AVANTE AT ROANOKE v. Finnerty

692 S.E.2d 277, 56 Va. App. 190, 2010 Va. App. LEXIS 175
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 4, 2010
Docket2869083
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 692 S.E.2d 277 (AVANTE AT ROANOKE v. Finnerty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AVANTE AT ROANOKE v. Finnerty, 692 S.E.2d 277, 56 Va. App. 190, 2010 Va. App. LEXIS 175 (Va. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

McCLANAHAN, Judge.

In this administrative appeal, four affiliated nursing home facilities, Avante at Roanoke, Avante at Lynchburg, Avante at Waynesboro, and Avante at Harrisonburg (collectively “Avante” 1 ), appeal the circuit court’s affirmance of two related decisions of the Virginia Department of Medical Assistance Services (“DMAS”), the state agency responsible for administering Virginia’s Medicaid program. In those decisions, DMAS denied Avante’s claims for additional reimbursement of costs (in the form of year-end settlement adjustments) for respiratory therapy services rendered to Medicaid eligible patients over a two-year period. Because of DMAS’s errone *193 ous interpretation and application of certain governing state and federal regulations, we agree with Avante that DMAS made errors of law in adjudicating Avante’s claims. We thus reverse the circuit court in affirming DMAS’s decisions, and remand the case to the circuit court with instructions to remand to DMAS for reconsideration.

I.

Avante, as a Medicaid services provider, established in the mid-1990’s specialized care units at its four Virginia nursing facilities, located in Roanoke, Lynchburg, Waynesboro, and Harrisonburg, for the treatment of, among others, ventilator and tracheostomy dependent patients who were eligible for Medicaid benefits. See 12 VAC 30-60-40(H) and 12 VAC 30-60-320 (setting forth Medicaid criteria for “ventilation/tracheostomy specialized care”). Those patients “require[d] comprehensive respiratory therapy services” as part of their specialized care. 12 VAC 30-60-320(B). Avante contracted with the University of Virginia Medical Center to perform the respiratory therapy services. See 42 C.F.R. § 413.106 (regulating cost reimbursements to nursing facilities for Medicare and Medicaid specialized care services provided “under arrangements” with outside entities). Avante received reimbursement for the cost of the services from DMAS, through its administration of the Medicaid program in Virginia. See Code § 32.1-325 (establishing DMAS as the agency in Virginia to administer the Medicaid program). 2

The University of Virginia Medical Center eventually stopped performing respiratory therapy services for patients at nursing facilities under the Medicaid program, at which time Avante began performing the services “in-house,” managing “the program on [its] own.” After a year of doing so, *194 Avante, in 2001, again contracted with an outside entity, Southern Healthcare Services (“Southern”), to perform the respiratory therapy services for Avante’s Medicaid eligible ventilator and tracheostomy dependent patients. This arrangement with Southern extended for at least the next two fiscal years ending May 31, 2002 (FY 2002) and May 31, 2003 (FY 2003), which are the two years in dispute in this appeal.

The respiratory therapy services provided to Avante’s above-referenced Medicaid eligible patients fell within the definition of “ancillary services” under the Medicaid payment system for nursing facilities. 12 VAC 30-90-264. The costs of those services were, in turn, categorized as “[sjpecialized care ancillary costs.” Id. Therefore, to the extent Avante’s costs for providing those services were “reasonable,” Avante was entitled to payment from DMAS for the costs “on a pass-through basis.” Id. That is, there was no pre-determined annual “ceiling” or limitation on the total actual costs that were subject to reimbursement (unlike, for example, certain Medicaid reimbursement limits for Avante’s “routine operating costs”). Id. DMAS paid Avante for the costs of such ancillary services under a prospective payment system. Under that system, DMAS would pay a provider like Avante an “interim rate” or per diem throughout the current year based on the provider’s actual “settled” costs for the services in the previous year, and at the end of the current year DMAS would determine what “settle[ment]” was required between it and the provider after reconciling the per diem payments with the provider’s actual costs incurred in the current year. 3 Id.

In FY 2002, DMAS thus paid to Avante a per diem throughout the year for the respiratory therapy services provided to Avante’s Medicaid eligible ventilator and tracheostomy dependent patients based on DMAS’s payment to Avante for the *195 costs of such services in the previous year (FY 2001). 4 At the end of FY 2002, Avante submitted to DMAS, as required, annual cost reports setting forth, inter alia, the actual costs it incurred for those respiratory therapy services in FY 2002— services provided to Avante’s patients through its first year contract with Southern. See 12 VAC 30-90-70. Avante indicated in the reports that it had been underpaid for the services, as established by comparing the total of its actual costs for FY 2002 to the total of its interim per diem payments received in FY 2002. Avante’s actual costs for the respiratory therapy services in FY 2002 were, in fact, substantially more than its costs “as settled” for the services in the previous year—the year Avante provided the services through its own employees. Accordingly, Avante further indicated in the FY 2002 cost reports that it was claiming, as part of its year-end settlement with DMAS, reimbursement in the amount of its underpayment for the actual costs of the respiratory therapy services incurred in FY 2002.

In the next step of this “cost settlement process,” DMAS evaluated Avante’s cost reports, conducted an audit, and decided that Avante’s actual costs in FY 2002 for the respiratory therapy services were not reasonable. See 12 VAC 30-90-20; 12 VAC 30-90-70; 12 VAC 30-90-120. Having reached that decision, DMAS determined Avante’s reimbursable costs for those services by calculating a “per patient/per day allowance” based on Avante’s FY 2001 settled costs. As a result of this calculation, which became the basis of DMAS’s FY 2002 cost settlement for Avante, Avante’s reimbursable costs were much less than the actual costs it incurred that year in providing the services to its Medicaid patients under its contract with Southern.

Avante pursued its claim for additional Medicaid reimbursement for the costs of its respiratory therapy services provided in FY 2002 by challenging DMAS’s FY 2002 cost settlement in *196 an administrative appeal. Following a formal administrative hearing, DMAS issued a final agency decision dated June 30, 2004, rejecting Avante’s claim.

The subsequent FY 2003 cost settlement process between DMAS and Avante was essentially the same, both procedurally and substantively, as the process had been for FY 2002.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
692 S.E.2d 277, 56 Va. App. 190, 2010 Va. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avante-at-roanoke-v-finnerty-vactapp-2010.