STAHL, Circuit Judge.
Yarushka Rivera died of a seizure in 2009 after receiving mental health treatment at Arbour Counseling Services in Lawrence, Massachusetts, a facility owned and operated by Defendant-Appellee Universal Health Services ("UHS"). UHS submitted reimbursement claims for these services to MassHealth, the state's Medicaid agency.
Following Yarushka's death, her mother and stepfather learned that Arbour had employed unlicensed and unsupervised personnel, in violation of state regulations — many of whom were involved in treating their daughter during the years leading up to her death. Relators subsequently brought a
The district court granted defendant's motion to dismiss, concluding that the regulatory violations were conditions for participation in the state Medicaid program, but were not conditions of payment as required for a claim to be actionable under the FCA. We reversed, holding that the regulatory violations in question were, in fact, conditions for payment and that the Relators' complaint had "properly pleaded that the condition of payment at issue was a material one," given the ubiquity of the licensing and supervision requirements throughout the MassHealth regulations governing the state's Medicaid program with respect to mental health services.
UHS sought review in the Supreme Court, the Court granted certiorari, and ruled that the implied false certification theory can be a basis for FCA liability. However, the Supreme Court vacated our judgment and remanded the case for further consideration of whether Relators' complaint sufficiently alleged that the regulatory violations in question were material to the government's payment decision, a requirement for an actionable FCA claim.
Applying the Supreme Court's guidance on the question of whether UHS's misrepresentations were material, we again find that Relators' complaint sufficiently states a claim under the FCA. We therefore REVERSE the district court's grant of UHS' Motion to Dismiss and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Having previously had occasion to discuss the underlying facts that gave rise to this litigation,
The False Claims Act, 31 U.S. § 3729
This case arose in the context of reimbursement claims submitted to MassHealth, the Massachusetts Medicaid program. The applicable Massachusetts Code
If the satellite program's staff do not meet the qualifications for core disciplines as described in 130 Mass. Code Regs. § 429.424, the staff must receive supervision from qualified core staff professionals of the same discipline at the parent center.
When submitting claims to MassHealth, UHS used numerical codes corresponding to the particular types of services rendered, in this case individual therapy, family therapy, and group therapy. The definition of each of these types of services, for billing purposes, in Section 601 of MassHealth's then-operative Mental Health Center Manual requires that they be performed "by [a] professional staff member as defined in 130 CMR 429.424."
Relators allege that unbeknownst to Yarushka Rivera's family in the years leading up to her death, UHS's Arbour facility was in flagrant non-compliance with these regulations. According to the allegations in Relators' Second Amended Complaint, of the five specific individuals who treated Yarushka — Maria Pereyra, Diana Casado, Anna Fuchu, Maribel Ortiz and Anna Cabacoff — only one of them (Cabacoff) had the proper license or was under the proper supervision to deliver treatment to Yarushka. Neither Pereyra nor Casado, the counselors assigned to Yarushka, had a professional license and at no time during their treatment of Yarushka were they supervised by anyone that did. Fuchu, despite being held out to Yarushka's parents as an experienced "doctor" and representing herself as a psychologist with a Ph.D, in fact only had received her psychological instruction from an unaccredited internet college and had her application for licensure rejected by the Board of Licensure of the Commonwealth several years before the treatment giving rise to this lawsuit.
Ortiz was referred to Relators as a psychiatrist, when in fact she was a nurse, without a license to practice psychiatry. Ortiz prescribed Trileptal to Yarushka, a medication to which Yarushka had an adverse reaction. This medication was prescribed despite the fact that Ortiz could prescribe medications only if properly supervised by a board certified psychiatrist (she was not). Yarushka ultimately suffered a seizure, her second while receiving treatment at Arbour, and died. Throughout this course of treatment, UHS regularly sought and received reimbursement for these mental health services from MassHealth.
Finally, UHS's staff members at Arbour, like any health care practitioner who bills under Medicaid, received National Provider Identification ("NPI") numbers which identify the practitioner's level of expertise and whether the practitioner is, in fact, licensed. One of UHS's unlicensed counselors, Maria Pereyra, had a fraudulently-obtained NPI, having misrepresented her background and education. Relators uncovered information that an additional 22 UHS employees had obtained false NPI numbers that misrepresented their status as licensed social workers or licensed mental health counselors.
Following Yarushka's death, Relators learned that most of the individuals who had provided care for their daughter were not properly licensed or supervised. With this knowledge, they then filed complaints with several state agencies, including the Disabled Persons Protection Committee ("DPPC"), Division of Professional Licensure ("DPL"), and the Department of Public Health ("DPH"). These complaints eventually culminated in the DPH conducting on-the-ground inspections at Arbour during the spring of 2012, during which time they learned that Arbour was using unlicensed and unsupervised personnel. DPH issued a report in July of 2012 detailing its findings.
On July 1, 2011, while the DPH investigation against Arbour was still pending, Relators brought suit against UHS in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, arguing that by submitting claims for reimbursement to MassHealth, UHS had impliedly certified that its services were in conformity with
We reversed in relevant part and remanded, finding that a violation is material to payment if "the defendant, in submitting a claim for reimbursement, knowingly misrepresented compliance with a material precondition of payment."
The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve a disagreement among U.S. Courts of Appeals over the validity and scope of the implied certification theory. The Court upheld the validity of the implied certification theory, holding that "[w]hen, as here, a defendant makes representations in submitting a claim but omits its violations of statutory, regulatory, or contractual requirements, those omissions can be a basis for liability if they render the defendant's representations misleading with respect to the goods or services provided."
The language that the Supreme Court used in
"The materiality standard is demanding," as the False Claims Act is not "`an all-purpose antifraud statute' or a vehicle for punishing garden-variety breaches of contract or regulatory violations."
The Court then laid out several specific factors that might contribute to determining materiality:
Applying the holistic approach to determining materiality laid out by the Supreme Court, we have little difficulty in concluding that Relators have sufficiently alleged that UHS's misrepresentations were material. We reach this conclusion for three reasons. First, Relators have alleged in their Second Amended Complaint that regulatory compliance was a condition of payment — itself a "relevant" though "not dispositive" factor in determining materiality.
Looking "to the effect on the likely or actual behavior of the recipient of the alleged misrepresentation,"
Additionally, in this case, regulatory compliance is not merely a condition of payment; rather, MassHealth's decision to have a series of regulations in place to ensure that clinical mental health counselors, psychiatrists and psychologists are of sufficient professional caliber to treat patients strongly counsels in favor of a finding that compliance with these regulations is central to the state's Medicaid program and thus material to the government's payment decision. In describing Relators' Second Amended Complaint, the Supreme Court noted that the Relators "have alleged that Universal Health misrepresented its compliance with mental health facility requirements that are so central to the provision of mental health counseling that the Medicaid program would not have paid these claims had it known of these violations."
We reaffirm our previous conclusion on this score. MassHealth has made it clear in its regulations that it expects that individuals in the business of providing mental health services in the Commonwealth have adequate training and professional credentials. Compliance, or lack thereof, with these regulations seem to us the textbook example of representations that would "likely ... induce a reasonable person to manifest his assent,"
While we recognize that the FCA is not "a vehicle for punishing garden-variety breaches of contract or regulatory violations,"
The defendant's primary argument on remand is that the government continued
First, reviewing the factual allegations in the Second Amended Complaint and accepting them as true, as we must for purposes of evaluating a 12(b)(6) motion, we see no evidence that MassHealth continued to pay claims despite actual knowledge of the violations. Relators' Second Amended Complaint only cites reimbursements paid up to "the filing of this litigation" on July 1, 2011. It would appear that DPH did not conclusively discover the extent of the violations until March of 2012, well after the commencement of the litigation. Even assuming, on the most generous reading of the Second Amended Complaint for UHS, that various state regulators had some notice of complaints against Arbour in late 2009 and 2010, mere awareness of allegations concerning noncompliance with regulations is different from knowledge of actual noncompliance. Additionally, there is no evidence in the complaint that MassHealth, the entity paying Medicaid claims, had actual knowledge of any of these allegations (much less their veracity) as it paid UHS's claims. Because we find no evidence that MassHealth had actual knowledge of the violations at the time it paid the claims at issue, we need not decide whether actual knowledge of the violations would in fact be sufficiently strong evidence that the violations were not material to the government's payment decision so as to support a motion to dismiss in this case.
Second, the specific claims identified by Relators only pertain to Yarushka's treatment, which ended with her death in October 2009. Their allegations plausibly make out a claim that those payments, for the unlicensed and unsupervised treatment their daughter received, were fraudulent. We see no reason to require Relators at the Motion to Dismiss phase to learn, and then to allege, the government's payment practices for claims unrelated to services rendered to the deceased family member in order to establish the government's views on the materiality of the violation. Indeed, given applicable federal and state privacy regulations in the healthcare industry, it is highly questionable whether Relators could have even accessed such information.
While it may be the case that MassHealth continued to pay claims to UHS despite becoming aware that they were not in compliance with the pertinent regulations at the Arbour facility, and this information may come to light during discovery, at this time Relators have stated a claim under the FCA sufficient to survive a Motion to Dismiss. Applying the Supreme Court's holistic approach to determining materiality, we conclude that UHS's alleged misrepresentations were material when looking "to the effect on the likely or actual behavior of the recipient of the alleged misrepresentation."
We therefore REVERSE the district court's grant of UHS's Motion to Dismiss the Second Amended Complaint and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings.