Indiana Federation of Dentists, an Unincorporated Association v. Federal Trade Commission

745 F.2d 1124
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 12, 1984
Docket83-1700
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 745 F.2d 1124 (Indiana Federation of Dentists, an Unincorporated Association v. Federal Trade Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Federation of Dentists, an Unincorporated Association v. Federal Trade Commission, 745 F.2d 1124 (7th Cir. 1984).

Opinions

COFFEY, Circuit Judge.

The Indiana Federation of Dentists (“IFD”) petitions this court to review an order of the Federal Trade Commission (“Commission”) requiring the IFD and its member dentists to “cease and desist from engaging” in a collective refusal to comply with the group dental health care insurers’ directive to submit copies of a patient’s dental radiographs along with the patient’s insurance claim form. We conclude that under a rule of reason analysis, the evidence presented at the administrative hearing failed to establish that the conduct of the IFD and its member dentists had an anticompetitive effect in a relevant market. Accordingly, we vacate the Commission’s “cease and desist” order.

I

The parties admit that the controversy in this case arises from two alleged cost-containment provisions that insurance companies include within their group dental health care plans.1 These provisions are entitled “predetermination of claims” and “least expensive adequate course of treatment.” According to the former plan, the dentist and patient may, at their discretion, submit a proposed course of dental treatment to the insurer for review. The insurer, in turn, will provide the dentist and patient with an estimate of the insurance benefits to be paid for the proposed treatment. The “least expensive adequate course of treatment” plan provides that for [1127]*1127all courses of dental treatment, whether proposed or completed, the group dental health care insurer will pay benefits only for the least expensive treatment that is “commonly accepted as providing good dental care.” Indiana Federation of Dentists, 101 F.T.C. 57, 159 n. 4 (1983).

In an effort to enforce these alleged cost-containment provisions, the group dental health care insurers direct dentists to submit copies of a patient’s dental radiographs (“x-rays”) along with the patient’s insurance claim form. The claim form and x-rays, if submitted, are initially reviewed by lay personnel employed by the insurance company.2 These lay employees have the authority to approve the proposed or completed course of dental treatment. If an insurer’s lay employee questions a particular course of treatment, the claim form and x-rays are transmitted to a licensed dentist, selected and hired by the insurer to review dental claims. Based upon an analysis of the claim form and x-rays alone, without a patient case history much less a complete dental examination, the insurer’s employed dentist determines the least expensive type of treatment that will, from the insurer’s standpoint, provide “good dental care.”

The instant case concerns the practice of the 84 current and 8 former IFD member dentists who collectively refused to comply with the group dental health care insurers’ directive to submit copies of a patient’s dental x-rays along with the patient’s insurance claim form. The IFD maintains that “[p]roper diagnosis and treatment planning predicates the doctor correlating all diagnostic aids, with a history and with all clinical findings.” Id. at 119, 129 (emphasis added). In accord with this policy of quality and proper dental care, the IFD member dentists “provide all diagnostic aids [including x-rays] to third parties on an in-office basis and with the consent of the patient.” Id. at 121-22.3 Furthermore, it is the IFD policy that the insurers’ employed dentists conduct this examination and review of all diagnostic and clinical aids used in formulating a proper course of dental treatment. Pursuant to Indiana law, “[a]ny person ... who ... offers to diagnose or professes to diagnose ... any of the lesions or diseases of the human oral cavity, teeth, gums, maxillary or mandibular structures” is practicing dentistry and must be licensed. Ind.Code §§ 25-14-1-1, 25-14-1-23 (1982). The IFD asserts that the unlicensed lay personnel employed by group dental health care insurers to review claims engage in the unlawful practice of dentistry when they examine and “diagnose” dental x-rays for purposes of benefit determination. Thus, the IFD concludes that the submission of dental x-rays to unlicensed lay personnel for diagnostic procedures is aiding and abetting the unlicensed practice of dentistry in violation of Indiana state law.4

[1128]*1128According to the findings of fact of the Administrative Law Judge (“AU”), as adopted by the Commission, there were 3,100 licensed dentists practicing within the State of Indiana in 1974 and 85-88 percent of those dentists belonged to the Indiana Dental Association (“IDA”). The IDA had an official “Manual on Group Funded Dental Care Programs” (“Manual”) recommending the procedures that member dentists follow when treating patients covered by a group dental health care insurance plan. The Manual included a section entitled “I.D.A. Policy Regarding Group Dental Care,” providing in pertinent part:

“The method of authorization of dental health care under pre-payment plans should be limited to determining the eligibility of the patient and extent of liability of the plan and should prevent any interference with the dentist-patient relationship or with the judgment and decision of the dentist. The plan must not require the dentist to submit radio-graphs (x-rays) to a third party.”

Indiana Federation of Dentists, 101 F.T.C. at 83 (emphasis original) (footnote omitted). The Manual also contained a form letter, entitled “To All My Patients,” that provided in pertinent part:

“Dental radiographs (x-rays) are a part of the dentist’s legal health records. They are available for valid review by a qualified representative(s) of your insurance company in this office. Radio-graphs (x-rays) will not be submitted to third parties for their use in determination of benefits (e.g., least expensive adequate procedure, or optional course of treatment) because a determination of an adequate treatment plan can only be made after a knowledge of the following:
A. Complete patient evaluation.
B. Radiographs.
C. Additional diagnostic procedures as required.”

Id. at 83, 162-63. In addition to formulating these guidelines for member dentists, the IDA undertook a pledge project in 1973 to obtain written pledges from their members that they would not participate in group funded dental health care plans unless such plans were previously approved by the IDA. It was the IDA’s position that “proper dental treatment is predicated on a diagnosis from many types of examination and not radiographs alone.” Id. at 90. According to the IDA statistics, approximately 85 percent of the member dentists agreed to support the IDA policy.

The ALJ found that the “smaller insurers had generally gone along with the Indiana dentists’ demands” to not require the submission of dental x-rays alone, but to review all diagnostic aids in determining a proper course of dental treatment. The ALJ further found that in July 1971, Aetna Life and Casualty Insurance Co. (“Aetna”) insisted that Indiana dentists submit copies of dental x-rays for patients covered under Aetna’s group dental plan with International Harvester and the United Auto Workers. Only a “small percentage of dentists” in the Allen County-Fort Wayne, Indiana area complied with Aetna’s directive.

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Bluebook (online)
745 F.2d 1124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-federation-of-dentists-an-unincorporated-association-v-federal-ca7-1984.