Hca Health Services of Georgia, Inc. v. Employers Health Insurance Company

240 F.3d 982, 2001 WL 91380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 14, 2001
Docket99-11241
StatusPublished
Cited by187 cases

This text of 240 F.3d 982 (Hca Health Services of Georgia, Inc. v. Employers Health Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hca Health Services of Georgia, Inc. v. Employers Health Insurance Company, 240 F.3d 982, 2001 WL 91380 (11th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

This is an ERISA 1 case involving the denial of benefits allegedly due a patient under the terms of a group health insurance policy issued and administered by an insurance company. The patient underwent covered outpatient surgery at a medical center. At the time of surgery, the patient assigned to the medical center his right to recover 80% of the costs of the surgery from the insurance company. 2 Accordingly, the medical center billed the insurance company for the costs of the surgery. Although the amount of the bill was consonant with the usual and customary fee charged for such services, the insurance company reduced the bill by 25% and paid the medical center 80% of the reduced bill. The insurance company claims it was entitled to reduce the medical center’s bill by virtue of the following series of contracts: the medical center promised a third party that it would charge a discounted fee upon rendering specified medical services; the third party, in turn, “leased” the right to the discounted fee to a fourth party; then, unbeknownst to the patient and the medical center, the fourth party “leased” the right to the discounted fee to the insurance company.

The medical center demanded full payment of its bill and the insurance company refused. The medical center then brought this lawsuit on behalf of its assignee, the patient, seeking recovery of benefits due the patient under the terms of his health insurance policy. 3 On cross motions for *986 summary judgment, the district court granted the medical center the relief it sought, entering judgment for 80% of the full amount, of the medical center’s bill for services. 4 The insurance company now appeals that judgment. We affirm.

I.

A.

The complex relationships among the multiple actors in this case necessitates a brief “who’s who.” Software Builders, Inc. (“Software Builders”) 5 is the employer of the patient, Steven J. Denton (“Den-ton”) and sponsor of the welfare benefit plan 6 it purchased for its employees from the insurance company, Employers Health, Inc. (“EHI”). EHI 7 is the insurance company whose interpretation of the welfare benefit plan purchased by Software Builders is at issue in this case. Denton, 8 a plan participant in the welfare benefit plan sponsored by Software Builders and administered by EHI, is the patient who underwent outpatient surgery performed by the medical center, HCA Health Services of Atlanta, d/b/a Parkway Medical Center (“Parkway”). Parkway is the medical center that performed the surgery at issue in this case, the assignee of Denton’s claim against EHI, and party to a preferred provider network contract with MedView Services, Inc. (“MedView”). MedView is an entity that contracts with providers such as Parkway to form a preferred provider network which MedView then markets to third party payors, usually insurance companies. In its contract with MedView, Parkway agreed to accept seventy-five percent of its usual and customary fee when providing specified medical services to MedView Subscribers. 9 MedView leased 10 its preferred provider network to Health Strategies, Inc. (“HSI”). 11 HSI is both a manager of pro *987 vider networks (like MedView) and a vendor of provider discounts. As a vendor, it leases its networks (both the networks it forms on its own and the networks it leases from entities such as MedView) to insurance companies so that they may access the discounts that providers promised to accept as payment in full when they joined the network. HSI leased to EHI the right to access the discounts in HSI’s provider networks, including the network leased from MedView (which included Parkway as a provider), in return for a percentage of the savings EHI gained from availing itself of the discounted fees promised by providers who were members of the networks.

B.

On March 31, 1995, Software Builders applied to EHI for a group health insurance policy providing medical, surgical, and hospital care for Software Builders’ employees. Coverage under the policy became effective April 1, 1995, and a welfare benefit plan within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1) was established. In its contract with EHI, Software Builders elected to provide its employees with the Preferred Provider Organization (“PPO”) form of managed care. Typically, the PPO form of managed care operates as follows: health care providers, such as doctors and hospitals, form a network of providers either on their own or by contracting with a third-party entity created for the purpose of forming provider networks. This third-party entity acts as a middleman between the providers in the network and third party payors such as insurance companies. In this case, Parkway, a provider, contracted with MedView, a middleman, to become part of MedView’s preferred provider network.

In essence, a PPO is a network of health care providers organized to offer medical services at discounted rates. The PPO providers furnish their services at discounted rates because they expect to receive a higher volume of patients, i.e., participants in the welfare benefit plan offered by the insurance company. The increase in the volume of patients is a result of third party payors, who pay the bills for medical services plan participants receive, directing plan participants to providers in the PPO network through marketing materials and financial incentives. Because third party payors, such as insurance companies, are financially responsible for the costs of a plan participant’s covered medical care, it is in the third party payor’s best interest for the plan participant to receive medical care from a provider who has promised to accept a discounted fee. The use of financial incentives and other measures to direct plan participants to providers in the PPO is known in the health care industry as “steerage.”

Another component of the PPO form of managed care rests on the difference between “in-network” and “out-of-network” providers. Under the PPO form of managed care, providers in the network of health care providers who offer a payor discounted rates are often referred to as “in-network” providers. Conversely, providers who do not agree to offer the payor discounted rates are referred to as “out-of-network” providers.

In this case, EHI agreed to treat the providers in Private Health Care Systems (“PHCS”) as its in-network providers (also known as “preferred providers”) in return for PHCS members’ promises to discount their fees when providing medical services to EHI’s plan participants. Thus, when EHI contracted with Software Builders to offer a PPO form of managed care to Software Builders’ employees, the providers in PHCS became the in-network providers for Software Builders’ employees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 F.3d 982, 2001 WL 91380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hca-health-services-of-georgia-inc-v-employers-health-insurance-company-ca11-2001.