Posts

7 days in healthcare (April, 1st-7th, 2024)

 

Summary

From the point of view of Biomedicine, the report published by the French National Academy of Medicine on generative AI systems in health is worth highlighting. It makes 10 recommendations, the first of which is that all health professionals should be trained in the use of generative AI. It seems that anti-obesity medications (initially, anti-diabetes) may be the closest thing to a universal panacea. There is already evidence that they can have benefits in many other diseases: heart, kidney, liver, brain (Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s), as well as other organs.

With regard to Global Health, concern continues over the difficulties of advancing the Pandemic Treaty. The Treaty aims to prevent governments, institutions and populations from the errors of the covid-19 pandemic. In this sense, a more than interesting article by Mariana Mazzucato on aspects related to innovation, intellectual property (IP), public/private collaboration and financing. The Lancet speaks out in an editorial against the use of starvation (the total lack of food and mass famine) as a weapon of war, as we have seen in the war in Sudan and currently in Gaza, where Israeli action is taking on dimensions of destruction of Gaza, with the consequent health and humanitarian problems. Prostate cancer cases will double between 2020 and 2040.

Regarding International Health Policy, the French Prime Minister, Gabriel Attal, proposes a fine of five euros for those who miss scheduled medical appointments. But possibly the most far-reaching news is President Petro’s actions in healthcare in Colombia, with the intervention of the two largest EPS (Health Promotion Entities). This breaks the approach of the Colombian health system based since 1993 on Law 100, which established public/private collaboration through the EPS, companies that received public aid and were in charge of providing health services to their insured population. There is no doubt that the proliferation of populist governments in Latin America is a threat against any form of public/private collaboration in healthcare, as is also the case in Chile where ISAPRES (private insurers that receive public aid) are also threatened. The universalization of health coverage – something absolutely defensible and one of the great advances of our time, today in full expansion – leads some to interpret this as a monopoly of health care by the State and even a colonization of the management model by the traditional Administration, thus breaking a desirable freedom of choice, as well as a certain competition for the coexistence of different management models.

If we talk about National Health Policy (Spain), the Interterritorial Council of the National Health System unanimously supports the Comprehensive Plan for the Prevention and Control of Smoking. However, the Plan is fundamentally a roadmap and a declaration of intentions, some of which will have to be materialized through laws, with the uncertainty regarding the approval of new laws generated by the situation of the current legislature. The plan aims to increase smoke-free spaces (not specified); avoid promoting tobacco products; access to smoking cessation programs; equate electronic cigarettes with conventional tobacco; and, increase taxes on tobacco. The most controversial thing may be to equate electronic cigarettes with conventional tobacco, since the risks and damage to health are not comparable. A recent article in the New England Journal of Medicine states that there is sufficient evidence to show that switching from cigarettes to e-cigarettes reduces exposure to tobacco toxins, reduces respiratory symptoms and reverses physiological changes related to smoking cigarettes. The Government’s Regulatory Plan for 2024 announces four laws in the health field: 1. statute-framework; 2. law of guarantees; 3. alcohol consumption prevention law; and, 4. law on public management of health services. Same comment regarding the uncertainty regarding the approval of laws. Among these laws does not appear that of the State Public Health Agency, already being processed in Parliament. Of note is the meeting at the Ministry of Health of a representation of the same with representatives of doctors who work for health insurers. Regardless of the outcome of this meeting, it was not common until now for the Ministry of Health to enter into the problems of private healthcare. But welcome if there is a change in this regard.

As for Companies, internationally, drug shortages have recently reached unprecedented levels in several European countries and last year reached a ten-year high in the USA. Regarding national information, Grifols admits changes in its debt level and Recoletas is expanding to several regions through its reproductive business.

Biomedicine

Global Health

International health policy

National health policy

Companies

7 days in healthcare (March 18th-24th, 2024)

 

Summary

From the point of view of Biomedicine, the transplant to a man of a genetically modified pig kidney stands out, a medical milestone that could lead to dialysis being declared obsolete, which would be an extraordinary advance and an improvement in the quality of life for hundreds of thousands of patients, currently dependent on the machine several times a week for their survival. Also notable is the beginning of a clinical trial on a vaccine for tuberculosis. The current BCG vaccine offers protection to infants and young children, but does not protect adults and adolescents from pulmonary tuberculosis. If the results are good, this vaccine can be transformative.

As far as Global Health is concerned, a study warns of serious declines in birth rates globally, which will mean that by 2050 it will fall below population replacement, which will have important social and labor changes.

Regarding International Health Policy, a great paradox in the USA, although abortion is prohibited in 14 states and restricted in many others, in 2023 there were more abortions than ever, many of them non-instrumental and through the abortion pill, already responsible of 60% of abortions. China is facing a population decline, a phenomenon that has already begun. The one-child policy, in force for 36 years, is only one of the causes of this phenomenon. The European Union is advancing in the approval of pharmaceutical legislation, contemplated with reluctance by both the EFPIA and Medicines for Europe (the two large European pharmaceutical associations). The Lancet sees the upcoming European elections as an opportunity to put health policy higher on the EU agenda.

If we talk about National Health Policy (Spain), three important initiatives of the Ministry of Health: anti-smoking plan, modification of the medical guard regime and waiting lists. In all three cases there may be problems due to the powers and regulations of the autonomous communities. From the point of view of the regions, the OPE of Asturias stands out, which brings together 19,000 candidates. Although logically, temporality was and is a serious problem of public healthcare, which needed a solution, the way to do it through macro-OPE’s (consolidating the position in property, and with hegemony of the administrative and union logic, above the professional and autonomy of organizations) does not seem to be the best. This type of mass examination is more reminiscent of previous calls for the “military service”, when it was in force, than the professional selection for complex organizations, in which the professional qualification, the needs of the different organizations, the projects of the services, etc. should be taken into account.

As for Companies, on an international level, China is seen as the large market for anti-obesity drugs. Bayer wants to renew its portfolio, entering into cell and genetic therapies. As for Spain, the CNMV has released its report on Grifols, with several objections to its accounts. Faes Farma is preparing to grow in Latin America. For its part, DKV, the health insurer, wants to concentrate on group insurance.

Biomedicine

Global Health

International health policy

National health policy

Companies