Stacy S. v. Boeing Co. Emp. Health Benefit Plan

344 F. Supp. 3d 1324
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedSeptember 25, 2018
DocketCase No.: 1:15-CV-72
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 344 F. Supp. 3d 1324 (Stacy S. v. Boeing Co. Emp. Health Benefit Plan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stacy S. v. Boeing Co. Emp. Health Benefit Plan, 344 F. Supp. 3d 1324 (D. Utah 2018).

Opinion

ROBERT J. SHELBY, United States District Judge

This case involves medical treatment that M.K., a minor, received from March 27 to July 1, 2013. Plaintiff, M.K.'s mother, brought this action for recovery of medical benefits that Defendants Boeing Company Employee Health Benefit Plan and ValueOptions (collectively, ValueOptions) denied. Plaintiff and ValueOptions each filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. For the reasons stated below, Plaintiff's Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED1 and ValueOptions' Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED.2

BACKGROUND

M.K. is a beneficiary of the Boeing Company Employee Health Benefit Plan (the Plan). Drawing on the criteria explained in the Plan, ValueOptions denied Plaintiff's request for coverage for M.K.'s stay at Aspen, a residential treatment center (RTC) in Utah.

The Plan Language

The Plan provides benefits for Boeing employees, spouses, and dependents. The summary plan description (SPD) states that the Boeing Company Board of Directors designated a committee to serve as Plan Administrator, which has the "absolute discretion" to "[d]elegate its administrative duties and responsibilities to persons or entities of its choice such as the Boeing Service Center, the service representatives, and employees of the Company."3 The SPD also states that "[a]ll decisions that the Plan Administrator (or any duly authorized designees) makes with respect to any matter arising under the Plan and any other Plan documents are final and binding."4 The SPD defines "service representative" as "an agent that the Company has contracted with to make benefit determinations and administer benefit payments under the plans described in this booklet."5 ValueOptions is listed as the service representative for mental health benefits.6 Under the heading "Who Administers the Benefits," the SPD states, "the Company has contracted various service *1328representatives to handle the day-to-day administration of the plan. Service representatives answer benefit questions, make benefit decisions, pay claims, process claim appeals, and account for premiums, service fees and claim costs."7

The SPD also states a beneficiary may file a civil action in the district court within 180 days after "[d]ecision on appeal of your claim for benefits or eligibility."8

Denial of Coverage

This case stems from a denial of coverage for M.K.'s stay at Aspen, an RTC. Prior to her stay at Aspen, M.K. had been hospitalized at Seattle Children's Hospital after Plaintiff discovered M.K. was cutting herself. M.K.'s physician at Seattle Children's Hospital modified M.K.'s medication, and M.K. was discharged on March 9, 2013, with her physician's recommendation that she participate in outpatient therapy.9 The physician noted that M.K. "reported fewer thoughts to harm herself, and these stopped before discharge."10

M.K. was admitted to Aspen on March 27, 2013. An Aspen representative contacted ValueOptions to request authorization for M.K.'s inpatient mental health services. ValueOptions' medical director reviewed Aspen's request and concluded M.K. did not meet the criteria for acute in-patient hospitalization because she had shown improvement concerning her psychotic symptoms.11 Instead, the medical director informed Plaintiff that an appropriate level of care would be partial hospitalization with intensive/structured setting.

ValueOptions notified Plaintiff of her right to appeal this decision in a letter sent March 29, 2013.12 The letter stated that the proposed admission "was for evaluation and treatment of behaviors and symptoms of psychosis such as disorganized thoughts, hearing voices, or aggressive behaviors, indicating a risk of harm to self or others."13 Based on the information provided as of March 27, 2013, ValueOptions stated its review did not "indicate the presence of behavior or thinking which would meet criteria for Acute Inpatient Hospitalization with 24 hour Medical Supervision."14 Rather, ValueOptions stated that "[a]n appropriate level of care to the current needs of the patient is Partial Hospitalization with Intensive/Structured setting."15

Aspen notified ValueOptions that if M.K. stepped down to a lower level of care such as RTC services, Aspen would contact ValueOptions for precertification.16 Although Aspen provided M.K. with RTC services, it did not contact ValueOptions for precertification.

On May 13, ValueOptions received a claim from Aspen for RTC services provided from March 27 to April 30, 2013. ValueOptions denied the claim on the basis that the services had not been authorized.17 After receiving more information from Plaintiff, ValueOptions' medical director reviewed the claim again in October 2013 and determined the services could not be certified because the criteria for RTC services had not been met.18 The medical director noted that many of the symptoms *1329reported occurred before M.K.'s hospitalization and that M.K.'s outpatient therapist had expressed a concern that Plaintiff was seeking long-term placement for M.K. because she did not want her to return home.

ValueOptions' letter to Plaintiff notifying her of this decision recited the same clinical rationale as the March 27 letter, except it replaced "Acute Inpatient Hospitalization with 24 hour Medical Supervision" with "Residential Treatment Setting."19

Plaintiff requested an appeal of the denial in April 2014. Plaintiff included a letter from M.K.'s outpatient therapist, who stated that long-term residential treatment "seems to be consistent with [his] impressions gathered over time, of [M.K.]'s growing needs."20 A psychiatrist who was not involved in prior decisions reviewed M.K.'s records and advised that RTC services should not be certified because M.K. did not exhibit any behavior or thinking that would warrant RTC services and that she could have been treated safely in a home setting through adolescent partial hospitalization or intensive outpatient treatment.21

ValueOptions notified Plaintiff of this decision on May 1, 2014.22 The denial stated that ValueOptions' review "included any additional information received in support of your appeal." The denial was based on the psychiatrist's determination that M.K. "could have safely been treated in Adolescent Partial Hospitalization or Intensive Outpatient Treatment and remained in the home setting" and that she did not "show any behavior or thinking which would need the requested level of [residential treatment] care." The denial notified Plaintiff that the review was "the final level of appeal available to you through ValueOptions and your plan," but it did not notify Plaintiff of her 180-day time limit to file an action with the district court.

Plaintiff requested an external appeal, which Allmed was randomly selected to conduct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 F. Supp. 3d 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stacy-s-v-boeing-co-emp-health-benefit-plan-utd-2018.