Weisenborn v. Missouri Department of Mental Health

332 S.W.3d 288, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 61
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 25, 2011
DocketNo. WD 72126
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 332 S.W.3d 288 (Weisenborn v. Missouri Department of Mental Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weisenborn v. Missouri Department of Mental Health, 332 S.W.3d 288, 2011 Mo. App. LEXIS 61 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

GARYD. WITT, Judge.

Andrea Weisenborn appeals1 the Missouri Department of Mental Health’s decision denying her services under the Comprehensive Medicaid Waiver Program. We affirm the judgment of the trial court, which reinstated Weisenborn’s Medicaid Waiver benefits, and remand to the trial court for a determination of reasonable reimbursement for attorney’s fees and costs expended by Weisenborn at the proceedings below and on appeal pursuant to Section 536.087.

Factual Background

Andrea Weisenborn (“Weisenborn”) is a twenty-nine year-old woman who was diagnosed with Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) with hyperphagia during her first year of her life. PWS is a genetic condition that affects brain functioning, body composition, metabolism, and cognitive/behavioral functioning. PWS affects brain functioning by causing the individual to be “always ravenously hungry and driven to eat,” in that it affects the operation of the hypothalamus which is “responsible for temperature regulation, day/night sleep wake cycles, appetite control, emotional control, [291]*291and the production of growth and sexual hormones.” Body fat/muscle composition ratios are reversed as compared to a person without this illness, and metabolism is significantly reduced. Most affected individuals demonstrate cognitive functioning in the mentally retarded range but approximately five percent can test in the normal range of cognitive functioning.

Weisenborn has PWS with hyperphagia. Hyperphagia causes an almost uncontrollable drive to excessively eat, and as a result, Weisenborn is morbidly obese and diabetic. She also has sleep apnea, celluli-tis, blood clots in her legs, psoriasis, and scoliosis. According to the Referee:

She is able to use eating utensils, but she does not have self-control over her drive to eat. As a result, she must have a lock on her refrigerator and her blood sugars must be regularly tested, as a screen to determine whether she has been sneaking food. She is able to put on different clothes when instructed, but is not able to dress herself in a manner that will protect her health and hygiene. If she does not receive support, she does not put on her socks and her bra in a way that will avoid rubbing, rashes, and infections, all of which exacerbate her Diabetes and Cellulitis and can be life-threatening if left untreated.... [She] is able to get into and out of the shower, but is not physically able to reach around to wash or dry her back, and she is not mentally able to ensure that she adequately cleans and dries all parts of her body, including under the folds of her skin. If her body is not dried properly, she gets yeast infections and exacerbates her Cellulitis. Appellant is not able to trim her fingernails and toenails, due to the danger of injuring the surrounding skin, which causes complications to her Diabetes and Cellulitis.

Weisenborn is part of the small subset of those affected by PWS who do not test in the range of mental retardation on a standardized IQ test.2 With the help of her mother’s tutoring, Weisenborn completed high school receiving A’s and B’s. Weisenborn then attended Moberly Community College and received an associate’s degree, also with significant tutoring from her mother. In 1998 at age seventeen, Weisenborn took a WAIS test which measures the IQ of school-aged children and scored a seventy-eight, which is on the border-line of mental retardation (and does not take into account her other significant behavioral deficit) but does not indicate mental retardation. At the age of eighteen, Weisenborn took a WAIS-R psychological test, used to measure IQ for adults, and scored a one-hundred, which is within the normal range of intellectual function.

Weisenborn was married in 2008. Two months later her parents obtained a limited guardianship and conservatorship, at which time they also agreed not to fight her marriage. Weisenborn serves as a self-advocate at the Regional Area Council and works two to three days a week as an in-home aide. To qualify as an in-home aide, Weisenborn had to pass the Medication Administration Examination, which she passed with a score of ninety-six. Weisenborn used to drive an automobile but has not been able to do so for several years because this gave her unsupervised access to food and she could not control her impulses.

[292]*292Under the Medicaid Waiver program, an administrator from the Missouri Department of Mental Health (“Department”) administers a test called the Missouri Critical Adaptive Behaviors Inventory (“MOCA-BI”) for each applicant. To qualify for services, among other requirements, an applicant must show a significant deficit in at least three of the following six areas: (1) self-care; (2) receptive and expressive language; (3) learning; (4) mobility; (5) self-direction; (6) capacity for independent living or economic self-sufficiency.

Weisenborn began receiving Medicaid Waiver services in 2003, at which time she was placed in an Independent Supported Living Placement. Her MOCABI results in both 2004 and 2006 showed she had substantial limitations in the requisite number of three areas. In each evaluation she was found deficient in: self-care, self-direction, and capacity for independent living or economic self-sufficiency. In 2008, Weisenborn was re-evaluated by Department employee Karen Moore and was again found to be deficient in the same three areas and eligible for services. However, Debra Wohlers (“Wohlers”), Assistant Director of Habilitation for the Kirksville Regional Office, reviewed Moore’s scoring of Weisenborn’s test and found that she had scored it incorrectly. Wohlers has served on a state-wide intake and eligibility work group to make sure assessments are consistent across the state and is experienced in administering the MOCABI. Weisenborn’s MOCABI was rescored, and she was found to have substantial limitations in only two areas: self-direction and capacity for independent living or economic self-sufficiency. Weisen-born was thus found not to have substantial functional limitations in the area of self-care. Based on this assessment, Weisenborn was informed that she was no longer eligible for Medicaid Waiver Services. Weisenborn, with the assistance of her parents, appealed the termination decision, and it was agreed that the MOCABI would be re-administered.

On April 29, 2008, Wohlers re-conducted the MOCABI on Weisenborn. As a result of that test, Wohlers found that Weisen-born was no longer eligible for services through the Medicaid Waiver program because she only had a significant deficit in two of the six areas: self-direction and capacity for independent living or economic self-sufficiency.

Weisenborn appealed the denial of her Medicaid Waiver Services and on September 11, 2008, a hearing was held before Referee Thad Taylor (“Referee”). At the hearing, the Department called witnesses Bowers and Wohlers. Weisenborn’s mother, Ms. Shoemaker, testified on her behalf. On October 17, 2008, the Referee issued his initial decision in Weisenborn’s favor. In addition to the two uncontested areas of deficiency, the Referee found that Weisen-born had substantial functional limitations in self-care based on the evidence and found: Wohlers noted on her MOCABI that Weisenborn always asks for help to dry her back; Weisenborn once fell when showering; Weisenborn must have locks on her refrigerator; and she is unable to dress herself to protect her health and hygiene.3

On October 29, 2008, the Department filed a Motion to Vacate or Amend Decision.

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Related

Weisenborn Ex Rel. Shoemaker v. MISSOURI DEPT. OF MENTAL HEA.
332 S.W.3d 288 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2011)

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