Dept. of Community Health v. Satilla Health Services, Inc.

598 S.E.2d 514, 266 Ga. App. 880
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 17, 2004
DocketA03A2244-A03A2246.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 598 S.E.2d 514 (Dept. of Community Health v. Satilla Health Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dept. of Community Health v. Satilla Health Services, Inc., 598 S.E.2d 514, 266 Ga. App. 880 (Ga. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

RUFFIN, Presiding Judge.

These three companion appeals arise from a superior court order directing the Department of Community Health ("the Department") to issue a certificate of need for an adult open-heart surgery service to Satilla Health Services, Inc. d/b/a Satilla Regional Medical Center ("Satilla"). The Department and two other hospitals filed separate applications for discretionary review of that ruling. We granted the applications and docketed the appeals as Case Nos. A03A2244, A03A2245, and A03A2246. For reasons that follow, we reverse.

**881 1. (a) The Certificate of Need Procedures. Under OCGA § 31-6-40(a) "only such new institutional health services or health care facilities as are found by the [D]epartment to be needed shall be offered in the state."1 In accordance with this mandate, "[a]ny person proposing to develop or offer a new institutional health service or health care facility shall, before commencing such activity, submit an application to the [D]epartment and obtain a certificate of need."2 The Department is responsible for granting or denying certificate of need ("CON") applications.3 To assist in this review, the legislature authorized the Department to promulgate rules setting forth the criteria for evaluating applications.4

In May 2001, the Department developed a "Specialized Cardiovascular Services Component Plan" ("the component plan") to "identify and address health issues and recommend goals, objectives and system changes to achieve official state health policies." Based on the findings in the plan, the Department formulated standards for reviewing open-heart surgery CON applications.5 Those standards address two important issues - need and adverse impact.6 As explained in the component plan:

Open Heart Surgical Services and the host of ancillary services necessary to support these programs require specialty qualifications; these are not services that can or should be available in every community. The planning area for these services is the entire state. The challenge for regulatory officials is to balance necessary access against the quality and cost-containment goals of guidelines. There are currently 16 open heart programs in the state, located in the various regions. New program development should be based on a clear need for services and a determination that new development will not have an adverse impact on existing services.

Under Department of Community Health Rule 272-2-.09(13)(c)(1)(i), "[a]n application for new adult open heart surgery services shall be considered by the Department only if each and all of [five] **882 conditions are met." Three of those conditions relate to need.7 The other two address the potential adverse impact on existing or approved facilities.8

Although meeting these five conditions generally is mandatory, a few exceptions exist. As provided in Rule 272-2-.09(13)(c)(1)(ii), "[t]he Department may allow an exception to the need standard and adverse impact requirements ... to remedy an atypical barrier to open heart surgery services *517based on cost, quality, financial access, or geographic accessibility." The exceptions enable the Department to remedy gaps in service that might otherwise remain undetected.

(b) Satilla's CON Application. The record shows that Satilla is a 231-bed hospital in Waycross, Georgia. In early 2001, it developed a plan to add an adult open-heart surgery facility to its existing range of cardiac services. The addition of such facility required a CON issued by the Department.9

In February 2001, Satilla submitted its CON application to the Department. Satilla acknowledged that its application did not meet all of the five conditions imposed by Rule 272-2-.09(13)(c)(1)(i).10 It asserted, however, that it qualified for an exception based on atypical cost and geographical accessibility barriers. Before the Department ruled on Satilla's application, the Hospital Authority of Valdosta/Lowndes County d/b/a South Georgia Medical Center ("SGMC") and Memorial Health University Medical Center ("Memorial") submitted letters opposing the application. Both SGMC, located in Valdosta, and Memorial, located in Savannah, provide open-heart surgical services.

The Department's Division of Health Planning, which screened Satilla's CON application, found no merit in Satilla's request for treatment under the exceptions. The Division first determined that no atypical cost barriers affected Satilla-area patients. It further concluded that two open-heart centers in Savannah (including Memorial) and one center in Valdosta (SGMC) had "excess capacity" to care for patients and could serve patients from Satilla's service area. In addition, the Division noted that Satilla had historically referred patients needing open-heart surgery to a hospital in Jacksonville, Florida, approximately 75 miles away. Given these other available facilities, the Division found no geographic access problem for open-heart surgery in Satilla's area.

**883 On August 24, 2001, the Department denied Satilla's CON application and forwarded the Division's evaluation to the hospital. Satilla appealed that denial to a hearing officer pursuant to OCGA § 31-6-44(c). SGMC and Memorial intervened in the proceedings.11

Following an evidentiary hearing conducted over several days, the hearing officer entered extensive findings of facts and conclusions of law. In those findings, the hearing officer noted that, because Satilla could not meet the need requirement in Rule 272-2-.09(13)(c)(1)(i), its "only possibility of prevailing... [was] on the basis of an exception." He further found that Satilla had abandoned its request for an exception based on cost barriers, choosing instead to focus on the atypical geographic barrier exception. The hearing officer then determined that Satilla had established an atypical geographic barrier to service and, therefore, should have been awarded a CON. In making this determination, the officer noted the practice among Satilla cardiologists of referring open-heart surgery patients to a Jacksonville, Florida hospital, rather than to facilities in Valdosta or Savannah. In paragraph 24 of his findings, he further stated:

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Dept. of Community Health v. Satilla Health Services, Inc.
598 S.E.2d 514 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
598 S.E.2d 514, 266 Ga. App. 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dept-of-community-health-v-satilla-health-services-inc-gactapp-2004.