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Healthcare · Daily Brief

Federal regulators intensify healthcare oversight as FTC launches Healthcare Task Force and strikes $7B insulin pricing deal with CVS

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

A significant shift in federal healthcare oversight is emerging, marked by aggressive regulatory intervention in drug pricing and industry practices. The FTC's launch of a cross-agency Healthcare Task Force, coupled with its landmark settlement with CVS over insulin pricing manipulation, signals a new era of coordinated enforcement. This regulatory activism extends beyond pharmaceuticals, with CMS piloting new programs for complex pediatric care and considering automatic Medicare Advantage enrollment. Meanwhile, technological challenges are mounting, particularly in healthcare AI security, as new research reveals radiologists' inability to detect deepfake X-rays. These developments suggest a healthcare landscape increasingly shaped by regulatory intervention, technological disruption, and evolving payment models, requiring healthcare organizations to strengthen their compliance frameworks while adapting to new care delivery paradigms.

I

FTC launches Healthcare Task Force and reaches $7B insulin pricing settlement with CVS

The FTC has formed a Healthcare Task Force incorporating multiple bureaus and seeking partnerships with HHS and DOJ. Simultaneously, FTC reached a settlement with CVS that will save Americans up to $7 billion in insulin costs over 10 years by addressing PBM price manipulation.

Impact · Healthcare organizations face increased scrutiny of pricing practices and potential investigations from a more coordinated federal enforcement apparatus. The precedent set by the CVS settlement could affect other PBM relationships and pricing structures.

Action
Review PBM contracts and pricing practices for potential regulatory risks; consider establishing a cross-functional team to monitor and respond to Healthcare Task Force initiatives.
II

CMS announces pilot program for children with complex conditions

CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz and CMMI Director Abe Sutton announced a new pilot program aimed at improving care coordination for children with complex medical conditions.

Impact · Healthcare providers serving pediatric populations will have new opportunities to participate in value-based care models specifically designed for complex cases.

Action
Evaluate eligibility for participation in the new CMS pilot program and assess operational readiness for enhanced care coordination requirements.
III

Study reveals radiologists cannot detect AI-generated deepfake X-rays

New research indicates that radiologists are unable to reliably identify artificially generated or manipulated X-ray images, raising concerns about diagnostic reliability and security.

Impact · Healthcare providers face increased vulnerability to AI-based imaging fraud and potential diagnostic errors, requiring new verification protocols and security measures.

Action
Implement image authentication protocols and consider investing in AI detection tools for radiology departments.

Watch for: 1) Additional FTC enforcement actions against other major PBMs within 60 days; 2) CMS release of specific eligibility criteria for the pediatric complex care pilot within 45 days; 3) Development of AI image authentication standards by major radiology associations within 90 days; 4) Healthcare Task Force's first major investigation announcement, likely targeting either hospital pricing or pharmacy benefit managers within 60 days.

  1. STAT News • FTC strikes proposed deal with CVS over charges its PBM manipulated insulin prices
  2. Healthcare Finance News • FTC launches Healthcare Task Force
  3. STAT News • Opinion: We're launching a new CMS pilot program
  4. STAT News • Can you spot a deepfake X-ray? Neither can your radiologist