5 Hot Healthcare Topics of 2018
As the US healthcare system continues to go through major shifts in policy and care delivery, 2018 saw several trends that remained prevalent throughout the year and will likely have significant implications for 2019.
As the US healthcare system continues to go through major shifts in policy and care delivery, 2018 saw several trends that remained prevalent throughout the year and will likely have significant implications for 2019.
Here are 5 hot topics from the year:
1. Social determinants of health
More and more, healthcare stakeholders are recognizing the impact that housing, transportation, and other social determinants have on a person’s health. A survey at the beginning of the year found that the majority of executives are increasingly adopting social determinants of health (SDOH) into their programs. Major health organizations are also getting involved, with Kaiser Permanente
However, while there is a general consensus that population health is impacted more by what happens outside the walls of a doctor’s office or hospital, rather than inside of it, and some organizations have taken initiative, there’s less of a consensus on who is responsible for addressing them. In a
2. Mergers and acquisitions
This year saw 2 megamergers finalized:
Last week, Cigna finalized its purchase of Express Scripts, which puts the insurance company in direct competition with Aetna and UnitedHealth Group. The announcement was first announced in March, and the 2 companies say that the acquisition will drive greater affordability and connectivity with customers and their healthcare providers, while making healthcare simpler.
Also during the year, Amazon
3. Medicaid work requirements
In January, the Trump administration released a guidance for states that want to require able-bodied Medicaid recipients to work or participate in volunteer or job-training activities. Just a day later, Kentucky
In June, Arkansas became the first state to actually implement its work requirements and since then has had nearly 17,000 beneficiaries locked out of coverage for the rest of the year for failing to comply with the requirements. The program has faced criticism, with the Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission asking the administration
Ten other states are
4. Biosimilars
In 2018, the number of FDA-approved
Despite these approvals and launches, just 15 biosimilar products have been approved to date and only 5 are commercially available. In order to address the lagging price competition, the FDA released the
5. CAR T-cell therapy
In January, chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy was named the American Society of Clinical Oncology's
Although the 2 approved therapies—tisagenlecleucel (Kymriah) and axicabtagene ciloleucel (Yescarta)—come with hefty price tags,
In August,
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