MARK A. GOLDSMITH, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff General Medicine, P.C.'s motion for summary judgment (Dkt. 60). The issues have been fully briefed. Because oral argument will not aid the decisional process, the motion will be decided based on the parties' briefing.
This case comes before the Court on review of the Medicare Appeals Council ("the Council"), which issued the final decision of the Secretary of Health and Human Services. The Council is the last layer of review in the Medicare system; denials by a Medicare Administrative Contractor ("MAC") must first be reviewed, in order, by a request for redetermination by the MAC, then by a qualified independent contractor ("QIC"), then by an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ"). The Council's decision follows, and is subject to judicial review.
In 2007, the MAC notified General Medicine, who hires physicians to provide services to Medicare beneficiaries in nursing facilities, of an overpayment of $1,836,646.56. This amount was calculated following a sample of 382 claims submitted by General Medicine. Of those, 314 claims were denied — 238 as not medically necessary — and 33 were allowed at different levels than billed. The overpayment sample was $16,778.80, which was then extrapolated to determine the amount of the overpayment. On redetermination, the overpayment was adjusted to $1,836,114.62. The QIC issued its decision on General Medicine's reconsideration request on September 13, 2007, with favorable decisions on claims in the sample that were adequately supported by the documentation, and unfavorable decisions on claims that either lacked sufficient documentation to establish that the services were provided at all or that they were provided on the date of service billed.
The process concluded following a lengthy back-and-forth between the ALJ and the Council. Relevant to this appeal is the ALJ's December 17, 2009 interim decision concluding that the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services ("CMS") did not provide complete notice of the audit, but holding that there was no evidence that any lack of notice "caused any detriment to [General Medicine] or adversely affected the validity of the sampling or the audit" and resulted in no harm to General Medicine. 12/17/2009 ALJ Order at 11, PageID.3196 (Dkt. 15-1). In a November 28, 2011 opinion, the ALJ rejected General Medicine's argument that it lacked the necessary documentation to render a decision on the sampled claims.
The Council issued its final decision on June 21, 2017, agreeing with the ALJ's decision validating the sample methodology.
General Medicine is not challenging any factual findings; rather, it only challenges the decision that it was not prejudiced by either the lack of notice of the audit or by the ALJ's refusal to issue subpoenas for additional medical records.
As to notice, the Council determined that "we do not see that [General Medicine] was irreparably harmed by the lack of formal notice of the pending audit. Nor are we entirely certain that [General Medicine] was totally without reasonable notice or at least notice similar to that which it received in connection with the 2002 audit." 6/21/2017 Council Decision at 21. It continued:
As for the subpoenas, General Medicine argued to the Council that it is a facility-based practice that does not maintain its own set of patient records. According to General Medicine, the facility was uncooperative in providing records, and thus the ALJ needed to use its subpoena power to have a full record. The Council found against General Medicine, initially noting that "since the nursing homes where [General Medicine's] physicians practiced were not parties to this action, it is not clear the extent to which the ALJ has the authority to subpoena medical records in their possession." 6/21/2017 Council Decision at 18. Regardless, the Council ruled that the "need to keep medical documents supporting an E&M [evaluation and management] service furnished by one of [General Medicine's] physicians is the responsibility of [General Medicine] since the [General Medicine] billed for those services," and thus the subpoena covered documents that should have already been in General Medicine's files.
Under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g), this Court has authority to review the Secretary's decision, as promulgated by the Council. "Judicial review of the Secretary's decisions is limited to determining whether the Secretary's findings are supported by substantial evidence and whether the Secretary employed the proper legal standards."
Neither party cites any specific caselaw regarding the notice issue, instead relying on canons of statutory interpretation that courts must give credence to every word of a statute. General Medicine observes that written notice for post-payment audits is required by statute, and that the purpose of this provision is "to allow the provider of services an opportunity either before or during the audit to reach a settlement with CMS, provide additional information, or take steps to prepare to contest the findings." Pl. Mot. at 8 (Dkt. 60). General Medicine acknowledges that the statute does not provide for a specific sanction for the failure to provide notice, but argues that it was harmed by its inability to provide input before the extrapolation decision was made.
It is axiomatic that "[e]very word in the statute is presumed to have meaning, and [courts] must give effect to all the words to avoid an interpretation which would render words superfluous or redundant."
42 U.S.C. § 1395ddd(f)(7)(A). Subparagraph (C) is not applicable to this case.
The Council decided that it did not "see that [General Medicine] was irreparably harmed by the lack of formal notice of the pending audit." 6/21/2017 Council Decision at 21. Indeed, the Council noted, it was not "entirely certain that [General Medicine] was totally without reasonable notice or at least notice similar to that which it received in connection with the 2002 audit."
As it relates to this appeal, General Medicine has not met its burden to necessitate overturning the Council's decision. To begin, the Council is correct that the statute, despite creating a right to notice, does not prescribe a remedy when that right is violated. General Medicine requests a reversal of the Council decision, which ultimately amounts to dismissal, regardless of any showing of prejudice by the lack of notice. Dismissal is, of course, "an extraordinary remedy,"
General Medicine would have a stronger argument that dismissal is an appropriate remedy if it were able to show that it had been prejudiced by the lack of notice. However, as the Council correctly determined, it has failed to do so. General Medicine only offers vague allegations of prejudice in this Court, contending that it was "denied the opportunity to influence [the extrapolation] decision." Pl. Mot. at 9. But General Medicine has not shown that the outcome of the process would have been different had it been given that opportunity. Further, General Medicine has had the opportunity to present its arguments in over a decade of litigation regarding these claims, and thus it cannot be said that it has been wholly without opportunity to argue its case.
For these reasons, the Court denies this aspect of General Medicine's motion.
General Medicine also argues that the ALJ erred in not requiring the QIC to obtain the complete medical records of the beneficiaries. According to General Medicine, the QIC failed to obey the ALJ's order to obtain all medical records. The ALJ proceeded in the absence of the full medical records, and the Council ultimately did so as well. General Medicine seeks a remand in order to obtain full medical records. The Government argues that the ALJ and the Council correctly determined that the medical records were not necessary to review the individual claims, and that the additional records are not new or material.
To begin, General Medicine seems to overstate the order made by the ALJ. General Medicine points to the ALJ's May 11, 2009 order of remand,
Further, General Medicine has not met its burden to show that a remand is appropriate, as it has not shown that the evidence here is new or material. In
Here, there is no dispute that the evidence sought existed at the time of the hearing in front of the ALJ, and thus the question becomes whether it was available. General Medicine claims that the evidence is not available because the QIC did not subpoena it. The plaintiff in
For these reasons, the Court denies Plaintiff's motion for summary judgment.
SO ORDERED.