Hasner v. W. Or. Advanced Health

410 P.3d 373, 289 Or. App. 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 6, 2017
DocketA161057
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 410 P.3d 373 (Hasner v. W. Or. Advanced Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hasner v. W. Or. Advanced Health, 410 P.3d 373, 289 Or. App. 207 (Or. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

DeVORE, P. J.

Petitioner receives medical assistance as a member of the Oregon Health Plan (OHP). She seeks judicial review after the agency that administers the plan, the Division of Medical Assistance Programs (DMAP) of the Oregon Health Authority (OHA), denied her physician's request for prior authorization of treatment for her medical condition. The dispute involves a list of conditions and treatments-the Prioritized List of Health Services-that the agency uses to determine what medical services that the plan covers. OHP members are eligible to receive treatments for conditions when the condition and treatment are paired on that list and appear above a chosen funding line. This dispute arises because petitioner's condition and treatment appear separately on the Prioritized List and not paired together above the funded line. On review, we conclude that, in that circumstance, DMAP must apply OAR 410-141-0480(10), which may require DMAP to make an ad hoc coverage decision. Because we cannot determine that DMAP considered or applied that rule, we reverse and remand.

Before summarizing the facts, we must sketch the regulatory landscape. The OHP is Oregon's Medicaid program, which provides health care assistance to qualifying residents. In the administration of the plan, the Health Evidence Review Commission ("HERC") creates and maintains a list of health conditions paired with treatments for those conditions-the "Prioritized List of Health Services." HERC ranks the condition/treatment pairs on the Prioritized List in order of importance, based on the clinical and cost effectiveness of services. The Oregon legislature then draws a "funded line" on the Prioritized List.

Generally speaking, OAR 410-141-0480 ties coverage under the OHP to whether conditions and treatments are paired above or below the funded line on the Prioritized List. Specifically, OAR 410-141-0480(1) provides:

"Division members are eligible to receive, subject to section (11) of this rule [regarding services excluded under OAR 410-141-0500 ], those treatments for the condition/ treatment pairs funded on the Health Evidence Review
Commission (HERC) Prioritized List of Health Services adopted under OAR 410-141-0520 when such treatments are medically or dentally appropriate, except that services shall also meet the prudent layperson standard defined in 410-141-0140. Refer to 410-141-0520 for funded line coverage information."

The cross-referenced exclusions from services, set forth in OAR 410-141-0500(1)(c), include, among others, "[a]ny treatment, service, or item for a condition that is not included on the funded lines of the Prioritized List of Health Services except as specified in OAR 410-141-0480, OHP Benefit Package of *375Covered Services, subsection (8) [co-morbid conditions]."

The facts are essentially uncontested. Petitioner is enrolled with Western Oregon Advanced Health (WOAH), a coordinated care organization that has contracted with DMAP to provide medical services to members when covered and medically appropriate.1 In 2011, petitioner twice sought emergency medical care for leg pain. In October 2014, her physician diagnosed severe, symptomatic varicose veins and referred her to a vascular surgeon. In February 2015, a vascular surgeon proposed endovenous laser ablation of the great saphenous vein of her right leg. He submitted a prior authorization request form to WOAH, in which he identified petitioner's condition as varicose veins with inflammation in the lower extremities, designated as a condition code ICD-9 454.1, to be treated with ablation therapy, designated as treatment code CPT 36478.

At the time of the physician's request, petitioner's condition-varicose veins with inflammation-appeared on line 209 of the Prioritized List, which is above the funded line, but the proposed treatment-ablation-appeared on lines 525 and 648, in the unfunded part of the list, paired

with conditions other than varicose veins. For that reason, WOAH denied the request, explaining that OHP "covers certain medical treatments for specific health conditions" and that the "treatment that was requested is not funded for [petitioner's] health condition under the [OHP]."

Petitioner sought administrative review of the denial, and DMAP referred the hearing request to an administrative law judge (ALJ). DMAP, in defense of WOAH's denial, contended that only those condition/treatment pairs above the funding line are covered under the OHP. Petitioner saw things differently. She argued that, at the time of her request, HERC simply had "not assessed the need of this treatment for this condition under the current prioritized list," and, as a result, the determination of coverage should be determined solely by the terms of an administrative rule governing prior authorization: OAR 410-130-0200. Petitioner recited that, under subsection (4) of that rule, "Codes for which medical need has not been specified by the HERC shall be authorized based on medical appropriateness as the term is defined in OAR 410-120-0000." OAR 410-130-0200(4). In petitioner's view, medical appropriateness-not funding line placement-should be the sole determinant of coverage when the condition and treatment do not appear as a pair on the Prioritized List.

The ALJ agreed with DMAP's argument that, in the absence of a matched pair of codes for the condition and treatment, the proposed treatment was implicitly excluded from coverage as a matter of law without any further consideration. The ALJ explained:

"Because the codes appear on the Prioritized List, it is reasonable to infer that HERC did consider both diagnosis code 454.1 and procedure code 36478 for the Prioritized List in effect at the time of the denials. However, because the codes did not pair on any line of the Prioritized List, it is reasonable to infer that HERC had determined that the procedure was not medically appropriate for that diagnosis. It does not follow that, simply because the diagnosis and procedure codes were not paired on the Prioritized List, HERC did not consider medical need as related to these two codes."

(Emphasis added.) Based on that interpretative inference, the ALJ sustained WOAH's denial of petitioner's request. Petitioner sought reconsideration before the agency itself. DMAP denied reconsideration, effectively adhering to the ALJ's view that petitioner is eligible to receive only treatment that has been paired with her funded condition, and not the requested ablation treatment.

Thereafter, petitioner sought judicial review in this court. The parties continue to *376disagree over how OAR 410-141-0480 addresses coverage for treatments and conditions that are not paired above the funding line. On review, the parties have focused, after supplemental briefing, on another subsection of that rule-subsection (10)-that provides critical context for the ALJ's interpretation that unpaired codes on the Prioritized List meant that such treatments are automatically excluded from coverage. Considering subsection (10), we conclude that the ALJ's proposed interpretation cannot be squared with the text and context of the rule, and, as a consequence, DMAP should be required to consider and apply subsection (10) under a correct interpretation of that rule. ORS 183.482(8)(a).

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Bluebook (online)
410 P.3d 373, 289 Or. App. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasner-v-w-or-advanced-health-orctapp-2017.