Agency for Persons With Disabilities v. C.B.

130 So. 3d 713, 2013 WL 6635803, 2013 Fla. App. LEXIS 19914
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 17, 2013
DocketNo. 1D13-613
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 130 So. 3d 713 (Agency for Persons With Disabilities v. C.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agency for Persons With Disabilities v. C.B., 130 So. 3d 713, 2013 WL 6635803, 2013 Fla. App. LEXIS 19914 (Fla. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

MARSTILLER, J.

The Agency for Persons with Disabilities (“APD”) appeals an amended final order from the Division of Administrative Hearings sustaining Appellees’ Petition for Administrative Determination of Invalidity of Agency’s Use of an Unadopted Rule.1 Appellees are APD clients receiving Intensive Behavioral Residential Habilitation (“IBRH”) treatment. They claimed APD was employing an unadopted rule, as opposed to certain provisions in the “Developmental Disabilities Waiver Services Coverage and Limitations Handbook” November 2010 (“Handbook”), to place IBRH recipients in less intensive treatment programs. The particular Handbook provisions are six “conditions for transition” which, when met, signify that a recipient no longer needs IBRH treatment and should be transitioned to a less intensive treatment program.

Following an evidentiary hearing, the presiding Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) ruled that APD must abide by the Handbook and cannot reduce an IBRH client’s level of treatment unless all six transition conditions are met. The ALJ further ruled that APD’s reliance on any other criteria to reduce services constituted use of an unadopted rule, and ordered the agency to immediately discontinue all reliance on such criteria. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude the ALJ erred, and accordingly reverse the pertinent portion of the amended final order.

I. Regulatory Background

APD’s general responsibilities concerning the Developmental Disabilities Medicaid Waiver (“DD Waiver”) are set forth in the Handbook, which is incorporated by reference into Florida Administrative Code Rule 59G-13.083. APD operates and oversees the DD Waiver.2 ‘Waiver services shall only be provided when the ser[715]*715vice or item is medically necessary.”3 “When a requested service or item is determined to be medically necessary and the service or item is covered by the waiver, it shall be approved within limits specified, in accordance with this handbook.”4 If APD determines the requested service is not medically necessary, a Medicaid recipient may appeal the decision by requesting an administrative hearing.5

Under an Agency for Healthcare Administration 6 rule, a service is “medically necessary” when it meets all the following conditions:

1. Be necessary to protect life, to prevent significant illness or significant disability, or to alleviate severe pain;
2. Be individualized, specific, and consistent with symptoms or confirmed diagnosis of the illness or injury under treatment, and not in excess of the patient’s needs;
3. Be consistent with generally accepted professional medical standards as determined by the Medicaid program, and not experimental or in-vestigational;
4. Be reflective of the level of service that can be safely furnished, and for which no equally effective and more conservative or less costly treatment is available statewide; and
5. Be furnished in a manner not primarily intended for the convenience of the recipient, the recipient’s caretaker, or the provider.

Fla. Admin. Code R. 59G-1.010(166)(a). Importantly, the rule further states, “The fact that a provider has prescribed, recommended, or approved medical or allied care, goods, or services does not, in itself, make such care, goods or services medically necessary or a medical necessity[.]” Fla. Admin. Code R. 59G-1.010(166)(c). The Handbook quotes these rule provisions.

IBRH is a covered DD Waiver service, the goal of which “is to prepare the person for full or partial reintegration into the community, with established behavioral repertoires[.]”7 Thus, the Handbook instructs service providers that “[ijndividual service plans for recipients receiving [IBRH] will include a written plan to decrease services through improved behavior and when applicable, medical condition.”8 The Handbook also tells providers that the specified “recipient characteristics and service characteristics must be met in order to receive an intense behavioral residential habilitation rate.”9 Further, “[s]ervice authorization [via APD’s prior service authorization process] shall be based on established need and re-evaluated at least annually while the recipient is receiving the services.”10

As to recipient characteristics, the Handbook provides:

[716]*716[IBRH] is for recipients who present problems with behavior that are exceptional in intensity, duration, or frequency and that meet one or more of the following conditions.
Within the past 6-months the recipient:
1. Engaged in behavior that caused injury requiring emergency room or other inpatient care from a physician or other health care professional to self or others.
2. Engaged in a behavior that creates a life-threatening situation. Examples of these types of behavior are excessive eating or drinking, vomiting, ruminating, eating non-nutritive substances, refusing to eat, swallowing excessive amounts of air, and severe Insomnia.
3. Set a fire in or about a residence or other facility in an unauthorized receptacle or other inappropriate location.
4. Attempted suicide.
5. Intentionally caused damage to property in excess of $1,000 in value for one incident.
6. Engaged in behavior that was unable to be controlled via less restrictive means and necessitated the use of restraints, mechanically, manually or by commitment to a crisis stabilization unit, three or more times in a month or six times across the applicable six-month period.
7. Engaged in behavior that resulted in arrest and confinement.
8. Requires visual supervision during all waking hours and intervention as determined by a certified behavior analyst or licensed behavior analysis professional to prevent behaviors previously described above that were likely, given past behavior in similar situations, without such supervision.
9. Engaged in sexual behavior with any person who did not consent or is considered unable to consent to such behavior, or engaged in public displays of sexual behavior (e.g. masturbation, exposure, peeping Tom, etc.).
10. If the supervision and environment is such that the person lacks opportunity for engaging in the serious behaviors the behavior analyst providing oversight must determine that the behavior would be likely to occur at least every six months if the person is without the supervision or environment provided and document in the recipient’s records![11]

The Handbook describes IBRH service characteristics, and discusses “Special Considerations,” among which are the conditions for transitioning a recipient to less intensive treatment. The Handbook specifically states that “[t]he transition criteria for intensive residential habilitation define the conditions under which the treatment team must recommend

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 So. 3d 713, 2013 WL 6635803, 2013 Fla. App. LEXIS 19914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agency-for-persons-with-disabilities-v-cb-fladistctapp-2013.