Orlando General Hosp. v. DHRS

567 So. 2d 962, 1990 WL 139628
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 27, 1990
Docket89-976
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 567 So. 2d 962 (Orlando General Hosp. v. DHRS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orlando General Hosp. v. DHRS, 567 So. 2d 962, 1990 WL 139628 (Fla. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

567 So.2d 962 (1990)

ORLANDO GENERAL HOSPITAL, Appellant,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, Appellee.

No. 89-976.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

September 27, 1990.

James A. Burt and James A. Gustino of Burt & Gustino, P.A., Orlando, for appellant.

Richard C. Bellak and Hala Mary Ayoub of Fowler, White, Gillen, Boggs, Villareal & Banker, P.A., Tallahassee, for appellee.

PETERSON, Judge.

The Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services (HRS) rendered a final order denying payment for the treatment of chemically-dependent Medicaid patients *963 in an administrative appeal from which Orlando General Hospital (OGH) appeals. We reverse.

After HRS refused payment for six patients based upon HRS's conclusion that treatment was not medically necessary, a formal hearing was held upon a petition for a formal administrative proceeding filed by OGH, pursuant to section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes. The hearing officer recommended that payment be made to OGH for the patients. HRS rejected the recommendation, indicating that the case was significant since it represented "the first formal challenge to a reimbursement denial" and that "[t]here is less deference to fact finding by the Hearing Officer in matters infused with overriding policy consideration." Baptist Hospital, Inc. v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 500 So.2d 620 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986), was cited in support of the last quoted "deference" rule. We will review later HRS's interpretation of the authority for the deference rule which is contrary to the rule that an agency may not substitute its own factual findings for those of the hearing officer unless it states with particularity in its order that the officer's findings of fact were not based on competent substantial evidence. B.B. v. Department of Health & Rehabilitative Services, 542 So.2d 1362 (Fla. 3d DCA 1989); see also § 120.57(1)(b)(10), Fla. Stat. (1987).[1]

HRS urges that a treating facility should be paid to provide only necessary hospital care and should not be paid for what HRS views as a liberal "cost-is-no-object" approach to care of indigent patients who are drug addicts and alcoholics. There can be no doubt that HRS's concern for protecting public funds is admirable and in conformity with the duties assigned to it. On the other hand, medical providers are placed in an awkward position where reimbursement by HRS may be denied. Medical providers are constantly supplied with new, more sophisticated, and more costly tools with which to administer treatment, and the failure to use these tools may be regarded by some as tortious.

In this case, OGH used inpatient treatment while HRS found alternative, less costly, outpatient centers were available and that the physicians at OGH did not consider these alternatives in prescribing treatment. The hearing officer appropriately found that the test to apply to OGH's claim for Medicaid reimbursement is whether the treatment was a "medical necessity." Rules 10C-7.039(1)(a) and 10C-7.039(4)(a)(3) of the Florida Administrative Code allow reimbursement for inpatient hospital services under the Medicaid program only if those services are medically necessary. The hearing officer also found that it appeared no statutory definition of the term "medically necessary" existed, but determined from an unreported case furnished to her by HRS that a service is medically necessary if:

a. The requested service is reasonably calculated to prevent, diagnose, correct, cure, alleviate, or prevent the worsening of conditions in the recipient that: (i) endanger life; or (ii) cause suffering or pain; or (iii) result in illness or infirmity; or (iv) threaten to cause or aggravate a handicap; or (v) cause physical deformity or malfunction; and
b. There is no other equally effective (i) more conservative, or (ii) substantially less costly course of treatment available or suitable for the recipient requesting the service. For the purpose of this section "course of treatment" may include mere observation or, where appropriate, no treatment at all.

Mead v. Burdman, case number 818663, Superior Court, State of Washington for *964 King County, Consent Order, May 20, 1978. HRS's final order stated that the twopronged test adopted by the hearing officer was correct, that is, whether the admission and treatment alleviated a harmful medical condition as the first prong and whether treatment could have been provided in a more economical setting than an acute care hospital as the second prong.

Several of the hearing officer's findings of fact relating to the second prong were rejected by HRS. The rejections included the hearing officer's finding that the results through Medicaid screening criteria, published by Interquality Publishers, are not binding upon physicians and that OGH complied with a Medicaid system of utilization review regarding the patients. The Medicaid screening criteria are referred to by those in the industry as "ISD screens," an acronym for "intensity of service, severity of illness, and discharge." ISD screens are applied to each patient admission by a registered nurse who is a "utilization review coordinator." The coordinator is an integral part of a "utilization review plan" that the federal regulations require each hospital to have in effect in order to ensure that each Medicare patient meets medical necessity criteria for admission. If the coordinator determines that a patient does not meet the ISD screen criteria, the matter is referred to a "utilization review physician" who then confers with the patient's attending physician if he feels initially that the criteria are not met. If both physicians feel that the criteria are not met, a third physician may be brought into the process. The review does not end at this point, however. After the treatment is completed and payment is requested, the decision to provide inpatient services is reviewed for HRS by a peer review organization (PRO). In the instant case, it was PRO's initial determination that the treatment "was not medically necessary because it could have been provided in an outpatient setting" that precipitated OGH's hearing before the hearing officer.

At the hearing, HRS presented an ISD-9 screen, and an OGH physician/witness testified he had seen the screen but had not used it in relation to the six disputed patients. The physician explained that the screen was designed for psychiatric admissions and that, while there may be overlapping applications for chemically-dependent patients, use of the screen for chemically-dependent patients would be inappropriate. Another OGH physician/witness used criteria that were not derived from Medicaid rules because he had never seen them. A PRO representative testified that, if a patient's symptoms did not fit within the screens, the "system" allows the utilization review physicians or "committee" to make a decision as to medical necessity completely independent of the ill-fitting screen. HRS's physician/witness, Dr. Macaluso, testified that ISD psychiatric criteria are "conditionally relevant to chemical dependencies but that there is certainly debate in this field." While he disagreed that the criteria used by OGH physicians for admission to the acute care hospital were appropriate, he did not think any physician is absolutely bound by the ISD psychiatric screen criteria. He testified, "If we admit ... Medicaid patients, to some extent we're limited by those criteria. And we can override them. I have done it."

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Bluebook (online)
567 So. 2d 962, 1990 WL 139628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orlando-general-hosp-v-dhrs-fladistctapp-1990.