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HOSPICE OF THE PALM COAST, INC. vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 06-001268CON (2006)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Apr. 12, 2006 Number: 06-001268CON Latest Update: Jul. 05, 2024
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PASCO-PINELLAS HILLSBOROUGH COMMUNITY HEALTH SYSTEM, INC. vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 07-003484CON (2007)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Jul. 26, 2007 Number: 07-003484CON Latest Update: Jan. 07, 2009

The Issue Whether there is need for a new hospital in AHCA Acute Care Subdistrict 5-2 (eastern Pasco County)? If so, whether AHCA should approve either CON 9975 or CON 9977?

Findings Of Fact The Applicants and Background Pasco-Pinellas Pasco-Pinellas, the applicant for CON 9975, is a joint venture between two nonprofit healthcare organizations: University Community Hospital, Inc. (UCH) and Adventist Health System Sunbelt Healthcare Corporation (Adventist). A not-for-profit healthcare system, UCH has served the Tampa Bay area for the last 40 years. It owns and operates two hospitals in Hillsborough County and one in Pinellas County. UCH has approximately $100 million available for capital expenditures to fund the hospital proposed by CON 9975. One of its Hillsborough County facilities, University Community Hospital, is located on Fletcher Avenue in northern Hillsborough County, AHCA Health Planning District VI. Across the street from the main campus of the University of South Florida (USF) and its College of Medicine, University Community Hospital has an agreement with USF for GME. University Community Hospital at present serves the Wesley Chapel area in eastern Pasco County. The other member of the joint venture, Adventist, is a financially successful not-for-profit healthcare organization. It operates 17 hospitals in the state of Florida. As of December 31, 2007, Adventist's cash on hand, including investments, exceeded $3.6 billion and net revenue for 2007 was approximately $368 million. The joint venture between UCH and Adventist was formed to establish a hospital to serve the Wesley Chapel area of Pasco County and to provide other healthcare services in the county. At present, the two members of the joint venture compete to serve the Wesley Chapel area through University Community Hospital and Adventist's Florida Hospital Zephyrhills (FHZ), a 154-bed general acute care hospital in Pasco County. The collaboration of competing hospitals in seeking approval for a new hospital through Florida's CON process is unusual. But by bringing the similar missions, strength in community interests and capable leadership of UCH and Adventist together, the Pasco Pinellas joint venture poses potential healthcare benefits to eastern Pasco County. BayCare The Applicant for CON 9977, BayCare of Southeast Pasco, Inc., is a not-for-profit corporation formed to develop the hospital proposed in the application. The sole member of BayCare is BayCare Health System, Inc. ("BayCare System"). BayCare System is the largest full-service community- based health care system in the Tampa Bay area. It operates 9 nonprofit hospitals and 11 ambulatory/outpatient centers in Hillsborough, Pasco and Pinellas counties. Initially organized in 1997 under a joint operating agreement between several hospitals, BayCare System's purpose has been to compete effectively in managed care operations in order to reduce the expenses of the individual organizations that are its members. In the first 5 years of operation, BayCare System saved its members a total of $90 million because of the enhanced cost efficiencies it achieved through business function consolidations and group purchasing. Its members are all not-for-profit hospitals. BayCare System's focus is on the treatment of one patient at a time. Its mission is to improve the lives of people in the community it serves, to operate effectively as a group of not-for-profit hospitals, and to provide high quality, compassionate healthcare. BayCare's application, because it provides potential for its proposal with its teaching aspects, draws significant and considerable support from USF, a national research university. USF has a College of Medicine, a College of Nursing, and a College of Public Health, collectively "USF Health." USF Health will collaborate with BayCare in the development of the hospital BayCare proposes, should it be approved and should its teaching functions come to fruition. The Agency The Agency for Health Care Administration is the state agency that administers the CON program pursuant to Section 408.034, Florida Statutes. It will make the final decisions to approve or deny the two CON applications at issue in this proceeding. Community Community Hospital is a general acute care for profit hospital with 386 beds. It is located within the City of New Port Richey in western Pasco County, Acute Care Subdistrict 5-1. With the exception of neonatal intensive care, open heart surgery and organ transplantation, Community is a full- service community hospital. It provides OB services. It is licensed for 46 adult psychiatric beds. It offers a variety of outpatient services including outpatient surgery, endoscopy, and outpatient procedures and lab testing. Its medical staff consists of approximately 400 physicians. Community serves patients without regard to ability to pay, and does not discriminate in any manner. Accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospital Organizations, it has received numerous awards and recognition for the quality of its health care services. Community's hospital facility is over 30 years old. Access to the campus from US 19, the closest major thoroughfare approximately 1.5 miles away, is gained via a two-lane street through a residential area. Land-locked but for the two-lane street, the campus is sandwiched between the residences and a high school. There are no medical office buildings ("MOB") owned by Community on the campus; less than 20 acres in size, it is completely built out. Community's Replacement Hospital Community has a replacement hospital facility currently under construction in Acute Care Subdistrict 5-2. Approximately five miles southeast of Community's New Port Richey location, the replacement facility is located at the intersection of Little Road and State Road 54. Expected to open in late 2010 at a cost in excess of $200 million, it is to be known as Medical Center of Trinity ("Trinity"). All current Community services will be offered at Trinity. At the same time, the new hospital will offer many advantages over the old facility. Trinity will initially be five stories in height, with fewer licensed beds, but constructed with the ability to expand. It will offer new medical equipment with the latest technology. Situated on 52 acres, with a new three-story MOB adjacent to the hospital, Trinity has plans to add a second MOB at some time in the future. Unlike existing Community Hospital, Trinity will have all private rooms. Its more efficient layout among service areas will improve efficiencies and patient satisfaction. Trinity's location is more accessible than Community's current location in New Port Richey. It is on State Road 54 (SR 54), a six-lane highway that runs east/west through Pasco County. The road has recently undergone major construction and expansion which was nearly complete at the time of hearing. Suncoast Parkway (a/k/a Veterans Expressway), furthermore, is an expressway toll road system that runs north/south from Hernando County through Pasco County to Tampa airport. From the intersection of Suncoast Parkway and SR 54, it takes approximately seven minutes to reach Trinity. Little Road runs north/south along the Trinity site, and north through Pasco County to Regional Medical Center Bayonet Point ("Bayonet Point"). Community's poor financial performance in recent years is expected to improve after the opening of Trinity. The Proposals Although both applicants propose a new hospital in roughly the same location in Subdistrict 5-2, the two are different both in scope and approach. Pasco-Pinellas' Proposal Pasco-Pinellas proposes to build an 80-bed acute care hospital on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard in the area known as Wesley Chapel in eastern Pasco County. If approved and constructed, the hospital will include 36 medical/surgical beds, 8 labor/delivery/recovery/post partum beds, 12 critical care beds, and 24 progressive care beds. The project would involve 184,000 gross square feet of new construction, at a total estimated cost of $121 million. Pasco-Pinellas proposes a typical primary service area (PSA). Five and one-half zip codes comprise the PSA; Pinellas- Pasco reasonably projects 82% of its admissions will come from the PSA. Two and one-half zip codes comprise the secondary service area (SSA). The zip code that is shared by the PSA and the SSA (33559) is split roughly in half between Pasco County and Hillsborough County. The half that is in Pasco County is in Pasco-Pinellas' PSA. The five full zip codes in the PSA are 33541, 33543, 33544, 34639, and 33576. The two full zip codes in the SSA are 33549 and 33647. Pasco-Pinellas' in-migration from outside its proposed service area (the PSA and the SSA) is forecast by Pasco- Pinellas's health planner at 12%. For a community hospital in the Wesley Chapel area without tertiary services, the in- migration percentage projected by Pasco-Pinellas is reasonable. BayCare's Proposal BayCare proposes to establish a general acute care hospital with 130 beds. The application proposes that it be collaboratively developed by BayCare System and USF Health so as to provide teaching functions associated with the USF College of Medicine and other health-related university components of USF Health. Consisting of approximately 476,000 square feet of new construction at an estimated total project cost of approximately $308 million, the hospital will have 92 medical/surgical beds, 24 critical care beds, and 14 post-partum beds. Like Pasco-Pinellas' proposal, BayCare's proposed hospital will be located on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard in the Wesley Chapel area of southeastern Pasco County. BayCare's proposed PSA is circular. The center point of the PSA is the proposed BayCare hospital site in the Wesley Chapel area. The circumference is along a series of seven-mile radii so that the diameter of the circular PSA is 14 miles. The seven-mile radius was chosen to approximate a fifteen-minute travel time by automobile from the outer edge of the circular PSA to the hospital site. BayCare's PSA includes some part of seven zip codes. Two are Wesley Chapel zip codes: 33543 and 33544. Two are Lutz area zip codes: 33549 and 33559. Two are Land O'Lakes zip codes: 34639 and 34638, and one is a zip code in Hillsborough County: 33647. Relative to typical PSAs for most proposed hospitals, the PSA proposed by BayCare's application was described at hearing by BayCare's health planner as "small." See Tr. 1855. For calendar years 2013 and 2014, BayCare projects that 19,0976 and 20,008 patient days, respectively, will be generated from within the PSA. These projections constitute a projection of 60% of all patient days projected for the two years, a percentage substantially lower than would be generated from a typical PSA. The remaining 40% of projected patient days is roughly double what would be expected from beyond a PSA under a more typical proposal. The high number of projected patient days for patients originating outside the PSA was explained at hearing by BayCare's health planner. The involvement of the USF Physician's Group and the "teaching" nature of the proposal "pumps up and provides an additive level of in-migration that would not be experienced without the USF combination with BayCare in [the] project." Tr. 1856-7. Pasco County Hospitals There are five hospitals in Pasco County. Two in western Pasco County will continue to remain in Subdistrict 5-1 in the near future: Regional Medical Center Bayonet Point, located in northwest Pasco County and Morton Plant North Bay Hospital, located in New Port Richey. Two are in eastern Pasco County, Subdistrict 5-2: Pasco Regional Medical Center in east central Pasco County, and FHZ, located in southeast Pasco. The fifth is Community/Trinity. No Need for Both Hospitals None of the parties contends there is need for both hospitals. Nor would such a contention be reasonable. Indeed, the record does not demonstrate need for both a new 80-bed community hospital as proposed by Pinellas-Pasco and a new 130- bed hospital that BayCare denominates a "teaching" hospital, each with an intended location on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard in the Wesley Chapel area of southeastern Pasco County in Subdistrict 5-2. The question remains: is there a need for one new hospital? If so, which of the two applications, if either, should be approved? Need for a New Hospital; Access Enhancement Among the counties in the Tampa Bay area, Pasco County has been the fastest growing in recent years. From 1990 to 2000, its population grew 22.6%. Three times higher than the state average, this represents tremendous growth for any locale. The Wesley Chapel area of south Pasco County roughly coincides with the PSAs of the two applicants. Dramatic growth over the last 20 years has marked the Wesley Chapel area's transformation from an agricultural area to a suburban community. North of Hillsborough County and its largest city, Tampa, improvements in the transportation network has made south Pasco County and in particular, the Wesley Chapel area, a bedroom community for workers commuting to Tampa. Claritas, a national demographic data service, is a generally accepted population projection source for CON applications. Claritas projects the growth in Pasco County to continue. For example, the projected population for Pasco- Pinellas' proposed PSA, which substantially overlaps with BayCare's proposed PSA, is 113,397 in 2011 and 118,505 in 2012. The Claritas projections are based on the most recent decennial U.S. Census, that is, 2000, and do not take into account data of impending population growth, such as new housing starts and new schools. Claritas, therefore, may understate projections in areas that have experienced more recent, rapid growth. The University of Florida Bureau of Economic and Business Research ("BEBR") also provides reliable population data by county. In the year 2000, the census for the Pasco County population was 344,765. By 2030, that population is projected by BEBR to grow to 526,100 based on low projections, 681,100 based on medium projections, and 876,900 based on high projections. For the high projection rate, this would constitute a 154% increase in population. Even assuming the low growth rate, the population would increase by 53%. According to BEBR data, the county can be expected to grow at a rate of 4.71% per year. Another source of population data relied upon by population experts is Demographics USA. The Demographics USA data shows a substantial growth in population for Pasco County. According to Demographics USA, the population for Pasco County can be expected to grow from 343,795 in the year 2000 to 440,527 in the year 2010 and then to 504,277 by the year 2015. Based on the Demographics USA data, the county can be expected to grow at a rate of 3.11% per year. The Wesley Chapel area is considered to be the area of Pasco County with the most development and development potential now and in the future. Of 175 major projects actively undergoing development in Pasco County, 76 are in the Wesley Chapel area. Between 2010 and 2012, the population in the area is projected to grow by 5,000 persons per year. With the increase in the general population in the area comes an expected increase in the need for schools. Of 37 schools identified by the Pasco County School Board to be built in the near future, 19 are to be located in the Wesley Chapel area. Whether the historic growth rate of the last few decades will continue for sure is an open question with the downturn in the economy and the housing market that commenced in Pasco County in mid-2007. Absent a major recession, however, it is reasonable to expect growth in the Wesley Chapel area to continue even if not at a rate as rapid as in the recent past. Whatever the future holds for Wesley Chapel's growth rate, there is clearly a demand for inpatient general acute care services in the Wesley Chapel area. The total non-tertiary discharges from the Pasco-Pinellas service area was 15,777, excluding newborns, for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2006. As a result, AHCA found the existing and growing population in the Wesley Chapel area warranted a new hospital. Along with significant growth in the Wesley Chapel area comes resulting traffic and healthcare and hospital access issues. Drive time analysis shows the average drive time from each of the Pasco-Pinellas PSA six area zip codes to the eight area hospitals in 2007 to be 46.11 minutes. The analysis shows that future drive time is expected to be lengthier, strengthening the need for a hospital in the Wesley Chapel area. In 2012, the average time increase is expected to 57.68 minutes. A Drive Time Study Report prepared by Diaz Pearson & Associates compared drive times to the proposed site for Pasco- Pinellas hospital to eight existing hospitals: UCH, Pasco Regional, FHZ, Tampa General, University Community Hospital on Dale Mabry in Tampa, St. Joseph's North, St. Joseph's in Tampa, and the site for Community's replacement hospital. The study concluded: The results of this travel study demonstrate that the vehicular travel times for access to the proposed PPHCHS Hospital [Pasco- Pinellas' Hospital] are consistently LESS for residents within the six Zip codes of the Primary Service Area for years 2007, 2011, and 2012 than for comparable trips to any of the eight area hospitals for alternate choice. Pasco-Pinellas 36, p. 27. Of particular note are the travel times from each of the six zip codes in Pasco-Pinellas' PSA to UCH, FHZ, and Tampa General. For example, a patient driving from the centroid point in zip code 33559 to UCH would take 24.28 minutes and to FHZ would take 37.97 minutes in 2007. This increases to 29.55 minutes and 50.94 minutes in 2012. Another example, the time it takes a patient to travel from zip code 33541 to Tampa General was 75.51 minutes in 2007. In 2012, the travel time is projected to increase approximately 20 minutes to 95.33 minutes. In contrast, a new hospital in the Wesley Chapel area would decrease travel times significantly for patients in the six zip code areas of the Pasco-Pinellas PSA. For example, in 2007, it would only take a zip code 33559 patient 11.41 minutes to reach the proposed site for Pasco-Pinellas. This represents a time savings of 12.87 minutes compared to the average driving time to UCH and 26.56 minutes compared to the average driving time to FHZ. In 2012, the reduction in time to drive to Pasco- Pinellas' proposed hospital site instead of UCH is 18.34 minutes and for FHZ, it is 39.53 minutes. The time savings for patients from the 33541 zip code traveling to Tampa General for non- tertiary services is even greater. Using Pasco-Pinellas' site in the Wesley Chapel area would save the patient 52.67 minutes in 2007 and is projected to save 63.88 minutes in 2012. Anecdotal evidence supports the need for a new hospital in the Wesley Chapel area. Dr. Niraj Patel practices obstetrics and gynecology in the Wesley Chapel area. A drive for him in good traffic is typically 20 minutes to UCH (the only hospital at which he practices because the distance between area hospitals is too great). In morning traffic during "rush" periods, the drive can exceed 40 minutes. Caught in such a drive in January of 2008, Dr. Patel missed the delivery of a patient's baby. He was required to appear before the UCH Medical Staff's credentials committee to "explain the situation . . . [because it] was the third or fourth [such] episode." Pasco-Pinellas 47, p. 11. As Dr. Patel explained in a pre- hearing deposition, "it doesn't fare well for me . . . credential and requirement wise but it doesn't fare well for the patient [who] had to be delivered by the nursing staff which [without a physician present] increases patient risk and [the chance] of complication[s]." Id. A new hospital in the Wesley Chapel area will provide residents of the Pasco-Pinellas PSA or the BayCare PSA with shorter travel time to a hospital compared to the time necessary to reach one of the eight existing hospitals in the region. In 2007, residents of the six zip codes in the Pasco-Pinellas' PSA could be expected to access Pasco-Pinellas' proposed hospital in a range of 10.9 to 21.8 minutes. For the year 2012, the time can be reasonably predicted to range from 17 to 31.4 minutes. In comparison the drive times to the eight hospitals in the region for residents of Pasco-Pinellas' PSA are significantly longer. In 2007, it took a resident in zip code 34639 approximately 55 minutes to get to UCH and 73 minutes to get to St. Joseph's Tampa. By 2012, those drive times are reasonably projected to increase to 64 minutes and 83 minutes, respectively. Simply put, travel times are expected to increase as the population increases in coming years. The site of Pasco-Pinellas' hospital is approximately one mile from the site of the proposed BayCare hospital. The travel times suggested for the residents of the Pasco-Pinellas PSA to the proposed Pasco-Pinellas hospital can be expected to be similar to travel times to the proposed BayCare hospital. Given the proximity of the two proposed sites, either will significantly reduce travel time to hospitals for patients in the Wesley Chapel area. The existence in the Wesley Chapel area of a community hospital with an emergency room and primary inpatient services will benefit doctors, patients and their families. Heightened driving concerns among elderly patients and traffic congestion and inadequate roadways that delay Emergency Medical services support the need for a Wesley Chapel area hospital. The support is based not only on 2007 travel times but also on the reasonable expectation that travel time will be greater in the future. Existing hospitals are capable of absorbing the increased need for acute care hospital services that result from the increased growth that is reasonably projected to occur in Subdistrict 5-2. If there is to be a new hospital in the subdistrict, the Wesley Chapel area is the best location for it. A new hospital in the Wesley Chapel area will enhance access to acute care services for residents of Subdistrict 5-2. Preliminary Agency Action; the SAAR The Agency determined that there is a need for a new hospital in the Wesley Chapel Area when it issued its State Agency Action Report on CONs 9975 and 9977. The Agency also determined that between the two applications, Pasco-Pinellas was superior and should therefore be approved over BayCare's. This determination was founded primarily on Pasco-Pinellas' application being more reasonable in terms of size and impacts on existing providers. The Agency maintained at hearing the position it took in it preliminary action memorialized by the SAAR. Jeffrey Gregg, Chief of AHCA's Bureau of Health Facility Regulation received in this proceeding as an expert in health planning and CON Review explained when called to the stand to testify: The proposal by [Pasco-Pinellas] was on the smaller side and gave us more comfort [than BayCare's] . . . [W]hile we . . . agree with these applicants that there is a hospital in the future of [the Wesley Chapel area], we are more comfortable with the conservative approach, the smaller approach [of Pasco- Pinellas], particularly given that should it be necessary in the future, any hospital can add beds, acute care beds, merely by notifying us. And we were more comfortable that [Pasco-Pinellas'] approach would be able to expand access and improve services for people in this area while at the same time minimally impacting all of the competitors. Tr. 1995. As detailed below, AHCA's determination that the Pasco-Pinellas application is superior to BayCare's is supported by the record even if the basis for the determination made on the state of the record is not quite the same as the basis advanced at hearing by AHCA. Size and Cost Pasco-Pinellas proposed hospital involves about 184,000 square feet of new construction at a cost of approximately $121 million dollars. It is much smaller and less costly than BayCare's proposed hospital of 476,000 square feet of new construction for about $308 million. The Pasco-Pinellas proposal is more reasonably sized to meet the needs of the Wesley Chapel area and, in turn, Subdistrict 5-2. The difference in size and cost of the two proposals, however, is a function of a major difference in approach in the applications. Pasco-Pinellas' proposal is for a typical community hospital that would start out with a bed size within a range that includes 80 beds. BayCare, on the other hand, proposes to serve not only the Wesley Chapel area and Subdistrict 5-2, but also a substantial population of patients to be drawn to the subdistrict particularly from Hillsborough County. Patients migrating to the hospital from outside the subdistrict will for the most part be the product of BayCare's affiliation with USF Health and its service to the USF College of Medicine in its proposal denominated in the application as a "teaching hospital." Need for a New Teaching Hospital "Teaching hospital" is a term defined in the Health Facility and Services Development Act, sections 408.031-408.045, Florida Statutes: "Teaching hospital" means any Florida hospital officially affiliated with an accredited Florida medical school which exhibits activity in the area of graduate medical education as reflected by at least seven different graduate medical education programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education or the Council of Postdoctoral Training of the American Osteopathic Association and the presence of 100 or more full-time equivalent resident physicians. The Director of the Agency for Health Care Administration shall be responsible for determining which hospital meets this definition. § 408.07(45), Fla. Stat. The Agency has not determined that BayCare's proposal meets the statutory definition as directed by the statute for it to qualify as a "teaching hospital." The record indicates that the proposal is not a typical teaching hospital. For example, teaching hospitals in the United States are usually located near indigent populations to achieve the efficiency of training future practitioners with treating people who otherwise could not afford services. BayCare's proposal in a small county with a more affluent population does not serve that purpose. BayCare contends neither that it is a "statutory" teaching hospital nor that it should be determined by the Agency to meet the statutory definition of "teaching hospital." Instead it grounds its case for need in the teaching functions its proposal would fulfill for USF Health and in particular for the GME needs of the students of the USF College of Medicine and the results those teaching functions would produce. Considerable testimony was offered by BayCare at hearing with regard to GME and the needs and aspirations of the USF College of Medicine. The Dean of the College, Stephen K. Klasko, M.D., spiritedly and eloquently related a narrative of need which was supported and amplified by other witnesses including faculty members at the college. There were many elements to the narrative. Highlights include the hybrid nature of the USF College of Medicine, "acting like a research intensive medical school . . . in a community-based body" (tr. 1132)," its on-going successful striving towards becoming an academic center for world class physicians as evidenced by this year's receipt of a research grant from the National Institute for Health, "the largest . . . given to a medical school in the last four or five years," id., and the GME challenges the college faces in the Tampa Bay area such as the recent loss of its anesthesiology residency program. BayCare's opponents point out the many ways in which the proposal is not only not a statutory teaching hospital but does not fit a nationwide model for teaching hospitals. BayCare counters that its model is one of many different models for a teaching facility. Whatever the merits of the various assertions of the parties on the point, USF's need for a teaching facility will be filled at least in part by the BayCare proposal. It is not an exaggeration, moreover, to call USF's need in this regard compelling. USF's institution-specific need, however, does not fall under any of the CON review criteria. See paragraphs 167- 8, below, in the Conclusions of Law. Perhaps not unmindful of the limits of the criteria, BayCare's presented other evidence that flows from the teaching function of the BayCare proposal. Relevant to the general criterion of "need" in subsection (1) of the Statutory CON Review Criteria, the evidence relates to physician shortages. The Physician Shortage There is a shortage of physicians in the district as there is in Pasco County. The problem has statewide dimensions. The state is not doing enough to replace aging doctors in Florida with younger doctors. Nor are aging doctors providing sufficient emergency room call coverage. The physician shortage both in general and in emergency rooms in the state is likely to increase. Residents are more likely to remain and practice in the community in which they train. Residents in the Tampa Bay area, in particular, are more likely to remain in the Tampa Bay area to practice. Even 20 residents per year in training at BayCare's proposed hospital would make a difference in existing physician shortages. Should BayCare's proposed hospital be built and operated as contemplated, the teaching functions that BayCare's application proposes to offer at the hospital would serve as a step, however small, toward meeting Florida's physician shortage as well as the shortage in District V, Pasco County, Subdistrict 5-2 and the Tampa Bay area. Nonetheless, there is a feature of this case that undermines BayCare's claim that the proposal will aid the physician shortage and its denomination in the application of the proposal as a "teaching hospital." The feature is present in the agreement between USF and BayCare (the "BayCare and USF Agreement) to make the BayCare proposed hospital a University Hospital. The BayCare and USF Agreement The BayCare and USF Agreement contains a section devoted to implementation and termination. The following is excerpted from the section's six separately numbered paragraphs: The Parties [the University of South Florida Board of Trustees or USF and BayCare Health System, Inc.] shall negotiate in good faith all other terms and conditions relating to the execution and implementation of this Agreement, including, without limitation, any revisions to the provisions of the Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws of the Hospital Corporation, the terms and conditions of the Health Affiliation Agreement, the design and layout of the University Hospital . . . [etc.] and such other documents and instruments as the Parties may find necessary or desirable to implement the terms of this Agreement. In the event the Parties are unable to agree on all such terms and conditions and all such documents required to implement the terms and provisions of this Agreement despite their good faith efforts to do so, either Party shall have the option after a period of at least twenty four months from the Effective Date or six months after the final approval of the Certificate of Need for the University Hospital is received, whichever is longer, to terminate this Agreement on the terms described in this [s]ection . . . . BayCare 2, Appendix C, BayCare and USF Agreement, Section G, p. 8. (Emphasis supplied.) For USF to terminate, the terms include payment to BayCare of $500,000 and agreement that for five years after termination it will not enter into an affiliation or other agreement with any other provider for the establishment of a university hospital in Pasco County. See id. The ability of USF to terminate the agreement is not "at will." It requires good faith efforts to have been made at implementations that fail to work. Furthermore, termination is not without consequences. But the termination provision in the agreement is consistent with the lack of a condition in BayCare's application that the BayCare proposal be a teaching hospital, "one more detail that made [AHCA officials] scratch our heads about the characterization of this hospital as a teaching hospital." Tr. 2011. It is also consistent with USF's support for "legislation that would be statewide that would allow state medical schools at some point, if they chose to, to make it easier . . . to have a hospital or research hospital on campus . . . [of which] USF would be one . . . " Tr. 1190-91. Adverse Impact Providers Outside the District Evidence was produced at hearing about the adverse impact of approval of either of the two applications on providers outside the district. Objections to the evidence were taken under advisement pending consideration of post-hearing memoranda submitted by the parties. Upon consideration of the memoranda, the objections are sustained. See paragraphs 159-66, below, in the Conclusions of Law. Providers Within the District The Pasco-Pinellas proposal will have minimal impact on Community/Trinity Medical Center. Its impact on other hospitals will be minimal with the exception of its two partner hospitals--UCH and FHZ--and of those two, only FHZ is in the District. There will be no adverse impact on Community as a result of the BayCare proposal. There is little patient flow from eastern Pasco to the western Pasco hospitals. Only about 1% of the patients in eastern Pasco travel west for services at Community, Morton Plant or Bayonet Point. It is reasonable to project that there will be no material change in Community's patient draw as a result of the new Trinity Medical Center. The projections by Community's health care and financial experts of patient days that would be lost and adverse financial impact to Community/Trinity should the BayCare proposal be approved were based on faulty assumptions. The majority of the adverse impact from BayCare's proposal, as in the case of Pasco-Pinellas' proposal, will be on UCH and FHZ. Availability of Resources Nursing and Non-Nursing Staff Pasco-Pinellas should be able to recruit and retain nursing and other staff for its hospital based on the Adventist experience at FHZ. The nursing vacancy at FHZ is 1% lower than the vacancy rate reported by the Florida Hospital Association (7.5% and 8.5%, respectively.) The turn-over rate for nurses at FHZ is 12%, significantly lower than the national rate in the 18-19% range. Recruitment of nurses has been successful at FHZ particularly in the last few years. In 2007, FHZ hired 100 nurses and reduced its use of agency nursing staff by roughly 75%. Among its different recruitment tactics have been a foreign nursing program, education and training incentives, scholarships at local colleges and specialty pay programs. Pasco-Pinellas will use many of the same recruiting techniques that have been successful at FHZ. It is reasonably anticipated that the same recruitment practices employed by FHZ will work for Pasco-Pinellas. Many members of the current nursing staff at FHZ, moreover, live in the Wesley Chapel area and have expressed an interest in working at Pasco-Pinellas. Retention programs at FHZ have been aimed at retaining better nurses. These include the magnet concept and a self- governance program with "a unit based council and nursing council so nurses . . . practicing . . . at the bedside have the opportunity to help govern the practice of nursing." Tr. 225-6. Retention programs similar to those used at FHZ will be implemented at Pasco-Pinellas. Schedule 6 in Pasco-Pinellas application reflects anticipated staffing for its new hospital. The staffing model is consistent with staffing at other Adventist facilities, specifically FHZ. The average salaries and wages are based on actual salaries inflated forward to the projected date of opening. The FTEs per adjusted occupied bed are adequate and consistent with the staffing patterns at FHZ. All necessary staffing positions are accounted for and the number of FTEs and salaries are sufficient for the hospital to operate and provide high quality of care. The registered nurse FTEs, as opposed to LPNs and lower-level nursing care, in Schedule 6 offer optimal staffing to provide high quality care and positive patient safety. The nursing salaries are adequate for the time frame in which Pasco-Pinellas will open with a one-time 5% increase and a 4% increase per year from present until opening. Schedule 6 supports the reasonable expectation that Pasco-Pinellas will be able to recruit and hire nursing staff and retain an adequate staff. The proposed staffing pattern in Schedule 6 of the Pasco-Pinellas application, which includes nursing staff, moreover, is reasonable. BayCare has a comprehensive recruitment program for recruiting and retaining nursing personnel as well. The strategies include a partnership with the nursing programs at USF and St. Petersburg College. BayCare System provides additional training to its nurses and with regard to salaries has committed to remaining competitive in the market. BayCare's recruitment and retention initiatives have been successful. In the 2008 year to date at the time of hearing, BayCare System had been able to hire more experienced nurses that it did in 2007 for the same time period. Overall, the BayCare System has a turnover rate of about 15%. The RN vacancy is 10% with a 13% turnover rate. These figures are comparable to state and national figures; in some cases they are lower. With regard to non-nursing employees or team members, BayCare System also had developed recruitment initiatives that are targeted toward those individuals. BayCare System has a positive reputation in the community as a good place to work. As an example, the three St. Joseph's hospitals (St. Joseph', Women's and Children's) and South Florida Baptist received recognition among the "Best Work Places in Health Care" for the years 2005 and 2006. The award recognizes outstanding practices related to employees. BayCare has the ability to recruit and retain the staff necessary to staff the proposed BayCare SE Pasco hospital. The staffing projections in Schedule 6 of BayCare's application, which includes nursing staff, are reasonable. Physician Support Despite the physician shortage, both applicants should be able to adequately staff their hospitals with physicians as shown by the evidence with regard to physician support for the hospitals. Florida Medical Clinic (FMC), a multi-specialty physician group practice with 85 physicians, is the primary physician group that serves the Wesley Chapel area. Thirty percent of its members are family practitioners or specialists in internal medicine. The remainder of the members cover 20 or so specialties that include both secondary and tertiary specialties. FMC has determined that it will support the Pasco- Pinellas proposal through its physicians, admissions and outpatients activity. Ninety percent or more of the clinic's patients use the UCH and FHZ facilities. FMC has a long- standing relationship with the administrators, personnel, and strategic issues of FHZ and UCH and is comfortable developing future plans for a hospital facility in Wesley Chapel with the two organizations FMC is able to meet the needs of the Wesley Chapel community both today and in the future. In addition, there are numerous other individual physicians who practice in the Wesley Chapel area who "predominantly support University Community Medical Center and Florida Hospital in Zephyrhills." Tr. 63. Having relationships with physicians already in a market when a hospital is being developed is advantageous to the new hospital. Among other advantages, it minimizes resources used to recruit and move new physicians into the area. In contrast to support for the Pasco-Pinellas proposal, FMC has not made a commitment to BayCare as to its proposal because of lack of knowledge about the structure of the facility, its strategic plans and whether or not FMC's interests align with the BayCare proposal but it has not foreclosed such a commitment. The USF physicians group will be a source of many of the physicians who will staff the BayCare proposed hospital, a likely reason for FMC's lukewarm to non-existing support for BayCare's proposal. USF emergency physicians will staff the Emergency Department. The BayCare System has approximately 28 physicians with privileges at BayCare System facilities with offices in the Wesley Chapel area. The proposed BayCare hospital will be staffed by recruited physicians and USF faculty physicians. Other physicians from the Wesley Chapel area provided testimony of their support for the BayCare proposal. It is reasonable to anticipate that some local Wesley Chapel area physicians will join the medical staff of the proposed BayCare hospital. Despite the physician shortages in the subdistrict, District V and the Tampa Bay area, both Pasco-Pinellas and BayCare will be able to staff their hospitals adequately with physicians. Charity and Medicaid; Conditions Pasco-Pinellas committed to a number of conditions of its applications. These include a 12.6% commitment to charity and Medicaid; the establishment of funding for a clinic for the underserved, provision of educational programs for the community, and two neonatal transports and funding for local fire and rescue services. BayCare projects a 6.1% level of charity care, 2.4% higher than Pasco-Pinellas' charity care commitment. It projects 10.3% of its Medicaid and Medicaid HMO patients will be attributable to Medicaid and Medicaid HMO patients versus 8.9% at Pasco-Pinellas. BayCare System has a history of providing services to Medicaid and Charity Patients. In 2006, for example, as not- for-profit entities, BayCare System facilities and related entities provided a total community benefit of $135 million in uncompensated care. Approximately 50% was pure charity care. BayCare System facilities currently serve patients from the Wesley Chapel area, including, of course, Medicaid and charity patients. BayCare System facilities provide 57% of the charity care and 31% of the Medicaid in the market. St. Joseph's Children's Hospital and St. Joseph's Women's Hospital operate at approximately 50-to-60% Medicaid and un-reimbursed care. St. Joseph's Hospital currently serves approximately 20% of the patients from the Wesley Chapel area. St. Joseph's, however, provides 36% of the total charity, Medicaid, and Medicaid HMO care rendered to patients who reside in the Wesley Chapel area. Thus, the facilities within the BayCare System have a demonstrated track record of providing care without regard to a patient's resources. In light of the record, it is reasonable to expect BayCare to carry on in the same vein under the BayCare proposal. Utilization Schedule 5 relates to projected utilization after project completion. The projections in the schedule in Pasco- Pinellas' application were developed by looking at service area population, applying a use rate growth and taking a market share by individual zip code. They are based on the expectation that the hospital would be operating at approximately 70% occupancy in its third year of operation, which equates to an average census of approximately 56 patients. The assumptions contained in the schedule are reasonable. The utilization projections in Schedule 5 in Pasco- Pinellas' application are reasonable; they indicate that an 80- bed hospital is appropriate to meet the need for a new hospital in the Wesley Chapel area of the subdistrict. BayCare will able to achieve its projected utilization from its primary service area and from the 40% of its patients it expects to receive by way of in-migration. The population forecast and market share forecast for the primary service area are reasonable. While the support among local physicians is much stronger for the Pasco-Pinellas proposal, it is likely that they will admit patients to the BayCare proposed hospital since it will be in the Wesley Chapel area, the area of the subdistrict that is most suitable for a new hospital. The 40% projected in-migration from outside of the seven mile service area is a reasonable projection. It is reasonable to expect that the bulk of these admissions will come from USF physicians located at the USF north Hillsborough campus. Projected Revenues Schedule 7A governs projected revenues. The payor mix in Schedule 7A of Pasco-Pinellas' application is based on historic admission and patient days by payor class occurring in the proposed Pasco-Pinellas service area based on the most recent available AHCA data. Gross charges and net revenues were developed based on historical data from FHZ as reported to AHCA. These figures were inflated forward using a net increase over all in revenue payments of approximately 3%. The projected revenues including net revenues in Schedule 7A of Pasco- Pinellas' application are reasonable and consistent with the marketplace. The payor mix in BayCare's Schedule 7A was based on an analysis of patient discharge data from the proposed primary service area plus an analysis of the experience of other BayCare System facilities in the same market. It is a reasonable payor mix. It allows for consideration of the experience of BayCare System, including the high level of charity care and Medicaid and Medicaid HMO services and at the same time reflects that the Wesley Chapel area is more affluent and younger than other areas of Pasco and Hillsborough Counties. BayCare's revenue assumptions were based on an analysis of gross and net revenue per patient day from another BayCare System facility, South Florida Baptist. Financial class specific projected patient days were applied to derive a gross and net revenue number for each of the three pro forma years for the proposed project denominated by Schedule 7A as "Projected Operating Year 1, 2 and 3" and ending "12/31/11, 12/31/12 and 12/31/13" respectively as indicated by BayCare in the application. See BayCare 2, pp. 133-135. The 2006 South Florida Baptist gross and net revenue per patient day were trended forward for each of the three projected operating years to reach the projected revenue figures in Schedule 7A. The projected revenues in Schedule 7A of the BayCare application are reasonable. Projected Income and Expenses Schedule 8A in a CON application contains projected income and expenses for the proposal. Pasco-Pinellas' application used a methodology in Schedule 8 that its expert had used in other CON cases. The methodology is consistent with methodologies of other health care experts and has been accepted in recommended and final orders in CON cases. The projections in Schedule 8 of Pasco-Pinellas' application are appropriate and reasonable. BayCare's methodology used to project income and expenses in Schedule 8A is also appropriate and reasonable. BayCare's healthcare finance expert asked BayCare financial analysts to look at his initial projections. They recommended that expenses be increased in physical therapy, radiology lab and pharmacy and that expense be reduced in plant operations. The recommendations were accepted; the projections were adjusted. Medicare GME reimbursement in year 3 of operations was assumed to be $1.7 million. If no addition Medicare GME reimbursement were received, BayCare's proposal would still show a profit of $2.8 million by year 3. It is virtually certain, moreover, that some portion of the $1.7 million included in calculation of BayCare's income projections will be realized. However valid criticism of the inclusion of the $1.7 million, BayCare's proposal remains financially feasible in the long- term. Financial Feasibility Pasco-Pinellas proved the immediate and long-term financial feasibility of its proposal. The schedules in its application related to financial feasibility used reasonable methodologies that yielded reasonable projections. Analysis of capital costs and funding is contained in Schedules 1 through 3. Schedule 1 presents an accurate summation of total project cost. That figure, $121 million, is a reasonable and typical cost for a new 80-bed community hospital. The $149 million on Schedule 2 reflects an accurate summation of anticipated capital costs, including the hospital project and necessary capital expenditures for the first tow or three years of operation. Schedule 3 set forth the sources of funding, a combination of equity and debt financing, discussed below. Both UCH and Adventist are financially successful systems. They will have not difficulty funding the Pasco- Pinellas proposal. As of December 31, 2007, Adventist's net revenue was approximately $368 million. About $100 million in funds were available to UCH at the time of hearing to contribute to development of the project. Due to the financial strength of its members, Pasco- Pinellas will easily be able to fund the project through a combination of equity and debt. The equity, $45 million, will be provided equally by Adventist and UCH, $22.5 million each. The remaining $76 million will be financed through tax-free bonds issued by Ziegler Securities. The project is immediately financially feasible. The Pasco-Pinellas project is also financially feasible in the long-term. Schedule 8 in the application, year 3, shows the project will generate a return of approximately $5.3 million in revenue over expenses, an amount that "more than meet[s] the test for financial feasibility in the long-term." Id. Based on the sources of BayCare System, BayCare has access to the financial resources to implement its proposed hospital. Funding for the hospital will come from BayCare System on the basis of 50% debt and 50% equity investment. As of early 2008, BayCare System had approximately $1.2 billion in unrestricted cash on hand. BayCare System's financial strength will allow BayCare to obtain the financing it needs for the project. Schedule 3 of the BayCare application sets forth an accurate and reasonable statement of the sources of funds necessary to develop the project. The immediate financial feasibility of BayCare's proposal is demonstrated by the evidence presented by BayCare. By year three of the pro forma, the BayCare proposal is reasonably projected to generate a net income over expenses in the amount of $4,498,637. BayCare demonstrated that the proposal's long-term financial feasibility. Costs and Construction Methods The costs and methods of the proposed construction of the Pasco-Pinellas project are reasonable. The facility is adequately sized and programmed for the services included in the Pasco-Pinellas application. All of the departments, including central storage, fall within an appropriate benchmark range for community hospitals. The 2,300 square feet per bed is reasonable as are the construction costs when compared to similar community hospitals. The proposed Pasco-Pinellas facility meets the codes for all of the services included in the application. The design of the Pasco-Pinellas facility enable expansion. The designed expansion capabilities are reasonable, logical and appropriate to meet the needs of the Wesley Chapel community. The drawings contained in the CON application show an efficient community hospital. The departments allow for efficient intra-department circulation and department-to- department circulation. There are adequate separation of public and staff flow corridors. All of the areas and departments as shown in the Pasco-Pinellas plans are code compliant. The layout of the patient rooms is consistent with industry standards for the design of single patient rooms. The number and size of the operating rooms are adequate and appropriate for an 80-bed community hospital not offering tertiary services. The emergency department, including the trauma room, complies with code and its layout is adequate and appropriate for an 80-bed hospital. The ambulance entrance in relation to the trauma bay allows for efficient location of patients based on acuity level. The number of treatment beds, treatment bays, including observation areas, provide adequate emergency department capacity. The Schedule 1 costs set forth in the BayCare application are reasonable. These costs include projected costs associated with necessary medical equipment. The medical equipment costs set forth in Schedule 1 are reasonable and BayCare has properly accounted for the items and costs of equipment necessary to operate the hospital. The Schedule 9 construction costs of approximately $180 million are reasonable as are the construction costs per square foot ($347 versus $325 for Pasco-Pinellas). Contingencies and escalation factors have been built into the projected costs. Facilities, Sites, Related Costs At the time the UCH and Adventist joint venture was formed, UCH had a parcel of land under contract located on State Road 54 across from the Saddlebrook Resort (the "UCH Parcel"). When it filed its application, Pasco-Pinellas hoped the UCH Parcel would serve as the site of its hospital. In fact, Pasco- Pinellas touted the location of the parcel for meeting the need of the growing population in Pasco County when it represented in the application that the UCH Parcel is the center point of the Wesley Chapel area. Close to Interstate 75, the UCH Parcel is a good location for a hospital. Pasco-Pinellas' aspiration for the use of the parcel was defeated, however, when the Pasco County denied a request to re-zone the UCH Parcel for use as a hospital. After the inability to have the UCH Parcel re-zoned, Pasco-Pinellas changed the site for the hospital to a parcel owned by FHZ (the "Pasco-Pinellas Site"). Located on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard, a major north-south corridor in the Wesley Chapel area, the site is 51.5 acres. The Pasco-Pinellas Site had been purchased by FHZ in 2001 with the intention of using it for a hospital. Subject to a height variance to allow a seven-story building, the site is zoned for special use as a hospital and related medical uses. The site has good visibility and access from Bruce B. Downs Boulevard as evidenced by its compliance with the State Road 581 (Bruce B. Downs Boulevard) access management plan. It meets other regulatory requirements such as the minimum spacing criteria for Pasco County. The Pasco-Pinellas Site is governed by a development order associated with the Wiregrass Ranch Development of Regional Impact (the "Wiregrass DRI DO"). The Wiregrass DRI DO "indicates that the phasing schedule assumed 100 hospital beds would be developed within the building phase." Tr. 597. As explained at hearing by Lara Daly, Pasco-Pinellas' expert in civil engineering and property site development, there are other aspects of the Wiregrass DRI DO, "like trade-off matrices" and "entitlement advancements" that indicate "entitlements are not limited on a parcel-by-parcel basis." Tr. 598. The assumption, therefore, does not necessarily restrict the number of hospital beds on the Pasco-Pinellas Site; rather it allows impacts associated with 100 hospital beds. The number of allowable beds may be increased following action taken under other provisions of the Wiregrass DRI DO. A significant portion of the Pasco-Pinellas Site is wetlands: some of low quality, some of high quality. The higher quality wetlands, referred to in the record as "a high quality category 1 wetland as defined by Pasco County," tr. 552, (the "Category 1 Wetland") are on the north and east perimeter of the site. The project is designed so as to have no impacts on the Category 1 Wetland. The only potential impact to these high quality wetlands is if there were a county-mandated road to be built in their vicinity. The lesser quality wetlands located in the interior of the site are herbaceous in nature or an open water feature that is "an older borrow pit that naturalized over time." Tr. 552-53. These lower quality wetlands constitute roughly 11.5 acres of the site. They will be impacted by the project but it is reasonable to expect that the impacts will be permitted. As Ms. Daly put it at hearing, "[a]fter reviewing, running stormwater models, looking at the proposed wetland impacts, coming up with appropriate mitigation ratios based on our experience elsewhere on the Wiregrass site, the site will accommodate all the necessary wetland and floodplain historic basin compensation . . . ." Tr. 550. The costs contained in Schedule 1 of the application were arrived assuming the use of the UCH Parcel as the site for the Pasco-Pinellas project. The Pasco-Pinellas Site requires expenditures for site preparation and other expenditures, such as wetland mitigation, related to the site that were not required had the UCH Parcel been used. For example, three potential foundation systems have been suggested for the hospital because of the wetland and subsurface conditions on the Pasco-Pinellas Site had the UCH Parcel been the site. Using the most expensive of the three, however, would not cause Pasco- Pinellas to exceed the construction costs contained in Schedule 1 of the CON Application. The land acquisition costs were reasonably projected to be less for the Pinellas-Pasco Site than for the UCH Parcel as reflected in the application. All told, the estimated project cost using the Pasco-Pinellas site was not materially different from the cost projected in the application and presented the possibility of being less than the $121 million reflected in the application. Likewise, the equipment cost figure shown in Schedule 1 of the Pasco-Pinellas application is reasonable and achievable. The total of the costs for the project sited at the Pasco-Pinellas Site, despite the change of site that occurred after the filing of the application, should not exceed the total of the costs listed in the Pasco-Pinellas application. The preponderance of the evidence is that the Pasco- Pinellas Site should ultimately qualify as an appropriate, developable site for the Pasco-Pinellas project. The BayCare site, north of Highway 56 and bordering I-75, (the "BayCare Site") includes two parcels of 54 and 17 acres. The 54 contiguous acres will be used for the hospital, outpatient services, and a planned medical office building. The 17 acres will be used for research space, physician office space, and academic training space necessary for the research and education function at the project. BayCare has the appropriate zoning and approvals necessary to develop the hospital. The hospital will have all private beds. It will be fully digital and will rely on electronic medical records. The BayCare Site is well suited for construction of the hospital and related buildings. The available footprint and design of the hospital, which includes shelled-in space, will readily allow for future expansion of the hospital up to 300 beds. Design of the BayCare facility is based on principles of family-centered care, flexibility to allow for change and future growth, efficiency, a quality of environment for teaching, a sustainable, green building, and patient safety. A "health building" with improved environmental quality and energy efficiency, the facility will seek LEED certification given to facilities constructed to have minimal adverse environmental impact. In keeping with the teaching function intended by the application, the facility's design includes additional work space, reading areas, sleep areas and conference rooms to facilitate teaching. Overall, the BayCare facility is twice as large as the Pasco-Pinellas facility. Size has its advantages. For example, it allows for larger treatment patient areas. But the facility is much more expensive to build. It is reasonably projected to cost more than $180 million above the costs associated with the Pasco-Pinellas facility which is more than twice as much. The high expense associated with the BayCare facility is shown by its cost per bed: in excess of $2 million-- much more than the cost per bed of the Pasco-Pinellas facility.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is recommended that the Agency for Health Care Administration approve CON 9975, Pasco-Pinellas' application for a new hospital in AHCA Subdistrict 5-2, and deny CON 9977, BayCare's application for a new hospital in the same subdistrict. DONE AND ENTERED this 28th day of October, 2008, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S DAVID M. MALONEY Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 28th day of October, 2008. COPIES FURNISHED: Richard J. Shoop, Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive, Building 3 Mail Station 3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Craig H. Smith, General Counsel Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive, Building 3 Mail Station 3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Karin M. Byrne, Esquire Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive, Building 3 Mail Station 3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Stephen K. Boone, Esquire Boone, Boone, Boone, Koda & Frook, P.A. 1001 Avenida Del Circo Post Office Box 1596 Venice, Florida 34284 Jonathan L. Rue, Esquire Parker, Hudson, Rainer & Dobbs, LLP 1500 Marquis Two Tower 285 Peachtree Center Avenue Northeast Atlanta, Georgia 30303 Robert A. Weiss, Esquire Parker, Hudson, Rainer & Dobbs, LLP The Perkins House, Suite 200 118 North Gadsden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 R. David Prescott, Esquire Rutledge, Ecenia, Purnell & Hoffman, P.A. 215 South Monroe Street, Suite 420 Post Office Box 551 Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0551

Florida Laws (5) 26.56408.034408.035408.039408.07
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CATHOLIC HOSPICE OF BROWARD, INC. vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 94-004772CON (1994)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Aug. 30, 1994 Number: 94-004772CON Latest Update: Aug. 24, 1995

Findings Of Fact The following is a statement of the facts taken verbatim from the Memorandum of Law in Opposition To Motion For Summary Recommended Order: The following facts are either evident from documents before the hearing officer, the authenticity of which are not disputed, or are contained in the Affidavit of Mr. Fitzgerald. On February 11, 1994, a board of directors meeting was held. The board that met is the governing body of Catholic Health Services, Inc. and also the governing body of Catholic Hospice of Broward, Inc. Fitzgerald Affidavit. On the day the meeting was held, Catholic Health Services, Inc. existed as a corporation. Catholic Hospice of Broward, Inc., however, did not exist on February 11, 1994; rather the Articles of Incorporation had been prepared and were on the desk of Archbishop McCarthy awaiting his signature. Among the items for the board to decide at that meeting was whether Catholic Hospice of Broward, Inc. should be formed as a Florida corporation to apply for a certificate of need for a new hospice program in Broward County. If the board decided against filing a certificate of need application, it would not be necessary to form this new corporation. The minutes of the board meeting reflect that: Included in the agenda package is a secretary's Certificate indicating that the Board authorizes the filing of the application for CON and authorizes the expenditures necessary in the pursuit and completion of this project and operation of Catholic Hospice of Broward, Inc. Also included is a draft of the Letter of Intent which would need to be filed no later than February 22, 1994, subject to the Archbishop's approval of the Articles of Incorporation. * * * A motion was then made by Fr. Whittaker to approve, pending the Archbishop's signature on the Articles of Incorporation, the filing of a Certificate of Need to establish a hospice in Broward county; seconded by Ralph Lawson, all were in favor. Msgr. Walsh abstained from the vote. Although not expressly reflected in the minutes, this board action was not to be effective until the applicant corporation, Catholic Hospice of Broward, Inc. existed. Fitzgerald Affidavit. The Articles of Incorporation were to be filed immediately upon being signed by the Archbishop. 1/ The February 11, 1994 board minutes were not drafted, or crafted, for purposes of scrutiny under a hot light by AHCA, or perhaps other interest, to support an attempt to defeat the company's certificate of need. Nor were they drafted to address every conceivable argument that could be advanced concerning letter of intent or resolution requirements of the statute or rules. Fitzgerald Affidavit. Following the February 11, 1994 board meeting, Archbishop McCarthy signed the Articles of Incorporation on February 16, 1994.2 The articles were filed at the Secretary of State on February 18, 1994.3 That same day, Brother Paul Johnson, Secretary of the new corporation, signed the Resolution "enacted on February 18, 1994" consistent with the board's direction that the Resolution not be effective until the corporation was formed.4 Subsequently, the letter of intent and Resolution were timely filed on or before February 22, 1994. . . . Catholic Hospice asserts that a second, redundant board meeting, following the filing of the articles of incorporation would have been unnecessary and superfluous. No subsequent action has been taken to ratify the resolution of February 11, 1994. AHCA argues that the resolution is void because the directors had no power to act on February 11, 1994, on behalf of a corporation which did not exist until the articles of incorporation were filed on February 18, 1994. Subsequently, in March 1994, Catholic Hospice filed its application for certificate of need number 7690, which was the subject of its February 22nd letter of intent.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the certificate of need application, number 7690, filed by Catholic Hospice, Inc., be denied. DONE AND ENTERED this 2nd day of June, 1995, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. ELEANOR M. HUNTER Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 2nd day of June, 1995. COPIES FURNISHED: Richard Patterson, Esquire Senior Attorney Agency for Health Care Administration 325 John Knox Road, Suite 301 Tallahassee, Florida 32303-4131 Paul H. Amundsen, Esquire AMUNDSEN & MOORE 502 East Park Avenue Tallahassee, Florida 32301 R. S. Power, Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration Atrium Building, Suite 301 325 John Knox Road Tallahassee, Florida 32303 Jerome W. Hoffman General Counsel Agency For Health Care Administration The Atrium, Suite 301 325 John Knox Road Tallahassee, Florida 32303

Florida Laws (3) 120.57408.039607.0203
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AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION vs HOSPICE INT. HEALTH SERVICES/DISTRICT VIIB, FL, D/B/A SAMARITAN CARE HOSPICE, 10-001887MPI (2010)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Apr. 12, 2010 Number: 10-001887MPI Latest Update: Sep. 21, 2010

Conclusions THE PARTIES resolved all disputed issues and executed a settlement agreement, which is attached and incorporated by reference. The parties are directed to comply with the terms of the attached settlement agreement. Based on the foregoing, this file is hereby CLOSED. DONE AND ORDERED on this Ig¢* day of Sacto who , 2010, in Tallahassee, Florida. Elizabeth Dudek, Interim aay Agency for Health Care Administration Hospice Int. Health Services/ District VIIB, FL d/b/a Samaritan Care Hospice (DOAH No.: 10-1887MPI) Final Order Page | of 3 Filed September 21, 2010 9:00 AM Division of Administrative Hearings. A PARTY WHO IS ADVERSELY AFFECTED BY THIS FINAL ORDER IS ENTITLED TO A JUDICIAL REVIEW WHICH SHALL BE INSTITUTED BY FILING ONE COPY OF A NOTICE OF APPEAL WITH THE AGENCY CLERK OF AHCA, AND A SECOND COPY ALONG WITH FILING FEE AS PRESCRIBED BY LAW, WITH THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL IN THE APPELLATE DISTRICT WHERE THE AGENCY MAINTAINS ITS HEADQUARTERS OR WHERE A PARTY RESIDES. REVIEW PROCEEDINGS SHALL BE CONDUCTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE FLORIDA APPELLATE RULES. THE NOTICE OF APPEAL MUST BE FILED WITHIN 30 DAYS OF RENDITION OF THE ORDER TO BE REVIEWED. Copies furnished to: Lester Jerome Perling, Esquire Broad & Cassel One Financial Plaza, Suite 2700 100 Southeast 3rd Avenue Fort Lauderdale, FL 33394 (Via U.S. Mail) Tracie L. Hardin, Esquire Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Building 3, Mail Station 3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 (Interoffice Mail) Agency for Health Care Administration Bureau of Finance and Accounting 2727 Mahan Drive Building 2, Mail Station 14 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 (Interoffice Mail) Bureau of Health Quality Assurance 2727 Mahan Drive, Mail Stop 9 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 License No.: 50370963 (Interoffice Mail) Mike Blackburn, Bureau Chief Medicaid Program Integrity 2727 Mahan Drive Building 2, Mail Station 6 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 (Interoffice Mail) Peter Williams, Inspector General Medicaid Program Integrity 2727 Mahan Drive Building 2, Mail Station 6 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 (Interoffice Mail) Division of Administrative Hearings The Desoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (Via U.S. Mail) Florida Department of Health (Via Email Only) Hospice Int. Health Services/ District VIIB, FL d/b/a Samaritan Care Hospice (DOAH No.: 10-1887MPI) CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true and correct copy of the foregoing has been furnished to the above named addressees by U.S. Mail, or the method designated, on this the VAS day of gore Ae , 2010. Richard Shoop, Esquire Agency Clerk State of Florida Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive, Building #3 Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403 (850) 412-3630 Hospice Int. Health Services/ District VIIB, FL d/b/a Samaritan Care Hospice (DOAH No.: 10-1887MPI) Final Order Page 3 of 3

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ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL, INC. vs GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPITAL, INC., D/B/A GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPITAL AND AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 93-000956CON (1993)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Feb. 23, 1993 Number: 93-000956CON Latest Update: Jan. 26, 1995

Findings Of Fact Good Samaritan Hospital, Inc. d/b/a Good Samaritan Medical Center ("Good Samaritan") is a 341 bed not-for-profit community hospital in West Palm Beach, established over 73 years ago. West Palm Beach is located in Agency for Health Care Administration ("AHCA") District 9. Its services include obstetrics and neonatal, medical and pediatric intensive care. Good Samaritan also opened an outpatient cardiac catheterization ("cath") laboratory of 1399 gross square feet, approximately two weeks prior to the start of the final hearing in this case. The establishment of an outpatient laboratory does not require a certificate of need. At the time the final hearing commenced, two procedures had been performed in the Good Samaritan outpatient cath lab. Written protocals exist for transfers to facilities with open heart surgery programs. Here, Good Samaritan is an applicant for a certificate of need ("CON") to provide adult inpatient cardiac cath services in the same cath lab. AHCA is the state agency which administers CON laws in Florida. AHCA published, on August 7, 1992, a fixed need pool showing a net need for two additional cardiac cath programs in AHCA District 9. On January 11, 1993, AHCA issued a State Agency Action Report ("SAAR") preliminarily approving Good Samaritan's CON. St. Mary's Hospital, Inc. ("St. Mary's") is a 430 bed hospital with acute care, psychiatric, and Levels II and III neonatal intensive care beds, located in West Palm Beach, Florida in AHCA District 9. St. Mary's is located 3 miles, or a 5 to 7 minute drive from Good Samaritan, and is an existing provider of adult inpatient cardiac cath services. Open heart surgery services are not available at St. Mary's. Palm Beach Gardens Community Hospital, Inc. ("Palm Beach Gardens") also in AHCA District 9, is located approximately a 25 minute drive from St. Mary's. Palm Beach Gardens' services include adult inpatient cardiac cath in a two room laboratory, and open heart surgery. There are eleven cath labs in District 9. Palm Beach Regional, Lawnwood in St. Lucie County, and a doctor in Martin County operate outpatient facilities. Five hospitals serve inpatients and outpatients - Boca Raton, St. Mary's, Martin Memorial, Bethesda, and Indian River. Three others, Palm Beach Gardens, JFK Medical Center and Delray Community Hospital, have cardiac cath labs at hospitals which also provide open heart surgery services. By prehearing stipulation, the parties agreed that the historical quality of care at Good Samaritan is not at issue. Palm Beach Gardens asserts that Good Samaritan's application was incomplete. Application Content Submitted with the Good Samaritan application was a certificate of the custodian of its records which relied on an April 20, 1989 resolution of Good Samaritan's Board of Directors as authorization for the filing of ". . . an application as described in the Letter of Intent." On August 25, 1989, Good Samaritan filed a letter of intent, with the Board's April 20, 1989 resolution, announcing its intent to apply on September 27, 1989, to establish inpatient cardiac cath and open heart surgery services, and to convert ten medical/surgical beds to intensive care beds for an estimated capital cost of $4,950,000. The 1989 resolution has not been withdrawn. The President of Good Samaritan, William J. Byron, testified that Good Samaritan never filed a joint application for cardiac cath, open heart surgery and intensive care beds, as described in the 1989 letter of intent. Good Samaritan also, he testified, never filed an application for cardiac cath services in 1989, but did file cardiac cath applications in 1990, and 1991 and the one at issue, in 1992. In February 1991, Good Samaritan's Board passed a resolution authorizing the filing of a CON application for inpatient cardiac cath services. Mr. Byron considered that resolution a reaffirmation of the 1989 resolution and decided to file the 1989 resolution with this application. The predecessor of AHCA initially notified Good Samaritan that the 1989 letter of intent for combined services was rejected. Subsequently, in November 1989, Good Samaritan was notified that the initial rejection applied to open heart surgery, because these were competing applicants, but that it would extend a grace period to apply for cardiac cath services to October 27, 1989, due to the absence of any competing applicants. What was intended in the letter which postdated the date it gave for the grace period was not established. Mr. Byron testified that Good Samaritan filed the February 1990 application, referencing the 1989 resolution, in accordance with the agency's grant of a grace period. Need For the Subject Project In August 1992, AHCA published its finding that a numeric need exists for two additional adult inpatient cardiac cath programs in District 9, by July 1995. The 1990-1991 local health plan for District 9 includes two factors for determining need and for allocating CONs for cardiac cath and open heart surgery services. The first District 9 factor favors facilities with an historical record of or commitment to serving Medicaid and indigent, handicapped or other underserved population groups. Good Samaritan's service to Medicaid patients increased from .2 percent in 1985 to 1.1 percent in 1989, then from 5.0 percent in 1990 to 11.2 percent of total admissions in 1992. Mr. Jay Cushman testified that the Medicaid commitment and record may be evaluated by comparing Good Samaritan to St. Mary's because they share a medical service area. Medicaid admissions to St. Mary's were 7.7 percent in 1985, 17.5 percent in 1989, 19.7 percent in 1990, and 32.0 percent in 1992. Therefore, as Mr. Cushman observed, the widening gap in the same service area is not indicative of Good Samaritan's historical record or present commitment to serve Medicaid patients. The District 9 plan also gives priority to applicants who propose to establish inpatient cardiac cath and open heart surgery services at the same facility when both are needed. The preference is inapplicable to the review of this application cycle, because no need was published for additional open heart surgery services in the district. There was testimony that Good Samaritan was, at the time of hearing, an applicant for an open heart surgery CON, having applied in March 1993, and had been preliminarily denied. The preference statement that an applicant "would not be expected to have to apply for both" describes the situation at the time of Good Samaritan's application. Therefore, the preference neither supports nor detracts from this application. The 1989 State Health Plan contains a similar preference for an applicant proposing both cardiac cath and open heart surgery services in response to a publication of the need for both. To have any practical effect in a comparative review process, avoiding speculation on the outcome of other pending administrative cases, the preference has to be understood to favor an applicant for cardiac cath and open heart surgery over an applicant for only cardiac cath in the same batching cycle. Therefore, the preference is inapplicable to this application for cardiac cath services, despite evidence of an open heart surgery application in a subsequent batching cycle. The state preference for the establishment of a new cardiac cath program in a county without such programs is not met. See, Findings of Fact 5. The state plan preference for disproportionate share charity care and Medicaid providers does not support approval of the Good Samaritan application. See, Finding of Facts 16, supra. The state preference for hospitals which accept patients regardless of ability to pay is met by Good Samaritan. On balance, there is no showing of the need for Good Samaritan's proposal to advance the special interests identified in the state and District 9 health plans. Good Samaritan argues that its inpatients should have access to its new, state-of-the-art cath lab to avoid costs and disruptions associated with unnecessary transfers. The argument is rejected as inconsistent with the regulatory scheme and need criteria established by statutes and rules. Testifying about AHCA's preliminary approval of Good Samaritan's application, Good Samaritan's expert, Ronald Luke, Ph.D., described the objective as improving access to care for the underserved, meaning uninsured, because ". . . there is no question - - no question - - that there is sufficient physical capacity in the market to perform the projected number of caths . . ." Transcript, Vol. 9, p. 1154. At hearing, David Musgrave, Good Samaritan's financial officer, and Dr. Luke asserted that Good Samaritan would perform caths on 100 more indigents than originally represented in the application. The application projected 3 percent indigent and 2 percent Medicaid payer categories. In the pro forma marked as exhibit 39, Good Samaritan projected 2.7 percent indigent care. There is no credible evidence to demonstrate that Good Samaritan can recruit an additional 100 indigent cardiac cath patients, through contacts with public health agencies. Utilization Projections Two major issues in dispute, which partially depend on the accuracy of utilization projections, are the requirements of Rule 59C-1.032(8)(b) that an applicant reasonably project 300 cath lab visits within two years of operation, and the long-term financial feasibility of the proposal. According to Dr. Luke, the 300 minimum annual procedures for a cath lab and 150 for invasive cardiologists who perform caths are standards set by the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiac Catherization and Cardiac Catheterization Laboratories. The standards are set to insure that sufficient numbers of procedures are performed to maintain staff and cardiologists' proficiency. Good Samaritan's application includes projections of 270 caths in year one and 360 in year two. Initially, a minimum of 119 caths is reasonably expected, based on that number of inpatients transferred in 1992 from Good Samaritan for cath inpatient procedures at other hospitals. The experts for Good Samaritan compare its proposal to the operations of the cath lab at Boca Raton Community Hospital ("Boca Raton"), which has no open heart surgery services and a closed in-house cathing staff. A "closed staff" limits those who perform cath lab procedures to invasive cardiologists based at the facility. After opening in October 1987, Boca Raton has had the following number of cath procedures performed at its hospital: 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 621 658 644 530 487 Like Boca Raton, Good Samaritan also proposes to have a closed lab. It will be headed by a hospital-employed physician. An agreement with the medical school at Duke University will allow the staff cathing physician to maintain the necessary personal clinical skills by performing sufficient numbers of additional procedures at Duke. Good Samaritan shares its medical staff and medical service area with St. Mary's. St. Mary's experts project that Good Samaritan would be another low volume provider in the area, primarily due to the lack of back-up open heart surgery services. Volumes of cath procedures reported at St. Mary's, which opened in February 1988, are as follows: 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 229 292 323 381 359 St. Mary's has an open cathing staff. Its lab is used by a number of different invasive cardiologists, who also practice primarily at other hospitals which have open heart surgery services available. Palm Beach Gardens also has an open cardiac cath staff, although a number of the cathing physicians are based at the hospital. However, Palm Beach Gardens also has open heart surgery services. It's volumes from 1988-1992 were as follows: 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1598 1392 1587 1824 1750 Clearly, both the presence or absence of open heart surgery and the internal operations of a lab affect the volumes of procedures performed at any cardiac cath lab. The greater weight of the evidence suggests that the presence of open heart surgery is more determinative of cath lab utilization than the internal operations of the cath lab. Despite evidence of increasing use rates in District 9, Good Samaritan has failed to demonstrate that its projected utilization is reasonable. All of the growth in volume in Palm Beach County in 1992 is attributable to JFK Medical Center and Delray Community Hospital, both of which have open heart surgery and to Bethesda, with a new program in 1992 and 249 procedures. Declines in volume occurred at both mature inpatient programs without open heart surgery in Palm Beach County, St. Mary's and Boca Raton. The suggestion that 1992 is an aberration in this regard, is rejected. See, Findings of Facts 28 and 30. Impact On Existing Providers The highest reasonable expectation of volumes for St. Mary's cath lab in 1993 is 330 visits. From October 1, 1991 through September 30, 1992, Good Samaritan transferred 13 to 14 inpatients to St. Mary's for cardiac caths. Subsequently, in December 1992, a group of internists sold their practices to Good Samaritan. The patient volume of that group, one internist estimated, will result in the referral of 150 to 200 patients for cardiac caths over the next year or two. Based on their staff affiliations, it is reasonable to expect that a significant number of their referrals will be diverted from St. Mary's. One doctor in a group of invasive cardiologists, which has performed approximately 150 cardiac caths a year at St. Mary's, expects 75 to 90 of the cases would have been done at a Good Samaritan inpatient lab, if that alternative had existed. It is reasonable to expect that an inpatient cardiac cath program at Good Samaritan will result in a loss of up to 80 visits to the St. Mary's cath lab in 1995 and 1996. As a result, the St. Mary's program would be below 300 procedures (visits) a year minimum quality of care standard, with no assurance that Good Samaritan could exceed the standard. Good Samaritan describes the financial impact on St. Mary's of an inpatient cath lab as relatively insignificant, because the more detrimental impact will occur as a result of the already established outpatient lab. Good Samaritan estimates, however, that 70 percent of its cardiac cath patients will be inpatient and 30 percent will be outpatients. St. Mary's financial loss would be $188,000 if Good Samaritan reaches 480 procedures, according to Good Samaritan's expert. Good Samaritan concedes that St. Mary's is at risk of performing less than 300 procedures and, therefore, that the quality of care in the St. Mary's cath lab would decline. However, as Good Samaritan notes the decrease in volumes below 300 may occur whether or not Good Samaritan's proposal is approved. Cardiac cath volumes are declining at mature inpatient programs which do not have open heart surgery services. The establishment of a program at Good Samaritan would accelerate that trend at St. Mary's. See, Finding of Facts 33. When Good Samaritan's cardiac cath volumes reach 240 visits, Palm Beach Gardens expects to lose 44 cardiac cath visits and $134,000 pre-tax revenue in Good Samaritan's second and third year of operation. If, as projected by Good Samaritan, its volumes reached 480 visits, a loss of 88 cardiac caths or approximately $250,000 to $270,000 is projected. Good Samaritan contends that a loss of $250,000 to $270,000 pre-taxes for Palm Beach Gardens is relatively insubstantial. After taxes, the loss is $80,000 when Good Samaritan reaches 240 cases, or $160,000 if Good Samaritan reaches 480 cases. Revenues at Palm Beach Gardens, in 1992, were approximately $8 million pre-taxes, or $5 to $6 million after taxes. Good Samaritan's contention that the loss to Palm Beach Gardens is relatively insubstantial is supported by the evidence in this case. Financial Feasibility Good Samaritan has already constructed an outpatient cardiac cath lab, which is adequately staffed and capable of serving inpatients of the facility. The immediate financial feasibility of the proposal has been established. The long term financial feasibility of the program has been questioned. The pro forma attached to the application showed a loss of $126,008 in year one, a loss of $26,967 in year two and a gain of $113,224 in year three of operations. Good Samaritan was required to include a two year pro forma in its application. In fact, Palm Beach Gardens' expert believes that profitability must be demonstrated in the second year to establish financial feasibility. Good Samaritan's projections are based on the assumption that case volumes will be 240 cases in 1994, 360 in 1995 and 480 in 1996. The assumption that Good Samaritan can reach 360 procedures in year two, while St. Mary's remains over 300 procedures is rejected. In addition, Good Samaritan's pro forma is prepared as Good Samaritan acknowledges, on a fully allocated cost basis which cannot demonstrate financial feasibility. Good Samaritan's exhibit 39 was described as a sensitivity analysis, and is also based on only slight changes in utilization assumptions caused by rounding to whole numbers. Unlike the pro forma submitted with the application, exhibit 39 clearly is an incremental analysis. Good Samaritan failed to provide AHCA adequate evidence of financial feasibility based on the pro forma included in the application. Palm Beach Gardens asserts that consideration of exhibit 39 constitutes an impermissible, untimely amendment to the application which may not be relied upon to establish financial feasibility. Mr. Musgrave, an expert in hospital financial operations, acknowledged that the information in exhibit 39 was available at the time he prepared the application pro forma. Comparing the two, he testified that among the differences are the use of different data bases, a higher Medicare case weight, a lower managed care discount rate, higher gross charges per admission, and lower indigent care percentages. Good Samaritan also failed to account for certain capital costs. Good Samaritan claims that the project has no capital costs. The State Agency Action Report determined that the $5,000 filing fee is a capital cost. At hearing, there was expert testimony that expenses and equipment required to implement video-conferencing and other direct contacts with Duke University will result in additional costs which have not been adequately considered in Good Samaritan's financial analysis. Mr. Musgrave also testified that 70 percent of the cardiac cath volume is expected to be derived from inpatients, with capital cost reimbursements from Medicare and Medicaid. When asked about Good Samaritan's claim that there are no or minimal capital costs associated with the proposal, Robert P. Maquire of AHCA testified as follows: With regard to outpatient services that are approved by non-reviewability criteria, if later a project is established as an inpatient program and does not require any new construction, those costs - - there's no allocation of costs to the inpatient factor. Transcript, Vol. VIII, p. 1041.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that an order be entered denying the application of Good Samaritan Hospital, Inc. for Certificate of Need 7086 to establish an adult inpatient cardiac catheterization program. DONE AND ENTERED this 2nd day of November, 1994, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. ELEANOR M. HUNTER Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 2nd day of November, 1994.

Florida Laws (4) 120.57408.035408.037408.039 Florida Administrative Code (3) 59C-1.00859C-1.01059C-1.032
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HOLMES REGIONAL HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS, INC. vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 88-000394 (1988)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 88-000394 Latest Update: Nov. 08, 1988

The Issue The basic issue is whether the applicant meets the relevant statutory and regulatory criteria for award of a CON. In its prehearing statement and in its proposed recommended order, HRS stipulates that the following criteria are met: Section 381.705(1)(a), F.S., regarding compliance with the district health plan; Section 381.705(1)(c), F.S., regarding the applicant's capability and record of providing quality of care; Section 381.705(1)(h), F.S., regarding the sufficiency of applicant's resources; Section 381.705(1)(m), F.S., regarding the reasonableness of proposed costs and methods of construction; and Section 381.705(2)(c), F.S., regarding the consideration of alternatives to new construction. The following statutory criteria are deemed by HRS to be inapplicable to the proposed project: Section 381.705(1)(f), F.S., regarding the need for special equipment or services not available in an adjacent district; Section 381.705(1)(g) and (h), F.S., relating to the need for research, educational and training facilities; Section 381.705(1)(j), F.S., regarding the needs of health maintenance organizations. Section 381.705(1)(k), F.S., regarding entity providing most of its services to individuals residing beyond the service district; and Section 381.705(2)(e), F.S., regarding nursing homes. HRS also concedes the numeric need formulae found in the rules do not apply, and that no HRS rule is applicable to the need in this case. (HRS proposed Recommended Order, p. 2; transcript, pp 13-14.) The remaining criteria which HRS contends are not fully met relate to accessibility, efficiency, financial feasibility and cost effectiveness. HRS states in the SAAR and argued at the hearing that Holmes' application lacked information, and that attempts to supply the information were improper amendments to the application.

Findings Of Fact The Applicant Holmes Regional Health Care Systems, Inc. is a nonprofit corporation having among its subsidiaries a 528-bed acute-care, tertiary care non-profit hospital: Holmes Regional Medical Center (HRMC) located in Melbourne, Brevard County, Florida. HRMC is the largest hospital in the Brevard subdistrict of HRS planning district 7. It employs approximately 1900 full and part-time staff; approximately 210 physicians serve on the medical staff. It offers a wide range of services, including comprehensive cardiovascular programs, pediatrics, psychiatry, all specialties in internal medicine and surgery, and a high-risk neonatal intensive care unit. HRMC is the oldest hospital in Brevard County. It opened in 1937 with 27 beds. Although the figure fluctuates frequently, at the time of hearing approximately 480 of its licensed beds were in service. Holmes is governed by a 13-member board comprised of local business professionals who serve without compensation. The Project Holmes proposes to reduce the licensed capacity of HRMC by 60 beds and to transfer those beds to a satellite facility to be constructed south of Melbourne in Palm Bay, still within Brevard County. Total project costs for the new facility, including land (already purchased), construction and equipment is $11,656,812. The 60 beds will be acute care, "medical/surgical", in 36 private rooms and 12 semi-private rooms. Pediatric, obstetric, intensive care, and other speciality services will remain at HRMC. Access Melbourne, the site of HRMC, is in the southern end of Brevard, an elongated county on Florida's central east coast. The satellite hospital is proposed for a site approximately seven miles south and slightly west of HRMC. Palm Bay is a city which grew from five square miles to sixty-five square miles in the 1960's, when General Development Corporation (GDC) platted and began developing vast subdivisions west of the once-sleepy village lying along the Indian River. Wuesthoff, the next nearest hospital in the planning district is located north of HRMC, in Rockledge, in central Brevard County. The GDC development currently includes 74,000 or 75,000 platted lots throughout the city, although only approximately 15,000 have been built. The estimated population at full build-out in the year 2050 is projected at 257,000. In the meantime, the City of Palm Bay is the second largest city in Brevard County, population-wise, and is projected to be the largest city in the county by 1992. In 1980 the city had 18,560 persons; in 1988, the population is over 53,000. A water and sewer service agreement between Brevard County and General Development Utilities is contributing to the sprawl, as the agreement limits buildout to thirty percent of the lots on a block with wells and septic tanks. This has pushed growth from the northern and eastern boundaries of the subdivisions into the southern and western reaches of the city limits, and farther away from HRMC in Melbourne. The Palm Bay area suffers with congested traffic, as does most of South Brevard. The labyrinthine system of roads throughout the new section (the GDC development) is characterized by circles and dead end lanes calculated to promote residential integrity. An elaborate system of canals further limits access to a few through streets. The only planned major improvement to road capacity in Palm Bay is the four-laning of an approximate mile and a half strip of Babcock Street, a major north-south artery. Dr. Stanley K. Smith, an Associate Professor of Economics and Population Program Director at the University of Florida Bureau of Economic and Business Research, was qualified, without objection, as an expert in demographics, including population studies and projections. Dr. Smith and William Tipton, Holmes' traffic and transportation engineering expert, compiled data establishing that by the horizon year 1992, 14.4 percent of Palm Bay's population would live beyond a thirty minute drive to HRMC. Utilizing trips from HRMC in peak afternoon traffic, Mr. Tipton's traffic study found four 30 minute drive time points in the Palm Bay, South Brevard area, fanning out southward from HRMC along the primary roadways. Using census data and population projections developed by Brevard County planning staff, Dr. Smith calculated the population in Palm Bay that will be living beyond the 30 minute drive times in 1992. Although the drive times were established at peak hours, those hours in Palm Bay are unusually long because of the staggered work hours for Harris Corporation, which with 9,000 employees, is the largest industrial employer in Palm Bay. The Tipton study is also considered a reasonably conservative predictor of accessibility in 1992. By that horizon year the population will have expanded, and the 30-minute drive points will be closer to HRMC as a result of increased congestion and deterioration of traffic conditions. HRS' position that access to HRMC was not a problem for Palm Bay residents was based on a personal visit to the area by its staff CON reviewer, Dennis Halfhill. Mr. Halfhill drove from his motel, north along US1 to HRMC, around midmorning, and determined that his drive time was only twenty-five minutes. U.S. 1 runs north-south along the Indian River on the eastern edge of Palm Bay and South Brevard County. Unlike most of the main roads in South Brevard, US 1 is four-laned. It also is in the old established section of Palm Bay, rather than in the newer population center in the south and west. Mr. Halfhill did not travel in the southwest area and erroneously believed he was in the center of Palm Bay along its eastern edge. He estimated the circumference of the main part of the city to be approximately five miles and believed the western city limits were east of Interstate 95, when, in fact, a vast portion, approximately 80 percent of the city's 65 square mile area, lies west of Interstate 95. Geographical access by Palm Bay residents is decidedly enhanced by the creation of a satellite hospital in that community. Efficiency Holmes can provide acute-care services in its proposed 60 bed satellite more efficiently than another free-standing facility could, and more efficiently than Holmes is currently providing those same services in its large facility. The proposed facility will share with HRMC various support and ancillary services as purchasing, patient accounts, dietary, plant engineering, data processing, pharmacy, laboratory and radiology. All of Holmes' management systems will be shared with its satellite. Some equipment and staff will be transferred to the new facility. Because some wings of HRMC are old and outdated, the relocation to a newer, better-designed facility will result in improved utilization of nursing staff and a slightly lower staffing level overall. Holmes is considering converting the transferred beds into an observation unit for outpatient surgery and increasing its number of private rooms. In addition, if the beds are transferred, Holmes anticipates the ability to move back into the hospital certain activities for which it is paying over $100,000 per year in outside rent and utilities. Financial Feasibility/Cost Effectiveness Based on its long range planning conducted in 1981, Holmes determined there would be a future need for an acute care facility in Palm Bay. It purchased land for $315,800, and is currently operating an ambulatory care center and diagnostic center at the site. The total funds required for completion of the satellite facility will come from reserves established from the operation of Holmes, the corporate holding company. No borrowing will be necessary. Initially, in the first two years of operation of the satellite, there will be a slight negative impact on HRMC, but not on Holmes, the parent company, as the negative impact will be offset by the revenues at the satellite and by the cost savings shared by the two facilities. Holmes anticipates net revenue at the satellite will be $404,891 the first year of operation and $2,052,911 for the second year. Rick Knapp, a health care consultant, was qualified without objection as an expert in hospital and health care finance. In his opinion, the pro- forma/operating statement is realistic and achievable and the financial management of the existing facility is good. This latter opinion is based on his experience that relatively low-charge hospitals which generate an attractive bottom line, such as HRMC, are well managed hospitals. HRS has acknowledged that HRAC has done well in serving medicaid patients and indigents, typically considered chronically underserved. Holmes has committed that it will continue that service with the satellite facility. John Stephen Eavenson, Vice-President of Finance at HRMC and chief operating officer for Holmes, was qualified without objection as an expert in hospital and health care finance, hospital financial administration and hospital business venture analysis. In his opinion, the Palm Bay satellite hospital proposed by Holmes represents a sound financial decision. Holmes considers South Brevard, including Melbourne and Palm Bay, as its service area. Approximately 92 percent of the population of the service area in need of hospitalization currently utilize HRMC. This figure is likely slightly lower for Palm Bay, alone, as some patients in that area use a hospital in Sebastian, in Indian River County, south of Palm Bay, and beyond the HRS planning district VII. Other patients go to Orlando. Aside from the economies already discussed relating to the new streamlined facility, Holmes' willingness to expend $11 million to transfer beds is motivated by a desire to preserve its market share by enhancing access to an expanding community. Application Content The principal reason for HRS' denial, perhaps 75 percent, according to HRS Supervisor Reid Jaffe, was the lack of documentation in Holmes' application to support the proposed transfer. This reason is reflected in the cover latter to the SAAR and in comments throughout the SAAR. HRS objected throughout the formal hearing to the introduction of evidence relating to access, arguing that transportation studies were not part of the original application and would be an inappropriate amendment to the application. Holmes provided all information requested on the CON application form; in addition it responded in full to the three brief questions in HRS' May 15, 1987, omissions letter. Holmes' application was deemed "complete" by HRS, effective June 29, 1987. With regard to availability and access, the SAAR states: ...the applicant did not present any information about the future traffic and growth management plans to determine if accessibility to services would be impaired.... Yet, the SAAR found enough information to determine compliance with the following priority of the District 7 Health Plan: Priority 4 Priority for needed acute care services should be given to those applicants who transfer unutilized beds/or establish hospital facili- ties in regions of the District where access to service can be substantially improved by at least 25 minutes for 10 percent of the popula- tion of the subdistrict or a minimum of 35,000 residents. Joint Exhibit #1, p. 3 The SAAR comments provides: Priority 4-Applicant complies, Holmes Regional proposes to transfer underutilized beds. Although the area might now be within 25 minutes of Holmes and Humana Sebastian, increased congestion is expected as Palm Bay and the area along US1 are developed. Joint Exhibit #1, p. 4 The foregoing comment possibly reflects Mr, Halfhill's personal tour of Palm Bay, a tour which the record amply reveals missed the truly congested and developed areas of this deceptively vast community. An HRS reviewer with personal knowledge of a geographical area will bring his or her experience to the application review process and will not question the lack of such information in the packet, according to Reid Jaffe. In other instances the reviewer uses the omissions process to question presumptions or to flesh out the necessary information. For example, in March 1988, HRS approved a CON for the transfer of 100 beds from Martin Memorial Hospital in Martin County to create a satellite facility in Port Salerno. Prior to that approval Martin Memorial submitted a revised application, responding to at least 17 omission questions, including such questions as: Omission #10 What accessibility problems were experienced by residents of the proposed satellite area in obtaining acute inpatient services? How far is it to Okeechobee and Stuart? Northern Palm Beach County? and Omission #11 What is the breakdown of the 100 med/surg beds to be transferred from Martin Memorial and the breakdown established at the satellite facility; i.e. ICCU, pediatrics, OB, etc.? How will the transfer affect health services at Martin Memorial? How will vacated space be utilized? Petitioner's Exhibit #15 In another similar case involving a transfer of beds by Lee Memorial Hospital, which CON application was in the same batching cycle as Holmes, HRS permitted the applicant to submit an extensive packet of information in March 1988, addressing the questions and issues raised by the SAAR. The packet included a travel time study completed well after the SAAR was issued. The Lee Memorial project was approved. Holmes also attempted to present additional information, including its travel time study prepared in December 1987. It was told that additional information would be considered an inappropriate amendment to the application. Although the travel time study was not included in Holmes' application, access was discussed throughout the application with references to the high growth portions of the service area, the inadequate roads and traffic congestion, and Dr. Smith's projections of population increases. The application was complete, as its narrative, tables and attachments sufficiently addressed the relevant criteria of the statute and rules. Weighing the Criteria The parties agree that numerical need is not an issue when no net increase in beds is proposed. HRS has no rule specifically governing the transfer of beds and, according to Sharon Gordon-Girvin, the HRS Administrator of Community Health Services and Facilities, the agency policy was still under consideration at the time that Holmes' current application was being reviewed. A policy framework had been discussed, but HRS conceded that the policy required patient origin data that was not available to the applicant or the department. In the absence of a specific rule or policy, HRS' review and comments on the Holmes application reflect a general concern that, if no additional services are being offered, and no additional beds are needed or proposed, there must be some direct, positive health care benefit to be derived from the expenditure of $11 million to transfer beds. Concomitantly, there should also be no negative effect on the existing services. These general concerns must still be translated into the statutory criteria found in section 381.705, F.S. The SAAR found that Holmes' proposal at least partially met every relevant criteria. In its evidence explaining and supporting its application, Holmes proved that its satellite project will significantly improve access to the population of a phenomenally fast-growing community. The reduction in beds at HRMC will increase the utilization rate at that facility, which, although underutilized at less than 80 percent, is experiencing a constant increase and a better rate than the other area hospitals. The loss of revenue will not negatively impact HRMC in the long-term and will positively impact the parent company, Holmes. HRMC and Holmes have a reputation for quality care, reasonable costs and a commitment to serve the indigent and underserved patients in South Brevard. The same management will assure these attributes are maintained at the satellite facility. Holmes' forecasts for patient mix and utilization rates are based on a long experience in providing wide range health care services in South Brevard. Its management decision to utilize $11 million of on hand resources to create the satellite is a sound business decision based on a projected need for the horizon year 1992, the growth patterns in the south west county, and a calculated desire to maintain its market share. The shared services and resources make the satellite facility economically preferable to a new separate free-standing facility of 60 beds. The removal of beds from HRMC will result in more efficient use of space in that hospital. In summary, there is a need for the facility proposed by Holmes.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is, hereby RECOMMENDED: That HRS award a Certificate of Need to Holmes Regional Healthcare Systems Inc., for a 60-bed satellite hospital in Palm Bay, Florida, by virtue of a transfer of 60 licensed beds from Holmes Regional Medical Center in Melbourne, Florida. DONE and RECOMMENDED this 8th day of November, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida. MARY CLARK 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 8th day of November, 1988. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NO. 88-0394 The following constitute my specific rulings on the findings of fact proposed by the parties. Petitioner's Proposed Findings Adopted in paragraphs 1 and 5. Adopted in paragraph 22. 3-7. Rejected as unnecessary. 8. Adopted in the background statement and in summary in paragraph 21. 9-10. Rejected as unnecessary. 11-13. Adopted in substance in paragraph 26, although the fact that the Lee application was originally denied was not clearly established. 14-15. Addressed in the background statement. 16. Addressed in the statement of issues. 17-18. Adopted in paragraph 31. Adopted in paragraph 9. Adopted in substance in paragraph 7. Adopted in paragraph 8. 22-24. Adopted in substance in paragraph 9. 25. Adopted in substance in paragraph 23. 26-28. Adopted in paragraph 10 and paragraph 24. Rejected as argument. Rejected as unnecessary. Addressed in the statement of issues. Adopted in paragraph 31. Addressed in the statement of issues. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in substance in paragraphs 15 and 18. 36-37. Rejected as unnecessary. 38. Adopted in paragraph 16. 39-40. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in substance in paragraph 20. Rejected as cumulative and unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in substance in paragraphs 12 and 13. Adopted in paragraph 21. 46-47. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in substance in paragraph 22. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in paragraph 25. 51-52. Rejected as argument. 53-55. Rejected as unnecessary. 56. Adopted in part in paragraph 26, otherwise rejected as unnecessary. 57-59. Rejected as argument. Respondents Proposed Findings 1. Adopted in Paragraphs 1 and 3. 2-3. Addressed in background statement. 4-5. Addressed in statement of issues. Rejected as unnecessary, although the access issue is addressed in paragraphs 6-11 and paragraph 23. Rejected as unsubstantiated by the evidence. Rejected in part as unnecessary. No criteria requires proof that the population is not predominately located within an average 30-minute drive time. Also rejected as inconsistent with the evidence. The study involved two-way drives (see transcript pp 309-310). The cited portion of the transcript does not support the finding suggested, that the study was manipulated. 9-10. Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as unnecessary. This was not an issue in the proceeding. Adopted in part in paragraph 5. 13-19. Rejected as unnecessary or irrelevant. 19-21. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence. 22-23. Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as immaterial. The application was not amended at hearing. Addressed in conclusions of law, paragraph 4. Rejected as immaterial. Occupancy rates are not at issue. 27-28. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence. Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as cumulative and unsupported by the evidence. Rejected as immaterial. The witness was credible. 32-34. Rejected as unnecessary. 35. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence. 36-39. Rejected as immaterial. 40. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence. COPIES FURNISHED: Lee Elzie, Esquire MacFarlane, Ferguson, Allison & Kelly 215 South Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32302 E. G. Boone, Esquire Jeffrey A. Boone, Esquire Boone, Boone, Klingbeil & Boone, P. A. Post Office Box 1596 Venice, Florida 34284 Sam Power, Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Suite 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Gregory L. Coler, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 John Miller, Esquire Acting General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Suite 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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