Patients and physicians are publicly shaming insurance companies on social media for the troublesome prior authorization process; HHS has awarded $1.4 billion in grants for the creation of new technologies and tools to prevent COVID-19 infection; Novo Nordisk has increased lobbying efforts to allow Medicare coverage of weight loss drugs.
Patients, Doctors Shame Insurers to Reverse Prior Authorization Denials
Patients and physicians have been publicly shaming insurance companies on social media to get drugs, tests, and treatments approved that were previously denied through the prior authorization process, according to KFF Health News. Patients explain that the rules create barriers that delay, or deny, access to treatment, and doctors note that these delays and denials mean death in some cases. Consequently, the federal government proposed prior authorization reform that would require insurance companies to be more transparent about denials and develop quicker response times; if finalized, these changes would be implemented in 2026. These reforms would exclude employer-sponsored health plans, meaning roughly half of the US population would not benefit from them.
HHS Awards $1.4 Billion for COVID-19 Countermeasures
HHS has awarded $1.4 billion in grants through its Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR) to fund the development of tools and technologies to protect against COVID-19, according to The Hill. HHS awarded the grants to pharmaceutical companies, nongovernmental organizations, and nonprofits as part of Project NextGen, an initiative led by ASPR to foster public-private partnerships to develop COVID-19 countermeasures. Most of the money that was awarded, $1 billion, went to 4 clinical trial partners of HHS’s Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority to support vaccine phase 2b clinical trials: Pharm-Olam LLC, ICON Government and Public Health Solutions Inc, Technical Resources International Inc, and Rho Federal Systems Inc. These were the first grants issued from NextGen of the $5 billion initial investment.
Novo Nordisk Boosts Lobbying for Obesity Drug Coverage
Novo Nordisk, creator of diabetes medication Ozempic and weight loss drug Wegovy, has increased its lobbying efforts in the past 6 months to push Congress to pass a bill that would lift Medicare restrictions against weight management treatment coverage, according to The Hill. The pharma giant has hired 3 new lobbying firms in the past 3 months to focus solely on obesity and Medicare coverage of anti-obesity drugs. This comes after the implementation of a 2023 law that excluded weight-loss drugs from Medicare coverage. Consequently, Novo Nordisk is increasing its lobbying efforts for the passing of the Treat and Reduce Obesity Act as public demand increases for weight loss drugs and clinical trials suggest Wegovy reduces the risk of serious heart problems. The act would expand weight management medication coverage to qualifying Medicare beneficiaries.
Trump Administration’s Message to Supreme Court Puts New Wrinkle in Braidwood Case
February 21st 2025The Trump administration argues that HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr can overrule the US Preventive Services Task Force to determine the preventive services covered under the Affordable Care Act.
Read More
Varied Access: The Pharmacogenetic Testing Coverage Divide
February 18th 2025On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with the author of a study published in the February 2025 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care® to uncover significant differences in coverage decisions for pharmacogenetic tests across major US health insurers.
Listen
5 Key Health Care Moments During President Trump's First Month Back in Office
February 21st 2025President Donald J. Trump pushed for significant health care changes during his first month back in office, through executive orders affecting managed care, drug pricing, and clinical trial diversity guidance.
Read More
NSCLC Advancements Offer Hope, but Disparities Persist
February 20th 2025Ioana Bonta, MD, Georgia Cancer Specialists, discusses the evolving state of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treatments, their impact on patient outcomes, and the need to address ongoing disparities in these populations.
Read More