City of Philadelphia & Comp Services v. Medical Fee Review Office
This text of 737 A.2d 356 (City of Philadelphia & Comp Services v. Medical Fee Review Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The City of Philadelphia (Insurer) appeals from the decision of the hearing officer of the Department of Labor and Industry, Bureau of Workers’ Compensation *357 (Bureau), finding that it must reimburse RJS Industries, Inc. (Provider) for the amount of rental fees for medical equipment because it failed to provide Provider with the requisite notice and opportunity to respond to a disputed billing code.
From June 1996 through June 1997, Provider rented a neuromuscular stimulator known as the H-Wave to four of Employer’s workers’ compensation claimants for muscular relaxation, prevention of disuse atrophy and maintenance of blood flow. 1 Provider then submitted the bills for the rental fees to Insurer, listing the billing code for the H-Wave as “miscellaneous” Medicare billing code E1B99 with a charge of $449.30 per month. Upon receiving the bills, Insurer wrote to Provider explaining it would not pay the rental fees because the use of the H-Wave was an unproven therapy for which claims would be summarily denied.
To challenge Insurer’s denial of payment, Provider filed applications 2 with the Bureau for fee reviews pursuant to Section 306(f.1)(5) 3 of the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act). 4 The Bureau issued an administrative decision granting reimbursement to Provider. Insurer then filed a request for a de novo hearing with the Bureau review hearing office where, for the first time, it argued that a procedural defect in Provider’s application for reimbursement was the reason for the denial and not because the H-Wave treatment was unproven. Insurer contended it was not required to reimburse the rental costs of the H-Wave device because, by using a “miscellaneous” Medicare billing code where Insurer believed a different and more specific 5 Medicare billing code should have been used, Provider was, in effect, giving no code at all. Because Provider had submitted materials which Insurer believed contained no billing code, Insurer argued that it was not required to contact Provider to change the billing code, but rather could treat the entire file as incomplete and deny the reimbursement.
At the hearing, Sandra Belton Macchioni (Macehioni), Insurer’s Manager for Repric *358 ing Services, testified in order to establish that Provider had improperly coded its billing. 6 She stated that based on her research of the H-Wave, the miscellaneous billing code of E1399 was incorrect because the H-Wave was essentially a powered muscle stimulator which should have been coded under the specific' Medicare code of E0745 for durable medical equipment. 7 She further testified that a change to the more specific billing code reduced the amount of reimbursement allowable for the H-Wave device rental charges from the $449.30 per month requested by Provider to only $96.70 per month. As to the notification given to Provider, Mac-chioni stated that a denial letter was sent to Provider based upon the unproven nature of the treatment, but no mention was made of the disputed billing code.
On behalf of Provider, Mary Fleming (Fleming), the operator of the medical billing company that supplied the billing services for Provider, testified that the miscellaneous E1399 code was the appropriate code for the H-Wave because she understood the more specific Medicare billing code of E0745 was to apply only when the claimant was using the equipment for a disuse atrophy, which was not the reason for the use by the claimants. 8 She further testified that the usual and customary rental fee for the H-Wave device was $449.30 per month which was reimbursed at 80% of the normal and customary charge or 100% of the charge depending on who was paying for the device. Fleming also stated that she did not receive any notification from Insurer to indicate a different code should be used.
Provider also submitted into evidence letters sent by Insurer to Provider which included the reasons for the denial of reimbursement as follows:
•“All Claimants for H-Wave treatments sent to CSI will be denied by medical director;”
•“Unproven therapy; CSI’s medical director - denies all claimants for H-Wave;”
•“All bills for H-Wave are denied now and into the future;” and
•“H-Wave stimulator are not approved.”
Finding that Insurer had failed to give Provider the requisite notice and an opportunity to respond as required by the Bureau’s regulations when the Insurer determined that a different code should be used for billing the H-Wave rentals, the hearing officer granted reimbursement to the Provider for the rental charges of the H-Wave. This appeal followed. 9
On appeal, Insurer again argues that it can summarily deny any application for medical fee reimbursement as incomplete if the application contains a billing code that Insurer believes should be different than the one used, and when that occurs, it is not required to contact Provider or provide a reason for denials in such cases. Insurer’s argument is disingenuous. First, it did contact Provider and the only reason it gave for denying payment was *359 that the H-Wave device was an unproven therapy. Second, and more importantly, Insurer’s assertion that it is not required to contact Provider if a wrong billing code is submitted is contrary to the plain language of Section 127.207 of the Bureau’s Medical Costs Containment Regulations. Section 127.207 requires that when an insurer believes a different billing code should be used than the one provided, it must notify the provider in writing of the proposed changes and reasons in support of the changes, and the insurer must then give the provider an opportunity to discuss the proposed changes and support the original coding decisions, none of which was done in this case. 10
Not only does the regulation specifically provide what procedure should be followed, but it also provides the remedy when there is not “strict compliance” with its notification requirements, i.e., any challenge based on a billing code will “result in disputes in favor of the- provider.” 34 Pa.Code § 127.254. Because Insurer notified Provider that it was not paying because of the unproven nature of the treatment and only shifted to the “coding” issue after the review was underway, it failed to strictly comply with the notice requirements. As a result, the hearing officer did not err in resolving the fee review dispute in favor of Provider. 11
Accordingly, Bureau’s Order is affirmed.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 1st day of September, 1999, the order of the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation, dated March 1, 1999 is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
737 A.2d 356, 1999 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-philadelphia-comp-services-v-medical-fee-review-office-pacommwct-1999.