St Francis Health v. Shalala

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 ELECTRONIC CITATION: 2000 FED App. 0067P (6th Cir.) File Name: 00a0067p.06 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________ ;  ST. FRANCIS HEALTH CARE  CENTRE,  Plaintiff-Appellant,  No. 98-3965  v. >   Defendant-Appellee.  DONNA SHALALA,  1 Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio at Toledo. No. 97-07559—David A. Katz, District Judge. Argued: October 25, 1999 Decided and Filed: February 25, 2000 Before: JONES, MOORE, and GILMAN, Circuit Judges. _________________ COUNSEL ARGUED: Dennis P. Witherell, SHUMAKER, LOOP & KENDRICK, Toledo, Ohio, for Appellant. Ted Yasuda, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES, OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL, REGION V, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Dennis P. 1 2 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 27 Witherell, Jenifer A. Belt, SHUMAKER, LOOP & I would therefore reverse the grant of summary judgment KENDRICK, Toledo, Ohio, for Appellant. Ted Yasuda, U.S. for the Secretary and remand with instructions to enter DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES, judgment in favor of St. Francis. Because I would reverse the OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL, REGION V, trial court’s disposition on the ground discussed above, I find Chicago, Illinois, for Appellee. no need to reach the other issues covered in the majority’s opinion. JONES, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MOORE, J., joined. GILMAN, J. (pp. 20-27), delivered a separate dissenting opinion. _________________ OPINION _________________ NATHANIEL R. JONES, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff- Appellant St. Francis Health Care Centre (“St. Francis”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment for Defendant-Appellee Donna Shalala, Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (“Secretary”). St. Francis contends that the Secretary erred in denying its request for Medicare reimbursement for the provision of hospital-based skilled nursing services. For the reasons stated herein, we AFFIRM. I. A. St. Francis operates a rehabilitation hospital, a hospital- based skilled nursing facility (“HB-SNF”), a general nursing facility, and a transitional living center in rural Ohio. Only St. Francis’s HB-SNF is relevant for purposes of this appeal. The goal of St. Francis’s HB-SNF is to rehabilitate, rather than simply maintain patients. Thus, St. Francis routinely provides “comprehensive rehabilitation therapy” for the vast majority of its patients. Although St. Francis’s intensive rehabilitation therapy results in higher per diem costs per patient compared to its peers, this therapy also results in shorter patient stays. Thus, a patient’s total costs are less than they would be at other facilities. 26 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 3 The majority also attempts to construe the PRM rule as an Like many health care facilities, a number of St. Francis’s interpretation of the requirement in 42 C.F.R. § 413.30 that a patients are Medicare recipients. Consequently, Medicare provider’s costs be “reasonable.” It views the rule as a reimburses St. Francis for the1 reasonable costs of services parallel provision to the two-tier system established by 42 provided to Medicare patients. See 42 U.S.C. § 1395x(u) & U.S.C. § 1395yy. That system reduced the cost limit for HB- (v)(1)(A). Pursuant to Medicare rules and regulations, from SNFs from Level 3 to Level 2, establishing a “discount 1983 to 1990, St. Francis was reimbursed for such reasonable factor” to account for what Congress found to be their relative actual costs of services provided. Because St. Francis’s actual inefficiency as compared to FS-SNFs. In the majority’s costs exceeded the statutory routine cost limits (“RCLs”) for opinion, the PRM rule similarly factors in the alleged each of these years, St. Francis requested, and was granted, inefficiency of HB-SNFs and discounts reimbursement for an “upward adjustment” to its cost limits. However, in the atypical services accordingly. See Op. at 15-16. 1991 and 1992 cost reporting periods, the Medicare intermediary2denied St. Francis’s requests for an “upward Closer analysis reveals that the PRM rule is not analogous adjustment.” St. Francis appealed to the Provider to the two-tier system. The PRM rule does not function as a Reimbursement Review Board (“PRRB”), which reversed the commonly understood “discount factor,” because it intermediary’s decision. Thereafter, the Administrator of the completely denies compensation for the first amounts spent Health Care Financing Administration (“HCFA”), the on atypical services. In other words, an HB-SNF that spends Secretary’s delegate, reviewed and reversed the PRRB’s $100 to provide routine services and anywhere from $1 to $20 decision. Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1395oo(f)(1), St. Francis on atypical services will receive no reimbursement at all for thereafter filed a Complaint in federal district court seeking its atypical service costs. These expenditures are arbitrarily review of the HCFA’s decision. St. Francis and the Secretary deemed to be 100% inefficient or, alternatively, are subjected filed cross motions for summary judgment. The district court to a 100% “discount factor.” To the extent that the same denied St. Francis’s motion, and granted the Secretary’s hospital raises its atypical costs above $20, however, it will be compensated for those costs. I find it unpersuasive to construe these results as a “discount factor” or a measure of “reasonableness.” 1 The initial decision of whether the health care provider should be Because the PRM rule should be regarded as more reimbursed is made by an “intermediary,” which is usually a private health substantive than interpretive, and because it was enacted insurance company. On a yearly basis, the intermediary determines the without notice and comment, the rule should be declared amount which Medicare must reimburse the provider in accordance with Medicare policies and procedures. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395g, 1395h(c)(1). invalid. Contrary to the majority’s fears, such a result would not necessarily require the Secretary to conduct a case-by-case 2 The 1991 and 1992 per diem amounts were as follows. The review of every provider’s reimbursement request. The terminology used in this footnote is explained infra: Secretary is free to establish guidelines that will presumptively determine a provider’s eligibility for upward 1991 1992 adjustments, thereby relieving her agency of the burden of St. Francis’s Actual Costs $120.94 $139.06 case-by-case analyses. Those guidelines must, however, be 112% of Mean HB-SNF Costs $136.11 $143.98 HB-SNF Statutory RCL $110.58 $116.90 consistent with the dictates of the governing regulation, or they must be enacted pursuant to the notice and comment J.A. at 120-21. The Secretary concluded that “[s]ince [St. Francis’s] cost procedures of the APA. per day is less than the uniform peer group cost, no exception is allowed.” J.A. at 442. 4 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 25 motion. See St. Francis Health Care Centre v. Shalala, 10 When an agency functions as an adjudicative body, it is F.Supp.2d 887 (N.D. Ohio 1998). This timely appeal ensued. under no obligation to act with consistency or to provide notice and an opportunity for comment by interested parties. B. See Michigan v. Thomas, 805 F.2d at 184 (“An administrative agency may reexamine its prior decisions and may depart The Medicare reimbursement plan developed by Congress from its precedents provided the departure is explicitly and has been refined over the years by Congress and the Secretary. rationally justified.”). Because the PRM rule under Beginning in 1972, Congress, faced with rising Medicare consideration is a legislative enactment rather than an costs, recognized that the original cost-based Medicare adjudicative order, any modifications that it makes to prior payment structure provided little incentive for providers to regulations are required to have been preceded by notice and operate efficiently. Congress amended the Medicare Act to comment. See 5 U.S.C. § 553. provide that “reasonable costs” reimbursable under Medicare should exclude “any part of incurred cost found to be B. The PRM rule cannot be construed as an unnecessary in the efficient delivery of needed health “interpretation” of 42 C.F.R. § 413.30 services.” 42 U.S.C. § 1395x(v)(1)(A). The majority concludes that by denying compensation to The original cost limits which HCFA established HB-SNFs for the costs of atypical services below Level 3, the categorized SNFs as free-standing or hospital-based and as PRM rule simply fleshes out the meaning of the terms urban or rural, and permitted reimbursement for SNFs for up “reasonableness” of costs and “typicality” of services to 115% of the mean cost of their respective category, or contained in 42 C.F.R. § 413.30. Op. at 14. I respectfully “peer group.” HCFA subsequently reduced the cost limit to disagree. 112% of the peer group mean costs. Therefore, while each facility was entitled to receive 112% of its peer group mean The regulation in question, 42 C.F.R. § 413.30, allows costs, the four types had different peer group means, and providers to seek compensation for “items or services [that] therefore each type of facility had a different cost limit. The are atypical in nature and scope.” In denying compensation cost limits for HB-SNFs were significantly higher than for for costs that do not exceed Level 3, the PRM rule seemingly free-standing SNFs (FS-SNFs). Advocates of separate cost confuses atypical costs with atypical services. The fact that limits argued that HB-SNFs incurred higher costs because of a provider’s costs are atypically high does not necessarily the more intensive care they rendered, justifying higher cost mean that it is providing atypical services. Conversely, the limits. However, opponents argued that all SNFs provide the fact that a hospital has below-average costs does not same standard of care and separate cost limits were not necessarily establish the absence of atypical services. warranted. The facts underlying the present case confirm this point, Congress, aware of results from several studies of the because it is undisputed that St. Francis provided atypical higher HB-SNF costs,3 enacted the Deficit Reduction Act services at a cost below Level 3 for the years in question. There is thus a critical difference between atypical costs and atypical services. The PRM rule, which focuses on atypical 3 costs, does not define or flesh out the meaning of the atypical Several studies concluded that only 50% of the cost difference services referred to in the prior regulation. between HB-SNFs and FS-SNFs was attributable to variations in the intensity of care or case-mix. Inefficiency was deemed the likely cause of the other 50% of the cost difference. 24 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 5 that a rule was substantive, in part, because it was (DEFRA), Pub. L. 98-369, § 2319(b), 98 Stat. 494 (1984). “mandatory, not advisory”); Guardian Fed. Sav. & Loan DEFRA added a new section to the Medicare Act which Ass’n v. Federal Sav. Loan Ins. Corp., 589 F.2d 658, 666-67 addressed the cost differences between HB- and FS-SNFs by (D.C. Cir. 1978) (“If it appears that a so-called policy adjusting the cost limits for the two groups. For HB-SNFs, statement is in purpose or likely effect one that narrowly instead of employing the previous 112% level (112% of the limits administrative discretion, it will be taken for what it mean per diem costs of the peer group), Congress lowered is—a binding rule of substantive law.”). that amount by 50% of the difference between the 112% level for HB-SNFs and FS-SNFs. (ie., 50% ((112% x HB-SNF per The Secretary argues that “nothing forbids an agency from diem costs) - (112% x FS-SNF per diem costs))). Still changing its interpretations.” I do not quarrel with the dissatisfied with the cost limits established by DEFRA, proposition that an agency may change its rulings or Congress has since enacted measures to contain costs further interpretations over time. An agency is not free, however, to and to reduce the differing treatment of HB- and FS-SNFs; adopt new substantive regulations without notice and these latter changes post-date the events of this case, comment. Indeed, in both cases cited by the Secretary in however.4 Despite this plethora of changes to the medicare which an agency modified its regulations, the change was reimbursement plan, Congress has always left intact the preceded by notice and comment. See American Trucking Secretary’s authority to make adjustments to cost limits “to Ass’ns. v. A.T. & S.F. Ry. Co., 387 U.S. 397, 404 (1967) the extent the Secretary deems appropriate.” 42 U.S.C. (allowing the Interstate Commerce Commission to adopt § 1395yy(c). rules, pursuant to notice and comment, which altered its previous policies regarding trailer-on-flatcar service); Western C. Coal Traffic League v. United States, 719 F.2d 772, 777 (5th Cir. 1983) (allowing the Interstate Commerce Commission to With this legislative history in the background, this case change its methodology for evaluating a carrier’s market involves a Medicare Act provision (42 U.S.C. § 1395yy(a)), dominance by enacting a new regulation pursuant to notice a regulation interpreting that provision (42 C.F.R. § 413.30), and comment). and a PRM provision (PRM § 2534.5) interpreting the regulation. In the remaining cases cited by the Secretary, the challenged modification was an adjudicative ruling as to a specific party rather than a general legislative rule. See Montana Power Co. v. Environmental Protection Agency, 608 F.2d 334, 347 (9th Cir. 1979) (affirming an Environmental Protection Agency order determining when construction of a 4 In the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, Pub. L. 103-66, power plant “commenced,” even though the order was § 13503, 107 Stat. 379 (1993), Congress froze cost limits at the fiscal year inconsistent with prior adjudicative rulings of the agency); 1993 levels for the next two fiscal years and eliminated the provision NLRB v. Local 103, Int’l Ass’n of Bridge, Structural and authorizing additional reimbursement to HB-SNFs for costs associated Ornamental Iron Workers , 434 U.S. 335 (1978) (affirming a with the Medicare cost allocation process. This essentially rejected cease and desist order issued by the National Labor Relations differing reimbursement for HB- and FS-SNFs. More recently, in the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, Pub. L. 105-33, Board to a striking, uncertified union, which the union alleged § 4432(a), 111 Stat. 258, 414-20 (1997), Congress eliminated the two- was inconsistent with a prior ruling of the agency). tiered system of cost limits as well as the retrospective cost-based reimbursement plan. In their place, Congress enacted a prospective payment system based on a federal per diem rate. 6 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 23 1. 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy: The Statutory Framework for all of their costs, including those costs above the applicable Cost Limits cost limit. Indeed, in the years prior to 1991, the Secretary routinely granted upward adjustments to St. Francis, Congress established the RCLs to be applied to different reimbursing all of its direct expenditures for atypical services. SNFs in 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy: Under the PRM rule, however, the Secretary no longer determines whether amounts spent on atypical services The Secretary, in determining the amount of the between Levels 2 and 3 should be compensated. The costs of payments which may be made under this subchapter with such atypical services, even if they otherwise conform to the respect to routine service costs of extended care services four requirements of 42 C.F.R. § 413.30(f), are never shall not recognize as reasonable (in the efficient delivery recoverable. of health services) per diem costs of such services to the extent that such per diem costs exceed the following per A rule that adds a new requirement to a set of existing diem limits . . . . requirements is substantive, and requires notice and comment before it can be enacted. See Ohio Dep’t of Human Svcs. v. 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy(a). The provision then establishes that Dep’t of Health & Human Svcs., 862 F.2d 1228, 1235 (6th the RCL for FS-SNFs “shall be equal to” 112% of the “mean Cir. 1988) (holding that the department’s adoption of a per diem routine service costs” of FS-SNFs. Id. at “maintenance amount ceiling” for noninstitutionalized § 1395yy(a)(1). For HB-SNFs, the RCL “shall be equal to” spouses of institutionalized Medicaid recipients required the sum of the following: the FS-SNFs cost limit plus 50% of notice and comment because it added a requirement that was the amount by which 112% percent of the HB-SNFs mean per not compelled by or implicit in the existing regulations); see diem routine service cost exceeds the FS-SNFs cost limit. Id. also Perales v. Sullivan, 948 F.2d 1348, 1354 (2d Cir. 1991) at § 1395yy(a)(3). Despite these statutory limits, Congress, (determining that a rule was substantive when it required state recognizing the Secretary’s expertise in this area, afforded the Medicaid submissions to provide assurance that the state Secretary the discretion to make “upward adjustments” to possessed supporting documentation); Linoz v. Heckler, 800 these statutory RCLs: F.2d 871, 877 (9th Cir. 1986) (concluding that a department provision excluding payment for ambulance service from one The Secretary may make adjustments in the limits set hospital to another solely to obtain the services of a specialty forth in subsection (a) of this section with respect to any physician was a substantive rule where “instead of simply skilled nursing facility [SNF] to the extent the Secretary clarifying a pre-existing regulation, [it] carved out a per se deems appropriate, based upon case mix or exception”). The case of Shalala v. Guernsey Memorial circumstances beyond the control of the facility. The Hosp., 514 U.S. 87 (1995), upon which the majority relies, is Secretary shall publish the data and criteria to be used for consistent with the cases just cited. See id. at 100 (“We can purposes of this subsection on an annual basis. agree that APA rulemaking would still be required if PRM § 233 adopted a new position inconsistent with any of the 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy(c). Secretary’s existing regulations). 2. 42 C.F.R. § 413.30: The Secretary’s Regulation for Moreover, other courts have held that rules like the PRM Adjusting Cost Limits rule, which impose binding constraints on an agency’s Pursuant to the discretion Congress afforded the Secretary existing discretion, are generally considered substantive. See in 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy(c), the Secretary implemented 42 Ohio Dep’t of Human Svcs., 862 F.2d at 1234 (concluding 22 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 7 II. ANALYSIS C.F.R. § 413.30, which “set[s] forth the general rules under which HCFA may establish limits on provider costs A. The PRM rule is substantive recognized as reasonable in determining Medicare program payments” and “also sets forth rules governing exemptions, This court has set out the following broad guidelines for exceptions, and adjustments to limits established under this determining the nature of an administrative rule: “An section that HCFA may make as appropriate in consideration interpretive rule simply states what the administrative agency of special needs or situations of particular providers.” Id. at means, and only reminds affected parties of existing § 413.30(a). The regulation provides as follows: duties. . . . On the other hand, if by its action the agency intends to create new law, rights or duties, the rule is properly *** considered to be a legislative rule.” Michigan v. Thomas, 805 (a)(2) General principle. Reimbursable provider costs F.2d 176, 182-83 (6th Cir. 1986) (citations and internal may not exceed the costs estimated by HCFA to be quotation marks omitted). The exemption for interpretive necessary for the efficient delivery of needed health rules must be narrowly construed by the courts in view of the services. HCFA may establish estimated cost limits for important purposes served by the APA’s procedural direct or indirect overall costs or for costs of specific requirements. See, e.g., Caraballo v. Reich, 11 F.3d 186, 195 items or services or groups of items or services. These (D.C. Cir. 1993). limits will be imposed prospectively and may be calculated on a per beneficiary, per admission, per In defending its conclusion that the PRM rule is interpretive discharge, per diem, per visit, or other basis. rather than substantive, the majority emphasizes that the *** controlling statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy, leaves the exemption- (f) Exceptions. Limits established under this section may granting process to the Secretary’s discretion. Her be adjusted upward for a provider under the department’s prior regulation on the subject preserves that circumstances specified in paragraphs (f)(1) through discretion, subject to the four requirements listed above. See (f)(5) of this section. An adjustment is made only to the 42 C.F.R. § 413.30(f). The majority therefore maintains that extent the costs are reasonable, attributable to the the PRM rule is simply a guide to the Secretary’s exercise of circumstances specified, separately identified by the discretion. It concludes that “the [PRM] rule does not effect provider, and verified by the intermediary. new substantive reimbursement standards inconsistent with prior regulations—the central characteristic of a substantive (1) Atypical services. The provider can show that the– rule.” Op. at 18. (i) Actual cost of items or services furnished by a provider exceeds the applicable limit because such items I respectfully disagree. At a minimum, the PRM rule adds or services are atypical in nature and scope, compared a fifth, unwaivable requirement to the four reimbursement to the items or services generally furnished by providers criteria set out in 42 C.F.R. § 413.30. At a maximum, the similarly classified; and PRM rule conflicts with the prior regulation. In either case, (ii) Atypical items or services are furnished because of it imposes new financial restrictions on the HB-SNFs that it the special needs of the patients treated and are necessary regulates, thus requiring notice and comment prior to its in the efficient delivery of needed health care. enactment. See 5 U.S.C. § 553. 42 C.F.R. § 413.30 (emphasis added). Before the PRM rule was promulgated, the Secretary was free to reimburse HB-SNFs that provided atypical services for 8 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 21 3. PRM5 § 2534.5 Facilities that provide atypical services, which tend to be more expensive, may seek upward adjustments for a. The Provision expenditures above their cost limits. Under the reimbursement review process originally set up by 42 C.F.R. In July 1994, HCFA established a new methodology for § 413.30(f), the Health Care Financing Administration handling exception requests—the methodology which St. granted upward adjustments to HB-SNFs that demonstrated Francis challenges in this case.6 The methodology is set forth that their costs were (1) reasonable, (2) attributable to atypical in Transmittal No. 378, PRM § 2534.5 (“Determination of services, (3) separately identified, and (4) independently Reasonable Costs in Excess of Cost Limit or 112 percent of verified. See 42 C.F.R. § 413.30(f). In the years 1984-1990, Mean Cost”) and pertains to cost reporting periods after St. Francis received full compensation under this regulation July 1, 1984: for its direct service costs that exceeded its cost limit, having demonstrated that its extra expenses were reasonable and In determining reasonable cost, the provider’s per diem legitimately due to the costs of providing atypical services. costs in excess of the cost limit are subject to a test for For example, if St. Francis’s routine costs had averaged $100 low occupancy and are compared to per diem costs of a per person per day during those years, and its atypical direct peer group7 of similarly classified providers. service costs had totaled $30 per day, then the facility would *** have recovered the $30 above its cost limit upon making the . . . With cost reporting periods beginning prior to July 1, showing called for in the regulation. 1984, for each free-standing group and each hospital- based group, each cost center’s ratio is applied to the The PRM rule changed this system. Under the PRM rule, cost limit [i.e., the RCL] applicable to the cost reporting St. Francis’s atypical service expenditures are recoverable period for which the exception is requested. For each only to the extent that its total costs exceed Level 3. Using hospital-based group with cost reporting periods the same illustrative numbers as before, if St. Francis’s beginning on or after July 1, 1984, the ratio is applied to routine service costs are $100 and its atypical service costs are 112% of the group’s mean per diem cost (not the cost $30, it would recover only $10 (($130 total costs)-($120 limit), adjusted by the wage index and cost reporting year Level 3)) of the $30 it expended on atypical services. When a provider’s total costs do not exceed Level 3, none of its atypical service costs are recoverable. Thus, in 1991 and 1992, when St. Francis’s requests for an upward adjustment 5 The PRM, or Provider Reimbursement Manual, is a set of non- were evaluated under the PRM rule, the facility could not binding rules that the Secretary issues in order to provide guidance to recover any of its expenditures above its cost limit (Level 2) providers and intermediaries and clarify the Secretary’s reimbursement because its total costs did not exceed Level 3. This was true policies and regulations. even though the Secretary acknowledges that St. Francis’s 6 expenditures were legitimately spent for the provision of While the exceptions at issue pertain to fiscal years 1991 and 1992, atypical services. they are governed by PRM § 2534.5 because they were filed on August 22, 1994, and December 28, 1994. 7 There are four different SNF peer groups: (1) Urban Hospital-based; (2) Urban Freestanding; (3) Rural Hospital-based; and (4) Rural Freestanding. See PRM § 2534.5(B). St. Francis’s peer group is Urban Hospital-based. 20 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 9 ______________ adjustment factor applicable to the cost reporting period for which the exception is requested. DISSENT ______________ The SNF’s actual per diem cost . . . is compared to the appropriate component of the disaggregated cost limit or 112 percent of the hospital-based mean per diem cost. If RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge, dissenting. A the SNF’s per diem cost exceeds the peer group per diem fundamental requirement of the Administrative Procedure Act cost for any cost center, the higher cost must be (APA) is that interested persons be given notice of proposed explained. Excess per diem costs which are not substantive regulations and an opportunity to comment. See attributable to the circumstances upon which the 5 U.S.C. § 553. The majority concludes that the rule in exception is requested and cannot be justified may result question, Provider Reimbursement Manual § 2534.5 (the in either a reduction in the amount of the exception or a PRM rule), is exempt from the APA’s notice and comment denial of the exception. requirement because it is an “interpretive” rule. See id. § 553(b)(A). I believe that the PRM rule is substantive. PRM § 2534.5 (emphasis added). In short, for HB-SNF costs Because the rule was enacted without notice and an above the RCL, the methodology permits reimbursement for opportunity for comment, it should therefore be declared only those costs in excess of 112% of the mean per diem cost invalid. which are attributable to the HB-SNF’s atypical services. The approach creates a “gap” between the HB-SNF RCL and the I. BACKGROUND 112% level within which HB-SNFs cannot recover any of their costs above the RCL. It is the propriety of this “gap,” As explained by the majority, the governing statute as well as the consequences it has on facilities like St. Francis establishes different cost limits for free-standing versus which happen to fall within it, which is at issue in this case. hospital-based skilled nursing facilities. Free-standing skilled nursing facilities (FS-SNFs) have a cost limit equal to 112% b. Illustration of PRM § 2534.5 of the mean per diem costs of all FS-SNFs, which the parties refer to as Level 1. The cost limit for hospital-based skilled Because the operation of the PRM is somewhat complex, nursing facilities (HB-SNFs) is computed through a two step the following illustration, provided by the district court, is process: first, one determines 112% of the mean per diem helpful: costs of all HB-SNFs, which the parties refer to as Level 3, and that number is then compared with Level 1. The amount Assume: FS-SNF statutory RCL = 112% of the FS-SNF mean = $80 midway between Levels 1 and 3 is the cost limit for HB- Assume: 112% of the HB-SNF mean = $120 SNFs, which the parties refer to as Level 2. Thus, in the Then: HB-SNF statutory RCL = 112% of the FS-SNF mean + majority’s illustrative scenario, $80 is Level 1, the cost limit 50%(112% of the HB-SNF mean - for FS-SNFs, $120 is Level 3, equaling 112% of the average 112% of the FS-SNF mean) per diem cost of HB-SNFs, and $100 is Level 2, the cost limit = $80 + .50($120 - $80) = $80 + $20 for HB-SNFs. All of these numbers represent the average daily cost, per person, of operating various skilled nursing = $100 facilities. Based on the aforementioned statutory/regulatory language, a HB-SNF with the per diem actual costs listed below and the 10 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 19 RCLs directly above would be entitled to the corresponding anchored in its prior argument that PRM § 2534.5 maximum reimbursement rates: “contradicts the plain language of the applicable regulation that it purports to interpret,” St. Francis’s Br. at 35, a Actual Costs Maximum Reimbursement contention with which we disagree. Similarly, the dissenting $150 $130 opinion’s APA argument also emerges from its underlying $140 $120 view that the PRM cannot be considered an interpretation of $130 $110 112% of HB-SNF mean ($120) $120 $100 42 C.F.R. § 413.30 because it “confuses” the key terms of that $110 <---(the “gap”)--> $100 regulation and is unrelated to the reasonableness of atypical HB-SNF statutory RCL ($100) $100 $100 service costs. Again, based on our discussion supra and in $90 $90 112% of FS-SNF mean ($80) $80 $80 light of the deference owed to an agency interpreting its own (i.e., FS-SNF statutory RCL) regulations, we simply disagree with this conclusion. Thus, the Secretary was not required to comply with the APA’s Note that SNFs with actual costs between $100 (the HB-SNF notice and comment procedures in issuing PRM § 2534.5.11 RCL) and $120 (the 112% level), are only recompensed for $100 (the RCL amount). This is the “gap” St. Francis decries. IV. Another way to conceptualize this formula is that there are Because we do not find PRM § 2534.5 to be an arbitrary or three possible categories of actual costs: the provider’s actual capricious interpretation of the statute and regulation at issue, costs can be (1) less than or equal to the statutory RCL; (2) we AFFIRM. greater than or equal to the statutory RCL but less than 112% of its peer group mean; or (3) greater than or equal to 112% of its peer group mean. Pursuant to PRM § 2534.5, if the provider’s actual costs are less than or equal to the statutory RCL, the provider is reimbursed the full amount of its actual costs (category 1); if the provider’s costs are greater than or equal to the statutory RCL, but less than 112% of the HB-SNF mean, the provider is only reimbursed in the amount of the statutory RCL (category 2); if the provider’s costs are greater than or equal to 112% of the HB-SNF mean, the provider is reimbursed in the amount of the statutory RCL, plus any additional amount attributable to atypical services up to the 11 We also find unpersuasive St. Francis’s argument regarding the total amount by which the actual costs exceed the 112% of the Secretary’s “inconsistent” interpretation of its regulations. As this Court mean (category 3). Accordingly, category (2) represents a has stated, “[a]dministrative agencies are not bound by their own prior “gap” for which a provider will not be reimbursed above the construction of a statute . . . . We therefore review the Commission’s RCL amount despite having costs above the RCL. That construction of the statute without regard to the shift it represents from provider does not have the opportunity to show that its costs [its] prior construction . . . .” Crounse Corp. v. ICC, 781 F.2d 1176, 1186 (6th Cir. 1986) (citing NLRB v. Local Union No. 103, International Ass’n were reasonable and for atypical services. of Bridge, Structural & Ornamental Iron Workers, 434 U.S. 335, 351 (1978) (stating that when an administrative agency “chang[es] its mind[,] the courts still sit in review of the administrative decision and should not approach the statutory construction issue de novo and without regard to the administrative understanding of the statutes”)). 18 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 11 omitted). Such rules “do not have the force and effect of law II. and are not accorded that weight in the adjudicatory process,” and do not effect a “substantive change” which is inconsistent This Court reviews an order granting summary judgment de with existing regulations. Id. See also Friedrich v. Secretary novo and uses the same legal standard as used by the district of HHS, 894 F.2d 829 (6th Cir. 1990) (holding that a national court. See Terry Barr Sales Agency, Inc. v. All-Lock Co., 96 coverage determination by the Secretary was an interpretive F.3d 174, 178 (6th Cir. 1996). Summary judgment is rule). Lower court decisions looking at PRMs have been appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to consistent with Guernsey, concluding that they are interrogatories, and admissions of file, together with the interpretive rules and do not require notice and comment affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any rulemaking. See, e.g., St. Mary’s Hosp. v. Blue Cross & Blue material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment Shield Ass’n/Blue Cross & Blue Shield, 788 F.2d 888, 891 (2d as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); accord Terry Barr, Cir. 1986)(stating that PRM rules “have consistently been 96 F.3d at 178. Moreover, “the inferences to be drawn from held to be ‘interpretive rules,’ and thus exempt from the the underlying facts . . . must be viewed in the light most notice and comment requirements”); Columbus Community favorable to the party opposing the motion.” Matsushita Elec. Hosp., Inc. v. Califano, 614 F.2d 181, 187 (8th Cir. 1980) Indus Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (stating that PRMs are agency interpretive rules) . (1986)(citation omitted). However, “[f]actual disputes that are irrelevant or unnecessary will not be counted.” Anderson Even beyond the simple fact that PRMs are generally v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). categorized as interpretive, the work done by PRM § 2534.5 places it within the Guernsey Court’s definition of an In reviewing the Secretary’s interpretation of regulations, interpretive rule. The rule does not effect new substantive courts may overturn the Secretary’s decision only if it is reimbursement standards inconsistent with prior “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion or otherwise not regulations—the central characteristic of a substantive rule. in accordance with the law.” Thomas Jefferson Univ. v. See Guernsey, 514 U.S. at 99; Warder v. Shalala, 149 F.3d Shalala, 512 U.S. 504, 512 (1994) (citation omitted); see also 73, 80 (1st Cir. 1998). Rather, as explained above, the PRM Harris County Hosp. Dist. v. Shalala, 64 F.3d 220, 221 (5th reasonably interprets a statute and regulation which placed the Cir. 1995). Further, courts are to “give substantial deference determination of general terms such as the “reasonableness” to an agency’s interpretation of its own regulations.” Thomas of costs and the “typicality” of services in the hands of the Jefferson Univ., 512 U.S. at 512; see Martin v. Occupational Secretary. We agree with the Secretary that the PRM partially Safety and Health Review Comm’n, 499 U.S. 144, 151 (1991) performs this role by providing the means by which HB- (“Because applying an agency’s regulation to complex or SNFs’ systemic unreasonable costs are accounted for in changing circumstances calls upon the agency’s unique determining exceptions. Thus, just as in Friedrich, the PRM expertise and policymaking prerogatives, we presume that the “creates no new law.” 894 F.2d at 837. “Rather, it interprets power authoritatively to interpret its own regulations is a the statutory language . . . as applied to a particular medical component of the agency’s delegated lawmaking powers.”); service or method of treatment.” Id.; see also Warder, 149 Harris, 64 F.3d at 221 (“The Secretary’s interpretation of F.3d at 80 (finding an administrative ruling to be interpretive Medicare regulations is given controlling weight unless it is because “it addresse[d] an area of ambiguity” and did not plainly erroneous or i nconsistent with the “stake out any ground the basic tenor of which [was] not regulation.”)(internal quotations omitted). In sum, if “it is a already outlined in the law itself”) (internal quotations and reasonable regulatory interpretation . . . we must defer to it.” citation omitted). St. Francis’s arguments to the contrary are 12 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 17 Shalala v. Guernsey Memorial Hosp., 514 U.S. 87, 94-95 unreasonable costs as determined by Congress, HB-SNFs and (1995). FS-SNFs are treated relatively the same. III. Third, St. Francis misunderstands how PRM § 2534.5 operates when it attacks it for being irrational on policy Because we agree that the Secretary’s interpretation is not grounds. Specifically, St. Francis believes that the regime is arbitrary or capricious, we affirm the district court’s holding. irrational because it deems costs below the 112% level to be unreasonable, but reasonable when they exceed that amount. A. See St. Francis’s Br. at 34. But this is not an accurate characterization of the PRM’s effect. As the district court St. Francis offers several reasons that the Secretary’s legal stated, the “discount” applies to the costs of all HB-SNFs interpretation of C.F.R. § 413.30(f)--embodied in PRM above the RCL; all have costs which are deemed to be § 2534.5--falls short of the requirement that agency unreasonable, and all are “systematically undercompensate[d] interpretations not be “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of in exactly the same manner.” St. Francis, 10 F.Supp.2d at discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 894. The only difference rendered is that once excess costs U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Most importantly, St. Francis asserts that span beyond the 112% threshold, a portion of the excess costs PRM § 2534.5 contradicts plain statutory and regulatory resulting from atypical services can be reimbursed. Yet the language. It contends that both 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy(a) and 42 discount factor reflecting the “unreasonable” costs of HB- C.F.R. § 413.30 “dictate” that a provider who demonstrates SNFs still impacts upon all HB-SNFs above the 112% level; that its costs in excess of its cost limit are 1) due to the in other words, there is still an amount of their costs which, provision of atypical services and 2) reasonable, attributable, deemed unreasonable by the PRM, those HB-SNFs cannot identified and verified, is entitled to reimbursement in full recover. See supra n. 9. above the cost limit. St. Francis’s Br. at 24. Therefore, St. Francis argues, PRM § 2534.5 contradicts the plain language 3. St. Francis’s APA Argument of the statute and regulation by imposing a blanket (and “arbitrary”) limit requiring that costs be excepted only to the Finally, we can not agree with St. Francis’s argument that extent that total costs exceed that limit. PRM § 2534.5 is invalid because it was not adopted pursuant to the notice and comment procedures set forth in the APA, St. Francis offers several other arguments to bolster its case. 5 U.S.C. § 553(b). In Guernsey, the Court sustained another First, St. Francis asserts that PRM § 2354.5 does not square of the Secretary’s PRMs concerning reimbursement. In doing with the legislative intent behind the Medicare Act so, the Court stated that the PRM at issue was not subject to provisions. It points to a Senate Finance Committee report the notice and comment requirement of the APA because it which it claims makes clear that facilities like St. Francis was a “prototypical example of an interpretive rule.” 514 should be able to recover all of their reasonable costs, U.S. at 99. See 5 U.S.C. § 553(b)(A) (establishing that notice regardless of whether they are a FS-SNF or a HB-SNF. See and comment are not required for “interpretive rules, general St. Francis’s Br. at 29. Second, St. Francis argues that PRM statements of policy, or rules of agency organization, § 2534.5 is unreasonable on policy grounds because it treats procedure or practice”). Specifically, the Court defined FS-SNFs and HB-SNFs disparately. The regime places FS- interpretive rules as those “issued by an agency to advise the SNFs that provide atypical services at a distinct advantage, public of the agency’s construction of the statutes and rules reimbursing them for all their costs. On the other hand, HB- which it administers.” Guernsey, 514 U.S. at 99. (citation SNFs receive less than full reimbursement for providing the 16 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 13 established by Congress in 4210U.S.C. § 1395yy and elaborated same services at the same cost; the regime thus penalizes upon by 42 C.F.R. § 413.30. them and provides a disincentive to provide such services. St. Francis argues that this result “turns the tables” on the true 2. Policy Arguments policy intent; indeed, it maintains that Congress originally intended that HB-SNFs should “receive more than We also agree with the district court that St. Francis’s freestanding facilities because it recognized that [HB-SNFs] policy arguments against PRM § 2534.5 are unavailing. First, incur more costs in providing the same services” than the FS- given the clear Congressional conclusion that HB-SNFs suffer SNFs. St. Francis’s Br. at 32. Third, St. Francis argues that from general cost inefficiencies, the Secretary, through the because HCFA previously interpreted the applicable intermediary, should not be required to review each regulations differently, the new interpretation is not entitled provider’s submitted reimbursement request to determine if to deference. Finally, St. Francis asserts that PRM § 2534.5 its costs were reasonable. Particularly in light of SNFs’ vastly is procedurally invalid because it is a substantive rule, yet it different services and patient populations, such a requirement was not passed pursuant to the notice and comment would impose a high burden and cost on the Secretary — a requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. burden not required by the statute or the regulation. It was § 553 (“APA”). neither arbitrary nor capricious for the Secretary instead to introduce a discount factor to account for the systemic cost B. inefficiencies identified by Congress, while still allowing HB- SNFs to obtain reimbursement when they demonstrate that We agree with the district court that St. Francis has not costs above the 112% threshold are due to atypical services. shown that PRM § 2534.5 is an arbitrary or capricious interpretation of either 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy or 42 C.F.R. Second, St. Francis errs when it argues that PRM § 2534.5 § 413.30. unfairly disadvantages HB-SNFs relative to FS-SNFs for “no legitimate reason.” St. Francis’s Br. at 32. This assertion 1. Statutory and Regulatory Text simply ignores Congress’s conclusion that FS-SNFs are more efficient than HB-SNFs, and thus should be reimbursed more St. Francis’s first argument is that PRM § 2534.5 “is favorably. Stated differently, once discounted for their inconsistent with the plain language of the governing statute and regulation.” St. Francis’s Br. at 23. We disagree with this contention because the statute explicitly granted the 10 Secretary broad discretion and because she exercised this We agree with the Secretary’s arguments regarding legislative history. First, the history is sparse and generally inconclusive, and should discretion consistent with the clear policy choices Congress be given little weight when the text of the statute so clearly resolves this made in the statute. dispute. Second, even the history to which St. Francis points does not contradict the Secretary’s reading of the statutory language. The language Neither Congress in 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy nor the Secretary from the Senate report that St. Francis emphasizes is that “[f]acilities eligible for exceptions could receive, where justified, up to all of their in 42 C.F.R. § 413.30 mandated that a HB-SNF be reasonable costs.” Senate Comm. on Finance, 98th Cong., 2d Sess., reimbursed any amount above the statutory RCL set forth in Deficit Reduction Act of 1984: Explanation of Provisions Approved by § 1395yy. St. Francis therefore overstates its case when it the Committee on March 21, 1984, Vol. 1 at 947 (Comm. Print 1984) claims the language of these provisions “dictates that a (emphasis added). PRM § 2534.5, through the discretion granted to the provider who demonstrates that its costs in excess of its cost Secretary by the plain text of the Medicare Act, is indeed consistent with this directive because it provides a general formula for determining the limit are 1) due to the provision of atypical services and 2) extent to which an HB-SNF’s costs are “reasonable.” reasonable, attributable, identified and verified, is entitled to 14 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala No. 98-3965 No. 98-3965 St. Francis Health Care v. Shalala 15 reimbursement in full above the cost limit.” St. Francis’s Br. these unreasonable costs comports with the general at 24 (emphasis added). Instead, both provisions are phrased recognition by Congress that “certain systemic inefficiencies in the permissive, merely stating that the Secretary “may” . . . associated with unreasonable costs [] are associated with adjust cost limits upward. 42 U.S.C. § 1395yy(c); 42 C.F.R. HB-SNFs.” St. Francis, 10 F.Supp.2d at 892. In fact, the § 413.30(f). Moreover, neither provision provides guidance PRM calculation reduces the reimbursement to HB-SNFs by as to the level of adjustment the Secretary must make. the very same proportion that Congress deemed to be Specifically, 42 C.F.R. § 413.30 provides that although limits inefficient — half of the difference in costs between FS-SNFs “may” be adjusted when “atypical,” they should only be and HB-SNFs.9 Likewise, the guideline comports with 42 adjusted upward “to the extent the costs are reasonable.” 42 C.F.R. § 413.30, which allows the Secretary to determine the C.F.R. § 413.30(f). As the Secretary argued, this explicitly extent to which costs for atypical services are “reasonable.” placed the determination of “typicality” of services versus 42 C.F.R. § 413.30(f). “reasonableness” of costs within her discretion.8 In sum, PRM § 2534.5 does not create the “two-tier” Having noted what the statute does not do, it is important system in contravention of the statute and regulation. To the to note what it does do. As discussed supra, Congress contrary, the Secretary merely acted within the discretion she responded to studies demonstrating that about half of the was granted by putting into place the very cost ratio greater cost of HB-SNFs was due to inefficiency by establishing a two-tier system which prevents HB-SNFs from being reimbursed for those inefficient costs. Hence, for HB- SNFs, Congress set the new statutory cost limit at fifty percent of the difference between 112% of the mean per diem costs for HB-SNFs and FS-SNFs. Of course, just as Congress did not address how the Secretary should generally grant 9 upward adjustments in reimbursements, it also did not specify Once again, if we take $80 as 112% of the FS-SNF mean, and $120 how the Secretary should do so in light of this new regime as 112% of the HB-SNF mean, the results of the application of PRM accounting for HB-SNFs’ inefficiency. Yet again, she was § 2534.5 are as follows: granted discretion to make this determination. Actual Costs Amount Reimbursed $150 $130 Given these aspects of the statute, we agree with the district $140 $120 court that the Secretary’s interpretation of the regulation and $130 $110 112% of HB-SNF mean ($120) $120 $100 statute in the PRM is reasonable, not arbitrary. First, we $110 <---(the “gap”)--> $100 agree with the Secretary that the best way to characterize the HB-SNF statutory RCL ($100) $100 $100 effect of the PRM is that it applies a “discount factor” to all $90 $90 112% of FS-SNF mean ($80) $80 $80 HB-SNFs to account for the “unreasonable costs” above those (i.e., FS-SNF statutory RCL) of FS-SNFs. As the district court recognized, discounting for Once at or above the 112% level, the difference between an HB-SNF’s actual costs and the amount it is reimbursed is $20, which is half of the 8 difference between 112% of the HB-SNF mean and 112% of the FS-SNF This is consistent with other parts of the Medicare Act, which also mean (which is $40). Thus, in determining upward adjustments as “authorize[] the Secretary to promulgate regulations ‘establishing the Congress bid her to, the Secretary is using the very ratio—and the very method or methods to be used’ for determining reasonable costs.” assumptions regarding the inefficiencies of HB-SNFs—that the statute Guernsey, 514 U.S. at 91 (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 1395x(v)(1)(A)). prescribed for establishing the RCL for HB-SNFs.