Pro Pharma Talks
By Pro Pharma
Pro Pharma TalksAug 29, 2019
Rationing Medication Therapy
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Government Funded Research & Privately Sold Medications
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Cyber Security & Healthcare
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The Reality of Testing Positive for Covid-19
1. The science of Covid-19
2. Pneumonia Vaccine
3. Immunocompromised patients do well with most vaccinations including RSV – these patients at increased risk of infections – new research indicates that vaccinations against human papillomavirus, hepatitis B, herpes zoster are not a problem to give
4. Misinformation
- Prevention is KEY!
- Once you have Covid-19, now what? –
- Access
- Precautionary responsibility
- Super-spreaders
5. Supporting Information
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A Model for High Quality, Low Cost Health Care
PP Talks – A Model for High Quality, Low Cost Health Care
- Rational -Arguments over ACA indicate that it is worthwhile to find another solution that uses basic principles to deliver high quality at low cost –The Cure That Works, by Sean Masaki Flynn
- Message -- health care first rate, easily accessible, and inexpensive
- Singapore health care system
- Target – Singapore: Elements of health care services
- Insurance
- Examples
- US Examples
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Observations on the Argument Over Health Care Policy
1. Who Makes HC Policy?
a. State differences – access, price and coverage
b. Individuals affected –
i. 17M buy insurance
ii. 29M don’t have insurance
iii. MCare & Medicaid not affected – State expansion of Medicaid, but higher rates of inflation in Red States
2. Hospital Closures & Medicaid Expansion
a. ACA improving health care?
i. Hospitals closed in States rejecting Medicaid
1. States expanding Medicaid – lower and falling hospital closures
2. ACA – improved hospital financial performance w/lower probability of closure for rural markets and counties w/large amt of uninsured
3. Supreme Court left Medicaid expansion to the States
4. Hospital closure leads to loss of well-paying and skilled jobs
3. Wall Street – Another Option for Paying For Health Care Benefits
a. Sell wealth management to individuals
i. Lower cost method to gain new customers
ii. Morgan Stanley, Goldman, Fidelity, Charles Schwab, E*Trade, Amazon/JPMorgan/Berkshire Hathaway
iii. Wall St has the analytics to redeploy investment dollars to benefits
iv. Same as insurance brokers?
v. TPA/PBM – middleman model to transactional model
4. Geography Matters – John Wennberg, MD
a. Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care – cost of living, site of care, volume of services delivered, hospital/MD salaries
b. Example –
i. SF Chronicle reports cost in No. CA 30% > So. Ca d/t UC Berkeley Petris Center on Health Care Markets and Consumer Welfare
ii. Primary reasons -- D/t consolidation in hospitals, insurance and MD practices b/w 2010-2016 (adj for higher cost of living and wages)
iii. Result – mergers/acquisitions in health care = HP+PBMs, MD practices, Plans, Pharmacies lead to higher costs
iv. Marketplace competition, technology, telehealth, international competition, competitor ads leverage cost differences
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Fake & Counterfeit Medications
What do people believe in fake medicines?
1. Differences between fake and counterfeit?
a. Counterfeit is medicine without active ingredient, contaminated, or wrong ingredient
i. Counterfeit examples – Fentanyl, Oncology meds – BCNU, Botox, Artesunate for malaria, antibiotics, meningitis vaccines, ED drugs
b. False treatments
i. Examples – fake miracle cancer cures, coronavirus treatments, nutritional supplements, cosmetic treatments, beauty treatments
c. Result – harm, loss of hope and money
2. Fake coronavirus treatments
a. Fake tests
b. Alcohol-based hand sanitizers, counterfeit respirators, biomagnetism magnetic therapy, covid-19 test packages, OMI sale therapy pipes inhalers, amniotic fluid products, colloidal silver, CBD
c. Fake treatments
i. Hydroxychloroquine, chloroquine
ii. Natural treatments and cures
1. Herbal cold remedies, immune system support products, nutritional vitamins from natural sources to protect from infection, covid-19 cough syrups, natural zinc and vitamin C
3. Why do people believe?
a. Confirmation bias
b. Lack of credible evaluation
c. Attention and impatience
d. Cognitively lazy
e. Emotions
f. Reiteration
g. Social pressure
4. Conclusion
a. Skeptical of treats & cures
b. Evidence, and confirmation
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Corona Virus Vaccine & The FDA Process
PP Talks -- Is It Common for Compounds to Fail the FDA Approval Process?
1. Stages of FDA Approval Process IND
a. Phase 1 – Safety – 20-100 healthy, 2 yrs.
b. Phase 2 – Effectiveness – 100-500 patients, 2 yrs.
c. Phase 3 – Effectiveness & ADR, 1K-5K, 3.5 yrs.
2. Vaccines
a. Phase I fails = 37%
b. Phase II fails = 69%
c. Phase III fails = 42%
d. Biologics License Application (BLA) application
e. Vacc & Related Biologics Prod Adv Cmte (VRBPAC)
3. Risks
a. New vaccine for new virus
b. Clinical trials never succeed
c. Vaccine induced enhancement
d. Acquire study population
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Let's Talk About Colon Cancer
What is it?
- Colorectal cancer
- 3rd most diagnosed cancer in US (men & women)
- S/S = blood in stool, GI irritation, irregular stools, chronic diarrhea, sudden weight loss
- Diagnostic = colonoscopy – polyps, inflammation, ulcers, abnormal growths
- ACS testing guidelines
- Asymptomatic, negative family history, no polyps – every 10 years
- Low-risk polyps – 5 years
- High-risk polyps
What causes it?
- Cause
- Age (90% of cases for people > 50 y/o)
- Family history
- Race – African Americans (new Dx 20% higher in Blacks, and death rates 40% higher)
- Ethnicity – Ashkenazi Jews
- Ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease
- Low whole grain diets
- Genetic predisposition
- Smoking, alcohol use, lack of exercise, diabetes
How is it treated?
- Stage O, I -- Sx
- Stage II – Sx + Adj Chemo
- Stage III – Sx + Adj Chemo
- Stage IV – Sx + Chemo
- Chemo + Targeted Tx
- Gene types – + immunotherapy
- Radiation
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What Aren’t People Talking About Healthcare?
What aren’t people talking about health care?
- Rationale
- Covid-19 Disruptions
- POV and lab decreased
- MDs financially restrained
- Hospitals losing money
- Patients lack access
- New diagnoses/therapies down
- Telehealth rising
- Unemployment rising
- Drug cost reduction
- CMS force PhRMA to publish drug prices on TV
- Legislation disallowing gag clauses
- Expand pricing transparency to radio, web, print and social media
- HHS maintain a public list of drugs violating rule
- Exempt Rx < $35/Rx
- Health Care Benefits
- Price transparency
- Health care = Consumer product
- Retailers offer basic services
- Robotics
- Convenience
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The War Over Covid-19 Expertise and the Politicization of Health
1. Public discussion
- New information
- Politics
- MD subspecialties
- Sources of data
- Nonsense
- PP Disclaimer
2. Expertise
- Experts
- ID specialists / epidemiologists
- CDC
- WHO
- NIH
- Survey data
- FDA for potential treatments
- Mistakes
- Data acquisition / politics
3. Pearls
- New treatments
- Bogus treatments
- Comps – 2019 vs. 1918
- Information progresses
- Experts change opinions
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Patient Assistance Programs in the Era of COVID-19
The War Over Covid-19 Expertise and the Politicization of Health
Public discussion
-New information
-Politics
-MD subspecialties
-Sources of data
-Nonsense
-PP Disclaimer
Expertise
-Experts
-ID specialists / epidemiologists
-CDC
-WHO
-NIH
-Survey data
-FDA for potential treatments
-Mistakes
-Data acquisition / politics
Pearls
-New treatments
-Bogus treatments
-Comps – 2019 vs. 1918
-Information progresses
-Experts change opinions
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COVID-19 & Children
Questions for PP Talks – Covid-19 & Children
1. Rationale?
a. Symptoms less severe than in adults
b. Children may carry the virus w/o S/S, but may transfer it
c. Data is variable and in many cases based on limited groups or on case reports
2. What do we know?
a. 22% of US population is children
b. 1.7% are reported cases (similar to China data)
c. Case breakdown =
i. 10-17 y/o = 60%
ii. 1 y/o = 15%
iii. 1-4 y/o = 11%
iv. 5-9 y/o = 15%
v. 57% males
d. Comps to adults
i. Peds experience less fever, cough, SOB -- 73% peds vs. 93% adults
ii. Hospitalization – 5.7% peds vs. 10% adults
3. Treatments?
a. Population at risk – no widespread testing, no testing for mild S/S
b. Perinatal transmission to neonates – guidelines require mandatory testing of neonates
c. Infants at higher risk than older children
d. Extrapolate treatments for adults
i. Prevention = hand washing, face masks, social distancing
ii. Behavioral changes = target stress, excessive worry, sadness, poor eating habits, unhealthy sleep habits, difficulties with attention and concentration
iii. Remdesivir – for hospital, severe disease – available for children through FDA Emergency Use Authorization OR through compassionate use program
4. Risks?
a. Standard vaccinations and wellness checks
b. PMIS-TS
How Other Countries are Managing the Pandemic
1. What is the current situation?
a. US – slow response, extremely poor national management, high uninsured rate, high out-of-pocket costs, and comparatively low medical system capacity
b. States in competition over purchasing PPE
2. What are other countries doing?
a. International experience – management, global partnering
b. Asian experience – using lessons learned from SARS outbreak
c. European experience – emphasize testing
d. Scandinavia
i. Swedish model – remained open, highest global death rate, economy in worst crisis since WWII
ii. Denmark/Norway – locked down
iii. Finland has low level of immunity – fears of a second wave
e. Taiwan Model
i. Geopolitical fight with China
ii. Serious history of respiratory diseases
iii. Coordinate government’s response
iv. Quick and efficient in deploying counter measures
3. What have we learned?
a. Proactive management like every other pandemic is crucial
b. Global partnerships are crucial
c. Quick and efficient testing
d. US complicated with high uninsured rate, high OOP costs, low medical system capacity
e. US has greater disease burden
f. US has smaller workforce and acute hospital bed capacity
g. Considerable variation among states
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Off-Label Drug Use
1. What is off-label drug use?
a. Off-label drug use is when doctors prescribe medications for unapproved uses
b. FDA cannot control how doctors prescribe
c. 20% of Rx in US are fore off-label uses
2. Why use a drug for off-label purposes?
a. Tried all other options without success
b. Literature to support drug’s use, even if limited
c. Different dosage form
d. Dosage for which there is evidence that a higher dose may be effective
e. Drug is generic so there is no financial benefit for a manufacturer to obtain approvals
3. What are the risks?
a. Balance between effectiveness and risk is tilted toward risk
b. Investigational studies with close monitoring of safety
4. Approvals
a. Experimental
b. Benefit unknown
c. Risks unknown
d. Plan must pay for all consequences
5. Examples
a. Gabapentin for anxiety
b. High dose/strength opiates for pain
c. Stimulants for weight loss
d. Anti-epileptic medications for mood disorders/bipolar disease
e. Examples of atypical antipsychotics include Seroquel, Zyprexa and Abilify. They are being used to treat an array of conditions off-label, including anxiety, attention-deficit disorder, sleep problems, behavioral problems in toddlers and dementia.
f. Antipsychotics to treat dementia
g. Cancer treatment – estimated 50% are off-label
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What Happened to Lowering the Cost of Drugs?
1. Goal: Lower drug cost so that they are affordable to patients
a. US Rate of Inflation (2017-2019) = 2.14% to 1.8%
b. CPI = 2.0%
c. CPI (health care) = 2.8% (2019)
2. Drug Cost Transparency
a. Transparency = cost
b. CA SB17: WAC >= $40 with 16% inflation in prior year, or 32% inflation in last 2 years
3. How do they differ? Are they effective? Pros/Cons
a. White House Plan
b. Congressional Action
c. Congress – Democratic Plan
4. State Plans – What are they trying to do? Pros/Cons
a. California
b. New York
5. Discount Programs
a. GoodRx
b. TimesRx
c. Misc.
6. PhRMA unregulated for innovation
a. Largest PhRMA produce 11% of leading new Rx
b. New Rx develo9ped by universities, academic centers, NIH, hospital research groups
c. 2/3 of new Rx developed by France, Germany, Japan, Switzerland and UK
d. Raw materials from China, India, Israel, Brazil, South Africa, Australia
7. Transparency
a. Shoppable vs. urgent
b. Uwe Reinhardt – Priced Out – health care spending increases private sector > public sector
c. Gag Order Bans (half-of-states)
d. 8 States – PhRMA must provide reasons for reasoning for drug cost decisions
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Are We Overemphasizing COVID-19 to the Detriment of Other Diseases? (Featuring Dr. Mark Walberg)
Science & Data vs. Misinformation & the risks of overemphasizing Covid-19 to the detriment of other diseases
1. Where is the science behind Covid-19?
2. What treatments have been approved? What treatments are of no value?
3. With the emphasis on Covid-19 vaccine, what are the risks for standard vaccinations for measles, mumps, chicken pox, etc.?
4. What should we do to mitigate these risks if physician offices are not open yet?
5. People stress the need for herd immunity, but what do we do if the Covid-19 only covers =< 60% of the people?
6. Do people with immunity and/or herd immunity from common diseases (in #3 above) lose immunity without boosters or additional shots?
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Racism’s Impact on Healthcare
Racism’s Impact on Health Care
1. Scope of topic = any civic, cultural, spiritual divisiveness
2. Scale = racism, sexism, antisemitism, genderism, etc., emblematic of hatred, brutality, senseless violence, exclusion, bias
3. Genesis of this podcast – police murder of George Floyd and a history of police violation of their oath
4. How do health care professionals address hatred in its many forms?
a. Merge physical and behavioral health treatment
b. Consider stress as a genesis for physical and emotional health
5. What is the position of medical, nursing, and pharmacy associations regarding hatred, violence, racism, etc.?
a. They consider it a public health care crisis
b. They conjoin the individual experience with the community experience
6. Mudd Rule
7. Inconsistencies in the health care ethic
a. Abortion
b. Access to care
c. Cost of care
d. Rationing
e. Triaging based on prognosis and responsiveness to care
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What Will Healthcare Look Like After the Coronavirus?
1. What has changed?
a. Decreased MD office visits
b. Decreased well visits
c. Decreased oversight of chronic diseases
d. Telehealth
e. Changes in billing rules to allow for indirect patient care
2. How has technology impacted health care?
a. Historical – health care behind other industries
b. Current – catching up with telehealth, apps, home monitoring
3. What is the impact on children and people with disabilities?
a. Did not participate in financial bail-outs
b. Vaccination rates down about 40%
c. Fear of epidemics, e.g., measles
4. What is the impact on MD and DDS offices?
a. Decreased revenue, increased expenses
b. Expect to be barraged with higher severity patients
c. DDS patients delayed discretionary dental work
5. What is the impact on pharmacies?
a. Increased 90-day scripts
b. Shortages of respiratory medications
c. Transparency and drug cost proposals
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Coronavirus: The Second Wave
1. What does “second wave” mean?
2. What is transmissibility and severity of COVID-19?
a. After relaxation of interventions (social distancing, population behavior change, contact tracing)
b. Covid-19 hits during fall flu season
c. Problem is overcapacity of the health care system
3. Precedence – H1N1 pandemic in 2009
4. Immunity Passports – Chile was first to issue
a. No evidence that patients can’t get the virus again
5. What Must Be Done
a. Testing
b. Contact surveillance
c. Flu Shots
6. Treatment
a. Vaccine is first priority
b. Treatments
i. Expedited, but do not help everyone
ii. Expedite release means that safety is an issue
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How We Pay for COVID-19?
QUESTIONS
- What do you do if you are insured?
- How do you afford copays and deductibles?
- What do you do if you are uninsured?
- Will Medicaid pay?
- Will Medicare pay?
- What if you are poor?
- What if you are an illegal immigrant?
OUTLINE
- Public health experts predict that tens of thousands and possibly millions of people across the United States will likely need to be hospitalized for COVID-19 in the foreseeable future. And Congress has yet to address the problem. On March 18, it passed the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, which covers testing costs going forward, but it doesn’t do anything to address the cost of treatment.
- While most people infected with COVID-19 will not need to be hospitalized and can recover at home, according to the World Health Organization, those who do need to go to the ICU can likely expect big bills, regardless of what insurance they have. As the U.S. government works on another stimulus package, future relief is likely to help ease some economic problems caused by the coronavirus pandemic, but gaps remain.
- A new analysis from the Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that the average cost of COVID-19 treatment for someone with employer insurance—and without complications—would be about $9,763. Someone whose treatment has complications may see bills about double that: $20,292. (The researchers came up with those numbers by examining average costs of hospital admissions for people with pneumonia.)
- Most private health insurance plans are likely to cover most services needed to treat coronavirus complications, but that doesn’t include your deductible—the cost you pay out-of-pocket before your insurance kicks in. More than 80% of people with employer health insurance have deductibles, and last year, the average annual deductible for a single person in that category was $1,655. For individual plans, the costs are often higher. The average deductible for an individual bronze plan in 2019 was $5,861, according to Health Pocket.
- 97% of Health Plans waive the copay/deductible for Covid-19 testing
- In both complicated and uncomplicated cases, patients with employer-based insurance can expect out-of-pocket costs of more than $1,300, the Kaiser researchers found. The costs were similar regardless of complications because many people who are hospitalized reach their deductible and out-of-pocket maximum.
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How Do Experts Know When a Pandemic Is About to Peak?
Questions:
- What does it mean to map the progress of an epidemic?
- Is testing crucial?
- What is an algorithm that is used for predicting the progress of an epidemic?
- What is the difference between out-brakes and modeling?
- What happens after modeling?
Outline – Notes:
- Data support
- Testing data to map a population
- # hospitalizations
- Deaths
- Past infectious disease progress
- Expert surveys
- Did lock down occur?
- Out-brakes vs. Modeling
- How many are going to get the disease?
- Out-brakes -- % of current deaths
- Modeling -- % of expected deaths based on looking backward
- Complicating Factors
- Social factors
- Geography
- Cultures
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Vaccine Development vs. Treatment
Vaccines vs. Treatment
-Treatment vs. Prevention
-Treatment is not curative – examples are HTN, anti-diabetic medications, anti-asthma medications
-New options are antibody serum, gene PCR techniques
-Prevention – examples are vaccines, gene transformations
-Vaccine manufacturing process
-Production technologies – using flu vaccine as an example
-Egg-based
-Cell based
-Recombinant
-https://www.cdc.gov/flu/prevent/how-fluvaccine-made.htm
-Coronavirus vaccine
-Exploratory stage (2-4yrs)
-Pre-clinical stage – animal tests 1-2 yrs.
-Clinical development – ca. 30% make it
-Regulatory review and approval – sign off by FDA and CDC
-Manufacturing – FDA inspects factory and drug labels
-Quality control – quality control review for safet
-Vaccine manufacture
-Vaccines are an antigen or foreign body that causes a reaction when introduced into the body. Foreign antigens illicit antibodies that fight the antigen.
-Live virus
-Inactivated virus
-Vaccine composed of a part of the virus
-Bacterial vaccines
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Managing a Chronic Condition During a Pandemic
-Restrictions
oLimited doctor visits
oTelehealth for showing doctor your current medical signs and symptoms
oLimited medical access (lab)
-Management
oCardiac Disease
-CHF: take weight daily – call MD if any increase in weight, then get an Rx for Lasix (Furosemide)
-High blood pressure – keep BP < 140/90 with home monitoring
-ASCVD/high cholesterol – keep diet low in fat
-Lose weight
-Comply with medication regimen
- Continue ACE inhibitors and ARB medications
oDiabetes
-Taking daily blood sugar, keeping it in normal range, is sufficient to delay the A1c measurement.
-Follow a low sugar diet
-Lose weight
-Check daily – feet, hands – for dry and blue appearance – if blue, then call MD and show on Skype
-Moisturize skin to prevent dryness
oAsthma/COPD
-Stop smoking or use alternatives like Nicorette or generics
-Use rescue medications only when necessary and use ICS as prescribed on a regular basis
-Use breathing machine to maintain good volume capacity
-Buy an oxygen monitor to measure your oxygenation. Keep O2 at > 90%.
oThyroid
oPain (non-cancer)
oPain (cancer)
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What We Learned From Previous Epidemics and Pandemics
What We Learned From Previous Epidemics / Pandemics
Statistics
- 1918: 50M people killed
- HIV/Aids: 39M people since 1981
- Poverty to risk
- Inadequate sanitation
- Poor nutrition
- Crowded living conditions
- Lack of healthcare services
- Poor infection control
- Lack of public infrastructure
- Poor governance
Epidemics History (very frequent until recent times after 1950s)
- Cholera —1852-1860
- Asian Flu – 1957
- Typhus Fever – 1945
- Cocolitzli epidemic – 1575
- Plague of Justinian – 541
- Antonine Plague – 165-180AD
- Third Plague Pandemic – 1855
- Black Death – 1334
- Great Flu Epidemic – 1918
- HIV/Aids – 1960’s to present
Pearls
- Management – calm, factual, frequent
- Immediate response!!!
- Early detection and monitoring – data, data, data!
- Factual communications from professionals
- Care isolation – Contact Quarantine
- Antisepsis / hand washing
- Social distancing
- Protective gear (masks, gloves, clothing)
- Pharmaceutical intervention
- Prohibit travel
- Prohibit / downplay racism
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Inhalant Medications & Devices
What do we need to know about inhalant medications?
- Examples of inhalants = Respiratory for Asthma and COPD, Flonase for allergy, Afrin, Insulin, etc.
- What should we know about inhalants? Particle size and why?
- Why are some drugs administered as inhalants, and some not?
- How to use them? Good compliance rules
- What are the general complications?
- What are the tests required to accompany medication management?
- What does success look like?
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Let's Talk Vaccines: Influenza, Coronavirus (COVID-19), & More (w/ Dr. Mark Walberg)
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Coronavirus
Corona Virus (2019-nCoV)
1. What it 2019-nCoV is?
2. How it spreads?
3. Vaccines
4. Prevention
CDC Information
2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) is a virus (more specifically, a coronavirus) identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China. Early on, many of the patients in the outbreak in Wuhan, China reportedly had some link to a large seafood and animal market, suggesting animal-to-person spread. However, a growing number of patients reportedly have not had exposure to animal markets, indicating person-to-person spread is occurring. At this time, it’s unclear how easily or sustainably this virus is spreading between people. The latest situation summary updates are available on CDC’s web page 2019 Novel Coronavirus, Wuhan, China.
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Blood Shortages
Blood Shortage
1. Usage = 32K pints of blood used every day in US
2. Type of blood in short supply = Type “O”
3. Impact – 4.5M
a. 220mg-250mg of Iron lost for every donation – 24-30 weeks to replace iron
b. Normal Iron levels = 10-30 mmol/L (also ferritin < 10mcg/L)
4. Donor requirements (Red Cross) – Good health, weight >= 110 pounds, >= 17 years old
a. Eat iron rich foods (spinach, red meat, fish, poultry, beans, iron fortified cereals and raisins)
b. Drink an extra 16 oz fluids
c. Avoid fatty foods (hamburgers, fries, or ice cream)
d. No upper age limit
5. OTC and homeopathics, herbals, nutritional supplements are acceptable
6. Anti-depressants, Xanax, ADHD drugs -- OK
7. Restrictions (Red Cross) – anyone who has used self-injected non-prescription drugs, anyone who lived in UK for >= 3 months (and other parts of Europe) since 1980-1996 due to mad cow disease (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), heavy periods
a. Coronary artery disease
b. Beta blockers
c. HIV
d. Hepatitis
e. Active infection – wait 10 days after last antibiotic
f. Autoimmune disease
g. Receive a transfusion – wait 12 months
8. What categories of medications prevent people from giving blood?
a. Acne meds – Isotretinoin (d/t birth defects)
b. Finasteride and dutasteride (d/t birth defects)
c. Psoriasis meds – Soriatane (acitretin) – wait 3 years d/t severe congenital birth defects
d. Antiplatelet meds – wait 7-14 days for platelet donations
e. Blood thinners – blood doesn’t clot
f. Growth hormone injections
g. Multiple sclerosis medications – Aubagio – wait 2 years d/t birth defects
9. Medications that can’t be used to give blood (must wait one month until you can give blood)
a. Accutane, Amnesteem, Absorica, Claravis, Myorisan, Sotret, Zenatane (isotretinoin)
b. Proscar (finasteride)
c. Propecia (finasteride)
10. Recovery
a. Blood replenished within 24 hours
b. Red cells take 4-6 weeks
c. Must wait 8 weeks between giving blood
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Patient Privacy (HIPPA) and Data Security
Topics for Security Talk
1. PHI = personal health information
2. Security
a. Passwords – 8 characters can be hacked in less than 1 minute
b. Two Factor Authentication
c. Confidentiality refers to protection of information shared with an attorney, therapist, physician (or other) from being shared with third parties without express consent. ... Privacy, on the other hand, refers to the legal protection of personal medical information from being shared on a public platform.Mar 4, 2019
3. Privacy
a. Professional Code of Ethics
1. A pharmacist respects the autonomy and dignity of each patient. A pharmacist promotes the right of self-determination and recognizes individual self-worth by encouraging patients to participate in decisions about their health. A pharmacist communicates with patients in terms that are understandable.
b. HIPAA
i. The HIPAA Privacy Rule for the first time creates national standards to protect individuals' medical records and other personal health information. It gives patients more control over their health information. It sets boundaries on the use and release of health records.
1. www.hhs.gov › hipaa › for-individuals › faq › what-does-the-hipaa-priv...
ii. Treatment
iii. Administration/Utilization
iv. Payment
c. HealthIT.gov
i. The privacy and security of patient health information is a top priority for patients and their families, health care providers and professionals, and the government. ... The Security Rule sets rules for how your health information must be kept secure with administrative, technical, and physical safeguards. Dec 17, 2018 HealhtIT.gov
4. HIPAA
a. Treatment
b. Administration/Utilization
c. Payment
5. Controversy over Security
a. Pro: Data needed for treatment
b. Con: How data is used?
c. Long, detailed responses to data security before it can be used
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Medical Devices
Medical Devices
- BP meters, blood glucose monitors
- The basic regulatory requirements that manufacturers of medical devices distributed in the U.S. must comply with are:
- Establishment registration,
- Medical Device Listing,
- Premarket Notification 510(k), unless exempt, or Premarket Approval (PMA),
- Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) for clinical studies.
- MEDICAL Devices
- Diagnostic equipment includes medical imaging machines, used to aid in diagnosis. Examples are ultrasound and MRI machines, PET and CT scanners, and x-ray machines. Treatment equipment includes infusion pumps, medical lasers and LASIK surgical machines.
- Home Use Devices
- Safety & Efficacy
- Medical devices that are authorized by the FDA for over-the-counter purchase that are not otherwise restricted and are appropriately described and labeled, such as:
- Adhesive bandages
- Crutches
- Eyeglass frames
- Otoscopes
- Personal Sound Amplification Products (PSAPs)
- Sharps containers
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Healthcare In 2020
What you need to know about Healthcare in 2020.
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The Importance of Handwashing
Topic: Washing Hands
- Goal – Prevention of infections and spreading disease
- How – water 100 degF or 38 degC, soap (?) for 20 seconds
- When
- Preparing food
- Using toilet or changing a diaper
- Blowing nose, coughing, sneezing
- Treat wounds or caring for a sick person
- Handling garbage
- Handling pets and their food
- Hand Sanitizer
- Must have >= 60% alcohol
- Antibacterial sanitizer is OK when hands are not dirty
- Antibiotic resistance
- Global health threat
- Need standard treatment guidelines
- Misuse and overuse of antibiotics
- Use hand washing prevention
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HIV / AIDS
Update on HIV/AIDS
- HIV-1 is a more dangerous virus than HIV-2: AIDS developed in 54% of people with HIV-1 and 43% of people with HIV-2. After eight years, half of those with HIV-1 had died. In comparison, after 15 years, half of those with HIV-2 had died.
- The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently announced the approval of Dovato, the first complete two-drug HIV treatment regimen for people who previously have not been on antiretroviral therapy. Why is Dovato significant? It offers the potential for these people to take their two-drug regimen in one single tablet. PrEP:
- Truvada is a brand-name prescription medication that's used for treating HIV infection. It's also used for preventing HIV infection in people who have a high risk of getting HIV. This use, in which the treatment is given before the person may be exposed to HIV, is called pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).
- Antiretroviral therapy may soon be obsolete, as scientists have successfully used immune cells to kick the dormant form of HIV out of its hiding place and destroy it. The findings may soon lead to an HIV vaccine.
Main Points:
- PrEP works
- HIV can be detected within weeks
- Late testing can be lethal
- Undetectable viral load can be an effective HIV prevention
- Repeated exposures increase the risk of an activity
- Not every HIV exposure leads to an infection
- Rectal fluid can transmit HIV
- People aren’t using condoms correctly
- People with AIDS can have a near-normal life expectancy
- Prepare for an aging HIV epidemic
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Children's Health
Childhood Issues
• Storage
o Keep out of reach
o Products not prescriptions
o Child-resistant packaging
• Safety
o Administer as prescribed or labeled
o Use dosing device (teaspoon, tablespoon, measuring cup, etc.)
o Write clear instructions to caregivers
o Share info with babysitters, family, friends
• Destruction
o Clean out used or expired medications
o Put in sealable bag and bring to pharmacies
• Safe Administration
o Teach about always given by adult
o Rx not candy
o Drug use – storage, read drug label and facts, follow dosing instructions
• Poisoning
o Have Poison Help number by phone (1-800-222-1222)
o 24/7/365
o How to take Rx and how to treat poisoning
• Special cases
o Childhood obesity
o Injury
o Lice
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Medication Compliance
Compliance – Easy to talk about, but hard to do!
o Drug Compliance – definition
o Same as compliance with doctor visits, lab draws, device use, BP measurements, BG measurements
o Take medications as prescribed by your doctor
o The best drug taken for the right reasons is no good, if it is not taken
o Education is primary method
o History
o A problem for decades
o No general solution
o Unintentional non-adherence
o https://bmchealthservres.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1472-6963-12-98
o 62% forgot
o 37% ran out of medications
o 23% careless about taking medications
o Barriers
o Why?
o Low perceived need
o Affordability
o Worse self-rated health
o Youth
o Prescriber/Pharmacists
o Cost
o Self-reporting
o Time to track pill counts
o Refill messages
o Time for education
o Scheduling
o 1-2x/day > 3-4x/day
o Devices
o Memory
o Calendars
o Automation – tops of medication bottles, app alerts
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Diabetes
Statistics
o >30 million people in US, 1 in 4 don’t know they have it
o 84 million US adults have prediabetes, and 90% don’t know they have it
o 7th leading cause of death in US
o Type 2 diabetes accounts for 90% to 95% of all diagnosed cases
o # of adults diagnosed with diabetes has doubled with age and overweight/obese
Risk factors
o Overweight
o >= 45 y/o
o Parent, brother, or sister with T2D
o Physically active < 3x/week
o Gestational diabetes (diabetes w/pregnancy) or given birth to baby weighing > 9 pounds
o African Americans, Hispanic/Latino Americans, American Indians, Alaska Natives, Pacific Islanders, and some Asian Americans have higher risk for prediabetes and T2M
Leading cause of in 2019
o Chronic kidney disease
o Lower-limb amputations
o Adult-onset blindness
Risk Factors -- independent
o Diet
o Over-weight
o Lack of exercise
o Smoking – 30-40% more likely to develop type 2 diabetes than non-smokers
o Non-compliance with medications, weight loss, diet
Medications
o Large armamentarium of drugs
o Look for A1c lowering
o Risk factors are independent and can still cause end-organ disease
o Compliance with monitoring blood sugar – proxy for end-organ disease
o Compliance with medication
o Compliance with Insulin is approximately 50% across US
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Care Transitions
Topic: Care Transitions
What are care transitions?
-Acute to home or chronic care/step down
-Example: Hospital to home
Concern
-Don’t want patient to return to the hospital within 30 days for same problem
- Medicare refusal to pay for certain conditions to promote prevention
Issues
-Understand discharge orders
-Comply with discharge orders
-Drug coordination from pre-hospital, to in hospital, or post-hospital regimen
-Labs and services to follow up
Examples
-Pneumonia & Serious infections – injectable to oral antibiotic, antibiotics compliance, monitor for symptoms (temperature, swelling, pain, GI symptoms, dizzy/confused, etc.)
-Heart Failure – monitor weight everyday, comply with medicines
-COPD/Emphysema – arrange for O2, use FiO2 to expand vital capacity, correct use of inhalers
-Asthma – correct use of inhalers
-Heart Attack – BP, lipid, ACEI regimen of medications – promote compliance
-DVT – transition from injectable-to-oral anticoagulants – promote compliance, alert notification if bleed
-Pain management – CDC recommendations
Support
-Nurse case managers
-Pharmacists
-Home – rest, anabolic diet, hydration
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Value & Ethics in Drug Pricing
Value & Ethics in Drug Pricing
1. What is the argument between high prices and value?
2. How is value determined?
a. ICER
b. NICE
c. Cochran Reviews
3. How is pricing determined?
4. What is the ethical question?
a. Support prescription and prescriber’s plan
b. 20% of standard Rx are for off-label
c. 50% of cancer treatment is off-label or unapproved
5. Actions to bridge value to price
a. Value-based purchasing
b. Non-inferiority trials
c. Objective review of the literature
d. Committee reviews, e.g., tumor boards, P&T Committees
6. Outstanding question
a. Cost vs. affordability
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Over the Counter Medications (OTC)
Outline for OTC Talk
What are OTC’s?
- Authorized for safety, not efficacy
- Many OTC were once prescription so effectiveness is ensured
How should they be used?
- Oral – symptomatic
- Topical – low severity problems
Cost-Benefit
- No doctor visit unless the condition does not improve
- No labs
- Buy generics if available
- Caution when paying for store-brand or private label as they cost similar to a brand
Information Resource
- Pharmacists – them most educated in medication physiology, pharmacology and clinical effects
Request OTC Formulary: https://www.123formbuilder.com/form-4856229/
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Compounding Pharmacies and Fraud, Waste & Abuse
Compounding Pharmacies / FWA
- Compound Requirements
- Must be for medications for specific patients, for a specific condition, for a specific prescription
- Compounding in bulk for multiple patients before prescriptions are received is manufacturing!
- Limits
- Patients will probably not know
- Prescriber will not know unless they have a commercial arrangement with the pharmacy
- Health Plans will only know when doing analysis of medication utilization
- PBMs will only know when doing analysis of medication utilization
- What are compounds?
- Injectables with custom ingredients and dosing
- Oral tabs/caps with non-manufactured ingredients
- Oral liquids for custom dosing
- Topical medications in different bases for better absorption or non-allergic
- What are compounding pharmacies?
- Regulated by State laws
- Rationale:
- Children’s medications
- Allergic modifications
- Dosing modifications
- Mixing injectables
- Animal treatments
- Misc.
- Limits on compounding
- PBM restrictions on medications currently manufactured
- State oversight
- Lack of absorption or effectiveness
- FWA
- Small % of total dispensing
- Physician prescribing for custom medications with a commercial motive
- Pharmacists dispensing/manufacturing for multiple patients for custom medications with a commercial motive
- Sterility problems
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Gender Bias in Medicine and Drug Research
Gender Bias in Medicine and Drug Research
1. Women 51% of population, but few women in clinical research
2. Sex is based on reproductive organs and functions assigned by chromosomes
- Gender is self-representation in response to socials institutions shaped by environment and experience
- Action: Education, research, workforce development
3. Medical Biases against women
- Heart failure – Australia: women < men to receive recommended treatment for heart failure
- Alzheimer’s Disease – women perform better than men in early stages
- Medical trials – women excluded
- 8 Rx in US withdrawn between 1997-2001 for less safe and effective
- Until early 1990’s women excluded from biomedical studies
- Example:
- Women: ASA reduced risk of stroke, but not MI
- Men: ASA reduces risk of MI, but not stroke
- CPR dummies – U of Penn (2018) women less likely to receive CPR
- Endometriosis – 1/10 women wait > 7 years for diagnosis
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All About Vaccines with Dr. Mark Walberg
All About Vaccines with special guest Dr. Mark Walberg
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The Risks of Vaping
Vaping
- What is it?
- Is it vapor and flavor only? (From a child’s scientific understanding)
- Pharmacology principles
- Is this the same as smoking?
- Recidivism
- Initial impact of vaping
- Complications
- Respiratory illness
- Seizures
- Interventions
- Same as nicotine?
- OTC medications
- Education
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AI in Healthcare
AI in Healthcare
Disclaimer – PP develops, innovates and utilizes AI for our clients
- What is AI?
- “the theory and development of computer systems able to perform tasks that normally require human intelligence, such as visual perception, speech recognition, decision-making, and translation between languages”
- Elements of AI
- Fundamental metrics
- Examples – hospital admissions, hospital length of stay, ER admits, drug utilization, drug cost, total cost of care, etc.
- Manifests AS --
- Increased productivity
- Improved efficiency
- Robotics
- Algorithms (Rules for analyzing data)
- Uses
- Current situation
- Predictions (trending based on current experience)
- Forecasts (estimates based on fundamental indicators)
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Purchasing Drugs From Canada
1. Quality of prescription drugs
a. Health Canada responsible for efficacy and safety of drugs marketed in Canada
b. Health Canada operates under the Food and Drugs Act and regulatory mandate under the Food and Drug Regulations
c. Most drugs are not manufactured in Canada
d. There is no parity between drugs available without a prescription in US vs. Canada
2. Availability of prescription drugs
a. US Rx received in Canadian pharmacy must be approved by a Canadian physician prior to it being filled – cosigning
b. Canada Health Act – drugs administered in Canadian hospitals are approved at no cost to patients
c. Employers cover many Canadians and their families
d. Drug Shortages Canada –
i. Website for reporting drug shortages and discontinuations in Canada
ii. Drug sellers must report that they cannot meet demand
3. Cost considerations
a. Canada
i. Most prescription drugs are imported
ii. Government places price ceilings on Brand name medications imported into Canada
b. Canadian internet pharmacies are suspect
c. Bricks and mortar pharmacies are same as US
4. Opportunity Savings
a. HIS Markit study – Abilify costs 87% less and Xarelto costs 60% less
b. Concerns that manufacturers will increase prices for drugs in US and Canada
5. State Plans
a. Florida
b. Vermont
6. Trump’s Plan
a. States, individual pharmacies, wholesalers can write proposals and submit for federal approval
b. Exclusions – biologics, medications created from living organisms
c. FDA would work with manufacturers to bring drugs made in foreign factories to the US (e.g., insulin)
7. Arguments Against – PhRMA
a. Counterfeit, dangerous medications
b. Canada drug market too small
c. Canada doesn’t have an unlimited supply of medications
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Healthcare and Homelessness
1. Indigent / Homeless Population
a. No address
b. No phone
c. No income, or no money for health care
d. No transportation
e. No time management
f. Information varies dependent on associations
g. Information sharing is variable and frequently based on incorrect concerns, false conversations, etc.
2. Health Care Issues
a. Poor diet
b. Poor exercise program
c. Lack of follow up on relatively trivial problems that result in major complications
d. Poor historians
e. Frequently comorbid
f. Frequently have behavioral health problems
g. Inconsistent adherence – office visits, obtaining labs, picking up drugs
3. Medication Issues
a. Can’t afford copays
b. Frequently don’t have a watch for scheduling medication
c. Medications cannot be evaluated as the patient may not be available to identify side effects, etc.
d. Patients frequently cannot obtain labs to use for medication management
e. Adherence is a problem, especially if they stop taking the medications due to side effects, etc.
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Travel Health
Travel Health:
1. What are the most common health issues travelers may encounter?
a. Travelers diarrhea
b. In terms of “things that will kill you”, most travelers die from pre-existing medical conditions (MI) or accidents (specifically MVA)
2. Mentioned vaccines, are there other vaccines people will need to consider besides those for GI bugs?
a. Yellow fever… basically a mosquito-borne disease that destroys your liver and has a very high fatality rate. Found in South America (Amazon) and Sub-Saharan Africa. Mosquitoes bite during the day and can also carry dengue, chikungunya and zika… so still have to prevent mosquito bites.
b. Japanese encephalitis… similar to West Nile, it causes neurological symptoms. Found in Southeast Asia, mostly in rural parts. Need to have a travel health advisor assess whether or not you should get it.
c. Rabies… fairly expensive, but lifesaving if bit by a rabid animal.
d. All the routine vaccines you thought you didn’t need… Tdap, meningitis, polio, MMRV and FLU! (because it looks like malaria and you will be treated as such in tropical countries)
3. What about malaria?
a. Parasitic disease that lays dormant for weeks to months and can result in death in 24-48 hours without treatment
b. Mosquitos bite at night so need modern housing or a bed net
c. Medication are typically taken before travel, while traveling and up to one month after
4. Anything else?
a. Lots of other things to consider… altitude sickness, other parasites (even those you can get from bathing in contaminated water like lakes and rivers), jet lag, etc.
b. Best to consult someone certified in travel health or tropical medicine… so they will have passed a competency exam
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Medical Devices
Devices Used in Therapeutics
1. Types of devices used for TESTING / MONITORING and At-Home Test Kits discussed in this talk –
a. Blood Glucose monitors
b. Blood pressure monitors
c. Prothrombin Blood Coagulation monitors
d. Pregnancy test kits
e. and others
2. FDA Medical Device Classes
a. Class I = low to moderate risk to patient
i. 47% of devices
ii. 95% exempt
iii. Examples = Enema kits, elastic bandages, manual stethoscopes, and bedpans
b. Class II = moderate or high risk to patient
i. 43% of devices (most devices)
ii. Examples = powered wheelchairs, some pregnancy tests kits
c. Class III = high risk to patients
i. 10% of devices
ii. Examples = Implantable pacemakers, breast implants
d. FDA Regulatory Requirements
i. FDA Registration (21 CFR Part 807)
ii. Medical Device Listing
iii. Premarket Notification 510(k) OR Premarket Approval (PMA)
iv. Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) for clinical studies
1. https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices/device-advice-comprehensive-regulatory-assistance/overview-device-regulation
v. Quality System (QS) regulation
vi. Labeling requirements
vii. Medical Device Reporting (MDR)
3. Over-the-Counter use Tests
a. Regulation by the FDA in the In Vitro Test Database (IVD) Over-the-Counter Database
b. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfIVD/Search.cfm
4. QS by FDA approved home and Lab Tests, laboratory validation
a. https://www.fda.gov/industry/regulated-products/medical-device-overview
b. https://www.pharmacytimes.com/publications/issue/2013/september2013/at-home-test-and-monitor-kits
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Beliefs & Myths
Beliefs:
1. Cold temperatures bring on cold/flu
2. Going outside with wet hair gives you a cold
3. The flu shot causes the flu
4. Coffee Can Stunt Childhood Development
5. Cracking Knuckles Leads to Arthritis
6. Starve a Fever, Feed a Cold
7. Gluten is Bad
8. Sitting is the New Smoking
9. Eating chocolate gives you acne.
10. Walking around barefoot on a cold floor will give you varicose veins
11. Sugar causes hyperactivity in children.
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