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☕️ Not so tariff-ic
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Johns Hopkins researchers weighed in on how tariffs may impact branded and generic drugs.

Happy Friday to all, especially the brave and inspiring foster dog Tiki, who was adopted this week. As fans of any and all types of animals—especially because studies have shown pets can reduce stress, boost your mood, and lower blood pressure, among other benefits—we’re wishing him a happy life in his new home.

In today’s edition:

The trouble with tariffs

United New-nited

Well, well, well

—Caroline Catherman, Cassie McGrath

PHARMA

Scale with money and surgical mask, tipping over with weight of money.

Emily Parsons

With tariffs on the way “very shortly” for imported drugs, pharma giants like Eli Lilly and Johnson & Johnson are investing billions into expanding US manufacturing.

On the surface, it seems like tariffs are accomplishing the promised goal of bringing manufacturing back to the US. In an April 2 briefing, the White House vowed this increase would strengthen supply chains, lower costs, and reduce dependence on “foreign adversaries.”

But Baltimore, Maryland-based Johns Hopkins researchers said in a June 11 media briefing they don’t think tariffs will bring much benefit. For generic drugs, tariffs could increase supply shortages. For branded drugs—which make up 20% of prescriptions but 80% of prescription drug spending—tariffs could increase prices.

The deets. Only about 12% of active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) volume is made in the US, excluding IV fluids, according to an April report by the United States Pharmacopeia (USP), an independent nonprofit that sets global drug quality and safety standards.

See what researchers are saying here.—CC

Presented By Kate Farms

PAYERS

United Healthcare building

Patrick T. Fallon/Getty Images

If you like drama, we highly recommend tuning into UnitedHealth Group’s current happenings.

The health insurer likely hoped to have a plot-twist-free 2025 after weathering the massive Change Healthcare data breach and executive Brian Thompson’s assassination in 2024.

But an abysmal Q1 foreshadowed another tumultuous year.

Execs blamed the poor performance largely on higher-than-expected utilization. Then, a month after Q1’s earnings call, CEO Andrew Witty abruptly resigned for “personal reasons” and former CEO Stephen Hemsley returned to the helm.

Now, the healthcare industry is watching to see if the insurance giant will right itself.

“When a company of this scale staggers, it can disrupt care delivery, delay access to medications, and erode trust across the healthcare ecosystem,” Forrester Research’s Principal Analyst Arielle Trzcinski told Healthcare Brew.

Is the insurance giant entering a new era?—CC

WELLNESS

Young woman relaxing

West/Getty Images

Wellness is big business—a $2 trillion business to be exact, according to the Global Wellness Institute. Now, a new survey by McKinsey that accounts for “six dimensions” of wellness—health, sleep, nutrition, fitness, appearance, and mindfullness—reveals many ways wellness is changing.

The survey—which included responses from over 9,000 consumers across countries like China, the UK, Germany, and the US—found that younger consumers have become pretty devoted to wellness over the past year.

With the US wellness industry worth about $500 billion in annual spend alone, according to previous McKinsey research, 84% of US customers from the survey said that wellness was a top or important priority for them.

Among those, around 30% of Gen Z and millennials responded that wellness was “a lot more” important to them compared to a year ago. Meanwhile, 23% of older generations felt the same.

Keep reading on Retail Brew here.—JS

Together With Cytonics

VITAL SIGNS

A laptop tracking vital signs is placed on rolling medical equipment.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: $1.9 million. That’s how much one addiction treatment center agreed to pay to settle allegations that it put out misleading ads, including some where it masqueraded as other clinics. (Healthcare Dive)

Quote: “This is about constituents who either heard, read, or saw something on social media and now have an idea that this is something good. They’re going right to their congressman or senator to demand access.”—Hugh Cassiere, director of critical care services for New York-based South Shore University Hospital, on legislation that would allow over-the-counter ivermectin. (NBC)

Read: Are “improper” Medicaid payments really that big of an issue? (KFF)

Meeting nutritional needs: You won’t find artificial sweeteners, colors, common allergens, or preservatives in Kate Farms shakes and formulas. What you will find is organic, plant-based medical nutrition formulas. See what health needs they meet.*

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EVENTS

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Is your healthcare org treating compliance like a cost center? Learn how to flip it into a strategic advantage with real-world advice from security leaders. From HIPAA updates to breach prevention, Thoropass covers it all—tune in on June 26!

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