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Jan. 24, 2025

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TODAY'S COUNT: 1,059 words  |  4.2-minute read

IN TODAY'S ISSUE

Senators Call for Price Info in Drug Ads; How Cyber Actors Exploited Cloud Products; Registration for 2025 AHA Annual Membership Meeting

Perspective

A Year of Action to Ensure Access to Care and Advance Health in America

By Rick Pollack, President and CEO, American Hospital Association

Rick Pollack, AHA President and CEO

All eyes this week have been on Washington, D.C., as President Trump was inaugurated and the 119th Congress — with Republicans holding majorities in the House and the Senate — beginning its legislative work.

As always with a change of administration and congressional leadership, there are new opportunities to explore and new challenges to navigate.

Administration and congressional leaders continue to plot out their legislative strategy for funding the federal government, which must occur by March 14; raising the debt ceiling; and using reconciliation — a budget tool that gives Congress a fast-track mechanism to avoid the Senate filibuster and pass legislation with a simple majority — to push through priorities on taxes, border security, energy and deficit reduction.

All of these instances will provide opportunities to go on offense and advocate for priorities that support hospitals’ ability to deliver quality care their communities depend on. At the same time, these instances present significant challenges that will require us to play defense so we can preserve access to the 24/7 care hospitals provide for patients and communities.

For example, on offense we’re advocating to extend the Marketplace Premium Tax Credits to ensure millions of Americans can continue to access health insurance; boost programs that support access to care in rural communities; and provide relief from burdensome policies that take caregivers away from providing patient care and increase costs. On defense, among other issues, we’ll need to prevent significant reductions to Medicaid and Medicare funding that would jeopardize access to hospital care and services; protect the 340B Drug Pricing Program from harmful changes; and preserve not-for-profit hospitals’ tax-exempt status so they can continue providing community benefits tailored to their communities’ unique needs.

You can find out more about all of these issues and others as part of AHA’s recently released Advocacy Agenda.

While activity on Capitol Hill is expected to be fast and furious during the next few months, here are three things hospital and health system leaders can do to ensure our field’s voices are heard.

  1. Stay engaged with the AHA and Coalition. The AHA will be providing hospital and health system leaders timely alerts and information on the latest developments from Capitol Hill, as well as new advocacy tools and resources to help you tell your story. In addition, the Coalition to Strengthen America’s Healthcare, of which the AHA is a founding member, will be running advertising on key issues, as well as engaging its more than 2.6 million grassroots supporters to take action.
  2. Tell your story to your lawmakers. While the AHA and Coalition provide the air cover here in Washington, nothing is more powerful than your voice — and the voices of your team members, trustees, patients and community members — with your senators and representatives. You live, work and, most importantly, vote in their districts and states. You have their attention and can explain to them the impact policy proposals would have for their constituents and your ability to provide care.
  3. Remain united as a field. While there will be many legislative proposals that come out during the next few weeks and months, it’s more important than ever that our field remains united. We’ve seen time and time again when our field speaks with a strong, united and collective voice — policymakers and lawmakers hear us. And we get results.

We may be living in unpredictable times, but one thing that is predictable — and will never change — is that hospitals will always be a source of health, healing and hope. Hospitals always will be focused on providing life-saving care to anyone who walks through their doors as well as promoting wellness. And hospitals will always be cornerstones of the communities they serve as we work together to advance health in America.

TOP NEWS

Senate introduces bill requiring price disclosures on ads for prescription drugs

Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, yesterday introduced the Drug-price Transparency for Consumers Act, legislation supported by the AHA that would require price disclosures on advertisements for prescription drugs. The bill would help ensure that consumers can make more informed decisions on prescription drugs.

The 2025 AHA Rural Health Leadership Conference will be held Feb. 23-26 in San Antonio. Join fellow rural hospital CEOs, senior executives, clinical leaders and trustees to share strategies and resources for addressing rural health challenges and explore innovative solutions to transform care delivery and optimize business practices. Visit https://ruralconference.aha.org/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=aha-today for details.
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Advisory details how cyber actors deployed vulnerabilities in attack on Ivanti cloud products

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and FBI Jan. 22 released an advisory explaining how cyberthreat actors “chained” vulnerabilities — deploying multiple vulnerabilities in rapid succession — during attacks on certain versions of Ivanti Cloud Service Appliances in September. Threat actors used an administrative bypass, structured query language and remote code execution vulnerabilities during the attack. The agencies said the actors gained initial access, obtained credentials and implanted webshells on victim networks.

“These attacks serve as another reminder of the importance of patch management in defending networks,” said Scott Gee, AHA deputy national advisor of cybersecurity and risk. “Think of this as a thief using bolt cutters to get through a perimeter fence, using a pry bar to force the door to the building open, and then using a hammer to break the glass protecting the jewels they came to steal. The good news for network defenders in this instance regarding Ivanti is that each of these tools can be detected.”

CISA and the FBI strongly encouraged network administrators to upgrade to the latest supported version of Ivanti CSA.

“Any hospitals still using outdated versions of Ivanti CSA should update their systems immediately,” Gee said. “If unable to remove the outdated version, network security teams should implement detections based on the indicators of compromise in the advisory and understand the risk posed by this vulnerable technology.”

For more information on this or other cyber and risk issues, contact Gee at [email protected]. For the latest cyber and risk resources and threat intelligence, visit aha.org/cybersecurity.

Early registration continues for 2025 AHA Annual Membership Meeting

Early-bird registration for the 2025 Annual Membership Meeting remains available until March 3. The event will be held May 4-6 in Washington, D.C., where policymakers, legislators and thought leaders will discuss the most pressing issues facing hospitals and health systems. REGISTER NOW

 
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