Fifty Residents of Park Pleasant Nursing Home v. Commonwealth, Department of Public Welfare

503 A.2d 1057, 94 Pa. Commw. 491, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1886
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 30, 1986
DocketAppeal, No. 2905 C.D. 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 503 A.2d 1057 (Fifty Residents of Park Pleasant Nursing Home v. Commonwealth, Department of Public Welfare) 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.

Bluebook
Fifty Residents of Park Pleasant Nursing Home v. Commonwealth, Department of Public Welfare, 503 A.2d 1057, 94 Pa. Commw. 491, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1886 (Pa. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Rogers,

This is the appeal of fifty nursing home residents of the Park Pleasant Nursing Home (residents) who have; been receiving skilled nursing care under the Medical Assistance Program.1 Following an annual [493]*493inspection, the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare’s (DPW) Inspection of Care team recommended that the care of the appellant residents be reclassified from skilled to intermediate. DPW sent notices to the residents recertifying them in accordance with the recommendation. The residents appealed this determination, and two days of hearings were held at which the hearing officer upheld DPW’s recommendations. The hearing officer’s decision was affirmed by DPW’s Office of Hearings and Appeals. The residents filed a request for reconsideration which was denied by DPW’s Executive Deputy Secretary. The residents have filed a petition for review of the order of recertification, asking us to remand their cases for reevaluation because, as they assert, DPW’s procedures were contrary to law and its own regulations.

The residents first claim that the DPW regulations which formed the basis for the reduction in the level of care to them must be invalidated since “ [these] regulations examine only the treatment and services provided in determining whether care is skilled or not.” The DPW regulations classify skilled care services as follows:

II. Shilled Care Services.
(a) For an individual service provided to the recipient to be considered a skilled care service, the service must:
(i) Be needed by the patient on a daily basis.
(ii) Be ordered by a physician.
(iii) Require the skills of, and be provided either directly by or under the supervision of, medical professionals.
(iv) Be provided to the patient on a daily basis.
[494]*494(V) ' Be one that can only be provided,- asapractical matter, in a skilled nursing facility on an inpatient basis.
(vi) Bé documented in the recipient’s médical record daily.
(vii) Be included and not excluded as a iskille-d care service in the Skilled Nursing Care-Assessment Handbook.
55 Pa. -Code §1181, Appendix E 11(a). The residents claim that .these criteria do not allow for -an analysis of'the patient’s condition as -a whole, which has been found to be necessary by those courts interpreting a similar provision defining “skilled nursing facility services” in the Social Security Act, which states in pertinent part:
■ [T]he term ‘skilled nursing facility services’ means services which are or were required to be, given an individual who needs or- needed on a daily basis skilled nursing care (provided directly by or requiring the supervision of skilled nursing personnel) . . . which can only as practical matter be provided in a skilled nursing facility on an inpatient basis.

42 H.S.C. §1396d(f). As a result, the residents claim that the DPW regulations are not in compliance with the.Social Security Act. We find this argument to be without merit. '

If a patient does not need or receive one of the listed, services in the above-cited DPW regulation, he may still qualify for skilled care service under the following conditions:

A recipient may not need or receive a skilled Care service . . . however, in rare instances, a particular medical condition may occur which contemplates the recipient’s medical state to the degree that the treatment of the recipient’s medical condition must be rendered or super[495]*495vised by medical professionals on a daily basis. Although any of the services required in the treatment of this condition could be performed by a properly instructed person, that person would not have the ability to understand the relationship between the services and to evaluate the ultimate effect of one service on the other. Therefore, the treatment of the medical condition requires that the services be performed by or under the immediate supervision of medical professionals. It is the necessity of the immediate involvement of medical professionals in the treatment of the recipient’s special medical condition that qualifies the recipient to be determined medically eligible for skilled nursing care.

55 Pa. Code §1181, Appendix EII(e).

From this provision it is evident that a person who does not qualify for skilled nursing facility services as expressly defined in the regulations may nevertheless be medically eligible for skilled nursing care if a particular medical condition exists. This provision allows the DPW to look beyond the services actually provided and assess the complete condition of the patient. Examples of instances in which an individual could be determined eligible for skilled nursing care due to special medical complications are contained in a DPW handbook entitled Medical Assistance Handbook. Eligibility determinations are made on a case by case basis, based on the following criteria: age of the patient, overall medical condition of the patient, diagnosis and presenting signs and symptoms, length of hospital stay, medications, and services and treatment needs. We find that DPW does consider, in accordance with the interpretations of analogous provisions of the Social Security Act, the patient’s overall condition when making level of care recommendations.

[496]*496The residents next claim that the DPW regulations at 55 Pa. Code §1181, Appendix E, do not comply with the corresponding federal regulations found at 42 C.F.R. §§409.32-409.36. We are controlled on this point by our recent decision in Barnett v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Public Welfare, 89 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 16, 491 A.2d 320 (1985), where we held:

After carefully reading the federal and state regulations, we have come to the conclusion that they are consistent with each other.
Since the DPW regulations do not mention that the ‘aggregate of personal care services'’ could qualify for skilled care services as the federal regulations do, petitioners contend that they would qualify for skilled service under the federal regulations, while they would not qualify under state regulations. Although 42 C.F.R. §409.33(a) is not followed verbatim in the DPW regulations, the analogous version of the ‘catchall’ federal regulations is 55 Pa. Code §1181, Appendix EII(c). Since there is a comparable State regulation, petitioners would not qualify under either regulation.

The residents next claim that the DPW Inspection of Care (IOC) procedures are inadequate under federal regulations. The federal regulations regarding IOC reviews are contained at 42 C.F.R. §§456.600-456.614.

The team must determine in its inspection whether—

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Bluebook (online)
503 A.2d 1057, 94 Pa. Commw. 491, 1986 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifty-residents-of-park-pleasant-nursing-home-v-commonwealth-department-pacommwct-1986.