UnityPoint Health Cedar Rapids d/b/a St. Luke's Hospital v. Iowa Department of Public Health, State Health Facilities Council and Mercy Hospital Cedar Rapids d/b/a Mercy Medical Center

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 2019
Docket17-1317
StatusPublished

This text of UnityPoint Health Cedar Rapids d/b/a St. Luke's Hospital v. Iowa Department of Public Health, State Health Facilities Council and Mercy Hospital Cedar Rapids d/b/a Mercy Medical Center (UnityPoint Health Cedar Rapids d/b/a St. Luke's Hospital v. Iowa Department of Public Health, State Health Facilities Council and Mercy Hospital Cedar Rapids d/b/a Mercy Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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UnityPoint Health Cedar Rapids d/b/a St. Luke's Hospital v. Iowa Department of Public Health, State Health Facilities Council and Mercy Hospital Cedar Rapids d/b/a Mercy Medical Center, (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-1317 Filed January 9, 2019

UNITYPOINT HEALTH CEDAR RAPIDS d/b/a ST. LUKE'S HOSPITAL, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

IOWA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH, STATE HEALTH FACILITIES COUNCIL, Defendant-Appellee,

and

MERCY HOSPITAL CEDAR RAPIDS d/b/a MERCY MEDICAL CENTER, Intervenor/Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Eliza J. Ovrom, Judge.

A hospital appeals from the district court’s decision on judicial review

affirming the State Health Facilities Council’s decision to grant a certificate of need

to another nearby hospital, thereby allowing that hospital to establish its own open-

heart surgical program. AFFIRMED.

Rebecca A. Brommel and Douglas E. Gross of Brown, Winick, Graves,

Gross, Baskerville and Schoenebaum, PLC, Des Moines, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Tessa Register and Heather L.

Adams, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee.

Edwin N. McIntosh and William J. Miller of Dorsey & Whitney LLP, Des

Moines, for appellee intervenor.

Heard by Potterfield, P.J., Doyle, J., and Danilson, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2019). 2

POTTERFIELD, Presiding Judge.

UnityPoint Health Cedar Rapids, doing business as St. Luke’s Hospital,

appeals from the district court’s ruling on judicial review affirming the State Health

Facilities Council’s decision to issue a Certificate of Need (CON) to Mercy Hospital

Cedar Rapids,1 which allows Mercy to establish its own open-heart surgical

program in its Cedar Rapids hospital.

On appeal, St. Luke’s maintains the Council’s decision to grant the CON

should be reversed because the Council’s interpretation of the minimum utilization

rule—found in Iowa Administrative Code rule 641-203.2(3)(a)(1)—as a guideline

rather than a mandate is either erroneous, see Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(c) (2015),

or “irrational, illogical, or wholly unjustifiable,” see Iowa Code § 17A.19(10)(l).

Additionally, St. Luke’s challenges whether some of the findings made by the

Council are supported by substantial evidence in the record, see Iowa Code

§ 17A.19(10)(f), including some findings that are required by Iowa Code section

135.64 before a CON can be issued.

I. Background Proceedings.

In July 2015, Mercy sent a letter to the Iowa Department of Public Health

advising it of the hospital’s intention to offer open-heart surgery at its Cedar Rapids

hospital. Mercy followed that letter by filing a CON application in August. In

support of its application, Mercy asserted that each year, approximately 150 of

Mercy’s patients have to go outside the Mercy system for their cardiac surgery. In

a later response to the department’s request for more information, Mercy again

1 The Iowa Department of Public Health is responsible for providing administrative support and advice to the Council. See Iowa Code §§ 135.62(1), .65, .66, .69. 3

asserted that it estimated a volume of 150 patients for cardiac surgical services,

with a 2% growth projected each year following the initial year.

A public hearing on the application was held before the State Health

Facilities Council on November 15, 2016. St. Luke’s participated in the hearing as

an “affected person” and spoke out against the granting of the CON. See Iowa

Code § 135.61(1)(c) (including in the definition of “affected persons” “each

institutional health facility . . . which is located in the geographic area which would

appropriately be served by the new institutional health service proposed in the

application”).

At dispute in the hearing was whether the minimum utilization rule was a

guideline to be used by the Council in reaching its ultimate decision or a mandatory

requirement that the Council must not grant the CON unless Mercy projected at

least 200 procedures annually. The rule, Iowa Administrative Code rule 641-

203.2(3)(a)(1), states: “Adult cardiovascular surgical programs should project an

annual minimum rate of over 200, or no approval shall be granted. Higher case

loads over 200 per annum, are encouraged.”

Before the hearing took place, legal counsel to the Council issued an email

regarding the application of the rule. Counsel advised it should be considered

discretionary, noting that the rule used both the terms “should” and “shall.”

Additionally counsel stated, “Interpreting the rule as a guideline would be in

keeping with the Council’s longstanding practice of applying utilization

requirements in its administrative rules . . . as guidelines only and not mandatory

requirements.” Following counsel’s email but before the CON hearing, St. Luke’s 4

petitioned the Department of Public Health for a declaratory ruling on the proper

interpretation of the rule. The department denied St. Luke’s request.

Immediately following the public hearing, the Council voted 3-2 to grant

Mercy’s request for the CON.

In the written ruling that followed, the Council ruled that the minimum

utilization rule

should be interpreted as a guideline in light of (1) the Council’s prior construction of this rule as guideline in approving a CON to an applicant which projected below 200 surgeries per year; (2) the totality of the language of the rule—which states programs should project a certain number of cases and that higher case loads are merely encouraged, not required—providing a discretionary approach to the utilization issue; and (3) the Council’s longstanding prior interpretation of the utilization standards in chapter 203 as guidelines.

The Council found “that patients needing urgent cardiac surgery are waiting an

average of four to nine days due to limited access to cardiac surgery in the

community. Additionally, patients needing elective open heart surgery found wait

times increase from 4.9 weeks in 2014 to 5.3 weeks in 2015.” The increase in wait

time “increased costs related to additional hospital stays, increased anxieties for

the patients and their families, and potential loss of wages due to the inability to

work.” The Council also recognized that patient stress “is exacerbated by having

to leave the Mercy system to receive care in a new health system.” In making this

finding, the Council noted that when St. Luke’s requested a CON in 2014 to begin

offering radiation therapy services—a service patients historically had to leave St.

Luke’s and go to Mercy for—the Council had granted its request, in part, because:

St. Luke’s cancer patients in need of radiation therapy must currently leave the facility and provider network, resulting in each patient being treated by a new set of health providers and supporting team 5

members from a different health care system. This movement between systems can result in delays, unnecessary costs, and duplication of testing and other services.

The Council’s written decision included findings as to the necessary four factors

contained in Iowa Code section 135.64(2)(a)–(d).

St. Luke’s filed a request for rehearing, which the Council denied. St. Luke’s

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UnityPoint Health Cedar Rapids d/b/a St. Luke's Hospital v. Iowa Department of Public Health, State Health Facilities Council and Mercy Hospital Cedar Rapids d/b/a Mercy Medical Center, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unitypoint-health-cedar-rapids-dba-st-lukes-hospital-v-iowa-department-iowactapp-2019.