Findings Of Fact The Parties Manor-Sarasota Manor Health Care Corporation operates 140 nursing centers throughout the country with nine nursing homes and three adult congregate living facilities (ACLF) in Florida. Seven of the nine Florida nursing homes are rated superior and two are standard. Manor-Sarasota is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Manor Health Care Corporation, and currently owns and operates a 120 bed nursing home, with a 120 bed ACLF, at 5511 Swift Road, Sarasota, Florida. The facility opened in December, 1983 and currently has a standard license, although for a period in 1986 its license was conditional. Manor-Sarasota is currently licensed as a skilled nursing home providing trach care, nasogastric feedings, wound care, physical, speech and occupational therapy, as well as Clinatron beds for patients with severe decubitus ulcers. On or about January 15, 1987, Manor-Sarasota filed CON application number 5050 for the addition of sixty community nursing home beds at its facility. The proposed additional beds will include a separate 30-bed specialized unit for elderly persons suffering from Alzheimer's Disease and related disorders. Manor Health Care Corporation currently operates 13 to 15 Alzheimer's units within their existing centers. Between 30 percent - 50 percent of Manor-Sarasota's current patients are diagnosed as having Alzheimer's or related disorders. There are no specialized facilities for Alzheimer's patients in Sarasota at the current time. The current facility is a two-story nursing home, and the additional beds would be configured in a two-story addition of thirty-five beds on the first floor and twenty-five beds on the second floor. The thirty-bed Alzheimer's unit would be located on the first floor. A separate dining room for Alzheimer's patients will also be provided. An additional nurse's station would be added to provide 4 nurse's stations for 180 beds. Total project costs are reasonably projected at $1.85 million, with construction costs of $1.26 million, equipment costs of approximately $170,000, professional services of approximately $137,000 and related costs of approximately $253,000. The proposal would add 16,683 gross square feet to the existing 49,454 gross square feet. The total project cost per additional bed would be $30,872, while the construction cost per square foot would be $55.00. The gross square footage per bed would be 278 feet. Manor-Sarasota projects a 40 percent Medicaid and 60 percent private pay utilization for the 60 bed addition, although its Medicaid utilization at the existing facility has only been between 15 percent and 24 percent. Since there is an upward trend in Medicaid utilization, Manor-Sarasota would accept a 40 percent Medicaid condition on its CON, if approved. Medicare patients will continue to be served within the existing facility. The project will be funded through 25 percent equity and 75 percent financing. Manor Health Care Corporation will finance the project internally through the sale of assets, and the sale of senior subordinated notes and convertible subordinated debentures, and this financing proposal is reasonable and realistic. In Manor-Sarasota's original application, six 3-bed wards were proposed. As a result of criticism of 3-bed wards in the Department's State Agency Action Report (SAAR) concerning this application as well as other facilities, the applicant modified its proposed design to eliminate all 3-bed wards and to include 24 semiprivate and 12 private rooms. The square footage of the addition was also increased by 21 percent from 13,750 to 16,683 square feet. This modification was presented at hearing and was filed subsequent to the application being deemed complete, and the SAAR being prepared. Competent substantial evidence in support of the original application was not offered, but rather evidence was presented in support of the substantially modified proposal. The applicant's existing 120-bed nursing home has experienced over 90 percent occupancy for the months of November, 1987 to the date of hearing, and also experienced an average occupancy of approximately 86 percent for 1986 and the first ten months of 1987. During the first year of operation, 65 percent occupancy is projected for the 60 new beds which are now being sought, and 95 percent occupancy is projected for the second year of operation. Sarasota Healthcare Sarasota Healthcare, Ltd., is a Georgia limited partnership whose general partners are Stiles A. Kellett, Jr. and Samuel B. Kellett. Sarasota Healthcare proposes to enter into a management agreement with Convalescent Services, Inc., (CSI) for the operation and administration of their proposed facility. The Kelletts, as 100 percent owners, comprise the Board of Directors of CSI and also serve as its Chairman and President. CSI operates 21 nursing homes in seven states, and 85 percent of its beds have superior licenses. There are 6 CSI operated nursing homes in Florida, one of which, Pinebrook Place, is located in Sarasota County in the City of Venice. Pinebrook Place is a 120 bed nursing home and has a superior license. Sarasota Healthcare does not own or operate any other nursing homes. A new 120 bed freestanding nursing home is proposed by Sarasota Healthcare in CON application 5025, which was filed with the Department in January, 1987. The project would be located in Sarasota County at a specific site which has not yet been identified. Sarasota Healthcare projects a utilization of 40 percent Medicaid, 5 percent Medicare and 55 percent private pay at its proposed facility, and would accept a 40 percent Medicaid condition of this CON, if approved. The proposed facility would offer skilled, intermediate, respite and hospice care; specialized services for Alzheimer's patients; physical, occupational, speech and rehabilitative therapy; counseling; and social services. Alzheimer's patients will not be located in a separate unit but will be intermingled with other patients while receiving specialized services and protections for their disease. Sarasota Healthcare proposes a 120 bed nursing home comprised of 12 private and 54 semiprivate rooms, 37,7000 gross square feet and a total project cost of $3.9 million The proposed size and cost of this facility are reasonable. The cost per bed would be $32,500 and the construction cost per square foot would be $58.00. Total project costs are reasonable and consist of approximately $2.45 million in construction costs, $385,000 in equipment costs, $145,000 for professional services, land acquisition of $600,000 for 3 to 5 acres, and $324,000 in related costs. The gross square footage per bed would be 314 feet. The project will be funded with 25 percent equity funding from the general partners, Stiles and Samuel Kellett, and 75 percent from a commercial bank, assuming a 9.5 percent interest rate with 1 percent discount point. The proposal is reasonable, but is dependent upon the general partners' ability to personally fund 25 percent of the costs of the project through an equity contribution, and on their ability to obtain commercial financing for the remaining project costs. Financial statements of the Kelletts provided in the record of this proceeding are unaudited, and were not prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The Kelletts have 15 CON applications currently pending, and 4 have already been approved. They have a 6 to 1 debt to equity ratio. Health Quest On or about January 15, 1987, Health Quest corporation submitted an application for CON number 5046 on behalf of Regents Park of Lake Pointe Woods for the addition of 58 new beds to its existing 53 sheltered bed nursing home at a projected cost of approximately $1.29 million. The existing sheltered nursing home facility is known as Regents Park of Sarasota which is part of the Lake Point Woods Retirement Center containing a 110 bed ACLF and 212 retirement apartment units. The sheltered nursing home opened in November, 1986, and has achieved 90 percent occupancy since October, 1987. It is licensed under Chapter 651, Florida Statutes, as a continuing care facility. Health Quest owns and operates nine nursing centers in three states, and has received CON approval for 12 additional facilities in three states, including four in Florida. One of these Florida CONs is for 180 new community nursing home beds in Sarasota County. Health Quest's existing Regents Park of Sarasota nursing home is located at 7979 South Tamiami Trail, Sarasota, Florida. Although it is a sheltered nursing home, only one or two beds are generally occupied by Lake Point Woods residents at any one time. During 1987, only 26 admissions to Regents Park came from Lake Pointe Woods, and most of these admissions were for episodic illnesses of less than 30 days rather than for longer term care. Thus, the vast majority of admissions at Regents Park have been from the community, including admissions directly from home, hospitals and other nursing homes, rather than from the retirement center, Lake Pointe Woods, of which Regents Park is a part. However, since existing beds at Regents Park are sheltered, community patients will not be able to be admitted there beyond November, 1991, the expiration of five years from its opening. During its year and a half of operation, Regents Park has not shown a profit, despite original projections of profitability after only one year. In response to the Department's omissions letter dated February 19, 1987, Health Quest notified the Department, by letter dated March 27, 1987, of its amendment to CON application 5046. Rather than pursuing its request for 58 new community nursing home beds, Health Quest amended the application to seek conversion of the 53 sheltered beds to community beds and to add 7 new community nursing home beds. Since no new space is proposed for construction under the amendment, and since virtually all equipment is already in place, Health Quest projected no cost associated with the amended project. However, there would be some minor costs to equip seven new beds, as well as legal and consulting costs associated with this application and hearing. Currently, the Regents Park nursing home has approximately 31,000 total gross square feet, which would result in 520 gross square feet per bed if its application is approved. On April 10, 1987, the Department published its notice of completeness regarding Health Quest's amended CON application 5046 at Florida Administrative Weekly, Volume 13, No. 15, p. 1365. The Department reviewed and evaluated Health Quest's amended application, rather than the original application, in preparing its SAAR on the applications at issue in this case dated June 15, 1987. Despite this notice of completeness, the record shows that Health Quest's conversion proposal was incomplete since no balance sheet, profit and loss statement for precious fiscal years of operation, detailed statement of financial feasibility or pro forma were introduced. Although sheltered beds can be certified to accept Medicaid patients, Health Quest has not sought such certification for any of the 53 existing beds at Regents Park. Health Quest proposes to seek Medicaid certification for 5 beds, and to serve 8 percent Medicaid patients if CON 5046 is approved. Health Quest does not propose a separate unit for Alzheimer's patients, but would offer special outdoor activities for these patients as well as an Alzheimer's club for patients with this primary diagnosis. Health Quest specializes in caring for patients with hip fractures, and offers a wheelchair mobility and ambulation program, rehabilitation and occupational therapy, bowel and bladder rehabilitation, as well as physical and horticulture therapy. Regents Park has patients on intravenous therapy and who require hyperalimentation and total parenteral nutrition. LPN and nurse's aide students from Sarasota Vo/Tech School receive training at the Regents Park nursing home. HCR In 1986, HCR purchased, and currently owns and operates a 147 bed nursing home located at 3250 12th Street, Sarasota, Florida, known as Kensington Manor, which holds a standard license. HCR is a wholly owned subsidiary of Owens-Illinois, a publicly held corporation, and has built over 200 nursing homes in the last 25 years. At the present time, HCR operates approximately 125 facilities with approximately 16,000 beds in 19 States. HCR owns and operates a total of 9 nursing homes in Florida, and has about 10 nursing home projects under development which it intends to operate upon completion. On or about January 14, 1987, HCR filed CON application 5049 with the Department. This application seeks approval of 60 new community nursing home beds at Kensington Manor, at a currently projected cost of $1.82 million, which is a reasonable projection. The cost per new bed would be $30,030. HCR proposes to finance to project with a 25 percent equity contribution, and 75 percent internally financed by HCR through its parent company, Owens-Illinois, and this proposal is realistic and reasonable. Throughout 1986, Kensington Manor had an occupancy level of between 85 percent - 95 percent and is currently operating at 95 percent - 96 percent occupancy. HCR reasonably projects 95 percent occupancy for the 60 new beds in the second year of operation. HCR reasonably proposes a patient mix in the new addition of 45 percent Medicaid, 4 percent Medicare and 51 percent private pay. Kensington Manor is currently 75 percent - 80 percent Medicaid, 1 percent Medicare, and the remainder is private pay, but its proposed patient mix for the new addition is realistic because there will be no three-bed wards in the addition, and sub- acute services will be provided, thereby increasing the Medicare percentage. The HCR proposed addition at Kensington Manor provides a distinct 29 bed wing for Alzheimer's patients where a special care program and special staffing can be made available. Additionally, a 12 person Alzheimer's adult day care center will be physically attached to the new addition where a less intense level of care outside the home can be made available to these patients. Respite care and sub-acute care will also be provided. The project will add a 60 bed, single story addition to Kensington Manor, with a special Alzheimer unit consisting of 1 private and 14 semiprivate rooms, an enclosed courtyard and porch. A second dining room will be added, as well as 2 central bathing areas, multipurpose and physical therapy rooms. The addition would total 18,000 gross square feet, or 267 gross square feet per bed in the new addition. Kensington Manor currently has approximately 30,000 gross square feet, with 1 private and 52 semiprivate rooms, and 14 three-bedroom wards. Therefore with the addition, Kensington Manor would have approximately 48,000 gross square feet which would be approximately 223 square feet per bed for the entire facility. Sisters of Bon Secours The Sisters of Bon Secours, a Catholic religious order, are currently responsible for the operation and ownership, through not-for-profit corporations, of a JCAH accredited 272 community bed nursing home in North Miami having a superior license, a nursing home in Port Charlotte, Charlotte County, and they also have a CON for an additional nursing home to be located in Collier County. On or about January 15, 1987, Sisters filed CON application 5039 for a new 120 community bed nursing home to be located in Sarasota County, and to be known as Villa Maria of Sarasota County. Sisters is the only applicant involved in this case which is not already providing services in Sarasota County. The proposal calls for the development of a teaching nursing home to be designated as a center for training and research in the study of gerontology and long term care. Affiliations with schools and universities will be developed to allow health care administrators, social workers, medical and nursing students, and practitioners interested in developing a specialization to fulfill their clinical studies and requirements. There will be an emphasis on restorative and rehabilitative care, with 20 percent of the beds being designated for sub-acute care patients who could return home after 30-45 days of therapy and transitional care. Sisters will develop a continuum of care by networking in the community. It is the only applicant that proposes to provide a site for education and research in Sarasota County. The proposed facility is intended to serve the needs of members of the Venice Diocese who reside in Sarasota County, where there is currently no Catholic nursing home. The Venice Diocese is now served by the Sisters' nursing home in Charlotte County, and will also be served by the facility to be located in Collier County, for which a CON has already been issued. However, treatment at these nursing homes, including the proposed Villa Maria of Sarasota County, is not limited to Catholics; the Sisters accept, treat and care for persons in need from all religions backgrounds and denominational affiliations. Total project costs are estimated at $6.64 million, including $3.86 million for construction, approximately $592,000 for equipment, $762,000 to acquire a seven acre site, $237,000 for professional services, $888,000 for financing costs and approximately $300,000 in other related costs. The project would encompass almost 60,000 gross square feet, and would cost approximately $55,300 per bed and $64.50 per square foot. Almost 500 gross square feet would be available per bed, which represents the most square footage per bed of any application under consideration. The proposed facility would have 8 private and 56 semiprivate rooms, with in-room tubs and showers, 3 patient lounges, and a 100 seat dining room. Due to the large size of the proposal, some patient rooms exceed 120 feet from nurse's stations. However, this licensure requirement can easily be met with minor design modifications during the licensure process. Sisters project a 33.3 percent Medicaid, 17.6 - 19.7 percent Medicare, 4 percent indigent and 43 percent - 45 percent private pay utilization for the 120 bed nursing home in its first two years of operation. While Medicaid utilization in Dade County during 1987 rose to 68 percent as a county-wide average, Sisters' Dade County nursing home experienced a drop in Medicaid to 14.6 percent. The high Medicare utilization level which has been projected is consistent with, and based on, the experience of the Sisters at their Dade County nursing home which currently has 21 percent Medicare utilization. However, due to the greater number of hospital referral sources, as well as the larger population and fewer competing nursing homes in Dade County compared with Sarasota County, Medicare utilization projections may be overstated, and actually fall between the 3-4 percent historical utilization in the Sarasota area and Sisters' projection. It will be somewhat above 3-4 percent due to the fact that this will be a teaching nursing home which will attract more Medicare patients. The project will be funded with an equity contribution of 10.6 percent ($635,455) and the remaining 89.4 percent ($6 million) will be funded through the issuance of tax exempt bonds. This financing proposal is realistic and reasonable. The proposed nursing home is intended to offer services to AIDS patients, adult day care, and a meals-on-wheels program. However, it was not established at hearing that such patients would definitely be served, or that space would be available at this facility for these services until the Sisters can determine the actual level of need for these services in Sarasota County, if this CON is approved. Department of HRS On or before January 15, 1987, the Department received the CON applications at issue in this case for additional community nursing home beds in Sarasota County. As it relates to this case, the Department issued its SAAR on June 15, 1987, in which the application of HCR (CON 5049) for a 60 community nursing home bed addition to Kensington Manor was approved, and all other applications in this case were denied. In addition to the HCR application, the Department also supported at hearing the applications of Manor Care (CON 5050) for a 60 bed addition to Manor-Sarasota and Sisters of Bon Secours (CON 5039) for a new 120 bed community bed nursing home to be known as Villa Maria of Sarasota County. The Department opposed the issuance of a CON to the remaining applicants. It is the position of the Department that changes or updates to CON applications made after an application has been deemed complete and reviewed in a SAAR, cannot be considered at hearing if such changes or updates are the result of matters or events within the control of the applicant, and which therefore could have been foreseen and considered at the time the application or responses to omissions were filed. However, matters involving payor mix, salaries and charges could result from changes in demographics and economic factors outside of the applicants' control. In such instances, updates or changes to an application based upon current demographics or economics can, and should be, considered at hearing. The updated pro forma submitted by Sarasota Healthcare at hearing resulted from the applicant's desire to reflect current salaries in the Sarasota County labor market, which have increased dramatically since the original application was submitted. As a result of updating salary expense projections, Medicaid and Medicare rates also had to be updated. Associated projections throughout the pro forma which are dependent upon these reimbursement rates, as well as salary expense projections, also had to be updated. The updated pro forma presented by Sarasota Healthcare results from a factor outside of the control of the applicant, inflation, which could not have been foreseen or predicated with certainty in January, 1987. To ignore actual, current inflation data in Sarasota County is to ignore reality. This update is permissible and has been considered. Manor-Sarasota's application presented at hearing includes changes in its proposed payor mix, charges and salaries, as well as its pro forma. These updates are permissible since they result from changes in demographics and inflation outside of the applicant's control which could not have been foreseen in January 1987. However, a 21 percent increase in square footage and elimination of three-bed wards, with associated changes in proposed staffing, capital costs and equipment, while certainly having a positive effect on quality of care, is nevertheless a matter totally within the control of the applicant. The desireability of these changes could have been foreseen at the time the application was filed, and therefore these substantial changes in design represent impermissible amendments to Manor-Sarasota's application. Stipulations The appropriate planning area for these applications is Sarasota County, and the appropriate planning horizon is January, 1990. Sarasota County is in subdistrict 6 of the Department's service district 8. The parties have stipulated that there is a need for 240 additional community nursing home beds in the January, 1990, planning horizon in Sarasota County, in accordance with the bed need formula in Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code. The parties have agreed that Section 381.705(1)(d) and (j), Florida Statutes (1987), have been met, or are not applicable to this case. This statutory criteria deals with the adequacy and availability of alternative health care facilities and the special needs and circumstances of health maintenance organizations. All remaining criteria found at Section 381.705(1) and (2), Florida Statutes (1987), are at issue in this case. Further, the parties stipulate that 1987 amendments to Chapter 381, Florida Statutes, relating to the content of applications, are inapplicable in this proceeding since these applications were filed prior to the effective date of said law. Therefore, application content provisions of Section 381.494(4), Florida Statutes, govern. State and Local Health Plans The 1985 Florida State Health Plan, Volume II, Chapter 8, identifies areas of concern relating to the provision of long-term care services in Florida, which traditionally has been synonymous with nursing home care. These concerns include resource supply, cost containment and resource access. The State Health Plan seeks a reduction in the fragmentation of services and encourages development of a continuum of care. These proposals are consistent with, or do not conflict with, the State Health Plan. The 1984 District Eight Local Health Plan for Nursing Home Care is applicable to these applications for community nursing home beds in Sarasota County. The Local Health Plan contains the following pertinent criteria and standards for review of these applications: Community nursing home services should be available to the residents of each county within District Eight. At a minimum community nursing home facilities should make available, in addition to minimum statutory regulation, in the facility or under contractual arrangements, the following services: pharmacy h. occupational therapy laboratory i. physical therapy x-ray j. speech therapy dental care k. mental health visual care counseling hearing care l. social services diet therapy m. medical services New and existing community nursing home bed developments should dedicate 33 1/3 percent of their beds to use for Medicaid patients. Community nursing home (skilled and intermediate care) facilities in each county should maintain an occupancy rate of at least 90 percent. New community nursing home facilities may be considered for approval when existing facilities servicing comparable service areas cannot reasonably, economically, or geographically provide adequate service to these service areas. No new community nursing home facility should be constructed having less than 60 beds. However, less than 60 beds may be approved as part of an established acute care hospital facility. Each nursing home facility should have a patient transfer agreement with one or more hospitals within an hour's travel time, or the nearest hospital within the same community. The proposed project should have a formal discharge planning program as well as some type of patient follow-up services with discharge/transfer made available seven days a week. Community nursing homes should be accessible to residents throughout District Eight regardless of their ability to pay. All community nursing homes and applicants for community nursing homes should document their history of participation in Medicaid and Medicare programs, and provide data on an ongoing basis to the District Eight Local Health Council as requested. The specifically stated goal of the Local Health Plan is to develop new community nursing home facilities in which at least 33 1/3 percent of the total beds should be Medicaid. The impact of this long range recommended action is stated as follows: The provision of Medicaid care beds in existing nursing homes would assure continuity of care for nursing home patients, and should improve placement in appropriate levels of care by hospitals, physicians, social services, health departments, and other referral groups. The provision for Medicaid beds would reduce cost to patients, utilizing skilled care beds, who could adequately be served by Medicaid. With the exception of Health Quest's application, all other applicants meet the above stated standards and criteria contained in the Local Health Plan. Health Quest's application does not conform to the Local Health Plan. All applicants in this proceeding have indicated that they will provide therapies and services recommended in the Local Health Plan. All applicants, except Health Quest, indicate a commitment to dedicate at least 33 1/3 percent of their beds for Medicaid patients. The new nursing home facilities proposed by Sisters and Sarasota Healthcare would each be for 120 beds, consistent with the Local Health Plan standard that new facilities have at least 60 beds. Health Quest has proposed a 60 bed community nursing home through conversion of 53 sheltered nursing home beds and the addition of 7 new community beds. As existing providers, Manor-Sarasota, HCR band Health Quest have patient transfer agreements with one or more hospitals, as well as formal discharge planning programs and patient follow-up services, as recommended in the Local Health Plan. The applications for new facilities of Sarasota Healthcare and Sisters indicate they will also comply with these priorities if approval is granted and their facilities are opened. By virtue of its existing service and transfer agreements through the CSI facility in Sarasota County, Pinebrook Place, Sarasota Healthcare will be able to obtain these necessary agreements. Based upon Sisters' experience in Dade County at Villa Maria, as well as the fact that this will be a teaching nursing home, Sisters will also be able to obtain such agreements. Data has been provided by the existing nursing homes (Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Health Quest) which documents the history of their participation in the Medicaid and Medicare programs. The other applicants (Sarasota Healthcare and Sisters) have provided Medicaid/Medicare data for other existing facilities with which they are affiliated or upon which their application at issue in this case is based. Based upon this data, Pinebrook Place in Sarasota County, which is owned and operated by Sarasota Healthcare's general partners has not met the Medicaid condition on its CON, and the existing Manor-Sarasota facility has had only 24.8 percent Medicaid utilization in fiscal year 1988: Availability, Accessibility and Adequacy of Like and Existing Services HCR and Manor-Sarasota would increase the availability and adequacy of existing services they are now offering with the 60 bed additions each is seeking. The separate 30-bed specialized unit proposed by Manor-Sarasota and the 29-bed wing proposed by HCR for Alzheimer's patients will clearly increase the availability of specialized services for persons with Alzheimer's and related disorders, as well as their families. HCR will also dedicate 10 beds for sub-acute care, while Manor-Sarasota will offer community outreach, as well as respite care. Sarasota Healthcare, Sisters and Health Quest do not propose special units for Alzheimer's patients, but would offer special programs and services for them and their families. It was established that there is a need for additional services and programs to serve nursing home patients with Alzheimer's and related disorders in Sarasota County, as well as a special need for sub-acute, restorative, hospice, respite, and adult day care in the County. It was not established that there is a need for additional Medicare beds in Sarasota County. Sisters have indicated an interest in offering services to patients with AIDS and patients in need of adult day care, for which there is also a need in Sarasota County. In addition, their application will enhance the availability of sub-acute nursing home services, restorative and rehabilitative care, and respite care in Sarasota County. While it would serve patients of all denominations and religious affiliations, it would be the only Catholic nursing home in Sarasota County. The teaching component of the Sisters' application would provide access for students and other health professionals seeking to further their professional training. The Sarasota Healthcare proposal also places special emphasis on increasing the availability of sub-acute services in Sarasota County. Quality of Care The Sisters will seek JCAH accreditation of the proposed facility if their CON is approved, just as their nursing home in North Miami is currently accredited. The proposed affiliation with a college of medicine and nursing school, and the intent to operate this facility as a teaching nursing home will insure quality of care at this nursing home by utilizing state-of-the-art treatment and therapy programs. Florida nursing homes currently owned or operated by each of the applicants or their affiliated corporations have standard or superior licenses which means they meet or exceed State Standards. Licensure status of facilities owned or operated in other states by the applicants, or their affiliated companies, has not been considered since it was not established that licensure standards in other states are similar, or even comparable, to those in Florida. Each applicant has significant experience rendering quality nursing home care, and each has proposed a reasonable and comprehensive quality assurance program which will insure that quality nursing home services will be provided to their residents. The architectural design proposed by each applicant is reasonable and sufficient to allow quality care to be provided at each facility. All instances where an applicant's design fails to meet final construction standards are relatively minor, and can easily be met during the licensure process with slight modifications and adaptations in design. Staffing proposals by each, while different, will all insure that adequate medical, nursing, counseling and therapeutic staff will be trained and available either on-staff or through contract, to implement quality care programs at each facility. Manor-Sarasota's past reliance on temporary nursing services is decreasing and this will have a positive effect on quality of care. HCR has just completed extensive repairs and renovations costing $350,000 at Kensington Manor which will improve the atmosphere, living conditions and overall quality of care at the facility. Sisters' educational affiliations will aid in recruiting and retaining well-trained staff for its facility. Each facility will be equipped to provide quality care. There was extensive testimony about the advantages and disadvantages of central bathing facilities compared with private baths or showers in patient rooms. Sisters and Health Quest would provide private bathing facilities in patient rooms, while the others would have central facilities. Obviously, individual bathing facilities in patient rooms offer more privacy than central facilities, but privacy can also be achieved in a central bathing area by taking only a single, or limited number of patients to a partitioned central facility at any one time. The central facility is less costly than bathing facilities in each room, and also requires less staff time and involvement to assist with, and insure safety in, the patients' bathing. It has not been shown that one type of bathing facility provided in a nursing home, to the exclusion of all others, affects the quality of care in a positive or adverse manner. Quality care can be, and is, provided under both designs. The elimination of 3-bed wards from Manor-Sarasota's application would have a positive impact on quality of care, and be consistent with the Department's position of discouraging the creation of additional 3-bed wards in nursing homes. However, such elimination was proposed after this application was deemed complete by the Department. Patients suffering from Alzheimer's and related disorders can benefit from programs and treatment conducted in separate units, or while comingled with other patients, particularly in the early and middle phases of the disease. In the later phase of the disease it may be less disruptive to other patients if Alzheimer patients reside in a separate wing or unit of the nursing home. Quality care can be rendered through separate or integrated programming, and all applicants in this case that propose to offer specialized services to these patients have proposed programs and facility designs which will provide quality care to persons with Alzheimer's and related disorders. While there are differences in facility design, such as the two-story construction of Manor-Sarasota compared with the single level construction of all other applicants, and the central heating and cooling proposed by Sisters compared with individual wall units to be used by Sarasota Healthcare, the proposed designs of all applicants allow for the rendering of quality care to patients. Access for Chronically Underserved The Health Quest proposal is inconsistent with the Local Health Plan policy that 33 1/3 percent of all nursing home beds should be dedicated for Medicaid patients since it proposes that only 5 of its 60 beds (8 percent) will be certified for Medicaid patients if CON 5046 is approved. Although Medicaid utilization at Manor-Sarasota has not been consistent with the Local Health Plan, it is projected that if CON 5050 is approved Medicaid utilization will rise to 40 percent. Sarasota Healthcare, HCR and Sisters propose to meet or exceed this Local Health Plan policy. HCR has experienced a 75-80 percent Medicaid utilization at Kensington Manor, and proposes a 45 percent Medicaid level in the new addition if CON 5049 is approved. Financial Feasibility The proposals of Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Sisters are financially feasible. Health Quest did not file a pro forma and has not shown a profit in its year and a half of operation at Regents Park. Based upon its actual per patient operating expense at Pinebrook Place, Sarasota Healthcare has underestimated expenses in its second year of operation by approximately $8 per patient day. Its projection of a profit in the second year of operation is questionable due to this underestimation. Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Sisters have established their ability to finance, through equity and debt, the construction, equipment, supplies, and start-up costs associated with their proposals. Health Quest will have no construction costs, and only very minor costs to equip and supply seven new beds it is requesting. The entire financial structure of CSI and Sarasota Healthcare is dependent upon the financial strength of their general partners, the Kelletts, who currently have $76 million in long term debt and $12 million in equity. This is a relatively high debt to equity ratio of 6 to 1 which makes them susceptible to adverse impacts from any downturn in the economy, especially since they have 15 additional CON applications pending in Florida, totaling $60 million in construction costs. In contrast to the Kelletts' high debt to equity ratio, Sisters have $159 million in long term debt and $160 million in equity for a very secure 1 to 1 debt to equity ratio. Projections of revenue and expense, as well as assumptions concerning projected utilization, Medicaid and Medicare rates, private pay rates, and patient mix used by Manor-Sarasota, HCR and Sisters in their pro forma are reasonable, based upon that applicant's experience and the services proposed in their applications at issue. Adequacy of Staffing All proposals have adequate and reasonable staffing patterns, as well as staff training programs, to insure that quality care is provided. Proposed salaries are reasonable and will allow qualified staff to be hired, based upon the recruiting experience and salaries currently offered by Sarasota nursing homes. Adequate staff resources exist in the area. I. Most Effective and Less Costly Alternative Since it is generally not necessary to construct support areas for storage, laundry, kitchen and administration, adding additional beds to existing facilities is a less costly alternative to an entirely new facility. Health Quest, HCR and Manor-Sarasota are, therefore, less costly per bed than Sarasota Healthcare and Sisters' proposals to construct new 120 bed nursing homes. Specifically, there are only minor costs associated with Health Quest's proposal, while the cost per bed of the Manor-Sarasota and HCR proposals are $30,872 and $30,030, respectively, compared with $32,500 per bed for Sarasota Healthcare and $55,295 for Sisters. Health Quest's application is the least costly alternative since it involves no construction costs to add seven beds to the existing 53 sheltered beds which would be converted to community nursing home beds, although minor costs for equipping seven new beds would be incurred. Effect on Costs and Charges Sisters and Health Quest have proposed, or actually experienced, the highest costs and charges of all applicants. Health Quest has not shown any basis upon which it can be reasonably expected that room rates will decrease, as it asserts, if this CON is approved. Due to the large size of its proposed building, higher food costs and number of staff, Sisters projects the highest operating expense per patient day in the second year of operation. Sisters will provide almost 500 gross square feet per bed, while Manor-Sarasota, HCR, and Sarasota Healthcare will provide 278, 267 and 314 gross square feet per bed, respectively. Enhanced Competition Since the other applicants are already represented in the service area, the approval of Sisters' application would enhance competition by adding another provider to Sarasota County. This will provide more choices to nursing home residents, and should increase the quality of long term care in the community with the added emphasis this proposal will place on rehabilitative programming. Costs and Methods of Construction The costs and methods of construction proposed by the applicants are reasonable, as well as energy efficient.
Recommendation Based upon the foregoing, it is recommended that the Respondent enter a Final Order, as follows: Approving HCR's application for CON 5049; Approving Sisters' application for CON 5039; Denying the application of Manor-Sarasota, Sarasota Healthcare and Health Quest for CONs 5050, 5025 and 5046, respectively. DONE AND ENTERED this 9th day of August, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida. DONALD D. CONN Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 9th day of August, 1988. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NOS. 87-3471, 87-3473, 87-3475, 87-3478 and 87-3491 Rulings on the Department's Proposed Findings of Fact Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30, 37. Adopted in Finding of Fact 37. 3-4. Adopted in Finding of Fact 43. 5. Adopted in Finding of Fact 42. 6-10. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary since the parties have stipulated to need. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38. Adopted in Findings of Fact 26, 27, 55, 69, 70. Adopted in Findings of Fact 30, 56, 58, 60. Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 55. Rejected as irrelevant since the parties have stipulated to need. Rejected in Findings of Fact 48, 57. Rulings on Manor-Sarasota's Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38, 43. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 30, 32. Rejected in Finding of Fact 17 and Adopted in Finding of Fact 19. Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 5, 24. Adopted in Finding of Fact 38. Adopted in Findings of Fact 13, 14 but Rejected in Findings of Fact 71, 73. Adopted in Findings of Fact 29, 31. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 35, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding or Fact 2. Rejected as unsupported and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 29, 60, 61 but also Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 60. Adopted in Finding of Fact 31. Adopted and. Rejected in Finding of Fact 60, and otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unsupported in the record. Adopted in Finding of Fact 29 but otherwise Rejected as unsupported argument on the evidence, without any citation to the record, rather than a proposed finding of fact. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76. Adopted in Findings of Fact 32, 33, 82 but Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 33. Rejected as unsupported by the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 33, 64 in part, but otherwise. Rejected in Finding of Fact 64 and as not supported by the record. Rejected as unnecessary and without citation to the record. Adopted and. Rejected in Findings of Fact 33, 63. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Rejected in Findings of Fact 33, 63. Rejected in Findings of Fact 17. Adopted in Finding of Fact 17, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 18. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 20, 71. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 33-34. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. 35-36. Adopted in Finding of Fact 81. Adopted in Finding of Fact 21. Rejected as speculative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18 but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 41-43. Rejected as not supported by the record and speculative. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 80. Adopted in Findings of Fact 48, 51, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 21. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76 and otherwise as unnecessary and irrelevant. Adopted in Findings of Fact 24-26. Adopted in Finding of Fact 23. Adopted in Finding of Fact 79. Adopted in Finding of Fact 27. Adopted in Finding of Fact 1. Adopted in Findings of Fact 61, 63 and otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 5, 81. Adopted in Findings of Fact 71, 75. 56-57. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. 58. Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 55, 56. 59-61. Rejected as irrelevant, unnecessary and cumulative. Rejected in Finding of Fact 66. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 76. Adopted in Findings of Fact 4, 6. Adopted in Finding of Fact l. Adopted in Finding of Fact 81 but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Rulings on HCR's Proposed Findings of Fact: 1-2. Adopted in Findings of Fact 42, 43. 3-4. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 5. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. 6-7. Rejected as unnecessary. 8-9. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. 10-15. Rejected in Finding of Fact 66 and otherwise as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Adopted in Findings of Fact 27, 55. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Adopted in Findings of Fact 23, 28, 63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 23. Adopted in Findings of Fact 25, 26, 28. Adopted in Findings of Fact 24, 27, 28. 24-25. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 26-27. Adopted in Finding of Fact 27, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 28-29. Adopted in Finding of Fact 66, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 30. Adopted in Findings of Fact 46-49. 31-37. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 24. 40-42. Adopted in Findings of Fact 25, 26, 71, 75. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71. Rejected as unnecessary. 45-46. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 81. Adopted in Finding of Fact 24. Adopted in Finding of Fact 28, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 79. 51-54. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 24, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 55. Adopted in Finding of Fact 37, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 56-57. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 17, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 19. Adopted in part in Findings of Fact 18, 42. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. 62-63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 20. Adopted in Findings of Fact 22, 55. Adopted in Findings of Fact 21, 49, 51. Adopted in Findings of Fact 32, 33. Adopted and. Rejected in Finding of Fact 33. Adopted in Finding of Fact 82. 69-70. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 56. Adopted and Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 34. Rulings on Sisters' Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30. Rejected as unnecessary as a Finding of Fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 43. Rejected as unnecessary as a Finding of Fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. Adopted in Findings of Fact 12, 14, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 3. Adopted in Findings of Fact 24, 29. Adopted in Finding of Fact 19, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38. 11-12. Adopted in Finding of Fact 46. 13-15. Adopted in Findings of Fact 47-54. Rejected as unnecessary and not supported by the record. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 18-22. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 23. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. 24-26. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 30, but otherwise Rejected as argument unsupported by any citation to the record. 30-38. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary, irrelevant and as argument on the evidence rather than a Finding of Fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 40. Rejected in Finding of Fact 40. 41-51. Adopted in Findings of fact 60, 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary, irrelevant and as argument on the evidence rather than a Finding of Fact. 52-58. Adopted in Findings of Fact 29, 60, 61, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 59. Adopted in Finding of Fact 11, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. 60-75. Rejected as unnecessary irrelevant, and cumulative. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 82. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 33, 82. Adopted in Findings of Fact 33, 82. Adopted in Finding of Fact 33, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 64. 82-83. Rejected as unnecessary. 84. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. 85-86. Rejected as unnecessary. 87-88. Adopted in Findings of Fact 9, 41. 89. Adopted in Finding of Fact 4, but otherwise Rejected as not supported by the record. 90-91. Rejected in Finding of Fact 63 and otherwise not supported by the record. 92-105. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary, cumulative and irrelevant. Rejected as unsupported in the record and otherwise unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 29. Adopted in Finding of Fact 11. Rejected as irrelevant, unnecessary and speculative. Rejected as unnecessary. 111-112. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 113. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. 114-115. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 116-120. Adopted in Findings of Fact 60, 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 121. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 122-123. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative. 124. Adopted in Findings of Fact 31, 34, but otherwise Rejected as unsupported in the record. 125-126. Adopted in Finding of Fact 35. 127-129. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant since no applicant has locked in interest rates, and therefore these rates will vary and are speculative. Rejected as speculative and irrelevant. Rejected as irrelevant. 132-135. Adopted in Finding of Fact 73. 136. Adopted in Finding of Fact 74. 137-139. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 140. Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 141-145. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71. 146-147. Adopted in Finding of Fact 83. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 71, 84, but Rejected in Findings of Fact 81, 82. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. Rejected in Finding of Fact 67. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Rejected as cumulative and unsupported by the record. 155-158. Adopted in Finding of Fact 54. 159. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rulings on Sarasota Healthcare's Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Findings of Fact 3, 12, 17, 19, 24, 30. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 37, 38, 43. 4-6. Adopted in Finding of Fact 11, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 7-13. Adopted in Findings of Fact 12-16, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 14-17. Adopted in Finding of Fact 46. Adopted in Finding of Fact 47. Adopted in Finding of Fact 49. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 11, 61. 22-23. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 24-41. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in part in Findings of Fact 14, 57, but otherwise. Rejected in Finding of Fact 83 and as unsupported in the record. Rejected in Finding of Fact 54, and otherwise as irrelevant. Adopted in Findings of Fact 13, 51, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 54. Adopted in Finding of Fact 13. Adopted in Findings of Fact 14, 57. 47-49. Adopted in Findings of Fact 56, 66. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 14. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. 53-58. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 14. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Adopted in Finding of Fact 14. Adopted in Finding of Fact 53. Adopted in Finding of Fact 81. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 65-78. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 79-85. Adopted in Findings of Fact 76, 77, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and irrelevant. 86-97. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 63, 84, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted and. Rejected in Finding of Fact 64. Rejected as unsupported in the record. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. 101-103. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 84. 104. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 105-109. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 84, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Rejected as unsupported in the record. Adopted in part in Finding of Fact 16, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 73. 112-116. Adopted and Rejected in part in Findings of Fact 71, 73, 75, but otherwise. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. 117. Adopted in Finding of Fact 16. 118-119. Adopted in Finding of Fact 75. 120-121. Rejected in Finding of Fact 71. 122-126. Adopted in Finding of Fact 40. 127-128. Adopted in Findings of Fact 30, 32. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 31. Adopted in Finding of Fact 33. Adopted and Rejected in Finding of Fact 67. 133-135. Adopted and Rejected in part in Findings of Fact 33, 63, and otherwise. Rejected as irrelevant since all licensure requirements can easily be met with minor modifications. Adopted in Finding of Fact 36. Rejected as unsupported in the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 15, 30, 32, 33. Adopted in Finding of Fact 31, but otherwise Rejected as simply a summation of testimony. 140-142. Adopted in Finding of Fact 36. Rejected as irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 51. 145-146. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 147-148. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30, but Rejected in Finding of Fact 57 and as unsupported in the record. 149-150. Adopted in Finding of Fact 34. Adopted in Finding of Fact 57. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative 153-156. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76, 77 and otherwise not supported in the record. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 36. Adopted in Finding of Fact 82. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact s. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 19. Adopted in Finding of Fact 71, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unsupported in the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 18, but otherwise Rejected as cumulative and as argument on the evidence. Adopted in Findings of Fact 48, 49, 51. Rulings on Health Quest's Proposed Findings of Fact: Adopted in Finding of Fact 24. Adopted in Finding of Fact 3. Adopted in Findings of Fact 17, 19. Adopted in Finding of Fact 12. Adopted in Finding of Fact 30. 6-10. Adopted in Finding of Fact 37. Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Findings of Fact 42, 43. Adopted in Finding of Fact 20. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 20, 39. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Adopted in Findings of Fact 61, 63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 61, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant and unnecessary. Adopted in Finding of Fact 17. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Rejected as argument on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact. Rejected as speculative and unsupported in the record. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 80. Rejected as argument on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 80. Rejected in Finding of Fact 71. Rejected as irrelevant. 27-34. Adopted in Findings of Fact 22, 63, 76, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 35-39. Adopted in Finding of Fact 22. 40. Adopted in Finding of Fact 66. 41-58. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 61, but otherwise Rejected as irrelevant. Rejected as simply a statement on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact and otherwise irrelevant. Adopted in Finding of Fact 17, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary. 62-63. Adopted in Finding of Fact 18. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Adopted in Finding of Fact 80. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63. Adopted in Findings of Fact 19, 80. 68-70. Adopted in Finding of Fact 63, but otherwise Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. 71. Adopted in Finding of Fact 21. 72-74. Rejected in Findings of Fact 48, 49, 51 and otherwise as irrelevant. 75-76. Rejected as unnecessary, although it is agreed that these matters are irrelevant and speculative. Adopted in Findings of Fact 63, 80. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. Rejected as argument on the evidence rather than a proposed finding of fact. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. 81-82. Adopted in Finding of Fact 39. 83. Rejected in Finding of Fact 39. 84-88. Adopted in Finding of Fact 41. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9. Rejected as argument on the evidence and as legal argument rather than a proposed finding of fact. Rejected as unnecessary. 92-94. Adopted in Finding of Fact 41. 95. Adopted and. Rejected in part in Finding of Fact 41. 96-101. Rejected in Findings of Fact 63, 76 and otherwise as irrelevant. 102. Rejected as cumulative. 103-104. Adopted in Finding of Fact 1. Rejected in Findings of Fact 61, 63. Rejected as simply a summation of testimony. 107-109. Rejected in Finding of Fact 63. 110-111. Rejected as unsupported in the record and irrelevant. 112-114. Adopted in Finding of Fact 9, but otherwise Rejected as unsupported by the record. 115. Adopted in Finding of Fact 41. 116-117. Rejected as unnecessary. 118-120. Rejected in Finding of Fact 66 and otherwise simply as a summation of testimony. 121-122. Rejected as irrelevant and as argument on the evidence. Adopted in Finding of Fact 38. Rejected as a conclusion of law rather than a proposed finding of fact. 125-127. Rejected as argument on the evidence and as a summation of testimony. 128. Rejected as cumulative. 129-131. Rejected as simply a summation of testimony rather than a proposed finding of fact. 132-134. Rejected in Findings of Fact 61, 63 and otherwise as irrelevant. 135. Rejected in Findings of Fact 43, 48, 57 and otherwise as irrelevant. 136-142. Rejected as irrelevant. The issue in this case is not the accuracy of the SAAR, but rather whether applicants have sustained their burden of establishing entitlement to a CON based on the record established at hearing. COPIES FURNISHED: Richard A. Patterson, Esquire Department of HRS 2727 Mahan Drive, 3rd Floor Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Alfred W. Clark, Esquire Post Office Box 623 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Donna H. Stinson, Esquire The Perkins House - Suite 100 118 North Gadsden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 David Watkins, Esquire Harry F. X. Purnell, Esquire Post Office Box 6507 Tallahassee, Florida 32314-6507 Byron B. Matthews, Jr., Esquire Vicki Gordon Kaufman, Esquire 700 Brickell Avenue Miami, Florida 33131-2802 Steven W. Huss, Esquire 1017 Thomasville Road, Suite C Tallahassee, Florida 32303 Gregory Coler, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Room 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 John Miller, Acting General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Room 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Sam Power, Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Room 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 =================================================================
The Issue In their Prehearing Stipulation the original parties described the background and general nature of the controversy as follows: In January, 1985, HCR filed an application for certificate of need to develop a new 120 bed nursing home in Collier County, Florida. By notice dated June 28, 1985, HRS stated its intention to deny HCR's application. HCR timely filed a request for formal administrative proceeding, and the proceeding was forwarded to the Division of Administrative Hearings. By application supplement dated May 15, 1986, HCR has reduced this application to a 90-bed new nursing home. The nursing home will provide skilled nursing care to Alzheimer's patients and to patients discharged from hospitals in need of additional intensive nursing care, in addition to the typical nursing home patient. HRS has denied HCR's application because, pursuant to Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code there is insufficient need for the additional nursing home beds proposed by HCR. In the Prehearing Statement the Petitioner described its position as follows: HCR contends that there is an identifiable need for a nursing home in Collier County, Florida, to serve the needs of patients who suffer from Alzheimer's disease and similar disorders and patients who are discharged from hospitals with a continuing need for a high level of intensive care, often provided through sophisticated technical or mechanical means. Existing nursing homes in Collier County do not offer adequate facilities for such patients and refuse admission to such patients. These patients have experienced an inability to obtain such care in Collier County. HCR's proposed nursing home will provide needed care which is otherwise unavailable and inaccessible in Collier County. The application meets all criteria relevant to approval of a certificate of need. HCR further contends that the nursing home formula shows a need for additional nursing home beds in Collier County. Previously, in circumstances where a need for additional nursing home services has been identified, HRS has approved certificates of need even though the nursing home formula showed a need for zero additional beds or a small number of additional beds. In the Prehearing Statement the Respondent described its position as follows: HRS contends, pursuant to the formula contained in Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code, that there is insufficient need in the January, 1988 planning horizon demonstrated for additional nursing home beds in Collier County to warrant approval of a-new nursing home. Therefore, HRS contends that the HCR application should be denied. Further in its original application, HCR did not identify services proposed specially for Alzheimer's disease patients or "sub-acute" patients. HCR did not and has not complied with provision of Chapter 10-5.11(21)(b 10., Florida Administrative Code, regarding mitigated circumstances. The Respondent also identified the following as an issue of fact to be litigated. "HRS contends that it should be determined whether HCR's supplement dated May 15, 1986, is a significant change in scope for which the application was originally submitted." Because of its late intervention into this case, the Intervenor's position is not described in the Prehearing Statement. In general, the Intervenor urges denial of the application on the same grounds as those advanced by the Respondent. The Intervenor did not attempt to become a party to this case until the morning of the second day of the formal hearing. Respondent had no objection to the Petition To Intervene. The original Petitioner objected on the grounds that the effort at intervention was untimely and that the Intervenor was without standing. The objection to intervention was overruled and the Intervenor was granted party status subject to taking the case as it found it. Accordingly, intervention having been granted at the conclusion of the evidentiary presentation of the other parties, the Intervenor was not permitted to call any witnesses or offer any exhibits. Intervenor's participation before the Division of Administrative Hearings was limited to an opportunity to file proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Following the hearing a transcript of proceedings was filed on July 8, 1986. Thereafter, all parties filed Proposed Recommended Orders containing proposed findings of fact. Careful consideration has been given to all of the Proposed Recommended Orders in the formulation of this Recommended Order. A specific ruling on all proposed findings of fact proposed by all parties is contained in the Appendix which is attached to and incorporated into this Recommended Order. The Petitioner also filed an unopposed post-hearing motion requesting that its name be corrected in the style of this case. The motion is granted.
Findings Of Fact Based on the stipulations of the parties, on the exhibits received in evidence, and on the testimony of the witnesses at the hearing, I make the following findings of fact. Findings based on admitted facts The parties agree that HCR properly filed a letter of intent and application for certificate of need for a new nursing home to be located in Collier County. The application was reviewed by HRS in the ordinary course of its activities, and HRS initially denied the application. HRS continues to oppose issuance of a CON because (a) there is an insufficient need, pursuant to Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code, for additional nursing home beds to warrant approval of a new nursing home [Section 381.494(6)(c)1., Florida Statutes]; (b) the long term financial feasibility and economic impact of the proposal is questionable because of low occupancy being experienced by existing nursing homes "Section 381.494(6)(c)9., Florida Statutes]. HRS proposes no other basis for denial of the application. The parties agree that HCR meets all criteria for a certificate of need, with the exception of those two criteria listed in the immediately foregoing paragraph relating to need and financial feasibility/economic impact (relevant to low occupancy), which HRS contends have not been met. The parties agree that HCR would provide good quality care to patients, that the project would be financially feasible if the occupancy projections asserted by HCR were obtained, that the costs and methods of proposed construction are appropriate and reasonable, and that the proposed facility would be adequately available to underserved population groups. The rest of the findings In January 1985, HCR filed an application for a certificate of need to develop a new 120-bed nursing home facility in Collier County, Florida. The original application described a traditional approach to nursing home care. By notice dated June 28, 1985, HRS stated its intention to deny HCR's application. HCR timely filed a request for formal administrative proceedings and this proceeding ensued. By application supplement dated May 15, 1986, HCR made certain changes to its original application. These changes included reducing the size of the proposed nursing home from 120 to go beds and changing the-concept of the nursing home from a traditional nursing home to one specifically designed to address the treatment of Alzheimer's disease patients and sub-acute care patients. The supplement specifically provided that 30 of the 90 proposed beds would be "set aside to offer a therapeutic environment for patients with Alzheimer's or similar disorders." The project description in the original application contained no such provision. HCR's proposed facility would consist of 90 nursing home beds, 30 assisted living beds, and an adult day care facility located adjacent to the nursing home portion of the facility. Those portions of the facility relating to assisted living and adult day care do not require certificate of need review. The estimated cost of the portion of the project which requires certificate of need review is $3.5 million. HCR estimates that approximately 33 1/3 per cent of the patients in the facility will be Medicaid reimbursed. It is proposed that 30 of the 90 nursing home beds be designed and staffed specifically to provide care and treatment necessary to meet the special needs of certain patients who suffer from Alzheimer's disease and dementia and exhibit need for care different from that found in the typical nursing home. It is proposed that another 30-bed wing be staffed and equipped to provide sub-acute, high-tech services such as ventilator, I.V. therapy, pulmonary aids, tube feeding, hyperalimentation and other forms of care more intensive than those commonly found in a nursing home and necessary for the care of patients discharged from hospitals and patients in the last stages of Alzheimer's disease. The remaining 30-bed wing would be devoted to traditional nursing home care. HRS has adopted a rule which establishes a methodology for estimating the numeric need for additional nursing home beds within the Department's districts or subdistricts. This methodology is set out in Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code. This rule determines historic bed rates and projects those bed rates to a three-year planning horizon. Allocation to a subdistrict such as Collier County is adjusted by existing occupancy in the subdistrict and the subdistrict's percentage of beds in relationship to the total number of beds in the district. Additional beds normally are not authorized if there is no need for beds as calculated under the rule. HRS calculated need utilizing current population estimates for January 1986 and projected need for the population estimated for January 1988, arriving at a need of approximately 16 additional nursing home beds for the January 1988 planning horizon. HCR projected need to the January 1989 planning horizon and projected a numeric need of approximately 38 additional nursing home beds. There are no applicants for additional nursing home beds in the January 1989 planning horizon (batching cycle). Alzheimer's disease is a primary degenerative disease of the central nervous system which results in a breakdown of the nerve cells in the brain. The disease is progressive, in that it begins subtly, often with forgetfulness or simple personality changes, and ultimately results in death following a phase in which the patient is bedridden and totally dependent upon others for survival. The cause of the disease is not known. The disease is much more common in the older age groups and is very common in the southwest Florida area. (However, nothing in the evidence in this case suggests that Alzheimer's disease is more common in southwest Florida than in other parts of the state.) There is no known cure for Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's disease patients are characterized by such symptoms as memory loss, communication problems, difficulty understanding, confusion, disorientation, inability to recognize care givers, waking at night, wandering, inability to socialize appropriately, and incontinence. The progress of the disease can be divided into stages. During the initial stage, the patients will display forgetfulness and subtle personality changes. As the disease progresses, the patients encounter increasing difficulty performing more than simple tasks, tend to be more emotional, become more confused, encounter difficulty with concentration and retaining thoughts, and often display poor judgment and a denial of the significance of their actions. In the next stage, the patients begin to require assistance to survive. Forgetfulness and disorientation increase and wandering patients are often unable to find their way. The patients become incontinent, experience sleep disturbances, become restless at night, and wander during the day, leading to considerable family distraction and difficulties for the care givers. The patients encounter difficulty recognizing family members and often become paranoid and fearful of those family members within the house. violence and aggressive outbursts may occur. Finally, the patients progress to a stage in which they are totally inattentive to their features physical needs, requiring total care. These Patients are totally incontinent, experience frequent falls, develop seizures, and eventually become bedridden, going into a fetal position and becoming totally unable to provide any care for themselves. Traditionally, most nursing homes offer no special programs for patients who suffer from Alzheimer's disease and mix these patients with other patients in the nursing home. There is no nursing home in Collier County which provides program specifically designed for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease patients. The nearest nursing home where such care can be found is in Venice, some 92 miles from Naples. The total facility proposed by HCR is designed to provide a continum of care for Alzheimer's disease patients and their family care givers. The adult day care portion of the facility would enable family members to place Alzheimer's disease patients in day care for a portion of the day in order for the family care givers to maintain employment, perform normal household chores, and find relief from the extremely demanding task of constantly supervising and caring for an Alzheimer's disease victim. The adult day care portion of the facility would be designed and staffed to provide a therapeutic program for the Alzheimer's disease patient and the patient's family. The assisted living portion of the facility would allow an Alzheimer's disease patient in the early stages of the disease to live in an environment, with his or her spouse if desired, where immediate care and routine supervision at a level lower than that required by a nursing home patient would be provided. Thirty nursing home patient and who do not display those characteristics which are disruptive to non-Alzheimer's patients, such as wandering, combativeness, and incontinence. For those Alzheimer's patients who should not be mixed with other nursing home patients because of their disruptive routines and who require unique programs and facility design features to meet their specific needs, a 30-bed wing would be set aside. Finally, for Alzheimer's patients in the final stages of the disease who require total care and are bedridden, and for patients discharged from local hospitals who require high-tech services, a 30-bed wing designed, staffed and equipped to provide such services would be set aside. The facility would provide a high level of staffing to meet the demanding, personal care needs of Alzheimer's patients and would provide 24-hour nursing supervision in that portion of the facility dedicated to intensive services for the bedridden and high-tech patient. The design and equipment of the proposed facility are particularly addressed to the needs of Alzheimer's disease patients. Physically, the facility would allow patients freedom of movement both inside the facility and in an outside courtyard with porches, but the facility would be sufficiently secure to prevent the patient from wandering away from the facility. There would be amenities such as therapeutic kitchens which would allow patients still able to cook to do so. Fixtures in the facility would be designed so that the Alzheimer's disease patients could easily identify the functions of fixtures such as wastebaskets, toilets, and sinks. Features such as low frequency sound systems, lever door knobs, square instead of round tables, barrier-free doorways, special floor coverings, appropriate labeling, automatic bathroom lighting, and provisions for seating small groups of patients together would all provide the special care required by the Alzheimer's patient. The concept of a separate unit for Alzheimer's disease patients is a new one, growing out of increased medical awareness of the disease. The proposed unit would be a prototype for the Petitioner. There are four nursing homes in Collier County and 413 licensed nursing home beds. There are no approved but unlicensed nursing home beds in Collier County. At the time that HRS initially reviewed the HCR application, Collier County nursing homes were reporting an average occupancy of approximately 70 percent. At the time of the hearing, average occupancy of existing nursing home beds in Collier County was 83.5 per cent. Existing nursing home beds in Collier County are underutilized and there are a number of nursing home beds available to the public. Also there are available alternatives to nursing homes in Collier County. HCR has projected reaching 95 per cent occupancy within one year of opening. This projection seems overly optimistic and unwarranted by prior history, as only one existing facility has an occupancy rate that high. HCR's occupancy projections are based on assumptions that the future growth will be similar to that experienced between 7/1/85 and 12/1/85. But more recent data shows that growth has been decreasing and that there was no growth for the most recent period prior to the hearing. If projected occupancy is not met, projected revenues will not be realized, and projections of financial feasibility will not materialize. The record in this case does not contain evidence of patients' need for nursing home care documented by the attending physicians' plans of care or orders, assessments performed by the staff of the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, or equivalent assessments performed by attending physicians indicating need for nursing home care. The local health plan (Policy 1, priority 4) requires an occupancy level of at least 90 per cent before new nursing homes can be approved. The local health plan (Policy 1, priority 6) also provides, "No new community nursing home facility should be constructed having less than 60 beds. However, less than 60 beds may be approved as part of an established acute care hospital facility."
Recommendation For all of the foregoing reasons, it is recommended that the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services issue a Final Order in this case denying the Petitioner's application for a certificate of need to construct either its original proposal or its supplemented proposal. DONE AND ENTERED this 14th day of October, 1986, at Tallahassee, Florida. MICHAEL M. PARRISH, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 14th day of October, 1986.
Findings Of Fact Upon consideration of the oral and documentary evidence adduced at the hearing, as well as the stipulation of facts "entered into by all parties, the following relevant facts are found: Along with six other applicants, the petitioner, Health Quest Corporation, d/b/a Lake Pointe Woods Health Center, and the respondent, Quality Health Facilities, Inc., d/b/a Sarasota Health Care Center, submitted applications for a Certificate of Need to construct and operate new nursing homes in Sarasota County, In June of 1982, the respondent Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services (HRS) determined to issue the application of Sarasota Health Care Center and deny the remaining seven applications. For the purposes of this proceeding, the parties have stipulated that there is a need for at least a 120-bed skilled and intermediate care nursing home in the Sarasota, Florida area. In November, 1982, respondent HRS adopted Rule 10- 5.11(21) , Florida Administrative Code, which provides a formula methodology for determining the number of nursing home beds needed in areas throughout the State. Briefly summarizing, this formula begins with a bed to population ratio of 27 per thousand population age 65 and over, and then modifies that ratio by applying a poverty ratio calculated for each district. The theoretical bed need ratio established for Sarasota County by this portion of the Rule's formula is 23.2 nursing home beds per thousand elderly population projected three years into the future. The population figures to be utilized in the formula are the latest mid-range projections published by the Bureau of Economic and Business Research (BEBR) at the University of Florida. After determining the theoretical need for nursing home beds in an area, the Rule purports to determine the actual demand for beds by determining the current utilization of licensed community nursing home beds, establishing a current utilization threshold and, if this is satisfied, applying a prospective utilization test too determine the number of beds at any given time. Applying the formula methodology set forth in Rule 10- 5.11(21) to Sarasota County results in a finding that there are currently 807 excess nursing home beds in that County. The need for sheltered nursing home beds within a life care facility are considered separately in Rule 10-5.11(22), Florida Administrative Code. Generally speaking, need is determined on the basis of one nursing home bed for every four residential units in the life care facility. Elderly persons 75 years of age and older utilize nursing homes to a greater extent than those persons between the ages of 65 and 74. Persons under the age of 65, particularly handicapped individuals, also utilize nursing home beds. The formula set forth in Rule 10-5.11(21) does not consider those individuals under the age of 65, and it does not provide a weighted factor for the age 75 and over population. In the past, the BEBR mid-range population projections for Sarasota County, compared with the actual census reached, have been low. Petitioner Health Quest, an Indiana corporation, currently owns and/or operates some 2,400 existing nursing home beds in approximately 13 facilities in Indiana. It holds several Certificates of Need for nursing homes in Florida and construction is under way. Petitioner owns 53 acres of land on the South Tamiami Trail in Sarasota, upon which it is constructing a 474-unit retirement center. It seeks to construct on six of the 53 acres a 120-bed nursing home adjacent to the retirement center. Of the 120 beds, it is proposed that 60 will be for intermediate care and 60 will be for skilled care. The facility will offer ancillary services in the areas of speech, hearing, physical, occupational, and recreational therapy. Thirty-five intermediate care beds would be classified as beds to be used for Medicaid recipients and the facility would be Medicare certified. Retirement center residents will have priority over nursing home beds. The total capital expenditure for the petitioner's proposed nursing home project was estimated in its application to be $3.1 million, with a cost per square foot of $46.29 and a cost per bed of approximately $26,000,00. As of the date of the hearing, the estimated capital expenditure for the petitioner's project as $3.9 million. The respondent Quality Health Facilities, Inc., d/b/a Sarasota Health Care Center (QHF), is a Mississippi corporation and owns nursing homes in Tennessee, North Carolina and Haines City, Florida, the latter site having been opened in August of 1983. It also holds three other outstanding Certificates of Need. QHF proposes to construct a 120-bed nursing home containing intermediate and skilled care beds which will be equally available to all members of the community. It is anticipated that it will have approximately 65 percent Medicaid usage and 5 percent Medicare usage. Though it has not yet selected its site, QHF plans to utilize a four-acre site near the City of Venice in Sarasota County. At the time of the application, the total capital expenditure for QHF's proposed project was estimated to be $2.3 million. Its construction costs were estimated at $1.16 million or $33.14 per square foot. QHF's recently constructed Haines City nursing home facility was completed at a construction cost of $1.22 million, or $31.00, per square foot. The Sarasota County facility will utilize the same basic design as the Haines City facility. At the current time, the cost of construction would be increased by an inflation factor of about ten percent. As of the date of the hearing, the projected capital expenditure for QHF's Sarasota County proposed facility was approximately $2.6 million or about $21,000.00 per bed. The owners of QHF are willing and able to supply the necessary working capital to make the proposed nursing home a viable operation. As depicted by the projected interest and depreciation expenses, the QHF facility will have lower operating expenses than the facility proposed by petitioner, Health Quest. In Sarasota County, there is a direct correlation between high Medicaid utilization and high facility occupancy. The long term financial feasibility of a 120-bed nursing home in Sarasota County is undisputed, as is the availability, quality of care, efficiency, appropriateness, accessibility, extent of utilization and adequacy of like and existing services in the health service area.
Recommendation Based upon the findings of fact and conclusions of law recited herein, it is RECOMMENDED that the application of Health Quest Corporation d/b/a Lake Pointe Woods Health Care, Inc. for a Certificate of Need to construct a 120-bed nursing home in Sarasota County be DENIED. It is further RECOMMENDED that the application of Quality Health Facilities Inc. d/b/a Sarasota Health Care Center for a Certificate of Need to construct a 120-bed nursing home facility in Sarasota County be GRANTED. Respectfully submitted and entered this 31st Day of October, 1983, in Tallahassee, Florida. DIANE D. TREMOR, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 31st day of October, 1983. COPIES FURNISHED: John M. Laird, Esquire 315 West Jefferson Blvd. South Bend, Indiana 46601 John T. C. Low, Esquire Paul L. Gunn, Esquire Low & McMullan 1530 Capital Towers Post Office Box 22966 Jackson, Mississippi 39205 James M. Barclay, Esquire Assistant General Counsel 1317 Winewood Blvd. Suite 256 Tallahassee, Florida 32301 David Pingree, Secretary Department of Health & Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Blvd. Tallahassee, Florida 32301
The Issue The issue in this proceeding is whether DHRS should approve the application for certificate of need of any one or more of the January, 1987, applicants for community nursing home beds in Hillsborough County. STIPULATIONS The parties stipulated to the following facts: All applicants timely filed their respective letters of intent, applications and omission responses with DHRS and the appropriate local health council for the January, 1987, batching cycle. The petitioners each timely filed a petition requesting a Section 120.57(1) hearing and have standing in this proceeding. The parties agree the Division of Administrative Hearings has jurisdiction over this matter and the parties. The CON application content requirements of Section 381.494, Florida Statutes (1985), apply as that was the statute in effect at the time the applications were filed. The review criteria in Section 381.705(1) and (2), Florida Statutes (1987), apply to this proceeding. The following statutory criteria have been met orare not applicable in this proceeding: Section 381.705(1)(d), (f), (g), (j) and (k) and all of Section 381.705(2), Florida Statutes (1987). Except for the effects the project will have on clinical needs of health professional training programs, the extent to which services will be accessible to schools for health professionals and the availability of alternative uses of such resources for the provision of other health services, Section 381.705(1)(h) is in dispute and remains to be litigated.
Findings Of Fact SUMMARY DESCRIPTION OF THE PARTIES. HCR's application (CON Action No. 5000) is to construct a 120-bed nursing home consisting of 40,000 square feet at a cost of $3,964,000.00, or $33,033 per bed (including adult day care; $32,1127 when the cost for day care is excluded.) The HCR application describes special programs and services for Alzheimer's Disease and related disorder patients in a distinct special care unit and an Alzheimer's day care center, both Identified in the plans submitted by HCR showing special design elements. HCR also proposes to offer sub-acute care and respite care. The HCR nursing home will have 2.08 (120/57.6) patients per staff, which includes the assistant director of nursing and occupational therapy and recreational therapy aides listed by HCR in its application. FCP submitted an application for 30 nursing home beds to be constructed as a part of a retirement facility (CON Action NO. 4993). The 30 beds will comprise approximately 17,558 square feet at a cost of $1,549,599.00, or $51,653 per bed. The Florida Country Place application proposes a patient staff ratio of approximately 2.3 (30/13). Palm Court submitted an application for a 60-bed addition to its existing 120-bed facility (CON Action No. 4987). The 60-bed addition would consist of 15,260 square feet at a cost of $1,472,435.00, or $24,571 per bed. The Palm Court facility is located in Plant City in the far eastern portion of Hillsborough County, near the Polk County line. Palm Court proposed a ratio of 2.31 (60/26) patients per nursing staff. Manor Care submitted an application (CON Action No. 5006) to add 60 beds to an approved certificate of need for 60-beds for which construction has not yet begun. The area to be added would consist of 19,000 square feet at a cost of $2,187,045.00, or $36,451 per bed. The Manor Care addition would include a distinct special care unit for Alzheimer's Disease and related disorder victims and the 60-bed addition would provide a patient staff ratio of 1.98 (60/30.3), which includes a half-time physical therapy aide, a half-time recreational therapy assistant and an assistant director of nursing. Forum submitted an application (CON Action No. 4999) to construct a 120-bed nursing home as a part of a retirement complex. The nursing home element will consist of 49,283 square feet at a cost of $5,053,301.00, or $42,111 per bed. Forum proposes a staffing ratio of 3.0 patients per staff FTE. Forum proposed to provide respite care and hospice care, and adult day care and meals on wheels during or after the second year of operation. HHL submitted an application (CON Action No. 4978) for 120-bed nursing home consisting of 37,700 square feet at a cost of $3,900,000.00, or $32,500 per bed. The HHL facility proposes 2.27 (120/52.8) patients per staff, which includes the rehabilitation assistants and the assistant director of nursing listed by HHL. HHL proposes sub-acute care, respite care, programs for Alzheimer's Disease victims (but not a distinct special care unit) and an Alzheimer's adult day care program of from four to six patients. Cypress submitted an application (CON Action No. 5004) to construct a 60-bed nursing home in Sun City Center in southeastern Hillsborough County. The nursing home described in the application would contain 24,069 square feet at a cost of $2,125,000.00, or $35,419 per bed. But Cypress' estimated construction cost per square foot of $49.81 does not account for inflation and is unreasonably low. Median cost of nursing home construction in Florida is $55 per square foot. It is estimated that Cypress' construction cost estimate is 10-15 percent too low. Assuming that the cost estimate is 12.5 percent too low, the cost of construction would increase to approximately $2,274.485 or $37,914 per bed. Cypress did not detail any special programs in its application and proposed 2.45 (60/24.5) patients per staff. However, this ratio is questionable in view of the confusion surrounding Cypress' evidence regarding staffing and the apparent inaccuracy of the staffing presented by the application. DHRS is the state agency that preliminarily reviewed and passed on the applications and is responsible for final agency action on them. DHRS PRELIMINARY REVIEW AND ACTION. HCR, FCP, Palm Court, Manor Care, Forum, HHL, Cypress, and others filed their applications for community nursing home bed certificates of need for Hillsborough County in the January, 1987, batching cycle. On June 18, 1987, DHRS issued its State Agency Action Report (SAAR), in which it denied all of the applications except HCR's, FCP's and VHA/Oxford's (for 120 beds). Review of the SAAR in light of the evidence introduced at the final hearing indicates that DHRS erred in reviewing the applications in at least the following respects: Manor Care. -- The SAAR indicates that DHRS was not cognizant that Manor Care had a final approval for a 60-bed nursing home CON (No. 4155) to which to add the 60 beds applied for in this case, CON Action No. 5006. The SAAR was somewhat critical of the Manor Care proposal for being a two-story structure. It appears that DHRS confused the proposal to add 60-beds (CON Action No. 5006) with a parallel contingent proposal to build a new 120-bed facility (CON Action No. 5005), which Manor Care eventually withdrew during the final hearing. Actually, CON Action No. 5006, added to the approved CON No. 4155 for a new 60-bed nursing home, would result in a one-story 120-bed nursing home. On page 7 of the SAAR, DHRS indicated its understanding that Manor Care had not specified a location for its proposal. Later, on page 11, the SAAR acknowledges the true fact that Manor Care's proposed nursIng home would be located in the Northwest Hillsborough County subdistrict, which is the Local Health Plan's first priority for location of additional nursing home beds in DHRS District 6. HHL. The SAAR (p. 13) states that Convalescent Services, Inc. (CSI), the management corporation HHL and other limited partnerships for which the Kellett Brothers are the general partners, has no other nursing homes in Florida. While technically correct, Kellett limited partnerships do have other nursing homes in Florida. Staffing tables on page 17 of the SAAR are incorrect, attributing no LPNs to the HHL proposal instead of 6 and only 36 aides instead of 38. On page 18 of the SAAR, the table of patient privileges incorrectly states that the HHL applications had no patients' bill of rights. Also on page 18 of the SAAR, DHRS incorrectly omitted adult day care and community outreach from the table of programs provided by HHL. On page 26 of the SAkR, it gives HHL's private pay private room rate ($101) as its semi-private room rate (actually $69.92) The SAAR Review Matrix incorrectly omits adult day care, community outreach and sub-acute care from HHL's proposed programs and omits HHL's patients' bill of rights. Forum. -- The SAAR starts out on page 3 by misidentifying Forum as being affiliated with Hospital Corporation of America. On pages 4, 6 and 15, the SAAR incorrectly fails to recognize that a retirement living center (apartments) is part of the overall development Forum proposes. The semi-private room rate of $110 attributed to Forum's application on page 26 of the SAAR is wrong; it should have been $85. Cypress. -- The Review Matrix in the SAAR failed to identify several services and programs Cypress stated in its application that it would offer. The matrix did not recognize that Cypress would offer social activity functions within the community, would offer rehabilitation, would provide some Alzheimer's type services, (which Cypress called supportive care and mentally frail services) and physically frail services. Cypress also spoke of hospice care and respite care in its application, as well as specialized rehabilitation, physical therapy, and speech therapy. Cypress also spoke of community outreach programs, psychiatric services, home health agencies, and numerous other areas that were not recognized by DHRS in its matrix. However, there are valid reasons for some of these omissions. On May 9, 1988, the first day of the final hearing, VHA/Oxford withdrew its application. On the afternoon of May 17, 1988, DHRS announced it was supporting the grant of Palm Court's application since VHA/Oxford had withdrawn. But the only evidence to support the new DHRS position was through the testimony of Reid Jaffe, DHRS Health Services and Facilities Consultants Supervisor, who did not express a personal opinion but acted as a messsenger to relay the positions taken by others at DHRS who did not testify. NUMERIC NEED. Rule 10.5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code, is a methodology for calculating net numeric need for nursing home beds. Under the methodology, gross numeric need is calculated essentially by multiplying the population of two age cohorts projected on the planning horizon by a use rate. The use rate is calculated by divIding current population by the current number of licensed beds. To obtain net need in a health planning sub-district, the methodology first prorates the gross need in the entire district, using the proportion of current licensed beds in the subdistrict to the current licensed beds in the district, and adjusts the resultant by a current occupancy rate factor (occupancy rate /0.90); then, the number of licensed beds, plus 90 percent of the number of approved beds in the subdistrict, are subtracted from the adjusted gross need in the subdistrict. With three exceptions, the parties agree on how net numeric need is calculated under the rule methodology. The parties disagree only on the current licensed bed count, the current approved bed count, and the occupancy rate at one facility that has both community nursing home beds and sheltered nursing home beds. (Sheltered nursing home beds generally are not factored into the formula.) As for the licensed bed count, the issue is whether The Home Association, a 96-bed facility in Hillsborough County, should be included as a licensed community nursing home facility or excluded as a sheltered facility. At hearing, all of the parties presenting evidence on the issue except Forum counted The Home Association's 96 beds as licensed community beds. Forum excluded The Home Association from the licensed bed count because it was not listed on the Department's Community Nursing Home Report for January 1, 1988. This same report reflects three other facilities in Hillsborough County in which the beds were formerly sheltered but as of August 1, 1987, began to be counted by the Department as community beds. Forum conceded, however, that if the Department recognizes The Home Association as a community facility, then it would be appropriate to include those beds in the licensed bed count under the rule formula. In its proposed recommended order, even Forum agrees that The Home Association beds are included in the licensed bed count. Two issues are presented relating to the inventory of approved beds under the rule formula: the date at which approved beds are to be counted; and whether the 120 beds under Careage CON #4714 and Manor Care's 60 beds under CON #4155 were approved at the pertinent time. On the first question, Forum again stands alone. In the face of a rule which is silent as to the date on which approved beds are to be counted, Forum suggests that they be counted cn the same day licensed beds are counted, December 1, 1986, for this batch. All other interested parties follow the Department's general practice of counting approved beds as of the date the State Agency Action Report for this batch was executed, June 18, 1987. Forum supports its position on the ground that use of the same date for both licensed and approved beds avoids the prospect that beds may be "lost" from the calculation if they are not licensed as of December 1, 1986, but become licensed before June 18, 1987, and therefore are no longer approved beds on that latter date. The argument is meritless. There is no evidence of any "lost" beds under this policy for this batch. Indeed, the evidence is that such beds are not lost: 120 beds at Carrollwood were licensed on December 15, 1986, after the December 1 licensed bed cut-off and before the June 18, 1987, SAAR date. These beds were included in the approved bed inventory on June 18, 1987. The Department's policy under its numeric need rule is to count approved beds as of the execution date of the SAAR. Under this policy, the need for beds in the future is predicated on the number of beds currently or soon to be available to meet the need. When more than seven months can elapse after licensed beds are counted but before the agency decision is formulated, it makes sense to count beds approved during this intervening period. A 120-bed award to Careage in the prior batch was published by DHRS in the Florida Administrative Weekly of January 23, 1987, reflecting approval on January 7, 1987. However, DHRS then received criticism.of the approval, and a new supervisor in charge initiated a second review of the circumstances and of the Careage approval. The second review did not conclude until after June 18, 1987. When it did, DHRS re- affirmed its decision to approve Careage and issued a CON for 120 beds on August 18, 1987. Although the Careage CON was issued after June 18, 1987, DHRS proved that there is a rational basis for including it in the approved bed count under these unusual circumstances. The Careage CON represents 120 beds approved in the batching cycle preceding the one at issue in this case. Counting the 120 beds as approved promotes sound health planning. The projection of net need on the planning horizon is predicated on the most accurate count of approved beds from prior batching cycles that can be anticipated to come on line in the near future. As of June 18, 1987, there were 308 other beds approved but not yet licensed in Hillsborough County. Included among these 308 approved beds are 60 beds awarded to Manor Care under CON 4155 by Stipulation dated March 30, 1987. By mistake, DHRS did not count Manor Care's 60-bed CON in the SAAR. This mistake was not discovered, and DHRS served discovery responses and took a final position on need, as required by prehearing orders, that did not count the Manor Care CON. But this mistake f fact should now be corrected, even if it could have been discovered earlier through the use of due diligence, so that the health planning decision resulting from these de novo proceedings will be predicated on the correct facts. See Gulf Court Nursing Center v. HRS, 483 So.2d 700, 712 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986). It is appropriate to include Manor Care's finally approved 60 beds in the rule formula. Adding Careage's 120 beds, the total approved bed count is 428. The final variation accounting for the differences in the parties' calculations under the formula is the manner in which the occupancy rate should be computed at John Knox Village, a facility containing both community and sheltered beds. The issue is whether the patient days in this mixed facility should be prorated between the two types of beds or whether the full patient days for both types of beds should be used in calculating the occupancy rate in the facility. There is no separate report of occupancy by bed type for this mixed facility. The number of patient days delivered in the community beds at John Knox is not known. If the patient days for the entire facility are prorated according to the percentage the community beds bear to the total number of beds, there is a necessary but wholly unsupported and speculative assumption that the proportion of patient days delivered in community beds is identical to the proportion of community beds. DHRS historically has been unwilling to make this assumption and has always included the total number of beds and patient days in mixed facilities to determine the occupancy rate under the community bed rule. The rationale supporting this policy has been appropriately explicated on the record. The use of prorated patient days to determine occupancy in mixed facilities, as suggested by DHRS for the first time at final hearing, also is a change from the position the Department took when exhibits were exchanged and the prehearing stipulation was executed and then relied on by the parties. Because the Department, as a party litigant, did not prorate in its prehearing submissions, it cannot do so at hearing in the absence of fraud, mistake of fact, or newly discovered evidence. No evidence of any such extenuating circumstances was presented. The only explanation DHRS gave for changing its treatment of the John Knox occupancy data was that more accurate recent data (using daily census data instead of first day of the month census data) furnished by the Local Health Council was prorated. But DHRS just as easily could have prorated the older, less accurate data if it had chosen to take that position at the time the parties were required to take final positions in prehearing procedures. The Department, therefore, is precluded from adopting a posture at hearing relating to the treatment of patient days in mixed facilities which is different from that reflected in the Department's prehearing stipulation and exchanged exhibits. In summary, the appropriate numeric need calculation must include The Home Association in licensed beds, count both Careage's 120-bed CON and Manor Care's 60-bed CON in the approved bed count, and use the full John Knox bed complement and patient days in determining the Hillsborough County occupancy rate. Using these factors in the rule methodology, the net need for community nursing home beds in Hillsborough County for the January, 1990, planning horizon is 231, as reflected in the calculation included in the attached Appendix To Recommended Order, Case Nos. 87-3409, etc. Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code, provides that DHRS normally may not approve more beds than the numeric net need calculated under rule methodology. In this case, none of the circumstances specified in the rule that would justify exceeding the numeric net need were proven by the evidence. At the same time, the rule does not require DHRS to fill all, or as much as possible, of the numeric net need by attempting to "mix and match" applications to come as close as possible to the calculated number. LOCAL GEOGRAPHIC NEED PRIORITIES. The current, 1985 District VI Local Health Plan provides that, after consideration of numeric bed need under the rule need methodology, its "priority need rankings" should be considered in the competitive review for new nursing homes. Hil1sborough County, Northwest, is priority rank number one. HCR, FCP, Manor Care, Forum and HHL all propose to locate their nursing homes there. Cypress proposes to locate in Sun City Center and Palm Court is in Plant City, both in Hillsborough County, Southeast, an area ranked fifth in priority in District VI. Plant City is close to Polk County, which the Local Health Plan designates as the fourth ranked area in priority. Cypress proposes its 60-bed nursing home approximately 1/4 mile down the road from an existing nursing home called Sun Terrace, operated by CSI. Quality of care concerns have arisen due to rapid fill-up of 60 additional beds recently licensed at Sun Terrace and opened in September, 1987. See Findings of Fact 83-87, below. As a result, Sun Terrace has imposed on itself a moratorium on new admissions until quality of care concerns can be addressed. In part as a result of the moratorium, Sun Terrace's occupancy rate at the time of the final hearing was only approximately 65 percent, leaving 42 empty beds. MEDICAID NEED. One of the three major considerations for competitive review of nursing home CON applications in the Longterm Care section of the 1985-1987 State Health Plan is "resource access." Except as reflected in the priority rankings, geographic access is not an issue in this proceeding. (Priority/Policy 7 of the Local Health Plan, setting a goal of providing for nursing home services within 30 minutes travel time of 90 percent of urban residents and within 45 minutes travel time of 90 percent of rural residents, already has been achieved in District VI.) But, to address concern for financial access, Priority/Policy 2 of the Local Health Plan provides that applicants "should commit, at a minimum, to serve Medicaid eligible patients in proportion to the representation of elderly poor in the subdistrict." In Hillsborough County, Northwest, where all but two of the applicants propose to locate, the elderly poverty rate is 18.6; in Hillsborough County, Southeast, where Cypress and Pal:n Court would be located, the elderly poverty rate is 15.6 percent. The applicants propose to commit the following percentages of their nursing home beds to the care of Medicaid- 4 eligible patients: HCR, 70 percent; FCP, 70 percent; Manor Care, 30 percent; HHL, 45 percent; Palm Court, 70 percent; and Cypress, approximately 10 percent. Cypress proposed in its application to commit 10 percent of its beds for Medicaid use. It attempted to update its application to provide for a 15 percent Medicaid commitment. The update was said to have been the result of a decrease in the average age of the residents of Sun City Center, Cypress' proposed primary service area, from 73 to 70. But the percentage was calculated by first estimating 60 percent private pay and "backing down" to a Medicare percentage of 25 percent, leaving 15 percent Medicaid. The evidence was persuasive that this attempted update was not due to extrinsic factors. See Conclusions of Law 20 to 25, below. Forum has committed only to have 50 percent of its beds Medicaid- certified and to meet the requirements of Priority/Policy 2. Although Priority/Policy 2 is written as a minimum Medicaid percentage, no evidence was presented from which to determine how high a percentage of Medicaid commitment is desirable. There was, e.g., no evidence on which to find that a Medicaid percentage as high as four times the elderly poverty rate is more desirable than a percentage approximately equal to or perhaps just a bit higher than the elderly poverty rate. To the contrary, the only evidence on the subject was that DHRS does not now consider the Medicaid percentage to be as important as it was considered to be in the past and that DHRS now just checks to see that the percentage approximates the elderly poor rate in the County. NEED FOR ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE PROGRAMS. Description Of The Disease And The Need. There is a need in Hillsborough County for additional nursing home beds and services for Alzheimer's Disease and related disorder victims. There is no known nursing home in Hillsborough County which provides a distinct care unit for Alzheimer's Disease and related disorder victims. There is an estimated unmet need by Alzheimer's patients for nursing home care in Hillsborough County of approximately 1,271 by July, 1989. DHRS has recommended that "preference should be given to applicants for new nursing home beds which propose the development of special Alzheimer's units" and "greater preference should be given to units that will also provide adult day care and/or respite care." Alzheimer's Disease is a brain disorder that was discovered at the turn of the century. It primarily affects persons over the age of 60. The term "related disorders" is used because some non-Alzheimer's disorders mimic Alzheimer's Disease symptoms and create many of the same needs for specialized care. Typically, Alzheimer's Disease results in gradual memory loss and, as memory loss progresses, results in the need for ever- increasing personal care. In the earlier stages, the victim is often in reasonably good physical condition and simply exhibits signs of recent memory loss. However, as memory loss increases, various activities of daily living are disrupted. Victims encounter more serious physical problems and exhibit symptoms such as wandering, significant weight loss, clumsiness, incontinence and antisocial behavior. In the last stages of the disease, the victim requires increasingly intense medical attention, becomes totally dependent on others, and may eventually require total skilled nursing care. The intensity of care required for the Alzheimer's Disease and related disorder victim increases as the disease progresses. In early stages, the victims are typically cared for at home by a family member. The nature of care required for an Alzheimer's Disease or related disorders victim is very exhausting for the care giver. Toward the end of the first stage of the disease when the victim requires increasing supervision, the victim can be maintained longer in the home if there is available to the care giver some form of occasional rest, such as adult day care or respite care. Adult day care and respite care provide opportunities for the primary care giver to "take a break". See Findings of Fact 133 to 135, below. An Alzheimer's Disease patient usually requires inpatient nursing home care late in the second stage of the disease. If the patient is ambulatory, he often exhibits a wandering behavior. Approximately 50 percent of the Alzheimer's victims admitted to a nursing home have the potential to wander. Ultimately, Alzheimer's victims become bed-ridden and require skilled or sub- acute nursing home care, including tube feedings, cathethers, and artificial life support. Historically, ambulatory Alzheimer's patients in nursing homes have been mixed with other patients. The Alzheimer's victim has often disrupted life in the nursing home because of the victim's wandering, incontinence, confusion, and socially unacceptable behavior. Because of these characteristics, some nursing homes avoid admitting Alzheimer's patients and others control problem behavior with sedation and physical restraint. A separate Alzheimer's care unit enables the nursing home to utilize special techniques to manage the Alzheimer's disease victim and allows the victim to maintain his cognitive capabilities for as long as possible, without restraint and sedation. Nursing home patients who do not suffer from Alzheimer's and related diseases are often agitated and disrupted by the Alzheimer's patients' unacceptable social behavior. A separate unit for Alzheimer's Disease victims accommodates the needs of the non-Alzheimer's patient by eliminating unpleasant, often violent encounters between dementia victims and other patients. Distinct Alzheimer's special care units provide better care for Alzheimer's disease and related disorder victims for several reasons. A separate unit eliminates the tendency of the Alzheimer's disease patient to disrupt the remainder of the nursing home. A separate unit provides a smaller, safer, specially designed area with specially trained staff to address the unique needs of the Alzheimer's disease victim. A separate unit is preferable to mixing Alzheimer's patients with non- Alzheimer's patients. Traditional nursing home programs and activities are often inappropriate and counterproductive for the Alzheimer's patient. HCR's Proposal. The 120-bed nursing home proposed by HCR will help meet the needs in Hillsborough County for adult day care, respite care, sub-acute care and a special care unit for Alzheimer's Disease and related disorder victims. The programs and services will enable the HCR nursing home to provide at one location a complete continuum of care from the least intense level of care in adult day care to total (sub-acute) care. HCR's Alzheimer's special care unit will incorporate special design features, special patient activities and programs and higher staffing levels to meet the unique needs cf Alzheimer's disease victims. These features are intended to compensate for memory loss and provide a safe environment where cognitive capabilities can be maintained for as long as possible while patients enjoy personal freedom without the use of restraints and sedation which have typified the treatment of unmanageable Alzheimer's and dementia patients. The architectural design of the HCR nursing home will accommodate the tendency of Alzheimer's victims to wander by allowing the victims to ambulate in circular patterns through the facility and the adjacent court yard and by providing an electronic warning system to prevent inadvertent exit from the nursing home. Patient bathrooms are specially designed to avoid fright and confusion through the use of automatic lighting fixtures, appropriate coloring and distinctly shaped fixtures and waste baskets. Calming colors, color coding, carefully selected art work, special floor coverings and labeling are provided. Separate dining and activities areas enable the nursing home to provide programs and activities for Alzheimer's disease victims in a more effective and efficient manner than would be possible if the same areas also had to be used for non- Alzheimer's Disease victims. The proposed HCR nursing home includes a discreet area designed for an adult day care center, which will share some resources with the nursing home. The program will accommodate 12 persons and be operated in accordance with adult day care regulations. The physical spaces include an entry separate from the main nursing home entry, a lobby, an office, a therapeutic kitchen for use by the patients, toilet facilities, an activities center, and a lounge with an adjacent covered porch. The adult day care program will be staffed by a nurse director, an assistant and volunteers. The participants in this program will be provided with various activities of daily living in an environment developed for Alzheimer's Disease victiMs. This program is intended to provide placement for persons not yet in need of in-patient care and will provide an alternative to premature nursing home admission. Manor Care's Proposal. Manor Care proposes a dedicated 30-bed specialized unit for persons suffering from Alzheimer's disease and related disorders. In 1985, Manor Care perceived the need to treat Alzheimer's patients in a manner different than patients in the general nursing home population. Manor Care's task force of nurses, administrators, architects, and designers developed an Alzheimer's program which recognizes the special needs of the patient. Manor Care now operates 21 special dedicated Alzheimer's units throughout the country and is planning 16 additional Alzheimer's units. Manor Care's comprehensive Alzheimer's program encompasses five components: (1) environment, (2) staffing and training, (3) programming, (4) specialized medical services, and (5) family support. Environment. The proposed 30-bed Alzheimer's unit will be separate from the rest of the facility and self-contained, with its own dining room, activities room, lounge, quiet/privacy room, nurses sub-station, director's office, and outdoor courtyard. A separate dining room for Alzheimer's residents enables staff to provide individualized attention and special assistance. By providing a simple and separate dining environment, residents are no longer embarrassed by confusion and agitation displayed in the presence of non-Alzheimer's residents during mealtime. A separate lounge area is provided for families to visit with residents. In a typical nursing center, the family must visit a confused resident in the presence of other families; families of Alzheimer's residents can find this embarrassing. A separate lounge makes visitation more desirable for Alzheimer's residents and families. The quiet/privacy room can be used by families as a quiet area to visit with a family member, by residents who want to spend time alone, or by staff persons and residents for individualized programming away from the activity on the unit. The outdoor courtyard, which is enclosed and accessible to the unit through the activities room and hallway door, allows Alzheimer's residents to walk outside freely without wandering off. The Manor Care Alzheimer's unit is specially designed with features which reduce environmental stress by minimizing glare (using parabolic lenses), noise and bold patterns which increase agitation in Alzheimer's residents. Throughout the unit, a residential, uncluttered atmosphere is emphasized, using soft, contrasting colors and textures. The unit also contains visual cues to increase orientation. Furnishings are functional, durable and easy to maintain. Staffing and Training. The Alzheimer's unit has its own specialized staff including a Unit Director, Activities Director, and nursing staff. The unit is staffed at a higher "nurse to resident" ratio than the rest of the facility. Staffing patterns emphasizu continuity to ensure that residents receive individualized care. The nurses become f;i1iar with the behavior and abilities of each resident and are able to render care appropriately. Programming. The goal of programming and activities in the Alzheimer's unit is to improve the quality of life of the Alzheimer's resident. This specialized programming results in reducing the use of medications and restraints necessary to manage the Alzheimer's resident. The Manor Care Alzheimer's activity program is success-oriented; staff provide activities designed to allow Alzheimer's residents to succeed more frequently. (They usually fail when mixed in with the general nursing home population.) specialized Medical Services. The use of consultant medical specialists is an integral part of Manor Care's Alzheimer's Program. Specialists provide diagnostic and treatment services for Alzheimer's residents upon admission to the unit, and thereafter when deemed medically appropriate. Family support. Family support is another important aspect of the Manor Care Alzheimer's program. Families are very supportive of the unit's programming and have benef itted from the understanding and support available to them. The Others' Proposals. None of the other applicants propose specialized units for the care of patients with Alzheimer's disease and related disorders. Alzheimer's sufferers will be treated in an "open unit" at the HHL facility and will be placed as compatibly as possible with other residents. Although these residents will be able to intermingle with other residents, their movements will be monitored by the "wander guard" system and all doors will be equipped with buzzers connected to the nurse's stations. The HHL facility will be designed to incorporate secure courtyards and other areas where residents will be free to wander safely throughout the living areas. The facility's nursing personnel will be specially trained to provide services to Alzheimer's sufferers. The proposed HHL facility will also offer an adult Alzheimer's day care program. Although the program will be small (accommodating between four to six individuals) it will interface with the Alzheimer's program offered to the in-house residents. As with the respite program, the Alzheimer's adult day care program will give the families of Alzheimer's disease sufferers an opportunity to take a breather during the day, and the participants will benefit from the special Alzheimer's programs and activities offered. With its proposed 60-bed addition, Palm Court plans to add a program directed specifically at persons suffering from Alzheimers and related brain disorders. Currently, it does not have one. Neither FCP nor Forum make any particular provision for the care of Alzheimer's patients. FCP points out that its facilities in other states historically have cared for this special category of patient, primarily through use of high quality, thereapy-oriented programs, especially at the earlier stages of the disease. Cypress proposes to locate off of a central core: a 60-bed nursing home, offering both intermediate and skilled care, with its own recreation area and dining, serviced from the central kitchen; (2) a 20-bed assisted living unit (which Cypress also calls "supportive care") for mentally frail and physically strong individuals which has its own outdoor recreation area and dining area; and (3) another 40 assisted living beds broken into two 20-unit wings for mentally strong and physically frail individuals, with their own dining and recreation area, including outdoor recreation. The various levels of care are separate since each of the levels have different needs and methods of treatment. However, Cypress will only accept in the mentally frail, physically strong wing, Alzheimer's-type patients who are in the earlier stages of the disease. QUALITY OF CARE. Priority/Policy 9 of the 1985 Local Health Plan states: "Applicants should be evaluated as to their achievement of superior quality ratings by DHRS and other indications of quality as available." Track Record. At the time of application, three of the nursing homes operated by HCR in Florida had superior licenses and the remaining homes had standard licenses. FCP has one nursing home in Florida. It is rated standard by DHRS. None of the facilities operated by FCP's principals, the Phillipses, has ever been in receivership or had a Medicaid or Medicare certification revoked. The Phillipses have an excellent reputation in Ohio for their operation and management of nursing homes and have remained in positive standing with federal and state certification agencies. Manor Care's proposed 60-bed addition will be owned by Manor Care of Florida, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Manor HealthCare Corporation. Manor HealthCare Corporation is a publicly-held corporation which owns and operates about 130 nursing homes in various states. Manor Care owns and operates nine nursing homes and three adult congregate living facilities (ACLFs) in Florida. All nine Florida nursing homes exceed DHRS licensure standards; the majority of Manor Care's Florida facilities hold a superior license rating. Manor Care has never had a license denied, revoked, or suspended in Florida. Manor Care has opened three nursing homes in Florida in recent years. All three are superior rated. Palm Court Nursing Home has a superior license, with zero deficiencies, from DHRS' Office of Licensure and Certification with the most recent inspection having occurred between May 2 and May 4 immediately preceding the beginning of the final hearing. It is managed by National Health Corp., Murpheesboro, Tennessee. National Health Corp is an owner-operator of other facilities and either owns or operates some 19 facilities in Florida. It has managed Palm Court Nursing Home since its inception and, if the 60 bed addition is approved, will manage the addition. Forum has never had a license denied, revoked or suspended, nor had a facility placed in receivership. Forum has never had any nursing home placed in receivership at any time during its ownership, management or leasing. Forum has a history of providing quality of care and owns and operates facilities in other states which hold superior ratings. Forum has a corporate policy of seeking to attain a superior rating in those states which have such a system. Forum presently owns and operates one facility in Florida. That facility is rated standard and was acquired by Forum within the past two years. That facility, which only has 35 nursing beds, is not a prototype of what Forum proposes in this case. Seventeen (17) of the twenty-one (21) nursing homes currently managed by CSI are located in states which utilize a superior rating system. Of the facilities that are eligible to receive superior licenses, CSI maintains superior ratings in over 80 percent of its beds. CSI's Sun Terrace in Sun City Center was the subject of an extensive survey issued by the Office of Licensure and Certification, an arm of DHRS, in April, 1988, that cited numerous deficiencies in the areas of quality of care, staffing, and programs at the Sun Terrace facility. The licensure survey also cited violations of state and federal laws in the handling of controlled substances and problems with resident care plans at the facility. The findings of DHRS in its licensure survey of Sun Terrace appear to be serious matters, the resolution of which is clearly within the control of CSI. Following the opening of the second 60 beds at Sun Terrace in September, 1987, the facility experienced a shortage of nursing personnel which necessitated a greater use of agency personnel to staff the facility. The problems cited by DHRS at Sun Terrace were largely the result of the increased use of agency personnel, lack of documentation, a newly licensed administrator, and the unexpected resignation of the director of nursing. Even before the DHRS licensure survey, CSI had taken affirmative action to address the problems at Sun Terrace, including a voluntary moratorium on new admissions. In response to the recent problems at Sun Terrac, CSI has moved toward more centralized management of its facilities. CSI now requires administrators to adhere very closely to the corporate policies and procedures. Further, the addition of a second full-time nurse/consultant will double the frequency of quality of care monitoring visits at CSI facilities. The problems experienced at Sun Terrace are atypical of CSI-managed facilities. When CSI's policies and procedures are properly followed, the result is excellent nursing care and services. But the problems at Sun Terrace are examples of what can happen when an organization attempts to expand operations more rapidly than it should. In this connection, CSI has received seven CONs since July 1984. Two of the seven are preliminary approvals that have been challenged and have not yet gone to hearing. One was the 60-bed addition to Sun Terrace which is now licensed. Another is a 73-bed nursing home in Brevard County which is expected to open within the next several months, and another is a 21-bed addition project in Collier County. Cypress has never operated a nursing home and has no track record. Staffing. Staffing arrangments are important considerations in assessing the quality of care to be expected from a proposal, but there is not necessarily a proportional correlation between staffing and quality. How staffing affects quality also depends on the breadth and types of programs to be offered. For example, Alzheimer's programs and sub-acute care will require higher staffing ratios. HCR, FCP, Manor Care, Palm Court and Forum all propose staffing arrangments that meet or exceed state requirements. See Findings Of Fact 1-5, above. Cypress' application, on the other hand, leaves much to be desired in its proposed staffing. The staffing plan presented by Cypress on its Updated Table 11 fails to meet the requirements of Rule 10D-29, F.A.C. Specifically, no provision has been made for an activity director (10D-29.116), a medical director (10D-29.107), a pharmacy consultant (10D-29.112), or a medical records consultant (10D-29.118), all of which are required by rule. (Cypress attempted to explain that it would have a pharmacy consultant on contract who would bill patients separately.) Further, no provision has been made for utilization review to monitor the appropriateness of the placement of residents, as required by Rule 10D-29. Cypress' Updated Table 11 provides for LPNs of 1.5 FTEs on the first shift and night shift and 6.0 FTEs on the second shift. The second shift LPN coverage is over-staffed by 4 1/2 FTEs which will result in inefficiency. Rule 10D-29.108, F.A.C., requires staffing of nursing assistants on all shifts. The Cypress staffing plan makes no provision for nursing assistants on the second shift. In testimony, Cypress attempted to explain that Table 11 was wrong and that the second shift LPNs should have been aides. The proposes Cypress nursing home will not offer 24-hour RN coverage. The third shift has no RN coverage. Based upon the proposed staffing pattern appearing in Cypress' Updated Table 11, its proposed facililty would not qualify for licensure under Florida regulations, much less qualify for a superior rating. Cypress has not secured or identified the day-to-day management of the proposed nursing home. No medical director has been secured or identified. Quality Assurance programs. All of the applicants except Cypress have existing quality assurance (QA) programs that are adequate to assL're quality of care. From the evidence HCR's, Manor Care's, HHL's and Forum's QA programs are comparable and are the best among the applicants. Palm Court has had results comparable to or better than the others , which is itself evidence of an adequate QA program. Meanwhile, CSI, despite an evidently superior QA program, has experienced quality programs due to rapid fill-up of its 60 additiional beds at Sun Terrace. Cypress has no experience operating a nursing home. Not surprisingly, it professes to desire quality and to plan to implement stringent QA programs. But its plans at this stage are not as developed and detailed as the existing QA programs being used by the other applicants at other facilities. Other Factors. Whether Therapies Are In-House or Contracted. Assuming a need for it, and reasonable cost of providing it, provision of therapies--e.g., physical therapy, occupational therapy and speech therapy-- in-house generally is preferable to providing them by contracts with third parties. From an operational and administrative perspective, there are advantages to providing physical therapy services (PT) on an in- house basis. Contracted physical therapy staff tend to be available only for scheduled treatments; in-house staff are always available to assist staff and perform unscheduled maintenance therapy. In-house physical therapy staff work regularly with the nursing home staff. They are present within the facility anc learn the operation of the nursing home facility better than outside agencies. Manor Care proposes to provide in-house physical therapy staff, as opposed to employing outside physical therapy staff on a contract basis. The evidence was that the other applicants plan to provide all of these therapies through third- party contracts. Palm Court has one full-time PT assistant who works under the direction of a licensed physical therapist who now divides time among three 120- bed nursing homes managed by National Health Corp. The service of this licensed physical therapist is provided as part of National Health Corp's management services. Having to cover another 60 beds at Palm Court will spread the service even thinner. In addition, Palm Court's administrator conceded that the single PT assistant in Palm Court's application will not be enough once 60-beds are added to the facility; two will be required. Of course, the trade-off (implied in Finding of Fact 102, above) for providing in-house therapy is that it is less efficient if full use of the services is not required. De-institutionalization. FCP, Forum and Cypress have made special efforts to "de- institutionalize" nursing home care at their proposed facilities. All three proposals emphasize the provision of nursing care within aresidential development--a combination of retirement apartments, assisted living accommodations and nursing home. (See also this concept's impact on Continuum of Care concerns, Findings of Fact 114-127, below.) FCP's proposed facility is designed with a residential appearance to facilitate and implement the philosophy of de-institutionalization co:tained in its application. It reflects FCP's modular approach to care with residential units in wings tied to a common area of support services. The support services are extensive. There are activities areas, craft areas, exercise rooms, therapy areas, a beauty salon and barber shop, men's and women's recreational areas, private dining rooms, a community dining room, screened patios and porches, a newsstand, a bank, a post office, a library, a chapel, a screened-in gazebo, and a swimming pool. The exterior amenities of the design include a pond, an exercise course, a sitting deck, and a putting green. The center core and its recreation and therapy programs are designed to encourage interact ion among the residents in all the different levels of care. Although the third floor, where the nursing home is located, also has a secondary lounge and supplemental dining area, the primary dining area, as well as all of the other amenities, are on the first floor to enhance the interaction. The 30-bed size of FCP's proposed nursing home unit is a part of the original Phillips concept of a de- institutionalized setting, enabling the provision of more personalized care. Where there are fewer residents to care for, a better rapport between the residents and the care givers and a more family-type, personal atmosphere are achieved. This 30-bed concept previously has been approved by the Department in Lee and Polk Counties. Those projects are operationally, structurally, and physically identical to this proposed project. The symmetrical, 3-story design minimizes the amount of travel distance for the resident at the farthest unit to the amenities of the center core and its services. The nursing unit is on the third and smallest floor so that the distance by elevator to the central core for the nursing home iesidents is at a minimum'while still providing those residents with the greatest opportunity for quiet time. Privacy is an essential element in achieving high quality of care. The semi-private room plan utilized in this proposal is a unique approach to maximizing privacy for each resident. A permanent partial partition separating the two beds in each room effectively creates two private rooms. This provides a private space for each resident with his or her own thermostat, window, storage space, television, and telephone accommodation, and heightened auditory privacy. There will be equal access to and control of the vestibule and bathroom for each resident. The 585 gross square feet per bed in the FCP proposal is approximately one-third greater than standard nursing home room configuration. Forum's proposal's chief effort in furtherance of the goal of deinstitutiona1izationother than the continuum of care concept and overall residential appearance--is in the relatively large and "up-scale" living areas. The Cypress facility will include a central core dividing the two 60- bed portions of the project. The central core will include an administrative area, a chapel, a beauty and barber shop, enclosed courtyard, physical and occupational therapy, dining, a central kitchen, and a laundry area. One trade-off for de-institutionalization is cost. Both FCP and Forum generally cost more than the others. Cypress claims not to, but its projected construction cost of $49 per square foot is unrealistically low. See Findings of Fact 147 and 149, below. PROGRAMS (OTHER THAN ALZHEIMER'S). Continnum of Care. As just alluded to, several of the proposals emphasize the placement of their nursing home within a larger community of persons needing different levels of care. FCP. FCP proposes the construction of a 30-bed nursing unit as part of a family owned and operated, 120-unit, full continuum of care facility for the elderly. The facility also contains 60 independent living apartments and 30 adult congregate living units. The full continuum of care is proposed in a uniquely designed, de-institutionalized, home-like atmosphere. FCP offers a therapeutic community offering individualized, personalIzed care in small self- contained units, each specializing in various levels of care ranging from day care and respite care, through apartments for the elderly and assisted living, to skilled, post-hospital rehabilitation. The continuum of care will provide a homogeneous environment through which residents can move as their medical and personal needs change. Forum. Forum Group, Inc., is a national company which owns, develops and operates retirement living centers in a number of states. Forum's proposed nursing home will be part of a total retirement living center containing two other levels of care, assisted living (or ACLF units) and independent apartment units. Forum's proposal calls for provision of a continuum of care, from independent living to assisted living to nursing care, all on the same campus. Cypress. Cypress Total Care would be part of an overall medical project known as Cypress Park. The corporation was formed and a master plan was created, to be developed in two phases. Phase I is a 120-bed nursing facility consisting of 60 skilled and intermediate nursing beds, the subject of these proceedings, and 60 personal care units. Phase II would consist of a 290-unit adult congregate living facility (ACLF) and 143 units of independent villa housing on a golf course with nature trails and other amenities. Also proposed in Phase II would be units of medical offices and commercial health-related facilities to support the community. The area selected by Cypress is adjacent to the Sun Hill Medical Arts Building and the Community Arts Building, as well as a hospital owned by Hospital Corporation of America known as Sun City Hospital. These components would be worked into the overall master plan proposed by Cypress. Cypress proposes a multi-level assessment program. The 120-bed Cypress Park Community facility will have an independent level one facility in Sun City Center which will admit healthy elderly residents. These elderly may have canes, but no walkers or wheelchairs, and they will function normally in their activities of daily living. These individuals may prepare two meals a day in their apartments, or have them in the dining room. The main meal will be in the dining room. Social services and activities will be provided and recommended to the independent living residents to enhance their lifestyles. A home health agency is planned as a part of the center so that house calls can be made to insure that any necessary medications are taken and that residents receive the services they might need from time to time. (Cypress has not yet applied for a CON for its home health agency.) The next level of living is for patients who need more assistance. These are residents who require 24-hour companion service. These patients do not require skilled nursing care and do not require the institutional environment of a nursing home. Some of these paients may be in the first stage of Alzheimer's, or they may be physically frail, but not enough to require skilled nursing care. This level is primarily for those individuals who are physically frail and mentally strong or mentally frail and physically strong. The physically frail and mentally strong may have limited ambulatory capabilities, need assistance in activities of daily living, need medication, or need all their meals prepared. As noted above, this level of services also will be provided to individuals who are physically strong but mentally frail. The majority of these people will be Alzheimer's residents, they must be carefully monitored 24 hours a day and receive strong psychological support. The next level of care offered is for individuals who require some nursing care and no longer qualify for the level two care described above. This will be intermediate nursing care and will consist of care from certified nursing aides and licensed practical nurses. These individuals do not require skilled nursing care. Rehabilitation is the key to this portion of the plan, and the rehabilitative center will be involved to constantly push these individuals to the point of rehabilitation where they can reenter an independent lifestyle. If individuals progress further, they can move into the skilled nursing care center in which they will receive care not only from nursing aides and licensed practical nurses, but also from registered nurses. The final level would be acute hospital care which would be provided by the existing Sun City Hospital. The medical staff who are involved in the Cypress project also are on the medical staff of the Sun City Hospital and will be working and consulting with individuals both in the acute hospital care and the nursing home setting to provide appropriate levels of care to the individuals who need it. The nursing home will share IV teams, work with tracheotomy patients, A.D.A. dieticians, accounting services, and other services with the existing hospital in Sun City Center. Palm Court. Palm Court, while currently a free-standing 120- bed nursing home, is located on property where construction of a 360-bed adult congregate living facility (ACLF) is now starting. In addition, Palm Court has transfer agreements with area hospitals including Plant City Hospital, South Florida Baptist Hospital, Brandon Humana Hospital and Lakeland Regional Medical Center. It also has formal working relationships with home health agencies and with elderly programs in the area. The Others. The other applicants--HCR, Manor Care and HHL-- propose free-standing nursing homes. But all can be expected to make efforts to achieve transfer and other agreements with local hospitals, home health agencies and providers of care for the elderly where reasonable and appropriate. Sub-Acute Care. The HCR nursing home will be staffed and equipped to provide sub- acute care. The sub-acute care services provided by HCR will include high tech services such as ventilator care, IV therapy, pulmonary aids, tube feeding, hyperalimentation, and short and long term rehabilitation. HCR currently provides a wide variety of these sub-acute services in its existing nursing homes. CSI currently provides sub-acute nursing services at its existing Florida facilities. Those services include ventilators, hyperalimentation, intravenous therapy, Clinitron beds, heparin pumps, nosogastric and Jejunoscopy tube feedings, subclavian lines, and Hickman catheters. These service will be provided at HHL's proposed facility. Forum will provide skilled and intermediate care, and the following services will be offered at the proposed facility: Sterile dressing changes for decubitus care. Brittle diabetics on sliding scale insulin. Continuous administration of oxygen. Sterile case of tracheotomies. Ventilators. Continuous bladder irrigation. Hyper-alimentation or N-G feeding. IV treatment. Special medication monitoring (e.g. heparin, comadin). New post-operative cases facing hospital discharge as a result of D.R.G. reimbursement. The skilled nursing services to be provided by FCP include parenteral nutrition, internal nutrition, tracheostomy care, respirator care, skin wound decubitus care, ostomy care, and head trauma care. Palm Court also will provide sub-acute care. Adult Day Care Adult day care is a part of the specialized Azfleimer's program HCR proposes. In addition, HHL, FCP and Forum offer adult day care. Respite Care. HCR and Manor Care offer respite care as part of their Alzheimer's programs. Both will have no minimum length of stay and no extra charge over the regular daily rate for nursing home care. All the others except Palm Court also offer respite care, but Cypress' proposal for respite care is sketchy. HHL says it will offer respite care at no extra charge. D. Hospice. Only HCR, Forum and HHL offer hospice care as part of their nursing home programs. F. Rehabilitation and Community Outreach. All of the applicants propose rehabilitative (or restorative) care and some kind of community outreach programs. The distinctions among the ideas expressed by the applicants are not particularly competitively significant. However, the manner in which the therapies are delivered can be significant. See Finding of Facts 102 to 105, above. HOW SOON THE PROJECT BECOMES OPERATIONAL. Because there is a shortage of nursing home beds in Hillsborough County, there is a valid concern how long it would take for the holder of a CON to get its facility operational. Priority/Policy 3 of the 1985 Local Health Plan gives expression to this concern as follows: In competitive reviews, preference should be given to applicants with a documented history of implementing certificates of need within the statutory time frames. Of the applicants who have developed nursing homes in the past (i.e., excluding Cypress), all but Palm Court have a history of timely implementing their CONs. Palm Court had to request an extension of time in implementing its existing 120-bed facility. But Palm Court bought the CON for that project from the original owners in 1982 or 1983. Palm Court then had to secure another, more suitable location, re-design the facility, get construction financing and enter into a construction contract before construction could begin. This delayed the project and resulted in administrative litigation to decide whether Palm Court should lose the CON for failure to timely implement it or be given an extension of time. Palm Court prevailed, and the facility opened in September, 1985. HHL, through CSI, also has a history of timely implementing CONs but recent expansion in Florida raises some question whether it can continue to be as timely in implementing this CON, along with the others. See Findings of Fact 82-87,98, and 100, above. Generally, an addition of beds to an existing nursing home can be constructed more quickly than a new facility, giving Palm Court an advantage in potential speed of implementation. similarly, Manor Care, which is prepared to begin construction on its finally approved 60-bed CON, has an advantage over the others, as well as a potential construction cost savings over Palm Court. See Findings of Fact 146, below. COST OF CARE. Cost of Construction And Development. Advantage of Additions. Within limits placed on recovery of capital costs under the Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement programs now in place (which, to some extent, are emulated by private health care insurers and employers' health benefit plans), construction and development costs generally are reflected in the charges patients pay for nursing home care. Additions, such as Palm Court's and Manor Care's proposals, have a cost advantage over the other proposals. Construction sites already have been prepared, and it is not ncessary to duplicate some features already incorporated in the original structure, such as the kitchen, laundry and building plant. Due to delays in finalization of its approved CON for 60 beds, Manor Care has the fortuitous additional potential cost advantage of being able to construct both the "original facility" and the 60-bed "addition" at the same time. Quality vs. Cost Trade-Off. Other than the cost advantage of adding on, and of saving the contractor's fee by using an in-house construction team (as HCR does), reduced cost of construction generally will reflect reduced quality. For example, some of the quality features incorporated in the proposals of Forum, FCP and Cypress will cost more. See Finding of Fact 113, above. Put another way, lower costs may result in lower patient charges but also may result in lower quality, everything else being equal. The costs of construction of the various proposals may be found in Findings of Fact 1 to 7, above. It should also be noted at this point that Cypress' facility design has features--primarily unusual wall and roof angles and one water heater requiring larger pipe sizing-- which make its construction costs appear lower than they should be. Cost Overruns. The applicants' respective records for cost overruns in implementing CONs mirror their records for timeliness. See Findings of Fact 138-143, above. Cypress has no track record; all the others except Palm Court have experienced no cost overruns; Palm Court's $1.3 million cost overrun was precipitated by the need to secure another site and re-design the facility after it acquired the CON for 120 beds; and CSI, which would be responsible for implementing HHL's proposal, is involved in recent expansion which could affect its ability to bring all of its' CONs on line within budget. Cost of Operations. Economies of Scale--Size of Facility. In addition to construction and development costs, cost of operations are reflected in patient charges. It generally is accepted that a 120-bed nursing home is the optimal size for operational efficiencies. In this respect, the proposals by HCR, Forum and HHL have an advantage over the others. Manor Care has the advantage of proposing to expand a less efficient 60-bed nursing home to an optimally efficient 120-bed facility. To some extent, the generally accepted principle that 120-bed nursing homes are more desirable may have become dated. Two of the proposals--FCP's and Cypress'--combine some of the operating efficiencies of a 120-bed nursing home with the continuum of care and quality of care that can be achieved in a 120-bed living complex that incorporates a smaller nursing unit with other living units of different levels of care. By c(Jmparison, these type facilities are less institutionalized than a 120-bed nursing home, whether free-standing or incorporated within a larger complex with other living units. See Findings of Fact 106 to 113, above. Economies of Scale--Size of Organization. Economies of scale also can be realized from the size of the organization that owns or manages a nursing home. The proposals of all of the applicants except Cypress benefit from this principle, Palm Court to a lesser extent than the others, including in the area of quality assurance, nurse training and nurse recruiting. At the time of hearing, HCR operated nine nursing homes in Florida. HCR has approximately twelve nursing homes scheduled to begin construction in Florida within the next year. Nationwide, HCR operates more than 125 facilities containing approximately 16,000 beds. HCR has designed and built over 200 nursing homes and related health care facilities. HCR realizes substantial savings by using national contracts for the purchase of furniture, equipment, hardware and other operating supplies. Forum, as a national company, has the experience and purchasing power to cut operational costs through national purchase contracts and through economies and improvements experienced at the local level with a total retirement facility all on one campus. The Manor Care Florida Regional Office offers the services of a Regional Director, a Regional Nurse, a Nurse Recruiter, and a Comptroller to work with the corresponding departments of the Manor Care Florida nursing homes. FCP's long term plans are to develop homes in clusters, currently concentrating on the central west coast area of Florida. FCP has previously been granted certificates of need in Lee County and Polk County and has been recommended by the Department for a certificate of need in Hillsborough County. This cluster will operate under a unified local administration and share rehabilitative, medical, social, dietary and transportation personnel, enhancing economies of operation. CSI was formed in 1978 for the purpose of operating extended care facilities, including nursing homes and retirement centers. Since that time, the company has grown to its current operations of twenty-one (21) nursing homes, two (2) retirement centers and one (1) home for the aged located in seven states. Historically, much of this growth has occurred through the acquisition of existing facilities, although more recently the focus has shifted to the development of new facilities. Because CSI has established "national accounts" for the acquisition of movable equipment CSI can purchase nursing home equipment and furnishings and other operating supplies for HHL at reduced prices. (3) Patient Charges. The applicants propose the following room charges for semi-private rooms. Applicant Medicaid Medicare Private Pay HCR 60.94 76.00 75.00 FCP 60.00 65.00 80.00 Manor Care 1/ 69.37 ---- 72.57 HHL 66.30 109.33 2/ 72.76 Forum 67.18 80.67 79.50 Palm Court 77.00 100.00 77.00 Cypress 58.00 65.00 69.00 However, Cypress' charges are suspect; they probably are unrealistically low. Palm Court's charges also are suspect. It is difficult to understand from the evidence whether they are charges or Medicaid reimbursements. It also is difficult to tell if they are current or projected. In any event, they do not relate to the information in Palm Court's pro forma. As previously alluded to, patient charges do not necessarily proportionately reflect construction and development and operating efficiencies. They also are affected by programs and quality. BUILDING DESIGN AND ENERGY FEATURES. Patient Care and Safety. Overall, HCR's design is excellent. Functional elements are effectively inter-related, the building is designed to be open to landscaping, sunlight and court yards, and there is a wide range of amenities. Cypress' patient rooms are smaller than allowed under state requirments. The state minimum in Chapter 10D-29, Florida Administrative Code, is 80 net square feet per bed for multi-bed and 100 net square feet in a single room. Cypress' proposal only has approximately 65.58 gross square feet per bed. Cypress' building design also has rooms that are approximately 130 feet from the nurses' stations and clean utility and soiled utility rooms, 10 feet over the state maximum under Rule 10D-29.121(24), Florida Administrative Code. Forum's :4 floor plan also violates this standard. Rule 10D-29.121(6), Florida Administrative Code, requires a 20 foot clear view out room windows. Cypress' design also violates this standard. Manor Care's floorplan is the most compact one- story design. It has four compact wings off a central core. Forum proposes a two-story structure, creating a potential increased hazard for patients with reduced mobility. But DHRS rules provide for nursing homes of more than one floor, and required safety features, which Forum will provide, keep the potential to an insignificant minimum. FCP proposes a three-story facility with the nursing home on the third floor adjacent to the elevators connecting it to the first floor central core and amenities. FCP, too, adequately addresses DHRS safety concerns and actually could be more convenient to more nursing home patients than a one-story structure. Energy Conservation Features. All of the applicants propose to insulate their facilities for energy efficiency, some, e.q., HHL, somewhat better than others. Building design itself also affects energy consumption. Cypress' high exterior building surface area makes it a less energy-efficient design; Manor Care's compact design aces it a more energy-efficient design. FCP's three-story design also is a more energy-efficient design. Cypress' design incorporates only one water heater. This will produce line loss and lower energy efficiency, as well as potential total loss of hot water. (Cypress also has only one electrical plant.) Other Unique Design Features. Several unique features in FCP's room design helps "de- institutionalize" the facility and contributes to overall quality of care. Similarly, residents at FCP will be able to offer their guests refreshments from the kitchen at any time of the day or nights and children, spouses, and entire families will be encouraged to join residents for meals as often as they wish, assisting in the maintenance of ties with the community. Dining may be either communal or in the several lounge areas and private dining rooms. One of Cypress' unique design features is of the bizarre and morbid variety--a room designed to store deceased residents. FINANCIAL FEASIBILITY. The short-term and long-term feasibility of the proposals of HCR, FCP, Manor Care, Forum and HHL was never seriously questioned and was easily proven. Not so with Palm Court and Cypress. Palm Court. The duty to defend the immediate and long term financial feasibility of Palm Court's project rested with Steve Jones. Mr. Jones, who was not involved in the preparation of the application, offered his opinion that the Palm Court 60-bed addition would be feasible in the immediate and long terms. In giving his opinion of the project's financial feasibility, Mr. Jones stated he believed the pro forma in years 1 and 2 relate back to the corresponding tables in the application; but acknowledged he performed no analysis of his own, but rather he took the information provided him at face value. The pro forma is one of the key components of an application, as literally the heart of the application ties directly or indirectly into developing the pro forma, including Tables 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 10, 11 and 25, as well as the amortization schedule. It is a required component of the application. Section 381.494(4)(e), F.S. (1985). Mr. Jones was asked to render an opinion on the reasonableness of Tables 8, 10, 11 and 25, which he did. On cross examination, however, Mr. Jones acknowledged he did not evaluate existing staff at Palm Court to determine the reasonableness of the pro forma. He did not verify the projected management fee and, in fact, stated he didn't know if it was included as a line item under "administration and general" on the pro forma nor how the management fee was computed. Mr. Jones, who has never prepared all the financial information in a CON application, also admitted he didn't know what current nursing salaries were in Hillsborough County, or any other salaries for that matter. He further acknowledged that he could not testify that the application's hourly wage times the number of working hours in a year would give you the stated nursing salaries. In sum, Mr. Jones admitted his opinion of the project's feasibility was based solely on his review of Tables 8, 11, 20 and 25 and his firm's involvement in the preparation of Palm Court's two most recent cost reports and not on the pro forma filed with Palm Court's application. Mr. Jones' accounting firm, in preparing Palm Court's cost reports, does not conduct an audit or express any opinion relating to the reasonableness of the statement of revenues and expenses. Joseph Lennartz, an expert in financial feasibility analysis, gave persuasive testimony outlining the inconsistencies in Palm Court's application. Palm Court's total revenue projections appearing in Table 7 for years 1 and 2 do correspond to the daily room and board revenues appearing in the pro forma, yet none of the Table 7 revenue projections correspond to the projected charges on Table 8. Assuming the salaries on Table 11 do not include fringe benefits, all FTE's and salaries on Table 11 are not accounted for in the pro forma. The pro forma salaries are significantly lower than on Table 11: RNs ,- understated by $12,426 LPNs - understated by $30,518 CNAS -understated by $239,541 Social Worker - understated by $2,983 Dietary - understated by $3,009 Maintenance - understated by $10,165 Activities - understated by $4,486 Housekeeping - understated by $6,365 Laundry & Linen - understated by $6,498 Admin & General - understated by $2,560 Palm Court's salary information on Table 11 is in 1987 dollars and needs to be inflated forward at least two to three years. Palm Court's current average salaries exceeded the proposed salaries on Table 11--including the administrator's salary, proposed at an annual salary of just over $31,000 when it actually was over $50,000 in 1987. Based on Palm Court's answers to interrogatories, Palm Court's management fee is not accurately reflected in the pro forma and is $44,559 too low in year 2; the projected dietary expense is understated by $112,386 in year 2; the projected housekeeping expense is understated by $46,609 in year 2; the projected laundry expense is understated by $35,308 in year 2; and plant expenses are understated by $100,116 in year 2. The terms of debt financing appearing on Table 2 of Palm Court's application do not conform to the amortization table, causing the interest expense line item on the pro forma to be understated. Cypress. As previously alluded to, the reasonableness of Cypress' projected Medicaid and Medicare rates appearing on its Updated Table 8 has not been established by competent substantial evidence. The Cypress pro forma fails to make provision for interest expense, depreciation, and property tax expense. These omissions represent an understatement of expenses as follows: YEAR ONE YEAR TWO INTEREST $177,818 $176,186 DEPRECIATION $110,000 $100,000 PROPERTY TAXES 2,200 25,000 (at assessed value 75 percent of market) TOTAL $290,018 $301,186 When interest, depreciation, and property taxes are included in the Cypress pro forma, the result is a loss of $90,000 in year one and $80,000 in year two. Furthermore, from a cash flow perspective, Cypress will incur a cash loss of $2,037 in year one and a cash gain of just $6,342 in year two. If property taxes are based on an assessed value at 100 percent of fair market value, there would be a $2,000 cash loss even in year two. It is not unusual for a nursing home to experience a negative cash flow in its first year of operation due to its low occupancy. However, it is unusual for a nursing home to experience a negative cash flow, as the Cypress facility will, while operating at optimal occupancy (95 percent). Cypress' owner/investors are willing to proceed with the project because they expect to be able to use some of the approximately $90,000 per year tax loss in years one and two to offset personal income, resulting in a cash on cash return of approximately $23,000 or 5.4 percent. Cypress' Table 1, "source of funds" states that the applicant has $425,000 "in hand". In fact, Cypress does not have those funds in hand. They are in the hands of the Cypress owner/investors. So far they have contributed $90,000 to the venture and will have to contribute not only an additional $425,000 to fund the nursing home but also an unspecified larger sum to fund Cypress planned ACLF and other projects. The evidence suggests that at least $425,000 more of equity contribution would be required for the rest of the project. Cypress did not prove that its proposed facility is financially feasible, either in the immediate or long term. BALANCED CONSIDERATION. Giving a balanced consideration to all of the statutory and rule factors addressed in the preceding findings, it is found that there is a net need for 231 community nursing home beds in Hillsborough County, that the applications of HCR, FCP and Manor Care should be granted and that the other applications should be denied.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings Of Fact and Conclusions Of Law, it is recommended that the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services enter a final order granting the applications of HCR (CON Action No. 5000), FCP (CON Action No. 4993) and Manor Care (CON Action No. 5006) and denying the applications of Forum (CON Action No. 4999), HHL (CON Action No. 4978) Palm Court (CON Action No. 4987) and Cypress (CON Action No. 5004). RECOMMENDED this 14th day of November, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida. J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 14th day of November, 1988.
Findings Of Fact The Department hereby adopts the findings of fact made by the Hearing Officer but with the significant modification set out and explained in PDCF's Exception (1).
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is recommended that the Department issue to petitioner Holmes Health Care, Inc., a Certificate of Need for 60 additional community nursing home beds in an addition, to be constructed, to its 60-bed facility now under construction, with permission to use the existing Bonifay Nursing Home facility under the CON until the 60-bed addition is constructed. RECOMMENDED this 8th day of June, 1984, in Tallahassee, Florida. J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The OAKLAND Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 8th day of June, 1984.
The Issue Whether or not Petitioner qualifies for grant of a certificate of need (CON) for construction of a 60 bed addition to its existing Stuart Convalescent Center nursing home facility in Stuart, Martin County by establishing a bed need of 60 beds. By stipulation, bed need is the only issue to be determined in these proceedings. POST HEARING SCHEDULE The parties joined in filing transcript of the proceedings on October 10, 1985, and by stipulation, proposed findings of facts and conclusions of law as well as supporting memoranda were timely filed by each party within 20 days thereof. Due to the extended period agreed upon, the 30 days for entry of this Recommended Order has been waived. All proposed findings of fact have been considered in preparation of this Recommended Order and each proposed finding of fact is ruled upon in the appendix hereto.
Findings Of Fact Petitioner Eden Park is a for-profit corporation which constructs and operates nursing homes in Florida and elsewhere. Its principal offices are located in the state of New York and its local office is located in Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County, Florida. Eden Park demonstrated that all of its facilities in Florida are currently rated "superior" by the DHRS Office of Licensure and Certification. This indicates at least peripherally that current nursing home residents at existing Eden Park facilities, including Stuart Convalescent Center in Martin County, receive a high quality of care. Eden Park's amended application contemplates adding 60 nursing home beds to its Stuart Convalescent Center, in Stuart, Martin County. Stuart Convalescent Center is the only licensed nursing home within the City of Stuart. Martin County constitutes a sub-district within DHRS District IX. St. Lucie County, is in the same DHRS District as Martin County, but is a separate and distinct sub-district as mandated by Rule 10-17.021(1)(b) and (e) Florida Administrative Code. Eden Park currently operates a nursing home in the City of Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County, which it maintains has an overflow of patients and a waiting list which needs to be absorbed by the proposed addition to its Stuart Convalescent Center in Martin County. The two counties are contiguous and it is possible for persons residing in St. Lucie County near the county line to be closer, physically, to Petitioner's existing Martin County facility than to Petitioner's existing St. Lucie County facility. The Cities of Stuart, Martin County and Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County are also characterized as physically contiguous cities. Petitioner presented no evidence to show that any existing nursing homes in St. Lucie County other than its own St. Lucie County facility had waiting lists. Petitioner presented no evidence to clearly establish that the patients on the Petitioner's St. Lucie County facility's waiting list could not be placed at other nursing homes in St. Lucie County. (See discussion of waiting lists infra.) Respondent presented testimony that two recent certificates of need have been granted in St. Lucie County to two other nursing home applicants, Beverly Enterprises and Florida Convalescent Centers. These facilities are not yet licensed and in operation nor are they required by their certificates of need to locate in any designated physical location within St. Lucie County. However, it is anticipated by DHRS personnel that completion of these facilities will adequately accommodate any nursing home bed need currently existing in St. Lucie County. Exhibit P-6, the Stuart Convalescent Center Martin County May 29, 1985 Census, shows 131 beds occupied by Martin County residents, 12 by St. Lucie County residents, 31 by residents of other Florida counties and 6 by patients originating out of state. Out of state patients are not calculated, and Florida patients from outside Martin County are not considered in the present calculation of bed need employed by DHRS for Martin County but Florida patients from outside Martin County are considered in bed need determinations for the counties in which they reside. For instance, the bed need of St. Lucie County residents has been calculated and provided for by the two nursing home CONs as recently issued for that sub-district and discussed above in paragraph 6. A CON was issued to Beverly Enterprises in 1982 for 120 new nursing home beds in Martin County. As of the date of formal hearing, these beds had been licensed and the nursing home was in operation. Although Mr. Kane, operational director for Eden Park Management, testified that the Beverly facility was only about one-fourth full at the time of formal hearing, he conceded that the Beverly facility would have an impact on Petitioner's Stuart Convalescent Center facility's waiting list although it has not impacted yet. Mr. Kane represents that the Beverly home is not presently taking Medicaid or Medicare patients. The predicate for Mr. Kane's knowledge on this point is weak, but even if it could be accepted, it does not, in isolation, provide any gauge of unfulfilled bed need in Martin County. Mr. Jaffe testified that Beverly's CON carries the proviso that Beverly must maintain one-third Medicaid occupancy when filled. Mr. Kane's testimony is accepted that historically Petitioner's Martin County facility has maintained a 50 percent Medicaid and Medicare population. Testimony of Respondent's expert, Reid Jaffe, is accepted that poverty level in a sub-district such as Martin County in relationship to its district, District IX, does not impact on the current bed need methodology established by rule and that the relevant factor is poverty level in the district in relationship to the state poverty level. Petitioner's existing St. Lucie County and Martin County nursing homes currently have a combined waiting list of 80 persons. For the Martin County facility, it is more like 32 on the waiting list (P-5). However, this waiting list's accuracy is suspect in that it includes persons hospitalized since December, 1984 and Mr. Kane could not state that the lists were correct, or whether the people on them were still hospitalized, at home, or exactly where they were. More recent data appears on P-3 (Eden Park's St. Lucie County facility's waiting list) but it shares the same paucity of in formation on the status of the listees and what other nursing home options are or are not available to them. Petitioner was previously granted three separate 60 bed projects, an original and two additions to its St. Lucie County facility. It took three months to fill the first 60 beds, two months to fill the second 60 beds and three and one half months to fill the next 60 beds. Past fill rate in St. Lucie County appears largely irrelevant, even given Petitioner's argument on the contiguous nature of the sub-districts. Petitioner appears to argue in its proposals that these additions were to its Martin County facility (Stuart Convalescent Center) but that is not what the undersigned understands from the testimony in the record (TR 48-51). Moreover, this rate of fill occupancy in 1978 has no probative value for currently projected future bed need whether it applied in St. Lucie or Martin Counties. Contrariwise, Petitioner's amended application (P-1) indicates the Stuart Convalescent Center was built for 120 beds in 1973 with a 60 bed addition in 1976 and that the St. Lucie County facility was built for 180 beds in 1980. In conjunction with Mr. Kane's testimony, this latter date also has no probative value for currently projected future bed need in Martin County. Martin Memorial Hospital is located in Martin County in near proximity to Petitioner's existing nursing facility, Stuart Convalescent Center. DHRS has recently granted a certificate of need to Martin Memorial Hospital for 150 hospital beds. Petitioner desires that the inference be drawn from the foregoing fact regarding new hospital beds that a need for 60 additional nursing home beds is established, but the two cannot be related as a quid pro quo. Petitioner is in the process of constructing a 150 unit adult congregate living facility (ACLF) in Martin County, which it proposes will provide an alternative to existing services in Martin County. Mr. Jack Kane testified that the Eden Park ACLF will foster the most efficient use of services allowing people to be cared for in the most appropriate setting based upon their individual needs especially as these needs change in the continuum of care. This testimony is accepted but it does not, without some statistical evaluation or projection of potential nursing home candidates arising out of that ACLF environment, provide any useful information for determining current nursing home bed need or even for projecting, per the formula established by rule, the future nursing home bed need in Martin County. Jack Kane served seven years as the director of the Palm Beach Health Planning Council, was president of the Florida Health Care Association for a period of two years, served as senior vice-president for the Florida Health Care Association for two years and as regional vice-president for five years. Mr. Kane testified to a number of factors which, during his tenure on the Palm Beach Health Planning Council, would have been applicable to the bed need formula used then. A process or formula applicable on a local basis prior to adoption of the present statewide system and prior to the present rule's adoption is not applicable in this instant proceeding. Here, there is no evidence of current revised sub-district designations by a local health council within either sub- district or even within District IX which have not already been accounted for by the rules. (See discussion in Conclusion of Law Paragraphs 8a-d). Determination of nursing home bed need used to be on a beds-per- thousand basis but the new methodology now precludes that formula. The present formula application, as clarified by expert testimony from Mr. Reid Jaffe, medical facilities coordinator for DHRS's Office of Community Medical Facilities, only permits application of a 27 beds-per-thousand formula if two events exist: the district percentage of elderly in poverty is greater than that which the state has and there are fewer beds than 27 per thousand. A poverty ratio was not established sufficient to bring Martin County within this rule. Any further discussion of the bed need rule is more properly discussed under the following conclusions of law. Although a specific location of facility is requested on the CON application there is no statutory requirement that the facility, as constructed, be located there.
Recommendation That the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services enter a final order affirming the denial of Petitioner's certificate of need application for 120 nursing home beds and further denying the amended application for 60 nursing home beds. DONE and ORDERED this 31st day of December, 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. ELLA JANE P. DAVIS Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 31st day of December, 1985. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE 84-0260 Petitioner's Proposed Findings of Fact Rejected as background procedure only and therefore subordinate, unnecessary and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. Rejected as background procedure only and therefore, subordinate, unnecessary and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. Rejected as background procedure only and therefore subordinate, unnecessary, and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. Rejected as background procedure only and therefore subordinated unnecessary, and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. Rejected as background procedure only and therefore subordinate, unnecessary, and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. Constitutes an evidentiary matter and not a finding of fact, and therefore requires no ruling. Accepted but modified and amplified to conform to the evidence. See Finding of Fact Paragraphs 2 and 13. Adopted. See Findings of Fact Paragraph 12. Rejected as setting forth a Conclusion of Law and to the extent it may constitute a proposed finding of fact is contrary to the competent substantial evidence in the record as a whole. Rejected as a proposed conclusion of law and as a proposed recommendation. It is not a proposed finding of fact requiring a ruling. Respondent's Proposed Findings of Fact. The proposals of fact herein are adopted. Other assertions which are essentially procedural are rejected as unnecessary, and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. Accepted but not adopted as subordinate, unnecessary and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. Adopted. Adopted. Adopted Adopted. Adopted. Up to the word "but" the proposal is accepted but not adopted as subordinate, unnecessary, and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. The remainder of the sentence is accepted but not adopted as stating a conclusion of law. See Finding of Fact Paragraph 14. Conceded that the proposal constitutes a portion of the expert opinion testimony of DHRS' expert witness but as expressed is a proposed conclusion of law requiring no ruling. To the extent it may constitute a proposed finding of fact it has been accepted and modified to conform to the competent substantial evidence contained in the record as a whole. See Finding of Fact Paragraphs 9b and 14. If this constitutes a proposal of fact that DHRS previously considered certain circumstances or as a matter of custom considers certain circumstances, it is accepted but not adopted as subordinate, unnecessary and not dispositive of any issue at bar due to the de novo nature of these proceedings. If it constitutes legal argument or a conclusion of law, it requires no ruling. Similar subject matter is covered by Finding of Fact Paragraphs 9a and 14. Adopted. COPIES FURNISHED: David Pingree, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Mark W. Hoffman, Esquire 87 Columbia Street Albany, New York 12210 R. Bruce McKibben, Jr., Esquire Assistant General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301
The Issue Whether Rule 59C-1.036 constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority, and; Whether the Agency's application form and scoring system utilized in the review of nursing home batch certificate of need applications constitute rules of the Agency as the term "rule" is defined in Section 120.52(16), employed in violation of Section 120.535, Florida Statutes (1993) and; Whether the disputed form and scoring system constitute an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority.
Findings Of Fact The disputed rule in this case is Rule 59C-1.036(1), Florida Administrative Code, which provides in pertinent part: The community nursing home beds subject to the provisions of this rule include beds licensed by the agency in accordance with Chapter 400, Part I, Florida Statutes, and beds licensed under Chapter 395, Florida Statutes, which are located in a distinct part of a hospital that is Medicare certified as a skilled nursing unit. All proposals for community nursing home beds will be comparatively reviewed consistent with the requirements of Subsection 408.39(1), Florida Statutes, and consistent with the batching cycles for nursing home projects described in paragraph 59C-1.008(1)(l), Florida Administrative Code. The challenged rule is entitled "Community Nursing Home Beds," and also includes the "need methodology" for determining the need for community nursing home beds and specifically: regulates the construction of new community nursing home beds, the addition of new community nursing home beds, and the conversion of other health care facility bed types to community nursing home beds... Also pertinent to this case, the challenged rule provides: The Agency will not normally approve applications for new or additional community nursing home beds in any agency service subdistrict if approval of an application would cause the number of community nursing home beds in that agency subdistrict to exceed the numeric need for community nursing home beds, as determined consistent with the methodology described in paragraphs (2)(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), and (f) of this rule. The challenged rule has the effect of, among other things, requiring nursing homes and hospitals who seek to operate skilled nursing facility beds to file applications for community nursing home beds in the same batching cycle, compete against each other for those beds in nursing home subdistricts and be subject to the need methodology applicable to nursing home beds. The Agency has not developed a need methodology specifically for Medicare certified distinct part skilled nursing units. In 1980, the Agency's predecessor, the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, attempted to promulgate rules with the same effect of the rules challenged in this case. In Venice Hospital, Inc. v. State of Florida, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 14 FALR 1220 (DOAH 1990) 1/ the Hearing Officer found the challenged rule in that case to be invalid and concluded, as a matter of law, that, with respect to the previous proposed rule: The competent, substantial evidence shows that these proposed rules are not reasonable or practical and will lead to an illogical result. There exists an inadequate factual or legal basis to support the forced inclusion of hospital-based skilled nursing beds into the community nursing bed inventory. In the 1990 challenge to the previously proposed rule, the Hearing Officer concluded that the proposed rule in question was an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority, but also found that, from a health planning standpoint, reasons existed for and against the inclusion of hospital-based skilled nursing units within the nursing home bed inventory. In the instant proceedings, the Agency concedes that the challenged rule and the previous proposed rule are substantially identical. In this case, the parties defending the challenged rule presented several facts, many of which seek to establish changed circumstances since 1990, as evidence of a rational basis for the inclusion of hospital-based skilled nursing units within the nursing home bed inventory. Facts Established Which Arguably Support the Validity of the Challenged Rule Although the term "subacute care" does not have a generally accepted definition, this term is often applied to that care provided patients in skilled nursing units. Subacute care is an emerging and developing area of care which covers patients whose medical and clinical needs are higher than would be found in a traditional nursing home setting, but not so intense as to require an acute medical/surgical hospital bed. Subacute care is a level of care that is being developed to bridge a gap between hospital and traditional nursing home care and to lower the cost of care to the health delivery system. Both hospitals and nursing homes operate Medicare-certified distinct part skilled nursing facility units. The same criteria, including admissions criteria, staffing requirements and reimbursement methodologies, apply to such skilled nursing units, in hospitals and freestanding nursing homes. The patient population served in such units is primarily a population which comes to either a hospital or nursing home-based unit from an acute care hospital stay. This population group has a short length of stay in the Medicare distinct part unit and can be rehabilitated within a certain period of time. Skilled nursing units in hospitals and those in freestanding nursing homes are competing for the same patient population. Both hospitals and nursing homes are aggressively entering the subacute care market. There are some nursing homes which provide a level of subacute care equal to that provided by hospitals. As a general rule, the staffing, clinical programs, patient acuity and costs of care for patients do not substantially vary between skilled nursing units in hospitals and such units in freestanding nursing homes. In the past two or three years, the number of Florida nursing homes which compete for skilled unit patients has increased. In applications for skilled nursing unit beds, the services proposed by hospitals and those proposed by nursing homes are generally similar. Medicare-certified distinct part units in both freestanding nursing homes and hospitals are certified to provide the same nursing services. The types of services and equipment provided by hospital skilled nursing units and nursing home skilled nursing units are similar. There has been an increase in subacute care in the past five years. The average length of stay for patients treated in Medicare-certified distinct part nursing units in hospitals and in such units located in freestanding nursing homes is similar. The federal eligibility requirement for Medicare patients in hospital- based and in freestanding nursing home distinct part skilled nursing units are the same. Some skilled nursing units which are located in nursing homes have historically received patient referrals from hospitals. When these referring hospitals develop distinct part Medicare certified skilled nursing units, the nursing home skilled nursing units tend to experience a decline in occupancy. Uniform need methodology is developed in part based upon demographic characteristics of potential patient population. Nursing home bed need methodology utilizes changes in population by age groups over age 65 to project need for beds. Both hospital-based skilled nursing units and nursing home-based units serve substantial numbers of Medicare-eligible patients who are 65 years of age and older. Population health status is also utilized in developing uniform need methodologies. The health status of service population for Medicare units in freestanding nursing homes is, as a general rule, the same as the health status of population served in such units located in hospitals. The intent behind the process of reviewing CON applications from hospitals seeking skilled nursing unit beds and nursing homes seeking such beds is to reduce the risk of overbedding and duplication of services. Overbedding and duplication of services have the tendency to result in excessive costs and can result in deterioration of quality of care. Medicare admissions to nursing homes and Medicare revenue to nursing homes have increased in the past several years. Data also indicates that nursing homes are beginning to provide more intensive care for patients in skilled nursing units. The prevalence of freestanding nursing home Medicare-certified skilled nursing units has substantially increased in the past three years and this growth trend is expected to continue. Facts Established Which Demonstrate That the Challenged Rule Should be Declared Invalid The challenged rule requires a hospital seeking Medicare-certified skilled nursing unit beds to be comparatively reviewed with nursing home applications seeking all types of nursing home beds. There is no separate nursing home licensure bed category for skilled nursing unit beds. The Agency's inventories of freestanding nursing home beds do not identify Medicare-certified skilled nursing beds. Once an applicant to construct a nursing home opens the nursing home, the applicant does not need a separate CON to designate beds as a Medicare- certified skilled nursing unit. According to the AHCA's own witness, a freestanding nursing home can internally change its categories at any time without CON review. Pursuant to statute and agency rule, however, hospitals must obtain a CON to change the category of even one bed. 2/ Although a hospital seeking hospital licensed Medicare-certified skilled nursing beds is compelled by Rule 59C-1.036(1), Florida Administrative Code, to compete against all nursing home applicants and all nursing home beds in a batched review, it faces totally different standards of construction, operation and staffing after approval. Rule 59C-1.036(2), Florida Administrative Code, is the nursing home bed need formula. This formula does not result in an estimate of need for skilled nursing unit beds and projects need for total community nursing home beds only. There is currently no bed need methodology (hospital or nursing home) to ascertain the need for Medicare certified skilled nursing unit beds. The Agency's inventories of freestanding nursing home beds do not separately identify Medicare-certified skilled nursing home beds in nursing homes. All that is shown is whether the beds are "community nursing home beds" or "sheltered nursing home beds." The Agency has not established how, under this inventory and regulatory scheme, it controls overbedding in Medicare- certified skilled nursing units within a specific district or subdistrict since the only such beds shown on the inventories are those in hospitals. It is unreasonable and illogical to compare the need for hospital- based Medicare-certified skilled nursing unit beds with the need for all community nursing home beds. Under the present circumstances a reasonable comparison might be drawn between need for hospital-based skilled nursing unit beds and freestanding nursing home skilled nursing unit beds, but the AHCA rules do not currently provide for such a comparison. Determining the need for hospital-based skilled nursing unit beds by comparing such beds to all nursing unit beds constitutes poor health planning. Such hospital-based skilled nursing units do not provide similar services to similar patients when compared to all community nursing home beds and it is neither logical or reasonable to comparatively review the need for such services. The challenged rule also requires hospital applicants for skilled nursing unit beds to compete with nursing homes within the nursing home subdistrict. The Agency by rule divides districts differently for nursing homes than for hospitals. Thus, some hospitals' skilled nursing unit beds are comparatively reviewed against nursing home beds of all kinds and against hospital skilled nursing beds which are not within the same hospital subdistrict. As a general statement, the treatment profiles for patients in Medicare-certified skilled nursing units in hospitals and those for patients in nursing homes skilled nursing units are similar. There is, however, a distinct part of such patient population which must be treated in a setting which provides immediate access to emergency care. The provision of immediate emergency care is not typically available in nursing homes and nursing home patients in need of such care usually have to be readmitted to hospitals. Care available in hospitals (physicians and registered nurses on duty at all times, laboratory and radiation services available on premises) is sufficiently different to demonstrate that Medicare-certified skilled nursing units are not comparable to such units in freestanding nursing homes in all aspects. This distinction is clearly significant to patients who need emergency services because of age, multiple illnesses, and other conditions. Chapter 395, Florida Statutes, is the hospital licensure statute. Section 395.003(4), Florida Statutes, provides: The Agency shall issue a license which specifies the service categories and the number of hospital beds in each category for which a license is received. Such information shall be listed on the face of the license. All which are not covered by any specialty-bed-need methodology shall be specified as general beds. The Agency equates "acute care" beds with general beds. By rule, the Agency has excluded from the definition of "acute care bed": neonatal intensive care beds comprehensive medical rehabilitation beds hospital inpatient psychiatric beds hospital inpatient substance abuse beds beds in distinct part skilled nursing units, and beds in long term care hospitals licensed pursuant to Part I, Chapter 395, Florida Statutes. By Agency rule, a hospital specialty need methodology exists for all categories of hospital beds excluded from the acute care bed definition except category (e) beds in distinct part skilled nursing units and (f) long term care beds. The Agency is currently drafting a specialty hospital bed need methodology for long term care beds. The only licensed bed category for which the Agency has developed no specialty bed need methodology (existing or in process) is hospital beds in distinct part skilled nursing units. At hearing, the Agency presented the testimony of Elfie Stamm who was accepted as an expert in health planning and certificate of need policy analysis. Through Ms. Stamm's testimony, the Agency attempted to establish that the numeric need methodology established by the challenged rule includes a calculation of the need for both nursing home and hospital-based distinct part skilled nursing units. This testimony was not persuasive on this point. Indeed, Ms. Stamm acknowledged that the disputed rule does not result in an estimate of need for skilled nursing units or beds. The parties to this proceeding have attempted to establish that Medicare admission statistics in Florida support either the validity or invalidity of the challenged rule. Based upon the Medicare-related statistical data placed in the record in this case, it is more likely than not that, as of 1992, in excess of 90 percent of utilization of hospital-based skilled nursing units is Medicare covered and that the percentage of Medicare (as opposed to Medicaid) patient days in all freestanding nursing home beds was only seven percent. In this respect, it is not logical or reasonable to comparatively review the need for hospital-based Medicare-certified skilled nursing unit beds with all community nursing home beds. 47. The Agency lists Sections 408.15(8), 408.34(3)(5), 408.39(4)(a) and 400.71(7), Florida Statutes, as specific statutory authority for the challenged rule. None of the cited statutory provisions provides specific authority for the Agency to require hospitals seeking hospital licensed beds in Medicare- certified skilled nursing units to be reviewed against all community nursing home beds. There is no evidence of record in this case of any federal law requiring such review and no evidence to suggest that Medicare reimbursement is affected by such a review one way or the other. In this case, the competent, substantial evidence shows that the disputed rule is not reasonable or rational. The Agency has not developed a specific numerical need methodology providing for a reasonable and rational basis to comparatively review the need for Medicare-certified skilled nursing unit beds in hospitals or in nursing homes. There exists an inadequate factual or legal basis to support the forced inclusion of hospital-based skilled nursing units into the inventory of all community nursing home beds. Form 1455A Agency Form 1455A and the scoring methodology are used by the Agency in the review of applications for community nursing home beds and for skilled nursing facilities within distinct parts of a hospital. Various parties in this proceeding assert the Form 1455A and the scoring methodology constitute unpromulgated rules which are invalid pursuant to Section 120.535, Florida Statutes. Any party filing a letter of intent concerning community nursing home beds receives from the Agency an application package including Form 1455A and instructions. The instructions are an integral part of the application. Also included as part of the application are 34 pages of instructions on how the Agency scores the application. Form 1455A has general applicability to all applicants for community nursing home beds and for skilled nursing home facilities within distinct parts of a hospital. Form 1455A contains numerous provisions of mandatory language which facially provides that it must be submitted with applications for CON. The Agency acknowledges that such mandatory language predated the passage of Section 120.535, Florida Statutes, and considers the language obsolete. The Agency intends, in the future, to edit the form to strike "misleading language". Form 1455A is not incorporated in any rule of the Agency and has not been promulgated as a rule. Applications are reviewed based upon questions in Form 1455A. Applications are also reviewed against a numerical scoring system developed with the form. The form requires that the applicant certify that it will obtain a license to operate a nursing home. The form also requires certification that the applicant participate in Medicaid services which are not applicable to hospitals. These and other portions of the form are not rationally or reasonably related to the operation of a hospital-based distinct part skilled nursing unit. In the review and analysis of the applications at issue, a "scoring methodology" is used by the Agency. The scoring matrix is utilized to put numerous applications filed in the same agency district in perspective in terms of numerical ranking and how the applications compare to each other. The State Agency Action Report is the end product of the Agency review of the applications. The scoring system is used in the review proceedings and is utilized and included in at least some of the State Agency Action Reports. Form 1455A and the scoring methodology are utilized by the Agency in a manner that has general application and which forms significant components of a process which creates rights, and which implements, interprets, and prescribes law and Agency policy. At the final hearing, the Agency presented the testimony of Ms. Elizabeth Dudek, the Agency Chief of the Certificate of Need and budget review offices. Ms. Dudek was accepted as an expert in CON policy and procedure. Ms. Dudek provided an overview of the process whereby the challenged form and scoring system are used by the Agency in analyzing CON applications. Ms. Dudek testified that the Agency does not believe the form and scoring system meet the requirements of a rule. Ms. Dudek considers the form and system to be tools used to elicit responses in a standardized format. The fact that an application receives a high score based on the scoring matrix does not mean that the application will be approved. Ms. Dudek is of the opinion that the form and scoring system do not competitively disadvantage hospitals competing with nursing homes. Ms. Dudek cited the most recent batch cycle in which twelve hospitals were awarded distinct part nursing units, although these hospitals' applications did not receive the highest scores. Ms. Dudek's testimony was not persuasive in the above-referenced areas. As currently structured and utilized by the Agency, the form and the scoring system at issue are not reasonable or rational. There is not an adequate factual or legal basis to support the use of the form or the scoring system in analyzing applications for CON files by hospitals for distinct part Medicare-certified skilled nursing units.
Findings Of Fact Based upon my observation of the witnesses and their demeanor while testifying, the documentary evidence received, the stipulations of the parties and the entire record complied herein, I hereby make the following findings of fact: THE STIPULATIONS OF THE PARTIES The parties stipulated to the following facts: Forum timely filed its letter of intent and application with DHRS and the District IX Local Health Council for the July 1986 batching cycle. DHRS ultimately deemed the application complete and, following review, published its notice of intent to deny the application. Forum timely filed a petition requesting a formal administrative hearing pursuant to Section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes. The sole issue is whether there is a need for Forum's proposed services; additionally, it is DHRS's position that a lack of need for the project results in the project not being financially feasible in the short or long term. All other statutory and rule criteria were satisfied, at least minimally, except proof of need pursuant to Rule 10-5.011(1)(k) [formerly 10-5.11(21)(b)], Florida Administrative Code, and financial feasibility as it relates to need. FORUM'S PROPOSAL Forum is a publicly held health services company which owns, develops and operates retirement living centers and nursing homes on a national basis. Forum proposes to develop a retirement living center in Palm Beach County that would consist of 120 to 150 apartment units for independent living, a separate personal care unit (known in Florida as an adult congregate living facility), and a 60-bed nursing home component certified for skilled and intermediate care. Palm Beach County is in HRS Service District IX, Subdistrict 4. All three components of Forum's retirement living center would be physically connected and share some operational functions, such as dietary facilities and the heating plant. Such a design provides for an efficient operation as well as an economic distribution of costs facility wide. No specific site has been selected , although Forum has narrowed its focus to the eastern half of Palm Beach County. It is not economically feasible to acquire property or pay for an option on property until after receiving CON approval. The projected total cost of Forum's proposed 60-bed nursing home is $2,329,800. Forum has the necessary resources for project accomplishment and operation. Forum proposes to seek Medicare certification and will provide up to 25 of its beds for Medicaid patients. FINANCIAL FEASIBILITY Forum is a national company, with substantial experience in developing and operating nursing homes and retirement living centers. If need for the facility is shown, Forum would be able to capture a sufficient share of the nursing home market to render its proposed nursing home financially feasible while at the same time having no material negative impact on existing providers in the district. NUMERIC NEED Need for new or additional community nursing home beds in Florida is determined, preliminarily, by use of the methodology found in Rule 10- 5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code. Additional beds normally are not approved if there is no need for beds as calculated under the rule. Pursuant to the rule, need for a defined nursing home subdivision is projected to a three- year planning horizon, in this case July 1989. The need methodology prescribed in the rule is as follows: A (POPA x BA) + (POPB x BB) or: The District's age-adjusted number of community nursing home beds for the review cycle for which a projection is being made [A] (The population age 65-74 years in the relevant departmental districts projected three years into the future [POPA] x the estimated current bed rate for the population age 65-74 years in the relevant district [BA]) + (The population age 75 years and older in the relevant departmental district projected three years into the future [POPB] x the estimated current bed rate for the population age 75 years and over in the relevant district [BB].) BA LB/(POPC) + (6 x POPD) or: The estimated current bed rate for the population age 65-74 years in the relevant district [BA] (The number of licensed community nursing home beds in the relevant district [LB]/the current population age 65-74 years [POPC] + (6 x the current population age 75 years and over [POPD]) BB 6 x BA or: The estimated current bed rate for the population age 75 years and over in the relevant district [BB] 6 x the estimated current bed rate for the population age 65-74 years in the relevant district [BA]. SA A x (LBD/LB) x (OR/.90) or: The preliminary subdivision allocation of community nursing home beds [SA] The district's age-adjusted number of community nursing home bids for the review cycle for which a projection is being made [A] x (The number of licensed community nursing home beds in the relevant subdistrict [LBD]/the number of licensed community nursing home beds in the relevant district [LB]) x (The average occupancy rate for all licensed community nursing homes within the subdistrict of the relevant district [OR]/.90) Rule 10-5.011(1)(k)(2)(i), Florida Administrative Code, provides that: The new bed allocation for a subdistrict, which is the number of beds available for CON approval, is determined by subtracting the total number of licensed and 90 percent of the approved beds within the relevant departmental subdistrict from the bed allocation determined under subparagraphs a. through i., unless the subdistrict's average estimated occupancy rate for the most recent six months is less than 80 percent, in which case the net bed allocation is zero. The appropriate planning horizon for the instant case is July 1989, corresponding to the review cycle which began July 15, 1986, and the subdistrict is Palm Beach County. THE NUMBER OF LICENSED COMMUNITY NURSING HOME BEDS IN THE RELEVANT DISTRICT (LB)/THE NUMBER OF LICENSED COMMUNITY NURSING HOME BEDS IN THE RELEVANT SUBDISTRICT (LBD) Rule 10-5.011(1)(k) requires that "review of applications submitted for the July batching cycle shall be based upon the number of licensed beds (LB and LBD) as of June 1 preceding this cycle..." On June 1, 1986, there were 5,459 licensed community nursing home beds in District XI (LB) and 4,084 licensed community nursing home beds in subdistrict 4 (Palm Beach County LBD). These figures include 220 licensed beds that were previously categorized as sheltered. In the instant case, the appropriate figure for LB is 5,459, and the appropriate figure for LBD is 4,084. APPROVED BEDS WITHIN THE RELEVANT DEPARTMENTAL SUBDISTRICT DHRS's interpretation of the rule is to include in the count of approved beds, those approved up to the date of the supervisor's signature on the State Agency Action Report (SAAR). In this case, there were 640 approved beds in Palm Beach County at that time. As of June 1, 1986, the same date as the licensed bed cutoff, there were 640 approved beds in the subdistrict. In Dr. Warner's opinion, approved beds should be determined as of the same time period as licensed beds in order to have consistency and avoid anomalies in the formula. This opinion is reasonable and appropriate. In the instant case, the figure to be applied in the formula for approved beds in the subdistrict is 640 approved beds. THE POPULATION AGE 65-79 YEARS IN THE RELEVANT DEPARTMENTAL DISTRICT PROJECTED THREE YEARS INTO THE FUTURE (POPA). THE POPULATION AGE 75 YEARS AND OVER IN THE RELEVANT DEPARTMENTAL DISTRICT PROJECTED THREE YEARS INTO THE FUTURE (POPB). The rule provides that the three year projections of population shall be based upon the official estimates and projections adopted by the Office of the Governor. For the purposes of calculating need, DHRS utilizes at the final hearing the figures for estimated population obtained from data available at the time of initial application and review. The set of population projections which were available when Petitioner's application was filed and reviewed were those published on July 1, 1986. Based on this data, which is reasonable to use, POPA 170,639; and, POPB 122,577. THE CURRENT POPULATION AGE 65-74 YEARS (POPC)/THE CURRENT POPULATION AGE 75 YEARS AND OVER (POPD). In calculating POPC and POPD, DHRS also utilizes at final hearing the most current data available at the time of initial application and review, in this case the July 1, 1986, release. Based on that data, POPC 153,005 and POPD 112,894. In the opinion of Dr. Warner, Forum's expert, the base for POPC and POPD should correspond to the period for which the average occupancy rate (OR) is calculated. For the July batching cycle, OR is based upon the occupancy rates of licensed facilities for the months of October through March preceding that cycle. According to Warner, January 1, 1986, as the midpoint of this time period, is the appropriate date to derive POPC and POPD in this case. The formula mandated by the rule methodology for calculating the estimated current bed rate requires that the "current population" for the two age groups be utilized. It is reasonable and appropriate for the base for POPC and POPD to correspond to the period for which the average occupancy rate is calculated. Supportive of Dr. Warner's opinion are the past practices of DHRS. Between December 1984 and December 1986, DHRS routinely used a three and one half year spread between the base population period and the horizon date in determining "current population" in its semiannual nursing home census report and bed need allocation. In the January 1987 batching cycle, which cycle immediately followed the cycle at issue in this case, DHRS utilized a three and one half year spread between the base population period and the horizon data for "current population" when it awarded beds. DHRS offered In this case, it proposed to use a three year spread between the base population period and the horizon dated for "current population" in calculating POPC and POPD. Using the July 1986 population release, POPC for January 1986 is 149,821 and POPD for January 1986 is 98,933. THE AVERAGE OCCUPANCY RATE FOR ALL LICENSED COMMUNITY NURSING HOMES WITHIN THE SUBDIVISION OF THE RELEVANT DISTRICT (OR). The rule requires the use of occupancy data from the HRS Office of Health Planning and Development for the months of the previous October through March when calculating a July batch of nursing home applicants. However, the rule is not instructive as to how one calculates this number. In this case, DHRS computed average occupancy rates based on the existing occupancy rates at applicable facilities on the first day of each month. Based on this occupancy data, which includes the data for the 220 previously sheltered beds in the subdistrict, occupancy rates for the July 1986 batch of Palm Beach County nursing home applicants is 83.75 percent. Forum's witness, Dr. Warner, determined that the correct occupancy rate was 85.46 percent for Palm Beach County for the period October 1985 to March 1986. Dr. Warner arrived at this figure by including paid reservation days. A paid reservation day is a day which is paid for by the patient or the patient's intermediary during which the patient is not physically in the bed. Typically, the patient will either be in the hospital, visiting relatives or otherwise away from the facility and will continue to pay for the nursing home bed, so that they will be able to return and not have someone occupy the bed. One of the goals and objectives of the District IX Local Health Plan is that paid reservation days be considered when bed need calculations are made. Calculating prepaid reservation days is consistent with the Rule because such beds are no longer available to the public and are therefore in use. Dr. Warner determined that during the applicable period, 1.25 percent of the licensed beds in the subdistrict were paid reservation days. Although taking paid reservation days into account would not be inconsistent with the rule, Forum failed to demonstrate that the 1.25 percent figure arrived at is valid for the applicable period, i.e., October 1985 to March 1986. Dr. Warner merely calculated a two-year average number of paid reservation days, broke this figure down to a six-month average and applied this average to the six-month period specified in the Rule. Gene Nelson, an expert called on behalf of Forum, calculated the occupancy rate as 88.72 percent in Palm Beach County for the appropriate period called for in the Rule. Nelson used the average monthly occupancy data obtained from medicaid cost reports for some facilities rather than first-day of the month data as used by DHRS. In addition, Nelson did not factor in the occupancy date of licensed beds in the extreme western portion of the County based on his belief that the District IX Local Health Plan mandates that the western area not be considered in any way with the eastern coast section of Palm Beach County for purposes of determining competitiveness. While the use of average full-month occupancy data is generally more reliable than using first-day of the month data, it is best, from a health planning prospective, to be able to use either all full-month data or all first- day of the month data. In making his calculations, Mr. Nelson mixed the two types of data, using full-month data when available and in other cases using first-day of the month data when full-month data was not available. It is inappropriate to fail to consider licensed beds in the extreme western portion of the County based solely on the local health plan. Among other reasons, the rule does not provide for exclusions for any of the subdistricts licensed facilities from the methodology. The appropriate and most reasonable occupancy rate (OR) in the instant case for the applicable time period is 83.75 percent. NET NEED Applying the above-referenced variables to the Rule formula produces the following results. July, 1986. District Allocation BA LB (POPC + (6 x POPD) - 5459 [149,821 + (6 x 98,833)] - .007349 BB - 6 x BA .044094 (.007349) July, 1989 Allocation (POPA x BA) + (POPB x BB) - (170,639 x .007349) + (122,577 x .044094) - 6659 Subdivision Allocation and Need SA A x (LBD / LB) x (OR 1.9) - 6659 x (4084 / 5459) x (.8375/.9) - 6659 x .74812236673 x .93055555555 4636 Subdistrict Allocation for Palm Beach County 4084 (Licensed Beds) 576 (90 percent of 640 Approved Beds) -24 (Bed Surplus)
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact, and Conclusions of Law, it is, RECOMMENDED that the application for certificate of need filed by Forum be Denied. DONE AND ORDERED, this 4th day of April, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida. W. MATTHEW STEVENSON Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 4th day of April, 1988. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NO. 87-0704 The following constitutes my specific rulings pursuant to Section 120.59(2), Florida Statutes, on all of the Proposed Findings of Fact submitted by the parties to this case. Rulings on Proposed Findings of Fact Submitted by the Petitioner Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 2. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 3. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 4. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 5. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 5. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 6. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 6. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 7. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 9. Sentence 1 is rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. Rejected as subordinate and/or unnecessary. 11. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 9. 12. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 9. 13. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 10. 14. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 12. 15. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 1. 16. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 14. 17. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 21. 18. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 20. 19. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 22. 20. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 22. 21. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 18. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 15. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 17. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 17. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 23. Rejected as a recitation of testimony and/or unnecessary. Rejected as subordinate and/or unnecessary. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 24. Rejected as a recitation of testimony and/or unnecessary. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 25. Rejected as a recitation of testimony and/or subordinate. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 25. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 21. Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. Rejected as not supported by the weight of the evidence and/or unnecessary. Rejected as subordinate and/or unnecessary. Rejected as subordinate and/or unnecessary. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 27. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 28. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 27. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 28. Rejected as a recitation of testimony and/or subordinate. Rejected as misleading and/or subordinate. Rejected as subordinate and/or unnecessary. Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. Rejected as contrary to the weight of the evidence. Rulings on Proposed Findings of Fact Submitted by the Respondent Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 1. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 1. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 9. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 3. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 13. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 18 and 19. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 16. Adopted in substance in Finding of Fact 23. Addressed in Conclusions of Law. Addressed in Conclusions of Law. Rejected as subordinate and/or unnecessary. COPIES FURNISHED: Thomas W. Stahl, Esquire 102 South Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 R. Terry Rigsby, Esquire 325 John Knox Road Building C, Suite 135 Tallahassee, Florida 32303 Richard Patterson, Esquire Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Gregory L. Coler Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Blvd. Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 John Miller, Esquire Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Blvd. Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Sam Power HRS Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Blvd. Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 =================================================================
The Issue The issues under consideration concern the request by Petitioner, Brookwood-Jackson County Convalescent Center (Brookwood) to be granted a certificate of need for dual certification of skilled and immediate care nursing home beds associated with the second review cycle in 1987. See Section 381.494, Florida Statutes (1985) and Rule 10-5.011(1)(k) , Florida Administrative Code.
Findings Of Fact On October 5, 1987 Brookwood filed an application with HRS seeking to expand its facility in Graceville, Jackson County, Florida, one with 120 licensed beds and 30 beds approved effective June 12, 1986, to one with 30 additional beds for a total of 180 beds. Beds being sought in this instance were upon dual certification as skilled and intermediate nursing home beds. The nursing home is located in Subdistrict A to District II which is constituted of Gadsden, Holmes, Jackson and Washington counties. This applicant is associated with Brookwood, Investments, a Georgia corporation qualified to do business and registered in the State of Florida and other states in the southeastern United States. That corporation has as its principal function the development and operation of nursing homes and other forms of residential placement of the elderly. The actual ownership of the applicant nursing home is through a general partnership. Kenneth Gummels is one of two partners who own the facility. The Brookwood group has a number of nursing home facilities which it operates in the southeastern United States. Florida facilities that it operates are found in DeFuniak Springs, Walton County, Florida; Panama City, Bay County, Florida; Chipley, Washington County, Florida; Homestead, Dade County, Florida; Hialeah Gardens, Dade County, Florida, as well as the present applicant's facility. The applicant as to the beds which it now operates, serves Medicare, Medicaid, Veteran Administration, private pay and other third party pay patients. The number of Medicaid patients in the 120 licensed beds is well in excess of 90 percent. The ratio of Medicaid patients with the advent of the 30 approved beds was diminished. As to those beds, 75 percent were attributed to Medicaid. If the 30 beds now sought were approved, the projection is for 87 percent private pay and 13 percent Medicaid for those new beds. The nursing home administration feels that the new beds must be vied for under those ratios in order for it to continue to be able to serve a high number of Medicaid patients, an observation which has not been refuted by the Respondent. Nonetheless, if these beds are approved the percentage of Medicaid patients would be reduced to the neighborhood of 80 percent within the facility which compares to the approximately 81 percent experience of Medicaid beds within the district at present and the approximately 88 percent of Medicaid beds within the subdistrict at present. The cost of the addition of the 30 beds in question would be $495,000. Financial feasibility of this project has been stipulated to by the parties assuming that need is found for the addition of those beds. The basic area within the Florida panhandle wherein the applicant facility may be found, together with other facilities in the Florida panhandle is depicted in a map found at page 101 of Petitioner's Exhibit 1 admitted into evidence. This map also shows that a second licensed nursing home facility is located in Jackson County in Marianna, Florida, known as Marianna Convalescent Center. The applicant facility is directly below the Alabama-Florida border, immediately south of Dothan, Alabama, a metropolitan community. The significance of the relative location of the applicant's facility to Dothan, Alabama concerns the fact that since 1984 roughly 50 percent of its nursing home patients have been from out-of-state, the majority of those out-of-state patients coming from Alabama. Alabama is a state which has had a moratorium on the approval of new nursing home beds for eight years. The proximity of one of that state's relatively high population areas, Dothan, Alabama, has caused its patients to seek nursing home care in other places such as the subject facility. The applicant has encouraged that arrangement by its business practices. Among the services provided by the nursing home facility are physical therapy, physical examination and treatment, dietary services, laundry, medical records, recreational activity programs and, by the use of third party consultants, occupational and social therapy and barber and beauty services, as well as sub-acute care. The facility is adjacent to the Campbellton-Graceville Hospital in Graceville, Florida. The nursing home was developed sometime in 1978 or 1979 with an original complement of 90 beds expanding to 120 beds around 1983 or 1984. The Chamber of Commerce of Marianna, Florida had held the certificate of need upon the expectation that grant funds might be available to conclude the project. When that did not materialize, the County Commissioners of Jackson County, Florida sought the assistance of Brookwood Investments and that organization took over the development of the 90 beds. The original certificate holder voluntarily terminated and the Brookwood partnership then took over after receiving a certificate of need for Brookwood-Jackson County Convalescent Center. The nursing home in Marianna, Florida which is located about 16 miles from Graceville has 180 beds having undergone a 60 bed expansion several years ago. Concerning the Brookwood organization's nursing home beds in Florida, the Walton County Convalescent Center was a 100 bed facility that expanded to 120 beds at a later date and has received permission to expand by another 32 beds approved in the same review cycle associated with the present applicant. Gulf Coast Convalescent Center in Panama City, is a 120 bed facility of Brookwood. Brookwood also has the Washington County Convalescent Center in Washington County, in particular in Chipley, Florida which has 180 beds. That facility was expanded by 60 beds as licensed in October, 1987 and those additional beds have been occupied by patients. Brookwood has a 120 bed facility in Homestead and a 180 bed facility in Hialeah Gardens. With the exception of its two South Florida facilities in Homestead and Hialeah Gardens, recent acquisitions under joint ownership, the Brookwood group has earned a superior performance rating in its Florida facilities. No attempt has been made by this applicant to utilize the 30 beds which were approved, effective June 12, 1986. Its management prefers to await the outcome in this dispute before determining its next action concerning the 30 approved beds. The applicant asserted that the 30 beds that had been approved would be quickly occupied based upon experience in nursing home facilities within Subdistrict A to District II following the advent of nursing home bed approval. That surmise is much less valuable than the real life experience and does not lend effective support for the grant of the certificate of need in this instance. The waiting list for the 120 licensed beds in the facility has been reduced to five names. This was done in recognition of the fact that there is very limited patient turnover within the facility. Therefore, to maintain a significant number of people on the waiting list would tend to frustrate the sponsors for those patients and social workers who assist in placement if too many names were carried on the waiting list. At the point in time when the hearing was conducted, the facility was not in a position to accept any patients into its 120 licensed facility. This condition of virtually 100 percent occupancy has been present since about 1984 or 1985. The applicant has transfer agreements with Campbellton-Graceville Hospital and with two hospitals in Dothan, Alabama, they are Flower's Hospital and Southeast Alabama Medical Center. The applicant also has a transfer agreement with the Marianna Community Hospital in Marianna, Florida. The referral arrangements with the Alabama hospitals were made by the applicant in recognition of the proximity of those hospitals to the nursing home facility and the belief in the need to conduct its business, which is the provision of nursing home care, without regard for the patient origin. Early on in its history with the nursing home, Brookwood promised and attempted in some fashion to primarily serve the needs of Jackson County, Florida residents, but the explanation of its more recent activities in this regard does not portray any meaningful distinction between service to the Jackson County residents and to those from other places, especially Alabama. This reflects the concern expressed by Kenneth Gummels, owner and principal with the applicant nursing home, who believes that under federal law the nursing home may not discriminate between citizens in Florida and Alabama when considering placement in the nursing home. In this connection, during 1987 the experience within the applicant nursing home was to the effect that for every patient admitted from Florida five Florida patients were turned away. By contrast, to deal with the idea of priority of placing patients some effort was made by Gummels to explain how priority is still given to Jackson County residents in the placement for nursing home care. Again, in the end analysis, there does not seem to be any meaningful difference in approach and this is evidenced by the fact that the level of out-of-state patients in the facility has remained relatively constant after 1984. If there was some meaningful differentiation in the placement of Florida patients and those from out-of-state, one would expect to see a change in the number of patients from out-of-state reflecting a downward trend. As described, historically the experience which Brookwood has had with the facility occupancy rates is one of high utilization except for brief periods of time when additional beds were added at the facility or in the Marianna Nursing Home. At time of the application the primary service area for the applicant was Jackson County with a secondary service area basically described as a 25 mile radius outside of Graceville extending into Alabama and portions of Washington and Holmes Counties. As stated, at present the occupancy rate is as high as it has ever been, essentially 100 percent, with that percentage only decreasing on those occasions where beds come empty based upon transfers between nursing homes or between the nursing home and a hospital or related to the death of a resident. Those vacancies are filled through the waiting list described or through recommendations of physicians who have a referral association with the facility. The patients who are in the facility at the place of consideration of this application were 50 percent from Florida and 50 percent from out-of-state, of which 56 of the 60 out-of-state patients were formerly from Alabama, with one patient being from Ohio and three others from Georgia. More specifically, related to the history of out-of-state patients coming to reside in the nursing home, in 1984 basically 25 percent patients were from Alabama, moving from there into 1985 at 47 percent of the patient population from Alabama, in 1986 50 percent from Alabama, in 1987 48 percent from Alabama and in 1988 the point of consideration of the case at hearing the figure was 47 percent of Alabama patients, of the 50 percent patients described in the preceding paragraph. Of the patients who are in the facility from Florida, the majority of those are believed to be from Jackson County. Those patients who come to Florida from Alabama, by history of placement, seem to be put in the applicant's facility in Graceville as a first choice because it is closest to the Dothan, Alabama area. The next preference appears to be Chipley and the Brookwood nursing home facility in Chipley, and thence to Bonifay and then to other places in the Florida panhandle, in particular Panama City. In the Brookwood-Washington County facility at Chipley, Florida 35 percent of the patients are from Alabama which tends to correspond to the observation that the Alabama placements as they come into Florida are highest in Graceville and decrease in other places. This is further borne out by the experience in the Brookwood-Walton County facility at DeFuniak Springs, Florida which has an Alabama patient percentage of approximately 10 to 12 percent. When the nursing home facilities in Chipley and Bonifay received 60 additional beds each in October, 1987, they began to experience rapid occupancy in those beds as depicted in the Petitioner's Exhibit 1 at pages 228 through 230. The other facility in Jackson County, namely Jackson County Convalescent Center, within the last six months has shown an occupancy rate in excess of 98 percent, thereby being unavailable to attend the needs of additional Jackson County patients who need placement and other patients within the subdistrict. This same basic circumstance has existed in other facilities within Subdistrict A to District II. When the applicant is unable to place patients in its facility it then attempts placement in Chipley, Bonifay, DeFuniak Springs, and Panama City, Florida, and from there to other places as nearby as possible. The proximity of the patient to family members and friends is important for therapeutic reasons in that the more remote the patient placement from family and friends, the more difficult it is for the family and friends to provide support which is a vital part of the therapy. Consequently, this is a significant issue. Notwithstanding problems in achieving a more desirable placement for some patients who must find space in outlying locales, there was no showing of the inability to place a patient who needed nursing home care. Most of the Alabama referrals are Medicaid referrals. Those patient referrals are treated like any other resident within the nursing home related to that payment class for services. Effectively, they are treated in the same way as patients who have come from locations within Florida to reside in the nursing home. Notwithstanding the management choice to delay its use of the 30 approved beds dating from June 12, 1986, which were challenged and which challenge was resolved in the fall, 1987, those beds may not be ignored in terms of their significance. They must be seen as available for patient placement. The fact that the experience in this service area has been such that beds fill up rapidly following construction does not change this reality. This circumstance becomes more significant when realizing that use of the needs formula for the project at issue reveals a surplus of 19 beds in Subdistrict A to District II for the planning horizon associated with July, 1990. See Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code. The 19 bed surplus takes into account the 30 approved beds just described. Having recognized the inability to demonstrate need by resort to the formula which is found within the rule's provision referenced in the previous paragraph, the applicant sought to demonstrate its entitlement to a certificate through reference to what it calls "special circumstances." Those circumstances are variously described as: Patient wishing to be located in Jackson County. Lack of accessibility to currently approved CON beds. High rate of poverty, Medicaid utilization and occupancy. Jackson County Convalescent Center utilization by out-of- state patients. The applicant in asking for special relief relies upon the recommendation of the Big Bend Health Council, District II in its health plan and the Statewide Health Council remarks, whose suggestions would modify the basis for calculation of need found in the HRS rule with more emphasis being placed on the adjustment for poverty. Those suggestions for health planning are not controlling. The HRS rule takes precedence. Consequently, those suggestions not being available to substitute for the HRS rule, Petitioner is left to demonstrate the "special circumstances" or "exceptional circumstances" in the context of the HRS rule and Section 381.494(6), Florida Statutes (1985). Compliance per se with local and statewide planning ideas is required in the remaining instances where those precepts do not conflict with the HRS rule and statute concerning the need calculations by formula. Turning to the claim for an exception to the rule on need, the first argument is associated with the patient wishing to be located in Jackson County. This would be preferable but is not mandated. On the topic of this second reason for exceptions to the need formula, the matter is not so much a lack of accessibility to currently approved CON beds as it is an argument which is to the effect that there are no beds available be they licensed or approved. This theory is not convincing for reasons to be discussed, infra. Next, there is an extremely high rate of poverty in District II. It has the highest rate of poverty in the state. Moreover Subdistrict A to District II has an even greater degree of poverty and this equates to high Medicaid use and contributes to high occupancy. This coincides with the observation by the Big Bend Health Council when it takes issue with the HRS methodology rule concerning recognition of the significance of poverty within the HRS rule and the belief by the local health council that given the high poverty rates in District II some adjustments should be made to the need formula in the HRS rule. Under its theory, 161 additional beds would be needed at the planning horizon for July 1990 in Subdistrict A. Concerning the attempt by the applicant to make this rationalization its own, the record does not reflect reason to defer to the Big Bend Health Council theory as an exception to the normal poverty adjustment set forth in the HRS rule. When the applicant describes the effects of the out-of-state patients, in particularly those from Alabama in what some have described as in-migration, it argues that Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), Florida Administrative Code makes no allowance for those influences. The applicant chooses to describe these beds, the beds used by out-of-state residents, as unavailable or Inaccessible. This concept of inaccessibility is one which departs from the definition of inaccessibility set forth at Rule 10-5.011(1)(k)2.j., Florida Administrative Code. The specific exception to the requirement for compliance with the numeric need methodology in demonstration of a net need is set forth in that reference, and the proof presented did not show entitlement to the benefits of that exception. That leaves the applicant arguing in favor of recognition of its entitlement to a certificate of need premised upon a theory not specifically announced in that reference. This is the in-migration idea. It ties in the basic idea of poverty but does not depend on rigid adherence to the Big Bend Health Council idea of a substitute element in the HRS needs formula related to poverty. It also promotes the significance of problems which a number of physicians, who testified by deposition in this case, observed when attempting to place patients in the subject nursing home and other nursing homes in the surrounding area. They found high occupancy rates in the present facility and others within Subdistrict A to District II. These problems with placement as described by the physicians can have short term adverse effects on the patient and the family members, but they are not sufficient reason to grant the certification. In considering the formula for deriving need as promulgated by HRS, the proof does not seem to suggest that the nursing home residents themselves who came from out-of-state are excluded from the population census for Florida. On the other hand, unlike the situation in Florida in which the population at large is considered in trying to anticipate future nursing home bed needs, it make no assumptions concerning the Alabama population at large. Ultimately, it becomes a question of whether this unknown factor, given the history of migration of patients from Alabama into Florida and in particular into the subject nursing home, together with other relevant considerations, may properly form the basis for granting the certificate of need to the applicant. It is concluded that there is a fundamental difference in the situation found within this application compared to other planning areas within Florida which do not have to contend with the level of poverty, the proximity to Alabama and the advent of Alabama placements in this nursing home, the high occupancy rates in the subdistrict and the resulting difficulty in placement of patients near their homes. Posed against this troublesome circumstance is the fact that the applicant has failed to use its 30 approved beds or to make a decision for such use, that it had invited and continues to invite the placement of Alabama residents through the referral arrangements with the two Dothan, Alabama hospitals, realizing that such an arrangement tends to exclude opportunities for Florida residents to some extent, and the recognition that patients are being placed; that is patients are not going without nursing home care. The two Alabama hospitals with whom the applicant has referral agreements provide a substantial number of the patients who are admitted. This recount acknowledges what the ownership considers to be their obligation in law and morally to serve the interest of all patients without regard for their home of origin; however, the thrust of the certificate of need licensing process in Florida is to develop the apparatus necessary to service the needs of Florida residents, not Alabama residents. This does not include the necessity of trying to redress the circumstance which appears to exist in Alabama in which the government in that state is unable or unwilling to meet the needs of its citizens. On balance, the applicant has not demonstrated a sufficient reason to depart from the normal requirements of statute and rule, which departure would have as much benefit for Alabama residents as it would for Florida Residents. Contrary to the applicant's assertions it could legitimately de-emphasize its association with Alabama. It has chosen not to and should not be indulged In this choice in an enterprise which is not sufficiently related to the needs of Florida residents to condone the licensure of the beds sought, even when other factors described are taken into account. The applicant has also alluded to a certificate of need request made by Walton County Convalescent Center, a Brookwood facility in District I which sought a certificate of need in the same batch which pertains to the present applicant. The application and the review and comment by HRS may be found within Composite Exhibit 2 by the Petitioner admitted as evidence. Petitioner asserts that the Walton County experience in which 32 beds were granted is so similar to the present case that it would be inappropriate for the agency to act inconsistently in denying the present applicant after having granted a certificate of need to the Walton County applicant. Without making a line-by- line comparison, it suffices to say that in many respects these projects are similar. In other respects they are not. On the whole, it cannot be found that the agency is acting unfairly in denying the present applicant while granting a certificate to the applicant in the Walton County case. The differences are substantial enough to allow the agency to come to the conclusion that the present applicant should be denied and the applicant in Walton County should have its certificate granted. Likewise, no procedural impropriety on the part of HRS in its review function has been shown.
Findings Of Fact HCR initially applied for a CON to construct a 120-bed nursing home facility in Lee County, DHRS District VIII. DHRS assigned this application CON Action 3854, which it denied. Manor Care also initially applied for a CON to construct a 120- bed nursing home facility in Lee County, DHRS District VIII. DHRS assigned this application CON Action No. 3850, which it denied. Manor Care and HCR timely filed petitions for formal administrative hearings which resulted in the DOAH Consolidated Case Nos. 85-2937 and 85-3240. During the hearing, Manor Care and HCR offered updated CON applications (respectively MCI and HCRS). While the Manor Care proposal is a "scale-down" to 60 beds (HCR still proposes 120 beds. both applications propose nursing home beds be set aside to offer a therapeutic environment for patients with Alaheimer's Disease and patients with related disorders. Manor Care's update also provides for an attached 60-bed adult congregate living facility (ACLF), which does not require a certificate of need. DHRS objected to the admission in evidence of the respective applications but did not move for relinquishment of jurisdiction to the agency for consideration by its experts of the updated material in lieu of formal hearing (Vol. III p. 54). Both applications had been submitted to the DHRS attorney prior to hearing. Upon the Hearing Officer's own motion, an evidentiary hearing was conducted prior to the taking of other evidence solely on the propriety of consideration of the updated applications without resubmittal to DHRS. The HCR update did not change the number of beds, nor the patient mix. The Manor Care update was downsized to 60 beds, and this is permitted as a matter of law. Neither update requires amendment of the District Health Plan or the same fixed pool; neither attempts to alter the January 1988 planning horizon contemplated by the original January 1985 applications. The other changes contained in the updated applications relate to a description of the Alzheimer's Disease (AD) program and design of the AD unit for each application, or other changes such as increase or decrease in costs due to inflation and the passage of time, including particularly, the fact that subsequent to the filing of the original application there was a recognition in the District Health Plan and the State Health Plan of the special needs of AD patients, which was contained in the 1985-87 State Health Plan, Vol. III, p. 109. (T-73-74, Vol. II - testimony of HCR expert, Milo Bishop; DHRS Exhibit 5), and the subsequent Local District VIII Health Plan also identified the concern of availability of beds for Medicaid patients. Specifically, the District VIII Health Plan recommends priority consideration for nursing home beds to be given to applicants that will propose to accept a proportion of Medicaid eligible patients that is at least equal to the most recent quarterly figure of Medicaid occupancy in the district. (T-75, Vol. III, DHRS Exhibit 5). The updated application of HCR was filed to reflect these recently identified needs of the AD patients, sub- acute patients and Medicaid patients. The update of each Petitioner also clarifies assurances of Medicaid availability. The updated applications of both Manor Care and HCR proposed special programs for AD patients and a separate wing which appears now to be a treatment of choice for these types of patients. Awareness of AD and its ramification has increased significantly in the recent past. Recognition of the special needs of these patients in the respective updated CON applications constitutes refined material describing the current state of knowledge in medical care. The proposals by Manor Care and HCR to designate separate units and programs for AD patients does not constitute a substantial change in the applications for all of the foregoing reasons but also because any nursing home may admit and treat AD, related disorders, and sub-acute care patients without obtaining a specialized CON and because these types of patients could have been treated in the nursing homes described in the original applications. As far as the identification of newly available information on AD and related disorder patients are concerned, the updates are clearly encouraged within the purview of Balsam v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 486 So. 2d 1341 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986). Over all, none of the amendments of the Petitioners are substantial and the updated applications of both Manor Care and HCR are proper amendments permitted in these de novo proceedings pursuant to McDonald v. Department of Banking & Finance, 346 So. 2d 569 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977); and Gulf Court Nursing Center v. DHRS, 483 So. 2d 700 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985), Motion for Rehearing (Feb. 14, 1986). The ruling that both amended applications were not substantial amendments and therefore no remand to the agency was necessary was entered on the record (Vol. III, p. 103 and is accordingly reiterated and confirmed here, within the Recommended Order. During the hearing, all the parties stipulated to the reasonableness of construction (and equipment) cost, and financial feasibility of both projects. DHRS (but not the Petitioners) stipulated that both Petitioners projects satisfied all quality of care considerations. Upon all the evidence (oral, documentary, and demonstrative) including but not limited to the testimony of Loma Overmeyer, Charlotte Young, Tal Widdes, and John Lee, it is found that both Petitioners have affirmatively demonstrated their respective abilities to provide satisfactory quality of care to their patients through these respective proposed projects. Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code, contains DHRS' methodology for computing nursing home bed need. The need methodology provides that the need for proposed new community nursing home beds is to be determined 3 years into the future. Here, the applicable planning horizon is January, 1988, which is 3 years from the time the initial applications were filed. Applications for new community nursing home beds will not normally be approved if such approval would cause the number of community nursing home beds in an area to exceed the bed need calculated pursuant to Rule 10-5.11(21)(b) 1-10 Florida_ Administrative Code. Applications for community nursing home facilities are normally approved for a minimum of 60 beds. All need experts utilized current population figures provided July 1, 1986 by the Office of the Governor. However, DHRS has arrived at a 37 bed surplus. The DHRS expert, Joyce Farr, testified she used the date of hearing (July 1986) as a basis and current population figures, rendering a gross need of 1,089 beds. If current population figures are used and the January 1985 (initial application date) is used, there is a gross bed need of 1,204 beds. There are 996 licensed nursing home beds in Lee County as of June 1, 1986. Applying the rule to either gross bed need leaves 93 (1089 minus 996) net need or 208 (1204 minus 996) net need. Manor Care calculated both ways and would qualify by either method if it were the sole applicant, but the net bed need by either calculation greatly exceeds the beds proposed by Manor Care. The latter calculation, based on January 1985 instead of the 1986 population projections is urged by HCR as preserving the sanctity and logic of batching cycles and planning horizons. Such an application of the rule's methodology would clearly permit a CON for 60 nursing home beds to be issued to Manor Care and also permit a CON for 120 nursing home beds to be issued to HCR, with a surplus of 28 beds. This solution of awarding a total of 180 beds (60 plus 120) would not offend DHRS established policy that applications for community nursing home facilities are normally approved for a minimum of 60 beds. Nonetheless, HCR's reading of the rule mixes 1985 and current figures without adequate justification in the record and is neither literal nor in conformity with the agency policy and interpretation which witness Farr testified has been applied by her on behalf of DHRS in at least 100 contested CON formal hearings. Further, it is clearly logical and in the best interests of the public and the health planning professions, and in accord with the intent of Chapter 381 F.S. to apply those figures which will most accurately reflect the bed need at the projected (January 1988) planning horizon. In this instance, that set of figures renders the net general community nursing home bed need as 93. However, Joyce Farr also testified that she had been instructed by her supervisor not to apply the rule as promulgated but instead to reserve 143 beds for Lee County and to subtract these beds as if they were already approved. The "reserved" 143 beds represent DHRS' interpretation of Gulf Court v. DHRS. Pursuant to directions in the opinion of the First District Court of Appeal in that case, DHRS has received, for comparative review, CON applications from the three party applicants in that case. Those parties' applications were originally filed in 1981 and 1982, and are for nursing home beds in Lee County. As of date of formal hearing in the instant cause, none of the "Gulf Court" parties' applications had been approved. The Department's stated intention regarding the three "Gulf Court" applications is to award 143 beds to one or more of the party applicants in that case. This intention is based upon the Department's interpretation of the Gulf Court case, and not upon any calculation of need for a planning horizon. As of date of hearing, DHRS had not given any consideration to the effect of changed statutes, regulations, facts, or circumstances on the "fixed pool" of beds applied for by the "Gulf Court" applicants. In her calculation of net need for the sub-district of Lee County, the DHRS witness counted the 143 beds set aside for the "Gulf Court" applicants as "approved" beds. Other than those beds, there are no other approved beds, nor any applications pending from prior batches. The DHRS methodology used to subtract 143 beds is not consistent with the provisions of Rule 10-5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code. (See Conclusions of Law). If the DHRS bed need formula contained in Rule 10- 5.11(21), Florida Administrative Code, is used, the correct number of beds needed for the planning horizon of January 1985 through January 1988 is 93 general community nursing home beds. Each applicant has included, in the updated applications presented at hearing, a number of beds set aside in a unit for Alaheimer's Disease (AD) patients. Manor Care has indicated that 18 beds would be so designated. HCR proposes to establish a 30 bed unit for both "Alzheimer's and the related disorders"' including 15 beds "just for wanderers." AD "is a degenerative process of the brain, characterized by memory impairment and impairment in several mental and physical functions." The disease progresses at certain levels or stages. There are four progressively worsening stages of this disease. In the first stage, the patient starts to forget names and facts in the recent past, and also begins to be unable to perform some complex tasks that the patient was able to perform before the disease began. In stage two, the impairment in memory increases. The patient starts to forget common names of objects usually used in daily living, and the patient starts to wander. There are often behavioral problems, such as agitation or depression. In stage three, there is. physical impairment, including incontinency, speech disturbances, and problems with communication. In stage four, the patient most of the time is confined to a bed, and largely unaware of his_ environment. He is incontinent. Without adequate care, he has sores on his back. He is nearing death at that point. AD is irreversible and the cause is unknown. Diagnosis is very difficult. The only positive method of diagnosis is by brain biopsy. The most common method of diagnosis is by a process of elimination and this often fails in the early stages of AD. Incidence of AD increases in the over 65 population but there are cases of some patients as young as 30. A large percentage of any nursing home is suffering from some form of dementia. The estimated need of "irreversible dementia" patients in nursing homes in Lee County for the year 1988 is 2,189. Out of this number of patients, 60% would be specifically AD patients or 1,313. Dr. Baquero presently has 100 AD patients in existing area nursing homes. AD patients are cared for in almost all nursing homes, but usually there is no separate area or program. There are no specialized programs or units for AD patients currently established in Lee County. The existing facilities in Lee County do not provide adequate care to persons suffering from AD. Because of the lack of facilities, AD patients are often kept at home until families are to the pint of desperation. Care of the AD patient is an enormous, 24 hour-a-day burden on the care-givers. Additional stress is caused by personality changes that often accompany the disease. Most facilities in Lee County will not accept a difficult patient. Families of AD patients have placed patients in facilities out of country, out of state, and out of country, because of the lack of facilities in Lee County. Dr Baquero, practicing medical physician in Ft. Myers, who is experienced in treating AD patients and who has knowledge gained as Medical Director for two existing nursing homes, was qualified as an expert in the care and treatment of AD patients. Upon his evidence and upon evidence of the representatives of the Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association (ADRDA), it is found that AD patients frequently have to be placed outside Lee County, as far as 60 to 70 miles from home. Approximately 50% of AD patients consulting ADTDA return to northern home states or go to foreign countries rather than awaiting long- delayed Lee County placement. Placement of AD patients also on Medicaid or needing sub-acute care is even more difficult. The Petitioners further demonstrated that other patients in addition to AD patients are not adequately served by the existing facilities in Lee County. It is extremely difficult in Lee County to place a patient who is in need of high technology or "sub-acute" care. Such patients include those in need of intravenous antibiotic therapy, ventilators, oxygen, feeding tubes or pumps, decubitus ulcer care (bed sores), etc. Feeding pumps and bed sores may eventually become a way of life for AD patients. AD patients may also require other forms of sub acute care and can be on Medicaid. Many of the existing nursing homes are not capable of handling such patients who often must be placed out of county. These difficult patients are frequently placed out of county or at great distance from their homes within the county, creating added burdens on elderly spouses and family members. The burden of out of county placement has created or intensified "separation syndrome" accidents and death for such patients elderly spouses. Implementation of the Diagnostic Related Grouping (DRG) system of Medicare reimbursement has been an incentive for hospitals to release patients as soon as they are no longer in need of "acute care," but due to the inability to place these patients, they stay in hospitals longer than necessary, resulting in a much higher expense than would be the case if a nursing home placement could be achieved. Additionally "cost shifting' to private and third party insurance payments may be inferred from the DRG statistics admitted. Both Lee Memorial Hospital and Ft. Myers Community Hospital experience difficulty in placing sub-acute care patients, especially those on Medicaid. Fifty per cent or more of Ft. Myers Community Hospital referrals are of sub-acute care patients. Ft. Myers Community Hospital records reflect an increase in hold-overs due to unavailability of nursing home beds. Since October, 1984, Lee Memorial Hospital has had to place 75 out of 941 discharge patients out of county. Only one of these patients was private pay. The majority of Lee Memorial discharges to nursing homes are Medicaid and Medicare patients; 48.3% are Medicare and 22.6% are Medicaid patients for a total of 70.9% of the total discharges to nursing homes. Only 29% of Lee Memorial discharges-to nursing homes are private pay patients. Twenty per cent of all of Lee Memorial's Medicaid discharges to nursing homes are required to be placed out of county and 11.2% of their Medicare discharges are placed out of the County. Mary Shell, the DHRS District Human Services Coordinator confirmed the difficulty of placing Medicaid patients in the county as sub-district and testified to a serious but unquantified shortage of both Medicaid and sub-acute nursing home beds in Lee County. Mr. Dennis Eskew, Supervisor of the DHRS Adult Payments Unit, which determines the eligibility for Medicaid nursing home programs, presented a chart (HCR 15) showing 20% of 203 approved Medicaid patients (41) had to be placed out of county during the immediately preceding six months because of unavailability of such beds in Lee County. Existing nursing homes in Lee County are almost always full. Hospital discharge planners, families, and medical physicians seeking placement of patients uniformly testified that there is a shortage of beds and long waiting periods, even for non-problematic patients and that there is a need for additional nursing home beds for all types of patients including Medicare/Medicaid patients, sub-acute patients, AD patients and routine nursing home patients. However, these witnesses did not attempt to quantify the number of beds needed. There is strong evidence that recently opened nursing homes are not making available promised Medicaid beds and there have been no DHRS enforcement procedures. Although minimally demonstrated, it may be inferred from the foregoing type of testimony that the absence of competition has reduced the incentive of existing local nursing homes to accept those out of the "walkie talkie" category, those still cognitive, ambulatory patients who are able to feed and care for themselves to a large degree. Both Petitioners meet the guidelines in the local health plan that applicants should provide at least 33 1/3% of beds available to Medicaid patients. HCR agreed to provide 46% Medicaid beds (55 beds out of 120) which was the prevailing district rate. The plan gives priority to those applicant who meet this percentage. Manor agrees only to provide 35% Medicaid beds. Both Petitioners indicate a willingness to treat sub- acute patients, but neither seeks a specific number of beds for this purpose. Sub-acute care is considered within the designation of skilled care. Manor Care's emphasis on rehabilitation in its existing facilities has had significant results. Manor Care's historical Medicare percentage is above the industry average. Both Petitioners are in the forefront of developing programs for the diagnosis and treatment of AD disease. Manor Care is prepared to totally commit 18 beds exclusively to AD and related diseases and 21 beds to Medicaid. These may overlap. HCR is prepared to totally commit 32 beds exclusively to AD and related diseases and 55 beds to Medicaid. These may overlap. The special attributes of each proposed AD unit (30 beds by HCR and 18 beds by Manor Care) include a higher staff-to- patient ratio, which is needed to supervise and assist confused and wandering patients and a great deal of attention to the physical environment, from a home-like atmosphere and certain relaxing shades of pink, to special furnishing and fixtures. Particular care is necessary in preparation and serving of food, to allow patients with AD and related disorders to eat adequately and without assistance and to prevent considerable weight loss in the wandering stage which can result in further rapid debilitation. One of the goals of AD programs is to reduce the need for traditionally utilized physical restraints or heavy sedation, and to promote prolonged individual functioning. There is no competent expert testimony contrary to the theme that AD patients require special care and special programs designed to meet their unique medical and custodial needs. The experts with any personal background in the area also uniformly agreed that a separate wing or another isolated area of the nursing home facility is most desirable because of the wandering tendencies of these patients, their hostile, unpredictable, and bizarre behavior, and the other special needs specific to this type of brain degeneration. HCR's Wander Guard security system is viewed as superior by some witnesses.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is RECOMMENDED: That DHRS enter a Final Order approving HCR's updated application for a 120 nursing home bed facility in Lee County limited and conditioned upon HCR's updated application's specific provision for 46% Medicaid beds and upon 30 beds being dedicated as set out in the application and evidence at formal hearing for the specific for treatment of AD patients, and denying the application of Manor Care for a 60 bed facility. DONE and Ordered this 23rd day of December, 1986 in Tallahassee, Florida. ELLA JANE P. DAVIS Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32309 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 23rd day of December 1986. COPIES FURNISHED: Jean Laramore, Esquire Kenneth A. Hoffman, Esquire 325 North Calhoun Street Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Donna H. Stinson, Esquire The Perkins House, Suite 100 118 North Gadaden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 John Rodriguez, Esquire Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Blvd. Building One, Room 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 William Page, Jr., Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Blvd. Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 APPENDIX_ The following paragraphs constitute specific rulings upon the parties' respective proposed findings of fact as required by Section 120.59(2) F.S. Petitioner Manor Care's Proposals: Covered in Findings of Fact 1, 3. Covered in Findings of Fact 3 and 12. Covered in Finding of Fact 8. Covered in Findings of Fact 3, 9-12. Sentence 1 is covered in Finding of Fact 4; remainder rejected as taken out of context and not clear from the record as a whole. Covered in Finding of Fact 9. Covered in Finding of Fact 12. Covered in Finding of Fact 9-12. Covered in Findings of Fact 9-12. Up to the comma covered in Findings of Fact 12; after the comma accepted but not adopted as unnecessary. Covered in part in Finding of Fact 12; remainder accepted but unnecessary. Covered in Findings of Fact 12. 16-19. Covered in Finding of Fact 6. 20. Covered in Findings of Fact 9-12. Proposals 9, 14, and 15 are accepted but not adopted because subordinate and unnecessary. Petitioner Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America's_ Proposals: Covered in Finding of Fact 1. Covered in Findings of Fact 2. sentence 1 is covered in Finding of Fact remainder rejected as subordinate and unnecessary. Covered in Finding of Fact 3. Covered in Finding of Fact 3. Covered in Finding of Fact 3. Covered in Finding of Fact 3 Covered in Finding of Fact 3. 10-12. Covered in Findings of Fact 3 and 12. Covered in Finding of Fact 12.a. Covered in Findings of Fact 3 and 10. 16. Covered in Finding of Fact 3. 19. Covered in Finding of Fact 3. 20-22. Covered in Finding of Fact 4; rejected in part as not supported by the record. 23-24. Covered in Finding of Fact 4. Covered in Findings of Fact 8 and 9. Covered in Finding of Fact 12. 27-32. Covered in Finding of Fact 8. Covered in Findings of Fact 5 and 6. Covered in Finding of Fact 8. 38-39. Are accepted in principle but rejected in their specificity as subordinate, unnecessary and cumulative. To a large degree the same subject matter is covered in Findings of Fact 8-12. Covered in Findings of Fact 9 and 12. Covered in Finding of Fact 8. Covered in Findings of Fact 9 and 12. 43-49. Covered in Findings of Fact 9-12. What is not covered is rejected as subordinate, unnecessary, and cumulative. Covered in Findings of Fact 9-10. Covered in Findings of Fact 9-12, particularly lOe. Covered in Findings of Fact 10-11. Accepted in principle but as stated is too broad and applies to situations outside of nursing home beds. Rejected in part as taken out of context and with insufficient predicate and in part as subordinate and unnecessary. What is accepted is covered in Finding of Fact 11. 60. Covered in Findings of Fact 10-11, particularly 10. 64. Covered in Findings of Fact 10-11, particularly 10. 66. Covered in Findings of Fact 9-12, particularly lOd. 67-69. Covered in Findings of Fact 10-11, what is rejected is rejected as unnecessary, subordinate and/or cumulative. 70. Covered in Finding of Fact 11. 71-73. Covered in Findings of Fact 10-11, what is rejected is rejected as unnecessary, subordinates and/or cumulative. Covered in Findings of Fact 10-11. Covered in Findings of Fact 9-12. Covered in Findings of Fact 6 and 11-12. 77-90. Covered in Finding of Fact 6. Matters rejected are rejected as not supported by the record or as contrary to the appropriate application of law and incipient policy. See Conclusions of Law. Represents the sum total of all the Findings of Fact made and is more in the nature of a conclusion of law. See Conclusions of Law. Rejected as covered in Finding of Fact 6, and the Conclusions of Law. 93-95. Accepted and incorporated in Finding of Fact 12. 96. Covered in Findings of Fact 6, 11, and 12. Proposals 3, 15, 17, 18, 35, 36, 37, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 61, 62, 63, 65, are accepted but not adopted because subordinate and unnecessary. Respondent Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services' Proposals: 1-2. Covered in Finding of Fact 1. 3. Covered in Finding of Fact 2. 4. Covered in Finding of Fact 4. 5. Covered in Findings of Fact 3 and 12. 6. Covered in Finding of Fact 3. 7-9. Covered in Findings of Fact 3, 5, and 6._ 10. Covered in Finding of Fact 6. 11. Accepted but not specifically set out in Findings of Fact. Sentences 1-2 are accepted and sentence 3 is rejected in Finding of Fact 6 and in the Conclusions of Law. Rejected for the reasons set out in Finding of Fact 6 and Conclusions of Law. Covered in Findings of Fact 5 and 6 and Conclusions of Law. Rejected as set out in Findings of Fact 6, and 9-12 and as a conclusion of law. Rejected as out of context and immaterial to the facts as found. Similar material is covered in Findings of Fact 6 and 9-12. Rejected as set out in Findings of Fact 6, and 9-12 and as a conclusion of law. ================================================================= AGENCY FINAL ORDER ================================================================= STATE OF FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES MANOR CARE, INC., Petitioner, CASE NO. 85-2937 vs. CON NO. 3850 DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, Respondent. / HEALTH CARE AND RETIREMENT CORPORATION OF AMERICA, d/b/a HEARTLAND OF LEE, Petitioner, vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, Respondent. / CASE NO. 85-3240 CON NO. 3854