M. CHRISTINA ARMIJO, Chief District Judge.
The parties are familiar with the background of this case, and thus the Court will not address it in detail. In short, Plaintiffs, a married couple, were aggressively treated for Lyme disease by Dr. Carol Ann Ryser in 2006 and 2007. [Doc. 23, pp. 5-7, 17] Their insurance carrier, and subsequently the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), denied payment for many tests and treatments ordered by Dr. Ryser on the grounds that they were not medically necessary. [Doc. 23, p. 2] This Court entered a Memorandum Opinion and Order in December, 2013, in relevant part concluding that OPM failed to state why it rejected the aggressive treatment Plaintiffs received for Lyme disease, which was consistent with International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS) Guidelines, which were a part of the record. [Doc. 23, p. 60] Absent from the record was evidence supporting the conclusion that Plaintiffs' tests and treatments did not meet the criteria for being medically necessary, i.e., that they were inconsistent with standards of good medical practice in the United States. [Doc. 23, pp. 60-61] Accordingly, the Court remanded the case to OPM for OPM to "develop a record which indicates the standards of good practice in the United States in sufficient detail to make an informed, reasoned decision about whether or not Dr. Ryser's treatment conformed to that standard." [Doc. 23, p. 61]
In October, 2015, OPM issued its second Final Decision, again denying benefits for many treatments as not medically necessary. Plaintiffs filed a Motion to Enforce, and argued that the October 2015 Final Decision did not comply with the Court's December 2013 Memorandum Opinion and Order. [Doc. 45; Doc. 49] The Court granted-in-part and denied-in-part Plaintiffs' Motion to Enforce on September 20, 2016. [Doc. 65] On October 17, 2016, Plaintiffs filed the present Motion for Reconsideration of the Opinion Entered 9/20/2016. [Doc. 66] Additional background, as necessary, is set forth below.
Rule 59(e) provides for motions to "alter or amend" a judgment if the motion is filed within twenty-eight days of the judgment. Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e). Although a final judgment consistent with Rule 58 was not entered in this case, Plaintiff's Motion is properly considered under Rule 59(e) because the Memorandum Opinion and Order at issue disposed of all issues and remanded the case. [Doc. 65, p. 32] See Wagoner v. Wagoner, 938 F.2d 1120, 1122-23 (10th Cir. 1991) (holding that, though the Court had not yet entered a judgment, a motion to reconsider an order that "dismissed plaintiff's complaint with prejudice" was "properly deemed filed pursuant to Rule 59(e)"); Hilst v. Bowen, 874 F.2d 725, 726 (10th Cir. 1989) (stating that a motion to alter judgment may be filed under Rule 59 "before a formal judgment has been entered" under Rule 58); but cf. Trujillo v. Bd. of Educ. of Albuquerque Pub. Sch., 212 F. App'x 760, 765 (10th Cir. 2007) (unpublished decision) (stating that the district court has the discretion to revise its interlocutory rulings, including an order granting summary judgment for the last remaining defendant, prior to entry of a judgment, without applying the stricter standards of Rule 59(e)).
"Rule 59(e) relief is available in limited circumstances, including [when there is] `(1) an intervening change in the controlling law, (2) . . . new evidence previously [which was] unavailable, and (3) the need to correct clear error or prevent manifest injustice.'" Hayes Family Trust v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 845 F.3d 997, 1004 (10th Cir. 2017) (quoting Servants of the Paraclete v. Does, 204 F.3d 1005, 1012 (10th Cir. 2000)). "[A] motion for reconsideration is appropriate where the court has misapprehended the facts, a party's position, or the controlling law. . . . It is not appropriate to revisit issues already addressed or advance arguments that could have been raised in prior briefing." Servants of the Paraclete, 204 F.3d at 1012 (internal citations omitted).
Plaintiffs primarily argue that OPM did not fulfill its duty, as set forth in Gunderson v. United States Department of Labor, 601 F.3d 1013, 1022-23 (10th Cir. 2010), to provide an analysis and reason for favoring one scientific theory over the other. [Doc. 66, p. 3] In particular, Plaintiffs argue that OPM's October 2015 Final Decision "completely fails to mention the opposing view, particularly the updated — ILADS Guidelines." [Doc. 66, p. 3] Plaintiffs argue that the "Court should have required OPM to discuss the two competing approaches to IV [intravenous] treatment of Lyme disease." [Doc. 66, p. 4]
This argument simply rehashes an argument Plaintiffs made previously. In their Reply brief, Plaintiffs argued, inter alia, that OPM "refuses to acknowledge the existence of chronic long-term Lyme disease or the ILADS Guidelines, and therefore the medical necessity for the testing or treatment of any such disease." [Doc. 49, p. 4] Accordingly, Plaintiffs' argument in the present motion is an inappropriate attempt to "revisit issues already addressed," and thus this argument is not a basis for relief under Rule 59(e). Servants of the Paraclete, 204 F.3d at 1012.
Plaintiffs argue that OPM "failed to even include or mention the submittal of the significant, published, highly researched [ILADS] Guidelines, which
Gunderson sets the standard which OPM was required to meet in determining whether the treatments were medically necessary. Gunderson, 601 F.3d at 1022. "[C]ourts generally afford [deference] to agency action that implicates scientific and technical judgments within the scope of agency expertise. . . . They have a corresponding obligation to use that skill when evaluating technical evidence." Id. (internal quotation marks, citations and emphasis omitted). "[C]oncomitant with the [Administrative Law Judge's] duty to resolve all conflicts in the medical evidence is the responsibility to provide some general articulable basis for rejecting certain key medical evidence that favors or disfavors an award of benefits." Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
Plaintiffs' argument is not persuasive. First, though OPM does not cite the ILADS Guidelines, OPM addressed the two competing approaches. Thus, it is clear that OPM considered the content and recommendations of the ILADS Guidelines. Moreover, OPM stated its reasons for not finding the medical care at issue to be consistent with standards of good medical practice by identifying the good medical practice, i.e., the IDSA Guidelines. OPM's final decision stated, in part (the full analysis is set forth in the Court's September 20, 2016 Memorandum Opinion and Order [Doc. 65]):
Although Dr. Ryser and other "Lyme literate" physicians are critical of the IDSA guidelines, it is worth noting that the guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with Lyme disease have been scrutinized by members of an independent medical review panel and found to be "medically and scientifically justified" with no changes recommended.
[Doc. 65, p. 11; Doc. 46-1 (footnotes omitted)] Thus, without expressly naming them, OPM rejected the ILADS recommendations (both the recognition of the "concept of chronic Lyme disease" and administering antibiotic treatment for longer than 28 days) and stated its reasons for doing so: the scrutiny of "an independent medical review panel" and evidence from "four National Institutes of Health-sponsored antibiotic treatment trials" which concluded that "retreatment provides little if any benefit and carries significant risk." [Doc. 65, pp. 11-12; Doc. 46-1, p. 4] Finally, OPM cited not only the IDSA guidelines, issued in 2006, but a peer reviewed article "revisit[ing]" the guidelines, published in —. [Doc. 65, pp. 11-12]
Having identified the evidence on which it relied to conclude that Plaintiffs' treatments were not medically necessary, OPM complied with the dictates of Gunderson, and thus, in turn, this Court's — Order. By addressing the aggressive Lyme disease school of thought generally, OPM's decision considered all important aspects of Plaintiffs' argument. See also Surgicore v. Office of Pers. Mgmt., 2006 WL 733548, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 21, 2006) ("[A]n agency acts arbitrarily and capriciously when it entirely fails to consider an important aspect of the problem." (Internal quotation marks, citation and brackets omitted)). OPM's expert medical reviewer demonstrates that he or she is familiar with the up-to-date research in his or her field. OPM and its reviewer did not, as Plaintiffs suggest, have the duty to refute every contrary medical article, or even those specifically identified by Plaintiffs. OPM merely had the duty to identify the standards of good medical practice in the United States and sufficient support for those standards for the Court to be able to trace OPM's reasoning. In sum, OPM's decision resolved the "scientific dispute on scientific grounds" and OPM "provide[d] support for favoring one opinion over another." Gunderson, 601 F.3d at 1022-23 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Furthermore, Plaintiffs did not timely submit the evidence of the — ILADS Guidelines to OPM.
Finally, with regard to the — ILADS Guidelines, under the circumstances of this case the Court is not willing to hold that OPM acted arbitrarily or capriciously by analyzing medical necessity under the best medical evidence available at the time of treatment, 2006 and 2007, rather than contradictory guidelines that were published over six years after the treatment was administered.
Thus, for the above reasons, it was not erroneous for OPM to fail to reference the 2014 ILADS Guidelines in its 2015 Final Decision.
Plaintiffs also argue that OPM failed to discuss forty "referenced articles sent by Plaintiffs in June, 2015." [Doc. 66, p. 6] Again, however, OPM need not discuss every medical research article contrary to its conclusion. Instead, the Court must be able to determine why OPM reached the conclusion that it did — and, as discussed above, the Court is able to do that on this record.
Finally, Plaintiffs' counsel disputes that he "admitted," as argued by Defendant, that a CD-ROM of unknown origin "was in fact prepared by his clients," [Doc. 55, p. 2], while nonetheless acknowledging that he is "not sure" where the CD-ROM came from and that "it is likely that Plaintiffs actually prepared it." [Doc. 66, pp. 1-2] This argument is irrelevant because: 1) the Court's reasoning in the September 2016 Memorandum Opinion and Order addressed several reasons for disregarding the CD-ROM, irrespective of Defendant's claim that Plaintiffs' counsel "admitted" that his clients prepared the CD, and, moreover, 2) even if this argument were persuasive, it is not a basis for reconsideration as set forth in Servants of the Paraclete, 204 F.3d at 1012.
In sum, Plaintiffs' have not persuaded the Court that the Court's September 20, 2016 Memorandum Opinion and Order should be reconsidered.