Productive MD, LLC v. Aetna Health, Inc.

969 F. Supp. 2d 901, 56 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1841, 2013 WL 4587859, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 122609
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedAugust 28, 2013
DocketCase No. 3:12-cv-00052
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 969 F. Supp. 2d 901 (Productive MD, LLC v. Aetna Health, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Productive MD, LLC v. Aetna Health, Inc., 969 F. Supp. 2d 901, 56 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1841, 2013 WL 4587859, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 122609 (M.D. Tenn. 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ALETA A. TRAUGER, District Judge.

Pending before the court are several motions filed by defendants Aetna Health, Inc. and Aetna Life Insurance Company, Inc. (collectively, “Aetna”) and by the plaintiff, Productive MD, LLC (“Productive MD”).

Aetna has filed a Partial Motion to Dismiss Second Amended Complaint (Docket No. 108) (“Motion to Dismiss ERISA-Governed Claims”) and a Partial Motion to Dismiss the Non-ERISA Claims (Docket No. 116) (“Motion to Dismiss Non-ERISA Claims”), with respect to which Productive MD filed Responses in opposition (Docket Nos. 140 (non-ERISA) and 141 (ERISA)), Aetna filed a consolidated Reply (Docket No. 146), and Productive MD filed a SurReply (Docket No. 152). Aetna has also filed a Motion to Sever the Non-ERISA Claims (Docket No. 86), to which Productive MD filed a Response in opposition (Docket No. 90), and Productive MD filed a Reply (Docket No. 93).1

Productive MD has filed a Motion for Order Specifying Contents of Administrative Record (Docket No. 95), with respect to which Aetna has filed an unopposed Motion for Leave to file an additional legal brief (Docket No. 125). Productive MD has also filed a Motion for Protective Order (Docket No. 134), with respect to which it has filed an unopposed Motion to Supplement (Docket No. 144).

For the reasons stated herein, the Motion to Dismiss ERISA-Governed Claims will be granted in part and denied in part, the Motion to Dismiss Non-ERISA Claims will be granted in part and denied in part, the Motion to Sever will be granted in part and conditionally denied in part, the Motion for Order Specifying Content of the Administrative Record will be denied without prejudice, and the Motion for Protective Order will be granted.

BACKGROUND2

I. Professional and Technical Component Payment

Productive MD provides medical services by administering diagnostic tests at the request of treating physicians. The tests include EKG testing, cardiopulmonary exercise tests, pulmonary function tests, and resting metabolic tests. The tests can identify heart disease and lung [907]*907disease, among other conditions. The tests can also help rule out certain medical conditions in an effort to avoid more expensive and invasive testing. Productive MD only tests a patient after a treating physician determines that the test is medically necessary.

In connection with each test at issue in this case, Productive MD had the patient sign a consent form (“Patient Consent Form”), which, in most relevant part, contained the following language:

I authorize payment of medical benefits to Productive MD for services rendered. I authorize the release of any medical or other information necessary to process this claim. I also request payment of government benefits either to myself or to Productive MD.

(See SAC Attachment G.) Productive MD argues that this paragraph, particularly the first sentence, constituted a valid assignment of each patient’s right to recover health insurance benefits under the patient’s insurance plan.

Once each test was performed, the treating physician and Productive MD, purporting to “stand in the shoes” of the insured patient under the patient assignments, filed separate claims for payment to the patient’s insurer. Productive MD requested payment for the “technical” component of each test, which included providing equipment and a technician to administer the test. With respect to that same test, the prescribing physician separately and simultaneously requested payment for the “professional” component, which included interpreting and utilizing the test results for the patient’s benefit.

Aetna administered (and in some cases also insured) health insurance plans for some of the patients on whom Productive MD performed a diagnostic test at a physician’s request. This case concerns claims for payment by Productive MD to Aetna related to 167 of these patients.

II. Aetna’s Non-Payment of Technical Component Claims by Productive MD

Certain medical providers contract with Aetna to join Aetna’s “network” of medical providers. In return for joining Aetna’s network, these “in-network” providers agree to lower reimbursement rates (for insurance claims administered by Aetna) than they might otherwise charge. Relative to Aetna, the physicians who ordered the tests at issue here were “in-network” providers, whereas Productive MD was not.

Before 2005, Aetna regularly paid Productive MD’s “technical component” claims for each test performed. However, from that year forward, Aetna began regularly denying most claims by Productive MD. By 2008, Aetna was paying less than 2% of Productive MD’s technical component claims. After Productive MD made an unspecified legal challenge to Aetna’s handling of those denied claims, the parties in July 2009 reached a negotiated settlement of the outstanding claims for payment relating to claims for dates of service through May 31, 2009.

Following that 2009 settlement, Aetna has denied virtually all technical component claims filed by Productive MD.3 At the same time, Aetna has generally allowed — in whole or in part — the profes[908]*908sional component claims filed by the physicians with respect to the same tests. Productive MD alleges that there is a simple explanation for this incongruence: Aetna is attempting to punish Productive MD for refusing to join Aetna’s provider network at the lower reimbursement rates that Aetna seeks.

Productive MD’s Second Amended Complaint attaches data compilations that reflect obvious discrepancies between Aetna’s handling of the professional component claims on the one hand and the technical component claims on the other. CCompare SAC Attachments A-l and A-2 (listing, by patient, claims by Productive MD that Aetna has not paid), with SAC Attachment D (listing, by patient and CPT code, Aetna’s handling of claims for payment billed by physicians).)4 For example, as to diagnostic testing performed by Productive MD on “Patient 3”,5 Aetna allowed payment under eight of the nine professional component CPT codes submitted by the physician (Attachment D at p. 1), but completely denied Productive MD’s request for payment for performing that test (see SAC Attachment A-l at p. 1). This is just one example among many: of the 167 tests at issue, Aetna completely denied Productive MD’s claims for payment as to 162 of those tests. With respect to the remaining tests (Patients 22, 89, 129, 163, and 173), Aetna paid only a small fraction of Productive MD’s bills ($1,172.96 paid out of $8,482.00 billed). Cumulatively, by the court’s calculation, Aetna has not paid $382,146.14 out of $390,628.14 in disputed charges billed by Productive MD. In other words, during the relevant three-year time period, Aetna denied 98% of Productive MD’s charges (collectively), including all of the charges for 97% of the tests performed by Productive MD.6

[909]*909Productive MD contends that Aetna could not logically pay the professional component claims while simultaneously denying the technical component claims.

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969 F. Supp. 2d 901, 56 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1841, 2013 WL 4587859, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 122609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/productive-md-llc-v-aetna-health-inc-tnmd-2013.