- HHS Awards Over $101 Million to Tackle the Opioid Crisis (drugtopics.com)
...the...Department of Health and Human Services awarded more than $101 million to 116 organizations in order to address substance use disorders (SUD) and opioid use disorders (OUD)...The awards...will go to organizations in 42 states, particularly in highly afflicted rural communities. HRSA’s Federal Office of Rural Health Policy supported 89 rural organizations in 38 states with $89 million as part of the Rural Communities Opioid Response Program-Implementation..."President Trump has focused on expanding access to treatment for Americans with substance use disorders, including opioid use disorder, and that commitment continues during the COVID-19 pandemic," said Alex Azar, MD, secretary of HHS. "The pandemic has created particular stresses for many Americans struggling with substance use disorders, and these HRSA awards will help strengthen prevention, treatment, and recovery services, especially in rural America, at this difficult time."...READ MORE
- Scientists uneasy as Russia approves 1st coronavirus vaccine (apnews.com)
Russia..became the first country to approve a coronavirus vaccine, a move that was met with international skepticism and unease because the shots have only been studied in dozens of people...President Vladimir Putin announced the Health Ministry’s approval and said one of his two adult daughters already was inoculated. He said the vaccine underwent the necessary tests and was shown to provide lasting immunity to the coronavirus, although Russian authorities have offered no proof to back up claims of safety or effectiveness...READ MORE
- Why a data security sting lurks in COVID-19’s long tail (healthcareitnews.com)
Hospital executive minds have understandably been distracted since the start of 2020, but the impact of the emergence of SarsCoV2 has not been limited to its physical toll. It has also torn into data security defenses and exposed patient privacy...The word ‘unprecedented’ seems to have been used on a daily basis during the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly when it comes to the impact of the virus on patients, clinicians, resources and care delivery. But it has resonated equally strongly with hospital chief information security officers, with its power to either stiffen resolve or ratchet up already stretched nervous tension as data security faces a whole new scale and level of cyber threats...READ MORE
- AllianceRx Walgreens Prime unveils new patented process for delivering specialty medicine (chaindrugreview.com)
A new patented process for delivering specialty medicine will assure AllianceRx Walgreens Prime patients receive their medicine delivered at the correct temperature...It is the only specialty pharmacy to offer a patented cold-chain shipment packaging process...Maintaining the right temperatures is critical to ensuring the efficacy of specialty medications, including costly biologics and injectables, which have special storage or temperature requirements...The new patented process also reduces waste and eliminates reship needs...AllianceRx Walgreens Prime anticipates a significant annual savings in reship costs...READ MORE
- Pharma is showering Congress with cash, even as drug makers race to fight the coronavirus (statnews.com)
The world’s biggest drug makers and their trade groups have cut checks to 356 lawmakers ahead of this year’s election — more than two-thirds of the sitting members of Congress…It’s a barrage of contributions that accounts for roughly $11 million in campaign giving, distributed via roughly 4,500 checks from the political action committees affiliated with the companies…The spending follows a long tradition of generous political giving. Major manufacturers typically make hundreds of modest donations to incumbent members of Congress but avoid donating to presidential candidates… pharma’s giving underscores the breadth of its influence and its efforts to curry favor through lobbying and donations to the lawmakers who regulate health care…READ MORE
- India’s role in coronavirus vaccine manufacturing grows with new deals (biopharmadive.com)
India's Wockhardt and the Serum Institute of India have lined up new deals to help ramp up the production of two coronavirus vaccines advancing quickly through clinical testing...Wockhardt's 18-month agreement with the U.K. government covers fill/finish work for a vaccine under development by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca. The Serum Institute, meanwhile, entered a wide-ranging pact with Maryland-based Novavax, covering development, production and commercial licensing of its experimental shot...India is already a key supplier to the global drug industry, producing pharmaceutical ingredients, vaccines and other medicines. The two agreements boost the country's role in making the likely billions of needed doses of coronavirus vaccines, a task being shouldered by nations around the world...READ MORE
- Western states embark on new telehealth partnership (healthcareitnews.com)
Washington, Oregon, Nevada and Colorado will share best practices for telehealth and remote patient monitoring, and follow their own state policies while also adhering to seven key principles, their governors say...Given their states' "significant individual and collective experience with telehealth," the governors say they'll work together to help "ensure that the nation benefits from our knowledge as changes to federal regulations are contemplated, to support continued application and availability of telehealth in our states, and to ensure that we address the inequities faced in particular by tribal communities and communities of color."...READ MORE
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Confidentiality
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Standard-of-care requirements
Stewardship
Patient choice
Payment and reimbursement
- Winter is coming: Why America’s window of opportunity to beat back Covid-19 is closing (statnews.com)
The good news: The United States has a window of opportunity to beat back Covid-19 before things get much, much worse...The bad news: That window is rapidly closing. And the country seems unwilling or unable to seize the moment...Winter is coming. Winter means cold and flu season, which is all but sure to complicate the task of figuring out who is sick with Covid-19 and who is suffering from a less threatening respiratory tract infection. It also means that cherished outdoor freedoms that link us to pre-Covid life — pop-up restaurant patios, picnics in parks, trips to the beach — will soon be out of reach, at least in northern parts of the country...Unless Americans use the dwindling weeks between now and the onset of “indoor weather” to tamp down transmission in the country, this winter could be Dickensianly bleak, public health experts warn...READ MORE
- US to pay $1B to stock up on J&J’s coronavirus vaccine (biopharmadive.com)
Johnson & Johnson has agreed to supply the U.S. government with 100 million doses of its experimental coronavirus vaccine, a stockpile that could be used either in clinical trials or, if cleared by the Food and Drug Administration, a widespread inoculation campaign...If necessary, the U.S. government can negotiate to buy up to 200 million additional doses of the shot, which would be available at no cost in any U.S. vaccination program, excepting charges from doctors for administration...READ MORE
- Rules on prescription drug prices in Georgia tightened in Kemp-signed bill (gwinnettdailypost.com)
Gov. Brian Kemp signed legislation...tightening rules on third-party companies that play a role in negotiating pharmaceutical drug prices between insurers and local pharmacies in Georgia...The bill...requires...pharmacy benefits managers to set drug prices within a national average, a move aimed at reining in excessively high prescription prices...Senate Bill 313...also forces PBMs to offer up full rebates to health plans that are typically given by drugmakers, rather than pocketing a portion...And PBMs will need to submit to new audits by the state Department of Community Health as well as requirements for publishing data on prescription prices online...READ MORE










