Wild hoping Marcus Foligno’s season will last a little longer

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The Wild aren’t giving up on getting Marcus Foligno back this season.

With 10 games to play and an eight-point deficit to overcome, the Wild need all hands on deck for an increasingly impossible, last-ditch run at an NHL playoff berth, and they’re hoping Foligno will be available for Saturday afternoon’s puck drop against Vegas at Xcel Energy Center.

Foligno has been slowed and/or sidelined by a groin injury for the better part of two months, scratched for 14 of the next 21 games, including Thursday night’s 3-1 victory over San Jose.

“It’s lingering with him,” coach John Hynes said after Thursday’s game.

Asked if the team had decided to shut Foligno down, the coach said, “Not right now, no.”

Foligno and Kirill Kaprizov were held out of a practice Friday at the X for what Hynes called maintenance, and Ryan Hartman took an optional. Hynes said Kaprizov and Hartman will play Saturday, but it was unclear whether Foligno would skate in a must-win, 2:30 p.m. puck drop against Vegas.

“I’ll probably talk to the trainers a little bit more and just see where he’s at,” Hynes said. “Obviously, with a 2:30 game, there wouldn’t be an opportunity for a (morning) skate or anything like that. I’ll probably know more (Friday) afternoon, for sure, whether he’ll go or not.”

Foligno, 32, signed a four-year contract extension during fall camp. He has played in 55 of the Wild’s 72 games so far this season and has 10 goals and 22 points with a plus/minus ratio of +10.

Certainly, the Wild need all of their best players on the ice as the season winds down, but their window to make their fourth straight postseason tournament is so small that the team could decide to just start Foligno’s offseason.

Currently 10th in the West, Minnesota earned a big two points on Thursday, but they were all but negated when ninth-place St. Louis beat Calgary and Vegas won at Winnipeg to jump Los Angeles for seventh place.

Minnesota can earn a maximum of 99 points, so even if the Wild were to win their final 10 games in regulation, they would be eliminated as soon as two of the three teams ahead of them — Vegas (88), Los Angeles (87) and St. Louis (82) — earned 100. Every Wild loss brings that finish line two points closer.

Since Jan. 25, the Wild have played 10 four-point games against close conference rivals, and gone 4-4-2 — and never once gotten higher than ninth place. So, while the Wild have played a few “biggest” games of the year already, Saturday’s game against the Golden Knights is as close to an elimination game as Minnesota has faced.

And Vegas is hot, on a five-game points streak (4-0-1). Saturday’s game will wrap up a four-game road trip for the Knights, and the teams meet again April 12th in Las Vegas. To make that game relevant, the Wild essentially have to win on Saturday.

“You’re trying to win every night, obviously. These are a little bit more important,” said winger Matt Boldy, who scored his 25th goal of the season on Thursday. “We’ve gotta get these points to push to try to get in that spot, but you can’t stress about them. I think that doesn’t end up helping, if you sit there and you’re just constantly stressing and worrying.

“It comes down to the guys in our locker room playing the right way and finding a way to win.”

Minnesota is 1-0 against the Knights so far, winning 5-3 on Feb. 12 in Las Vegas.

“Obviously, we know (Saturday will) be a game that’s highly contested,” Hynes said. “They’re a good team, they have a lot to play for, and we’re continuing to push.”

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Cottage Grove: District 5M6 Lions Club plans day of doing good

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Nine service projects are planned for this year’s District 5M6 Lions Club’s “Community Day of Service.”

The event will be 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 6 at the Historic Furber Farm, 7310 Lamar Ave. S. in Cottage Grove. The event is free and open to the public.

The service projects include making after-school snack bags for the Northeast Youth & Family Services in Shoreview; making activity bags for patients at the Masonic Cancer Clinic at the University of Minnesota Health Cancer Care; making diabetes hypoglycemia kits at local schools; making dog toys for the Animal Humane Society; making fleece blankets for Sleep in Heavenly Peace, and making “Save the Bees” seed balls.

There also will be a station for volunteers to shred paper — up to five boxes each, said Judy Zewers, district governor for District 5M6.

“It’s a great way for Lions and the community to come together and do a variety of service projects in one location,” Zewers said. “This is our first year doing this, and we are hoping for a great turnout.”

District 5M6 Lions Club will provide a free lunch for all volunteers; registration is required. For more information, go to community-service-saturday.

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Experts say Medicaid rebate change is behind inhaler price cuts

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Lauren Clason | (TNS) CQ-Roll Call

A recent tweak to a Medicaid formula could be behind the shake-up to inhaler products, a series of changes that have both benefited and harmed patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD.

Three of the four major inhaler manufacturers have announced plans to cap patient copays for all their inhalers at $35 a month in recent weeks, in addition to lowering the list prices of some of those products. But one drugmaker also withdrew two popular children’s inhalers from the market, and the alternative is in short supply.

Boehringer Ingelheim, AstraZeneca PLC and GlaxoSmithKline, also known as GSK PLC, all announced the $35 monthly copay cap, which could significantly extend the impact of their current patient assistance programs. The companies have simultaneously cut list prices — the initial price before health plans negotiate discounts and rebates — for some, but not all, of their inhalers.

The drug companies say they’ve made the changes because they’re committed to helping patients. Some Democrats on Capitol Hill say it happened because of public pressure. But some drug pricing experts are pointing to a recent change in the formula of Medicaid’s mandatory drug rebate program as the reason. It’s the same reason experts pointed to when insulin manufacturers lowered their list prices, although those reductions were more widespread.

The rebate change can force drugmakers to actually pay Medicaid in some cases if list prices on older products outpace inflation. The effect is less severe on asthma products than it was on insulin, thanks to a 2009 ban on chlorofluorocarbons, a common propellant in old inhalers, that resulted in a wave of new inhalers with new patents.

Because the change to the Medicaid rebate formula penalizes older drugs with higher prices the most, the newer inhalers are less affected than older insulin products.

“They’re still playing the same game,” said Anna Kaltenboeck, a former Senate Finance Committee staffer under Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden who now leads ATI Advisory’s Prescription Drug Reimbursement Practice. “It just brought the ceiling on the game down a little bit. And they’re sort of diffusing it vis-a-vis the patients by giving them these copay coupons.”

The rebate change is tied to the change in list prices, though, not copays. Copay caps are important because they limit what patients pay — including, at least in this case, uninsured patients — but reducing list prices helps cut behind-the-scenes costs that are absorbed by the health care system.

The rebate change took effect in January. GlaxoSmithKline in January reduced the list price for its Advair Diskus and Advair HFA inhalers, while AstraZeneca also reduced the list price of Symbicort. Boehringer Ingelheim is also planning to cut the list prices for Spiriva HandiHaler and Atrovent HFA.

Other factors like Medicare’s new penalty for raising prices faster than inflation could also be driving the changes.

“Inhalers are prime examples, like insulin, of products where manufacturers have raised list prices over very long periods of time,” said Will Feldman, a pulmonary doctor with Brigham and Women’s Hospital and an instructor at Harvard Medical School.

He pointed to Boehringer Ingelheim’s decision to drop list prices on Spiriva HandiHaler, an older inhaler that now faces generic competition, and not its newer product, Spiriva Respimat.

“That product is far less likely to be impacted by the Medicaid rebate cap policy change than Spiriva HandiHaler,” he said.

Both Boehringer Ingelheim and AstraZeneca refuted the idea that the Medicaid rebate was behind the decision to cut list prices.

“We continually look at market dynamics to assess what more we can do to address barriers to access and affordability of our medicines to help patients living with respiratory diseases lead healthier lives,” an AstraZeneca spokesperson said.

Not all the developments were positive for patients. GlaxoSmithKline in January also discontinued Flovent HFA and Flovent Diskus, two of the few inhalers approved for children. Insurance coverage for the authorized generics can vary, and the only other major alternative, Organon’s Asmanex, is now in shortage because of increased demand.

“It is the perfect storm of what is wrong with our pharmaceutical system,” Feldman said. “And the end result is patients in some cases are suffering and not getting the products they need.”

GlaxoSmithKline did not say whether the rebate was the driving factor behind its pricing changes or the decision to discontinue the two inhalers, saying it “had been planning to discontinue the branded products for some time.”

“The price reductions build on our strong track record of increasing access and improving the affordability of its medicines including an ongoing commitment to responsible pricing,” a company spokesperson said.

Capping patient copays could greatly increase access to consumers as well, even though the drugmakers already offer patient assistance programs. Kaltenboeck pointed to the ongoing access issues for insulin despite the insulin makers’ long-standing assistance programs.

“We know that people were dying because they weren’t getting insulin,” she said, “which suggests to me that copay coupons and patient assistance programs aren’t reaching people to the extent that you want them to be reached.”

Public pressure

Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Chairman Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, singled out the four major manufacturers in January as part of an investigation into inhaler prices. On Friday, he took a victory lap in the wake of the drugmakers’ announcements to cap copays, saying “they’re beginning to catch on to the fact that the American people are sick and tired of paying astronomical prices for the prescription drugs they need to stay alive.”

He acknowledged that the companies are only lowering list prices on some products but stressed the importance of the copay caps to patients. He also attributed the drug companies’ announcements to the committee’s investigation and public backlash, rather than Medicaid’s rebate program.

“In this instance, we think it’s public pressure,” he said.

Additionally, Sanders urged the last of the four major manufacturers that hasn’t capped copays, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., to follow suit. The company is smaller and more focused on generics, he said, but he hoped Teva executives would come around.

“They are considering it,” he said.

Teva did not respond to requests for comment.

In November, the Federal Trade Commission warned a number of drugmakers, including Teva and the other major inhaler manufacturers, that they had improperly listed patents in the Food and Drug Administration’s registry known as the Orange Book, which can help block competition from generic rivals.

Teva was one of several companies that refused to pull any of the patents the FTC challenged. On Friday, the FTC took another step against the manufacturer, filing an amicus brief in a patent infringement suit Teva brought against Amneal Pharmaceuticals Inc. for attempting to bring a generic version of its ProAir HFA to market. The FTC argues the patents that Teva is claiming are improperly listed.

The issues underscore the broader dynamics that lawmakers and regulators still face in unwinding the tangled drug pricing system. The copay caps are good for patients, Feldman said, but not nearly enough.

“It’s a Band-Aid on a problematic drug pricing system in our country,” he said.

The post Experts say Medicaid rebate change is behind inhaler price cuts appeared first on Roll Call.

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Drake Maye? Jayden Daniels? J.J. McCarthy? Kevin O’Connell details how Vikings are looking for their next quarterback

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Drake Maye dazzled with his incredible arm strength at his pro day in Chapel Hill, N.C. Jayden Daniels showcased his unmatched playmaking ability at his pro day in Baton Rouge, La. J.J. McCarthy proved that he’s more than capable of letting it rip at his pro day in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell wasn’t in attendance for any of it.

As many of his counterparts have traversed the country over the past couple of weeks, descending upon various college campus with an eye toward the future, O’Connell has taken a different approach as the Vikings canvass the market in search of their next quarterback.

“I think pro days are great for a lot of reasons,” O’Connell said. “It’s valuable for us as a piece of it.”

Just not as valuable as some quality time away from an environment that is literally scripted for success. As he chatted with reporters this week at the NFL’s annual owners meetings in Orlando, O’Connell implored people not to read too much into his absence at pro days, emphasizing that the Vikings will prioritize meeting privately with some of the top prospects on their draft board.

“I think it’s really important,” O’Connell said. “Now, what that looks like may not be a standard thing however many times we do it.”

It could mean visiting a particular player and taking him out to lunch to see how he interacts with his peers when the cameras are turned off. It could mean hosting a particular player at TCO Performance Center in Eagan and putting him in stressful situations to see how he responds. All the pieces matter in trying to project how that person is going to perform at the highest level.

“You can get a real quick indication of the level of excitement we all have for a guy based upon spending a good chunk of time together,” O’Connell said. “The building changing quarterbacks, they don’t just change the facilities. Any room they ever walk into, they light it up, they change it, they impact it. We can see that on display in an authentic way when we do the full process with those trips.”

Some of the tangible traits O’Connell is looking for during his evaluation start off the field. He likes to watch film with them to see how quickly they can remember the intent of certain plays. He likes to ask them questions to see how clearly they can articulate their answers. He likes to inundate them with new information to see how effectively they can process in real time.

The next step for O’Connell is determining if the basic fundamentals of playing the position translate on the field. He wants to see if they have proper technique with their feet during a standard drop. He wants to see how they navigate the pocket when the play is on schedule versus when the play is off schedule. He wants see if they can deliver the ball accurately with rhythm and timing.

“You want to see how it fits within the framework of, not our system, rather the system that we want to build for them,” O’Connell said. “It’s a partnership with whoever we’re selecting to try to build something that we’ll all be really proud of.”

The biggest issue for the Vikings is the fact that they are going to be at the mercy of other teams higher than them in the draft’s pecking order. They currently have the No. 11 pick in the first round (as well as the No. 23 pick in the first round), so they likely will have to be aggressive to get their guy.

“I think there are probably multiple teams that are all looking to add a player at the position,” O’Connell said. “That’s all part of the fun.”

It’s not as simple as the Vikings saying they like Maye, or they like Daniels, or they like McCarthy, and then pulling the trigger once they’re on the clock. There will be a lot of things the Vikings can’t control over the next month. That’s why O’Connell is leaning into the things he can control.

“I want to be forming relationships with these guys and really starting to envision what it’s going to look like to be around each other every single day trying to build up our organization,” O’Connell said. “That’s the excitement of something like this, and I want them to feel that from me. I want them to feel like whether they end up being a Minnesota Viking or not, I want them all to look at it and say, ‘Man, I’d love to play for that guy. That would be a great opportunity.’ You earn that by what we do throughout the process.”

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