OPINION
Justice NIGRO.
We granted allowance of appeal in these cases to consider whether the Commonwealth Court erred in reversing three administrative decisions of Appellant the Department of Public Welfare (“DPW”) which denied Medical Assistance payments to Appellee Devereux Hospital Texas Treatment Facility (“Devereux”) for certain care that Devereux rendered to three juveniles, K.C., K.T., and H.B. For the following reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part.
Devereux is a Texas treatment facility that provides, among other things, inpatient psychiatric services. On the recommendation of the Philadelphia Department of Human Services (“DHS”), and pursuant to orders of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, K.C., K.T., and H.B. were sent to Devereux for inpatient psychiatric treatment after having been adjudicated delinquent under the Juvenile Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6365.1 Thereafter, Devereux sought payment for the treat[317]*317ment from DPW under Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance Program, but DPW denied the claims. Devereux appealed the denials to DPW’s Bureau of Hearing and Appeals.
After hearings in each case, the Hearing Officer recommended that each appeal be denied. Specifically, the Hearing Officer concluded that DPW had correctly denied payment for K.C. and H.B., because DPW regulations only permit payment for non-emergency out-of-state services when there is no comparable in-state alternative and here, the record was devoid of competent evidence that there was no in-state alternative.2 The Hearing Officer similarly concluded that DPW had properly denied payment for K.T.’s treatment, because DPW regulations “are clear that a provider is not entitled to reimbursement for days of care for recipients who are appropriate for an alternate level of care” and here, Devereux had stipulated that K.T. was “appropriate for treatment at an alternate level of care” during the relevant time period. Hearing Officer’s K.T. Adjudication, at 6.3
The Bureau of Hearing and Appeals subsequently adopted the Hearing Officer’s recommendations in all three cases, and [318]*318the Secretary of the Department of Public Welfare (the “Secretary”) upheld the Bureau’s orders. However, on April 15, 2003, the Commonwealth Court reversed all three orders denying payment. Devereux Hosp. Texas Treatment Network v. Dep’t of Public Welfare, 797 A.2d 1037 (Pa.Commw.2002). With respect to K.C. and H.B., the court reasoned and concluded as follows:
Under section 6352(a)(3) of the Juvenile Act, if a child is found to be delinquent, the court may commit the child to a facility for delinquent children operated under the supervision or direction of the court or other public authority and approved by DPW. 42 Pa.C.S. § 6352(a)(3). Such commitment shall be “best suited to the child’s treatment, supervision rehabilitation, and welfare.....”42 Pa.C.S. § 6352(a) (emphasis added). In this case, the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County found [K.C.] and [H.B.] to be delinquent children, and committed them to Devereux’s facility, a facility supervised by a public authority and approved by DPW. Thus, the court determined that Devereux’s facility was “best suited” to treat [K.C.] and [H.B.]. If commitment to Devereux’s facility was “best suited” to the treatment needs of [K.C.] and [H.B.], then, certainly, Devereux’s facility provided better access to the care they needed and was the only facility equipped to provide the type of care they needed.
Because DPW erred in concluding that it was impossible to determine from the record that Devereux provided better access to the care that [K.C.] and [H.B.] needed or that Devereux’s facility was the only facility equipped to provide the type of care [K.C.] and [H.B.] required, DPW erred in denying payment for services rendered to [K.C.] and [H.B.] on that basis.
797 A.2d at 1041-42 (footnotes omitted).
With respect to K.T., the court stated simply that:
The commitment order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County constituted a legal determination that [K.T.] was suitable for placement in Devereux’s facility. Notwithstanding a finding to the contrary, until the court [319]*319issued a subsequent order declaring that [K.T.] was suitable for an alternate type or level of care, [K.T.] was not suitable for a different placement as a matter of law.
Because there was an unmodified legal determination that [K.T.] was suitable for placement in Devereux’s facility, DPW erred in denying payment for services rendered to [K.T.] based on the contrary view that [K.T.] was suitable for an alternate type or level of care.
Id. at 1042 (emphasis in original).
On appeal to this Court, DPW contends that the Commonwealth Court erred in requiring it to utilize Medical Assistance funds to pay for Devereux’s treatment of K.T., K.C. and H.B., when such treatment did not qualify for reimbursement under DPW regulations. Significantly, DPW in no way challenges the trial court’s authority under the Juvenile Act to order that the three juveniles be placed at Devereux. Rather, it merely argues that funds other than Medical Assistance funds must be used to pay for that placement.4
Under Section 6352(a) of the Juvenile Act, a court is authorized to commit a child to a facility for delinquent children, provided, inter alia, that the placement is “best suited to the child’s treatment, supervision, rehabilitation and welfare.”5 [320]*32042 Pa.C.S. § 6352(a). When such a commitment is ordered, the Public Welfare Code provides that DPW and the state and local county governments shall share the costs of necessary care. See 62 P.S. §§ 704.1, 704.2; 42 Pa.C.S. § 6306. However, to the extent a committed child is eligible for funds under Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance Program pursuant to DPW regulations, such funds must be exhausted before the child or provider may seek reimbursement from the state and local child welfare funds. See 62 P.S. § 704.2.
Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance Program, which is designed to provide medical assistance to certain individuals who cannot afford to pay for necessary medical services, was created pursuant to provisions in the Public Welfare Code (the “Code”),6 and in accordance with the requirements of the federal Medicaid Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1396 et seq.7 The Code vests DPW with responsibility for administration of the program, see 62 P.S. § 403, and for “establishing] rules, regulations and standards ... as to eligibility for assistance and as to its nature and extent.” Id. § 403(b). To that end, DPW [321]*321has promulgated regulations that, among other things, only-permit the use of Medical Assistance funds for services that are “medically necessary,” 55 Pa.Code § 1101.61, and specifically prohibit payment for inpatient psychiatric services after the patient has been determined to be “suitable for an alternate type or level of care.” Id.
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OPINION
Justice NIGRO.
We granted allowance of appeal in these cases to consider whether the Commonwealth Court erred in reversing three administrative decisions of Appellant the Department of Public Welfare (“DPW”) which denied Medical Assistance payments to Appellee Devereux Hospital Texas Treatment Facility (“Devereux”) for certain care that Devereux rendered to three juveniles, K.C., K.T., and H.B. For the following reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part.
Devereux is a Texas treatment facility that provides, among other things, inpatient psychiatric services. On the recommendation of the Philadelphia Department of Human Services (“DHS”), and pursuant to orders of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, K.C., K.T., and H.B. were sent to Devereux for inpatient psychiatric treatment after having been adjudicated delinquent under the Juvenile Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6365.1 Thereafter, Devereux sought payment for the treat[317]*317ment from DPW under Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance Program, but DPW denied the claims. Devereux appealed the denials to DPW’s Bureau of Hearing and Appeals.
After hearings in each case, the Hearing Officer recommended that each appeal be denied. Specifically, the Hearing Officer concluded that DPW had correctly denied payment for K.C. and H.B., because DPW regulations only permit payment for non-emergency out-of-state services when there is no comparable in-state alternative and here, the record was devoid of competent evidence that there was no in-state alternative.2 The Hearing Officer similarly concluded that DPW had properly denied payment for K.T.’s treatment, because DPW regulations “are clear that a provider is not entitled to reimbursement for days of care for recipients who are appropriate for an alternate level of care” and here, Devereux had stipulated that K.T. was “appropriate for treatment at an alternate level of care” during the relevant time period. Hearing Officer’s K.T. Adjudication, at 6.3
The Bureau of Hearing and Appeals subsequently adopted the Hearing Officer’s recommendations in all three cases, and [318]*318the Secretary of the Department of Public Welfare (the “Secretary”) upheld the Bureau’s orders. However, on April 15, 2003, the Commonwealth Court reversed all three orders denying payment. Devereux Hosp. Texas Treatment Network v. Dep’t of Public Welfare, 797 A.2d 1037 (Pa.Commw.2002). With respect to K.C. and H.B., the court reasoned and concluded as follows:
Under section 6352(a)(3) of the Juvenile Act, if a child is found to be delinquent, the court may commit the child to a facility for delinquent children operated under the supervision or direction of the court or other public authority and approved by DPW. 42 Pa.C.S. § 6352(a)(3). Such commitment shall be “best suited to the child’s treatment, supervision rehabilitation, and welfare.....”42 Pa.C.S. § 6352(a) (emphasis added). In this case, the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County found [K.C.] and [H.B.] to be delinquent children, and committed them to Devereux’s facility, a facility supervised by a public authority and approved by DPW. Thus, the court determined that Devereux’s facility was “best suited” to treat [K.C.] and [H.B.]. If commitment to Devereux’s facility was “best suited” to the treatment needs of [K.C.] and [H.B.], then, certainly, Devereux’s facility provided better access to the care they needed and was the only facility equipped to provide the type of care they needed.
Because DPW erred in concluding that it was impossible to determine from the record that Devereux provided better access to the care that [K.C.] and [H.B.] needed or that Devereux’s facility was the only facility equipped to provide the type of care [K.C.] and [H.B.] required, DPW erred in denying payment for services rendered to [K.C.] and [H.B.] on that basis.
797 A.2d at 1041-42 (footnotes omitted).
With respect to K.T., the court stated simply that:
The commitment order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County constituted a legal determination that [K.T.] was suitable for placement in Devereux’s facility. Notwithstanding a finding to the contrary, until the court [319]*319issued a subsequent order declaring that [K.T.] was suitable for an alternate type or level of care, [K.T.] was not suitable for a different placement as a matter of law.
Because there was an unmodified legal determination that [K.T.] was suitable for placement in Devereux’s facility, DPW erred in denying payment for services rendered to [K.T.] based on the contrary view that [K.T.] was suitable for an alternate type or level of care.
Id. at 1042 (emphasis in original).
On appeal to this Court, DPW contends that the Commonwealth Court erred in requiring it to utilize Medical Assistance funds to pay for Devereux’s treatment of K.T., K.C. and H.B., when such treatment did not qualify for reimbursement under DPW regulations. Significantly, DPW in no way challenges the trial court’s authority under the Juvenile Act to order that the three juveniles be placed at Devereux. Rather, it merely argues that funds other than Medical Assistance funds must be used to pay for that placement.4
Under Section 6352(a) of the Juvenile Act, a court is authorized to commit a child to a facility for delinquent children, provided, inter alia, that the placement is “best suited to the child’s treatment, supervision, rehabilitation and welfare.”5 [320]*32042 Pa.C.S. § 6352(a). When such a commitment is ordered, the Public Welfare Code provides that DPW and the state and local county governments shall share the costs of necessary care. See 62 P.S. §§ 704.1, 704.2; 42 Pa.C.S. § 6306. However, to the extent a committed child is eligible for funds under Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance Program pursuant to DPW regulations, such funds must be exhausted before the child or provider may seek reimbursement from the state and local child welfare funds. See 62 P.S. § 704.2.
Pennsylvania’s Medical Assistance Program, which is designed to provide medical assistance to certain individuals who cannot afford to pay for necessary medical services, was created pursuant to provisions in the Public Welfare Code (the “Code”),6 and in accordance with the requirements of the federal Medicaid Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1396 et seq.7 The Code vests DPW with responsibility for administration of the program, see 62 P.S. § 403, and for “establishing] rules, regulations and standards ... as to eligibility for assistance and as to its nature and extent.” Id. § 403(b). To that end, DPW [321]*321has promulgated regulations that, among other things, only-permit the use of Medical Assistance funds for services that are “medically necessary,” 55 Pa.Code § 1101.61, and specifically prohibit payment for inpatient psychiatric services after the patient has been determined to be “suitable for an alternate type or level of care.” Id. § 1151.48(a)(15). In addition, DPW regulations provide that funds will only be provided for non-emergency out-of-state care if there is documentation to verify that the out-of-state facility is the “only facility equipped to provide the type of care that the individual requires.” Id. § 1151.50(a)(2)(ii).
On appeal to this Court, DPW contends that the Commonwealth Court erred in failing to apply these regulations to deny payment for the services rendered to K.C., H.B. and K.T.8 As the specific regulation that the Commonwealth Court considered in resolving Devereux’s claims with respect to K.C. and H.B., ie., 55 Pa.Code § 1151.50(a)(2)(ii), differs from that which it considered in conjunction with Devereux’s claims with respect to K.T., ie., 55 Pa.Code § 1151.48(a)(15), we will address DPW’s claims with respect to K.C. and H.B. separately from its claims with regard to K.T.9
[322]*322In connection with K.C. and H.B., DPW argues that the Commonwealth Court erred in concluding that the trial court’s determination under the Juvenile Act that placement at Devereux was “best suited” to the juveniles’ “treatment, supervision, rehabilitation, and welfare,” 42 Pa.C.S. § 6352, was sufficient to satisfy DPW’s regulatory requirement that there be documentation to verify that Devereux, an out-of-state facility, was the “only facility equipped to provide the type of care that [K.C. and H.B.] required.” 55 Pa.Code § 1151.50(a)(2)(ii). We agree.
In both K.C.’s and H.B.’s adjudications, the Hearing Officer noted that DPW regulations state that Medical Assistance funds may not be used to fund an out-of-state placement unless there is documentation to establish that the out-of-state facility is the “only facility equipped to provide the type of care that the individual requires.” Id. Moreover, in both cases, the Hearing Officer concluded that there was no record documentation to support a conclusion that Devereux was the “only facility equipped to provide the type of care that [K.C. and H.B.] require[d].” Id.
Specifically, in the case of K.C., the Hearing Officer acknowledged that Devereux had submitted into evidence “a checklist of placement options,” which included over fifty instate facilities and indicated that at each facility, K.C. “was not accepted for admission due to his age, appropriateness for the facility or because referrals were generally not being accepted at that time.” Hearing Officer’s K.C. Adjudication, at 4, Finding of Fact (“F.O.F.”) ¶ 4. However, the Hearing Officer noted that the “referral date” for each attempted placement was September 15, 1998, which was well after K.C. was discharged from Devereux on January 3,1998. See id., F.O.F. ¶ 5. As there was no additional evidence submitted that indicated that in-state options had been investigated either prior to or while K.C. was placed at Devereux, the Hearing Officer specifically found that there was “no documentation in the record that in-state placement options had been exhausted prior to [K.C.]’s placement in an out-of-state facility.” Id. at 7. Moreover, the Hearing Officer stated that there had been [323]*323“no documentation submitted for the record that [Devereux] is the only private psychiatric hospital facility equipped to provide the type of care that [K.C.] requires as required under 55 Pa.Code § 1151.50.(a)(2)(ii).” Id.
Meanwhile, in the case of H.B., the Hearing Officer noted that the record contained a “Residential Treatment Facility” Checklist which “indicated that over 40 psychiatric facilities ... had been contacted and were unable to provide placement of [H.B.] prior to his being referred to Devereux,” but further stated that the same checklist indicated that “only 2 acute care psychiatric facilities” had been contacted. Hearing Officer’s H.B. Adjudication, at 4, F.O.F. ¶20 (emphasis added). In addition, the Hearing Officer explicitly credited the testimony of DPW’s representative, Dr. John Hume, that “there were forensic-type psychiatric facilities suitable to handle [H.B.j’s aggressive personality that were not contacted that were located in Pennsylvania----” Id. at 9. Given this record evidence that potentially suitable in-state facilities had not even been contacted to see if they could accommodate H.B., the Hearing Officer ultimately found that the record was devoid of “documentation that Devereux is the only private psychiatric hospital facility equipped to provide the type of care that [H.B.] require[d] as required under 55 Pa.Code § 1151.50.(a)(2)(ii).” Id. (emphasis in original).
In reversing the Hearing Officer’s decisions in these two cases, the Commonwealth Court did not point to any additional evidence that had been introduced by the parties which established that Devereux was the only facility adequately equipped to treat K.C. and H.B. Rather, the court merely noted that the trial court had committed both boys to Devereux pursuant to section 6352 of the Juvenile Act, 42 Pa.C.S. § 6352, which only authorizes the court to commit a juvenile to an institution that is “best suited to the child’s treatment, supervision, rehabilitation, and welfare,” and then reasoned that “[i]f commitment to Devereux’s facility was ‘best suited’ to the treatment needs of [K.C.] and [H.B.], then, certainly, Devereux’s facility provided better access to the care they needed and was the only facility equipped to provide the type [324]*324of care they needed.” 797 A.2d at 1041. This reasoning, however, is fundamentally flawed.
As an initial matter, we agree with the Commonwealth Court that given the limitations on the trial court’s authority pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 6352, we must presume that the trial court concluded that placement at Devereux was “best suited” to “the treatment, supervision, rehabilitation and welfare” of K.C. and H.B. However, we do not agree that this determination alone is sufficient to establish that Devereux was the “only facility equipped to provide the type of care that the [juveniles’] required.” 55 Pa.Code § 1150(a)(2)(h) (emphasis added).
First, we note that it is possible for more than one facility to be “best suited” to a juvenile’s needs and thus, merely because Devereux is “best suited” does not mean that there is not another in-state facility that is equally well-suited. See In re Tameka M., 525 Pa. 348, 580 A.2d 750, 755 (1990) (noting that under 42 Pa.C.S. § 6351(a), trial court contemplating an “order of disposition best suited to the protection and physical, mental and moral welfare of [a dependent] child” may be faced with options of two “equally effective schools, both suited to the child’s needs”) (emphasis added). Moreover, where, as here, there is simply no indication in the record that DHS even considered all of the in-state options for K.C. and H.B., much less advised the trial court of such options,10 we will not presume, as the Commonwealth Court did below, that the trial court considered all of the available instate options and explicitly rejected them as inferior to Devereux.[325]*32511 While we recognize that the trial court is required under 42 Pa.C.S. § 6352(a) to enter an order “best suited to [a juvenile’s] treatment, supervision, rehabilitation, and welfare,” we will not presume that it has failed in that duty if it considers only the placement options that the parties present to it and finds that at least one such option will be best suited to the juvenile’s needs. In other words, we do not believe that a court ordering placement under section 6352 should be required either to cross-examine the parties regarding the extent of their efforts to identify available facilities or to conduct its own exhaustive search and survey of placement options when it concludes that the juvenile’s needs will be well served by an order placing the juvenile at one of proposed facilities and ho party objects to the child’s placement at that [326]*326facility.12 Accordingly, where, as in the instant case, the trial court issues a commitment order under section 6352 that no one disputes is well suited to the juvenile’s needs, we will only consider that order as definitively establishing that the trial court deemed the selected facility to be the best suited facility of those of which it was advised.
Given this conclusion, we simply cannot agree with the Commonwealth Court that the trial court’s mere issuance of the commitment orders here necessarily demonstrated compliance with DPW’s regulatory requirement that all in-state placement options be exhausted before Medical Assistance funds could be released to pay for an out-of-state placement.13 [327]*32755 Pa.Code § 1151.50(a)(2)(ii). Rather, we agree with DPW that documentation beyond the trial court’s orders committing H.B. and K.C. to Devereux’s custody was necessary in order to establish such compliance. Moreover, the Hearing Officer below clearly found that there was no additional documentation sufficient to establish that in-state options had been exhausted, and Devereux did not argue to the Commonwealth Court and does not now assert that this conclusion was in error,14 instead arguing only that the trial court order was determinative. Accordingly, we reverse the order of the Commonwealth Court and reinstate the Secretary’s orders upholding the denial of payment for treatment rendered to H.B. and K.C. pursuant to 55 Pa.Code § 1151.50(a)(2)(ii).15
[328]*328In contrast, we affirm the order of the Commonwealth Court insofar as it pertains to the treatment of K.T. DPW argues in its brief to this Court that the Commonwealth Court erred in concluding that Medical Assistance funds had to be used to pay for K.T.’s treatment even though that treatment was not “medically necessary” and thus, not subject to reim[329]*329bursement by DPW. See 55 Pa.Code § 1101.61. According to DPW, the Commonwealth Court concluded that the trial court’s placement order “obviated the need for Devereux to comply with [DPW’s] duly promulgated regulations” that only permit payment for “medically necessary” treatment. 55 Pa. Code § 1101.61. Moreover, it contends that such a conclusion was in error because it was in complete disregard for this Court’s “long-standing instruction that duly-promulgated agency regulations have the force of law, and strict compliance with such regulations is mandatory.” DPW’s Brf. at 14 (citing Housing Auth. v. Pennsylvania State Civil Serv. Comm’n, 556 Pa. 621, 730 A.2d 935, 942 (1999); Rohrbaugh v. Pennsylvania Public Util. Comm’n, 556 Pa. 199, 727 A.2d 1080, 1085 (1999); Snizaski v. Zaleski, 410 Pa. 548, 189 A.2d 284, 286 (1963)).
However, DPWs arguments in this regard are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the Commonwealth Court’s underlying opinion and order. As is apparent from a close reading of the Commonwealth Court’s opinion, the court understood the Hearing Officer to have denied payment to Devereux based solely on his determination that DPW had established that K.T. had been “suitable for an alternate type or level of care.” See 55 Pa.Code 1151.48(a)(15) (permitting DPW to deny payment for individuals “suitable for an alternate type or level of care”). Accordingly, on appeal, the Commonwealth Court considered only whether this limited determination had been correct. In holding that it had not been correct and that, in fact, K.T. had not been “suitable” for an alternative type or level of care because the trial court’s commitment order remained in effect, the Commonwealth Court did not address or decide whether DPW might have been entitled to deny payment based on any other DPW regulation, such as 55 Pa.Code § 1101.61, which requires that Medical Assistance funds only be used to pay for “medically necessary” treatment.16
[330]*330Under these circumstances, DPW’s assertion that the Commonwealth Court order required it to pay for K.T.’s treatment in spite of the fact that the treatment was not medically necessary is simply incorrect as the order merely concluded that DPW could not deny Devereux’s claim for payment pursuant to Regulation 1151.48(a)(15). Moreover, DPW does riot take issue with the Commonwealth Court’s conclusion that Regulation 1151.48(a)(15) alone did not provide adequate support for the denial of payment. Accordingly, we affirm the order of the Commonwealth Court insofar as it held that DPW could not deny payment for KT.’s treatment based on Regulation 1151.48(a)(15). However, given that the Commonwealth Court did not acknowledge, much less resolve, DPW’s argument that the treatment was not compensable because it was medically unnecessary,17 we remand the matter [331]*331for consideration of that and any other properly preserved argument that could support DPW’s denial of payment.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Commonwealth Court’s order insofar as it prohibited DPW from denying payment for KC.’s and H.B.’s treatment based on a lack of documentation that Devereux was the only facility equipped to provide the type of care that the two juveniles required. However, we affirm the order insofar as it held that DPW could not deny payment for K.T.’s treatment based on a conclusion that K.T. was suitable for an alternate type or level of care. We nevertheless remand the matter for consideration of any other properly-preserved arguments as to why DPW may have been entitled to deny compensation for K.T.’s treatment.
Former Justice LAMB did not participate in the decision of this case.
Justice SAYLOR files a concurring and dissenting opinion.
Justice EAKIN files a dissenting opinion.'