Post Acute Medical at Hammond, LLC v. Burwell

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMay 22, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 2016-1257
StatusPublished

This text of Post Acute Medical at Hammond, LLC v. Burwell (Post Acute Medical at Hammond, LLC v. Burwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Post Acute Medical at Hammond, LLC v. Burwell, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

POST ACUTE MEDICAL AT HAMMOND, LLC,

Plaintiff, Civil Action No. 16-1257 (DLF) v.

ALEX M. AZAR II,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Post Acute Medical at Hammond, a hospital that qualifies as a provider of services under

the Medicare Act, challenges a rule promulgated by the U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS)

that reduced Post Acute’s reimbursement amount for services provided in 2016. Post Acute

claims that the rule violates the Administrative Procedure Act and the Medicare Act because it is

arbitrary and capricious and was promulgated with insufficient notice. Before the Court are Post

Acute’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Dkt. 16, and HHS Secretary Alex M. Azar II’s Cross-

Motion for Summary Judgment, Dkt. 17.1 For the reasons that follow, the Court will deny Post

Acute’s motion and grant the Secretary’s motion.

I. BACKGROUND

Medicare is a federal health insurance program administered by HHS that primarily

serves elderly or disabled people. Under the Medicare Act, when a long-term care hospital

1 Sylvia M. Burwell was HHS Secretary when Post Acute filed its complaint, but Alex M. Azar II has since taken that position and is automatically substituted as the defendant in this case under Rule 25(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. discharges a Medicare beneficiary, HHS pays the hospital with predetermined standard rates

rather than reimbursing actual costs. See Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Balanced Budget

Refinement Act, Pub. L. No. 106-113, § 123 (1999) (codified as a note to 42 U.S.C. § 1395ww)

(directing the HHS Secretary to “develop a per discharge prospective payment system for

payment for inpatient hospital services of long-term care hospitals”). The hospital receives a

certain fixed amount per patient no matter what it actually spends on the patient.

In implementing this prospective payment system, HHS calculates a long-term care

hospital’s reimbursement amount by approximating the costs that a typical, similarly situated

hospital would incur. HHS estimates the per patient average cost incurred by hospitals

nationwide, then factors in several adjustments. See generally 42 C.F.R. §§ 412.513, 412.515,

412.517, 412.523. The most prominent of these adjustments accounts for a patient’s diagnosis.

See id. § 412.515. Another adjustment—central to this case—is a labor-cost adjustment that

accounts for the varying wage levels across the country. Id. § 412.523(d)(4); see also Pub. L.

No. 106-113, § 123 (codified as a note to 42 U.S.C. § 1395ww) (requiring the prospective

payment system to “include an adequate patient classification system that is based on diagnosis-

related groups . . . and that reflects the differences in patient resource use and costs”); Medicare,

Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 106-554,

§ 307(b)(1) (2000) (codified as a note to 42 U.S.C. § 1395ww) (“The Secretary shall examine

and may provide for appropriate adjustments to the long-term hospital payment system,

including adjustments to [diagnosis-related groups] weights [and] area wage adjustments.”). A

hospital’s labor-cost adjustment does not reflect the actual wages it pays; instead the adjustment

reflects the average wages paid by hospitals in the area. See 42 C.F.R. § 412.523(d)(4); id.

2 § 412.525(c)(1). If a particular geographic area has high hospital labor costs, a hospital in that

area will receive a correspondingly higher Medicare reimbursement.

To determine a hospital’s labor-cost adjustment, HHS must assign it to a geographic area.

HHS does this by using geographic classifications issued by the Office of Management and

Budget (OMB). The OMB defines “Metropolitan Statistical Area” as consisting of an

“urbanized area of 50,000 or more population, plus adjacent territory that has a high degree of

social and economic integration with the core.” Office of Mgmt. & Budget, Bulletin No. 15–01

(July 15, 2015). Meanwhile, the OMB defines a “Micropolitan Statistical Area” identically to

Metropolitan Statistical Areas except with a smaller urbanized area: the urbanized area contains

at least 10,000 but fewer than 50,000 people. Id. HHS defines Metropolitan Statistical Areas as

urban areas and all other areas as rural areas. 42 C.F.R. § 412.503. For a hospital located within

a Metropolitan Statistical Area, HHS classifies the hospital’s labor-market area as that

Metropolitan Statistical Area. For a rural hospital, HHS classifies the hospital’s labor-market

area as the entirety of the rural area of the state. See Fiscal Year 2003 Rule, 67 Fed. Reg. 55,954,

56,015–19, 56,057–75 (Aug. 30, 2002). HHS collects wage data from acute care hospitals to

determine the labor-cost adjustment for each labor-market area. See Fiscal Year 2016 Rule, 80

Fed. Reg. 49,326, 49,797 (Aug. 17, 2015).

This system has been in place for more than a decade. More recently, HHS’s only

relevant changes have been in response to OMB’s reclassification of the country’s geographic

areas based on the 2010 census. With the new census, certain areas moved between the

Metropolitan Statistical Area and rural categories. HHS adopted these reclassifications for fiscal

year 2015. See Fiscal Year 2015 Rule, 79 Fed. Reg. 49,854, 50,180–85, 50,391–96 (Aug. 22,

3 2014).2 The Rule challenged here, which concerns fiscal year 2016, carried over the geographic

classifications from the 2015 fiscal year (that were based on the 2010 census). See 80 Fed. Reg.

49,326.

Post Acute is located in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana, and was reclassified from a rural

category into the Hammond, Louisiana Metropolitan Statistical Area after the 2010 census. For

fiscal year 2014—the last year with the pre-census classifications—the Louisiana statewide rural

labor-market area wage index was .7585. Dkt. 17-1. For fiscal year 2015, the Hammond wage

index was .9452. Dkt. 17-2. For fiscal year 2016, the Hammond wage index was .8167. Dkt.

17-6. In sum, Post Acute’s labor-costs adjustment rose significantly when it transitioned from

rural to urban, but dropped from fiscal year 2015 to fiscal year 2016. The labor-cost adjustment

for 2016 resulted in a reimbursement approximately $1,046,874 lower than it would have been

with the 2015 Hammond wage index (though approximately $983,840 higher than it would have

been with the 2016 Louisiana rural index). See Post Acute Mot. Summ. J. at 19, Dkt. 16; Dkt.

17-7. The fluctuation is explained partly by the fact that the Hammond Metropolitan Statistical

Area has only two acute care hospitals from which HHS collects wage data. Dkt. 17-8. The

smaller the number of hospitals going into the calculation, the more volatile an area’s wage index

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