Industry Wire 242

  1. CIA now believes COVID originated from lab leak, China disagrees.
  2. Trump federal grant freeze halted by judge
  3. Everything you need to know about HIPAA’s big security update.
  4. Trump taps new FDA, NIH, and CMS leaders.
  5. UNC and Duke to build NC’s first freestanding children’s hospital.
  6. How payors are charging providers for claim appeals.
  7. Trump fires 15 inspector generals, including HHS.
  8. NM awards $40.6M to 26 rural care organizations.
  9. Union to pay HCA’s Riverside Community Hospital for unlawful strike.
  10. PA law voids noncompetes when a physician is dismissed.
Get twice-weekly insights on the biggest stories shaping cardiology.

You might also like

Cardiac Imaging June 16, 2025

Beyond Hardware: Is AI the Answer to Making Cardiac Imaging more Accessible? June 16, 2025

Sponsored by Philips Healthcare Cardiac imaging has traditionally improved through hardware advances, enabling the speed needed for high-quality images. However, hardware is rapidly reaching its physical limitations in suppressing cardiac motion and represents a large financial investment. Today, software and AI are driving the next leap in cardiac image quality and motion control – offering […]

Cardiology Pharmaceuticals June 12, 2025

FDA Approves a New BP Triple Polypill June 12, 2025

Bringing a more effective BP therapy to the U.S. market, the FDA approved George Medicines’ triple therapy polypill called Widaplik for patients with hypertension, making it the first of its kind to go to market in the U.S. Widaplik’s approval stems from two studies, including one comparing the polypill against placebo as an initial treatment […]

Cardiology Pharmaceuticals June 12, 2025

Pharmacologic Preconditioning to Improve Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery  June 12, 2025

The majority of patients undergoing cardiac surgery, especially those on cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), experience post-operative complications such as new-onset atrial fibrillation (POAF) and acute kidney injury (AKI), largely driven by oxidative stress and inflammation.   Several approaches have been explored to reduce complications following cardiac surgery, however, a clinically meaningful impact has yet to be realized.  […]

You might also like..

Select All

You're signed up!

It's great to have you as a reader. Check your inbox for a welcome email.

-- The Cardiac Wire Team

You're all set!