7 days in healthcare (June 17th-23rd, 2024)

 

 

Summary

Biomedicine

  • 20 years of progress in the treatment of lung cancer. Until the 2000s, lung cancer was a lethal disease with very limited treatment options, based on platinum-based chemotherapy, which gave one-year survival in 33% of patients with advanced disease. In the last 20 years there has been incredible progress, always based on identification with biomarkers, which are now part of the routine.
  • A single injection provides total protection against HIV. One Gilead injection provides total protection from HIV, in a trial with African women, with extraordinary results, with just two injections a year.
  • The first drug against sleep apnea. It could be a new generation drug against diabetes and obesity. Sleep apnea is so common that this medication could represent something similar to obesity medications.

Global Health

  • The Sustainable Development Goals are failing. We are now halfway between 2015, when these Goals were announced, and 2030, when they should be achieved. The objectives have not materialized, remaining a “promise without a plan.” None of the 17 objectives are on track to be met and number 3 (dedicated to health and well-being) is no exception.

International health policy

  • Health coverage projections in the USA 2024-2034. The percentage of uninsured will increase in this period, going from 7.7% in 2024 to 8.9% in 2034. The main cause is the expiration of certain measures as a consequence of Covid regarding Medicaid.
  • The Surgeon General in the USA demands warnings against the danger of the platforms. He calls for danger warnings on social media platforms, similar to tobacco. He will ask Congress for such a measure, warning that the use of certain platforms can harm the mental health of adolescents.
  • The NHS wants to move medical studies to 4 years in 2026. From the current 5 in that country. Both the British Medical Association (BMA) and the Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association (HCSA) oppose the measure, warning that it risks producing a type of doctors without the necessary preparation and that this is dangerous for quality.
  • £38bn a year will be needed until 2029-2030 to “revive” the NHS. According to the think tank The Health Foundation, the system needs to grow 3.8% in real terms in the next decade, not 0.8% as planned. Politicians need to be honest on this issue, says the director of the think tank. There is a fairly widespread perception that 14 years of Conservative government spelled doom for the NHS. Perhaps a similar analysis was necessary with regard to the Spanish health system.
  • French pharmacists want to be able to dispense antibiotics without a prescription. For angina and cystitis, under certain conditions, following a decree published on June 18.

National Health Policy (Spain)

  • A scientific advisor in each ministry. This is similar to what is happening in the UK and the need for a better science-politics connection became very clear during Covid. This project will be coordinated by the National Scientific Advisory Office (ONAC).
  • Open Health Forum. It will incorporate the voice of patients, people with disabilities, citizens and professionals.
  • Green light to the Royal Decree creating the Public Health Surveillance Network, which includes the Early Warning and Rapid Response System.
  • Controversy among experts over the “singular financing” for Catalonia. The extension of a “Basque-style” model to Catalonia endangers the financing of the system, according to representatives of FEDEA (Diego Martínez López) and FUNCAS (Santiago Lago).
  • Castilla-La Mancha dedicates 1.3 million to the National Health Data Space. This community will house the data centers that must be implemented in Spain. The agreement was reached at the Sector Conference for Digital Transformation.
  • The reform of La Paz is transformed into the City of Health. With an investment of 1,000 million euros, it will house, among other spaces, the new Faculty of Medicine of the UAM, a research center and a pediatric cancer center.
  • The Constitutional Court endorses abortion without parental consent. Which allows 16 and 17 year old girls to terminate their pregnancies without this consent.
  • Three years of euthanasia law in Spain. Half of the applicants have their request rejected and a third die during the process. Since the law came into force, it was applied in 363 cases, half of the applicants. Not all autonomous communities are collaborating adequately. Surely this is a consequence of the hasty discussion of this important law, unlike what happened in France, although in that country the elections have paralyzed the processing of the law.

Companies

  • International
    • Lilly and NovoNnordisk in the race for anti-obesity drugs. They will invest $30 billion to expand the production of their anti-obesity therapies.
  • National
    • Growth of the residence sector. It earned 5,250 million euros in 2023, 6% more than the previous year.
    • Growth of ASISA. The ASISA group invoiced 4.9% more in 2023 and reached 1,761 million euros.

Biomedicine

Global Health

International health policy

  • Mexico
    • Health under the new president Claudia Sheinbaum. He will have an opportunity to improve the health of Mexicans, given his great advantage in the elections and the majority in both chambers. Her plan, called a Healthy Republic, plans to improve care by focusing on prevention, modernization and better training of professionals. She also proposes limiting private sector participation in public service. However, it is difficult for this to be achieved without improving health spending (2.9% of GDP), the lowest in the OECD (https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(24)01301-1/abstract)

National health policy

Companies