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Spiraling out
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Healthcare Brew // Morning Brew // Update
The term “death spiral” has been cropping up, though experts think it’s unlikely to occur.

Midway through the week, and nobody loves a last-minute tight deadline quite like the federal government. Both the Republican effort to fund individual health accounts and the Democratic proposal for extending enhanced ACA subsidies have failed in the Senate. With House votes that don’t include an extension on the docket this week, we’re shaping up to potentially see the end of subsidies as we know them.

In today’s edition:

What’s a “death spiral”?

Another pharma-tech partnership

Biggest fundings of 2025

—Caroline Catherman, Patrick Kulp, Cassie McGrath

PAYERS

A green healthcare symbol surrounded by a spiral and falling money

Morning Brew Design

Health insurance premiums are on the rise, and it’s brought a frightening term back into conversation: death spiral.

Exact definitions vary, but this often refers to a “spiral” of rising premiums and falling enrollment that ends in the market’s collapse.

Experts told Healthcare Brew this isn’t likely to happen without drastic policy changes. But one way it could happen is if out-of-pocket increases motivated a significant amount of healthy people—the ones who pay more into the system than they cost—to leave the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace.

Those who still enroll would likely be people who really need coverage: the sickest with the costliest medical care. This would spike insurers’ expenses, prompting them to further raise premiums and potentially scaring even more healthy people away in a self-propelling cycle of doom.

Right now, though, the market has fail-safes to stop that from happening.

Which is why experts say they don’t expect a spiral to occur.—CC

Presented By Collectly

AI

Merck's building

Sundry Photography/Getty Images

There’s no shortage of AI models aimed at discovering new drugs these days. Researchers have introduced more than 200 of these foundation models in the last three years, with 40% growth per quarter, according to a new paper published this month in the journal Drug Discovery Today.

Pharmaceutical giant Merck and Nvidia recently rolled out a new entry in this growing body with a small-molecule drug model called KERMT. The model is pretrained on more than 11 million molecules, then fine-tuned for various tasks specific to industrial drug discovery workflows, according to Merck.

Alan Cheng, Merck’s senior director of data science, told us the model could help scientists better predict how a given molecule will behave in the body, potentially catching problems before researchers invest in months of testing.

“Traditionally, scientists spend months running physical and biological tests to understand ADMET properties: absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and toxicity,” Cheng said in an email interview. “These steps are essential because a promising compound can fail late in development if it is toxic or has poor exposure at the therapeutic target.”

Here’s more on what Merck and Nvidia have in store.—PK

FINANCES

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

Emily Parsons

As the end of the year rolls around, Healthcare Brew has compiled a list of the largest capital raises of 2025—just for the fund of it.

Silicon Valley Bank reported midyear that venture capital funding in healthcare had a “steep drop” in 2025 compared to 2024, with projections showing $9 billion expected in investment overall this year compared to $23 billion last year. But by Q3, market analysis firm PitchBook reported the year had bounced back some, hitting $12.2 billion compared to $12.1 in 2024. Jury’s still out on final numbers, as the year isn’t over yet.

We worked with venture fund and advisory firm Rock Health and reviewed public notices to create a list of the 20 largest US funding rounds of the year as of Nov. 30.

See Rock Health’s list of top fundraising rounds here.—CM

Presented By Project Management Institute

VITAL SIGNS

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

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: $2.2 trillion. That’s how much of a burden forever chemicals and pesticides will cost healthcare annually, per a new report. (the Guardian)

Quote: “We’re all comfortable with the US being the dominant space for drug discovery and drug development, but I think that is definitely shifting.”—Mark Cobbold, head of immuno-oncology at AstraZeneca, on how US-based genetic drugmakers are increasingly testing novel therapies in China (Endpoints News)

Read: Many patients have turned to cannabis for pain, anxiety, and sleep trouble, but a new study found evidence of its benefits is often “weak or inconclusive.” (the New York Times)

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