped OxyContin hasn’t curbed abuse, overdoses:”A panel of government health advisers said Friday there’s no clear evidence that a harder-to-crush version of the painkiller OxyContin designed to discourage abuse actually resulted in fewer overdoses or deaths.
The conclusion from the Food and Drug Administration advisory panel comes more than a decade after Purdue Pharma revamped its blockbuster opioid, which has long been blamed for sparking a surge in painkiller abuse beginning in the 1990s.”

Not enough Covid vaccine for all until 2024, says biggest producer: “Adar Poonawalla, chief executive of the Serum Institute of India, told the Financial Times that pharmaceutical companies were not increasing production capacity quickly enough to vaccinate the global population in less time. 
‘It’s going to take four to five years until everyone gets the vaccine on this planet,” said Mr Poonawalla, who estimated that if the Covid-19 shot is a two-dose vaccine — such as measles or rotavirus — the world will need 15bn doses.’”

Taking a cue from traditional Chinese medicine for transdermal insulin delivery:”Researchers from Nanyang Technical University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) and the country's Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) say they've developed a pressure device resembling a vise clamp that, when applied to a fold of skin, temporarily changes the skin barrier to form "micropores" that greatly increase its ability to absorb drugs.” 

Americans' Views of U.S. Business and Industry Sectors, 2020: In this latest Gallup poll, the only sector on the list lower than pharma is the federal government.

Gilead to buy Immunomedics for $21 billion: Biggest business story of the day. Read the article for more details.

Exclusive: U.S. hospitals turn down remdesivir, limit use to sickest COVID-19 patients: “U.S. hospitals have turned down about a third of their allocated supplies of the COVID-19 drug remdesivir since July as need for the costly antiviral wanes, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) confirmed on Friday.” I would need to see hard data, as it might be HHS’s pushback on claims of a shortage of this drug.

About health insurance

Centene to expand ACA exchange footprint by nearly 400 counties in 2021: “Centene announced Friday a major expansion of its plan offerings on the Affordable Care Act’s insurance exchanges, branching out into nearly 400 new counties across 13 states for 2021.”

Obamacare co-ops down from 23 to final '3 little miracles': These federally-funded community-based health insurance ventures were a spectacular failure. Read more in the article.

About the public’s health

WHO reports record one-day increase in global coronavirus cases, up over 307,000:”The World Health Organization reported a record one-day increase in global coronavirus cases on Sunday, with the total rising by 307,930 in 24 hours.
The biggest increases were from India, the United States and Brazil, according to the agency’s website. Deaths rose by 5,537 to a total of 917,417.
India reported 94,372 new cases, followed by the United States with 45,523 new infections and Brazil with 43,718.”

Trump officials interfered with CDC reports on Covid-19: A great piece of investigative reporting published in Politico. “The health department’s politically appointed communications aides have demanded the right to review and seek changes to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s weekly scientific reports charting the progress of the coronavirus pandemic, in what officials characterized as an attempt to intimidate the reports’ authors and water down their communications to health professionals.”

How Many Lives Could You Save Wearing a Face Mask? This Calculator Tells You: ”In an effort to make this dynamic a little less abstract, two Ph.D. students in Poland have created an online calculator that uses statistics and variables to estimate how many infections one person may be able to prevent—and how many lives they might save—as a result of wearing a mask.”

About healthcare IT

Fitbit to launch first ECG app in U.S., Europe next month:”Fitbit’s latest smartwatch has now secured medical device clearances in the U.S. and Europe, unlocking the full use of its ECG app to help identify cases of the irregular heart rhythm known as atrial fibrillation.
With an FDA green light and a CE mark, the app for the Fitbit Sense will launch in the U.S. and certain European countries as well as in Hong Kong and India starting in October.”

Today's News and Commentary

About health insurance

Medicaid Work Requirements In Arkansas: Two-Year Impacts On Coverage, Employment, And Affordability Of Care: Read the entire abstract. The aim of the requirement was to get people off Medicaid and back to work. However, “work requirements did not increase employment over eighteen months of follow-up.”

Insurers bearing the brunt of COVID-19 test costs. That might mean higher premiums: “Health insurers say providers are overcharging them for COVID-19 tests and the added costs could mean higher premiums for their plan members in the future.
The problem, insurers said, is providers can charge whatever they want for the tests and insurers must cover the full costs — no matter how high — under federal laws passed to address the coronavirus pandemic. One free-standing emergency room charged Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas $4,800 for a nasal swab test, according to a redacted claim provided by the insurer.”

Coronavirus Tests Are Supposed to Be Free. The Surprise Bills Come Anyway:”Congress passed laws requiring insurers to pay for tests, and the Trump administration created a program to cover the bills of the uninsured. Cities and states set up no-cost testing sites…
About 2.4 percent of coronavirus tests billed to insurers leave the patient responsible for some portion of payment, according to the health data firm Castlight…
In some cases, the charges appear to violate new federal laws that aim to make coronavirus tests free for privately insured patients. In other cases, insurers are interpreting gray areas in these new rules in ways that work in their favor.”

About pharma

1,100 Hospitals Press HHS to Enforce 340B Pricing:”More than 1,100 hospitals in 46 states and the District of Columbia on Thursday urged the federal government to ensure that drug makers continue to provide discounts mandated under the 340B Drug Pricing Program for safety-net providers…
The petitioning hospitals noted that 340B hospitals provide 60% of uncompensated and unreimbursed care and 75% of hospital care to Medicaid patients…
The hospitals complained that several drug makers have cut off access to discounted drugs, and they singled out AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly (Azar's former employer), Merck, Sanofi, and Novartis as the most egregious offenders.”

Novartis, Roche fined $526M in France for alleged Lucentis marketing missteps: “ The [French] Competition Authority levied a fine of €385 million ($455 million) against Novartis and €60 million ($71 million) against Roche, according to several press reports in Europe. Lucentis was developed by Roche’s Genentech division and is marketed in Europe by Novartis.
The agency said the penalties were in response to allegedly anti-competitive practices by the companies in pushing Lucentis over Roche’s similar—and much less expensive—cancer drug Avastin, which can be used off-label to treat AMD [Age-related macular degeneration].”

Takeda's selloff spree continues with $562M deal with Germany's Cheplapharm:”With last month’s $2.3 billion Japanese consumer health sale to Blackstone Group, Takeda has arguably achieved its $10 billion divestment goal. But the Japanese pharma is showing no sign of stopping with the selloffs anytime soon.
Tuesday, Takeda said it had penned a deal to offload some noncore prescription drugs sold mainly in Europe and Canada to Germany’s Cheplapharm for $562 million…
the drugs changing hands fall outside of the company’s five key focus areas of gastroenterology, rare diseases, oncology, plasma-derived therapies and neuroscience. Takeda will use the cash to reduce the mountain of debt it incurred with its $59 billion Shire buyout and help lower its net debt/adjusted EBITDA ratio to the target of 2x, which it's aiming to hit between fiscal year 2021 and 2023.”

AbbVie puts $2B on the table for I-Mab cancer collab as biotech nabs $418M raise:”It’s a good day for Shanghai-based I-Mab, which has penned a $2 billion upfront-biobucks R&D deal with AbbVie while also nabbing $418 million from investors.” Read the article for details.

About healthcare IT

Taking the Pulse® 2020 Physician Survey Shows 4 in 5 U.S. Physicians Have Conducted Virtual Patient Consults Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic: “As of July 2020, 80% of U.S. physicians had conducted a virtual patient consultation in the previous three months – up from 39% in April and 9% in early March, when use of virtual consults was unchanged over 2019 levels…
However, barriers to telemedicine use remain – 58% of U.S. physicians have lingering reservations about the quality of care they can provide remotely.”

Telehealth is biggest threat to healthcare cybersecurity, says report: The headline speaks for itself. Read the article for more details.

About the public’s health

2020 Scorecard on State Health System Performance: Latest state rankings by the Commonwealth Fund. Hawaii, Massachusetts and Minnesota are again the top three.

20-second coronavirus screening test piloted at U.K.'s Heathrow airport: “Two British companies are preparing to launch a simple COVID-19 saliva screening test that aims to provide an accurate result within 20 seconds—following its first uses at London’s Heathrow airport, one of the busiest in the world.
The Virolens device, developed by iAbra, uses a digital microscope and artificial intelligence-powered software to visually search a mouth swab sample for signs of the novel coronavirus.
The machine provides a low-cost, repeatable and self-administered method of screening, allowing hundreds of cartridge-based tests to be performed each day, according to iAbra’s manufacturing partner TT Electronics. Validation studies by the University of Bristol have pegged the system’s false-negative rate of 0.2%, alongside a false-positive rate of 3.3%.”

New tool could 'help UK doctors spot high-risk Covid patients in seconds': “The researchers focused on eight metrics that play a key role in determining mortality risk – age, sex, number of underlying conditions, respiratory rate, blood oxygen concentration, level of consciousness, urea, and C-reactive protein (a chemical linked to inflammation).
These factors were combined into a model to give a score ranging from 0 to 21 points. Age, they concluded, is the biggest predictor, accounting for a third of the score. The calculations suggested patients with a score of at least 15 had a 62% chance of mortality compared with 1% mortality for those with a score of three or less. The tool, which is easily accessible on a smartphone or computer, takes seconds to generate a score and is expected to be rolled out in the NHS this week.”

COVID-19 study links strict social distancing to much lower chance of infection: Just a reminder: “Using public transportation, visiting a place of worship, or otherwise traveling from the home is associated with a significantly higher likelihood of testing positive with the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, while practicing strict social distancing is associated with a markedly lower likelihood.”

Trends in Mortality From Drug Poisonings, Suicide, and Alcohol-Induced Deaths in the United States From 2000 to 2017: “During 2000 to 2017, 1 446 177 drug poisoning, suicide, and alcohol-induced premature deaths occurred in the US… totaling 451 596 more deaths than expected based on 2000 rates.”The concentration of each of those causes of death varied in different regions.

Today's News and Commentary

About hospitals and health systems

Care New England, Lifespan to merge: “Two Providence, R.I.-based health systems — Lifespan and Care New England Health System — have signed a letter of intent to combine into one nonprofit organization with Brown University…
If the transaction closes, the combined system would include seven hospitals and have more than 23,500 employees.” This is the second time the merger has been attempted.

13 health systems opening hospitals: The news here is that in this economy, these projects are going forward.

Association of Clinician Health System Affiliation With Outpatient Performance Ratings in the Medicare Merit-based Incentive Payment System: “Publicly reported data on 636 552 clinicians working at outpatient clinics across the US were used to assess the association of the affiliation status of clinicians within the 609 health systems with their 2019 final MIPS performance score and value-based reimbursement (both based on clinician performance in 2017), adjusting for clinician, patient, and practice area characteristics…
Whether this represents differences in quality of care or other factors requires additional research.”

About pharma

Mylan to Acquire Aspen's Thrombosis Business in Europe: Mylan announced “an agreement to acquire the related intellectual property and commercialization rights of Aspen Pharmacare Holdings Limited's thrombosis business in Europe for EUR 641.9 million, subject to customary closing conditions and European regulatory clearances. The transaction is expected to be immediately accretive to Mylan upon closing and is anticipated to be accretive to VIATRIS [a new company to be formed by the planned combination of Mylan and Upjohn, a division of Pfizer] upon the completion of Mylan's previously announced combination with Upjohn that is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2020.”

Covid-19 vaccine trial participant had serious neurological symptoms, but could be discharged today, AstraZeneca CEO says: “The participant who triggered a global shutdown of AstraZeneca’s Phase 3 Covid-19 vaccine trials was a woman in the United Kingdom who experienced neurological symptoms consistent with a rare but serious spinal inflammatory disorder called transverse myelitis, the drug maker’s chief executive, Pascal Soriot, said during a private conference call with investors on Wednesday morning.
The woman’s diagnosis has not been confirmed yet, but she is improving and will likely be discharged from the hospital as early as Wednesday, Soriot said…
[And here is the news update today on this situation:] Soriot also confirmed that the clinical trial was halted once previously in July after a participant experienced neurological symptoms. Upon further examination, that participant was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, deemed to be unrelated to the Covid-19 vaccine treatment, he said.”

GlaxoSmithKline earns FDA nod for triple-drug combo Trelegy in sought-after asthma patients: ”The FDA on Wednesday gave its thumbs-up to GSK's Trelegy as a maintenance therapy for asthma, making it the first once-daily, triple-drug inhaler approved in that indication, the British drugmaker said in a release. 
The agency based its review on findings from the phase 3 Captain head-to-head study, which showed Trelegy topped GSK's Breo Ellipta, known as Relvar in Europe, at improving lung function after 24 weeks in patients with uncontrollable asthma.”

Merck & Co. reports positive Phase III data for 15-valent pneumococcal vaccine V114:  “Merck & Co. on Wednesday unveiled top-line results from two Phase III studies, including the pivotal PNEU-AGE trial, which showed that V114, its experimental 15-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, was non-inferior to Pfizer's Prevnar 13 for the 13 serotypes targeted by both vaccines. The company said it intends to apply for V114 approval in adults by year-end…

Merck said V114 was also superior for pneumococcal serotypes 22F and 33F, the two serotypes unique to its vaccine.“

Covid-19 drug rationed in the US is plentiful in developing countries: “A CNN investigation into remdesivir finds that doctors in several developing countries report ample supplies of the drug, while US patients have faced shortages -- even though the drug is made by a US pharmaceutical company and was developed with the help of US taxpayer money.” Read the article for more details.

About the public’s health

Substantial underestimation of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the United States: “We estimate 6,454,951 cumulative infections compared to 721,245 confirmed cases (1.9% vs. 0.2% of the population) in the United States as of April 18, 2020. Accounting for uncertainty, the number of infections during this period was 3 to 20 times higher than the number of confirmed cases. 86% (simulation interval: 64–99%) of this difference is due to incomplete testing, while 14% (0.3–36%) is due to imperfect test accuracy.”

Trump Administration Orders U.S. Diplomats to Curtail Contact With WHO: The headline speaks for itself, “even though the United States will remain a member of the global health agency until next summer…”

Scarcity of key material squeezes medical mask manufacturing: “Meltblown is spun out of plastic pellets made from oil, typically polypropylene or polyethylene. The pellets are fed into a heated metal extruder, and jets of hot air force the liquefied plastic through an array of extremely small holes, producing fine plastic fibers. As the fibers cool, they overlap and stick together, forming a dense mesh.
This year, American meltblown makers have been ramping up supply. But some say they need more government support to meet the demand.” The concern is that return on the investment in ramping up may not be long-lived, leading manufacturers with costly overcapacity.

USAID to shut down its coronavirus task force: “According to the aid agency’s note and people familiar with the issue, the responsibilities of the USAID task force will be handed to other agency bureaus and divisions. ‘As we approach the deactivation of the Task Force on Sept. 9, the entire team is focused on ensuring a smooth transition of key functions back to Bureaus and Independent Offices,’ the note read.” The story is more nuanced than it appears, so read the entire article.

Racial disparities in mortality for patients with prostate cancer after radical prostatectomy: “When adjustments were made for age and year of diagnosis only, Blacks had 51% higher mortality, AAPIs had 22% lower mortality, and Hispanics had 6% lower mortality than Whites. Overall, with adjustments for all clinical factors and nonclinical factors, the Black‐White survival disparity narrowed to 20%, whereas the AAPI‐White disparity increased to 35%. Among the controlled‐for factors, education, median household income, and insurance status contributed the most to the racial disparity.”

Some scientists spot 'unlikely' patterns in Russia vaccine data: letter:”Twenty-six scientists, most of them working at universities in Italy, have signed an open letter questioning the reliability of the data presented in the early-stage trial results of the Russian COVID-19 vaccine, named ‘Sputnik-V’…
The letter, published on the personal blog page of one of the signatories, said the Phase I/II trial results data showed multiple participants reporting identical antibody levels. 
‘On the ground of simple probabilistic evaluations the fact of observing so many data points preserved among different experiments is highly unlikely,’ the open letter said.”

How to talk about the COVID-19 Vaccine: “Across all demographic and geographic categories, the Personal Story message was most effective, and Economic Recovery, Safety and Community messages were least effective. But for some subgroups, the magnitude of effect was higher or lower. For example, for people who make less than $75K, Personal Story resulted in a 7% increase in intent, higher than the 5% for the overall sample…
Although personal stories were effective for both flu and COVID-19 vaccine messaging, the ‘community’ theme was most persuasive in the flu research, but ineffective for the COVID vaccine.”

About healthcare IT

Blackbaud security breach hits 11 systems: Atrium, NorthShore University, UK HealthCare & more:”The Blackbaud security breach affected more than 25,000 nonprofit organizations worldwide, including many health systems in the U.S.
Blackbaud is an organization that stores donor information for organizations. Most of the information exposed included the names, birth dates, addresses and phone numbers of donors and some patients. The breach occurred in between Feb. 7 and May 20, and the vendor notified organizations of the breach in July.
Blackbaud paid the ransom for the attackers to destroy their backup file of stolen information. So far, the breach is known to have affected more than 2 million individuals across at least 11 health U.S. health systems.”

7 things to know about VA's reboot of Cerner EHR go-live: An update in this continuing saga.

About health insurance

Cigna plans to expand its ACA exchange presence by 27% in 2021: “Cigna aims to expand its presence in the Affordable Care Act’s insurance exchanges by 27% in 80 new counties next year.
The insurer also announced that it will boost its plans sold on the exchanges, including offering new features intended to lower out-of-pocket costs. Cigna said it will grow its reach to more than 300 counties across 10 states.”

Humana launches value-based programs focused on heart surgery, shoulder replacements: “Humana is launching two new value-based care programs for members of its select Medicare Advantage (MA) plans, including one to cover coronary artery bypass grafting and another for total shoulder replacement procedures…
Under the new episode-based payment model, Humana provides data and analytics and financially incentivizes cardiothoracic clinicians to enhance patient care, deliver better coordinated care and reduce duplicative services, readmissions and complications…
The shoulder program also provides clinicians data and analytics, and it offers incentives for better health outcomes and lower costs derived from site of care selection, such as ambulatory surgical centers. Its inaugural facility participants in the program are located in Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, North Carolina and Tennessee. 
The model is Humana’s third orthopedic value-based payment program, following those created for total hip and knee joint replacement surgeries and for spinal fusion procedures.”

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Major coronavirus vaccine trial is paused to investigate unexplained illness: One of today’s top news stories. “A major coronavirus  vaccine trial is on hold as an independent committee investigates whether a case of spinal inflammation in a single British participant is linked to the vaccine — a step that several experts said is a sign of the protections in place to ensure the safety of products ultimately used in millions of healthy people.
The hold on human testing of the vaccine candidate being developed by the pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford was confirmed by the company in a statement Tuesday evening, calling it a ‘routine action.’”

Woodward book: Trump says he knew coronavirus was ‘deadly’ and worse than the flu while intentionally misleading Americans: Another top news story. The headline speaks for itself. The evidence comes from recordings of interviews.

LabCorp to launch single home swab test spanning COVID-19, flu, RSV: “LabCorp announced plans to launch a new at-home COVID-19 diagnostic that allows people to also get tested for the flu and respiratory syncytial virus from a single sample.
The combined test is currently offered through doctors’ offices, hospitals and other healthcare providers, while the future, home-based version will be made available through LabCorp’s Pixel service, pending the FDA’s review and authorization.”

Operation Warp Speed promised to do the impossible. How far has it come?: A good overview of the progress of this initiative covering vaccines, treatments and diagnostics.

Sanofi France chief sees coronavirus vaccine priced below 10 euros: “A coronavirus vaccine that Sanofi is developing with Britain’s GlaxoSmithKline is likely to be priced at less than 10 euros ($11.80) per shot if it is approved for use…” Companies can afford to offer low prices because the volumes are guaranteed to be very high.

The Importance of Careful Patient Selection in the Use of Follow-up Bone Mineral Density Testing: An excellent review of this topic. The “bottom line” is that routine repetition every 2-3 years is not more predictive than baseline testing.

About health insurance

AMA announces new CPT codes as COVID-19 advancements expand: ”For quick reference, the two new Category I CPT codes and long descriptors are:
99072     Additional supplies, materials, and clinical staff time over and above those usually included in an office visit or other non-facility service(s), when performed during a Public Health Emergency as defined by law, due to respiratory-transmitted infectious disease
86413     Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) (Coronavirus disease [COVID-19]) antibody, quantitative”

Association of Race, Health Insurance Status, and Household Income With Location and Outcomes of Ambulatory Surgery Among Adult Patients in 2 US States: “The study’s findings indicated that Black patients and patients with public health insurance were less likely to receive surgery at freestanding ambulatory surgery centers.”

About pharma

First trial of personalised care for children with asthma suggests benefits of prescribing according to genetic differences: Selecting treatments according to genetic differences could help children and teenagers with asthma, according to research presented at the European Respiratory Society International Congress
The research involved 241 children aged between 12 and 18 years who were all being treated for asthma by their GPs. The children were randomly assigned either to receive treatment according to existing guidelines, or to receive treatment according to particular genetic differences (their genotype), an approach known as personalised medicine…using a test that costs less than €20.
The researchers were testing for a small difference in the gene that contains instructions for making the beta-2 receptor and they were looking for children who had either with one copy of the altered gene or with two copies of the altered gene…
Previous research suggests that the majority of children with asthma will benefit from standard treatment with an asthma preventer called salmeterol in addition to their regular steroid inhaler. However, around one in seven children have a small genetic difference that means using this medication could actually result in these children having more asthma symptoms. 
In this trial, children in the personalised medicine group who had this genetic difference were treated with an alternative asthma medicine called montelukast.
Researchers followed the children for a year to monitor their quality of life, with a score between one and seven according to how their symptoms were, whether their normal activities were limited by their asthma and how their asthma made them feel. 
They compared the average score of the group of children who had their medication decided on the basis of their genetics with the average score of children who were treated according to current practice that does not involve any genetic testing, and found only a small improvement of 0.16 with those who received personalised care.
However, when the researchers looked specifically at the children who were found to have two copies of the altered beta-2 receptor gene, they found a greater benefit, with children experiencing an average 0.42 improvement in their quality of life score. The researchers say this would translate to a noticeably better quality of life for the children with two altered gene copies…”

About healthcare IT

Association of Electronic Health Record Use Above Meaningful Use Thresholds With Hospital Quality and Safety Outcomes: “These findings suggest that advanced levels of electronic health record implementation are not consistently associated with patient satisfaction, spending, and safety, and in some cases depend on the outcome quantile.” 

Today's News and Commentary

About the public’s health

Experts project autumn surge in coronavirus cases, with a peak after Election Day: “Infectious-disease experts are warning of a potential cold-weather surge of coronavirus cases — a long-feared “second wave” of infections and deaths, possibly at a catastrophic scale. It could begin well before Election Day, Nov. 3, although researchers assume the crest would come weeks later, closer to when fall gives way to winter.”

Coronavirus in the U.S.: Latest Map and Case Count: “At least 261 new coronavirus deaths and 25,167 new cases were reported in the United States on Sept. 7. Over the past week, there have been an average of 38,915 cases per day, a decrease of 9 percent from the average two weeks earlier.
As of Tuesday morning, more than 6,317,200 people in the United States have been infected with the coronavirus and at least 189,000 have died, according to a New York Times database.”

Contributions Of Public Health, Pharmaceuticals, And Other Medical Care To US Life Expectancy Changes, 1990-2015: “Life expectancy in the US increased 3.3 years between 1990 and 2015…Forty-four percent of improved life expectancy was attributable to public health, 35 percent was attributable to pharmaceuticals, 13 percent was attributable to other medical care, and −7 percent was attributable to other/unknown factors.”

Assessment of Receipt of the First Home Health Care Visit After Hospital Discharge Among Older Adults: “Only… [54.0% of patients] discharged from the hospital with a home health referral received home health care services within 14 days of discharge. Of the remaining… [46% of discharged patients], 37.7%… never received any home health care, while 8.3%… were institutionalized or died within 14 days without a preceding home health care visit. Patients who were Black or Hispanic received home health at lower rates than did patients who were White… In addition, disadvantaged patients waited longer for their first home health care visit.”

The COVID-19 Global Response Index: With New Zealand as the global model of response (gaining a score of 100), the #2 country on the list is…Senegal (89.3). Not a statistical fluke, but the result of an early isolation policy starting with its top government officials acting as role models.

In EU, 1 in 8 deaths linked to pollution: report:”In the EU, 13 percent of deaths are linked to pollution, said a new report published on Tuesday by the European Environment Agency (EEA), which stressed the current pandemic put environmental health factors in the spotlight.
Europeans are constantly exposed to environmental risks like air pollution, noise and chemicals, and the COVID-19 pandemic provides an example of the links between ‘human health and ecosystem health.’
’The emergence of such zoonotic pathogens is linked to environmental degradation and human interactions with animals in the food system,’ the report said.”

Blue Shield of California launches interactive community health dashboard: “The dashboard, built in partnership with data company mySidewalk, combines information from dozens of sources to provide a look at health outcomes, care access and utilization, social risk factors and economic health conditions across California.
The goal, Blue Shield officials said, is to offer supports to community health organizations, health advocates providers and public health officials as they craft solutions targeting local needs. The data are not restricted to Blue Shield's members.”

About healthcare IT

OCR updates HIPAA resources for cloud computing, mobile health apps: ”HHS' Office for Civil Rights on Sept. 1 updated its previous Health App Developer Portal and changed it to a HIPAA resource page for cloud computing, mobile health apps and application programming interfaces.”

Children's Hospital Los Angeles launches 26-hospital pediatric digital innovation accelerator: “Children's Hospital Los Angeles is spearheading a new digital health accelerator that will link 26 hospitals across the U.S., U.K. and Australia with 10 tech companies focused on increasing digital innovations in pediatric healthcare. 
Applications for the 13-week program, dubbed KidsX, opened Sept. 1; the program will follow a reverse pitch model, which allows the participating hospitals to pitch their problems or challenges to the startup community and then work with the companies that have tech solutions to meet their needs.
Some of the problems on the KidsX wish list include wearables and bi-directional communication technologies for monitoring pediatric patients at home, tools to improve care transitions from pediatric to adult healthcare, and predictive analytics to identify potentially harmful clinical outcomes in pediatric patients.”

Data-sharing lawsuit against U of Chicago Medical Center, Google dismissed: “A federal judge in Illinois dismissed the class-action lawsuit against the University of Chicago Medical Center and Google, which alleged HIPAA violations.Former University of Chicago Medical Center patient Matt Dinerstein sued Google and the hospital in June 2019, alleging the partnership between the two organizations violated HIPAA. Under the partnership, which began in 2017, the University of Chicago Medical Center shared thousands of de-identified patient records with Google to help the tech giant improve predictive analytics.
The data included time stamps for dates of service and physician notes, which Mr. Dinerstein contended violated HIPAA. The University of Chicago denied any wrongdoing and the lawsuit didn't include evidence that Google misused the information.”

From big deals to bankruptcy, a digital health unicorn falls short. Here's what other startups can learn from Proteus: “Hundreds of startups are trying to succeed in a digital health market that is now flush with cash.
Investors poured $5.4 billion into healthcare technology startups in the first half of 2020, according to digital health venture capital firm Rock Health.
But having a breakthrough technology is not enough to succeed.”
This article is a good case study of one company, Proteus, that ultimately filed for Chapter 11 after a promising start.

About health insurance

A Doctor Went to His Own Employer for a COVID-19 Antibody Test. It Cost $10,984:”Physicians Premier ER charged Dr. Zachary Sussman’s insurance $10,984 for his COVID-19 antibody test even though Sussman worked for the chain and knows the testing materials only cost about $8. Even more surprising: The insurer paid in full…
The bill left him so dismayed he quit his job. And now, after ProPublica’s questions, the parent company of his insurer said the case is being investigated and could lead to repayment or a referral to law enforcement.”
A great case for discussion of what went wrong and what can be done to prevent similar situations.

Urgent care network to pay $12.5M in billing fraud case: “A company that owned and operated more than 30 urgent care centers has agreed to pay $12.5 million to resolve overbilling allegations, the Department of Justice
UCXtra Umbrella, which did business in Arizona as Urgent Care Extra, previously admitted…that it had billing procedures in place that caused its providers to overstate the complexity of the medical services provided to patients…
The company also admitted that staff were encouraged to order tests and procedures that may not have been medically necessary to justify higher billing codes and reimbursement.”

Adjustment For Social Risk Factors Does Not Meaningfully Affect Performance On Medicare’s MIPS Clinician Cost Measures: “Medicare’s Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) …do not include risk adjustment for social risk factors. We found that adjusting for individual and community social risk did not have a meaningful impact on clinicians’ cost measure performance... Prior analyses have generally found higher health care costs for patients with increased social risk. MIPS episode-based cost measures are distinct from previous cost measures because they only include costs related to the specific condition being evaluated. This unique approach may explain why costs were similar for patients with high and low social risk before any risk adjustment”