Healthcare Knuggets
Mar 19, 2026
- Email 1: Healthcare Asia Update
Subject: Health systems prioritise cyber resilience | PBM market nears $1t | HK tobacco measures by Q2 2027
Content Summary:
- IHH Healthcare to expand into India by acquiring Fortis stake, aiming to add 2,000 hospital beds by 2028.
- Radjak launches rapid cardiac and stroke units for urban emergencies with plans for wider deployment.
- Hong Kong is advancing tobacco control with duty stamps and standardized packaging to combat illicit trade by mid-2027.
- Pharmacy Benefit Management (PBM) market approaching $1 trillion as chronic diseases rise globally, with fastest growth in Asia Pacific.
- Emphasis on cyber resilience for health systems due to risks impacting patient care.
- New developments in diagnostics and organ transplantation, including a rapid cardiac test and increased kidney transplants in Dubai.
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Upcoming events: Healthcare Asia Summit and Medtech/Pharma Awards in March 2026.
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Email 2: STAT Morning Rounds
Subject: The Texas couple getting rich off out-of-network medical bills
Content Summary:
- HaloMD, run by a Texas couple, profits from independent dispute resolution in out-of-network medical billing, exploiting a complex system to maximize revenue.
- This company is currently the largest in this niche, facing legal challenges over questionable billing practices.
- Pressing concerns on hospital overcrowding, with patients housed in hallways, diminishing care quality.
- Reports on rising kratom use trends, regulatory debates, and low cigarette smoking rate at 9.9%, the lowest in US history.
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NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya reassures Congressional committees about the full use of the 2026 grant budget despite delays.
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Email 3: Axios Vitals Newsletter
Subject: đź’‰ Next vaccine battlegrounds
Content Summary:
- Political and court challenges now push vaccine policy battles to state legislatures, intensifying ahead of the midterm elections.
- Federal vaccine policy is frozen after a judge blocks Trump administration’s vaccine advisory committee recommendations.
- NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya confirmed commitment to fully fund grants despite congressional concerns over delays.
- FDA withdraws planned rule restricting teen access to indoor tanning beds citing regulatory and personal choice concerns.
- Colorectal cancer incidences rising sharply in people under 50, now the deadliest cancer in this age group in the US.
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Ongoing policy deliberations on Medicare Advantage payments and pharmaceutical industry pricing pressures.
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Email 4: STAT Event Reminder
Subject: How to watch Breakthrough East live tomorrow
Content Summary:
- Breakthrough East conference begins tomorrow at 12:25 p.m. ET focusing on pharma, biotech, and government cooperation to accelerate scientific progress.
- Virtual pass available at 40% discount ($90) with promo code LASTCALL-40, registration deadline today for in-person attendance.
- Featured speakers include former FDA Commissioner Rob Califf, Intra-Cellular Therapies CEO Sharon Mates, and CMS deputy administrator Chris Klomp among others.
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The program offers high-level insights into current innovations and policy discussions shaping healthcare futures.
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Email 5: Nature Briefing
Subject: Funding calls plummet as NIH turns away from agency-directed science
Content Summary:
- NIH shifts from soliciting problem-specific grant proposals to funding investigator-initiated research, claiming administrative cost savings and flexibility.
- Concerns arise about reduced large-scale collaborative projects, and potential neglect of underfunded disease areas.
- Funding approvals now influenced more by political appointees than independent scientific panels, worrying some in the research community.
- Other highlights include the awarding of the Turing Prize to quantum information pioneers, the rediscovery of the oldest whale song recording, and the rise of low-speed electric vehicles as sustainable transport solutions.
- Features on China’s tech advancement narrative and Brazil’s AI-based climate disaster alert system.
- Infographic on Starlink satellites highlighting concerns over their impact on astronomy.
Stay Well!
