Physicians and Private Equity-Owned Practices
By Phillip Miller Debra Wood Merrit Hawkins
Healthcare remains a dynamic and evolving field, with many physicians looking to the security of health system employment, while others are opting for private equity-owned practices.
“There are a lot of benefits to private equity, depending on the specialty,” said Ericka L. Adler, shareholder, practice group manager for health care at the law firm Roetzel & Andress in Chicago.
Adler also reported regional differences in private equity’s interest in practices. These companies often buy up physician practices in a certain geographic area. Then they enjoy economies of scale when purchasing supplies or malpractice coverage and possess greater power when negotiating with payors.
When private equity invests in physician practices, it can relieve the physicians of administrative responsibilities and streamline operations, handle human resources and compliance issues, negotiate payor contracting, bill insurers and let physicians practice medicine. Additionally, most deals offer profit sharing, creating long-term financial benefits as the practices grow or the private equity firm sells.
“In these situations, the physician may lose a little freedom but receives a solid paycheck and gets rid of the headaches of running a practice,” Adler said.
However, she warned that private equity deals are not for everyone and physicians found earlier models controlling.
“For physicians who ran their own practice, it was a culture shock,” Adler said. “Now they are loosening up and acting as partners. It’s increasingly attractive for physicians who never thought they could work for someone else.”
Additionally, many physicians are selling to private equity as a retirement strategy.
“They sell to private equity and end up with a chunk of cash,” Adler said. “They continue to work three to five years and then retire. During that time while working, they receive a
The contributors indicated private equity can contribute to innovation, streamline expenses and may allow practices to offer expanded services and benefits to patients.
AHIP, the health insurers association in Washington, D.C., reported in an issue brief on September 2022 that the COVID-19 pandemic drove a sharp rise in healthcare private equity investment, including for physician practices and other entities.
compensation package.”
Physicians who do not own a practice but are seeking a physician job can also find some benefits to working for a private-equity organization. The growth in private equity for physicians
The Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill published a blog in February 2022, reporting private equity healthcare deals remain strong.
A Healthcare Services Report: PE Trends and Investment Strategies by PitchBook of Seattle, released on February 2023, reported there has been significant merger and acquisition activity in primary care and multispecialty networks. However, looking forward, Pitchbook believes deal volumes may decline due to macroeconomic uncertainty and the increase in capital costs.
The types of physician practices attracting private equity Common physician practices
PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO 1 HOUSTON TX PERMIT # 1149 AUSTIN TX June Edition 2023 Volume 6 | Issue 6 Brain Has Natural Way to Fight Dementia See pg. 8 Inside This Issue Racial Disparities Exist In Use Of Statins to Reduce Heart Disease Risk See pg. 12 INDEX Legal Matters pg.3 Mental Health ..................... pg.4 Oncology Research pg.5 Healthy Heart pg.6 see Practices ...page 14
In these situations, the physician may lose a little freedom but receives a solid paycheck and gets rid of the headaches of running a practice
— Ericka L. Adler
Austin Medical Times Page 2 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com Hands-Only CPR Join a Nation of Lifesavers™ today. CPR week is June 1-7 #CPRwithHeart heart.org/handsonlycpr Don’t drop the beat! Know it. Feel it. Push it. Keep it. TWO STEPS TO SAVE A LIFE ©2023 American Heart Association WF213148 5/23 Call 911 Push hard and fast in the center of the chest 1 2
Legal Matters
Texas Legislature Passes New Law That Limits White Bagging
By Mark S. Armstrong, J.D. Polsinelli, Pc
TheTexas Legislature recently passed HB 1647, prohibiting certain health plans from imposing limitations relating to coverage of clinician-administered drugs for patients with chronic, complex, rare and life-threatening medical conditions. Texas follows several other states that limit white bagging of specialty pharmacy products out of concerns for patient safety, access, clinician burden and drug waste.
Specialty drugs, many of which are very expensive, are prescribed to treat a variety of conditions, including cancer, autoimmune disease, multiple
sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis. Many specialty drugs also treat rare conditions for which there are limited treatment options. These specialty drugs often have complex handling and distribution requirements. For that reason, many specialty products are not distributed through standard retail pharmacies but are either purchased directly by providers or dispensed by specialty pharmacies.
Traditionally, providers purchased clinic-administered specialty drugs directly from a pharmaceutical wholesaler and were responsible for storing and administering the drugs to their patients. As specialty drug spend increased, payers developed strategies to facilitate cost savings. These strategies changed the typical distribution model where specialty drugs were dispensed by physicians and mandated that the drugs be dispensed through a specialty pharmacy, often
owned by the health insurance provider or pharmaceutical benefits manager (“PBM”). This approach is often referred to as white bagging or brown bagging, depending on who receives the drug from the specialty pharmacy.
White bagging is an arrangement between payers and selected specialty pharmacies to deliver directly to providers at the site of the patient’s medications directly to site of care (typically a physician’s office, hospital-based outpatient department, or home infusion provider). Providers are responsible for receiving the drug delivery from the specialty pharmacy,
unboxing it, and storing it until the patient is on site and ready for administration.
Brown bagging is an arrangement that requires a specialty pharmacy to deliver the clinician administered drugs to the patient at the specialty pharmacy or directly to the patient, following which, the patients are responsible for storing these drugs appropriately until their appointment with a clinician. Patients then bring their specialty drug with them to hand over to a clinician for administration.
Despite the potential for reducing costs, some patient advocates have see Legal Matters...page 14
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Mental Health
Researchers Discover Positive Effects of Intravenous Ketamine For Treatment-Resistant Depression In Noninferiority Study
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is considered to be the gold standard to treat an episode of refractory depression. However, over the last decade, ketamine has proved itself as a rapid-acting and effective treatment option as well. Researchers from Baylor College of Medicine and the Michael E. DeBakey Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center studied whether ketamine was noninferior to ECT for treatment-resistant, non-psychotic, unipolar depression patients. The ELEKT-D study is the largest trial to date comparing the real-world effectiveness of ECT versus ketamine. Other participating institutions include the Cleveland Clinic, Yale University School of Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Johns Hopkins Medical Institute. Their findings were published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Researchers enrolled patients with major depressive disorder who had been referred for ECT, presenting them
the option of enrolling in a comparative trial versus ketamine. ECT requires general anesthesia for a brief period of time, while the 40-minute ketamine infusion is a low dose of a commonly used anesthetic in which patients are awake. They compared the effects of both treatment options by studying patients randomized in two groups: ECT and ketamine. Patients in the ECT arm received a standard course of three weeks of ECT, which was given to them every Monday, Wednesday and Friday each week. Patients randomized to ketamine received it twice per week for three weeks. The patients were evaluated several days after the three-week period with a commonly used questionnaire for depression. As the primary outcome measure, they looked for patients who demonstrated at least a 50% decrease in depression severity scores.
Ketamine had a 55% response rate versus ECT, which had a 41% response rate at the end of the three weeks of treatment. The sample size was
the largest study ever done of its kind comparing ECT to another modality, with 170 patients randomized to ECT and 195 patients randomized to ketamine. The Baylor site enrolled almost 100 patients for this trial. ECT was associated with memory disturbance that persisted for a few months post-treatment, while ketamine was associated with transient feelings of disconnection on treatment days.
“Statistically, it was a robust finding showing that ketamine was noninferior to ECT,” said Dr. Sanjay Mathew, primary investigator of the Baylor site and Marjorie Bintliff Johnson and Raleigh White Johnson, Jr. Vice Chair for Research and professor in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry
and Behavioral Sciences at Baylor. “This study can give clinicians and patients confidence that ketamine is a reasonable and safe alternative to ECT, at least for the short-term management of treatmentresistant, non-psychotic depression.”
Mathew and his team plan to further investigate the comparison between ECT and ketamine among suicidal patients. The patients in the current study were not acutely suicidal and the majority were treated as outpatients.
“ECT is often used for suicidal patients in the inpatient setting, so now we need to do a large-scale comparison of ketamine versus ECT for our most critically ill and suicidal patients,” he said.
Give
Austin Medical Times Page 4 June 2023
the gift that lasts a lifetime this Father's Day!
Oncology Research
Calling All Men: Your Health is Your Wealth
By Mike Lattanzi, M.D., Texas Oncology–Austin Central
For some, summer is a time to take it easy and have some fun. That can mean consuming more sweet or alcoholic beverages and rich foods at barbeques, and spending time in the sun lounging by the pool with less time in the gym.
However, no matter the time of year, we can all use encouragement when it comes to our health. June is National Men’s Health Month, which highlights unique health and wellness challenges as well as helpful advice for men on behaviors that ideally should be adopted year-round. How lifestyle can put men at risk
for cancer
According to the American Cancer Society, one in two men will develop some form of cancer in his lifetime, and one in five will die from cancer. Factors such as genetics, aging, and lifestyle have been linked to many types of cancer. While men cannot change their genes nor prevent growing older, they can change certain behaviors that may put them at a greater cancer risk.
Lifestyle changes for men that can help prevent cancer include:
• Not smoking
• Avoiding UV radiation and protecting skin when outdoors
• Getting to and maintaining a healthy weight
• Moderating alcohol consumption
• Cutting down intake of red meat and processed foods
• Consuming plenty of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains
• Being physically active regularly,
up to 150 minutes per week
• Knowing family history of cancer and discussing this with your physician
• Getting regular checkups and health screenings as appropriate for age and family history Less familiar forms of cancer affecting men
Men are aware of the cancers that affect them most such as prostate, colorectal, lung, and skin. However, there are other less familiar cancers that are becoming more prevalent in men including bladder, kidney, and esophageal cancer. Awareness is key to early detection and ensuring men adopt healthy habits to lower their
risk.
Bladder Cancer
The fourth most common cancer in men, approximately 62,420 new cases of bladder cancer will be diagnosed in men in the United States in 2023 per the American Cancer Society. Bladder cancer occurs mainly in older individuals, with the average age of diagnosis around 73. Certain risk factors like smoking, exposure to certain industrial chemicals, or not drinking enough fluids can contribute to the development of bladder cancer. The chance men will develop this cancer during their lifetime is about 1
see Oncology Research...page 13
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FEEL GOOD AGAIN GIVE
Healthy Heart
Learning To Save Lives Can Start as Early As Age 4, According To New Scientific Statement
By The American Heart Association
Building the skills for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) can begin as early as age 4 and layer on as children get older, so that by age 10 they may be able to perform effective chest compressions on training manikins, according to a new scientific statement from ILCOR, the American Heart Association and the European Resuscitation Council published in the American Heart Association’s flagship, peer-reviewed
American Heart Association. “Building skills at a young age that are reinforced consistently throughout their years in school has the potential to educate generations of students and their parents on how to respond to cardiac arrest, perform chest compressions and rescue breaths, use an AED and ultimately increase survival.”
Cardiac arrest outside of a hospital setting is a leading cause of death worldwide. Survival rates range between 2% and 20% globally and are
journal Circulation.
The writing group of resuscitation scientists from around the world reviewed more than 100 research articles about training students in CPR. The review found that school-aged children are highly motivated to learn life-saving skills and often “multiply” their training by passing on what they’ve learned to others.
“Training students has become a key element to increase the number of people ready to perform CPR when cardiac arrest occurs outside of a hospital, and potentially increase rates of CPR and cardiac arrest survival globally,” said Bernd W. Böttiger, M.D., M.L., FAHA, chair of the statement writing group, professor and head of the Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine at the University Hospital of Cologne in Cologne, Germany.
“Given that most cardiac arrests outside of a hospital will happen at home, it’s important that all members of the family understand what to do if someone has a cardiac arrest,” said Comilla Sasson, M.D., Ph.D., FAHA, a member of the statement writing committee, practicing emergency medicine physician and vice president for science and innovation at the
particularly low without immediate recognition and action from a bystander. According to the statement, even if children are too young or small to perform an effective chest compression, they may begin learning the steps and rhythm for proper CPR and begin to learn about AEDs. Research has shown impactful results in the amplification of community preparedness as school-aged children share what they are learning with their families, friends and neighbors.
In addition to what may be done in schools, families should have a cardiac emergency response plan in place. Make a plan within the household, and practice regularly by delegating the steps below:
1. Who will call 911? Use a cell phone. Put the phone on speaker while talking with the emergency dispatcher and starting CPR.
2. Who will start CPR? Double or triple the chance of survival by performing Hands-Only CPR immediately.
3. Who will open the door? Make sure your entrance is unlocked, giving first responders easy access to your residence.
Learn more at newsroom.heart.org
Austin Medical Times Page 6 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com
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The 1 in 5 Central Texas children at risk of hunger deserve a shot at a happy summer.
A Stroke Victim Requires FAST Care
How to Help A Loved One Live Through This High-Risk Emergency
By Ezekiel Sachs, M.D. Neurologist
balance.
• Sudden severe headache.
Strokes,
sometimes called brain attacks, are the third leading cause of death in Texas. For anyone experiencing a stroke, time is the most critical factor. Imagine if a stroke happened to a loved one, and you were alone with them. Would you know what to do?
What is a stroke?
A stroke occurs when the blood supply to the brain is blocked or when a blood vessel in the brain bursts. This can quickly damage brain cells and is a medical emergency. Depending on which parts of the brain are affected, the common signs of a stroke include:
• Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes.
• Sudden numbness or weakness in the face or arms and legs, especially on one side.
• Sudden trouble walking, including dizziness or lack of coordination or
• Sudden trouble speaking or understanding. Recognizing these symptoms, being aware that you are with a potential stroke victim, and understanding that you must take action is critical and possibly lifesaving. The longer the treatment delay, the more brain tissue may be lost. That’s why it’s important to call 911 immediately if you or someone you are with shows any signs of stroke. How can you help?
F.A.S.T is an easy-to-remember acronym that serves as a quick test to determine whether someone might be experiencing a stroke and needs emergency care:
• F (Face) – Ask the person to smile to determine if one side of their face is drooping.
• A (Arms) – Ask the person to raise both arms to determine if there is
difficulty moving one side (e.g., one arm is drifting downward).
• S (Speech) – Have the person repeat a simple phrase to determine if their speech is slurred.
• T (Time) – If you notice even one of these signs, call 911 immediately. No matter what, do not let the victim drive themselves. By calling 911 and getting paramedics on the scene as soon as possible, treatment can begin right away and continue during transport to a hospital or urgent care facility.
What are some ways to help prevent a stroke?
The good news about strokes is that 80 percent are thought to be preventable. However, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, once someone has had a stroke, they are at high risk for
Obesity Drugs Help Patients Lose Weight Regained Years After Bariatric Surgery
Anti-obesity medications, including semaglutide (Ozempic and Wegovy), can effectively help patients manage weight regained after bariatric surgery, a study led by UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers shows.
“There was very little published data on how to treat post-bariatric surgery weight gain,” said Jaime Almandoz, M.D., Associate Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Endocrinology at UTSW and the study’s senior author. “Our research found that newer anti-obesity medications are effective for treating weight regain and optimizing body weight after bariatric surgery. Our study also found that weight management medication regimens containing semaglutide worked better than those containing liraglutide, even when the dose of semaglutide
was lower than what is currently approved to treat obesity.”
More than 40% of adults in the United States have obesity, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and many patients choose to undergo bariatric surgery as part of their treatment. However, regaining weight after the surgery is common and can exacerbate obesity-related conditions such as Type 2 diabetes and fatty liver disease.
In recent years, two anti-obesity medications have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration: semaglutide (Wegovy), which is given as a weekly injection, and liraglutide (Saxenda), a daily injection. Both belong to the same drug class – glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists – and work by controlling appetite and satiety. Previous work by Dr.
Almandoz and colleagues suggested that this class of drugs could be more effective than other drugs, or even lifestyle modification, in treating post-bariatric surgery weight regain. However, the two drugs had not been directly compared in this context.
The new study, published in the journal Obesity, analyzed health records for 207 adults who previously had bariatric surgery and were then treated for obesity at UTSW’s Weight Wellness Program between 2015 and 2021. Nearly 90% of the patients were women, and the average age was 55. About 46% were non-Hispanic white, nearly 35% were non-Hispanic Black, and about 11% were Hispanic. These patients were, on average, eight years out from surgery and had regained more than 40% of the weight they lost after their bariatric procedures. Data were analyzed from
another. In fact, one in four strokes is recurrent. That’s another reason why it’s important to stay ahead of the risk by treating the contributing factors of stroke, which include diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, atrial fibrillation (fast or irregular heartbeat) and heart disease.
It is also important to incorporate healthy habits into your lifestyle. Work with your doctor to determine whether you need to change your diet, add more exercise, begin medication, or make other beneficial lifestyle choices. Chances are, if a friend or loved one shows stroke symptoms, it’s up to you to recognize the signs and get help FAST!
patients who were prescribed weight management regimens containing either semaglutide or liraglutide for at least three months.
Twelve months later, those taking semaglutide had lost an average of 12.9% of their body weight, while those taking liraglutide had lost an average of 8.8%, the study
Austin Medical Times Page 7 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com
see Obesity Drugs ...page 13
Jaime Almandoz, M.D., is an Associate Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Endocrinology at UT Southwestern.
Brain Has Natural Way to Fight Dementia, UTMB Study Suggests
Autophagy Recycles, Cleans ‘Garbage’ In Brain Cells
Somepeople who have Alzheimer’s disease pathology never get dementia because they have a protective biological mechanism working in their favor, a new study suggests.
Researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch studied postmortem brains and found that
dementia, and scientists think that an accumulation of certain toxic products is why. Autophagy can clean out these toxic products at the cell level.
“Imagine a garbage service,” Taglialatela said. “Cells and neurons have to get rid of anything which cannot be recycled or reused within the cell.”
people who presented with brain pathology consistent with fully symptomatic Alzheimer’s disease— but not dementia—also had preserved autophagy, a physiological system that allows cells to recycle or eliminate junk and clutter.
“This is significant, because it means that our brain is not necessarily a victim in the battle against Alzheimer’s,” said Dr. Giulio Taglialatela, the corresponding author, a neurology professor and the director of Mitchell Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases.
Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association published the research team’s paper May 16. The study found that non-demented Alzheimer’s brains had preserved autophagy and reduced levels of Tau, a toxic protein that accumulates.
“We describe that these individuals have higher efficiency in removing the toxic Tau proteins,” said Dr. Anna Fracassi, one of the authors and a neurology postdoctoral fellow at UTMB.
Alzheimer’s disease causes
Autophagy is a normal process in human cells, but in people with dementia because of Alzheimer’s disease, autophagy doesn’t do that job as well as it once did.
“In dementia, there’s a dramatic reduction of this ability of autophagy,” Taglialatela said. “That decline that is normally observed in dementia in Alzheimer’s patients does not occur in these people who are resilient.”
The cause of the vast majority of sporadic Alzheimer’s cases is not known yet, but it is not genetic and any correlation with diet or environment is moderate at best.
Even so, this new research indicates a way more people might prevent dementia. Researchers can now look at ways to induce autophagy for therapeutic treatment.
“This illustrates that there is a natural way for our brain to react appropriately to the pathology associated with dementia in Alzheimer’s disease,” Taglialatela said. “There is a natural way for our brain to perfectly adapt to the challenge and win.”
Austin Medical Times Page 8 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com THE STRENGTH TO HEAL and get back to what I love about family medicine To learn more about the Army or Army Reserve, call MAJ Tamela Mitchenor at 210-692-7376, or tamela.l.mitchenor.mil@mail.mil Do you remember why you became a family physician? When you practice in the Army or Army Reserve, you can focus on caring for our Soldiers and their Families. You’ll practice in an environment without concerns about your patients’ ability to pay or overhead expenses. Moreover, you’ll see your efforts making a difference. ©2010. Paid for by the United States Army. All rights reserved.
Austin Medical Times Page 9 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com
Moving From Distressed Areas to Better-Resourced Neighborhoods Improves Kids’ Asthma
Children whose families participated in a program that helped them move from distressed neighborhoods to areas with lower rates of poverty and better public resources like schools and parks experienced significant improvements in severe asthma episodes, according to a new study led by a researcher at Dell Medical School at The University of Texas at Austin.
The study, published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association, involved 123 children, ages 5 to 17, with persistent asthma whose families took part in a six-year housing mobility program in Baltimore.
Before moving, for every 100 children, there were approximately 88 severe asthma attacks per year. After moving, there were approximately 40
severe attacks per year, a reduction of more than 50%.
“That degree of improvement is larger than the effect we see with asthma medications,” said epidemiologist Elizabeth Matsui, M.D., senior author of the study and a professor of population health and pediatrics at Dell Med. “We were also surprised to find that improvements in neighborhood stressors, including feeling safer in their new community and experiencing better social cohesion with neighbors, seemed to be major factors in the improvements in asthma.”
In fact, researchers found that the reduction in neighborhood-related stress was responsible for between 20% and 35% of the improvement in asthma exacerbations and symptoms.
Postdoctoral Certificate in
The number of symptom days also declined with moving, from five days to just under three days in a two-week period.
Previous efforts to improve asthma by addressing household-level exposures such as mouse and cockroach allergens have had only modest success in improving asthma. Programs that support families that want to move to better resourced neighborhoods provide an alternative approach that appears to be more effective, according to Matsui.
“These findings confirm what we’ve long suspected: A big part of the asthma burden is not about who you are. It’s about where you live,” said Matsui. “This study demonstrates that programs designed to counter housing discrimination can have significant positive health effects for the children who move.”
Matsui said she thinks the outcomes of this study are scalable to other cities that offer similar housing mobility programs.
The findings could also explain
persistent racial and ethnic disparities in childhood asthma, Matsui said, since Black and Latinx/Hispanic children are more likely to live in distressed, urban areas because of historical and current-day housing discrimination.
“For example, we know kids in the poorest neighborhoods in Austin and Travis County have the highest burden of asthma emergency department visits and that these kids tend to be Black and Hispanic,” said Matsui. “The results of our study suggest that if those children lived in better-resourced neighborhoods, their emergency hospital visits would be greatly reduced.”
Infant & Early Childhood Development
Austin Medical Times Page 10 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com
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Racial Disparities Exist in Use of Statins to Reduce Heart Disease Risk
Black and Hispanic Adults are Significantly Less Likely to Take Statin Drugs for Preventive Measures Compared with White Adults
Black and Hispanic adults at risk of developing cardiovascular disease are less likely to take statin drugs than white adults with the same risk factors, UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers reported in JAMA Cardiology.
Age, sex, blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, and smoking status all increase a person’s likelihood for cardiovascular disease. Researchers found that even after adjusting for these risk factors, data showed that 37.6% of white participants used statins compared with 23.9% of Hispanic participants and 23.8% of Black participants. The study also showed that having health insurance and regular access to routine health care were associated with higher statin use.
“This adds to the known racial
and ethnic disparities already highly prevalent in heart disease,” said Ambarish Pandey, M.D., Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Cardiology at UT Southwestern, who is an expert on disparities in cardiovascular disease and the lead author of the study. “These findings have the potential to affect how we screen for and treat people who do not have heart disease but may have risk factors such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and smoking.”
Statins, which include atorvastatin (Lipitor) and simvastatin (Zocor), are among the most prescribed drugs in the U.S. In 1985, UT Southwestern researchers Michael S. Brown, M.D., and Joseph L. Goldstein, M.D., were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their
Age Well, Live Well HHSC Recognizes Innovators in Aging
By Texas Health and Human Services Commission
TheTexas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC) recently announced seven Innovators in Aging across the state in recognition for their efforts serving older adults. The award program, now in its fifth year, highlights innovative efforts to
serve older Texans. HHSC hopes that by highlighting these innovators, it will encourage others to develop creative ways to serve older adults.
The Innovators in Aging award categories highlight the three components of aging and living well — be healthy, be connected, and be informed. It’s important for older adults
discovery of the LDL receptor and its role in cholesterol metabolism, which led to the drug’s development.
Previous research has established that rates of cardiovascular disease – as well as many individual risk factors –are higher among Black and Hispanic adults than white adults. Due to those disparities, race and ethnicity are factors in a person’s individual risk of developing heart disease.
Previous studies have found lower statin use among Black and Hispanic adults who already have established heart disease or diabetes. The new study is the first to look at statin use across races and ethnicities in people
with a broad range of risk factors. Dr. Pandey and collaborators at the University of Utah analyzed data on a select group of people who completed the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between January 2013 and March 2020. The subset of participant records selected for the analysis was designed to represent the U.S. population. Dr. Pandey said the disparities found in statin use across race groups were independent of risk factors, including age, sex, and LDL cholesterol levels. “The rates of statin use in those see Disparities...page 13
to take care of their physical health, stay engaged and connected with their local communities, and be informed of statewide and local services and programs that can help them. These components can help older adults have a better quality of life as they age.
The “Be Healthy” category recognizes innovations that promote wellness. These organizations will receive the Being Healthy Award:
• Anavah Health developed The Knowable “smart brief”
that detects the presence of wetness in real-time, enabling caregivers to change older adults’ undergarments more quickly. This new development will help prevent urinary tract infections, pressure ulcers, and pain in older adults.
• WayWiser created a private, secure, collaborative platform where loved ones can connect with family members, close friends, and key professionals to help manage the care and safety of an aging parent as a team. The platform offers a care coordination feature allowing users to post daily caregiving updates, calendar events or appointments, medication needs, and coordinate other forms of care.
The “Be Connected” category recognizes innovations that promote social engagement to improve a person’s health and sense of well-being. These organizations will receive the Being Connected Award:
• Artifcts, Inc. is a safe, secure
Austin Medical Times Page 12 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com
see Age Well, Live Well ...page 13
Oncology Research
Continued from page 5
in 28.
Kidney Cancer
Kidney cancer is twice as common in men than women, according to the American Cancer Society, with more than 52,300 men to be diagnosed in the United States in 2023. Rare in people younger than 45, the average age of diagnosis is between 65 and 74. Risk factors include smoking, obesity, high blood pressure, race, use of certain medicines, and exposure to
Obesity Drugs
Continued from page 7 showed. People in the semaglutide group were more than twice as likely to have lost at least 10% of their body weight. The results with semaglutide remained unchanged when factoring in age, sex, or the type of bariatric surgery, according to the study.
“Our results support the real-world effectiveness of GLP-1
Disparities
Continued from page 12
at the highest risk for cardiovascular disease is quite low overall, but especially among Black and Hispanic adults. Statins are cheap and effective at the prevention of heart disease, so this is definitely a large missed opportunity,” said Joshua A. Jacobs, Pharm.D., Cardiology Clinical
environmental toxins. Symptoms vary by patient, with some having little to no symptoms in the early stages, or blood in the urine and flank pain at later stages.
Esophageal Cancer
Men are three to four times more likely to develop esophageal cancer than women. In Texas, an estimated 1,350 new esophageal cancer cases are anticipated in 2023, and 1,010 Texans are expected to die. According to the
Texas Department of State Health and Human Services, the highest incidence rate of esophageal cancer is in males living in rural areas. The seventh most common cause of cancer death among men, risk factors for esophageal cancer include smoking, alcohol use, and obesity as well as Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD), which occurs when stomach acid flows up to the esophagus.
If you – or the men in your life
– aren’t making health a priority, consider this National Men’s Health Month a great time to get on track. Set up an appointment with your healthcare provider and be sure to schedule important annual screenings. Pay attention to your body and incorporate healthy habits every day. As the saying goes, “your health is your wealth.”
receptor agonists for treating post-bariatric weight recurrence and suggest that semaglutide is superior to liraglutide,” Dr. Almandoz said. He noted that the results could help inform the use of these drugs in optimizing body weight after bariatric surgery.
Other UTSW researchers
who contributed to this study are Jeffrey N. Schellinger, RD, registered dietitian nutritionist in the Division of Endocrinology, and Ildiko Lingvay, M.D., Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Endocrinology. Dr. Almandoz has served as a paid consultant to Novo Nordisk A/S, which manufactures Wegovy and
Saxenda. Dr. Lingvay has received research funding and advisory and consulting fees from Novo Nordisk A/S. Other disclosures are listed in the study.
Pharmacist at the University of Utah who is the first author of the study.
The new results, Dr. Pandey added, “help identify health care access as a target for interventions in order to shrink the racial and ethnic gap for preventive cardiovascular care.”
The next step would be to
Age Well, Live Well
Continued from page 12
space to capture, preserve, and share personal and world history “one Artifct at a time.” Artifcts, Inc. patent-pending website and mobile app helps save and share the histories, stories, and memories behind treasured belongings. The organization is also partnering with veterans’ groups, memory care centers, and nonprofits serving older adults to provide Artifcts as an engagement activity within those communities.
• Global Agetech Innovations Laboratory (GAIL) is a virtual collective laboratory that
brings together the expertise of researchers, government agencies, educational institutions, businesses, older adults and caregivers, gerontologists, healthcare organizations, and financial institutions to improve the quality of products and services for older adults.
The “Be Informed” category recognizes innovations that help older adults and their families stay informed about available services, treatments, policies, programs, etc. These organizations and people will receive the Being Informed Award:
study the effectiveness of different interventions in increasing statin use among minority communities.
“This way we can find strategies that work for the communities most affected by the disparity,” he said.
• Nancy Walker is the volunteer executive director for the Funeral Consumers Alliance of Central Texas (FCACTX). FCACTX is a nonprofit organization run entirely by volunteers who help educate the public about end-of-life planning, decision- making, and related issues. Nancy has been a key figure in assisting thousands of people to develop an end-of-life plan best suited for their needs.
• Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service and the Texas Council for Developmental Disabilities have partnered to improve the
lives of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, caregivers, partners, and community providers throughout Texas. Their partnership established the Regional Coordinator Initiative to help people with disabilities and others around the state have access to region-specific information, resources, and events.
For more information about programs and services for older adults, visit the HHS Age Well Live Well webpage or call 2-1-1.
Austin Medical Times Page 13 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com
Ambarish Pandey, M.D., Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine in the Division of Cardiology at UT Southwestern, is an expert on disparities in cardiovascular disease.
Practices
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of interest to private equity include gastroenterology, urology, cardiology, radiology, obstetrics and gynecology, and hematology and oncology. However, primary care and other specialties also may be able to sell to private equity firms.
“Private equity has to borrow the equity and pay it back to investors,” Adler said. So, they have to improve or grow the practice to make more profit. That may include reducing overhead, decreasing malpractice rates, negotiating better payor contracts, especially if the firm owns multiple practices.
Adler added that private equity firms look for practices with room for growth, no malpractice claims and compliance with regulators.
“Private equity in certain parts of the country, most especially in the Southeast and the West, is playing a gigantic role in organizing small primary care practices into larger entities, giving them the resources, the sophistication, and protection from the vagaries, like the next pandemic, and better information about their own cost structure,” said David Nash, MD, MBA, founding dean emeritus
Leagl Matters
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expressed concerns about the impact of white bagging on patient safety, access, clinician burden and drug waste. In addition, some clinicians contend that the practice of white bagging can cause delays that lead to disease progression. HB 1467 seeks to protect patient choice and safety by limiting white bagging of clinicianadministered drugs.
Specifically, HB 1647 generally prohibits a health benefit plan for an enrollee with chronic, complex, rare or life-threatening conditions from:
1. Requiring clinician-administered drugs to be dispensed only by certain pharmacies or only by pharmacies participating in the health benefit plan’s network,
2. Limiting or excluding coverage for clinician-administered drugs based on the enrollee’s choice of pharmacy or because the drug was not dispensed by a pharmacy that participates in the health benefit
and the Dr. Raymond C. and Doris N. Grandon professor of Health Policy at the Jefferson College of Population Health in Philadelphia.
Adler reported private equity firms are showing a huge interest in the Midwest for obstetrics and gynecology, dermatology and aesthetics practices, but not for primary care practices.
“Anesthesiology is a major area for private equity investors because of its high demand,” said Alex Milligan, co-founder and chief marketing officer of NuggMD in Marina del Rey, California. “Investors are seeking opportunities that provide high patient intake and the need for rapid expansion.”
Milligan explained that anesthesiology services are needed for both life-saving invasive treatments and more minor healthcare interventions.
“Millions of inpatient and outpatient surgeries occur each day, making it a high capital-generating industry,” Milligan added. “In turn, investors are able to see profits much sooner than, say, a general practice.”
Considering private equity?
Private equity for physicians has changed during the past 10 years, Adler said. Now, more equity firms include physician governance boards in their deals. Physician jobs may include giving the equity firm suggestions
plan’s network, if the clinicianadministered drug is otherwise covered by the plan,
3. Requiring a physician of health care provider to bill for or be reimbursed for the delivery and administration of the clinicianadministered drugs under the pharmacy benefit instead of the medical benefit without:
a. informed consent of the patient, and
b. a written attestation by the patient’s physician or health care provider that a delay in the drug’s administration will not place the patient at an increased health risk, or
4. Requiring that an enrollee pay an additional fee, higher copay, higher coinsurance, second copay, second coinsurance or any other price increase for clinician-administered drugs based on the enrollee’s choice of pharmacy or because the drug was not dispensed by a pharmacy that participates in the health benefit plan’s network.
about staffing or equipment or how to continue the growth.
There can be tax consequences and real estate involvement, so physician-owners are encouraged to surround themselves with a knowledgeable team if considering an offer from a PE firm.
“There is a lot to think about,” said Adler, and everything should be addressed before signing a letter of intent.
Private equity for physician practices will remain common and offer physicians who have traditionally worked in either acute care hospitals or private practices a third option.
“A steady paycheck and no administrative hassles is really the biggest benefit [of the PE model],” Adler added. “It can be a good option for doctors who are not the type to manage their own practice, but want to work in an ‘independent practice.’ Typically, the compensation, benefits and opportunity for bonuses can also be greater than other comparable employers.”
“There is no slowdown in private-equity deals,” she said. “There are more now than ever before.
The foregoing limitations on coverage for certain clinician-administered drugs apply only if the patient’s physician or health care provider determines that:
1. A delay of care would make disease progression probable, or
2. The use of a pharmacy within the health benefit plan’s network would:
a. make death or patient harm probable,
b. potentially cause a barrier to the patient’s adherence or compliance with the patient’s plan of care, or
c. because of the timeliness of the delivery or dosage requirements, necessitate delivery by a different pharmacy.
HB 1647 is currently awaiting Governor Abbott’s signature. Once signed, the new law will be effective September 1, 2023.
Austin Medical Times Page 14 June 2023 austinmedtimes.com Published by Texas Healthcare Media Group Inc. Director of Media Sales Richard W DeLaRosa Senior Designer Jamie Farquhar-Rizzo Web Development Lorenzo Morales Distribution Brad Jander Accounting Liz Thachar Office: 512-203-3987 For Advertising advertising@ medicaltimesnews.com Editor editor@medicaltimesnews.com Austin Medical Times is Published by Texas Healthcare Media Group, Inc. All content in this publication is copyrighted by Texas Healthcare Media Group, and should not be reproduced in part or at whole without written consent from the Editor. Austin Medical Times reserves the right to edit all submissions and assumes no responsibility for solicited or unsolicited manuscripts. All submissions sent to Austin Medical Times are considered property and are to distribute for publication and copyright purposes. Austin Medical Times is published every month P.O. Box 57430 Webster, TX 77598-7430
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