Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Opioid Use Disorder Diagnoses Surged Nationwide Between 2021 And 2024
Diagnoses of opioid use disorder among the commercially insured jumped nearly 40% nationwide between 2021 and 2024, according to data from FAIR Health's Opioid Tracker shared first with Axios. (Reed, 9/30)
More pharmaceutical news 鈥
Gabapentin prescribing rose sharply in recent years, with the generic drug becoming the fifth most dispensed product in retail pharmacies in 2024, a CDC analysis showed. From 2010 to 2024, prescriptions jumped from 79.5 to 177.6 per 1,000 people, according to Gery Guy Jr., PhD, of the CDC National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, and co-authors. (George, 8/29)
The potential benefits of GLP-1 medications continue to expand. New research has found that the weight loss and diabetes drugs 鈥 officially known as glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists 鈥 are associated with a reduced risk of some cancers, especially in women. (Stabile, 9/29)
A聽meta-trial of randomized clinical studies conducted in 6 countries suggests that the use of inhaled heparin dramatically reduced the risk of intubation, death, and in-hospital death in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. (Van Beusekom, 9/29)
In health care industry news 鈥
Universal Health Services faces more than $500 million in damages after a Nevada jury ruled the system had interfered with Prime Healthcare physicians鈥 contracts. The lawsuit, which was filed in Washoe County, Nevada, in 2021, stems from Prime鈥檚 allegations that UHS illegally solicited physicians and other employees from Saint Mary鈥檚 Medical Group, stole trade secrets, diverted patients and triggered a mass resignation to gain an economic advantage, according to a Monday press release from Prime. (Hudson, 9/29)
Yale New Haven Health will pay Prospect Medical Holdings $45 million to settle dueling lawsuits in state court, ending a contentious saga over the proposed sale of Prospect鈥檚 three Connecticut hospitals 鈥 with Yale acquiring none of them. (Altimari, 9/29)
麻豆女优 Health News: Doctors With Troubled聽Pasts Are Performing Cosmetic Surgeries Tied To Crippling Pain And Injury
Not long after California surgeon Andrew S. Hsu landed a job with a cosmetic surgery chain in Georgia, several of his patients suffered disfiguring injuries, and even his new employer had doubts about his competence, court records allege. Hsu, a board-certified general surgeon, was one of six out-of-state doctors who joined the Atlanta Goals Aesthetics & Plastic Surgery center during the pandemic. (Schulte, 9/30)
麻豆女优 Health News: How To Pick The Right Cosmetic Surgeon
The debate over which doctors are best qualified to perform cosmetic surgery 鈥 and who gets the best results for patients 鈥 has raged for decades. Here鈥檚 why: A state-issued medical license grants a physician what a Federation of State Medical Boards policy statement called the 鈥減rivilege of practicing the full breadth of medicine.鈥 (Schulte, 9/30)