Dimensions Health Corp. v. Maryland Insurance Administration

821 A.2d 40, 374 Md. 1, 2003 Md. LEXIS 157
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 7, 2003
Docket86, Sept.Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 821 A.2d 40 (Dimensions Health Corp. v. Maryland Insurance Administration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dimensions Health Corp. v. Maryland Insurance Administration, 821 A.2d 40, 374 Md. 1, 2003 Md. LEXIS 157 (Md. 2003).

Opinion

WILNER, Judge.

Appellants, Dimensions Health Corporation (DHC) and Mercy Medical Center, Inc. (Mercy), challenge a final order of the Maryland Insurance Commissioner which declared that United Healthcare of the Mid-Atlantic, Inc. (United), a health maintenance organization, was not required to reimburse appellants for certain hospital services they rendered to United members. The Circuit Court for Baltimore City affirmed the Commissioner’s order. We agree with that result.

BACKGROUND

Appellants’ complaint hinges on the construction of two provisions in the law regulating health maintenance organizations — Maryland Code, §§ 19-712(b) and 19-713.2 of the Health-General Article (HG). Those statutes have meaning, however, only when one first understands some of the relationships that exist (or at least that once existed) in a managed health care system.

United is a health maintenance organization (HMO), which is a term defined in HG § 19 — 701(f). For our purposes, it is an organization that agrees to provide certain hospital and medical services for its members in return for predetermined capitation payments made on a periodic basis by or on behalf of the members. An HMO may carry out its obligation to provide the hospital and medical services in three ways: (1) with respect to physician services, it may provide the services directly, through employees or partners of the HMO (HG § 19 — 701(f)(5)); (2) it may contract with hospitals and physicians or physician groups to provide the services; or (3) under HG §§ 19-712(b) and 19-713.2, it may contract with an Administrative Service Provider (ASP) for the ASP to provide, either directly or through “external providers,” the services *5 for which, as between the HMO and its members, the HMO is responsible.

In the case before us, United chose the third method. In September, 1996, it entered into an ASP contract with Dimensions Health Network (DHN) for DHN to provide, or arrange for the provision of, hospital and medical services to United’s members who were within a designated service area and who selected DHN as their provider. Under that agreement, United agreed to pay to DHN a monthly capitation payment for each such United member, in return for which DHN agreed to provide, or arrange for the provision of, the agreed-upon hospital and medical services. The DHN service area was centered in Prince George’s County. In April, 1997, United entered into a similar ASP contract with Maryland Personal Physicians, Inc. (MPPI) for the provision of services within the MPPI service area. The MPPI service area was centered in Baltimore.

DHN was a non-profit, non-stock membership corporation. It had two classes of members. The one Class B member was DHC, which owns and operates three hospitals in Prince George’s County. The Class A members consisted of certain physicians who, among other things, were either on the medical staff of a DHC facility or had a practice that did not mandate such membership, and who had entered into an agreement with DHN to become a participating provider. It was anticipated that most of the services to be provided by DHN under the contract would be provided by its Class A or Class B members — that is, the participating physicians who were the Class A members and the hospitals owned and operated by DHC.

MPPI is a Maryland stock corporation. Its majority (57%) stockholder is Mercy. MPPI and Mercy each had a complex set of ownership and contractual relationships with various physician groups and other health care providers that the Insurance Commissioner regarded as “affiliates” of Mercy. It was anticipated that the hospital services would be provided by Mercy in Baltimore.

*6 An ASP obviously acts as an intermediary between the HMO and its members, as well as between the HMO and the doctors and hospitals who actually provide the medical and hospital services to the HMO’s members. Absent an ASP, the relationship in an HMO situation is a tripartite, and essentially triangular, one: the members pay a capitation fee to the HMO to assure the provision and cover the cost of the agreed-upon range of hospital and medical services; the HMO employs or contracts with doctors and hospitals (and other direct health care providers) to provide those services; the doctors and hospitals provide the service to the HMO members and are paid by the HMO. See Riemer v. Columbia Medical, 358 Md. 222, 230-31, 747 A.2d 677, 681-82 (2000).

A principal function of an ASP, in an economic sense, is to “downstream” some of the HMO’s risk. In return for a capitation payment by the HMO, the ASP assumes responsibility for procuring and paying the hospitals, doctors, and other health care providers who actually provide the medical services that the HMO is obliged to provide for its members. The insertion of an ASP intermediary thus required some refinement or redefinition of the statuses of the HMO and the direct health care providers vis a vis each other. Under an ASP arrangement, the HMO and the ultimate providers, who otherwise would look to each other for the provision of the service, on the one hand, and payment for the services provided, on the other, each look to the ASP for both. That insertion, which is of relatively recent origin, also raised some legislative concerns regarding the assurances that (1) the services called for in the HMO-member agreement would, in fact, be provided, and (2) the direct providers of the service would be paid.

Until 1991, Maryland law did not formally recognize. ASPs or ASP contracts, although they apparently existed. In that year, House Bill 1263 was introduced to deal with a much narrower issue — the situation in which an HMO had a contract with a health care provider who, because of the provider’s inability to render a particular covered service, referred an HMO member to another provider who was able to perform *7 the service but who had no contractual relationship with the HMO. Some HMOs had taken the position that the capitation payment they made to their contractual providers covered that service and that the HMO had no additional obligation to pay any other provider, with whom it had no contract — that payment for the referred service was the responsibility of the contractual provider that made the referral. Apparently, contractual providers saw the matter differently, and the persons who, on referral, actually provided the service were caught in the middle.

The purpose of HB 1263, as introduced, was to make clear that the HMO was responsible for paying the provider who rendered the service, even though it had no direct contract with that provider. The bill sought to achieve that end by adding language to § 19-712 to provide that an HMO that entered into a contract with another entity for the provision of health care services to the HMO’s members had to pay claims for health care services covered by the HMO contract that were rendered by a non-contractual provider pursuant to a referral from the contractual provider.

At its core, the issue addressed by the bill was the responsibility of HMOs to providers with whom the HMO had no direct contractual relationship.

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Bluebook (online)
821 A.2d 40, 374 Md. 1, 2003 Md. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dimensions-health-corp-v-maryland-insurance-administration-md-2003.