The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hospital Authority D/B/A Erlanger Health System v. United Healthcare Plan of The River Valley, Inc. D/B/A Americhoice and Tennessee Attorney General

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 6, 2014
DocketM2013-00942-COA-R9-CV
StatusPublished

This text of The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hospital Authority D/B/A Erlanger Health System v. United Healthcare Plan of The River Valley, Inc. D/B/A Americhoice and Tennessee Attorney General (The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hospital Authority D/B/A Erlanger Health System v. United Healthcare Plan of The River Valley, Inc. D/B/A Americhoice and Tennessee Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hospital Authority D/B/A Erlanger Health System v. United Healthcare Plan of The River Valley, Inc. D/B/A Americhoice and Tennessee Attorney General, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 22, 2013 Session

THE CHATTANOOGA-HAMILTON COUNTY HOSPITAL AUTHORITY D/B/A ERLANGER HEALTH SYSTEM V. UNITED HEALTHCARE PLAN OF THE RIVER VALLEY, INC. D/B/A AMERICHOICE AND TENNESSEE ATTORNEY GENERAL

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 091253II Carol L. McCoy, Chancellor

No. M2013-00942-COA-R9-CV -Filed June 6, 2014

Hospital filed an action against TennCare managed care organization (“MCO”) for breach of contract and unjust enrichment when MCO refused to pay Hospital’s standard charges for emergency services and follow-up care. Hospital was not part of MCO’s “provider network” under the TennCare regulations and therefore was “non-contract” provider. MCO alleged Hospital was required to accept as payment the rate TennCare specified in its regulations. MCO filed motion for summary judgment, and the trial court dismissed the portion of the complaint to which the TennCare regulations may apply due to lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The trial court determined the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act (“UAPA”) divested it of jurisdiction because Hospital did not first seek a declaratory order from the Bureau of TennCare regarding the applicability of its regulations to Hospital’s dispute with MCO. Hospital appealed the dismissal of its claims, and we reverse. Because Hospital is not challenging applicability or validity of TennCare regulations, UAPA does not divest trial court of jurisdiction.

Tenn. R. App. P. 9 Interlocutory Appeal; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which F RANK G. C LEMENT, J R. and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, JJ., joined.

James Nathaniel Bowen, II, Steven Allen Riley, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hospital Authority d/b/a Erlanger Health System. Erin Palmer Polly, J. Mark Tipps, John C. Hayworth, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, UnitedHealthcare Plan of the River Valley, Inc. d/b/a AmeriChoice.

Robert E. Cooper, Linda A. Ross, Sue Ann Sheldon, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee/intervenor, Tennessee Attorney General.

OPINION

I. B ACKGROUND

The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hospital Authority d/b/a Erlanger Health System (“Erlanger”) is a not-for-profit tertiary care medical center based in Chattanooga, Tennessee. UnitedHealthcare Plan of the River Valley, Inc. d/b/a AmeriChoice (“AmeriChoice”) is a for- profit managed care organization (“MCO”) based in Illinois that has contracted with the State of Tennessee to participate in the TennCare program. TennCare is Tennessee’s managed care system for Medicaid-eligible individuals residing in Tennessee.

To provide healthcare services to the individuals enrolled in TennCare, MCOs enter into private contracts with healthcare providers and reimburse the providers at mutually agreed upon rates for the medical services they provide. The providers that enter into these contracts with MCOs are referred to as “participating” providers, and this group of providers constitutes an MCO’s “provider network.” Providers of medical services that do not have a contract with an MCO, but that provide services to an MCO’s enrollees nonetheless, are referred to as “non-participating” or “non-contract” providers.

Pursuant to the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act1 (“EMTALA”), all providers of medical services are required to administer emergency services to anyone who presents himself or herself to the provider, regardless of whether the patient can pay for the services, is insured, or is insured by an MCO that has contracted with the provider for the provision of these services. Erlanger and AmeriChoice have a limited service contract with respect to certain obstetric and pediatric services. However, they do not have a full-service contract that covers other types of healthcare services that Erlanger may provide to AmeriChoice’s enrollees. Thus, if an individual covered by TennCare and enrolled with AmeriChoice as his or her MCO presents himself or herself at Erlanger’s emergency room, Erlanger is required by federal law to treat that individual and continue to provide necessary services until the individual is transferred to another provider or is released.

1 42 U.S.C. § 1395d, et seq.

2 This case involves the rate at which AmeriChoice is required to reimburse Erlanger for two categories of medical care Erlanger has provided to AmeriChoice’s TennCare enrollees since January 1, 2009, which is when the contract between Erlanger and AmeriChoice for these services expired. The two categories include services Erlanger was required to render under EMTALA: (1) outpatient emergency services and (2) medically necessary inpatient services required as a result of the outpatient emergency services.

Once the contract between Erlanger and AmeriChoice lapsed for these EMTALA services on January 1, 2009, Erlanger became a “non-participating” or “non-contract” provider with regard to its provision of these services. As part of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (“DRA”), the federal government addressed the rate at which these non-contract providers of emergency services are to be compensated:

Any provider of emergency services that does not have in effect a contract with a Medicaid managed care entity that establishes payment amounts for services furnished to a beneficiary enrolled in the entity’s Medicaid managed care plan must accept as payment in full no more than the amounts (less any payments for indirect costs of medical education and direct costs of graduate medical education) that it could collect if the beneficiary received medical assistance under this subchapter other than through enrollment in such an entity. In a State where rates paid to hospitals under the State plan are negotiated by contract and not publicly released, the payment amount applicable under this subparagraph shall be the average contract rate that would apply under the State plan for general acute care hospitals or the average contract rate that would apply under such plan for tertiary hospitals.

42 U.S.C. § 1396u-2(b)(2)(D) (emphasis added).

In response to this legislation, the Tennessee General Assembly passed Tennessee Code Annotated § 71-5-108. This statute directed TennCare to set out a payment methodology consistent with the DRA regarding emergency services furnished by non- contract providers to individuals covered by TennCare:

The TennCare bureau is directed to submit a state plan amendment to the centers for medicare and medicaid services that sets out a payment methodology for medicaid enrollees who are not also enrolled in medicare, consistent with provisions in § 6085 of the federal Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, regarding emergency services furnished by non-contract providers for managed care enrollees. The payment amount shall be the average contract rate that would apply under the state plan for general acute care hospitals. A

3 tiered grouping of hospitals by size or services may be utilized to administer these payments. The payment methodology developed pursuant to this section shall be budget neutral for the state fiscal year 2007-2008 when compared to the actual experience for emergency services furnished by non-contract providers for medicaid managed care enrollees prior to January 1, 2007. It is the intent that this section only applies to the emergency services furnished by non-contract providers for medicaid managed care enrollees.

Tenn. Code Ann.

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The Chattanooga-Hamilton County Hospital Authority D/B/A Erlanger Health System v. United Healthcare Plan of The River Valley, Inc. D/B/A Americhoice and Tennessee Attorney General, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-chattanooga-hamilton-county-hospital-authority-dba-erlanger-health-tennctapp-2014.