Department of Health and Human Services DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD Civil Remedies Division |
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IN THE CASE OF | |
Four Winds - Syracuse, |
DATE: August 22, 2001 |
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
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Docket No.C-01-431 Decision No. CR811 |
DECISION | |
DECISION After considering the arguments of the parties, the documentary
evidence, and the applicable law and regulations, I sustain the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS') determination that Petitioner's
effective date of certification for participation in the Medicare program
was June 13, 2001. I. Background On May 9, 2000, Arbor Winds, LLC, acquired the Benjamin
Rush Center, a psychiatric hospital located in Syracuse, New York, and
changed the name to Four Winds - Syracuse. Rather than accept assignment
of the Benjamin Rush Center's Medicare provider agreement and provider
number, Four Winds decided to apply for a new provider number. Petitioner
was required to submit to two surveys before it could be certified to
participate in the Medicare program: a survey for the general hospital
conditions of participation and a survey for the two special psychiatric
hospital conditions. The hospital conditions of participation survey was conducted
on May 11, 2000. Immediately after the survey, a statement of deficiencies
was presented to Four Winds, and a plan of correction was filed the same
day. The survey for the two special conditions of participation was concluded
by CMS contract surveyors on May 12, 2000. No written statement of deficiencies
was provided at the time of the exit interview for the two special conditions
of participation. The CMS contractors informed the hospital's administrators
that Four Winds had passed the survey and that it had met both conditions
of that part of the survey. P. Ex. 6 at 2. On June 8, 2000, CMS forwarded a statement of deficiencies
to Petitioner identifying five deficiencies, and Petitioner filed a Plan
of Correction on June 13, 2000. On June 22, 2000, CMS notified Petitioner
that its agreement for participation as a psychiatric hospital had been
accepted, and that its effective date of participation was June 13, 2000. Petitioner requested Reconsideration on August 17, 2000,
which it supplemented on October 13, 2000. CMS denied the request for
reconsideration on December 20, 2000, and Petitioner filed a request for
a hearing before an administrative law judge on February 15, 2001. Subsequently,
this case was assigned to me for hearing and decision. On May 21, 2001, I adopted the briefing schedule suggested
by the parties, which concluded with the parties' response briefs dated
June 29, 2001. In the absence of objection, I am admitting into evidence
CMS' three proposed exhibits (CMS Exs. 1-3) and Petitioner's 10 proposed
exhibits (P. Exs. 1-10). Neither party offered Petitioner's supplemental
submission dated October 13, 2000 in support its request for reconsideration.
I am, therefore, admitting that four-page document as administrative law
judge exhibit 1 (ALJ Ex. 1). II. Applicable law and regulations In order to be approved for participation in the Medicare
program, a provider must meet the applicable statutory definition and
be in compliance with conditions or requirements for participation. 42
C.F.R. § 488.3. 42 C.F.R. Part 488 sets forth the survey and certification
process by which CMS and its authorized agents determine whether a provider
is complying with the applicable conditions for participation. Medicare participation requirements for psychiatric hospitals
are found in 42 C.F.R. Part 482. These regulatory requirements establish
that psychiatric hospitals must meet all conditions of participation applicable
generally to hospitals, as well as special certain conditions. See 42
C.F.R. §§ 482.61, 482.62. Conditions of participation are broken down
into standards. A provider, or prospective provider, that is found to
be deficient with respect to one or more standards in the conditions of
participation, may participate in Medicare only if the facility submits
an acceptable plan of correction for achieving compliance within a reasonable
period of time as required by 42 C.F.R. § 488.28(a). A Medicare provider agreement is effective on the date the survey is completed, if on that date the provider meets all federal requirements. 42 C.F.R. § 489(13)(b). If on the date the survey is completed the provider fails to meet any of the requirements specified in 42 C.F.R. Chapter IV the effective date of certification
is the earlier of the following:
III. Issue The issue in this case is whether CMS correctly determined
that Petitioner's effective date of participation in the Medicare program
is June 13, 2000. IV. Burden of Proof As an applicant for certification as a participant in
the Medicare program, Petitioner has the burden of establishing that it
satisfies participation requirements. 42 C.F.R. § 489.10(a). Petitioner
also has the ultimate burden of rebutting, by a preponderance of the evidence,
any prima facie case of noncompliance established by CMS. Hillman Rehabilitation
Center, DAB No. 1611 (1997), aff'd, Hillman Rehabilitation
Center v. U.S. Dep't of Health and Human Services, No. 98-3789 (GEV),
at 21-38 (D.N.J., May 13, 1999). CMS meets its burden to establish a prima facie case merely
by establishing that Petitioner has not supplied it with sufficient affirmative
evidence that it is complying with participation requirements. As an applicant
for certification, Petitioner must show affirmatively that it is complying
with such requirements. V. Findings and Discussion My findings of fact and conclusions of law are noted and
numbered below, in bold and italics, and are followed by a discussion
of each finding.
For an applicant to qualify for participation in the Medicare
program as a psychiatric hospital, it must satisfy "all applicable Federal
requirements as specified in paragraph (b) of 42 C.F.R. § 489.13." CMS
contends that whereas Petitioner met all the conditions of participation
applicable generally to hospitals, contract surveyors identified five
lower level deficiencies at the time of the May 12, 2000 survey. Consequently,
argues CMS, Petitioner could not have been certified earlier than the
date on which it submitted an acceptable plan of correction on June 13,
2000. CMS Br. at 6, 7. Petitioner, on the other hand, argues that on May 12,
2000, CMS contract surveyors assured Four Winds that the facility had
"passed" and "met both conditions of the survey." As a result of this
information, says Petitioner, it began to treat Medicare patients, under
the belief that it had met the terms and conditions necessary to provide
treatment to such patients. Moreover, Petitioner claims that it would
have immediately filed a plan of correction if not for the misleading
information provided by the surveyors rather than allow 27 days to lapse
while waiting for a statement of deficiencies to arrive. P. Br. at 6. The second point of contention raised by Petitioner is
that CMS is estopped from denying it Medicare certification effective
May 12, 2000, in view of the misrepresentation of the contract surveyors.
P. Br. at 8. In support of its claim, Petitioner submitted the affidavits
of Robert Greenbaum, Chairman of the Board of Four Winds and Stephen Lawrence,
CEO of Four Winds. They both assert that at the conclusion of the survey
conducted on May 12, 2000, the surveyors uttered the following expression:
"Congratulations, you passed. You have met both conditions of this survey."
Consequently, they were left with the impression that "there were no deficiencies
identified that required correction before a Medicare provider number
could be issued." P. Exs. 6, 7. CMS does not deny the congratulatory utterance made by
one of its surveyors. However, the affidavits of both surveyors go on
to explain that at the exit interview of May 12, 2000, they "read aloud"
the lower level deficiencies that they identified during the survey. Furthermore,
the surveyors stated in their affidavits that they informed Dr. Lawrence
both in private and in a group meeting that Petitioner was found to be
in compliance with both conditions of participation for psychiatric hospitals,
but that under one of the two conditions some standards were not met.
Finally, the surveyors assert that although their written report was not
submitted to CMS until sometime later, but within the 10-day time frame
required, neither of them informed Petitioner that the hospital's date
of certification would be the date of the survey, nor that there would
be an exemption from submission of a plan of correction upon receipt of
an official CMS report. CMS Exs. 2, 3. While Petitioner acknowledges that the New York State
Department of Health surveyors noted certain physical plant deficiencies
which warranted correction, it asserts that none of those deficiencies
impacted in any significant way on the quality of care or safety of Four
Winds patients. ALJ Ex. 1 at 2. The fact that none of the deficiencies
impacted on patient care or safety should imply that a plan of correction
was not required. In this context, the regulation provides that a facility
found to be deficient with respect to one or more of the standards in
the conditions of participation may participate in Medicare by submitting
an acceptable plan of correction if the deficiencies do not jeopardize
the health and safety of patients. 42 C.F.R. § 488.28. Petitioner does
not deny that it had deficiencies with respect to one or more of the standards
in the conditions of participation, nor that they were informed of their
existence, albeit orally. The facility's claim that the surveyors were
not emphatic at the exit conference of the importance of submitting a
timely plan of correction did nothing to relieve it of the onus of filing
an acceptable plan of correction in order to participate in Medicare.
That assertion is an implied recognition that Petitioner was put on notice
regarding the existence of certain standard deficiencies. However, Petitioner
feels justified in assuming that certification was certain as of the date
the survey was concluded because the deficiencies noted did not adversely
affect patient care or safety nor did the surveyors emphasize the importance
of submitting a timely plan of correction. ALJ Ex. 1 at 3. Consequently,
Petitioner's decision to begin treating Medicare patients without having
been certified, is a risk taken at its own peril. On a final note, Petitioner complains that CMS did not provide it with a timely Statement of Deficiencies, but fails to advance legal support as to what constitutes a reasonable period of time for such notification.
It is my finding that there was no misrepresentation on
the part of CMS contract surveyors. In its haste to begin treating Medicare
patients, Petitioner overlooked the need to be first certified for participation
in the program and failed to understand that satisfying the conditions
of participation is not the same as meeting all of the Federal requirements
for participation in Medicare. Therefore, it is not necessary to discuss
Petitioner's estoppel arguments. VI. Conclusion Based on the foregoing analysis, I sustain CMS' determination to certify Petitioner, Four Winds, for participation in the Medicare program effective June 13, 2000. |
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JUDGE | |
Jose A. Anglada Administrative Law Judge |
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