THIS WEEK’S DOSE
- 119th Congress Begins. The new Congress began with key membership announcements for relevant healthcare committees.
- Cures 2.1 White Paper Published. The document outlines the 21st Century Cures 2.1 legislative proposal, focusing on advancing healthcare technologies and fostering innovation.
- Senate Budget Committee Members Release Report on Private Equity. The report, released by the committee’s chair and ranking member from the 118th Congress, includes findings from an investigation into private equity’s role in healthcare.
- HHS OCR Proposes Significant Updates to HIPAA Security Rule. The US Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) seeks to address current cybersecurity concerns.
- HHS Releases AI Strategic Plan. The plan outlines how HHS will prioritize resources and coordinate efforts related to artificial intelligence (AI).
- CFPB Removes Medical Debt from Consumer Credit Reports. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) finalized its 2024 proposal largely as proposed.
- President Biden Signs Several Public Health Bills into Law. The legislation includes the reauthorization and creation of public health programs related to cardiomyopathy, autism, and emergency medical services for children.
CONGRESS
119th Congress Begins. The 119th Congress began on January 3, 2025. Lawmakers reelected Speaker Johnson in the first round of votes and adopted the House rules package. The first full week in session was slow-moving due to a winter storm in Washington, DC; funeral proceedings for President Jimmy Carter; and the certification of electoral college votes. Committees are still getting organized, and additions to key health committees include:
- House Energy & Commerce: Reps. Bentz (R-OR), Houchin (R-IN), Fry (R-SC), Lee (R-FL), Langworthy (R-NY), Kean (R-NJ), Rulli (R-OH), Evans (R-CO), Goldman (R-TX), Fedorchak (R-ND), Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), Mullin (D-CA), Carter (D-LA), McClellan (D-VA), Landsman (D-OH), Auchincloss (D-MA), and Menendez (D-NJ).
- House Ways & Means: Reps. Moran (R-TX), Yakym (R-IN), Miller (R-OH), Bean (R-FL), Boyle (D-PA), Plaskett (D-VI), and Suozzi (D-NY).
- Senate Finance: Sens. Marshall (R-KS), Sanders (I-VT), Smith (D-MN), Ray Luján (D-NM), Warnick (D-GA), and Welch (D-VT).
- Senate Health, Education, Labor & Pensions: Sens. Scott (R-SC), Hawley (R-MO), Banks (R-IN), Crapo (R-ID), Blackburn (R-TN), Kim (D-NJ), Blunt Rochester (D-DE), and Alsobrooks (D-MD).
Congress has a busy year ahead. The continuing resolution (CR) enacted in December 2024 included several short-term extensions of health provisions (and excluded many others that had been included in an earlier proposed bipartisan health package), and these extensions will expire on March 14, 2025. Congress will need to complete action on fiscal year (FY) 2025 appropriations by this date, whether by passing another CR through the end of the FY, or by passing a full FY 2025 appropriations package. The short-term health extenders included in the December CR could be further extended in the next appropriations bill, and Congress also has the opportunity to revisit the bipartisan, bicameral healthcare package that was unveiled in December but ultimately left out of the CR because of pushback from Republicans about the overall bill’s size.
The 119th Congress will also be focused in the coming weeks on advancing key priorities – including immigration reform, energy policy, extending the 2017 tax cuts, and raising the debt limit – through the budget reconciliation process. This procedural maneuver allows the Senate to advance legislation with a simple majority, rather than the 60 votes needed to overcome the threat of a filibuster. Discussions are underway about the scope of this package and the logistics (will there be one reconciliation bill or two?), and we expect to learn more in the days and weeks ahead. It is possible that healthcare provisions could become a part of such a reconciliation package.
Cures 2.1 White Paper Published. Rep. Diana DeGette (D-CO) and former Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-IN) released a white paper on December 24, 2024, outlining potential provisions of the 21st Century Cures 2.1 legislative proposal expected to be introduced later this year. This white paper and the anticipated legislation are informed by responses to a 2024 request for information. The white paper is broad, discussing potential Medicare reforms relating to gene therapy access, coverage determinations, and fostering innovation. With Rep. Bucshon’s retirement, all eyes are focused on who will be the Republican lead on this effort.
Senate Budget Committee Members Release Report on Private Equity. The report contains findings from an investigation into private equity’s role in healthcare led by the leaders of the committee in the 118th Congress, then-Chair Whitehouse (D-RI) and then-Ranking Member Grassley (R-IA). The report includes two case studies and states that private equity firms have become increasingly involved in US hospitals. They write that this trend impacts quality of care, patient safety, and financial stability at hospitals across the United States, and the report calls for greater oversight, transparency, and reforms of private equity’s role in healthcare. A press release that includes more documents related to the case studies can be found here.
ADMINISTRATION
HHS OCR Proposes Significant Updates to HIPAA Security Rule. HHS OCR released a proposed rule, HIPAA Security Rule to Strengthen the Cybersecurity of Electronic Protected Health Information (ePHI). HHS OCR proposes minimum cybersecurity standards that would apply to health plans, healthcare clearinghouses, most healthcare providers (including hospitals), and their business associates. Key proposals include:
- Removing the distinction between “required” and “addressable” implementation specifications and making all implementation specifications required with specific, limited exceptions.
- Requiring written documentation of all Security Rule policies, procedures, plans, and analyses.
- Updating definitions and revising implementation specifications to reflect changes in technology and terminology.
- Adding specific compliance time periods for many existing requirements.
- Requiring the development and revision of a technology asset inventory and a network map that illustrates the movement of ePHI throughout the regulated entity’s electronic information system(s) on an ongoing basis, but at least once every 12 months and in response to a change in the regulated entity’s environment or operations that may affect ePHI.
- Requiring notification of certain regulated entities within 24 hours when a workforce member’s access to ePHI or certain electronic information systems is changed or terminated.
- Strengthening requirements for planning for contingencies and responding to security incidents.
- Requiring regulated entities to conduct an audit at least once every 12 months to ensure their compliance with the Security Rule requirements.
The HHS OCR fact sheet is available here. Comments are due on March 7, 2025. Because this is a proposed rule, the incoming Administration will determine the content and next steps for the final rule.
HHS Releases AI Strategic Plan. In response to President Biden’s Executive Order on AI, HHS unveiled its AI strategic plan. The plan is organized into five primary domains:
- Medical research and discovery
- Medical product development, safety and effectiveness
- Healthcare delivery
- Human services delivery
- Public health
Within each of these chapters, HHS discusses in-depth the context of AI, stakeholders engaged in the domain’s AI value chain, opportunities for the application of AI in the domain, trends in AI for the domain, potential use-cases and risks, and an action plan.
The report also highlights efforts related to cybersecurity and internal operations. Lastly, the plan outlines responsibility for AI efforts within HHS’s Office of the Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer.
CFPB Removes Medical Debt from Consumer Credit Reports. The final rule removes $49 billion in unpaid medical bills from the credit reports of 15 million Americans, building on the Biden-Harris Administration’s work with states and localities. The White House fact sheet can be found here. Whether the incoming Administration will intervene in this rulemaking remains an open question.
President Biden Signs Several Public Health Bills into Law. These bills from the 118th Congress include:
- H.R. 6829, the HEARTS Act of 2024, which mandates that the HHS Secretary work with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, patient advocacy groups, and health professional organizations to develop and distribute educational materials on cardiomyopathy.
- H.R. 6960, the Emergency Medical Services for Children Reauthorization Act of 2024, which reauthorizes through FY 2029 the Emergency Medical Services for Children State Partnership Program.
- H.R. 7213, the Autism CARES Act of 2024, which reauthorizes, through FY 2029, the Developmental Disabilities Surveillance and Research Program and the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee in HHS, among other HHS programs to support autism education, early detection, and intervention.
QUICK HITS
- ACIMM Hosts Public Meeting. The HHS Advisory Committee on Infant and Maternal Mortality (ACIMM) January meeting included discussion and voting on draft recommendations related to preconception/interconception health, systems issues in rural health, and social drivers of health. The agenda can be found here.
- CBO Releases Report on Gene Therapy Treatment for Sickle Cell Disease. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report did not estimate the federal budgetary effects of any policy, but instead discussed how CBO would assess related policies in the future.
- CMS Reports Marketplace 2025 Open Enrollment Data. As of January 4, 2025, 23.6 million consumers had selected a plan for coverage in 2025, including more than three million new consumers. Read the fact sheet here.
- CMS Updates Hospital Price Transparency Guidance. The agency posted updated frequently asked questions (FAQs) on hospital price transparency compliance requirements. Some of the FAQs are related to new requirements that took effect January 1, 2025, as finalized in the Calendar Year 2024 Outpatient Prospective Payment System/Ambulatory Services Center Final Rule, and others are modifications to existing requirements as detailed in previous FAQs.
- GAO Releases Reports on Older Americans Act-Funded Services, ARPA-H Workforce. The US Government Accountability Office (GAO) report recommended that the Administration for Community Living develop a written plan for its work with the Interagency Coordinating Committee on Healthy Aging and Age-Friendly Communities to improve services funded under the Older Americans Act. In another report, the GAO recommended that the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) develop a workforce planning process and assess scientific personnel data.
- VA Expands Cancers Covered by PACT Act. The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) will add several new cancers to the list of those presumed to be related to burn pit exposure, lowering the burden of proof for veterans to receive disability benefits. Read the press release here.
- HHS Announces $10M in Awards for Maternal Health. The $10 million in grants from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) will go to a new community-based maternal behavioral health services grant program. Read the press release here.
- Surgeon General Issues Advisory on Link Between Alcohol and Cancer Risk. The advisory includes a series of recommendations to increase awareness of the connection between alcohol consumption and cancer risk and update the existing Surgeon General’s health warning label on alcohol-containing beverages. Read the press release here.
- SAMHSA Awards CCBHC Medicaid Demonstration Planning Grants. The grants will go to 14 states and Washington, DC, to plan a Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic (CCBHC). Read the press release here.
- HHS Announces Membership of Parkinson’s Advisory Council. The Advisory Council on Parkinson’s Research, Care, and Services will be co-chaired by Walter J. Koroshetz, MD, Director of the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and David Goldstein, MS, Associate Deputy Director for the Office of Science and Medicine for HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health. Read the press release here.
NEXT WEEK’S DIAGNOSIS
The House and Senate are in session next week and will continue to organize for the 119th Congress. Confirmation hearings are expected to begin in the Senate for President-elect Trump’s nominees, although none in the healthcare space have been announced yet. On the regulatory front, CMS will publish the Medicare Advantage rate notice.