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INDIAN RIVER MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC. vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 97-004794 (1997)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Vero Beach, Florida Oct. 15, 1997 Number: 97-004794 Latest Update: Feb. 07, 1999

The Issue Whether Respondent should recoup Medicaid payments made to Petitioner for health care services provided to eight patients.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner, Indian River Memorial Hospital, Inc., (Hospital), has contracted with Respondent, Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA), to provide services to Medicaid patients. The parties have agreed that there is a dispute for Medicaid reimbursement for goods and services provided to eight patients: S.G., J.D., R.J., C.A., G.M., S.S., M.P., and C.T. The Agency has paid the Hospital for the services rendered to these eight patients and seeks to recoup the payment based on a retrospective review by a peer review organization, Keystone Peer Review Organization (KePro). The Agency claims that either the admission or a portion of the length-of-stay for the eight patients was medically unnecessary. Services were provided to C.T. in 1994 and to the remainder of the patients at issue in 1995. Payment for Medicaid services is on a per diem basis. The rate for 1994 is $473.22 per day, and the rate for 1995 is $752.14. The Agency contracted with KePro to do a review of the Medicaid payments to the Hospital. KePro employs nurses to review the patient files based on criteria on discharge screens. If the services meet the criteria, there is no further review and the payment is approved. If the nurse determines that the services do not meet the criteria on the discharge screens, the patient's files are reviewed by a board certified physician, who in this case would be a psychiatrist. If the physician determines that the services are not medically necessary, a letter is sent to the Medicaid provider, giving the provider an opportunity to submit additional information. Additional information submitted by the provider is reviewed by a board certified physician. If the doctor concludes that the services are still medically unnecessary, the provider is notified that that services do not qualify for reimbursement and the provider may ask for a reconsideration of the denial. If the provider seeks reconsideration, the file is reviewed by a physician, and the provider has an opportunity to be present during the review. If the physician determines that the services are medically unnecessary, KePro sends a letter to the Agency stating the reasons for denial. The denial letters that KePro sends to the Agency are reviewed by the Medical Director of KePro, who is not a psychiatrist. Dr. John Sullenberger, the Agency's Medicaid physician, reviews the KePro denial letters sent to the Agency, and 99.9 percent of the time he agrees with the findings of KePro regarding whether the services were medically necessary. Dr. Sullenberger does not review the patient's charts when he does this review. The Agency sends a recoupment letter to the Medicaid provider requesting repayment for services provided. Patient S.G., a 12 year-old boy, was being treated pursuant to the Baker Act. He was admitted to the Hospital on March 8, 1995, and discharged on March 25, 1995. The Agency denied Medicaid reimbursement for the admission and the entire length-of-stay for S.G. based on KePro's determination that it was not medically necessary for the services to S.G. to be rendered in an acute care setting because the patient was neither suicidal nor homicidal. Three to five days prior to his admission to the Hospital, S.G. had attempted to stab his father. He also had further violent episodes, including jumping his father from behind and choking him and pulling knives on his parents. S.G. had a history of attention deficit and hyperactive disorder. He had been using multiple substances, such as alcohol, LSD, cocaine, and marijuana, prior to his admission. His behavior was a clear reference that he was suffering from a psychosis. A psychosis is a significant inability to understand what is reality, including delusions of false beliefs, hallucinations, hearing and seeing things which do not exist, and ways of thinking that are bizarre. Psychosis is a reason to admit a patient, particularly combined with substance abuse. S.G.'s treating psychiatrist noted that S.G. had tangentiality, which means that his thoughts did not stay together. He did not have a connection between thoughts, which is a sign of a psychosis. The chart demonstrated that S.G. had disorder thinking, which includes the possibility of a psychosis. There was also a reference in the charts to organic mental disturbance which could infer brain damage as the cause for the mental disturbance. Two days after admission, there was an issue of possible drug withdrawal because S.G. was agitated and anxious and showed other symptoms. Drug withdrawal, psychosis, and a demonstration of overt violence require a stay in an acute care facility. There was some indication that S.G. was suicidal. While in the Hospital he was placed under close observation, which is a schedule of 15-minute checks to determine if the patient was physically out of harm's way. S.G. was started on an antidepressant, Wellbutrin, because the treating physician thought S.G. was becoming increasingly depressed and was having trouble organizing his thoughts. Antidepressants, as contrasted to a medication such as an antibiotic, may take a minimum of two to three weeks before the patient will benefit from the full effect of the drug. It is difficult to stabilize the dosage for an antidepressant on an outpatient basis. S.G. was taking Ritalin, which is commonly used for children with attention deficit, hyperactivity disorders. During his stay at the Hospital, S.G. was engaging in strange behavior, including absence seizures. On March 16, 1995, he was still lunging and threatening harm. On March 20, 1995, he was still unstable and at risk. The dosage of Wellbutrin was increased. On March 21 and 22, 1995, S.G. was still threatening and confused. S.G. was discharged on March 25, 1995. The admission and length-of-stay for S.G. were medically necessary. Patient J.D. was a 16 year-old boy who was admitted to the Hospital on March 7, 1995, and discharged on March 14, 1995. The Agency denied the admission and entire length-of-stay based on KePro's determination that the patient was not actively suicidal or psychotic and services could have been rendered in a less acute setting. J.D. was admitted from a partial hospitalization program pursuant to the Baker Act because he was observed by a health care professional banging his head against the wall and throwing himself on the floor. He had a history of depression and out-of-control behavior, including being a danger to himself and running away. At the time of his admission, he was taking Prozac. Banging his head against the wall can mean that the patient is psychotic, can cause brain damage, and can be dangerous if the cause of the behavior is unknown. Admission to the Hospital was justified because the patient was extremely agitated and self abusive, requiring restraints and medication to decrease his agitation and self abusiveness. One of the tests administered during his hospital stay indicated that J.D. was a moderate risk for suicidal behavior. During his hospital stay, it was discovered that J.D. had threatened to kill himself while at school. He had been in a partial treatment program during the day, but that environment was not working. There was violence in the home, and J.D. was becoming overtly depressed. During his stay at the Hospital, J.D. was placed on close observation with 15-minute checks. His dosage of Prozac was increased. The admission and length-of-stay for J.D. were medically necessary. R.J., a 10 year-old male, was admitted to the Hospital on January 1, 1995, and discharged on February 9, 1995. The Agency denied Medicaid reimbursement based on a determination by KePro that the treatment in an acute care facility was not medically necessary because R.J. was not psychotic, not suicidal, and not a threat to others; thus treatment could have been provided in an alternate setting. R.J. had been referred by a health care professional at Horizon Center, an outpatient center, because of progressive deterioration over the previous fourteen months despite outpatient treatment. His deterioration included anger with temper outbursts, uncontrollable behavior at school, failing grades, sadness, depressed mood, extreme anxiety, extensive worrying and a fear of his grandmother. R.J. also suffered from encopresis, a bowel incontinence. He was agitated, lacked energy, neglected his hygiene, experienced crying spells, and had difficulty concentrating. R.J. needed to be admitted for an evaluation to rule out a paranoid psychosis. It was necessary to do a 24-hour EEG as opposed to a 45-minute EEG. In order to do a 24-hour EEG, the patient is typically placed in an acute care facility. The EEG showed abnormal discharge in the brain, which could be contributing to a psychiatric illness. At school R.J. had smeared feces on the walls, behavior that could be seen in psychotic persons. There was evidence that he had been hitting and throwing his stepbrother and 3 year-old brother. He was fearful of his grandmother and, based on his family history, there was reason to fear her. R.J. was placed on Buspar, a medication which generally takes two weeks to take effect. Contrary to the Agency's determination, R.J. was disorganized. He was also violent in terms of threatening danger and extreme anger. The admission and length-of-stay for R.J. at the Hospital were medically necessary. Patient C.A., a 9 year-old male, was admitted to the Hospital on June 1, 1995, and discharged on June 12, 1995. The Agency disallowed one day of the length-of-stay based on a determination by KePro that the services provided on June 11, 1995, could have been provided in a less restrictive setting. C.A. was admitted for violent and disruptive behavior. He also had an attention deficit, hyperactivity disorder and was taking Lithium and Depakote. These medications are used for patients who experience serious mood swings and abrupt changes in mood, going from depression to anger to euphoria. To be effective, medicating with Lithium and Depakote requires that the blood levels of the patient be monitored and the dosage titrated according to blood level. C.A. also was given Wellbutrin during his hospital stay. On June 11, 1995, C.A. was given an eight-hour pass to leave the hospital in the care of his mother. The physician's orders indicated that the pass was to determine how well C.A. did in a less restrictive setting. He returned to the Hospital without incident. He was discharged the next day to his mother. The treatment on June 11, 1995, could have been provided in an environment other than an acute facility; thus the stay on June 11, 1995, was not medically necessary for Medicaid reimbursement purposes. Patient G.M., an 11 year-old male with a history of being physically and sexually abused by his parents, was admitted to the Hospital on March 21, 1995, and was discharged on April 3, 1995. The Agency denied Medicaid reimbursement for inpatient hospital treatment from March 28 to April 3, 1995, based on KePro's determination that the length of hospital stay exceeded health care needs at an inpatient level and could have been provided in a less acute setting. At the time of admission, G.M. had suicidal ideation. His school had reported that G.M. had mutilated himself with a pencil, banged himself on the knuckles, and told the school nurse that he wanted to die. Prior to admission, G.M. had been taking Ritalin. His treating physician took G.M. off the Ritalin so that she could assess his condition and start another medication after a base-line period. The doctor prescribed Clonidine for G.M. Clonidine is a drug used in children to control reckless, agressive and angry behavior. Clonidine must be titrated in order to establish the correct dosage for the patient. During his hospital stay, G.M. was yelling and threatening staff. He was placed in locked seclusion, where he began hitting the wall. G.M. was put in a papoose, which is similar to a straitjacket. The papoose is used when there is no other way to control the patient. The patient cannot use his arms or legs while in a papoose. This type of behavior and confinement was occurring as late as March 31, 1995. G.M. was given a pass to go to his grandparents on April 2, 1995. He did well during his pass, and was discharged on April 3, 1995. Treatment in an acute facility was medically necessary through April 1, 1995. Treatment on April 2, 1995, could have been provided in a less acute setting. Patient S.S., a 5 year-old male, was admitted to the Hospital on March 9, 1995, and was discharged on April 3, 1995. The Agency denied Medicaid reimbursement for the admission and entire length of his hospital stay based on a determination by KePro that S.S. was not psychotic or an immediate danger to himself or others and the evaluation and treatment could have been rendered in a less acute setting. Prior to admission to the Hospital, S.S. was threatening suicide, ran into a chalk board at school, scratched his arms until they bled, and showed aggressive intent toward his sister, saying that he would kill her with a saw. S.S.'s condition had been deteriorating for approximately three months before his admission. At the time of admission, he had been suicidal, hyperactive, restless, and experiencing hallucinations. The hallucinations imply a psychosis. S.S. was put on Trofanil, an antidepressant which needs to be titrated. The patient's blood level had to be monitored while taking this drug. During his hospital stay, S.S. was on close observation. All objects which he could use to harm himself were removed from his possession. After he ate his meals, the hospital staff would immediately remove all eating utensils. On March 28, 1995, S.S. threatened to kill himself and became self-abusive. His blood level on March 31, 1995, was sub-therapeutic, and his medication dosage was increased. On April 1, 1995, S.S. had a temper tantrum. The admission and length-of-stay for the treatment of S.S. were medically necessary. Patient M.P., a 10 year-old male, was admitted to the Hospital on April 27, 1995, and was discharged on May 6, 1995. The Agency denied Medicaid reimbursement for the admission and entire length-of-stay based on a determination by KePro that the patient functions on an eighteen to twenty-four month level but is not psychotic and the treatment could have been provided in a less acute setting. M.P.'s IQ is between 44 and 51. He was diagnosed with a pervasive development disorder, which is a serious lack of development attributed to significant brain damage. His condition had deteriorated in the six months prior to his admission. He had episodes of inappropriate laughter, fits of anger, hit his head, hit windows, and put his arm in contact with the broken glass through the window. At the time of his admission, he had a seizure disorder. An EEG and an MRI needed to be performed on M.P. in order to evaluate his condition. M.P. had to have a regular EEG, a 24-hour EEG, and a neurological examination. The patient was aggressive, restless, and uncooperative. In order for the MRI to be performed, M.P. had to be anesthetized. The admission and length-of-stay for M.P. were medically necessary. Patient C.T., a 34 year-old female, was admitted to the Hospital on November 11, 1994, and was discharged on November 26, 1994. The Agency denied the treatment from November 17, 1994, to November 26, 1994, based on a determination by a peer review organization that the patient was stable by November 17, 1994, and psychiatric follow-up could have been performed in an outpatient setting. C.T. was admitted for kidney stones. She did pass the kidney stones but continued to have severe pain. Her doctor asked for a psychiatric consult. The psychiatrist diagnosed C.T. as having a personality disorder, chronic psychogenic pain disorder, and an eating disorder. Her depressive disorder exacerbated pain. C.T. had been given narcotics for the pain associated with the kidney stones. In order to assess her mental status, the physicians needed to taper the dosage of Demerol which she had been receiving. She was started on Sinequan, which is an anti-depressant given to alleviate the psychological condition and to help with the physical complaints. C.T. was later put on Vicodin, an oral narcotic, which seemed to bring the pain under control. The drugs used could cause a drop in blood pressure; therefore, they had to be titrated slowly. Her treating physician was trying to find an appropriate anti-depressant, while weaning the patient from intramuscular narcotics. On November 17, 1994, C.T. left her room and went to the hospital lobby, where she was found by nursing staff. C.T. was crying and saying that she was in pain and wanted to die. During her hospital stay, C.T. was in much distress; she would scream out that she was in pain. On November 18, 1994, she was found crying on the floor of the hospital chapel and had to be returned to her room. It was the opinion of Dr. Bernard Frankel, an expert retained by the Hospital, that C.T. probably could have been discharged a day earlier. The hospital stay for C.T. from November 17, 1994, to November 25, 1994, was medically necessary. The last day of her stay was not medically necessary.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a Final Order be entered requiring Indian River Memorial Hospital, Inc., to pay to the Agency $752.14 for one day of service provided to G.M., $752.14 for one day of service provided to C.A., and $473.22 for one day of service provided to C.T. and finding that the Hospital is not liable for payment for any of the other services at issue in this proceeding. DONE AND ENTERED this 2nd day of November, 1998, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. SUSAN B. KIRKLAND 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 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 2nd day of November, 1998. COPIES FURNISHED: Thomas Falkinburg, Esquire Agency for Health Care Administration Fort Knox Building 3 2727 Mahan Drive, Suite 3431 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 John D. Buchanan, Jr., Esquire Henry, Buchanan, Hudson, Suber & Williams, P.A. 117 South Gadsden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Sam Power, Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration Fort Knox Building 3 2727 Mahan Drive, Suite 3431 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Paul J. Martin, General Counsel Agency for Health Care Administration Fort Knox Building 3 2727 Mahan Drive, Suite 3431 Tallahassee, Florida 32308

Florida Laws (2) 120.57409.913 Florida Administrative Code (1) 59G-1.010
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RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT CENTER OF THE PALM BEACHES, INC. vs. FLORIDA RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT CENTERS, 87-002037 (1987)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 87-002037 Latest Update: Jun. 28, 1988

Findings Of Fact The Parties FRTC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Charter Medical Corporation (Charter) which proposes to construct and operate a freestanding, 60 bed, 24- hour-a-day, Intensive Residential Treatment Program for children between the ages of 6 and 18 in Palm Beach County within HRS District IX, pursuant to Rule 10-28.152(8), F.A.C. and Chapter 395, F.S. Although FRTC represents it will construct its proposed facility with or without CON licensure, which it is entitled to do, given the peculiarities of this type of health care entity, it is clear that a prime motivator in FRTC's CON application is that with CON licensure, FRTC potentially will have greater access to insurance reimbursement because it may then call itself a "hospital." FRTC will seek JCAH accreditation. HRS is the state agency with the authority and responsibility to consider CON applications, pursuant to Chapter 10-5.011, F.A.C. and Sections 381.701-381.715, F.S. (1987). HRS preliminarily approved FRTC's application, and supported it through formal hearing and post-hearing proposals. RTCPB is an existing 40 bed residential treatment center for adolescents between the ages of 12 and 18, located in Palm Beach County, on the campus of Lake Hospital of the Palm Beaches. It provides services similar or identical to those services proposed to be offered by FRTC. It is JCAH accredited through an extension of Lake Hospital's accreditation and is close to JCAH accreditation in its own right. RTCPB is a subsidiary of Psychiatric Hospitals, Inc. (PIA) . PIA operates two residential treatment centers in Florida. RTCPB is not CON licensed as an IRTP, under Chapters 381 and 395, F.S., but is licensed as a child care facility under Chapter 395, F.S., as a provider of services to HRS under Chapters 10M-9 and 10E-10, F.A.C. RTCPB accepts substance abusers in residency. RTCPB has also applied for CON licensure as an IRTP in a batching cycle subsequent to the present one. That application has been preliminarily denied by HRS and RTCPB is awaiting a Section 120.57(1), F.S., formal administrative hearing thereon. RTCPB now estimates its current patients' average length of stay (ALOS) as 106 days but projects a 315 day (10 1/2 months) ALOS in its subsequent CON application. RTCPB is charging $185 per day or HRS patients and $255 with $23-26 ancillaries [sic] per day for private pay patients. Like FRTC, it uses a "levels" system of behavior modification and patient control. Humana is a 250 bed JCAH accredited hospital located in Palm Beach County, Florida. Of Humana's 250 beds, 162 are traditional acute care beds and 88 are psychiatric beds. The 88 psychiatric beds are administratively divided into different units, one of which is a 27 bed adolescent psychiatric unit; this unit opened January 20, 1987, and has an average length of stay of nine months. Humana's existing CONs are for short-term adult psychiatric beds and do not authorize an adolescent unit with an average length of stay of over 30 days. Ninety days is the demarcation, by rule, between short- and long-term psychiatric beds. Humana recently applied for a CON for more psychiatric beds and also applied for an IRTP CON in a subsequent batch to the present one. Humana's present 27 bed adolescent psychiatric unit provides grossly similar services to those proposed to be offered by FRTC, but its emphasis is more medical-psychiatric than emotional-behavioral. Like FRTC, Humana does not accept in residency adolescents with a primary diagnosis of substance abuse. Like FRTC and RTCPB, Humana uses a "levels" system. Eighty percent of Humana's patient mix are commercial pay, and the unit is running at a 15 to 20 percent profit margin. Humana usually charges $325 per day on their adolescent unit plus ancillaries [sic] amounting to 10 percent of the patient's bill, but HRS contract patients pay only $225 per day. Humana has lost a number of adolescent unit referrals to RTCPB since RTCPB opened June 1, 1987, but the unit continues to be almost fully occupied. Humana's main referral asset, as well as the source of the confusion of referring entities, appears to be the reputation of its director, Dr. Kelly. Dr. Kelly previously directed a program at Lake Hospital which was identical to the program that he now directs at Humana. Lake Hospital currently has RTCPB operating under its auspices, but not Dr. Kelly. Nature of the FRTC Program FRTC's proposed program is designed to serve those persons in the designated age group who have psychiatric diagnoses of a severity requiring a long-term approach in a multidisciplinary structured living setting to facilitate recovery. It will not, however, treat adolescents with an active diagnosis of chemical dependency or substance abuse. It also only commits to 1.5 percent indigent care. The proposed FRTC program differs from an acute care setting in significant quantitative and qualitative ways, the most visible of which is that acute care psychiatric settings (either long- or short-term) are geared toward dealing with patients actively dangerous to property, themselves, or others, but patients whom it is reasonably assumed will respond primarily to physiologically-oriented physicians and registered nurses administering daily medication, treatment, and monitoring, as opposed to a long-term living arrangement emphasizing behaviorally-oriented group interaction as an alternative to parental care at home. FRTC will, however, accept patients with psychiatric diagnoses of effective disorders, depression, schizophrenia and impulse disorders and those who may be potentially harmful to themselves, others, or property for whom no other less intensive or less restrictive form of treatment would be predictably helpful. FRTC would fall on the continuum of care below an acute psychiatric facility such as Humana. Assessment of such a target group on a patient by patient basis is obviously subject to a wide variation of interpretation by qualified health care professionals, but FRTC anticipates both verifying referral diagnoses and assuring quality of care by insuring that each new patient is seen by a psychiatrist within 24 hours of admission, and by having each case reviewed by an independent utilization review committee. FRTC also plans to complete appropriate patient assessments and develop and update individual, integrated treatment programs. FRTC will provide, where appropriate, for continuity of care from previous acute care institutions through the FRTC program and out into more normal individual or family living arrangements. Parents will have to consent to their child's placement at FRTC. FRTC's program proposes an average length of stay of 365 days (one year) with a range of six months to two years. Based upon all the credible record evidence as a whole, including, but not limited to, the protestants' respective ALOS, this is a reasonable forecast despite contrary evidence as to Charter's experience at its "template" Virginia institution, Charter Colonial. FRTC's program components will include individual therapy, recreational therapy, occupational therapy, and general education. The general education component in FRTC's proposed program is more general and more open than that offered in acute care settings, such as Humana. FRTC's overall program will utilize a "levels" system of behavioral management based upon patients earning privileges, which levels system has a good patient rehabilitation and functional administrative track record in many different kinds of psychiatric health care facilities, including Humana and RTCPB. FRTC intends that each patient's program will be individualized according to age and program component directed to his/her diagnosis and each patient will receive individual, resident group, and family therapies. As to assessment, types of therapy, continuity of care, and general education provisions, FRTC's proposal is grossly consistent with that of its "template." To the extent there is evidence of inconsistencies between the two programs in the record, the FRTC proposal represents either improvements over, or refinements of, its template program which have been developed as Charter/FRTC has learned more about what actually "works" for the IRTP form of health care, or it represents changes to accommodate Florida's perception of what less restrictive but still intensive residential treatment should be, or it anticipates local community needs. Quality of Care The applicant's parent corporation is an experienced provider of many types of accredited psychiatric facilities. The type of quality assurance program proposed and the staff mix provide reasonable quality care assurances. Design, Construction, and Personnel Refinements to FRTC's original schematic take into consideration the influence that physical structure has on an Intensive Residential Treatment Program. Those refinements include modification of a multipurpose room into a half-court gymnasium, addition of a classroom, addition of a mechanical room, modification of the nursing station to decrease the amount of space, and the deletion of one seclusion room and addition of a four to six bed assessment unit. The modifications resulted in the addition of approximately 1,000 square feet to the original design. A minimum of four to six acres would be necessary to accommodate the modified design which totals approximately 32,000 square feet. Public areas, such as administration and support services, dining room, and housekeeping areas, are to the front; private areas, such as the nursing units, are to the back. The facility's middle area houses gym, classrooms, and occupational therapy areas. The location encourages residential community involvement. Each of three, 20-bed units is made up of a group of two consultation rooms, a galley, a laundry, a day room and core living space located directly across from the nursing station for maximum observation and efficiency. Each unit comprises a separate wing. Six handicapped accessible patient beds are contemplated; the building will be handicapped-accessible. The staffing projections have increased and the pattern has been minimally altered in the updates. The updated pro forma also modified the initial financial projections so as to increase salary expense and employee benefits based on this change in staffing. An increase in the total project cost impacted on depreciation, and interest expense changed with time. All these changes are reasonable and insubstantial. FRTC's design is adequate for providing a suitable environment for intensive residential treatment for children and adolescents even though it is not identical to Charter's "template" for residential treatment and even though Charter's extensive experience with acute care facilities has focused these changes in its residential treatment concepts. The parties stipulated to the adequacy of FRTC's proposed equipment list and costs. Total construction cost was demonstrated to be reasonably estimated at $2,078,000. The square footage costs of $64.86 per square foot represet an increase from the square footage costs contained in the original CON application. The original budget was updated based upon a three percent inflation factor and the addition of the approximately 1,000 square feet. The additional space is not a significant construction change. The total project costs of $4,728,000 are reasonable. The testimony of HRS Deputy Assistant Secretary for Regulation and Health Facilities, John Griffin, who testified by deposition, (RTCPB's Exhibit 8, pp. 21-22) revealed no firm policy on what the agency, within its expertise, views as substantial and impermissible amendments to a CON application; HRS did not move at hearing to remand for further review; and the undersigned concludes that the changes in facility design, costs, and staffing do not represent significant changes which would be excludable as evidence and that they do represent permissible minor modifications and refinements of the original FRTC application. Site Availability No party contended that FRTC's application was a "site specific" application, that a residential treatment program is otherwise required to be "site specific," or that an IRTP CON is governed by a "site specific" rule or by "site specific" statutory criteria. Therefore, it was only necessary for FRTC in this noncomparative proceeding to establish that several suitable sites were available within the required geographic parameters at the financial amount allotted in FRTC's projections. FRTC did establish financially and geographically available and suitable sites through the testimony of Robert H. Ellzey, a qualified expert in commercial real estate values. The Non-Rule Need Policy There are no hospital licensed Intensive Residential Treatment Programs in Palm Beach County or in District IX. IRTPs are in a separate licensure category by law from psychiatric beds, acute care beds, and rehabilitation beds. There is a separate need methodology for long-term psychiatric beds and there are no CON licensed long-term psychiatric programs for children and adolescents in District IX, unless one considers Humana which is treating adolescents well beyond 30 or 90 days residency. HRS has no promulgated rule predicting need for IRTPs seeking specialty hospital licensure under Chapter 395, F.S. Subsequent to advice of its counsel that a CON must be obtained as a condition of IRTP licensure pursuant to Chapter 395, F.S., HRS elected to evaluate all IRTP CON applications in the context of the statutory criteria of Chapter 381, F.S., and in the context of HRS' non-rule policy establishing a rebuttable presumption of need for one "reasonably sized" IRTP in each HRS planning district. The May 5, 1988 Final Order in Florida Psychiatric Centers v. HRS, et al., DOAH Case No. 88- 0008R, held this non-rule policy invalid as a rule due to HRS' failure to promulgate it pursuant to Section 120.54, F.S., but that order also held the policy not to be invalid as contrary to Chapter 381, F.S. That Final Order intervened between the close of final hearing in the instant case and entry of the instant Recommended Order, however, it does not alter the need for the agency to explicate and demonstrate the reasonableness of its non-rule policy on a case by case basis. HRS was unable to do so in the formal hearing in the instant case. Notwithstanding the oral testimony of Robert May and Elizabeth Dudek, and the deposition testimony of John Griffin, it appears that the non- rule policy is not based upon generally recognized health planning considerations, but solely on the agency's statutory interpretation of recent amendments to Chapter 395 and some vague perception, after internal agency discussions, that the policy is consistent with certain promulgated need rules and with certain other non-rule policies for other types of health care entities, which other non-rule policies were never fully enunciated or proved up in this formal hearing. The HRS non-rule policy was also not affirmatively demonstrated to be rational because it does not take into account the reasonableness of a proposed facility's average length of stay, referral sources, geographic access, or other factors common to duly promulgated CON rules. Numerical Need and Conformity to Applicable Health Plans FRTC sought to support HRS' non-rule policy on numerical need for, and definition of, a "reasonably sized" IRTP through the testimony of Dr. Ronald Luke, who was qualified as an expert in health planning, development of need methodologies, health economies, survey research, and development of mental health programs. In the absence of a finding of a rational non-rule policy on numerical need, Dr. Luke's evidence forms the cornerstone of FRTC's demonstration of numerical need. Through the report and testimony of Dr. Luke, and despite contrary expert health planning testimony, FRTC established the numerical need for, and reasonableness of, its 60 licensed IRTP beds in District IX with projected 60 percent occupancy in the first year and 50 percent in the second year of operation using two bed need methodologies. Dr. Luke ultimately relied on a utilization methodology based upon 1991 population projections. Dr. Luke used a census rate per 100,000 population of 21.58. This is appropriately and reasonably derived from national data for residential treatment patients aged 0-17, regardless of the fact that the types of residential treatment considered by the NIMH data base employed by Dr. Luke greatly vary in concept and despite HRS having not yet clearly defined the nature of the programs and services it expects to be offered by a Florida specialty hospital licensed IRTP. Therefrom, Dr. Luke derived an average daily census of 52 in 1991. That figure yields a bed sizing of between 58 and 61 beds, depending on whether an 85 percent or 90 percent occupancy factor is plugged in. Either 58 or 61 beds is within the range of ratios calculated by Dr. Luke's other methodology for currently licensed Florida IRTPs in other districts. Assuming a target occupancy rate of 85 percent and an ALOS of one year, Dr. Luke considered the gross District IX IRTP bed need to be 60. In the absence of any like program to assess occupancy for and in the presence of similar programs such as Humana operating at nearly full occupancy now and RTCPB forecasting its occupancy at 88 percent in 1990 if it were IRTP-licensed, it is found that 60 beds are justified. Since there are no IRTP beds licensed as specialty hospitals in the current district bed inventory, no adjustment of this figure must be made to account for existing licensed IRTP beds. Simply stated, this is a CON application for an IRTP, nothing more and nothing less, and the subtrahend to be subtracted from gross district bed need is zero when there is a zero specialty hospital licensed IRTP bed inventory. Luke's calculated gross need of 60 bed is also his net need and is accepted. Fifty beds is generally the minimum size HRS will approve to be feasible for any free standing facility to be eonomically efficient and to be able to benefit from economies of scale. This 50 bed concept is within the wide range of bed ratios that HRS implicitly has found reasonable in, previously- licensed IRTP CON approvals. Conformity With Applicable Health Plans Section 38l.705(1)(a), F.S., requires HRS to consider CON applications against criteria contained in the applicable State and District Health Plans. In this regard, neither the applicable State Health Plan nor the applicable District IX Local Health Plan make any reference to a need for intensive residential treatment facilities. The District IX Health Plan addresses the need for psychiatric and substance abuse services to be available to all individuals in District IX. FRTC's project addresses this goal only in part. The District Health Plan states that priority should be given to CON applicants who make a commitment to providing indigent care. FRTC proposes only 1.5 percent indigent care which works out to only 1/2 of the ALOS of one patient at the proposed facility and is hardly optimum, but in a noncomparative hearing, it stands alone as advancing the given accessibility goal within the plan. Objective 1.3 of the State Health Plan provides: Through 1987, additional long-term inpatient psychiatric beds should not normally be approved unless the average annual occupancy for all existing and approved long-term hospital psychiatric beds in the HRS District is at least 80 percent. FRTC's project is neutral as to this goal. The District Plan also contains a goal for a complete range of health care services for the population of the district. FRTC advances this goal. The State Health Plan further provides: Goal 10: DEVELOP A COMPLETE RANGE OF ESSENTIAL PUBLIC MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES IN EACH HRS DISTRICT OBJECTIVE 10.1: Develop a range of essential mental health services in each HRS district by 1989. OBJECTIVE 10.3: Develop a network of residential treatment settings for Florida's severely emotionally disturbed children by 1990. RECOMMENDED ACTION: 1.03A: Develop residential placements within Florida for all SED children currently receiving ing treatment in out-of-state facilities by 1990. The FRTC project advances these goals in part. To the extent SED patients placed outside the state for residential treatment services are HRS patients whom FRTC as yet has not contracted to treat, the FRTC project does not advance this goal. However, increased insurance reimbursement will advance accessibility for those SED children and adolescents in need of this type of care whose families have insurance coverage. The State Plan also emphasizes a goal for a continuum of care. The FRTC plan advances this goal. Financial Feasibility William S. Love, Senior Director of Hospital Operations for Charter, was accepted as an expert in health care finance. Mr. Love prepared the pro forma financial statement contained in the original CON application and the update of the pro forma in response to HRS' completeness questions. Mr. Love also had input into the updated financial information which increased salary and benefit expense. (See FOF No. 11). The revised pro forma utilized an assumption of gross patient revenues of $300 per day and a 365 day ALOS, both of which are reasonable and both of which support the rest of FRTC's assumptions (See FOF No. 9). Routine revenues are based on the types of routine services patients normally receive on a daily basis. Ancillary revenues are support revenues such as pharmacy charges, X-rays, lab charges, and other charges not generally utilized on a routine basis. The only charges to patients at the proposed FRTC facility are the routine and ancillary charges. The assumptions with regard to contractual adjustments are that there will be no Medicare utilization since the facility is projected for children and adolescents and no Medicaid since freestanding facilities in Florida are not eligible for Medicaid. Two percent of gross patient revenues are estimated to be contractual adjustments which relate to HMOs and PPOs. FRTC addresses indigent care by 1.5 percent of gross revenues which will be dedicated to Charter Care which is free care. The assumptions with regard to bad debt are that 8 percent of gross revenue will be the allowance for bad debt. An assumption of 20 percent of salaries was used for employee benefits which include the FICA tax, health insurance, dental insurance, retirement plans, and other benefits. Supplies and expenses were calculated as a function of patient day with a $90 per day estimate. Included in supplies and expenses are supplies utilized in the delivery of health care services as well as medical professional fees such as the half-time medical director and purchased services such as laundry, linen, speech and hearing services, utilities, telephone, malpractice insurance, repairs and maintenance. The depreciation assumptions are that the building would be depreciated over 40 years, fixed equipment over 20 years and major movable equipment over 10 years. Pre-opening expenses for the first 45 days of operation have been capitalized over 60 months with low amortization costs over 15 years. There is no income tax assumed in the first year but the assumption in subsequent years is that the tax rate will be 38 percent. The failure to assume a hospital tax is inconsequential. The assumptions for the second fiscal year are basically the same. Although staffing remained the same, the FTEs per occupied bed increased, and a 7 percent inflation factor was added. The project will be financially feasible even though the facility is pessimistically projecting a loss of $102,000 for the first year because a facility can suffer a loss in its first year of operation and remain financially feasible. The facility projects a $286,000 profit in its second year of operation. With regard to utilization by class of pay, FRTC has assumed that the insurance category represents 65.5 percent of total revenues projected and includes such things as commercial insurance, Blue Cross and any third party carrier other than Medicare and Medicaid. Assumptions with regard to the private pay are that 25 percent of the total revenues will be generated by private pay patients and would include the self pay portions of an insurance payor's bill, such as deductible and co-insurance. Bad debt was assumed to be 8 percent, and Charter Care or free care, 1.5 percent. FRTC's projected utilization by class of pay is reasonable and is supported by the protestants' current experience with commercial insurance utilization and reimbursement and the predicted recoveries if RTCPB were IRTP-licensed. In the second year of operation, the assumptions with regard to utilization by class of pay demonstrated an increase in the insurance category from 65.5 to 66.5 percent with everything else remaining the same except for a decrease in bad debt to 7 percent. The assumption with regard to a decrease in bad debt is based upon the establishment of referral patterns from acute psychiatric facilities, outpatient programs, mental health therapists, and miscellaneous programs. The assumption is that 65 percent of the patients would be covered by insurance, not that 65 percent of each bill would be paid by insurance. Charter's experience has been that a good portion of the deductible and co-insurance payments are collectible. FRTC did not assume payment from any governmental contracts or HRS reimbursement. FRTC's projected self pay percentages assumption reasonably contemplates the percentage of households in the district which can afford its projections for self pay. For purposes of evaluating the financial feasibility of this proposal, a management fee was not included because in looking at the financial feasibility of a facility the expenses of a corporate home office are incurred whether or not the facility is built. It was not appropriate to allocate a management fee to the hospital because it showed a loss in its first year of operation and a profit in its second. When the facility becomes profitable, FRTC anticipates passing the profit through to the corporation to help reduce the corporate overhead. If a management fee had been allocated to this facility, allocations would have had to have been made to the other Charter facilities to show where their management expense had decreased and their profitability increased. It would have been inappropriate to take these fixed expenses and allocate a portion of them to the proposed FRTC facility. In addition to the fact that the failure to include a management fee in the pro forma should not affect the feasibility of the project, Charter has good cause not to apply a $44 per patient day management fee in its IRTP. FRTC's categories of payor class are generally reasonable based in part on the results of a survey performed in Florida. FRTC's assumptions and calculations are reasonable, based upon the testimony of William S. Love and Dr. Ronald Luke, notwithstanding the testimony of Dan Sullivan, Donald Wilson, and Christopher Knepper, also qualified as experts. Specifically, it is found that Dr. Luke's assessment that the designation of a facility as a licensed specialty hospital has a beneficial effect on its ability to obtain insurance reimbursement for services, that reimbursement impacts to increase ALOS, and that the breakdown of sources of payment that FRTC has used is reasonable, is a credible assessment, supported elsewhere in the record. It is also found that Mr. Knepper's assessment for bad debt is inadequately supported and inconsistent with other evidence, and therefore not credible. Mr. Sullivan's testimony is not persuasive. Staffing and Recruitment Dr. Brett, a Charter regional director for hospital operations, was accepted as an expert in staffing psychiatric facilities including residential treatment centers. His distinctions between the acute care and residential types of facilities are corroborated and explained by other witnesses and evidence. Mr. Joyner was accepted as Charter's expert recruiter. Although the depth of Mr. Joyner's hands-on involvement in active recruitment is not extensive, the Charter network of manpower referrals and "head hunting" will obviously support this project. Upon the combined testimony of Dr. Brett, Mr. Joyner, and Paul Bodner, Charter's senior director of physician relations, there is sufficient evidence that FRTC can recruit a suitable staffing pattern to ensure quality of care (see FOF Nos. 9 and 10) in its proposed program, even if it has to hire from out of state and pay somewhat higher salaries due to some qualified manpower shortages in certain categories in Palm Beach County. In making this finding, the undersigned has considered the testimony of Donald Wilson concerning certain institution-specific recruiting problems of his principal, RTCPB, and the "step down" status of residential treatment as testified by Mary Certo, of Humana. Impact on Costs and Competition The FRTC project can reasonably be expected to attract patients with insurance coverage who would otherwise go to existing facilities for care, however, in light of the relatively consistent occupancy rates at Humana and RTCPB despite both their geographical proximity and the unique confusion of referrals arising over the relocation of Dr. Kelly, this impact is not altogether clear. Dr. Kelly's reputation will not be impacted by granting of a CON to FRTC. It is also not possible upon the basis of the record created in this hearing to factor out reimbursement differences inherent in Humana's current CON classification and RTCPB's circumstance as an unlicensed intensive residential treatment center. In any case, the negative impact upon Humana must be measured against the health planning goals expressed by several witnesses that it is desirable to substitute more suitable, less restrictive facilities for institutionalization of the severely emotionally disturbed child and adolescent whenever possible and that it is also desirable to encourage residential treatment upon a continuum of care basis after acute psychiatric care. The FRTC project will obviously increase the accessibility to this type of treatment for young people who have the appropriate insurance coverage. These goals are in conformity with the applicable health plans. The FRTC project can reasonably be expected to initially increase some costs of health services throughout the district because it will inflate some salary costs due to competition, but the negative impact will probably be short term.

Recommendation Upon a balanced consideration of all relevant criteria it is RECOMMENDED that HRS enter a Final Order approving FRTC's CON application for an IRTP, as updated, for licensure as a specialty hospital. DONE and ORDERED this 28th day of June, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida. ELLA JANE P. DAVIS 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 28th day of June, 1988. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NOS. 87-2037 & 87-2050 The following constitute specific rulings pursuant to Section 120.59(2), F.S., with regard to the parties' respective Proposed Findings of Fact. Proposed Findings of Fact (PFOF) of FRTC: Covered in "issue" and FOF 1. Covered in FOF 1 and 2. 3-7. Except as subordinate or unnecessary, accepted in "procedural and evidentiary matters" and FOF 11. 8. Accepted in FOF 12. 9-12. Except as subordinate, unnecessary, or cumulative, accepted in FOF 7-9. 13. Accepted in FOF 10. 14-17. Accepted in part and rejected in part in FOF 7-11, 30. Although portions of the underlying data referred to in proposal 16 and by Mr. Joyner in his testimony was excluded from evidence, he was qualified as a recruitment expert and for the reasons set forth in FOF 30, his opinion is accepted. 18-19. Accepted in FOF 21. Accepted in FOF 22, 26, 29. Accepted in FOF 23. Accepted in FOF 24. Accepted in FOF 25 and 29. Accepted in FOF 26 and 29. Except as subordinate or unnecessary, covered in FOF 27. Except as mere argument or statement of position, accepted in FOF 26-27, and 29. 27-29. Accepted in part and rejected in part as unnecessary and cumulative to the facts as found; in part rejected as mere argument or recital of testimony, not distinguishing opinion from fact. To the degree adopted or accepted upon the record as a whole, see FOF 26-29. 30-31. Accepted in FOF 28. 32-40. Accepted in part and rejected in part as unnecessary and cumulative to the facts as found; in part rejected as mere argument or recital of testimony, not distinguishing opinion from fact. To the degree adopted or accepted upon the record as a whole, see FOF 9, 11, 21, 26-29. 41-44. Accepted in part and rejected in part as unnecessary and cumulative to the facts as found in FOF 29-32. 45-47. Rejected, as recital or summation of testimony and as part of preliminary agency review not relevant to this de novo proceeding. 48. Covered in FOF 7, 18-20, 22, and 26. 49-52. dejected as set out in "organic law and legislative background," "procedural and evidentiary matters," FOF 13-15. See also COL. 53. Accepted in FOF 16. 54-58. Rejected in part and accepted in part as set out in FOF 14-15. Rejected where not supported in full by the record as a whole, where subordinate, unnecessary or cumulative to the facts as found and where mere recital of testimony. 59. Accepted in principle and modified to conform to the record in FOF 18-20, 31. 60-61. Accepted in part and rejected in part as stated in "procedural and evidentiary matters" and in FOF 14-16 and the COL. Accepted in FOF 15 and COL. Accepted in FOF 18-20, 31. 64-68. Rejected as unnecessary to the facts as found in FOF 1, 7, 13-15 and 29, also in part as not supported by the record as a whole, and as primarily legal argument and recitation of testimony. Accepted in FOF 3-4 and 30. Accepted in part and rejected in part in FOF 3-4, 7, 26, and 29. 71-74. Except as subordinate or unnecessary, accepted in FOF 5-9 and 30-32. HRS' Proposed Findings of Fact (PFOF): 1-3. Accepted in "organic law and legislative background." 4. (Two paragraphs) Accepted FOF 3-4. Accepted in "issue" and FOF 3-4. Accepted, FOF 29-32. Rejected as unnecessary. Accepted, FOF 1. 10-18 & 20. Except as subordinate or unnecessary, accepted in FOF 5, 6, 15, 26, 31. 19. Rejected as irrelevant. 21-28. Accepted in part as modified to conform to the record as a whole in FOF 6-9, 30-31. The irrelevant, unnecessary or subordinate material has also been rejected. 29-31. Accepted in FOF 4, 9, 21, 26, 29-31. 32-35. Accepted in FOF 7-9. 36-41. Accepted in FOF 7-9 as modified to conform to the record as a whole, to eliminate subordinate and irrelevant matters and to comport with the rulings on the insubstantiality of updates to the CON application, in "procedural and evidentiary matters" and FOF 11. 42-45. Accepted as modified to conform to the record as a whole, to eliminate subordinate and irrelevant matters and to comport with the rulings on the insubstantiality of updates to the CON application in "procedural and evidentiary matters" and FOF 9-11, 21, 23, 30 and 32. Accepted in FOF 22, 26, 29. Accepted in FOF 7, 20, 22, 26. 49-52. Accepted in FOF 3, 4, 21-29. Assuming, based on the transcript reference, that this proposal refers to FRTC's pro forma, this proposal is accepted but unnecessary for the reasons set forth in rulings on HRS' PFOF 36-45. See FOF 11 and 21-29. Accepted in FOF 13-15. 55-58. Rejected as unnecessary. 59. Accepted but not dispositive of any material issue at bar. See FOF 13-15. 60-62. Accepted in part and rejected in part in FOF 13-14, as mere recital of testimony and statements of position. 63. Accepted in FOF 29. 64-65. Accepted in FOF 5-9. Accepted in FOF 7-9. Accepted that HRS made this assumption but it fails to explicate the non-rule policy. See FOF 13-14. Accepted in FOF 16. Rejected as a statement of position or COL. Peripherally, see COL. Accepted in FOF 13-14 but not dispositive of any material issue at bar. Rejected in FOF 13-14. 72-74. Rejected as preliminary agency action, irrelevant to this de novo proceeding. 75-76. Accepted in FOF 17-20. This is a subordinate definition and not a FOF. See FOF 30-31 and COL. Rejected in part and accepted in part in FOF 17-20, 31. Accepted in FOF 10. Accepted in FOF 13-15. Accepted as stated in the "procedural and evidentiary matters," FOF 13-15 and in the COL. 82-85. Covered in FOF 3-6, 13-15. 86. Rejected as preliminary agency action, irrelevant to this de novo proceeding. 87-88. Rejected as subordinate or unnecessary. 89. Accepted in FOF 29. 90-96. Accepted as modified to conform to the record evidence as a whole and FOF 15-16 and to reject subordinate and unnecessary material. Accepted without any connotations of the word "therefore" in FOF 4, 7-9, 21 and 29. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative. Accepted in "organic and legislative background" and FOF 13-15. Rejected as not established upon the record as a whole; unnecessary. Rejected as a statement of position only. Joint Proposed Findings of Fact of RTCPB and Humana 1-2 Accepted in FOF 1. 3-4. Accepted in FOF 2. 5-6. Accepted in "issue" and FOF 3-4. 7. Accepted in "issue" and FOF 5-6. 8-13. Accepted in part and rejected in part as set out under "procedural and evidentiary matters," FOF 3-6, 13-15, and the COL. 14-18. Except as subordinate or unnecessary, accepted in FOF 1, 7-9, 11, 21-29. 19-27. Rejected as irrelevant preliminary action to this de novo proceeding. 28-36. Rejected in part and accepted in part upon the compelling competent, substantial evidence in the record as a whole as set forth in FOF 13-14. Also as to 33 see FOF 15. 37-52. Accepted in part and rejected in part in FOF 13-16 upon the greater weight of the credible evidence of record as a whole. Irrelevant, unnecessary and subordinate material has been rejected, as has mere argument of counsel. Accepted in FOF 17. Rejected in FOF 20, 31. Accepted as modified in FOF 20, 31. Excepting the mere rhetoric, accepted in FOF 18, 31. Accepted as modified in FOF 7, 18-20, 26, 31. 58-59. Accepted in part and rejected in part in FOF 17-20, 26, Rejected as subordinate. Rejected as recital of testimony and argument 62-63. Rejected as unnecessary. 64-67. Accepted in FOF 3-4, 6-9. The first sentence is rejected as cumulative to the facts as found in FOF 3-4, 6-9. The second sentence is rejected as not supported by the greater weight of the evidence as a whole. Rejected in FOF 4, 21. Accepted in FOF 4 and 21, 29. Rejected as unnecessary Accepted in FOF 26. Rejected in FOF 15-20, 31. Rejected as unnecessary in a noncomparitive hearing. 75-87. Except as irrelevant, unnecessary, or subordinate, accepted in FOF 5-9, 30, 31. Rejected in part as unnecessary and in part as not comporting with the greater weight of the evidence in FOF 7-10 and 30. Accepted in FOF 1, 5-9. 90-92. Accepted in FOF 5-9. Rejected in FOF 5-6. Rejected as subordinate. 95-98. Accepted in FOF 5-9. 99-102. Rejected as unnecessary. 103. Except as subordinate or unnecessary, accepted in FOF 5-9. 104-118. Except as unnecessary, subordinate, or cumulative to the facts as found, these proposals are covered in FOF 5-9, 30-31. Except as Subordinate, covered in FOF 6 and 31. Accepted in part in FOF 5-9, 21-29, otherwise rejected as misleading. Except as subordinate, accepted in FOF 6. Rejected as unnecessary. Accepted in FOF 21. Accepted in FOF 21-29. Rejected in part and accepted in part in FOF 21-29. Rejected as subordinate and unnecessary in part and not supported by the greater weight of the credible evidence in 21-29. 127-128. These proposals primarily recite testimony by Mr. Grono, an administrator of a psychiatric hospital for very severely disturbed persons (Grant Center). This evidence by itself is not persuasive in light of Dr. Luke's study and other admissions of the parties referenced in FOF 21-29. Upon the greater weight of contrary evidence, it is rejected. 129. Rejected as subordinate except partly accepted in FOF 29. 130-133. Rejected upon the greater weight of the evidence in FOF 9, 11 and 21-29. 134, 139. Rejected as legal argument without citation. 135-138. Rejected in FOF 21-29. 140-144. Rejected as stated as not supported by the greater weight of the credible evidence and as partly mere legal argument. See FOF 9, 21-29. 145. The first sentence is rejected upon the reference to PFOF 140-144 for the same reasons given above and the remainder is rejected as subordinate. 146. Rejected in FOF 21-29. 147. Rejected as mere legal argument without citation. 148-149. Rejected in FOF 21-29, particularly 27 upon the greater weight of the credible evidence. The mere legal argument is also rejected. 150-157. Rejected as set out in FOF 28 upon the greater weight of the credible evidence. Uncited argument and statements of position have likewise bean rejected. 158, 160. Rejected as mere argument without citation. 159. Rejected as subordinate and not dispositive of any material issue at bar in FOF 23. 161. Rejected as mere argument. 162-167. Rejected as not supported by the greater weight of the credible evidence in FOF 30-32. Also 167 is rejected as mere argument without citation. 168. Accepted in part and rejected in part in FOF 30-32. 169. Accepted but subordinate. 170. Rejected as unnecessary and cumulative to the facts as found in FOF 31. 171-180. Covered in FOF 30-32. 181-185. Rejected as contrary to the evidence in part and in part unnecessary and cumulative to the ruling in "procedural and evidentiary matters" and FOF 7, 10-11, 21, 23, 30-32. 186-188. Rejected in FOF 7, 10 and 30 upon the greater weight of the credible evidence. 189. Rejected as unnecessary 190. Rejected in FOF 30. 191-392. Accepted but not dispositive of any material issue at bar. See FOF 30-32. 193. Rejected in FOF 30-32. 194-195. Except as subordinate or unnecessary, rejected in the several references to future establishment of referral networks. See FOF 21, 27. 196-197 & 199. Rejected as unnecessary 198. Rejected as irrelevant in part and immaterial in part upon the rulings in "procedural and evidentiary matters" and FOF 11. 200. Rejected as unnecessary 201-202. Accepted in FOF 7, 20, 26-27 and 31, but cumulative. 203. Covered in the COL. Rejected in FOF 21-22. 204. Rejected as mere argument without citation. COPIES FURNISHED: Michael J. Glazer, Esquire AUSLEY, McMULLEN, McGEHEE, CAROTHERS & PROCTOR 227 South Calhoun Street Post Office Box 391 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 John T. Brennan, Jr., Esquire BONNER & O'CONNEL 900 17th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20006 James C. Hauser, Esquire Joy Heath Thomas, Esquire MESSER, VICKERS, CAPARELLO, FRENCH & MADSEN 215 South Monroe Street Post Office Box 1876 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Fred W Baggett, Esquire Stephen A. Ecenia, Esquire ROBERTS, BAGGETT, LaFACE & RICHARD 101 East College Avenue Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Lesley Mendelson, Esquire Assistant General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Sam Power, Agency Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Gregory L. Coler, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700

Florida Laws (4) 120.54120.57395.002395.003
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FLORIDA PSYCHIATRIC CENTERS vs. FLORIDA RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT CENTERS, 87-002046 (1987)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 87-002046 Latest Update: Sep. 07, 1988

Findings Of Fact The application and project On October 15, 1986, Respondent, Florida Residential Treatment Centers, Inc. (FRTC), filed a timely application with the Respondent, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services (Department), for a certificate of need to construct a 60-bed specialty hospital to be licensed as an intensive residential treatment program for children and adolescents in Broward County, Florida. On March 11, 1987, the Department proposed to grant FRTC's application, and petitioners, Florida Psychiatric Centers (FPC) and South Broward Hospital District (SBHD), timely petitioned for formal administrative review. FRTC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Charter Medical Corporation (Charter). Currently, Charter owns, operates or has under construction 85 hospitals within its corporate network. Of these, 13 are general hospitals, and 72 are psychiatric hospitals. Notably, Charter now operates residential treatment programs in Newport News, Virginia, Provo, Utah, and Mobile, Alabama; and, is developing such a program in Memphis, Tennessee. Within the State of Florida, Charter operates psychiatric hospitals in Tampa, Jacksonville, Fort Myers, Miami, and Ocala. In connection with the operation of these facilities, Charter has established satellite counseling centers to screen patients prior to admission and to provide aftercare upon discharge. Of 20 such centers operated by Charter, one is located in Broward County and two are located in Dade County. The facility proposed by FRTC in Broward County (District X) will treat seriously emotionally disturbed children and adolescents under the age of 18. The patients admitted to the facility will have the full range of psychiatric diagnoses, with the probable exception of serious mental retardation and severe autism. FRTC will not treat patients who present themselves with a primary substance abuse diagnosis, nor will it admit patients who are actively dangerous. This distinguishes FRTC from an acute psychiatric hospital where actively dangerous patients requiring immediate medical intervention are often admitted. The anticipated length of stay at FRTC will vary depending upon the patient's responsiveness to treatment, but is reasonably expected to range between 6 months to 2 years, with an average of 1 year. The treatment programs to be offered at FRTC will be based upon a bio- psychosocial treatment model. This model assumes that the biological component of a patient's condition has been stabilized and that psychiatric medication will be administered solely to maintain this stabilized condition. The social component of the model is designed to resolve problems in interpersonal, family and peer relationships through educational groups, psychiatric co-therapeutic groups and family group therapy. The psychological component focuses primarily on developing personal understanding and insight to guide the patient toward self-directed behavior. Among the therapies to be offered at FRTC are individual, family, recreational, group and educational. Group therapy will be designed to resolve interpersonal problems and relationships, and focuses primarily on building trust among group members. Some group therapy sessions will also cover specific issues such as sex education, eating disorders, self-image and social skills. The goal of recreational therapy will be to teach patients to play appropriately, showing them how to give, take and share, and to follow and to lead. Recreational activities will be available both on and off campus. The goal of occupational therapy will be to develop skills used in work. For a child whose work is school, this often involves using special education techniques. For teenagers, occupational therapy also develops work skills, and prepares them for vocational training or employment. Family therapy is crucial because the family is she core of child development. Families will be invited to spend days with their children at FRTC where they will learn behavioral management techniques, and participate in parent education activities and multifamily groups. The school component of the program includes development of an individualized educational plan for each child. School will be conducted 4-5 hours a day. FRTC will utilize the level system as a behavioral management tool This system provides incentives for learning responsibility for one's own behavior and for functioning autonomously. The typical progress of a patient at FRTC will be as follows. First, a team which includes a psychiatrist, social worker, psychologist and teacher will decide, based upon available information, whether admission is appropriate. If admitted, a comprehensive assessment will be conducted within 10 days, a goal- oriented treatment program will be developed for each patient, designed to remedy specific problems. Discharge planning will begin immediately upon admission. A case manager will be involved to assure that the treatment modalities are well-coordinated. Finally, FRTC will provide aftercare upon discharge. Should any FRTC patients experience acute episodes, they will be referred to acute care psychiatric hospitals with which FRTC has entered into transfer agreements. Likewise, patients who require other medical attention will be referred to appropriate physicians Consistency with the district plan and state health plan. While the local health plan does not specifically address the need for intensive residential treatment programs (IRTPs) for children and adolescents, it does contain several policies and priorities that relate to the provision of psychiatric services within the district. Policy 2 contains the following relevant priorities when an applicant proposes to provide a new psychiatric service: ... Each psychiatric inpatient unit shall provide the following services: psychological testing/assessment, psychotherapy, chemotherapy, psychiatric consultation to other hospital departments, family therapy, crisis intervention, activity therapy, social services and structured education for school age patients, and have a minimum patient capacity of 20 and a relationship with the community mental health center. Facilities should be encouraged to provide for a separation of children, adolescents, adults, and geriatric patient' where possible. Greater priority should be given to psychiatric inpatient programs that propose to offer a broad spectrum of continuous care. ... Applicants should be encouraged to propose innovative treatment techniques such as, complementing outpatient and inpatient services or cluster campuses, that are designed to ultimately reduce dependency upon short term psychiatric hospital beds. New facilities should be structurally designed for conducive recovery, provide a least restrictive setting, provide areas for privacy, and offer a wide range of psychiatric therapies. Applicants should be encouraged to offer intermediate and follow-up care to reduce recidivism, encourage specialty services by population and age, engage in research, and offer a full range of complete assessment (biological and psychological). Additionally, the local plan contains the following policies and priorities which warrant consideration in this case: POLICY #3 Services provided by all proposed and existing facilities should be made available to all segments of the resident population regardless of the ability to pay. Priority #1 - Services and facilities should be designed to treat indigent patients to the greatest extend possible, with new project approval based in part on a documented history of provision of services to indigent patients. Priority #2 - Applicants should have documented a willingness to participate in appropriate community planning activities aimed at addressing the problem of financing for the medically indigent. POLICY #4 Providers of health services are expected to the extent possible to insure an improvement of the quality of health services within the district. Priority #1 - Applicants for certificate of need approval should document either their intention or experience in meeting or exceeding the standards promulgated for the provision of services by the appropriate national accreditation organization. Priority #2 - Each applicant for certificate of need approval should have an approved Patient Bill of Rights' `as part of the institution's internal policy. POLICY #5 Specialized inpatient psychiatric treatment services should be available by age, group and service type. For example, programs for dually diagnosed mentally ill substance abusers, the elderly, and children, should be accessible to those population groups. Priority #1 - Applicants should be encouraged to expand or initiate specialized psychiatric treatment services. The FRTC application is consistent with the local health plan. FRTC's program elements and facility design are consistent with those mandated by the local plan for mental health facilities, and its proposal offers a wide range of services, including follow-up care. FRTC intends to provide a minimum of 1.5 percent of its patient day allotment to indigent children and adolescents, and will seek JCAH accreditation and CHAMPUS approval. The state health plan addresses services similar to those being proposed by FRTC, and contains the following pertinent policies and statements: Mental health services are designed to provide diagnosis, treatment and support of individuals suffering from mental illness and substance abuse. Services encompass a wide range of programs which include: diagnosis and evaluation, prevention, outpatient treatment, day treatment, crisis stabilization and counseling, foster and group homes, hospital inpatient diagnosis and treatment, residential treatment, and long term inpatient care. These programs interact with other social and economic services, in addition to traditional medical care, to meet the specific needs of individual clients. STATE POLICIES As the designated mental health authority' for Florida, HRS has the responsibility for guiding the development of a coordinated system of mental health services in cooperation with local community efforts and input. Part of that responsibility is to develop and adopt policies which can be used to guide the development of services such that the needs of Florida residents are served in an appropriate and cost effective manner. Policies relating to the development of mental health services in Florida are contained in Chapter 394 and Chapter 230.2317, F.S. The goal of these services is: '... reduce the occurrence, severity, duration and disabling aspects of mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders.' (Chapter 394, F.S.) '... provide education; mental health treatment; and when needed, residential services for severely emotionally disturbed students.' (Chapter 230.2317, F.S.) Within the statutes, major emphasis has also been placed on patient rights and the use of the least restrictive setting for the provision of treatment. 'It is further the policy of the state that the least restrictive appropriate available treatment be utilized based on the individual needs and best interests of the patient and consistent with optimum improvement of the patient's condition.' (Chapter 394.459(2)(b), F.S.) 'The program goals for each component of the network are'... 'to provide programs and services as close as possible to the child's home in the least restrictive manner consistent with the child's needs.' (Chapter 230.2317(1)(b), F.S.) Additional policies have been developed in support of the concept of a 'least restrictive environment' and address the role of long and short term inpatient care in providing mental health services for severely emotionally disturbed (SED) children. These include: 'State mental hospitals are for those adolescents who are seriously mentally ill and who have not responded to other residential treatment programs and need a more restrictive setting.' (Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Program Office, 1982) 'Combined exceptional student and mental health services should be provided in the least restrictive setting possible. This setting is preferably a school or a community building rather than a clinical or hospital environment.' (Office of Children Youth and Families, 1984) 'Alternative, therapeutic living arrangements must be available to SED students in the local areas, when family support is no longer possible, so that they may continue to receive services in the least restrictive way possible.' (Office of Children Youth and Families, 1984) 'SED students should not be placed in residential schools or hospitals because of lack of local treatment resources, either educational or residential.' (Office of Children Youth and Families, 1984). * * * Sufficient funding for the development of residential treatment and community support is necessary if the state is to fulfill its commitment to providing services for long term mentally ill persons. These services provide, in the long run, a more humane and cost effective means of meeting the mental health needs of Florida residents. Community services have been shown to be effective in rapidly returning the majority of individuals to their productive capacity and reducing the need for costly long term, institutional mental health services. There is, therefore, a need to proceed as rapidly as possible with the development of publicly funded services in those districts which are currently experiencing problems resulting from gaps in services. * * * Services for Adolescents and Children An additional issue which has been identified as a result of increased pressures for development of hospital based programs is the need to differentiate between services for adults and those for children and adolescents. Existing policy supports the separation of services for children and adolescents from those of adults and requires the development of a continuum of services for emotionally disturbed children. The actual need for both long and short term inpatient services for children and adolescents is relatively small compared to that of adults but is difficult to quantify. Providers, however, continue to request approval for long and short term adolescent and children services as a means of gaining access to the health care market. Continued development of long and short term inpatient hospital programs for the treatment of adolescents and children is contrary to current treatment practices for these groups and is, therefore, inappropriate without local data to support the need for these services. Such development can contribute to inappropriate placement, unnecessary costs of treatment, and divert scarce resources away from alternative uses. In addition, the following pertinent goals are contained in the state health plan: GOAL 1: ENSURE THE AVAILABILITY OF MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES TO ALL FLORIDA RESIDENTS IN A LEAST RESTRICTIVE SETTING. * * * GOAL 2: PROMOTE THE DEVELOPMENT OF A CONTINUUM OF HIGH QUALITY, COST EFFECTIVE PRIVATE SECTOR MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT AND PREVENTIVE SERVICES. * * * GOAL 3: DEVELOP A COMPLETE RANGE OF ESSENTIAL PUBLIC MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES IN EACH HRS DISTRICT. * * * OBJECTIVE 3.1.: Develop a range of essential mental health services in each HRS district by 1989. * * * OBJECTIVE 3.2.: Place all clients identified by HRS as inappropriately institutionalized in state hospitals in community treatment settings by July 1, 1989. RECOMMENDED ACTIONS: 3.2a.: Develop a complete range of community support services in each HRS district by July 1, 1989. * * * OBJECTIVE 3.3.: Develop a network of residential treatment settings for Florida's severely emotionally disturbed children by 1990. The FRTC application is consistent with the state health plan which emphasizes the trend toward deinstutionalization, and the importance of education, treatment and residential services for severely emotionally disturbed children and adolescents rather than the traditional approach of institutional placement. Deinstutionalization assures more appropriate placement and treatment of patients, and is less costly from a capital cost and staffing perspective. The FRTC application also promotes treatment within the state, and will assist in reducing out-of-state placements. Need for the proposed facility The Department has not adopted a rule for the review of applications for IRTPs, and has no numeric need methodology to assess their propriety. Rather, because of the paucity of such applications and available data, the Department reviews each application on a case by case basis and, if it is based on reasonable assumptions and is consistent with the criteria specified in Section 381.705, Florida Statutes, approves it. In evaluating the need for an IRTP, the Department does not consider other residential treatment facilities in the district, which are not licensed as IRTP's and which have not received a CON, as like and existing health care services because such facilities are subject to different licensure standards. Under the circumstances, the Department's approach is rational, and it is found that there are no like and existing health care services in the district. While there are no like and existing health care services in the district, there are other facilities which offer services which bear some similarity to those being proposed by FRTC. These facilities include short-term and long-term residential treatment facilities, therapeutic foster homes and therapeutic group homes. These facilities are, however, operating at capacity, have waiting lists, and do not in general offer the breath or term of service proposed by FRTC. There are also short-term and long-term psychiatric hospitals within the district that include within their treatment modalities services similar to those proposed by the applicant. The short-term facilities are not, however, an appropriate substitute for children and adolescents needing long-term intensive residential treatment and neither are the long-term facilities from either a treatment or cost perspective. Notably, there are only 15 long term psychiatric beds in Broward County dedicated to adolescents, and none dedicated to children. In addition to the evident need to fill the gap which exists in the continuum of care available to emotionally disturbed children and adolescents in Broward County, the record also contains other persuasive proof of the reasonableness of FRTC's proposal. This proof, offered through Dr. Ronald Luke, an expert in health planning whose opinions are credited, demonstrated the need for and the reasonableness of FRTC's proposed 60-bed facility. Dr. Luke used two persuasive methodologies which tested the reasonableness of FRTC's 60-bed proposal. The first was a ratio of beds per population methodology similar to the rule methodology the Department uses for short-term psychiatric beds. Under this methodology, approval of FRTC's proposal would result in 25.47 beds per 100,000 population under 18 in District X. This ratio was tested for reasonableness with other available data. Relevant national data demonstrates an average daily census of 16,000 patients in similar beds. This calculates into 24.01 beds per 100,000 at a 90 percent occupancy rate and 25.93 beds per 100,000 at an 85 percent occupancy rate. Additionally, Georgia has a category of beds similar to IRTP beds. The Georgia utilization data demonstrates a pertinent ratio of 27.05 beds per 100,000 population. The second methodology used by Dr. Luke to test the reasonableness of FRTC's proposal, was to assess national utilization data for "overnight care in conjunction with an intensive treatment program." The national census rate in such facility per 100,000 population for persons under 18 was 21.58. Multiplying such rate by the district population under 18, derives an average daily census of 52. Assuming an optimal occupancy rate of 85 percent, which is reasonable, this demonstrates a gross need for 61 IRTP beds in District X. Dr. Luke's conclusions not only demonstrate the reasonableness of FRTC's proposal, but corroborate the need for such beds within the district. This proof, together with an analysis of existing or similar services, existing waiting lists for beds at similar facilities, and the placement by the Department of 28 children from Broward County outside the county in 1986 for long-term residential treatment, demonstrates the need for, and reasonableness of, FRTC's proposal. Quality of care The parties have stipulated that Charter and its hospitals provide quality short and long term psychiatric care. All of Charter's psychiatric hospitals are JCAH accredited, and Charter will seek JCAH accreditation and CHAMPUS approval for the proposed facility. Based on Charter's provision of quality psychiatric care, its experience in providing intensive residential treatment, and the programs proposed for the Broward County facility, it is found that quality intensive residential treatment will be provided at the FRTC facility. The availability of resources, including health manpower, management personnel, and funds for capital and operating expenditures, for project accomplishment and operation. The parties have stipulated that FRTC has available resources, including management personnel and funds for capital and operating expenditures, for project accomplishment and operation. The proof further demonstrates that FRTC will be able to recruit any other administrative, clinical or other personnel needed for its facility. 1/ Accessibility to all residents FRTC projects the following utilization by class of pay: Insurance 66.5 percent, private pay 25 percent, indigent 1.5 percent, and bad debt 7 percent. While this is an insignificant indigent load, FRTC has committed to accept state-funded patients at current state rates. FRTC's projected utilization by class of pay is reasonable. The evident purpose of FRTC's application is to permit its licensure as a hospital under Section 395.002, Florida Statutes, and thereby permit it to be called a "hospital." If a residential treatment facility is licensed as a hospital it has a significant advantage over unlicensed facilities in receiving reimbursement from third party payors. Therefore, accessibility will be increased for those children and adolescents in need of such care whose families have insurance coverage since it is more likely that coverage will be afforded at an IRTP licensed as a "hospital" than otherwise. Design considerations The architectural design for the FRTC facility was adopted from a prototype short-term psychiatric hospital design which Charter has constructed in approximately 50 locations. This design contains the three essential components for psychiatric facilities: administration, support and nursing areas. The floor plan allows easy flow of circulation, and also allows for appropriate nursing control through visual access to activities on the floor. This design is appropriate for the purposes it will serve, and will promote quality residential care. As initially proposed, the facility had a gross square footage of 31,097 square feet. At hearing, an updated floor plan was presented that increased the gross square footage by 900 square feet to 32,045, an insignificant change. In the updated floor plan the recreational component was increased from a multipurpose room to a half-court gymnasium, an additional classroom was added, and the nursing unit was reduced in size to create an assessment unit. The updated floor plan is an enhancement of FRTC's initial proposal, and is a better design for the provision of long-term residential care to children and adolescents than the initial design. While either design is appropriate, acceptance of FRTC's updated floor plan is appropriate where, as here, the changes are not substantial. Financial feasibility As previously noted, the parties have stipulated that FRTC has the available funds for capital and operating expenses, and that the project is financially feasible in the immediate term. At issue is the long-term financial feasibility of the project. FRTC presented two pro forma calculations to demonstrate the financial feasibility of the project. The first pro forma was based on the application initially reviewed by the Department. The second was based on the proposal presented at hearing that included the changes in staffing pattern and construction previously discussed. Both pro formas were, however, based on the assumption than the 60-bed facility would achieve 50 percent occupancy in the first year of operation and 60 percent occupancy in the second year of operation, that the average length of stay would be 365 days, and that the daily patient charge in the first year of operation would be $300 and in the second year of operation would be $321. These are reasonable assumptions, and the proposed charges are reasonable. The projected charges are comparable to charges at other IRTP's in Florida, and are substantially less than those of acute psychiatric hospitals. For example, current daily charges at Charter Hospital of Miami are $481, and FPC anticipates that its average daily charge will be $500. FRTC projects its utilization by class of pay for its first year of operation to be as follows: Insurance (commercial insurance and CHAMPUS) 65.5 percent, private pay 25 percent, indigent 1.5 percent, and bad debt 8 percent. The projection by class of pay for the second year of operation changes slightly based on the assumption that, through experience, the bad debt allowance should decrease. Consequently, for its second year of operation FRTC projects its utilization by class of pay to be as follows: Insurance (commercial insurance and CHAMPUS) 66.5 percent, private pay 25 percent, indigent 1.5 percent, and bad debt 7 percent. These projections of utilization are reasonable. FRTC's pro forma for the application initially reviewed by the Department demonstrates an estimated net income for the first year of operation of $97,000, and for the second year of operation $229,000. The updated pro forma to accommodate the changes in staffing level and construction, demonstrates a $102,000 loss in the first year of operation and a net income in the second year of operation of $244,000. The assumptions upon which FRTC predicated its pro formas were reasonable. Accordingly, the proof demonstrates that the proposed project will be financially feasible in the long-term. Costs and methods of construction The estimated project cost of the FRTC facility, as initially reviewed by the Department, was $4,389,533. The estimated cost of the project, as modified at hearing, was $4,728,000. This increase was nominally attributable to the change in architectural design of the facility which increased the cost of professional services by approximately $7,500 and construction costs by $139,322. Of more significance to the increased cost of the project was the increase in land acquisition costs which raised, because of appreciation factors, from $750,000 to $1,000,000. The parties stipulated to the reasonableness of the majority of the development costs and most of the other items were not actively contested. Petitioners did, however, dispute the reasonableness of FRTC's cost estimate for land acquisition and construction supervision. The proof supports, however the reasonableness of FRTC's estimates. FRTC has committed to construct its facility south of State Road 84 or east of Interstate 95 in Broward County, but has not, as yet, secured a site. It has, however, allocated $1,000,000 for land acquisition, $200,281 for site preparation exclusive of landscaping, and $126,000 for construction contingencies. The parties have stipulated to the reasonableness of the contingency fund, which is designed as a safety factor to cover unknown conditions such as unusually high utility fees and unusual site conditions. Totalling the aforementioned sums, which may be reasonably attributable to land acquisition costs, yields a figure of $1,326,281. Since a minimum of 6 acres is needed for project accomplishment, FRTC's estimate of project costs contemplates a potential cost of $221,047 per acre. In light of the parties' stipulation, and the proof regarding land costs in the area, FRTC's estimate for land acquisition costs is a reasonable planning figure for this project. FRTC budgeted in its estimate of project costs $6,000 for the line item denoted as "construction supervision (Scheduling)." Petitioners contend that construction supervision will far exceed this figure, and accordingly doubt the reliability of FRTC's estimate of project costs. Petitioners' contention is not persuasive. The line item for "Construction supervision (Scheduling)" was simply a fee paid to a consultant to schedule Charter's projects. Actual on site supervision will be provided by the construction contractor selected, Charter's architect and Charter's in-house construction supervision component. These costs are all subsumed in FRTC's estimate of project cost. FRTC's costs and methods of proposed construction, including the costs and methods of energy efficiency and conservation, are reasonable for the facility initially reviewed by the Department and the facility as modified at hearing. The petitioners FPC, a Florida partnership, received a certificate of need on May 9, 1986, to construct a 100-bed short term psychiatric and substance abuse hospital in Broward County. At the time of hearing, the FPC facility was under construction, with an anticipated opening in May 1988. Under the terms of its certificate of need, the FPC facility will consist of 80 short-term psychiatric beds (40 geriatric, 25 adult, and 15 adolescent) and 20 short-term substance abuse beds. Whether any of the substance abuse beds will be dedicated to adolescent care is, at best, speculative. The principals of FPC have opined at various times, depending on the interest they sought to advance, that 0, 5, or 20 of such beds would be dedicated to adolescent care. Their testimony is not, therefore, credible, and I conclude that FPC has failed to demonstrate than any of its substance abuse beds will be dedicated to adolescent care and that none of its treatment programs will include children. As a short term psychiatric hospital, FPC is licensed to provide acute inpatient psychiatric care for a period not exceeding 3 months and an average length of stay of 30 days or less for adults and a stay of 60 days or less for children and adolescents under 18 years. Rule 10-5.011(1)(o), Florida Administrative Code. While its treatment modalities and programs may be similar to those which may be employed by FRTC, FPC does not provide long-term residential treatment for children and adolescents and its services are not similar to those being proposed by FRTC. Notably, FPC conceded that if the patients admitted by FRTC require treatment lasting from 6 months to 2 years, there will be no overlap between the types of patients treated at the two facilities. As previously noted, the proof demonstrates that the length of stay at the FRTC facility was reasonably estimated to be 6 months to 2 years, with an average length of stay of 1 year. Under the circumstances, FPC and FRTC will not compete for the same patients. As importantly, there is no competent proof that FRTC could capture any patient that would have been referred to FPC or that any such capture, if it occurred, would have a substantial impact on FPC. Accordingly, the proof fails to demonstrate that FPC will suffer any injury in fact as a consequence of the proposed facility. SBHD is an independent taxing authority created by the legislature. Pertinent to this case, SBHD owns and operates the following facilities in Broward County: Memorial Hospital of Hollywood, 1011 North 35th Avenue, Hollywood, Florida, and Memorial Hospital Share Program, 801 S.W. Douglas Road, Pembroke Pines, Florida. Memorial Hospital of Hollywood is a general acute care hospital, with 74 beds dedicated to short-term psychiatric care. These beds are divided between three units: two closed units for acute care (42 beds) and one open unit (32 beds). There is no unit specifically dedicated to the treatment of adolescents, and Memorial does not admit any psychiatric patient under the age of 14. When admitted, adolescents are mixed with the adult population. From May 1987 through January 1988, Memorial admitted only 5-10 adolescents (ages 14-18). Their average length of stay was 12-14 days. Memorial Hospital Share Program is a 14-bed inpatient residential treatment program for individuals suffering from chemical dependency. No patient under the age of 18 is admitted to this program, which has an average length of stay of 27 days. SBHD contends that its substantial interests are affected by this proceeding because approval of FRTC's facility would result in the loss of paying psychiatric and residential treatment patients that would erode SBHD's ability to provide services to the indigent, and would, due to a shortage of nursing, recreational therapy and occupational therapists who are skilled and trained in the care of psychiatric patients, affect the quality of care at its facility and increase costs for recruiting and training staff. Due to the paucity of competent proof, SBHD's concerns are not credited, and it has failed to demonstrate that its interests are substantially affected by these proceedings. Succinctly, SBHD offered no proof concerning any staffing problems it was encountering and no proof of any disparity that might exist between wages and benefits it offers its employees and those to be offered at the FRTC facility. In sum, it undertook no study from which it could be reasonably concluded that the FRTC facility would adversely impact its staffing or otherwise increase the cost of recruiting and training staff. Likewise, SBHD undertook no study and offered no credible proof that the FRTC facility would adversely impact it financially. In fact, the FRTC facility will not treat the same patient base that is cared for by SBHD.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED that FRTC's application for certificate of need, as updated, be granted, subject to the special condition set forth in conclusions of law number 12. DONE AND ENTERED in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this 7th day of September, 1988. WILLIAM J. KENDRICK 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 7th day of September, 1988.

Florida Laws (4) 120.5727.05394.459395.002
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A. H., ON BEHALF OF R. H. vs DEPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT SERVICES, 16-006837 (2016)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Jacksonville, Florida Nov. 17, 2016 Number: 16-006837 Latest Update: Feb. 27, 2018

The Issue At issue in this proceeding is whether Respondent’s denial of Petitioner’s Level II appeal should be upheld or whether the inpatient residential mental health services provided to R.H. by McLean Hospital’s 3 East Dialectical Behavior Therapy (“DBT”) program from September 9, 2015, through September 22, 2015, and again from October 15, 2015, through December 11, 2015, were “medically necessary” and therefore covered under the terms of the State Employees’ PPO Group Health Insurance Plan.

Findings Of Fact DSGI is the state agency responsible for administration of the state group insurance program, pursuant to section 110.123, Florida Statutes. Petitioner, A.H., is a State of Florida employee and was insured through the State Employees’ PPO Group Health Insurance Plan (the “Plan”). R.H., the child of A.H., was eligible for coverage under A.H.’s health insurance policy as of September 1, 2015. Pursuant to contract, Florida Blue acts as DSGI’s third-party medical claims administrator for employee health insurance benefits. New Directions is Florida Blue’s subcontractor and third-party administrator for mental health and substance abuse reviews and authorizations. “Utilization management” is the process of reviewing a service claim to determine whether the service is a covered benefit under the Plan and whether the service is “medically necessary” as that term is defined in the Plan. In cases involving mental health or substance abuse services, the service must also satisfy the more detailed and specific coverage guidelines, titled “Medical Necessity Criteria,” established by New Directions.1/ Consistent with general practice in the field, the “medical necessity” criteria of the New Directions document observe the following levels of care, in increasing order of intensity: psychiatric outpatient; psychiatric intensive outpatient; psychiatric partial hospitalization; psychiatric residential; and psychiatric acute residential. In the interests of conserving medical resources and preserving patient liberty, safety, and dignity, every effort is made to place patients in the least intensive level of care consistent with effective treatment of their presenting condition. R.H., a female who was 15 years old during the period relevant to this proceeding, has been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and has a history of eating disorders. Her treating psychologist in Florida, Nicolle Arbelaez Lopez, noted that R.H. was also being treated for generalized anxiety disorder. R.H. had an inpatient admission to the Renfrew Center in Florida for eating disorder treatment in May 2015. R.H. transitioned to partial hospitalization over the summer, followed by a step down to the Renfrew Center's intensive outpatient program, then by a step up back to partial hospitalization when her eating disorder behaviors worsened. Though less intensive than a full residential admission, intensive outpatient treatment and partial hospitalization allow patients to receive comparatively intensive treatment while remaining in their home environment.2/ R.H.’s final discharge from the Renfrew Center was on August 21, 2015. At the time she was admitted to McLean Hospital’s 3 East DBT program, R.H. had a recent history of engaging in superficial cutting of her arm. On August 30, 2015, R.H. intentionally hit herself in the hand with a hammer. R.H.’s mother took her to the emergency room for treatment and told the treating personnel that R.H. had fallen down some stairs. The hammer blow caused swelling and bruising but no broken bones. R.H. was also continuing to purge and restrict her food intake. R.H.’s treating psychiatrist, Dr. Thania V. Quesdada, and her psychologist, Ms. Lopez, both urged that she be admitted to one of three nationally-recognized immersion DBT programs. Her family chose the program at McLean Hospital. DBT is a cognitive behavioral treatment that was originally developed to treat chronically suicidal individuals diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, though it is now employed for treatment of other conditions, including eating disorders. DBT teaches behavioral coping skills such as mindfulness, distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness, and emotional regulation. At the hearing, DSGI did not dispute the general efficacy of DBT treatment. However, DSGI did dispute whether R.H.’s presentation merited “immersion” DBT, i.e., a residential inpatient admission. McLean Hospital’s 3 East DBT program is self-pay and requires a minimum stay of 28 days. The program does not accept insurance and does not assist patients with insurance reimbursement efforts. Because of its stance on insurance, the 3 East DBT program is obviously not an in-network provider under the Plan. Prior to admission, Petitioner was aware that the 3 East DBT program did not accept insurance. R.H. was in residential treatment at McLean Hospital from September 9, 2015, through September 22, 2015. While at McLean Hospital, R.H. engaged in restricting and purging behaviors that led to medical instability. She was discharged to Cambridge Eating Disorder Center on September 23, 2015. She remained at the Cambridge Center until October 15, 2015. R.H.’s stay at the Cambridge Center was pre-certified by New Directions and is not at issue in this proceeding. On October 15, 2015, R.H. returned to McLean Hospital, again as a residential inpatient admission. She remained at McLean Hospital until her discharge on December 11, 2015. The total billed amount for R.H.’s two stays at McLean Hospital was $96,950, which was paid by the family out-of- pocket. Section 3-5 of the Plan sets forth the following under the heading “Mental Health and Substance Dependency Services”: “Physician office visits, Intensive Outpatient Treatment, Inpatient and Partial Hospitalization and Residential Treatment Services are covered based on medical necessity.” The general definition of “Medically Necessary” is set forth at section 15-4 of the Plan: [s]ervices required to identify or treat the Illness, injury, Condition, or Mental and Nervous Disorder a Doctor has diagnosed or reasonably suspects. The service must be: consistent with the symptom, diagnosis and treatment of the patient’s Condition; in accordance with standards of good medical practice; required for reasons other than convenience of the patient or the Doctor; approved by the appropriate medical body or board for the illness or injury in question; and at the most appropriate level of medical supply, service, or care that can be safely provided. The fact that a service, prescription drug, or supply is prescribed by a Doctor does not necessarily mean that the service is Medically Necessary. Florida Blue, CVS/Caremark, and DSGI determine whether a service, prescription drug, or supply is Medically Necessary. New Directions’ Medical Necessity Criteria guidelines provided the following admission criteria for psychiatric residential admissions: Must meet all of the following: A DSM diagnosis is the primary focus of active, daily treatment. There is a reasonable expectation of reduction in behaviors/symptoms with treatment at this level of care. The treatment is not primarily social, custodial, interpersonal, or respite care. The member has documented symptoms and/or behaviors that are a significant deterioration from baseline functioning and create a significant functional impairment in at least three (3) of the following areas: primary support social/interpersonal occupational/educational health/medical compliance ability to maintain safety for either self or others Must have one of the following: The member’s family members and/or support system demonstrate behaviors that are likely to undermine goals of treatment, such that treatment at a lower level of care is unlikely to be successful. This lack must be situational in nature and amenable to change as a result of the treatment process and resources identified during a residential confinement. The member has a documented history of an inability to be managed at an intensive lower level of care. There is a recent (in the last six months) history of multiple brief acute inpatient stays without a successful transition to a lower level of care, and at risk of admission to inpatient acute care. New Directions’ Medical Necessity Criteria guidelines provided the following admission criteria for eating disorder residential admissions: Must meet 1-4 and either 5, 6, or 7 A DSM diagnosis found in the Feeding and Eating Disorder section is the primary focus of active, daily treatment. There is a reasonable expectation of reduction in behaviors/symptoms with treatment at this level of care. The treatment is not primarily social, custodial, interpersonal, or respite care. The member has documented symptoms and/or behaviors that are a significant deterioration from baseline functioning and create a significant functional impairment in at least three (3) of the following areas: primary support social/interpersonal occupational/educational health/medical compliance ability to maintain safety for either self or others Must have one of the following: The member’s family members and/or support system demonstrate behaviors that are likely to undermine goals of treatment, such that treatment at a lower level of care is unlikely to be successful. This lack must be situational in nature and amenable to change as a result of the treatment process and resources identified during a residential confinement. The member has a documented history of an inability to be managed at an intensive lower level of care. There is a recent (in the last six months) history of multiple brief acute inpatient stays without a successful transition to a lower level of care, and at risk of admission to inpatient acute care. There are active biomedical complications that require 24-hour care, including, but not limited to: Adults Children/Adolescents Pulse <40 <50 Blood Pressure <90/60 <80/50 Orthostatic changes in BP Systolic: >20 point drop Systolic: > 20 point drop (Supine to standing) Diastolic: > 10 point drop Diastolic: > 10 point drop Potassium < 3 meq/l Hypokalemia Body temperature < 97 F Abnormal core temperature Electrolytes/ serum chemistry Significant deviation from normal Significant deviation from normal Must have either a. or b.: A low body weight that can reasonably lead to instability in the absence of intervention as evidenced by one of the following: Less than 85% of IBW or a BMI less than 16.5. Greater than 10% decrease in body weight within the last 30 days. In children and adolescents, greater than 10% decrease in body weight during a rapid growth cycle. Persistence or worsening of eating disorder behavior despite recent (with [sic] the last three months), appropriate therapeutic intervention in a structured eating disorder treatment setting. If PHP or IOP is contraindicated, documentation of the rationale supporting the contraindication is required. One of the following must be present: Compensatory behaviors (binging, purging, laxative abuse, excessive exercise, etc.) have caused significant physiological complications. Compensatory behaviors occur multiple times daily and have failed to respond to treatment at a lower level of care and acute physiologic imbalance can reasonably be expected. New Directions’ contact notes for this case indicate that it was called by someone named “Rachelle” on behalf of A.H.’s family on September 3, 2015. This person asked about the authorization process for McLean Hospital. No witness was presented who had direct knowledge of the contents of this conversation. The note indicates that “Rachelle” was advised that any authorization process must be initiated with New Directions by McLean Hospital. On September 9, 2015, the day R.H. was admitted to McLean Hospital, Florida Blue received what its notes reference as a “critical inquiry” message regarding this admission. A Florida Blue employee phoned the number attached to the message but discovered it was not for A.H. but for “someone at AllState Insurance who is out of the office.” (This person turned out to be Pearl Harrison, R.H.’s grandmother and qualified representative in this proceeding, who had not yet obtained a release to receive confidential medical information concerning R.H.). No number for A.H. could be found. Florida Blue contacted New Directions, which confirmed that no request for pre-authorization3/ had been received from McLean Hospital or the member. R.H.’s stays at McLean Hospital were not emergency admissions. The term “medical emergency” was not specifically defined in the 2015 Plan, but expert testimony at the hearing established that it is a term of common meaning and usage in the medical community. An emergency situation is one in which there is an immediate risk of death, serious bodily harm, or creation of an irreversible condition. If care is not administered immediately, the person will harm herself or someone else. Michael Shaw, the utilization management team leader for New Directions, explained that emergency care is not provided at the residential level of care, but in an inpatient setting under lock and key. The medical records indicated that R.H.’s last incident of self-harming behavior occurred about a week prior to her admission to McLean Hospital. Her injuries were superficial and she was in no immediate danger or risk of irreversible damage. Section 7-1 of the Plan provides for hospital admissions, including the following pertinent language as to non-emergency admissions to non-network hospitals and pre- certification for stays at non-network hospitals: Non-Network Hospital: Non-emergency Admission Every non-emergency admission to a non- network Hospital must be pre-certified. This means that before services are provided Florida Blue must certify the Hospital admission and provide the number of days for which certification is given. Precertification of non-network Hospital stays is your responsibility, even if the Doctor admitting you or your dependent to the Hospital is a Network Provider. Failure to obtain pre-certification will result in penalties (higher out-of-pocket costs). For more information on penalties, see “If You Do Not Pre-Certify Your Stay” within this section below. To pre-certify your stay in a non-network Hospital, ask your Doctor to call Florida Blue at (800) 955-5692 before your Hospital admission and provide the reason for hospitalization, the proposed treatment or surgery, testing, and the number of Hospital days anticipated. Florida Blue will review your Doctor’s request for admission certification and immediately notify your Doctor or the Hospital if your admission has been certified and the number of days for which certification has been given. If the admission is not certified, your Doctor may submit additional information for a second review. If your Hospital stay is certified and you need to stay longer than the number of days for which certification was given, your Doctor must call Florida Blue to request certification for the additional days. Your Doctor should make this call as soon as possible. * * * If You Do Not Pre-Certify Your Stay: Non- Network Hospital Benefits for covered services will be reduced by 25 percent of the covered charges, not to exceed a maximum benefit reduction of $500 IF you are admitted to a participating Hospital (Payment for Hospital Services or PHS Provider)[4/] that is not part of the Preferred Patient Care (PPC) Network and admission certification has not been requested on your behalf or the request is denied. This Plan will not pay room and board benefits for your first two days of hospitalization IF your non-network Hospital admission is denied, but you are admitted to a non-network Hospital anyway. This Plan will not pay room and board benefits for your entire Hospital stay IF you are admitted to a non-network Hospital without having your Doctor call prior to the admission. This Plan will not pay room and board benefits for the additional days that were not certified IF your non-network Hospital admission is certified but your stay is longer than the number of days for which the admission was certified. The Plan’s pre-certification requirement was not met. Neither A.H. nor McLean Hospital requested pre-certification. Mr. Shaw testified that he spoke to three different people at McLean Hospital, all of whom stated that the 3 East DBT program does not accept or work with insurance. Mr. Shaw was unable to generate the paperwork needed to begin the pre-certification process because McLean Hospital declined to share with him the necessary clinical information about R.H.5/ Although pre-certification was not obtained for R.H.’s stays at McLean Hospital, Florida Blue conducted a post-service review to determine whether the claim was eligible for reimbursement. Petitioner submitted a request for a Level I appeal pursuant to Section 12 of the Plan, under which a person denied benefits or payment of a claim for medical services may obtain a review by Florida Blue. Petitioner submitted a package of R.H.’s medical records for review. Prest & Associates, Inc., a URAC-approved independent review organization,6/ was retained to conduct an independent review of Petitioner’s claim. Dr. Barbara Center, a staff psychiatrist with Prest & Associates, performed a review designed to determine the medical necessity of R.H.’s stays at McLean Hospital. Dr. Center is board-certified in General Psychiatry, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and Addiction Medicine. Dr. Center reviewed the claim in terms of the New Directions criteria for psychiatric residential admissions and for eating disorder residential admissions. She performed two reviews, one for the admission starting on September 9, 2015, and another for the admission starting on October 15, 2015. Dr. Center stated that the McLean Hospital medical records provided by Petitioner gave a detailed description of R.H.’s history of present illness, past psychiatric history, and other elements of her history that were adequate for making a medical necessity determination. As to the September 9 admission, Dr. Center concluded that medical necessity criteria were not met for either a psychiatric residential or an eating disorder residential admission. As to the psychiatric residential criteria, Dr. Center concluded that R.H.’s admission failed to satisfy criteria 3, 4, and 5. Dr. Center testified that criterion 4 looks at symptoms and behaviors that represent a significant deterioration from the patient’s baseline functioning in several areas. R.H.’s primary support structures were stable. Her mother was clearly involved in her care and had the support of other family members. Dr. Center stated that the medical records showed no sign of substantial social or interpersonal deterioration, aside from some typical difficulty in starting high school. R.H. was having no medical instability at the time of admission. She was not at a dangerously low body weight. She had a recent onset of self-harming behaviors, but there was no documentation of acute risk issues that warranted placement in 24-hour care. As to criterion 5, Dr. Center testified that the records showed no indication that R.H.’s family and support system was unsupportive or unable to take her to treatment and participate in her care. There was no documentation that R.H. could not progress in a less intensive level of care. Dr. Center noted that R.H.’s prior treatment for eating disorders had been at varying levels of care and that R.H. had not had multiple brief acute inpatient stays. Criterion 3 is a diagnosis of exclusion, meaning that if there is no apparent medical necessity for the residential placement, then the reason must be “primarily social, custodial, interpersonal or respite care.” Dr. Center found in the records no support for a 24-hour residential placement. She noted that R.H.’s self-injury was of a recent onset and that McLean Hospital had ruled out any immediate prospect of self-injury or serious threat to other people. Cutting is not uncommon among adolescents and does not rise to the level of requiring residential care. Mental health providers distinguish between self-injurious behaviors and suicidal ideation, and McLean Hospital did not describe R.H. as suicidal. Dr. Center testified that, at the request of Mr. Shaw, she also reviewed R.H.’s admission in terms of the New Directions eating disorder residential criteria. Dr. Center noted that R.H. was not at a dangerous body weight (122 pounds, with a BMI of 22.2) at the time of her admission on September 9. There was no indication of medical instability or of out-of- control eating disorders requiring 24-hour care. Dr. Center testified that DBT is routinely taught on an outpatient basis and that she recommended outpatient treatment for the stay beginning on September 9. She opined that R.H. did not meet numbers 3 through 7 of the New Directions eating disorder residential criteria. As to the McLean Hospital admission beginning on October 15, 2015, Dr. Center recommended intensive outpatient treatment. Dr. Center knew that R.H. had been transitioned from McLean Hospital to the Cambridge Center to address the eating disorder as her primary symptom. Dr. Center felt that continuing R.H. in an intensive outpatient setting would help her stabilize and maintain the progress she had made at the Cambridge Center. Dr. Center stated that a basic tenet of medical care, and especially psychiatric care, is that the patient be treated in the least restrictive setting possible under the circumstances. She stated that it is always best to treat people in the environment they live in. Treatment in the 24- hour residential setting removes the patient from the stressors she will have to deal with when she goes home. Upon her readmission to the McLean Hospital from Cambridge Center, R.H. denied suicidal ideation and homicidal ideation, and the record disclosed nothing to indicate suicidal thoughts. R.H. denied auditory or visual hallucinations and her mood was described as “euthymic,” i.e., essentially normal. Dr. Center acknowledged that the medical record showed that R.H. had been in intensive outpatient treatment for her eating disorder at the Renfrew Center in Florida from July 23 through August 21, 2015, with limited success. Dr. Center stated that the issue for R.H. had recently changed from her eating disorder to her self-harming behavior and believed that an intensive outpatient program focusing on skills to deal with self-injurious behaviors would be the appropriate placement under the circumstances. Dr. Center also acknowledged that her review did not include the records of R.H.’s treating psychiatrist and therapist during her stay at Renfrew, and that their notes indicated that R.H.’s condition had regressed while in intensive outpatient care. Dr. Center testified that these records might have persuaded her to recommend a higher level of care, such as a partial hospital program, but that she still would not have recommended residential placement. After Dr. Center rendered her opinion that R.H.’s residential stays at McLean Hospital were not medically necessary, the claim was reviewed by Dr. Frank Santamaria, Florida Blue’s care management medical director. In rendering his opinion, Dr. Santamaria reviewed the medical records sent by Petitioner and McLean Hospital, the log of contact notes kept by New Directions, and Dr. Center’s report.7/ He testified that the available records were adequate to allow him to render an opinion as to medical necessity. Dr. Santamaria concluded that, as to the New Directions criteria for psychiatric residential admissions, R.H. failed to meet criteria 3, 4, and 5. He opined generally that when assessing the need for a residential stay, he is looking for someone who is at risk of self-harm or harming others or who has an acute severe psychiatric condition such as a psychotic disorder that requires confinement. Dr. Santamaria noted that R.H.’s eating disorder was not the primary concern at the time of her admissions to McLean Hospital; however, because the eating disorder was occurring at the same time as the psychiatric problem, he was also looking for medical manifestations of the eating disorder, such as severe weight loss affecting blood chemistry. Criterion 4 requires documented symptoms and/or behaviors that are a significant deterioration from baseline functioning and create a significant functional impairment in at least three of five listed areas. Under area 4a, “primary support,” Dr. Santamaria noted that R.H. had good support from her mother and grandmother. He did not believe that primary support was a problem.8/ As to area 4b, “social/interpersonal,” the notes indicated that R.H. recently had an altercation with a friend. Dr. Santamaria did not find such an altercation out of the ordinary for a 15-year-old and thus found no functional impairment under 4b. Area 4c, “occupational/educational,” appeared to pose no problem because the records indicated that R.H. was an A-B student, despite her rocky first week of high school. As to area 4d, “health/medical compliance,” Dr. Santamaria noted that R.H. had been compliant with medical instructions and her family had been good about seeking care for her. As to area 4e, “ability to maintain safety for either self or others,” Dr. Santamaria acknowledged that R.H. had hit her hand with a hammer and acted in other self-injurious ways, chiefly superficial cutting. He testified that such behaviors are not uncommon in younger populations and do not necessarily make the person a candidate for residential care. Self-injury alone does not satisfy the criterion, unless there is a concern for suicide or homicide. The hammer incident occurred in August, at least one week before R.H.’s admission to McLean Hospital. The McLean Hospital admission note of September 9, 2015, indicates no reported history of suicidal thinking. Dr. Santamaria found no documentation to indicate R.H. was aggressive against herself or others. She had no acute conditions such as psychotic disorders. Dr. Santamaria noted that even if area 4e were deemed to have been met, criterion 4 requires significant functional impairment and degradation from baseline functioning in at least three of the listed areas, and that R.H. at most satisfied one area of the criterion. Criterion 5 of the New Directions psychiatric residential criteria requires that one of three conditions relating to the patient’s support system or treatment history be met. Dr. Santamaria concluded that none of the three conditions were met. Condition 5c requires a recent history of multiple brief acute inpatient stays without a successful transition to a lower level of care. Dr. Santamaria conceded that the record he examined disclosed little information about prior therapies that had been tried with R.H., but he concluded that the record was sufficient to confirm that R.H. did not have multiple brief inpatient stays. He was reasonably confident that McLean Hospital would have documented such stays had they occurred because they would be a very significant part of her history. Dr. Santamaria also noted that R.H. had been able to transition to an intensive outpatient program from her inpatient admission to the Renfrew Center in May 2015. Condition 5a requires that family members or the patient’s support system demonstrate behaviors that are likely to undermine the goals of treatment, such that treatment at a lower level of care is unlikely to be successful. The record disclosed that R.H.’s mother, who was her custodial guardian, had a history of substance abuse but had gone through a rehabilitation program, attended Narcotics Anonymous regularly, and had been sober for one year at the time of R.H.’s October 15, 2015, admission to McLean Hospital. Dr. Santamaria testified that if R.H.’s mother were currently using drugs and R.H. had nowhere else to go, then condition 5a might be met. However, the actual situation presented by the medical record did not establish that R.H. was living in an unsafe environment that could undermine her treatment. As to condition 5b, a documented history of an inability to be managed at an intensive lower level of care, Dr. Santamaria concluded that R.H. had responded to various therapies in the past. As noted above, criterion 3 of the New Directions psychiatric residential criteria is exclusionary, i.e., if the placement appears not to be medically necessary, then one begins to seek another motivation, such as the desire for a change of pace or a respite for the family. Dr. Santamaria noted that DBT does not require placement at the residential level. It can be done at an intensive outpatient or partial hospitalization level, both of which are lower levels of care than residential.9/ This fact made Dr. Santamaria suspect that the prime motive for R.H.’s placement may have been custodial. Dr. Santamaria testified that he also analyzed R.H.’s admission under the New Directions eating disorder residential criteria. He stated that he could not be certain from the record whether McLean Hospital was treating R.H.’s eating disorder, as well as providing DBT, but he knew that McLean Hospital was mindful of the eating disorder. He also knew that R.H.’s transfer to the Cambridge Center was partly because her eating disorder was becoming worse. Dr. Santamaria concluded that R.H. did not satisfy criteria 3 through 7 for an eating disorder residential admission. Dr. Santamaria testified that R.H. did not meet eating disorder residential criteria 3 through 5 for the same reasons she did not meet the identical criteria 3 through 5 of the psychiatric residential criteria. Criterion 6 concerns biomedical complications of an eating disorder. Dr. Santamaria reviewed the medical records and concluded that R.H. presented none of the complications that would require 24-hour care at the time of her admission on September 9, 2015. Dr. Santamaria likewise found that R.H. satisfied neither factor 7a nor 7b of Criterion 7. As to 7a, R.H. did not present with a low body weight and there was no documentation that she had lost 10 percent of her body weight in the last 30 days. As to 7b, there was no evidence that R.H.’s “compensatory behaviors,” i.e., binging and purging, had caused “significant physiological complications” or that such behaviors occurred multiple times daily and did not respond to treatment “at an intensive lower level of care.” Dr. Santamaria testified that his analysis as to the October 15, 2015, admission was identical to that for the September 9, 2015, admission. As to both admissions, he believed that intensive outpatient was the appropriate level of care. Dr. Santamaria defined “intensive outpatient” as three hours of intensive therapy for at least three days per week. He believed that this level of care could address all of R.H.’s issues, including her self-injurious behavior. Dr. Santamaria concluded that if R.H. tried the intensive outpatient level of care and failed, then a higher level could be considered. Like Dr. Center, he stated that he might have recommended a partial hospitalization setting had he known that intensive outpatient had been tried and failed, but he still would not have recommended a 24-hour residential admission. Petitioner’s presentation implied that Florida Blue and/or Prest & Associates base their coverage decisions on financial considerations rather than strictly on the merits of the claims. Dr. Center and Dr. Santamaria both testified that they had no incentive, financial or otherwise, to deny a claim for reimbursement. Their testimony on this point is credible. Petitioner offered no direct evidence that Florida Blue or Prest & Associates directly pressure their physician employees to reject meritorious claims, and there is no evidence that Dr. Santamaria or Dr. Center based their recommendations on anything other than their assessment of R.H.’s medical records in light of the relevant medical necessity criteria. Petitioner raised questions about the completeness of the records examined by Dr. Santamaria and Dr. Center and sounded a skeptical note as to the diligence of the physicians’ efforts to obtain additional documentation. As found above, both Dr. Santamaria and Dr. Center testified that they had adequate documentation to render an opinion as to medical necessity in this case. Both physicians stated that in other cases they have taken additional steps to obtain missing information, including making peer-to-peer calls to the treating physicians or reaching out to the case managers, but that no such steps were necessary in this case. Both physicians conceded that not all of the medical records were available to them at the time of their reviews. They did not have records from R.H.’s stays at the Renfrew Center and the Cambridge Center or the notes of R.H.’s treating physicians in Florida. Both Dr. Center and Dr. Santamaria credibly testified that nothing in these additional records would have changed their opinion as to the medical necessity of residential treatment for R.H. Section 12 of the Plan, which sets forth the appeal process for a denied claim, expressly states: “Your appeal may include any additional documentation, information, evidence or testimony that you would like reviewed and considered during the appeal process.” This language is included in the explanations for both the Level I and Level II appeals. Nothing prevents the member from providing any documentation whatsoever during the appeal process. Dr. Center and Dr. Santamaria are physician reviewers, not medical investigators. If something Petitioner asserted to be relevant to the decision was missing from the files, it was not the fault of the reviewing physicians. It is ultimately the member’s responsibility to provide appropriate documentation for review. By letter dated April 5, 2016, Florida Blue notified Petitioner that it “remains unable to approve additional coverage and/or payment for the Residential Treatment.” The letter set forth the following rationale for the denial: Per the State Employees’ PPO Plan Booklet and Benefits Document page 5-5: “Services or supplies that are not Medically Necessary, as determined by Florida Blue and/or CVS Caremark clinical staff and Division of State Group Insurance, are non- covered.” Specifically, coverage for the Mental Health (Eating Disorder) Residential stays is denied as it does not meet the definition of medical necessity. This is for hospital stay on and after 09/09/2015 and 10/15/2015. The final decision to proceed with the requested services is between the provider and the member. Records show that the member was not deemed to be a present risk to self or to others. Though the member had a preoccupation with weight sand [sic] eating, there was no evidence of inability to adequately care for self with functioning in multiple sphere areas, including stabilization of the eating disorder issues. There was no report of medical instability or psychosis. The member was in a body weight range. The member was described as having her eating disorder symptoms under control. From the clinical evidence, this member could have been safely treated at each occasion at a lesser level of care such as in an eating disorder intensive outpatient setting. This review was done using New Directions Clinical Care criteria and is based on the opinion of a board certified psychiatrist. Services that are not medically necessary are not covered under your health benefit plan. The denial letter provided Petitioner with information regarding the Level II appeal process to DSGI, including a reference to the pertinent section of the Plan. The denial letter reiterated that Petitioner could submit any information or documentation that Petitioner believed could assist in DSGI’s review of the appeal. Petitioner submitted a request for a Level II appeal to DSGI on May 23, 2016. The Level II appeal was reviewed by DSGI’s legal nurse coordinator, Kathy Flippo. Ms. Flippo reviewed all of the documents reviewed by Dr. Center and Dr. Santamaria, plus additional records submitted by Petitioner with the Level II appeal request. Ms. Flippo determined that the stays at issue were non-emergency admissions that required pre-certification and that the pre-certification requirements of the Plan were not met. Ms. Flippo reached the same conclusions as Dr. Center and Dr. Santamaria regarding the New Directions psychiatric residential criteria. Ms. Flippo concluded that R.H. did not meet criteria 3, 4, or 5. Ms. Flippo testified that she did not review the case pursuant to the New Directions eating disorder residential criteria because Petitioner’s Level II appeal addressed only the psychiatric issues and because R.H.’s eating disorder stay at the Cambridge Center was covered by Florida Blue. By letter dated July 29, 2016, signed by Tami Fillyaw, director of DSGI, Petitioner was informed that the Level II appeal had been denied. The letter informed Petitioner of his rights under the Plan to file a petition for a formal or an informal hearing contesting the denial of the appeal and/or to request a binding external review from an Independent Review Organization (“IRO”).10/ Petitioner requested both an administrative hearing and an external review.11/ The external review was conducted under the auspices of the Medical Review Institute of America, Inc. (“MRIoA”), a URAC-accredited external review network. The MRIoA assigned a physician whom it stated is board-certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology in the specialties of General Psychiatry and Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.12/ The external review upheld the adverse determinations regarding coverage for the McLean Hospital stays. In its decision letter dated November 11, 2016, the MRIoA provided the following relevant clinical summary and findings: At the time in question, the patient was a 15 year old female with a variety of difficulties related to depression, anxiety, eating disorder symptoms, and symptoms of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) with self-harming behaviors. This review has to do with a question of whether residential treatment center (RTC) level of care (LOC) for two episodes of service 9/9/15-9/22/15 and 10/15/15-12/11/15 met the plan criteria for medical necessity. It is noted that the patient was treated in a special eating disorders program on the dates between these two episodes. * * * The patient’s presentation did not meet the plan criteria for medical necessity for the dates in question. Specifically, the patient did not meet criteria #5 of the Admission Criteria. The patient is noted to have a caring and effective support system that would have supported a less intensive level of care. There was no recent history of inability to be effectively treated at an intensive level of service below residential treatment center (RTC) level of care (LOC), and there was no recent history of inability to transition from inpatient treatment into a less intensive level of care. At the time of admission to residential treatment, it is clear that the patient struggled with mood dysregulation along with episodes of food restriction and self- harming behaviors. She was not responding to attempts at outpatient treatment. The residential program in question was sought out specifically due to its approach to the utilization of DBT (dialectical behavior therapy). However, there is no indication that the patient could not have responded to attempts to escalate her treatment in the outpatient setting through the use of either intensive outpatient or partial hospitalization services. In particular, the patient could have been involved in a formal DBT program without utilization of residential treatment. Her symptom severity for the dates in question was not of a severity to require the use of round the clock observation and treatment. As a result, there was no medical necessity for residential treatment center (RTC) level of care (LOC). * * * The appeal letters from the patient’s family, outpatient providers, and residential facility discuss the need for residential treatment due to the patient’s symptoms severity, particularly the patient’s episodes of self-harming behavior and the need for her to participate in the immersive DBT program utilized at the residential program in question. The patient’s need for more intensive treatment is acknowledged. However, the patient’s recent treatment history was one of outpatient treatment with a previous history of residential treatment for eating disorder symptoms. For the DOS in question, the patient could have obtained appropriate and effective DBT in a less restrictive setting, such as either a partial hospitalization program (PHP) or an intensive outpatient program (IOP). Based on the above, the previous determination has been upheld. At the hearing, Petitioner complained that, prior to receiving the letter denying the Level II appeal, he had no inkling that medical necessity determinations were based on criteria produced by New Directions. The Plan’s definition of “medically necessary” does not reference the fact that Florida Blue relies on the New Directions criteria for medical necessity determinations in psychiatric and eating disorder admissions. Petitioner basically argues that not having the precise language of the New Directions medical necessity criteria deprived him and the medical providers of the ability to frame the coverage requests in such a way as to satisfy the criteria. The record evidence shows Florida Blue does not make the New Directions medical necessity criteria directly available to its members. In fact, New Directions is nowhere mentioned in the Plan. Witnesses for DSGI correctly stated that anyone can download the criteria from the New Directions website, but Petitioner pointed out that one must be aware the criteria exist before one can download them. If this case is typical, it appears that a Florida Blue member must be denied coverage and go through the appeal process before Florida Blue makes him aware of precisely how the determination of medical necessity is made. Dr. Santamaria testified that Florida Blue does not expect its members to have any knowledge of the New Directions criteria or to “understand all the medical jargon.” The member is expected to present Florida Blue with the best and most accurate medical information available (preferably before the services are rendered) and rely on Florida Blue to make the decision. Dr. Santamaria stated, “Your role is not to do the utilization management. That’s my role. Your role is, if you disagree with a coverage determination, to appeal it and to even have your doctor speak on your behalf or write a letter or do whatever. It’s not your role to access the documents and to use them on your own. That--that’s not what they were created for.” Dr. Santamaria emphasized that the member’s “role” is not to “meet criteria” but to provide Florida Blue with information sufficient to allow its experts to apply the criteria. While his phrasing may be condescending, Dr. Santamaria’s statement is basically accurate: the medical records determine whether the criteria have been met. Petitioner’s awareness of the particulars of the criteria would not change the substance of the medical record. The undersigned tends to agree with Petitioner that Florida Blue’s process could be more transparent. However, Petitioner failed to show how the outcome would have been different if the New Directions medical necessity criteria had been available to him or McLean Hospital. Every expert who examined the medical records agreed that R.H. did not meet the criteria for medical necessity. Their opinions are credited. Ms. Flippo emphasized that Florida Blue did not deny coverage merely because McLean Hospital’s 3 East DBT program was self-pay. If the member had been able to obtain pre- certification for hospitalization and a proper bill had been presented to Florida Blue, it would have been covered at the allowable non-network coverage amount. Ms. Flippo also stated that even if pre-certification had been obtained, Florida Blue would certainly not have covered the 70 days that R.H. spent in McLean Hospital. Ms. Flippo had never seen more than 15 days at a time approved, even for members who were floridly psychotic and admitted under the Baker Act. With modern treatments and medications, it is seldom necessary to keep patients at a residential level of care for months at a time. All of the experts agreed that DBT is more commonly provided on an outpatient basis. Additionally, Mr. Shaw pointed out that the ability of the insurer to pay the non-contracted, non-network rate to the hospital is contingent on the hospital’s willingness to accept insurance payments. McLean Hospital’s 3 East DBT program did not accept insurance. Mr. Shaw succinctly stated, “We’re not obligated to pay you back because you made the choice to go to a facility that takes your money but not ours.”

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department of Management Services, Division of State Group Insurance, issue a final order denying Petitioner’s claim for coverage under the State Employees’ PPO Plan for R.H.’s residential treatment at McLean Hospital from September 9, 2015, to September 30, 2015, and October 15, 2015, to December 11, 2015. DONE AND ENTERED this 17th day of May, 2017, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S LAWRENCE P. STEVENSON Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 17th day of May, 2017.

Florida Laws (3) 110.123120.57120.68
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VENICE HMA HOSPITAL, LLC, D/B/A VENICE REGIONAL BAYFRONT HEALTH vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 17-003108RX (2017)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida May 25, 2017 Number: 17-003108RX Latest Update: May 08, 2018

The Issue Whether Florida Administrative Code Rule 59C-1.008(4) (Rule) constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority because it enlarges, modifies, or contravenes the specific provisions of law implemented.

Findings Of Fact The Parties VRBH is an existing hospital in Sarasota County. In the second batching cycle of 2016, VRBH applied to AHCA for a CON to establish a Class I Acute Care Replacement Hospital of up to 312 beds in AHCA District VIII, Subdistrict 8-6, Sarasota County. The CON application was preliminarily approved by AHCA on December 2, 2016. SMH is a public hospital system serving Sarasota County. In the second batching cycle of 2016, SMH applied for a CON to establish a new acute care hospital with 90 beds in AHCA District 8, Acute Care Subdistrict 8-6, Sarasota County. As with the VRBH application, the SMH application also received preliminary approval from AHCA on December 2, 2016. AHCA is designated as the single state agency responsible for administering the CON program under the Health Facility and Services Development Act, sections 408.031 through 408.045, Florida Statutes. The Challenged Rule In part, Florida Administrative Code Rule 59C-1.008(4) requires that CON applications contain the audited financial statements of the applicant, or the applicant’s parent corporation. The Rule states as follows: Certificate of Need Application Contents. An application for a Certificate of Need shall contain the following items: All requirements set forth in Sections 408.037(1), (2) and (3), F.S. The correct application fee. An audited financial statement of the applicant or the applicant’s parent corporation if the applicant’s audited financial statements do not exist. The following provisions apply: The audited financial statement of the applicant, or the applicant’s parent corporation, must be for the most current fiscal year. If the most recent fiscal year ended within 120 days prior to the application filing deadline and the audited financial statements are not yet available, then the prior fiscal year will be considered the most recent. Existing health care facilities must provide audited financial statements for the two most recent consecutive fiscal years in accordance with subparagraph 1. above. Only audited financial statements of the applicant, or the applicant’s parent corporation, will be accepted. Audited financial statements of any part of the applicant or the applicant’s parent corporation, including but not limited to subsidiaries, divisions, specific facilities or cost centers, will not qualify as an audit of the applicant or the applicant’s parent corporation. To comply with Section 408.037(1)(b)1., F.S., which requires a listing of all capital projects, the applicant shall provide the total approximate amount of anticipated expenditures for capital projects which meet the definition in subsection 59C-1.002(7), F.A.C., at the time of initial application submission, or state that there are none. An itemized list or grouping of capital projects is not required, although an applicant may choose to itemize or group its capital projects. The applicant shall also indicate the actual or proposed financial commitment to those projects, and include an assessment of the impact of those projects on the applicant’s ability to provide the proposed project; and, Responses to applicable questions contained in the application forms. The 2008 CON Legislative Changes In 2008, the Florida Legislature made numerous changes to streamline the CON application process for general hospitals. It is these changes that VRBH asserts removed the requirement for general hospitals to submit audited financial statements with CON applications. Section 408.035 was amended to provide as follows: 408.035 Review criteria.— The agency shall determine the reviewability of applications and shall review applications for certificate-of-need determinations for health care facilities and health services in context with the following criteria, except for general hospitals as defined in s. 395.002: The need for the health care facilities and health services being proposed. The availability, quality of care, accessibility, and extent of utilization of existing health care facilities and health services in the service district of the applicant. The ability of the applicant to provide quality of care and the applicant’s record of providing quality of care. The availability of resources, including health personnel, management personnel, and funds for capital and operating expenditures, for project accomplishment and operation. The extent to which the proposed services will enhance access to health care for residents of the service district. The immediate and long-term financial feasibility of the proposal. The extent to which the proposal will foster competition that promotes quality and cost-effectiveness. The costs and methods of the proposed construction, including the costs and methods of energy provision and the availability of alternative, less costly, or more effective methods of construction. The applicant’s past and proposed provision of health care services to Medicaid patients and the medically indigent. The applicant’s designation as a Gold Seal Program nursing facility pursuant to s. 400.235, when the applicant is requesting additional nursing home beds at that facility. For a general hospital, the agency shall consider only the criteria specified in paragraph (1)(a), paragraph (1)(b), except for quality of care in paragraph (1)(b), and paragraphs (1)(e), (g), and (i). (Emphasis added). Section 408.035 has not been revised since 2008. Additionally, section 408.037 was amended to read as follows: 408.037 Application content.— Except as provided in subsection (2) for a general hospital, an application for a certificate of need must contain: A detailed description of the proposed project and statement of its purpose and need in relation to the district health plan. A statement of the financial resources needed by and available to the applicant to accomplish the proposed project. This statement must include: A complete listing of all capital projects, including new health facility development projects and health facility acquisitions applied for, pending, approved, or underway in any state at the time of application, regardless of whether or not that state has a certificate-of-need program or a capital expenditure review program pursuant to s. 1122 of the Social Security Act. The agency may, by rule, require less- detailed information from major health care providers. This listing must include the applicant’s actual or proposed financial commitment to those projects and an assessment of their impact on the applicant’s ability to provide the proposed project. A detailed listing of the needed capital expenditures, including sources of funds. A detailed financial projection, including a statement of the projected revenue and expenses for the first 2 years of operation after completion of the proposed project. This statement must include a detailed evaluation of the impact of the proposed project on the cost of other services provided by the applicant. An audited financial statement of the applicant or the applicant’s parent corporation if audited financial statements of the applicant do not exist. In an application submitted by an existing health care facility, health maintenance organization, or hospice, financial condition documentation must include, but need not be limited to, a balance sheet and a profit-and-loss statement of the 2 previous fiscal years’ operation. An application for a certificate of need for a general hospital must contain a detailed description of the proposed general hospital project and a statement of its purpose and the needs it will meet. The proposed project’s location, as well as its primary and secondary service areas, must be identified by zip code. Primary service area is defined as the zip codes from which the applicant projects that it will draw 75 percent of its discharges. Secondary service area is defined as the zip codes from which the applicant projects that it will draw its remaining discharges. If, subsequent to issuance of a final order approving the certificate of need, the proposed location of the general hospital changes or the primary service area materially changes, the agency shall revoke the certificate of need. However, if the agency determines that such changes are deemed to enhance access to hospital services in the service district, the agency may permit such changes to occur. A party participating in the administrative hearing regarding the issuance of the certificate of need for a general hospital has standing to participate in any subsequent proceeding regarding the revocation of the certificate of need for a hospital for which the location has changed or for which the primary service area has materially changed. In addition, the application for the certificate of need for a general hospital must include a statement of intent that, if approved by final order of the agency, the applicant shall within 120 days after issuance of the final order or, if there is an appeal of the final order, within 120 days after the issuance of the court’s mandate on appeal, furnish satisfactory proof of the applicant’s financial ability to operate. The agency shall establish documentation requirements, to be completed by each applicant, which show anticipated provider revenues and expenditures, the basis for financing the anticipated cash- flow requirements of the provider, and an applicant’s access to contingency financing. A party participating in the administrative hearing regarding the issuance of the certificate of need for a general hospital may provide written comments concerning the adequacy of the financial information provided, but such party does not have standing to participate in an administrative proceeding regarding proof of the applicant’s financial ability to operate. The agency may require a licensee to provide proof of financial ability to operate at any time if there is evidence of financial instability, including, but not limited to, unpaid expenses necessary for the basic operations of the provider. The applicant must certify that it will license and operate the health care facility. For an existing health care facility, the applicant must be the licenseholder of the facility. (Emphasis added). Section 408.037 has only been amended once since 2008. The revisions are not relevant to the issue presented in this Rule challenge.2/ The Parties’ Positions In support of its argument that the Rule contravenes the statutes, VRBH asserts that the Rule is an invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority because it enlarges, modifies, or contravenes the laws implemented. Simply put, VRBH contends that the Rule is contrary to sections 408.035 and VRBH advances three reasons for its position that the Rule modifies the laws implemented; all three center on the assertion that in 2008, the Legislature removed the requirement for the submission of audited financial statements with general hospital CON applications: Requiring a general hospital to comply with the requirements of section 408.037(1), Florida Statutes, by submitting an audited financial statement with its CON application violates the express provision of the statute which specifically excludes general hospitals from the requirements of subsection (1); Requiring a general hospital to submit an audited financial statement with the CON application directly contradicts the submission requirements set forth in section 408.037(2), Florida Statutes, which only requires a general hospital to provide a statement of intent that it will “furnish satisfactory proof of the applicant’s financial ability to operate” if the CON application is approved by final order of the agency. Requiring a general hospital to submit an audited financial statement with the CON application contradicts the 2008 legislative changes to section 408.035, Florida Statutes, which streamlined the application process for general hospitals by removing the short and long term financial feasibility of the project as a review criteria. (VRBH Petition, ¶¶ 15-17). AHCA’s ultimate position is that the Rule should be interpreted as not requiring audited financial statements for general hospital CON applicants. To reach this conclusion, AHCA relies on 59C-1.008(4)(a), which provides that a CON application must contain “all requirements set forth in Sections 408.037(1), (2), and (3), Florida Statutes.” AHCA interprets the introductory phrase contained in section 408.037(1)--“except as provided in subsection (2) for a general hospital, an application for a certificate of need must contain”--to mean that only subsection (2) of section 408.037 applies to an application for general hospitals. Because section 408.037(2) does not mention audited financial statements, AHCA reasons that they are not required. Therefore, despite the plain language of the Rule, AHCA contends that the Rule does not require the submission of audited financial statements because: the Rule references sections 408.037(1), (2), and (3); AHCA interprets only section 408.037(2) as applying to general hospitals; and section 408.037(2) does not mention audited financial statements. SMH contends that the Rule does not enlarge, modify, or contravene the laws implemented and, therefore, is a valid exercise of delegated legislative authority. Specifically, SMH contends that section 408.037 itself requires general hospital applicants to submit audited financial statements because subsection (2) does not wholesale replace subsection (1) for general hospitals. Subsection (1) applies to general hospitals, unless there is an exception to those requirements listed in subsection (2). Subsection (1) requires the submission of audited financial statements for all CON applicants; nothing in subsection (2) creates an exception to that requirement. SMH also argues that audited financial statements are reliable documents that AHCA can quickly access for relevant information, including an applicant’s provision of health care services to Medicaid patients and the medically indigent, both of which are prominent considerations during the review of a general hospital’s CON application. See § 408.035(1)(i), (2), Fla. Stat. Post 2008 Rule Challenged Rule 59C-1.008(4) does not expressly exclude or differentiate between general hospital CON applications and other CON applications. Instead the Rule cross-references to the statutory requirement. AHCA asserts that by doing so, the Rule incorporates the statutory scheme by reference and does not require a CON application for a general hospital to include audited financial statements. The above-cited statutory provisions clearly state that a general hospital CON application need not include an audited financial statement and that financial condition is not relevant to the CON application review process. Any rule that requires a general hospital CON applicant to provide an audited financial statement with the application would be contrary to the requirements of section 408.037. It follows, therefore, that a rule contrary to the requirements of a statute would be invalid as it would exceed AHCA’s delegated legislative authority. Requiring a general hospital applicant to comply with the requirements of section 408.037(1) would violate the provision of the statute, which expressly excludes general hospitals from the requirements of subsection (1). Further, requiring a general hospital applicant to submit an audited financial statement with its CON application directly contradicts the submission requirements set forth in section 408.037(2). AHCA’s interpretation of rule 59C-1.008 is that it must be read in conjunction with section 408.037, subsections (1), (2), and (3), and accordingly, AHCA does not require that a general hospital applicant submit an audited financial statement as part of its application. AHCA’s interpretation is consistent with the differences in the content of the CON application forms published by AHCA for general hospital applications when compared to non-general hospital applications, for instance, those seeking other beds and services such as comprehensive medical rehabilitation, psychiatric, hospice, and other CON- regulated beds in a hospital. The requirements of each application type correspond to the statutory requirements for each application type. Application forms for projects “except for general hospitals” correspond to the CON application content requirements of section 408.037(1), which requires a statement of financial resources that must include capital projects (Schedule 2 of the CON application); capital expenditures and source of funds (Schedules 1 and 3 of the CON application); and a detailed financial projection, including revenues and expenses for the first two years (Schedules 5 through 8 of the CON application). The general hospital CON application does not have these requirements. General hospitals are not required to submit proof of financial ability to operate at the time of the submission of the CON application. In accordance with rule 59C-1.010(2)(d), general hospitals are required to comply with the requirements of sections 408.035(2) and 408.037(2). Neither of those statutes requires that a general hospital applicant submit proof of financial ability to operate until 120 days after the issuance of the final CON to the applicant. AHCA’s representative, Marisol Fitch, testified that AHCA does not require applicants for general hospitals to submit audited financial statements in the CON application, and that proof of financial ability to operate is required within 120 days after the final approval of the CON application, consistent with the statutory provisions. She testified that the Rule being challenged, when read in conjunction with the AHCA CON application form (incorporated by reference into the Rule) and other AHCA rules, including 59C-1.010 and 59C-1.030, is consistent with the statute, and that no audited financial statements are required. SMH asserts that an audited financial statement for hospitals might contain useful information, such as information on a hospital’s current payor mix. However, the unrefuted testimony is that audited financial statements are not required to include payor mix information, and normally do not since they are typically used to look at an applicant’s financial feasibility to operate. Further, regardless of whether such information might be “useful,” the specific requirement of section 408.037(2) expressly “excepts” general hospitals from the requirement to include such statements in the CON application. Pursuant to rule 59C-1.010(2)(d), “an application for a general hospital must meet the requirements of Sections 408.035(2) and 408.037(2), F.S.,” neither of which require that a general hospital CON applicant provide audited financials or financial feasibility data with the CON application. However, the challenged language in rule 59C-1.008(4) does not contain the “exception” for general hospital applications. Rule 59C-1.008(4) provides, without qualification, that a CON application must contain audited financial statements. Therefore, rules 59C-1.008(4) and 59C-1.010(2)(d) are contradictory. The primary purpose of an audited financial statement in a CON application is to review the short-term and long-term financial feasibility of the proposal. Requiring this financial information is contrary to the clear language of the 2008 changes to section 408.035, which removed the short-term and long-term financial feasibility of the project as review criteria in order to streamline the general hospital CON application process. AHCA has stated that their interpretation of rule 59C-1.008(4) is that it must be read in pari materia with rule 59C-1.010(2)(d) and sections 408.037 and 408.035, therefore, general hospital CON applicants are not required to submit audited financials with the CON application. According to AHCA’s interpretation, rule 59C-1.008(4) does not require a general hospital CON applicant to submit an audited financial statement with the CON application. However, regardless of AHCA’s interpretation, rule 59C-1.008(4) expressly states that a CON application must contain audited financial statements, in contravention of sections 408.035 and 408.037.

Florida Laws (13) 120.52120.56120.68395.002400.235408.031408.033408.034408.035408.037408.039408.042408.045
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CHARTER WOODS HOSPITAL, INC. vs. UNITED MEDICAL CORPORATION, D/B/A BAY COUNTY PSYCHIATRIC, 84-003114 (1984)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 84-003114 Latest Update: Oct. 26, 1984

The Issue Whether an out-of-state corporation doing business as a psychiatric hospital located out of state and as a counseling servico located in Florida's District I is entitled to formal administrative proceedings on an application for certificate of need filed by another party seeking a certificate of need to construct an 80-bed long-term psychiatric hospital in District I? For present purposes Bay Psychiatric's well-pleaded, factual allegations in its petition for formal hearing are assumed to be true. The petition alleges essentially the following ASSUMED FACTS Bay Psychiatric proposes to build an 80-bed long-term psychiatric hospital in Bay County, Florida, and HRS proposes to grant it certificate of need No. 3204 authorizing it to do so. The proposed hospital's primary service area is to be HRS Districts l and 2. Petitioner operates a free standing psychiatric hospital in Dothan, Alabama, which "includes beds defined as long-term psychiatric beds by Rule 10- 5.11(26), Florida Administrative Code, and beds defined as short-term psychiatric beds by Rule 10-5.11(25), Florida Administrative Code." Approximately one quarter of the Dothan hospital's patients come across the state line from HRS Districts l and 2. Last year the Dothan hospital experienced less than an 80 percent occupancy rate of its long-term beds, less than a 75 percent occupancy rate of its adult short-term beds, and less than a 70 percent occupancy rate of its other short-term beds. If Bay Psychiatric receives a certificate of need, the Dothan hospital "will be substantially and adversely affected because any patients admitted to the proposed UNITED MEDICAL facility would otherwise likely have been admitted to CHARTER WOODS HOSPITAL. Petitioner also operates a "counseling and intervention facility located in Panama City, Florida, "offering various outpatient services which "at least in part" are the types of outpatient services Bay Psychiatric would offer at its proposed hospital. Because of "a finite patient population" petitioner's counseling facility would also be "substantially and adversely affected " if Bay Psychiatric receives a certificate of need.

Recommendation It is, accordingly, RECOMMENDED: That the Department of Health and Rehabilitative dismiss the petition for formal proceeding. DONE AND ENTERED this 26th day of October, 1984, at Tallahassee, Florida. ROBERT T. BENTON, II Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 26th day of October, 1984. COPIES FURNISHED: Douglas L. Mannheimer, Esquire 318 North Calhoun Street Post Office Drawer 11300 Tallahassee, Florida 32302-3300 William E. Hoffman, Jr. James A. Dyer Bondurant Miller Hishon and Stephenson 2200 First Atlanta Tower Two Peachtree Street, N.W. Atlanta, Georgia 30383 F. Philip Blank, Esquire 241 East Virginia Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Chris H. Bentley, Esquire Fuller & Johnson, P.A. 300 East Park Avenue Post Office Box 1739 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 David Pingree, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winuwood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301

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MOUNT SINAI MEDICAL CENTER OF GREATER MIAMI, INC., D/B/A MOUNT SINAI MEDICAL CENTER vs MIAMI BEACH HEALTHCARE GROUP, LTD., D/B/A MIAMI HEART INSTITUTE, 94-004755CON (1994)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Aug. 30, 1994 Number: 94-004755CON Latest Update: Aug. 24, 1995

The Issue Whether the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA or the Agency) should approve the application for certificate of need (CON) 7700 filed by Miami Beach Healthcare Group, LTD. d/b/a Miami Heart Institute (Miami Heart or MH).

Findings Of Fact The Agency is the state agency charged with the responsibility of reviewing and taking action on CON applications pursuant to Chapter 408, Florida Statutes. The applicant, Miami Heart, operates a hospital facility known as Miami Heart Institute which, at the time of hearing, was comprised of a north campus (consisting of 273 licensed beds) and a south campus (consisting of 258 beds) in Miami, Florida. The two campuses operate under a single license which consolidated the operation of the two facilities. The consolidation of the license was approved by CON 7399 which was issued by the Agency prior to the hearing of this case. The Petitioner, Mount Sinai, is an existing health care facility doing business in the same service district. On February 4, 1994, AHCA published a fixed need pool of zero adult inpatient psychiatric beds for the planning horizon applicable to this batching cycle. The fixed need pool was not challenged. On February 18, 1994, Miami Heart submitted its letter of intent for the first hospital batching cycle of 1994, and sought to add twenty adult general inpatient psychiatric beds at the Miami Heart Institute south campus. Such facility is located in the Agency's district 11 and is approximately two (2) miles from the north campus. Notice of that letter was published in the March 11, 1994, Florida Administrative Weekly. Miami Heart's letter of intent provided, in pertinent part: By this letter, Miami Beach Healthcare Group, Ltd., d/b/a Miami Heart Institute announces its intent to file a Certificate of Need Application on or before March 23, 1994 for approval to establish 20 hospital inpatient general psychiatric beds for adults at Miami Heart Institute. Thus, the applicant seeks approval for this project pursuant to Sections 408.036(1)(h), Florida Statutes. The proposed capital expenditure for this project shall not exceed $1,000,000 and will include new construction and the renovation of existing space. Miami Heart Institute is located in Local Health Council District 11. There are no subsdistricts for Hospital Inpatient General Psychiatric Beds for Adults in District 11. The applicable need formula for Hospital General Psychiatric Beds for Adults is contained within Rule 59C-1.040(4)(c), F.A.C. The Agency published a fixed need of "0" for Hospital General Psychiatric Beds for Adults in District 11 for this batching cycle. However, "not normal" circumstances exist within District which justify approval of this project. These circumstances are that Miami Beach Community Hospital, which is also owned by Miami Beach Healthcare Group, Ltd., and which has an approved Certificate of Need Application to consol- idate its license with that of the Miami Heart Institute, has pending a Certificate of Need Application to delicense up to 20 hospital inpatient general psychiatric beds for adults. The effect of the application, which is the subject of this Letter of Intent, will be to relocate 20 of the delicensed adult psychiatric beds to the Miami Heart Institute. Because of the "not normal" circumstances alleged in the Miami Heart letter of intent, the Agency extended a grace period to allow competing letters of intent to be filed. No additional letters of intent were submitted during the grace period. On March 23, 1994, Miami Heart timely submitted its CON application for the project at issue, CON no. 7700. Notice of the application was published in the April 8, 1994, Florida Administrative Weekly. Such application was deemed complete by the Agency and was considered to be a companion to the delicensure of the north campus beds. On July 22, 1994, the Agency published in the Florida Administrative Weekly its preliminary decision to approve CON no. 7700. In the same batch as the instant case, Cedars Healthcare Group (Cedars), also in district 11, applied to add adult psychiatric beds to Cedars Medical Center through the delicensure of an equal number of adult psychiatric beds at Victoria Pavilion. Cedars holds a single license for the operation of both Cedars Medical Center and Victoria Pavilion. As in this case, the Agency gave notice of its intent to grant the CON application. Although this "transfer" was initially challenged, it was subsequently dismissed. Although filed at the same time (and, therefore, theoretically within the same batch), the Cedars CON application and the Miami Heart CON application were not comparatively reviewed by the Agency. The Agency determined the applicants were merely seeking to relocate their own licensed beds. Based upon that determination, MH's application was evaluated in the context of the statutory criteria, the adult psychiatric beds and services rule (Rule 59C-1.040, Florida Administrative Code), the district 11 local health plan, and the 1993 state health plan. Ms. Dudek also considered the utilization data for district 11 facilities. Mount Sinai timely filed a petition challenging the proposed approval of CON 7700 and, for purposes of this proceeding only, the parties stipulated that MS has standing to raise the issues remaining in this cause. Mount Sinai's existing psychiatric unit utilization is presently at or near full capacity, and MS' existing unit would not provide an adequate, available, or accessible alternative to Miami Heart's proposal, unless additional bed capacity were available to MS in the future through approval of additional beds or changes in existing utilization. Miami Heart's proposal to establish twenty adult general inpatient psychiatric beds at its Miami Heart Institute south campus was made in connection with its application to delicense twenty adult general inpatient psychiatric beds at its north campus. The Agency advised MH to submit two CON applications: one for the delicensure (CON no. 7474) and one for the establishment of the twenty beds at the south campus (CON no. 7700). The application to delicense the north campus beds was expeditiously approved and has not been challenged. As to the application to establish the twenty beds at the south campus, the following statutory criteria are not at issue: Section 408.035(1)(c), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), (j), (k), (m), (n), (o) and (2)(b) and (e), Florida Statutes. The parties have stipulated that Miami Heart meets, at least minimally, those criteria. During 1993, Miami Heart made the business decision to cease operations at its north campus and to seek the Agency's approval to relocate beds and services from that facility to other facilities owned by MH, including the south campus. Miami Heart does not intend to delicense the twenty beds at the north campus until the twenty beds are licensed at the south campus. The goal is merely to transfer the existing program with its services to the south campus. Miami Heart did not seek beds from a fixed need pool. Since approximately April, 1993, the Miami Heart north campus has operated with the twenty bed adult psychiatric unit and with a limited number of obstetrical beds. The approval of CON no. 7700 will not change the overall total number of adult general inpatient psychiatric beds within the district. The adult psychiatric program at MH experiences the highest utilization of any program in district 11, with an average length of stay that is consistent with other adult programs around the state. Miami Heart's existing psychiatric program was instituted in 1978. Since 1984, there has been little change in nursing and other staff. The program provides a full continuum of care, with outpatient programs, aftercare, and support programs. Nearly ninety-nine percent of the program's inpatient patient days are attributable to patients diagnosed with serious mental disorders. The Miami Heart program specializes in a biological approach to psychiatric cases in the diagnosis and treatment of affective disorders, including a variety of mood disorders and related conditions. The Miami Heart program is distinctive from other psychiatric programs in the district. If the MH program were discontinued, the patients would have limited alternatives for access to the same diagnostic and treatment services in the district. There are no statutes or rules promulgated which specifically address the transfer of psychiatric beds or services from one facility owned by a health care entity to another facility also owned by the same entity. In reviewing the instant CON application, the Agency determined it has the discretion to evaluate each transfer case based upon the review criteria and to consider the appropriate weight factors should be given. Factors which may affect the review include the change of location, the utilization of the existing services, the quality of the existing programs and services, the financial feasibility, architectural issues, and any other factor critical to the review process. In this case, the weight given to the numeric need criteria was not significant. The Agency determined that because the transfer would not result in a change to the overall bed inventory, the calculated fixed need pool did not apply to the instant application. In effect, because the calculation of numeric need was inapplicable, this case must be considered "not normal" pursuant to Rule 59C-1.040(4)(a), Florida Administrative Code. The Agency determined that other criteria were to be given greater consideration. Such factors were the reasonableness of the proposal, the ability to afford access, the applicant's ability to provide a quality program, and the project's financial feasibility. The Agency determined that, on balance, this application should be approved as the statutory and other review criteria were met. Although put on notice of the other CON applications, Mount Sinai did not file an application for psychiatric beds at the same time as Miami Heart or Cedars. Mount Sinai did not claim that the proposed delicensures and transfers made beds available for competitive review. The Agency has interpreted Rule 59C-1.040, Florida Administrative Code, to mean that it will not normally approve an application for beds or services unless the statutory and rule criteria are met, including the need determination criteria. There is no list of circumstances which are routinely considered "not normal" by the Agency. In this case, the proposed transfer of beds was, in itself, considered "not normal." The approval of Miami Heart's application would allow an existing program to continue. As a result, the overhead to maintain two campuses would be reduced. Further, the relocation would allow the program to continue to provide access, both geographically and financially, to the same patient service area. And, since the program has the highest utilization rate of any adult program in the district, its continuation would be beneficial to the area. The program has an established referral base for admissions to the facility. The transfer is reasonable for providing access to the medically under-served. The quality of care, while not in issue, would be expected to continue at its existing level or improve. The transfer would allow better access to ancillary hospital departments and consulting specialists who may be needed even though the primary diagnosis is psychiatric. The cost of the transfer when compared to the costs to be incurred if the transfer is not approved make the approval a benefit to the service area. If the program is not relocated, Medicaid access could change if the hospital is reclassified from a general facility to a specialty facility. The proposed cost for the project does not exceed one million dollars. If the north campus must be renovated, a greater capital expenditure would be expected. The expected impact on competition for other providers is limited due to the high utilization for all programs in the vicinity. The subject proposal is consistent with the district and state health care plans and the need for health care facilities and services. The services being transferred is an existing program which is highly utilized and which is not creating "new beds." As such, the proposal complies with Section 408.035(1)(a), Florida Statutes. The availability, quality of care, efficiency, appropriateness, accessibility, extent of utilization, and adequacy of like and existing services in the district will not be adversely affected by the approval of the subject application. The proposed transfer is consistent with, and appropriate, in light of these criteria. Therefore, the proposal complies with Section 408.035(1)(b), Florida Statutes. The subject application demonstrates a full continuum of care with safeguards to assure that alternatives to inpatient care are fully utilized when appropriate. Therefore, the availability and adequacy of other services, such as outpatient care, has been demonstrated and would deter unnecessary utilization. Thus, Miami Heart has shown its application complies with Section 408.035(1)(d), Florida Statutes. Miami Heart has also demonstrated that the probable impact of its proposal is in compliance with Section 408.035(1)(l), Florida Statutes. The proposed transfer will not adversely impact the costs of providing services, the competition on the supply of services, or the improvements or innovations in the financing and delivery of services which foster competition, promote quality assurance, and cost-effectiveness. Miami Heart has taken an innovative approach to promote quality assurance and cost effectiveness. Its purpose, to close a facility and relocate beds (removing unnecessary acute care beds in the process), represents a departure from the traditional approach to providing health care services. By approving Miami Heart's application, overhead costs associated with the unnecessary facility will be eliminated. There is no less costly, more efficient alternative which would allow the continuation of the services and program Miami Heart has established at the north campus than the approval of transfer to the south campus. The MH proposal is most practical and readily available solution which will allow the north campus to close and the beds and services to remain available and accessible. The renovation of the medical surgical space at the south campus to afford a location for the psychiatric unit is the most practical and readily available solution which will allow the north campus to close and the beds and services to remain available and accessible. In totality, the circumstances of this case make the approval of Miami Heart's application for CON no. 7700 the most reasonable and practical solution given the "not normal" conditions of this application.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is, hereby, RECOMMENDED: That the Agency for Health Care Administration enter a final order approving CON 7700 as recommended in the SAAR. DONE AND RECOMMENDED this 5th day of April, 1995, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. JOYOUS D. PARRISH 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 5th day of April, 1995. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NO. 94-4755 Note: Proposed findings of fact are to contain one essential fact per numbered paragraph. Proposed findings of fact paragraphs containing multiple sentences with more than one statement of fact are difficult to review. In reviewing for this case, where all sentences were accurate and supported by the recorded cited, the paragraph has been accepted. If the paragraph contained mixed statements where one sentence was an accurate statement of fact but the others were not, the paragraph has been rejected. Similarly, if one sentence was editorial comment, argument, or an unsupported statement to a statement of fact, the paragraph has been rejected. Proposed findings of fact should not include argument, editorial comments, or statements of fact mixed with such comments. Rulings on the proposed findings of fact submitted by Petitioner, Mount Sinai: Paragraphs 1 through 13 were cited as stipulated facts. Paragraph 14 is rejected as irrelevant. With regard to paragraph 15 it is accepted that Miami Heart made the business decision to move the psychiatric beds beds from the north campus to the south campus. Any inference created by the remainder of the paragraph is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 16 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 17 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 18 is accepted. Paragraph 19 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 20 is rejected as contrary to the weight of the credible evidence. Paragraph 21 is rejected as contrary to the weight of the credible evidence. Paragraph 22 is accepted. Paragraph 23 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 24 is accepted. Paragraph 25 is rejected as repetitive, or immaterial, unnecessary to the resolution of the issues. Paragraph 26 is rejected as irrelevant or contrary to the weight of the credible evidence. Paragraph 27 is rejected as comment or conclusion of law, not fact. Paragraph 28 is accepted but not relevant. Paragraphs 29 and 30 are accepted. Paragraphs 31 through 33 are rejected as argument, comment or irrelevant. Paragraph 34 is rejected as comment or conclusion of law, not fact. Paragraph 35 is rejected as comment or conclusion of law, not fact, or irrelevant as the FNP was not in dispute. Paragraph 36 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 37 is rejected as repetitive, or comment. Paragraph 38 is rejected as repetitive, comment or conclusion of law, not fact, or irrelevant. Paragraph 39 is rejected as argument or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 40 is accepted. Paragraph 41, 42, and 43 are rejected as contrary to the weight of the credible evidence and/or argument. Paragraph 44 is rejected as argument and comment on the testimony. Paragraph 45 is rejected as argument, irrelevant, and/or not supported by the weight of the credible evidence. Paragraph 46 is rejected as argument. Paragraph 47 is rejected as comment or conclusion of law, not fact. Paragraph 48 is rejected as comment, argument or irrelevant. Paragraph 49 is rejected as comment on testimony. It is accepted that the proposed relocation or transfer of beds is a "not normal" circumstance. Paragraph 50 is rejected as argument or irrelevant. Paragraph 51 is rejected as argument or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 52 is rejected as argument or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 53 is rejected as argument, comment or recitation of testimony, or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 54 is rejected as irrelevant or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 55 is rejected as irrelevant, comment, or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 56 is rejected as irrelevant or argument. Paragraph 57 is rejected as irrelevant or argument. Paragraph 58 is rejected as contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 59 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 60 is rejected as contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 61 is rejected as argument or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 62 is rejected as argument or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 63 is accepted. Paragraph 64 is rejected as irrelevant. Mount Sinai could have filed in this batch given the not normal circumstances disclosed in the Miami Heart notice. Paragraph 65 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 66 is rejected as comment or irrelevant. Paragraph 67 is rejected as argument or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Paragraph 68 is rejected as argument or irrelevant. Paragraph 69 is rejected as argument, comment or irrelevant. Paragraph 70 is rejected as argument or contrary to the weight of credible evidence. Rulings on the proposed findings of fact submitted by the Respondent, Agency: Paragraphs 1 through 6 are accepted. With the deletion of the words "cardiac catheterization" and the inclusion of the word "psychiatric beds" in place, paragraph 7 is accepted. Cardiac catheterization is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 8 is accepted. The second sentence of paragraph 9 is rejected as contrary to the weight of credible evidence or an error of law, otherwise, the paragraph is accepted. Paragraph 10 is accepted. Paragraphs 11 through 17 are accepted. Paragraph 18 is rejected as conclusion of law, not fact. Paragraphs 19 and 20 are accepted. The first two sentences of paragraph 21 are accepted; the remainder rejected as conclusion of law, not fact. Paragraph 22 is rejected as comment or argument. Paragraph 23 is accepted. Paragraph 24 is rejected as argument, speculation, or irrelevant. Paragraph 25 is accepted. Rulings on the proposed findings of fact submitted by the Respondent, Miami Heart: Paragraphs 1 through 13 are accepted. The first sentence of paragraph 14 is accepted; the remainder is rejected as contrary to law or irrelevant since MS did not file in the batch when it could have. Paragraph 15 is accepted. Paragraph 16 is accepted as the Agency's statement of its authority or policy in this case, not fact. Paragraphs 17 through 20 are accepted. Paragraph 21 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraph 22 is rejected as irrelevant. Paragraphs 23 through 35 are accepted. Paragraph 36 is rejected as repetitive. Paragraphs 37 through 40 are accepted. Paragraph 41 is rejected as contrary to the weight of the credible evidence to the extent that it concludes the distance to be one mile; evidence deemed credible placed the distance at two miles. Paragraphs 42 through 47 are accepted. Paragraph 48 is rejected as comment. Paragraphs 49 through 57 are accepted. COPIES FURNISHED: Tom Wallace, Assistant Director Agency for Health Care Administration The Atrium, Suite 301 325 John Knox Road Tallahassee, Florida 32303 Sam Power, Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration The Atrium, Suite 301 325 John Knox Road Tallahassee, Florida 32303 R. Terry Rigsby Geoffrey D. Smith Wendy Delvecchio Blank, Rigsby & Meenan, P.A. 204 S. Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Lesley Mendelson Senior Attorney Agency for Health Care Administration 325 John Knox Road, Suite 301 Tallahassee, Florida 32303-4131 Stephen Ecenia Rutledge, Ecenia, Underwood, Purnell & Hoffman, P.A. 215 South Monroe Street Suite 420 Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0551

Florida Laws (4) 120.57408.032408.035408.036 Florida Administrative Code (1) 59C-1.040
# 7
WUESTHOFF MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC. vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 97-000389CON (1997)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Jan. 28, 1997 Number: 97-000389CON Latest Update: Dec. 06, 1999

The Issue The issue in this case is whether the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) should grant the application of Wuesthoff Memorial Hospital, Inc. (WUESTHOFF), for a Certificate of Need (CON) (CON 8597) to establish a new 50-bed general acute care hospital in South Brevard County, District 7.

Findings Of Fact WUESTHOFF is a 303-bed, acute care hospital in Brevard County, Florida. In addition to its hospital, WUESTHOFF has three home health locations, eight or nine walk-in clinics, a hospice, a durable medical equipment business, an ambulatory surgery center, two freestanding diagnostic centers, and outpatient labs throughout Brevard County. HRMC is a JCAHO accredited, 528-bed, regional, not-for- profit community hospital based in Melbourne, Brevard County, Florida. HRMC is comprised of two acute care campuses: a 468- bed tertiary hospital in Melbourne, and a 60-bed, general acute care hospital in Palm Bay. The Melbourne campus operates a 10-bed, Level II, neonatal, intensive care unit, and 428 general medical and pediatric beds. The Proposed Project WUESTHOFF chose to establish a satellite hospital complex in South Brevard County by applying separately for: (1) a certificate of need (CON) to decertify and de-license 100 general acute care hospital beds and undertake certain renovations and improvements at its existing Rockledge hospital facility; (2) a CON for a medical office building (MOB); (3) a non-reviewability letter for a $35 million diagnostic and treatment center (DTC), which would provide all of the ancillary services for the new satellite hospital; and (4) the CON to establish the 50-bed hospital (CON 8597) which is at issue in this case. In CON 8597, WUESTHOFF has asked AHCA to treat the $35 million DTC as the “sunk” costs of an existing facility, and to review the CON application at issue in this case incrementally— i.e., as consisting of only the inpatient tower and the additional ancillary activities that would take place at the complex, over and above those that would take place at the DTC without the inpatient tower. Viewing CON 8597 in this way, WUESTHOFF presented total project costs of only $13 million. In preparing the financial schedules for CON 8597, WUESTHOFF presented the revenues and expenses of the entire hospital operation (including the DTC), except for the additional activities (inpatient and ancillary) that would result from the addition of the inpatient tower, and the revenues and expenses of the entire hospital operation, including the additional activities (inpatient and ancillary) that would result from the addition of the inpatient tower. By presenting the financial schedules in this manner, WUESTHOFF never presented the revenues and expenses of the entirety of the new satellite hospital it is proposing to establish, and AHCA has not had the opportunity to review those revenues and expenses. WUESTHOFF planned to build the MOB, the DTC and the inpatient tower in one continual course of construction and to open the entire complex at the same time; the complex, when completed, was planned to function as a single, integrated hospital facility. AHCA granted the first three applications comprising WUESTHOFF’s project but denied CON 8597. In a subsequent batch, WUESTHOFF filed a letter of intent for a single CON application that the combined the DTC and inpatient tower projects at a total cost of approximately $50,000,000. Need In Relation To State And District Health Plans: Section 408.035(1)(a) Florida Statutes State Health Plan The first State Health Plan preference favors applicants who demonstrate that the subdistrict occupancy rate is at or exceeds 75 percent, or in the case of existing facilities, where the occupancy rate for the most recent 12 months is at or exceeds 85 percent. WUESTHOFF failed to meet this preference. For the applicable period, the subdistrict occupancy was approximately 53 percent; however, more recent data shows that occupancy is below 53 percent, which suggests a continuing decline in inpatient occupancy rates in the subdistrict. During the applicable period, the occupancy rate at WUESTHOFF’s Rockledge facility was only slightly more than 45 percent. The second State Health Plan preference favors an applicant with a history of providing a disproportionate share of the subdistrict’s acute care and Medicaid patient days, and further meets the Medicaid disproportionate share hospital criteria. WUESTHOFF failed to meet this preference, as it is not a disproportionate share provider. The third State Health Plan preference favors an applicant that provides or proposes to provide disproportionate share of Medicaid and charity care patient days in relation to other hospitals within the district or subdistrict. WUESTHOFF’s existing facility is not a disproportionate share hospital. (Although WUESTHOFF’s CON application proposes to condition award of the CON setting aside 15 percent of its discharges for Medicaid, charity, and indigent patients, its application does not provide percentages for each category.) The fourth State Health Plan preference considers the current and projected indigent inpatient case load, the proposed facility size, and the case and service mix, WUESTHOFF’s application partially complies with the preference in that it proposes to provide some indigent care. The fifth State Health Plan preference favors proposals that would not negatively affect the financial viability of an existing, disproportionate share hospital. This preference is not applicable in this case. The sixth State Health Plan preference favors applicants with a record of accepting indigent patients for emergency care. WUESTHOFF meets this preference. The seventh State Health Plan preference favors applicants for any type of hospital project if the facility is verified as a trauma center. WUESTHOFF does not meet this preference. WUESTHOFF claims that it operate the emergency room at the proposed facility with “the same level of services as WUESTHOFF’s existing emergency room.” WUESTHOFF does not currently operate a Level II trauma center at its Rockledge campus. The eighth State Health Plan preference favors applicants who can document that they provide a full range of emergency services. WUESTHOFF’s Rockledge facility offers a range of emergency services, but the emergency department at the proposed facility will necessarily offer a limited range of services, as the proposed facility will not be a tertiary care hospital, and emergency patients in need of those services will have to be transferred. The ninth State Health Plan preference favors applicants who can document that it has not been fined by HRS for any violation of the emergency services statutes. WUESTHOFF meets this preference. Local Health Plan Preferences The District 7 Local Health Plan sets forth five preferences to be used in evaluating CON applications for the transfer/relocation/delicensure of acute care beds. The health plan provides that “[p]reference shall be given to applications for transfer of existing acute care beds, delicensure/conversion of existing acute care beds and/or relocation of an entire facility if the applicant can provide substantial documentation of: The need for acute care beds or specialty beds in the service area proposed to receive the beds. Need should address specific populations, access consideration, etc. The impact of the proposed project on the parent facility including projected occupancy declines, curtailing of service effect on operating cost, use of vacated space at the main campus and charge changes. The proposed service improving access by at least 25 minutes to at least 10 percent of the population or a minimum of at least 35,000 people. This should be substantiated by analyses of patient origin to existing providers, physician referral practices and location of physician offices. Commitment to provision of care to both no-pay and low-pay medically indigent patients and Medicaid patients at a minimum of no more than 2 percent below the most recent HCB publication for the District of the charity/uncompensated care percentage of net revenues. Agreement to participate in any indigent care programs which exist in the county or counties proposed to be served. Participation should be at a rate equal to or greater than the average for the general hospitals also serving that area. As to the first preference, WUESTHOFF failed to demonstrate a need for the proposed 50-bed general acute care hospital. Even with the delicensure of 100 acute care beds as a result of WUESTHOFF’s companion application, there still is an oversupply of 215 acute care beds in the county. The evidence presented at the final hearing failed to demonstrate any geographic or other barriers to accessing acute care services that would warrant the expenditure proposed by WUESTHOFF to construct the proposed project. Indeed, WUESTHOFF’s own evidence was clear that every resident of Brevard County has access to a general acute care hospital within a maximum drive time of 30-40 minutes and, in almost all instances, to two different acute care facilities within a 30-40 minute drive time. WUESTHOFF contends that its proposed 50-bed general acute care hospital is needed for four reasons: (1) to provide a high quality alternative inpatient health care provider in south Brevard County; (2) to introduce competition into the south Brevard area; (3) to enhance access to care to Medicaid, charity, and indigent population, as well as to enhance access for the managed care segment of the population; and (4) to enable WUESTHOFF to remain competitive in the marketplace. The evidence is clear that HRMC provides high quality inpatient health care in south Brevard County. See Findings 30- 44, infra. In addition, WUESTHOFF already serves some patients, residing in south Brevard County, and so does Sebastian River Medical Center, located in the adjacent county to the south. The evidence also is clear that there already is competition for inpatient hospital services in south Brevard County. HRMC serves a much greater percentage of those patients primarily due to its location and the high quality and low costs of HRMC’s services. In view of the excess capacity of hospital beds in the county, it does not make sense to add a satellite WUESTHOFF hospital in south Brevard County that would duplicate the services of the existing providers. WUESTHOFF also attempted to show that its proposed acute care hospital was needed in order to provide services for managed care participants. However, WUESTHOFF failed to offer any competent evidence to show that participants in managed care programs are a traditionally underserved population group and did not prove that WUESTHOFF’s ability to participate in managed care networks is a valid basis for determining the need of additional acute care services in south Brevard County. To the contrary, the evidence tended to show that the expansion of managed care programs would result in a decrease in the utilization of inpatient acute care services. Furthermore, there is no barrier to WUESTHOFF’s participating in managed care programs with one or more facilities in the southern portion of Brevard County, and in fact WUESTHOFF has aligned itself with Sebastian River Medical Center in a number of managed care contracts serving residents of southern Brevard County. While WUESTHOFF is offering a larger discount to managed care payers, its charges are higher, resulting in net revenue per managed care case that is still higher than HRMC’s. The price the managed care providers pay to HRMC is actually 14 percent lower than what they pay to WUESTHOFF. Not only does HRMC provide a better “deal” to managed care payers, but HRMC’s managed care volume is also greater than WUESTHOFF’s, indicating HRMC’s willingness to negotiate and work with managed care companies. At the time WUESTHOFF submitted its CON application, the penetration of managed care in Brevard County was approximately 8.6 percent. However, more recent data from 1996 shows a significant increase in the penetration of managed care to 15 percent, without the allegedly needed new hospital. A primary thrust of WUESTHOFF’s case for the need for its proposed project was that patients in the southern portion of Brevard County cannot be admitted into HRMC’s Palm Bay facility because its physicians do not enjoy staff privileges at that facility. Each hospital establishes criterion for staff privileges. In order to be eligible for staff privileges, it is normally required that the physician reside or have his or her office within certain geographic boundaries surrounding the hospital. The primary reason for such requirement is to ensure that the physician is capable of responding to patient needs within a time certain and that the physician will be able to provide coverage for his or her patients admitted into a facility. Dr. Arnold, a physician with staff privileges at WUESTHOFF who operates an office in West Melbourne, conceded that if his physician group associated with a physician living within HRMC’s geographic boundaries who was able to meet response time criteria, the physician group could admit patients into HRMC. Dr. Arnold also conceded that his physician group is not eligible for staff privileges at other Brevard hospitals, based on geographic considerations. The Availability, Quality Of Care, Efficiency, Appropriateness, Accessibility, Extent Of Utilization, And Adequacy Of Like And Existing Health Care Services In The Service District: Section 408.035(1)(b), Florida Statutes. There is no need for another hospital in South Brevard County. The county already has more than enough hospitals. Even in light of a 27-29 percent increase in population, utilization of Brevard County hospitals has dropped 10 percent in the last five years. There has been a marked shift in the Brevard County area away from inpatient services toward outpatient services. That shift is still growing. HRMC is the only hospital in Brevard County which has been nationally recognized for quality care by the National Research Corporation. According to AHCA’s hospital report card, HRMC was shown to be a consistent, low-charge provider, operating within the expected range of outcomes. According to a study done by AHCA, HRMC performs as one of the top five hospitals in Florida for reducing overall C-section births and increasing vaginal births after Cesarean (“VBAC”). This is important because vaginal births are safer for both mother and baby and save approximately $3,000 per delivery when compared with Cesarean births. HRMC has the lowest Cesarean Section rate and the highest VBAC rate in Brevard County and is one of the five lowest charging hospitals in the State for these services. Wuesthoff, on the other hand, has some of the highest costs in the county for these services. HRMC is providing efficient hospital services when compared with WUESTHOFF and other markets where competition is a factor. Of the zip codes addressed in WUESTHOFF’s travel study, there is no zip code in Brevard County that is more than 30 minutes from an existing hospital. Of the fourteen intersections tested, the addition of the proposed project would decrease travel times from only three intersections, with the greatest decrease in travel time being only nine minutes. Thus, the construction of WUESTHOFF’s proposed facility would not significantly increase access for Brevard County patients. HRMC delivers the majority of Medicaid babies in the county and is also a contract provider for Children’s Medical Services. HRMC worked with the Public Health Department to develop a better system for giving prenatal care and delivery to Medicaid and indigent mothers. HRMC offered to subsidize the salary of a doctor, and eventually two midwives, to work with the Public Health Department for this purpose. HRMC’s HOPE programs provides access to Medicaid and indigent patients. HOPE clinic and HOPE van expenses are direct expenses of HRMC. In addition to medical care, the HOPE program also provides free medication to those who cannot afford it. HRMC’s HOPE van provides services to the homeless every Tuesday, seeing as many as 40 patients each visit. Patients are provided with an examination, medications, and referrals to specialists or the hospital, if necessary. This care is provided at no charge to the patient. HRMC’s HOPE program was given the Nova award by the American Hospital Association for its ground-breaking effort in community health improvement. It is the only program in Florida which has been so recognized. The HOPE program has also received the Heartland Award from Governor Chiles for its work at improving the status of life in Florida. HRMC supports a variety of agencies to provide care to indigent AIDS patients. HRMC provides services to a nonprofit outpatient AIDS services organization, which offers reduced-rate and free lab services. HRMC, along with the Public Health Unit, funded a dental clinic for the AIDS organization. The hospitals in Brevard County do a good job in regard to taking care of the patients who are incapable of paying, with HRMC going the extra mile to provide services to the poor. There was no evidence that persons in need of quality, general acute care services are not able to access those services at any existing provider in Brevard County. There is no lack of availability or access to general acute care services based on either geographic or financial grounds. WUESTHOFF’s proposed 50- bed general acute care hospital is not needed to accomplish this. The Ability Of The Applicant To Provide Quality Of Care And The Applicant’s Record Of Providing Quality Of Care: Section 408.035(1)(c), Florida Statutes. It is clear that WUESTHOFF is capable of providing quality inpatient health care services. However, it is found that HRMC is providing higher quality services (and at a lower cost). As shown in AHCA’s hospital report card, WUESTHOFF performed in the lowest 15 percent in the State in 5 of 6 serviced lines where mortality was measured. On the other hand, HRMC was indicated to be consistently a low-charge provider, operating within expected outcomes. HRMC’s C-section rate is significantly lower than WUESTHOFF’s, and its VBAC rate much higher. The results of a low C-section rate are lower lengths of stay and less risk to both mom and baby. The Availability And Adequacy Of Other Health Care Facilities And Services In The District Which May Serve As Alternatives For The Services To Be Provided By The Applicant: Section 408.035(1)(d), Florida Statutes. WUESTHOFF already has three home health locations, 8 or walk-in clinics, a hospice, a durable medical equipment business, an ambulatory surgery center, 2 freestanding diagnostic centers, and outpatient labs in Brevard County. In addition, WUESTHOFF plans to construct a new outpatient and diagnostic center in south Brevard County. In addition, inpatient surgeries have shifted to private, for-profit outpatient centers and ambulatory surgery centers that have opened in the last five years in Brevard County. The competent, substantial evidence presented at the final hearing demonstrates that within Brevard County, there are available and adequate alternatives to the inpatient services proposed by WUESTHOFF. First, as discussed above, the existing providers of acute inpatient health care services have capacity to absorb any increase in the utilization of acute care services in the County. Second, data introduced at the final hearing demonstrate that overall utilization for the types of services WUESTHOFF proposes to offer are declining and demonstrate that residents are seeking out alternatives to inpatient hospital services. For example, from 1993-1996, inpatient surgery services in Brevard County showed a marked decline of approximately 20 percent, both in number of patients and procedures. This trend is not unique to Brevard County, but is occurring throughout the state. Health care providers are seeking alternatives to hospitalization, with procedures being performed in physician offices and ambulatory surgical centers. Likewise, there has been a decline in utilization of several other services WUESTHOFF is proposing for its 50-bed hospital. During the period 1993-1996, while the population of Brevard County was growing at a rate of approximately 2.4 percent per year, the rate of obstetric admissions as a percentage of admissions to Brevard hospitals declined. There is excess capacity for pediatric and obstetrical services in Brevard County. The average daily census in obstetrical beds has dropped from approximately 34 patients per day to approximately 29 per day. With 66 reported available obstetrical beds in Brevard County, that means that on any day only 44 percent of the available capacity is being utilized. Likewise, pediatric census has gone from approximately 32 patients per day to only about 25. With 78 reported pediatrics beds, a demand for only 25 beds means that approximately 32 percent of available capacity is utilized. Probable Economies And Improvements In Service That May Be Derived From Operation Of Joint, Cooperative, Or Shared Health Care Resources: Section 408.035(1)(e), Florida Statutes. WUESTHOFF does not propose the operation of a joint, cooperative, or shared program with any other entity. WUESTHOFF contends that its application is consistent with this criterion because it proposes the sharing of certain resources with its main facility. But the construction of a satellite facility will result in the duplication of certain services. It is actually less efficient for a hospital to operate two campuses. The Need in the Service District for Special Equipment and Services Which Are Not Reasonably and Economically Accessible in Adjoining Areas: Section 408.035(1)(f), Florida Statutes. WUESTHOFF’s CON application does not propose to provide special equipment. This criterion is not met. The Need For Research And Educational Facilities, Health Care Practitioners, And Doctors Of Osteopathy And Medicine At The Student, Internship, And Residency Training Levels: Section 408.035(1)(g), Florida Statutes. This need is already being met in the community. WUESTHOFF, HRMC, and other Brevard County hospitals are already active in community training programs through their links with Brevard Community College and the University of Central Florida. HRMC has institutional training programs with the University of Florida, all Children’s Hospital, the local vo- tech, and University of Central Florida, in addition to other community programs. The Immediate And Long-Term Financial Feasibility Of The Proposal: Section 408.035(1)(i), Florida Statutes. The immediate financial feasibility of a proposed project is satisfied by showing that the applicant has adequate financial resources to fund the capital costs of the project and the financial ability to fund short-term operating losses. WUESTHOFF has demonstrated that its proposed project is financially feasible in the short-term. Long-term financial feasibility is established by demonstrating that projected revenues can be attained in light of the projected utilization of the proposed service and average length of stay. WUESTHOFF has not demonstrated that it can achieve its projected revenues by the second year of operation and has, therefore, failed to demonstrate long-term financial feasibility. It is impossible to tell from the information contained in WUESTHOFF’s CON application 8597 what the revenues and expenses of the new hospital will be. Staffing and supply costs associated with the ancillary building, but which will be used by the hospital when constructed and which amount to millions of dollars, are not broken out in the application. The application also does not show the totality of the costs associated with the 50-bed hospital WUESTHOFF seeks to establish. For example, provision for bad debt expense does not appear in the application, nor does the indigent care tax expense. Furthermore, the application does not provide for any administrative staff for the new hospital, nor has all other necessary staff been provided for. If these positions are included under “other,” then the salary expense projected is not enough. Also, the salaries listed on Schedule 6 do not include benefits. The preopening expenses figure shown in WUESTHOFF’s application is reasonable only if the entire facility, the ancillary, outpatient, and inpatient tower would open all at the same time. It is very difficult to analyze the reasonableness of the financial projections because the revenues and expenses do not match. All the revenue from the proposed new facility appears to be included, but not all of the expenses. Schedule 8A shows that daily ancillary expenses are $470 at WUESTHOFF’s existing hospital but only $82 at the new, proposed hospital. It is implausible that the new hospital would have costs this much lower than the existing hospital. WUESTHOFF’s staffing projections do not account for a significant number of nursing and other staff necessary for the operation of the facility as a hospital. The projections only address nursing positions for the 50-bed, inpatient tower. The schedule fails to show those nurses assigned to the ancillary services areas in the outpatient diagnostic center who will be working with inpatients. For example, the scrub nurses in the emergency department who will be working on inpatients are not included in the schedule, and the nurses working in radiology who will be caring for inpatients are not shown. The schedule fails to include a director of nursing at the proposed hospital facility. Although WUESTHOFF claimed that it will assign a director of nursing when patient volumes reach 50%, it failed to include projections for that position in this second year projections, even though patient volumes are projected to reach 50% in the second year. Wuesthoff also failed to include benefits in its computation of salaries on Schedule 6, even though it expects to pay benefits at a rate of 20% of salary. Interest expenses are also significantly understated. The project is financed with 100 percent debt, which should amount to an interest expense of approximately $850,000.00 per year. However, the application shows interest in year one as $197,000.00 and for year two, $393,000.00. It is unusual that interest would be higher in year two than year one. There is no way to tell from looking at the schedules or assumptions in the application what the utilization of the new hospital will be, or how the patient days break out by payor. Therefore, reasonableness of the financial projections cannot be tested. Without additional information, one cannot determine if the average charges projected are reasonable. There are unusual projections, such as the charges during construction, year one, and year two, in the application which without explanation are not reasonable. The financial projections as to the whole facility are unreasonable. They show that WUESTHOFF, which currently makes $7 or $8 million dollars each year, will lose money once the new facility is open but that, in its second year, the new facility will make $6.9 million. Such a projection is unreasonable. By focusing only on the incremental effect of adding an inpatient tower to a presumed existing DTC, WUESTHOFF’s financial projections are not sufficient to allow a conclusion to be drawn as to the financial feasibility of the new 50-bed hospital. However, it would appear that, if those schedules had been presented, they would have shown the new satellite hospital, taken in its entirety, not to be financially feasible in the long term. The Special Needs Of Health Maintenance Organizations: Section 408.035(1)(j), Florida Statutes. The application is not made on behalf of an HMO, and this criterion is not applicable. The Needs And Circumstances Of Those Entities Which Provide A Substantial Portion Of Their Services Or Resources, Or Both, To Individuals Not Residing In The District: Section 408.035(1)(k), Florida Statutes. The CON application does not address serving a substantial number of persons or providing a substantial portion of services to individuals residing outside the district, and this criterion is not applicable. The Probable Impact Of The Proposed Project On The Costs Of Providing Health Services Proposed By The Applicant, Including The Effect On Competition: Section 408.035(1)(l), Florida Statutes. There is significant competition for managed care services in Brevard County. HRMC seeks and desires to enter into managed care contracts and is as competitive in the managed care arena as WUESTHOFF is. In fact, HRMC’s managed-care, patient volume is higher than WUESTHOFF’s. Managed care penetration in Brevard County has increased over the last five years and especially in the last two years. One particular HMO in Brevard County that is just getting started has received an acceptable managed care offer from HRMC. If they did not receive an acceptable offer from WUESTHOFF. Brevard County does not need another inpatient facility to allow the County to achieve higher levels of managed care penetration. There are no barriers in Brevard County to increasing HMO and other managed care penetration. Even though HRMC has an 82 percent market share in South Brevard County, that by itself does not indicate HRMC is charging non-competitive prices. In fact, HRMC’s charges are much lower than WUESTHOFF’s. Both the State of Florida and the FTC found that HRMC’s merger with Cape Canaveral when Health First was formed did not create an adverse, competitive effect on the marketplace. Because HRMC’s charges are so much lower than WUESTHOFF’s, the addition of the proposed hospital would not introduce price competition into the market. The majority of the proposed hospital’s patients are likely to come from South Brevard County-–an area where HRMC has an 82.5 percent market share. Thus, the bulk of the proposed hospital’s patients will come from HRMC. If the proposed hospital meets its projected utilization, HRMC stands to lose somewhere between $4 and $5 million a year. While that loss may not put HRMC into bankruptcy, it will have a significant adverse effect. The Costs And Methods Of The Proposed Construction And The Availability Of Alternative, Less Costly, Or More Effective Methods Of Construction: Section 408.035(1)(m), Florida Statutes. WUESTHOFF’s proposal to establish a 50-bed, general, acute care hospital entails the construction of a 3-story, 50-bed patient tower adjoining an outpatient diagnostic center. The outpatient diagnostic center, and not the inpatient tower, will encompass virtually all of the ancillary services necessary for WUESTHOFF to obtain a license to operate its facility as a hospital. As more fully discussed below, WUESTHOFF’s proposed 50- bed inpatient hospital will require substantial design modification and increased square footage in order to obtain licensure as a general, acute care hospital. The Applicant’s Past And Proposed Provision Of Health Care Services To Medicaid Patients And The Medically Indigent: Section 408.035(1)(n), Florida Statutes. The evidence showed that all acute care hospitals in Brevard County provide a fair level of Medicaid and indigent care in comparison to the remainder of the state. In its CON application, WUESTHOFF proposes to condition approval of its 50- bed, general, acute care hospital on providing 15 percent Medicaid and charity care, but did not provide a breakdown of each. There was no documented access problems for Medicaid or indigent patients that would warrant a new health care facility. Because indigent care is reported to the State based on a hospital’s charges, WUESTHOFF and HRMC could be doing the same amount of indigent care, but WUESTHOFF could appear to be doing more because its charges are higher. Whether Less Costly, More Efficient, Or More Appropriate Alternatives To The Proposed Inpatient Services Are Available: Section 408.035(2)(a), Florida Statutes. HRMC’s average charges are significantly lower than WUESTHOFF’s on both a per case and per patient day basis. HRMC’s costs are also lower, indicating it is more efficient. Therefore, the addition of another less-efficient, higher- charging WUESTHOFF hospital into the market would be more costly and less efficient than what it is there now. The greater weight of the evidence establishes that denial of WUESTHOFF’s proposed 50-bed, general acute care hospital is the least costly, more efficient, and appropriate alternative. The existing providers of acute care services in Brevard County are operating efficiently and have unused capacity that is available to serve Brevard residents. Data suggests that while the population of Brevard County is growing, there is no corresponding increase in utilization of general, acute care services. While Brevard enjoys a proportionately higher growth rate than the rest of the State, the growth does not translate into higher utilization of general acute care services. Further, the age 65+ population, those most likely to use hospital services, has experienced an annual growth of approximately 3.7 percent between 1990-1996, which is higher than the overall rate of growth for Brevard. While there has been a significant growth in the number of elderly and Medicaid eligible population, only approximately percent of those eligible for Medicaid in the 14 zip codes targeted as the service area of WUESTHOFF’s proposed hospital actually use hospital services. In 1993, the last year of available data, the actual county-wide use rate for Medicaid eligible residents was only 8.4 percent. This is expected to remain constant in subsequent years, as the demand for inpatient acute care services has not increased, but has in fact decreased. There is insufficient utilization of the inpatient acute care services which already exist in Brevard County, with approximately 50 percent of the available beds unoccupied. The addition of another health care facility will not improve access, improve delivery of services, or make services available to a population that is not presently being adequately and appropriately served by existing providers. In a market where inpatient volume is going down, length of stay is going down, and utilization is going down, it does not make sense to spend scarce dollars on new inpatient services. Whether The Existing Facilities Providing Similar Inpatient Services Are Being Used In An Appropriate And Efficient Manner: Section 408.035(2)(b), Florida Statutes. The greater weight of the evidence established that there is available capacity for inpatient services like those proposed by WUESTHOFF at the existing, general, acute care facilities in Brevard County. WUESTHOFF did not demonstrate that any provider is suffering from over utilization or that any patient has not been able to access general acute care services when such services were necessary. On the contrary, there was a consensus among the experts, even WUESTHOFF’s experts, that there is no problem with geographic or financial access to existing providers. Between 1993 and 1996, hospital utilization dropped from 63 percent to 52 percent. AT WUESTHOFF’s Rockledge campus, utilization fell from a high of 63 percent in 1993, to approximately 46 percent in 1996. During this same period, the population of Brevard County grew at a rate of approximately 2.4 percent per year, which was proportionately higher than for the rest of the state. At HRMC, its occupancy dropped, but not quite as dramatically. Between 1993 and 1996, HRMC’s occupancy went from 67 percent to approximately 62 percent. The satellite facility, operated by HRMC in Palm Bay and located in the same service area where WUESTHOFF proposes to construct its 50-bed general acute care hospital, has never experienced occupancy above 31 percent. That Patients Will Experience Serious Problems In Obtaining Inpatient Care Of The Type Proposed, In The Absence Of The Proposed New Service: Section 408.035(2)(d), Florida Statutes. There was no evidence to show that any population group in Brevard County is unable to access quality health care services at any of the subdistrict’s existing facilities. Further, WUESTHOFF failed to establish that its proposed facility was needed to provide general acute care services not currently provided or currently accessible to residents of south Brevard County. WUESTHOFF maintains that participants in managed care contracts may not be able to access WUESTHOFF’s general acute care services without approval of the proposed project, but there was not demonstration that those individuals would not otherwise have access to quality affordable health care in Brevard County. WUESTHOFF also failed to demonstrate that participants in managed care programs are a “traditionally underserved” population group for a determination of need under not normal circumstances. CON Application Content And Procedures: Section 408.037, Florida Statutes And Rule 59C-1.008, Florida Administrative Code. The parties stipulated as to the timeliness of the submission of WUESTHOFF’s Letter of Intent, initial CON application and response to omissions. However, the board resolution required by Section 408.037, Florida Statutes, and Rule 59C-1.008, Florida Administrative Code, is fatally defective. The applicant is required to provide certification that its governing board enacted a resolution to license and operate the proposed facility. In this case, the proposed 50- bed, inpatient tower cannot be licensed by the applicant as a hospital. In order to obtain hospital licensure, the proposed project would necessarily include the $35+ million that WUESTHOFF proposes to spend on its outpatient diagnostic center. WUESTHOFF’s CON application also fails to comply with Section 408.037(2)(c), which requires detailed financial projection including a statement of the revenues and expense for the period of construction and the first two years of operation after completion of the project. The proposed project is a “hospital.” The hospital will report all of the revenues and expenses of the inpatient and outpatients to the state in its actual report, and those same projected revenues and expenses should be in the pro forma of a certificate of need application for a new hospital project. Instead, the projected revenues and expenses in the pro formas take an “incremental” approach and focus only on the 50-bed tower and an unspecified portion of the diagnostic center. WUESTHOFF’s own financial expert admitted that one cannot determine the revenues and expenses of the new hospital from the information contained in the application. AHCA does not have sufficient information with respect to revenues and expenditures in the pro formas to determine the financial feasibility of the hospital project. The pro formas do not meet the statutory requirement contained in 408.037(2)(c), Florida Statutes, and are fatally defective. Neither AHCA nor its predecessor agency ever have approved a CON to establish a hospital without ever seeing projections of the revenues and expenses of the hospital as a whole. Additions to hospitals have been approved on a strictly incremental basis; but, in those cases, the revenues and expenses of the hospital as a whole already had been reviewed and approved. Inpatient cardiac catheterization programs also have been approved, based on a strictly incremental review of the financial impact of converting from an existing outpatient to an inpatient program. But there is a meaningful difference between the approval of a program in a hospital facility that already has been reviewed and approved as a whole and what WUESTHOFF is seeking to have done in this case. There also is a difference between treating the costs of an existing and operating facility or program as being “sunk” and treating the $35 million capital cost and additional operating costs of the proposed DTC in this case as being “sunk.” In the former, the costs have been or are being spent and truly are “sunk”; in the latter, despite WUESTHOFF’s assurances, the DTC money has not been spent, and the DTC has not been established. Indeed, the decision properly before AHCA in this case is whether those expenditures should be made for purposes of establishing a hospital. If not, the hospital should not be approved. If WUESTHOFF still wants to build and operate its proposed $35 million anyway, as it has assured AHCA that it will do, it is free to do so. Criteria Used In Evaluation Of CON Applications: Rule 59C-1.030, Florida Administrative Code. AHCA’s rules set forth additional criteria used to evaluate CON applications which focus on whether there is a need for the proposed service in the population to be served and whether the proposed project is accessible to those in need of the service. The evidence in this case showed that there was no unmet need in Brevard County for inpatient, general, acute care services and that the target population is adequately served by the existing providers of general acute care services. Furthermore, the evidenced showed that the anticipated population growth in Brevard County is not likely to generate additional numbers of inpatient admissions, based on the decline in utilization during a period when Brevard County was experiencing unprecedented annual growth at a rate of 2.4 percent overall and 3.7 percent in the 65+ population. Any attendant increase in demand for inpatient general acute care services can be easily accommodated by the existing providers in Brevard County. The rule also examines the extent to which an applicant provides services to Medicare, Medicaid, and the medically indigent patients. The evidence showed that WUESTHOFF provides a fair amount of general acute care services to Medicare, Medicaid, and charity patients, as do the other existing providers in Brevard County. Hospital Physical Plant Requirements For Licensure: Rule 59A-3, Florida Administrative Code. WUESTHOFF’s 50-bed, general, acute care hospital, as proposed, cannot meet licensure standards without significant adjustment to the design to bring it into compliance with the licensure rules. Rule 59A-3.081(4)(c), Florida Administrative Code, specifically requires that the critical care nurse’s station be situated so that nurses have visual control of each patient from common spaces. The schematics provided by WUESTHOFF indicate that there is no visual control of two patient rooms located in the northwest end of the unit. As to functionality of the space, there is no observation from the nurses station to trauma rooms located at the end of the unit and inadequate proximity to support spaces, such as soiled and clean utility and med prep, to the trauma rooms. Seriously injured patients would necessarily be transported up to surgery through what would be public corridor spaces in order to access elevators and then through additional public spaces on the second floor. Inpatient access to the CT scan room and MRI room appears to be made through a narrow, 5-foot wide corridor. Hospital licensure regulations require inpatient access through an 8-foot corridor. The only 8-foot corridors available for inpatient use, the service corridor off the housekeeping and staff facilities area to the rear of the unit and the corridor located between radiology and dietary, do not appear to be appropriate means for inpatients to access these rooms. On the third floor of the facility, WUESTHOFF proposes to locate an aerobics and exercise room, directly above the second floor patient recovery area and two of the operating rooms. With an exercise area located above such critical areas, there is the possibility that vibrations would transmit to operating room lights, ceiling mounted microscopes, and other instruments. It would be costly to sufficiently stiffen the structure to minimize vibrations. In order to bring the proposed project into compliance with hospital licensure regulations, material changes to the plans must be made, which will necessarily increase the square footage of the facility. The square footage of the facility would likely be increased by approximately 5,000 square feet, and many of the areas would have to be significantly redesigned to accommodate concerns with compliance to ADA and hospital licensure regulations.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Health Care Administration enter the final order denying WUESTHOFF’s CON 8597. RECOMMENDED this 18th day of July, 1997, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (904) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax FILING (904) 921-6847 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 18th day of July, 1997. COPIES FURNISHED: David C. Ashburn, Esquire Gunster, Yoakley, Valdes-Fauli and Stewart, P.A. 215 South Monroe Street, Suite 830 Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Mark Thomas, Esquire Agency for Health Care Administration Office of the General Counsel 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Stephen K. Boone, Esquire Boone, Boone, Boone and Hines, P.A. Post Office Box 1596 Venice, Florida 34284 R. Terry Rigsby, Esquire Blank, Rigsby & Meenan 204 South Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Douglas M. Cook, Director Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Jerome W. Hoffman, General Counsel Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Sam Power, Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308

Florida Laws (2) 408.035408.037 Florida Administrative Code (3) 59A-3.08159C-1.00859C-1.030
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AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION vs NEW HORIZON`S ADULT LIVING, INC., 98-004688 (1998)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Port Charlotte, Florida Oct. 22, 1998 Number: 98-004688 Latest Update: May 21, 1999

The Issue The issues are whether Respondent is guilty of various deficiencies found during surveys of its adult living facility and, if so, the amount of the administrative fines.

Findings Of Fact Pursuant to a license issued by Petitioner, Respondent owns and operates New Horizon, an assisted living facility in Punta Gorda. The license is a standard license. Violeta Sebastian is the owner and president of Respondent and the administrator of the facility. On July 8, 1998, Petitioner conducted a survey of New Horizon. Petitioner's investigator found several residents sitting in the day room when he arrived at the facility between 9:00 a.m. and 9:30 a.m. Resident Number 3, who is very elderly, remained seated in an over-stuffed chair all morning. When staff helped her to the dining room at around 11:30 a.m., the investigator asked to see her buttocks area and found a Stage 2 pressure sore on the coccyx area. Resident Number 3, who was wearing adult briefs, had also urinated on herself at some earlier point in time. Resident Number 3 required the assistance of two staffpersons to get her to stand; she was unable to assist in this process. She also required the assistance of both staffpersons to walk, and she required complete assistance to change her briefs. The records concerning Resident Number 3 revealed nothing about the existence or treatment of a pressure sore or that staff had notified the resident's physician. An aide knew of the pressure sore for three days, but had not informed the administrator nor commenced treatment. The records also revealed that she was admitted to New Horizon on August 28, 1997, and her health assessment was conducted on September 29, 1997, which was 32 days after admission. A Stage 1 pressure sore is a reddened area. A Stage 2 pressure sore is a reddened area with a blister. A Stage 3 pressure sore occurs when the affected area is open to the muscle. A Stage 4 pressure sore is when the affected area is open to the muscle, bone, and tendon. Stage 2 pressure sores are susceptible to infection and may cause a loss of fluids, including protein, around the wound site. The pressure sore on this female resident was about two centimeters wide. As a result of these findings concerning Resident Number 3, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tags A 006, A 401, A 407, A 409, and A 700. Another investigator asked for the most current Radon test. The last Radon test, which the facility passed, was November 16, 1992, which meant that the facility had not been tested in almost five years and eight months. As a result of these findings, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tag A 202. The investigator checked the training records for two of four staffpersons and determined that two employees had not received the two hours' required training in resident behavior and handling abuse, neglect, and exploitation. The administrator thought that they had received the required training, but was unable to produce documentation of training. As a result of these findings, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tag A 504. The investigator checked the training records for four staffpersons and determined that they had not received the required training in assisting residents in the activities of daily living. The administrator said that this was an oversight and would be corrected. As a result of these findings, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tag A 505. The investigator could not determine who was in charge of medications. However, the administrator and one part-time employee were in charge of medications. As a result of these findings, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tag A 602. The investigator found a bottle of milk of magnesia in an unlocked refrigerator and a bag of medications in an unlocked kitchen drawer. As a result of these findings, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tag A 607. The investigator testified as to restraints of a resident found by another investigator in a 1996 survey and found by her in a 1998 complaint investigation. However, her testimony concerning the incident of which she had personal knowledge was vague and provides an insufficient basis on which to fine Respondent. As a result of these findings, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tag A 709. The investigator examined a ledger maintained by Respondent for one resident who was receiving certain federal benefits in the form of a monthly $35 check. Respondent's records do not document that it supplies the resident quarterly with a copy of this accounting, and staff and the administrator admitted to not supplying quarterly statements to the resident. As a result of these findings, Petitioner cited Respondent for Tag A 102. Petitioner did not produce admissible evidence to show that any violations were repeat violations.

Recommendation It is RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Health Care Administration enter a final order imposing an administrative fine against New Horizon's Adult Living, Inc., in the amount of $3000. DONE AND ENTERED this 6th day of April, 1999, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. ROBERT E. MEALE 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 6th day of April, 1999. COPIES FURNISHED: Ruben J. King-Shaw, Jr., Director Agency for Health Care Administration Post Office Box 14229 Tallahassee, Florida 32317-4229 Paul J. Martin, General Counsel Agency for Health Care Administration Post Office Box 14229 Tallahassee, Florida 32317-4229 Sam Power, Agency Clerk Agency for Health Care Administration Post Office Box 14229 Tallahassee, Florida 32317-4229 Karel Baarslag, Senior Attorney Agency for Health Care Administration State Regional Service Center 2295 Victoria Avenue Fort Myers, Florida 33901 Violeta D. Sebastian Qualified Representative New Horizon's Adult Living Facility 1391 Capricorn Boulevard Punta Gorda, Florida 33983

Florida Laws (2) 120.57404.056 Florida Administrative Code (8) 58A -5.018158A -5.018258A-5.018158A-5.018258A-5.018458A-5.019158A-5.02358A-5.024
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THE PUBLIC HEALTH TRUST OF MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA D/B/A JACKSON HOSPITAL WEST vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 16-003820CON (2016)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Jul. 05, 2016 Number: 16-003820CON Latest Update: Jul. 22, 2019

The Issue The issues in these cases are whether Certificate of Need (CON) Application No. 10432 filed by East Florida-DMC, Inc. (DMC), to build an 80-bed acute care hospital in Miami-Dade County, Florida, AHCA District 11, or CON Application No. 10433 filed by The Public Health Trust of Miami-Dade County, Florida d/b/a Jackson Hospital West (JW), to build a 100-bed acute care hospital in Miami-Dade County, Florida, AHCA District 11, on balance, satisfy the applicable criteria; and, if so, whether either or both should be approved.

Findings Of Fact Based upon the parties’ stipulations, the demeanor and credibility of the witnesses, other evidence presented at the final hearing, and on the entire record of this proceeding, the following Findings of Fact are made: The Parties The Public Health Trust of Miami-Dade County d/b/a Jackson Hospital West and Jackson Health System (JHS) JHS is a taxpayer-funded health system located in and owned by Miami-Dade County. It is governed by The Public Health Trust of Miami Dade-County, Florida (PHT), a seven-member board. JHS owns and operates three acute care hospitals in Miami-Dade County--Jackson Memorial Hospital (JMH); Jackson North Medical Center (JN); and Jackson South Medical Center (JS)--as well as three specialty hospitals: Holtz Children’s Hospital (Holtz); Jackson Rehabilitation Hospital; and Jackson Behavioral Health Hospital. JHS also owns and operates numerous other non- hospital healthcare facilities within Miami-Dade County. JHS’s applicant in this proceeding is JW which, if approved, will be another acute care hospital in JHS. JHS is an academic teaching institution, and the University of Miami (UM) is JHS’s affiliated medical school. Over 1,000 UM residents staff JMH pursuant to an operating agreement with JHS. JN and JS are not academic medical centers. JHS annually receives sales tax and ad valorem tax revenues from Miami-Dade County in order to help fund its operations. JS and JN are community hospitals operated as part of JHS. JS was acquired in 2001. JS is licensed for 226 beds and is also home to a verified Level II trauma center. The JN facility was acquired by JHS in 2006. The facility is licensed for 382 beds. East Florida (DMC) DMC is an affiliate of HCA Healthcare, Inc. (HCA), the largest provider of acute care hospital services in the world. DMC will operate within HCA’s East Florida Division (EFD), which is comprised of 15 hospitals, 12 surgery centers, two diagnostic imaging centers, four freestanding emergency departments, nine behavioral health facilities, and one regional laboratory, along with other related services. There are three HCA-affiliated hospitals in Miami-Dade County: KRMC; Aventura Hospital and Medical Center (Aventura); and Mercy Hospital, a campus of Plantation General Hospital (Mercy). Kendall Regional (KRMC) KRMC, which is located at the intersection of the Florida Turnpike and Southwest 40th Street in Miami-Dade County, is a 417-bed tertiary provider comprised of 380 acute care beds, 23 inpatient adult psychiatric beds, eight Level II neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) beds, and five Level III NICU beds. It is a Baker Act receiving facility. KRMC is a verified Level I trauma center. It also has a burn program. KRMC is also an academic teaching facility, receiving freestanding institutional accreditation from the Accrediting Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) in 2013. KRMC currently has six residency programs including, among others, surgery, internal medicine, podiatry, anesthesia, and surgical critical care. Its teaching programs are affiliated with the University of South Florida, Nova Southeastern University, and Florida International University. KRMC also participates in scholarly and clinical research. In 2017, KRMC had over 82,000 Emergency Department (ED) visits. It treated over 115,000 total inpatients and outpatients that year. There are 850 physicians on KRMC’s medical staff. It offers a full range of medical surgery services, interventional procedures, obstetrics (OB), pediatric, and neonatal care, among many other service lines. KRMC primarily serves southern and western portions of Miami-Dade County but also receives referrals from the Florida Keys up through Broward County, Palm Beach County, and the Treasure Coast. Its main competitors include, but are not limited to: Baptist Hospital; Baptist West; South Miami Hospital; PGH; Hialeah; CGH; JS, and Palm Springs General Hospital. The Tenet Hospitals PGH, Hialeah, and CGH are wholly-owned subsidiaries of Tenet South Florida. These are all for-profit hospitals. PGH is a 368-bed tertiary facility that opened in the early 1970s. It has 297 licensed acute care beds, 48 adult psychiatric beds, 52 ICU beds, and 15 Level II NICU beds. It is located at the Palmetto Expressway and Northwest 122nd Street in Hialeah, Florida. The hospital employs about 1,700 people and has over 600 physicians on its medical staff. PGH is a tertiary-level facility offering a variety of specialty services, including adult open heart surgery, a comprehensive stroke center, and robotic surgery. It has inpatient mental health beds and serves the community as a Baker Act receiving facility. It also offers OB and Level II NICU services with approximately 1,500 births a year. It has approximately 70,000 ED visits and between 17,000 and 18,000 inpatient admissions per year. In addition to its licensed inpatient beds, PGH operates 31 observation beds. PGH is ACGME accredited and serves a significant teaching function in the community. It has approximately 89 residents and fellows. The hospital provides fellowships in cardiology, critical care and interventional cardiology, and also has rotations in neurology and gastroenterology. Residents from Larkin General Hospital also rotate through PGH. PGH generally serves the communities of Opa Locka, Hialeah, Miami Lakes, Hialeah Gardens, Doral, and Miami Springs. In reality, all of the hospitals in the county are competitors, but more direct competition comes from Palm Springs Hospital, Memorial in Miramar, Mount Sinai, Kendall, and even its sister hospital, Hialeah. Hialeah first opened in 1951 and is a 378-bed acute care facility. It has 356 acute care beds, 12 adult psychiatric beds, and 10 Level II NICU beds. The ED has 25 beds and about 40,000 visits per year. It has approximately 14,000 inpatient admissions and 1,400 babies delivered annually. It offers services including cardiac, stroke, robotic surgery, colorectal surgery, and OB services. The hospital has a Level II NICU with 12 beds. CGH is located in the City of Coral Gables and is near the border between Coral Gables and the City of Miami on Douglas Road. It first opened in 1926. Portions of the original structure are still in use. CGH has 245 licensed beds, over 725 employees, 367 physicians, and over 100 additional allied providers on its medical staff. The hospital has a full-service ED. Its service lines include general surgery, geriatrics, urology, treatment of cardiovascular and pulmonary disease, and others. The hospital has eight operating rooms and offers robotic surgery. The ED has 28 beds divided into the main area and a geriatric emergency room. It had about 25,000 ED visits last year, which is lower than prior years, due in part to the presence of over a dozen nearby urgent care centers. CGH has over 8,500 inpatient admissions per year and is not at capacity. While patient days have grown slightly, the average occupancy is still just a little over 40%, meaning, on average, it has over 140 empty inpatient beds on any given day. The hospital is licensed for 245 beds, but typically there are only 180 beds immediately available for use. Agency for Healthcare Administration (AHCA) AHCA is the state health-planning agency charged with administration of the CON program as set forth in sections 408.31-408.0455, Florida Statutes. The Proposals Doral Medical Center (DMC) DMC proposes to build an 80-bed community hospital situated within the residential district of Doral. The hospital will be located in southwestern Doral in zip code 33126 and will serve the growing population of Doral, along with residential areas to the north and south of Doral. The hospital will be located in the City of Doral’s residential district on Northwest 41st Street between Northwest 109th Avenue to the east, and Northwest 112th Avenue to the west. Doral has seen significant growth in the past 15 years and has been consistently included on the list of the fastest growing cities in Florida. The new facility will have a bed complement of 80 licensed acute care beds, including 72 medical/surgical and eight OB beds. The proposed acute care hospital will be fully accredited by the Joint Commission for the Accreditation of Healthcare Facilities and licensed by the State of Florida. No public funds will be utilized in construction of the hospital and it will contribute to the state, county, and municipal tax base as a proprietary corporation. DMC will offer a full range of non-tertiary services, including emergency services, imaging, surgery, intensive care, cardiac catheterization, and women's services, including an OB unit, and pediatric care. DMC will be a general medical facility that will include a general medical component and a surgery component. Although DMC will operate an OB unit, NICU services will not be offered at DMC. If DMC’s patients need more advanced services, including NICU, the EFD hopes they will receive them from KRMC. The open medical staff will be largely community-based, but University of Miami physicians would be welcome at DMC. Before the hospital is built, KRMC will construct and operate a freestanding emergency department (FSED) at the location that will eventually become the ED of DMC. Construction of the FSED is now underway, and Brandon Haushalter, chief executive officer (CEO) of KRMC, estimated that it will open in March or April of 2019. Jackson West JHS proposes to build a community hospital to be known as “Jackson West” near the eastern edge of Doral. The proposed 100-bed general acute care hospital would have medical surgical and obstetrical beds and offer basic acute care services. JHS is a public health system owned by Miami-Dade County. All of JHS’s assets, as well as its debts, belong to the county. JHS is a not-for-profit entity, and therefore does not pay taxes, though it receives hundreds of millions of dollars from property taxes and sales taxes in Miami-Dade County. JHS’s main campus is a large health campus located near the Midtown Miami area in between Allapattah (to the north) and Little Havana (to the south). In addition to JMH, the campus includes Holtz Children’s Hospital, a behavioral health hospital, an inpatient rehabilitation hospital, and several specialty clinics. Bascom-Palmer Eye Institute, a Veterans Administration hospital, and University of Miami Hospital are also located adjacent to Jackson West’s main campus. JMH is a 1,500-bed hospital with a wide array of programs and services, including tertiary and quaternary care, and a Level I trauma program, the Ryder Trauma Center. JMH receives patients from throughout Miami-Dade County, elsewhere in Florida, and internationally. JMH is a teaching hospital and has a large number of residents, as well as professors from the University of Miami, on staff. UM and JMH have had a relationship for many years, and in addition to research and teaching, UM provides physician staffing to JMH. JN is a 342-bed community hospital located in between Miami Gardens and North Miami Beach, just off of I-95 and the Turnpike. JS is a 252-bed community hospital located in the Palmetto Bay area just south of Kendall. It has stroke certification and interventional cardiology, and was recently approved for a trauma program, which began in May 2016. Both JN and JS were existing hospitals that were acquired by JHS. JHS has never built a hospital from the ground up. In 2014, JHS leadership directed its internal planning team to review the healthcare needs of county residents. JHS’s analysis identified a need for outpatient services in western Miami-Dade, the only remaining quadrant of the county in which JHS did not have a hospital or healthcare program at the time. As part of its due diligence, JHS then consulted healthcare firm Kurt Salmon & Associates (KSA) to independently evaluate the data. KSA’s investigation validated a need in the west county for adult and pediatric outpatient services, including need for an FSED. This prompted JHS to explore opportunities for expansion of outpatient services where needed: in the western corridor of Miami-Dade. This was also the genesis of JHS’s long-range plan to first build an FSED in the Doral area, to be followed ultimately by the addition of a general acute care hospital at the site. The JW site is a 27-acre parcel of land located just west of the Palmetto Expressway and north of 25th Street. The site is in an industrial area only a short distance from the western end of the runways at Miami International Airport. The site is located in zip code 33122, which is very sparsely populated. JW proposed a primary service area (PSA) consisting of zip codes 33126, 33144, 33166, 33172/33122, 33174, 33178, and 33182, and a secondary service area (SSA) of zip codes 33155, 33165, 33175, and 33184. JW intends to serve general, acute care non-tertiary patients and OB patients. Detailed below, trends in the JW service area do not demonstrate need for its proposed hospital. The location of the JW site will not contribute to the viability of the proposed hospital. According to 2010 census data, only 328 people live within a one-mile radius of the JW site. Since 2000, only 32 total people have moved into that same area around the JW site--an average of three per year. There are virtually no residences within a one-mile radius of the JW site. From 2000 to 2010, the population within a two- mile radius of the JW site decreased by a rate of 9.4%. The JW health planner projects JW’s home zip code of 33122 will have a total population of only eight (8) people in 2022. From 2012 to 2014, the use rate in the JW service area for non-tertiary patients decreased by 3.9%. That decline continued at a steeper pace of 4.2% from 2014 to 2017. This was largely due to the 65+ age cohort, the demographic of patients that utilize inpatient services the most. The 65+ age cohort is growing at a slower pace in the JW service area than in Miami- Dade or Florida as a whole. Non-tertiary discharges in the JW service area are declining at a greater pace than that of Miami- Dade County--negative 4.2% compared to negative 1.9%. The rate of projected population growth in the JW PSA is decreasing. The projected rate of growth for the JW service area is lower than that of Miami-Dade County and Florida as a whole. The OB patient base JW intends to rely on is projected to remain flat. The inpatient discharges for all ages in the JW service area have declined from 2014 to 2017. For ages 0-17, discharges in the JW service area declined 21.4% during that time period. The discharges for ages 18-44 declined by 4.8%, and the discharges for ages 45-64 declined by 8.9%. The discharges for the important 65+ age cohort declined by 0.1%. Specifically, the discharges for ages 65-74 declined by 6.5%, and the discharges for ages 75-84 declined by 3.3%. The discharges for ages 85+ are the only age cohort that has not declined from 2012 to 2017. Overall, the non-tertiary discharges per 1,000 population (i.e., use rate) for all ages in the JW service area declined from 2012 to 2014 by 6%, and from 2014 to 2017 by 7.8%. Despite these declines in discharges in the JW service area, the health planners who crafted the JW projections used a constant use rate for the 0-17, 18-44, and 45-64 age cohorts. The JW health planners used a declining use rate for the 65+ age cohort. These use rates were applied uniformly across all zip codes, despite wide variance in actual use rates in each zip code. Applying the zip code specific use rates in conjunction with the other assumptions used by the JW health planner demonstrates that the JW projections are unreasonable. For instance, JW’s reliance on a uniform use rate over-projects the number of discharges in JW PSA zip code 33178 by nearly 1,000 patients. This occurs because the population is only growing at a 2% rate in the zip code, but JW’s reliance on service area-wide projections cause the discharges to grow at an extraordinary rate of 8.9% per year. Applying actual use rates across all zip codes causes a drastic change in the JW PSA and SSA definition. Section 408.037(2) requires a CON applicant to identify its PSA and SSA by listing zip codes in which it will receive discharges in descending order, beginning with the zip code with the highest amount of discharges, then proceeding in diminishing order to the zip code with the lowest amount of discharges. The zip codes, which comprise 75% of discharges, constitute the PSA; and the remaining zip codes, which consist of the remaining 25% of discharges, makes up the SSA. However, JW did not project its utilization in this manner. In its application, JW did not define its service area, PSA, and SSA zip codes in descending order by number or percentage of discharges. When this correct adjustment is made, its PSA consists of zip codes 33126, 33172, 33178, 33174, 33144, and 33165; and its SSA consists of zip codes 33175, 33166, 33155, 33182, and 33184. Zip codes 33166 and 33182 were in the original JW PSA, and zip code 33165 was in the original JW SSA. As such, JW’s home zip code should actually be in its SSA. JW health planners call this illogical, but it demonstrates that the JW site is located within a zip code that has almost no population of potential patients. JHS is developing an FSED and outpatient/ambulatory facilities on the JW site regardless of whether its CON application for a hospital is approved. Construction has begun on the JW site, and JHS is actually building a “shelled in” structure intended to house a future hospital, notwithstanding lack of CON approval for the hospital. There is no contingency plan for use of the shelled-in hospital space if CON approval is not obtained. JHS executives unequivocally stated that they intend to continue pursuing CON approval for the JW hospital, even if the proposed DMC hospital is approved. Indeed, JHS has filed third and fourth CON applications for its proposed JW hospital. The budget for the JW campus is $252 million. Sixty to $70 million is being funded from a bond issuance approved by voters in Miami-Dade County. Notably, the bond referendum approved by voters made no mention of a new hospital. The remaining $180 to $190 million is being funded by JHS, which has chosen to only keep 50 days cash-on-hand, and put any surplus toward capital projects. This is well below the number of days cash-on-hand ws advisable for a system like JHS. The specific programs and services to be offered at JW have not been finalized, but it is clear that JW will be a small community hospital that will not offer anything unique or different from any of the existing hospitals in the area, nor will it operate NICU beds. Patients presenting to JW in need of specialized or tertiary services will need to be transferred to another hospital with the capability of serving them, most likely JMH. The Applicants’ Arguments Doral Medical Center (DMC) DMC’s arguments in support of its proposed hospital may be summarized as follows: Geographic features surrounding Doral create transportation access barriers for the residents of the area; Doral is a densely-populated community that is growing quickly and lacks a readily accessible hospital; KRMC, which is the provider of choice for Doral residents, is a growing tertiary facility that cannot sufficiently expand to meet its future demands. DMC will serve much of the same patient population currently served by KRMC and help decompress KRMC’s acute care load so KRMC can focus on its tertiary service lines; From a geographic standpoint, the Doral community and its patients are isolated from much of Miami-Dade County to the north, west, and east, and the nearest hospitals. East Florida-DMC is a subsidiary of HCA and would be a part of the HCA EFD. Michael Joseph is the president of the EFD, which includes 15 hospitals and other facilities from Miami north through the Treasure Coast. Mr. Joseph authorized the filing of the DMC CON application, which proposes an 80-bed basic acute care hospital that includes 72 medical surgical and eight OB beds. As noted, there will be neither unique services at DMC nor any tertiary services, such as a NICU. HCA anticipates that DMC patients needing tertiary services would be referred and treated at KRMC. The proposed hospital would be built on 41st Street, between Northwest 109th Avenue and Northwest 112th Avenue. This site is located on the western edge of Doral, just east of the Everglades. When the consultants were retained to write the first DMC CON application, HCA had already made the decision to go forward with the project. Mr. Joseph described Miami-Dade County as one of the most competitive markets in the country for hospital services. There is robust competition in the Miami-Dade market from the standpoints of payors, physicians, and the many hospitals located in the county, including Jackson, HCA, Tenet, Baptist and others. HCA is not proposing this project because any of the existing hospitals in the area do not provide good quality care. HCA is currently building an FSED on the DMC site that will open regardless of whether the DMC hospital is approved. Mr. Joseph acknowledged that there is a trend toward outpatient rather than inpatient care. Inpatient occupancy of acute care hospitals in Miami-Dade County has been declining in recent years. Managed care has added further pressure on reducing inpatient admissions. Surgical advances have also resulted in fewer inpatient admissions. Surgeries that formerly required an inpatient stay are now often done on an outpatient basis. Mr. Joseph agreed that 30 minutes is a reasonable travel time to access an acute care hospital. The home zip code for the proposed DMC hospital is 33178. KRMC’s market share for that zip code is 20%. Individuals in that zip code are currently accessing a wide variety of hospitals. PGH is only 6.7 miles away and has the fourth highest market share in that zip code. HCA’s healthcare planning expert, Dan Sullivan, acknowledged that, if approved, DMC would likely have an adverse financial impact on KRMC and other area hospitals. Several witnesses testified that the travel time from the DMC site to KRMC is about 10 minutes, and that an ambulance could do it in as little as five minutes. As to the argument that the residents of Doral face geographic access barriers, the evidence did not indicate that there is anything unique about Doral from a traffic standpoint compared to other parts of Miami-Dade County. People come in and out of Doral on a daily basis in significant numbers for work and other reasons via various access points. Witnesses agreed that 25 to 30 minutes is a reasonable drive time for non-tertiary acute care services, and the evidence showed that residents of Doral, and the DMC service area, are well within 30 minutes of multiple hospitals providing more intensive services than are proposed by DMC. Indeed, many residents of DMC’s service area are closer to other hospitals than to the DMC site. None of the DMC witnesses were able to identify any patient in Doral who had been unable to access acute care services, or had suffered a bad outcome because of travel from Doral to an area hospital. The evidence did not establish that there currently exists either geographic or financial access barriers within the service area proposed to be served by DMC. Jackson West As in its Batch One application, JW advances six arguments as to why its proposed hospital should be approved. They are: It will serve a significant amount of indigent and Medicaid patients. JHS already serves residents of the proposed service area, which JW characterizes as “fragmented,” in that residents go to a number of different hospitals to receive services. Development of the freestanding ED and ambulatory center is under way. JW would provide an additional opportunity to partner with UM and FIU. There is physician and community support for the project. JW will add to the financial viability of JHS and its ability to continue its mission. JW presented very little analysis of the types of factors typically considered in evaluating need for a new hospital. JW did not discuss existing providers and their programs and services, the utilization of existing hospitals, and whether they have excess capacity, or other important considerations. Instead, JW advanced the six arguments noted above, for approval of its proposed hospital, none of which truly relate to the issue of need. First, JW states that its proposed hospital will serve a significant level of Medicaid and indigent patients. While it is true that JHS serves a significant amount of Medicaid and indigent patients, there are a number of reasons why this is not a basis to approve its proposed hospital. As an initial matter, JW treads a fine line in touting its service to Medicaid and indigent patients, while also targeting Doral for its better payer mix and financial benefit to JHS. JHS also receives an enormous amount of tax dollars to provide care to indigent and underserved patients. While other hospitals in Miami-Dade County provide care to such patients, they do not receive taxpayer dollars, as does JHS, although they pay taxes, unlike JHS. Also, Medicaid is a good payer for JHS. With its substantial supplement, JHS actually makes money from Medicaid patients, and it costs the system more for a Medicaid patient to be treated at a JHS hospital than elsewhere. More significantly, there is not a large Medicaid or indigent population in Doral, nor evidence of financial access issues in Doral. Second, JW argues that its CON application should be approved because JHS already serves patients from the Doral area, which JW characterizes as “fragmented” because area residents go to several different hospitals for care. This so- called “fragmentation” is not unique to Doral, and is not unusual in a densely-populated urban market with several existing hospitals. The same phenomenon occurs in other areas of Miami-Dade County, some of which actually have a hospital in the localized area. The fact that Doral residents are accessing several different hospitals demonstrates that there are a number of existing providers that are accessible to them. As discussed in greater detail below, residents of the Doral area have choices in every direction (other than to the west, which is the Everglades). JHS itself already serves patients from the Doral area. If anything, this tells us that patients from Doral currently have access to the JHS hospitals. Third, JW argues that its CON application should be approved because development of the JW campus is under way. This is irrelevant to the determination of need, and is simply a statement of JHS’s intent to build an FSED and outpatient facilities on a piece of land that was acquired for that purpose, regardless of CON approval. Fourth, JW argues for approval of its proposed hospital because it would provide an additional opportunity to partner with UM and Florida International University (FIU). However, the statutory criteria no longer addresses research and teaching concerns, and JHS’s relationship with UM or FIU has no bearing on whether there is a need for a new hospital in the Doral area. Moreover, JW did not present any evidence of how it would partner with UM or FIU at JW, and there does not seem to be any set plans in this regard. Fifth, JW claims that there is physician and community support for its proposed hospital, but it is very common for CON applicants to obtain letters in support for applications. Indeed, the DMC application was also accompanied by letters of support. Sixth and finally, JW argues that its proposed hospital will add to the financial viability of HSA and allow it to continue its mission. However, JW provided no analysis of the projected financial performance of its proposed hospital to substantiate this. The only financial analysis in the record is from KSA, a consulting firm that JHS hired to analyze the programs and services to be developed at JW. The KSA analysis posits that the JW FSED project will lose millions of dollars and not achieve break-even unless there is an inpatient hospital co-located there so that JW can take advantage of the more lucrative hospital-based billing and reimbursement. The sixth “need” argument relates to the issue of JHS’s historical financial struggles, which bear discussion. Only a handful of years ago, the entire JHS was in dire financial trouble, so much so that selling all or parts of it was considered. Days cash-on-hand was in the single digits, and JHS fell out of compliance with bond covenants. JHS’s financial difficulties prompted the appointment of an outside monitor to oversee JHS’s finances. Price Waterhouse served in that role, and made several recommendations for JHS to improve its revenue cycle, make accounting adjustments, and improve its staffing and efficiency. As a result of these recommendations, JHS went through a large reduction in force, and began to more closely screen the income and residency of its patients. As a result of these measures, overall financial performance has since improved. Despite its improved financial position, JHS still consistently loses money on operations, including a $362,000,915 loss as of June 30, 2018. JHS clearly depends upon the hundreds of millions of non-operating tax-based revenues it receives annually. JHS’s CEO expressed concerns over decreases in the system’s non-operating revenue sources, and claimed that JHS needs to find ways to increase its operating revenue to offset this. JW is being proposed as part of this strategy. However, JHS’s chief financial officer testified that “the non-operating revenues are a fairly stable source of income.” In fact, JHS’s tax revenues have gone up in the last few years. JHS sees the more affluent Doral area as a source of better paying patients that will enhance the profitability of its new hospital. Beyond this aspiration however, there is no meaningful analysis of the anticipated financial performance of its proposed hospital. This is a glaring omission given that a significant impetus for spending millions of public dollars on a new hospital is to improve JHS’s overall financial position. The KSA analysis referenced above determined that changes to the Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System rule would result in the JW campus losing hundreds of millions of dollars and never reaching “break even,” absent an inpatient hospital on the campus for “hospital based” billing and reimbursement. Though a financial benefit to the system, the increased reimbursement JHS would receive by having an inpatient hospital on the JW campus would be a financial burden on the healthcare delivery system since it would cost more for the same patient to receive the same outpatient services in a hospital- based facility. Reports by KSA also state that a strategic purpose of JW is to attract patients that would otherwise go to nearby facilities like PGH and Hialeah, and to capture tertiary or higher complexity cases which would then be sent to JMH. JW’s witnesses and healthcare planning experts fully expect this to happen. In 2015, and again in 2017, JHS conducted a “Community Health Needs Assessment,” which is required by law to be performed by public safety net hospitals. The assessments were conducted by gathering responses to various questions from a wide array of community leaders and stakeholders, including the CEOs of JHS’s hospitals, about the healthcare needs of the community. The final Community Health Needs Assessment documents are lengthy and cover a variety of health-related topics, but most notable for this case is that: (1) nowhere in either the 2015 or 2017 assessment is the development of a new hospital recommended; and (2) expansion into western Miami-Dade County scored by far the lowest on a list of priorities for JHS. In its application and at hearing, JW took the position that JW can enter the Doral area market without impacting existing providers to any meaningful extent. While JW acknowledges that its proposed hospital would impact the Tenet Hospitals, it argues that the impact is not significant. The evidence established that the financial impact to the Tenet Hospitals (calculated based upon lost contribution margin) would total roughly $3 million for lost inpatients, and $5.2 million including lost outpatients. While these losses will not put the Tenet Hospitals in financial peril, they are nonetheless significant and material. The Existing Healthcare Delivery System Miami-Dade County is home to 18 freestanding acute care hospitals, comprising a total of 7,585 licensed and approved acute care beds. With an average annual occupancy of 53.8% in calendar year 2017, there were, on average, approximately 3,500 unoccupied acute care beds in the county on any given day. While the countywide occupancy rate fluctuates from year to year, it has been on a downward trend in the past several years. As pointed out by several witnesses, the lack of a hospital in Doral is not itself an indication of need. In addition, population growth, and the demands of the population for inpatient hospital beds, cannot be considered in a vacuum. Sound healthcare planning requires an analysis of existing area hospitals, including the services they offer and their respective locations; how area residents travel to existing hospitals and any barriers to access; the utilization of existing hospitals and amount of capacity they have; and other factors which may be relevant in a given case. The population of Doral currently is only about 59,000 people. It is not as densely populated as many areas of Miami-Dade County, has a number of golf course communities, and is generally a more affluent area with a higher average household income than much of Miami-Dade County. As set forth in JW’s CON application, the better payer mix in Doral was a significant factor behind its decision to file its CON application. Although there is not a hospital within the Doral city limits, there are a number of healthcare providers in Doral and several hospitals nearby. PGH and Palm Springs Hospital are just north of Doral. KRMC is just south of Doral. Hialeah is northeast of Doral. CGH, Westchester General, and NCH are southeast of Doral. JMH and all of its facilities are east of Doral. And there are others within reasonable distance. KRMC is only six miles due south of the proposed DMC site, and PGH is just eight miles north of the DMC site. As to the JW site, PGH is 6.9 miles distant, CGH is 8.6 miles distant, and Hialeah is 7.4 miles distant. Residents of the Doral area have many choices in hospitals with a wide array of services, and they are accessing them. The parties to this case, as well as other existing hospitals, all have a share of the Doral area market. JW calls this “fragmentation” of the market and casts it in a negative light, but the evidence showed this to be a normal phenomenon in an urban area like Miami, with several hospitals in healthy competition with each other. Among the experts testifying at the hearing, it was undisputed that inpatient acute care hospital use rates are on the decline. There are different reasons for this, but it was uniformly recognized that decreasing use rates for inpatient services, and a shift toward outpatient services, are ongoing trends in the market. Recognizing the need for outpatient services in the Doral area, both JW and DMC (or, more accurately, their related entities) have proposed outpatient facilities and services to be located in Doral. Kendall Regional Medical Center KRMC is currently the dominant hospital provider in the Doral area. Regarding his motivation for filing the DMC application, Mr. Joseph readily admitted “it’s as much about protecting what I already currently provide, number one.” KRMC treats Medicaid and indigent patients. KRMC has never turned away a patient because it did not have a contract with a Medicaid-managed care company. The CEO agreed that there is no access problem for Medicaid or charity patients justifying a new hospital. It was argued that KRMC is crowded, and the DMC hospital would help “decompress” KRMC, but the evidence showed that KRMC has a number of licensed beds that are not being used for inpatients. In addition, its ED has never gone on diversion, and no patient has ever been turned away due to the lack of a bed. Moreover, the census at KRMC has been declining. It had 25,324 inpatient admissions in 2015, 24,649 admissions in 2016, and 23,301 in 2017. The most recent data available at the time of hearing reflected that KRMC has been running at a little less than 75% occupancy, before its planned bed additions. KRMC is between an eight to 10 minute drive from Doral, and currently has the largest market share within the applicants’ defined service areas. KRMC is readily available and accessible to the residents of Doral. KRMC currently has a $90 million dollar expansion project under way. It involves adding beds and two new floors to the West Tower--a new fifth floor which will add 24 ICU beds and 24 step-down beds, and a new sixth floor which will house the relocated pediatric unit and 12 new medical-surgical beds. KRMC is also adding a new nine-story, 765 parking space garage and other ancillary space. This expansion will reduce the occupancy rate of KRMC’s inpatient units, and in particular its ICUs. These bed additions, in conjunction with increasing emphasis on outpatient services and the resultant declining inpatient admissions, will alleviate any historical capacity constraints KRMC may have had. There are also a number of ways KRMC could be further expanded in the future if needed. The West Tower is designed so it could accommodate a seventh floor, and the East Tower is also designed so that an additional floor could also be added to it. In addition, KRMC recently completed construction of a new OR area that is built on pillars. The new construction includes a third floor of shelled-in space that could house an additional 12 acute care beds. Moreover, this new OR tower was designed to go up an additional two to three floors beyond the existing shelled-in third floor. It is clear that KRMC has implemented reasonable strategies for addressing any bed capacity issues it may have experienced in the past. Decompression of KRMC is not a reason to approve DMC. Palmetto General Hospital Evidence regarding PGH was provided by its CEO Ana Mederos. Ms. Mederos is a registered nurse and has lived in Miami-Dade County for many years. She has a master of business education from Nova University and has worked in several different hospitals in the county. Specifically, she was the chief operating officer (COO) at Cedars Medical Center, the CEO at North Shore Medical Center, the CEO at Hialeah Hospital, and has been the CEO at PGH since August of 2006. Ms. Mederos is one of the few witnesses that actually lives in Doral. She travels in and out of the area on a daily basis. Her average commute is only about 15 minutes, and she has multiple convenient options in and out of Doral. PGH is located just off the Palmetto Expressway at 68th Street. It opened in the early 1970s and has 368 licensed beds, including 52 ICU beds. The hospital employs about 1,800 people and has over 600 physicians on its medical staff. PGH’s occupancy has declined from 79.8% in 2015 to 64% in 2016, and even further to 56.7% in 2017. There are many reasons for this decline, including pressure from managed care organizations, the continued increase in the use of outpatient procedures, improvements in technology, and increased competition in the Miami-Dade County market. Ms. Mederos expects that inpatient demand will continue to decline into the foreseeable future. PGH recently activated 31 observation beds to help improve throughput and better accommodate the increasing number of observation patients. PGH offers high-quality care and uses various metrics and indicators to measure and monitor what is going on in the hospital. The hospital has also been recognized with numerous awards. Through its parent, Tenet, PGH has contracts with just about every insurance and managed care company that serves the community. The hospital treats Medicaid and indigent patients. PGH’s Medicaid rate of $3,580 per patient is significantly lower than the rate paid to JMH. PGH has an office dedicated to helping patients get qualified for Medicaid or other financial resources, which not only helps the hospital get paid for its services, it also assists patients and families to make sure that they have benefits on an ongoing basis. Roughly 9-10% of PGH’s patients annually are completely unfunded. PGH only transfers patients if there is a need for a service not provided at the hospital, or upon the patient’s request. PGH does not transfer patients just because they cannot pay. PGH pays physicians to take calls in the ED which also obligates those physicians to provide care to patients that are seen at the hospital. PGH is a for-profit hospital that pays income taxes and property taxes, and does not receive any taxpayer subsidies like those received by JHS. Ms. Mederos reviewed the applications of JW and DMC, and articulated a number of reasons why, in her opinion, neither application should be approved. She sees no delays in providing care to anyone in the area, as there are hospitals serving Doral in every direction. There are a multitude of FSEDs available and additional FSEDs are being built in Doral by both applicants. There is another FSED being built close to PGH by Mount Sinai Medical Center. NCH has also opened an FSED that has negatively affected the volume of pediatric patients seen at PGH. There are also multiple urgent care centers. It was Ms. Mederos’ firm belief that persons living in Doral have reasonable geographic access to both inpatient and outpatient medical services. Ms. Mederos’ testimony in this regard is credited. There are no programs or services being proposed by either applicant that are not already available in the area. Ms. Mederos also noted that there is currently no problem with access to OB services in the area. However, she has a particular concern in that both applicants propose to offer OB services, but neither is proposing to offer NICU services. The evidence showed that most all of the hospitals that provide OB services to the Doral area offer at least Level II and some Level III NICU services. Thus, in terms of OB care, both proposed hospitals would be a step below what has developed as the standard of care for OB patients in the county. Ms. Mederos acknowledged that PGH does not have a huge market share in the zip codes that the applicants are proposing to serve, but that does not mean that the impact from either would not be real and significant. If a hospital is built by either applicant, it will need physicians, with some specialists in short supply. There are tremendous shortages in certain medical fields, such as orthopedics and neurology. In addition, there will be additional competition for nurses and other staff, which will increase the cost of healthcare. The loss of $1.3 to $2 million in contribution margin, as projected by Tenet’s healthcare planner, is a negative impact on PGH as hospital margins become thinner, and those numbers do not include costs like those needed to recruit and retain staff. PGH is again experiencing a nursing shortage, and losing nurses, incurring the higher cost for contract labor, paying overtime, and essentially not having the staff to provide the required services is a serious potential adverse impact from either proposed new hospital. JHS also tends to provide more lucrative benefits than PGH, and a nearby JW hospital is a threat in that regard. As a final note, Ms. Mederos stated that her conviction that there is no need for either proposed hospital in Doral is even more resolute than when she testified in the Batch One Case. With continued declines in admissions, length of stay and patient days, the development of more services for the residents of Doral, the shortages of doctors and nurses, the ever increasing role of managed care that depresses the demand for inpatient hospital services and other factors, she persuasively explained why no new hospitals are needed in the Doral area. Coral Gables Hospital (CGH) Maria Cristina Jimenez testified on behalf of CGH, where she has worked in a variety of different capacities since 1985. She was promoted to CEO in March 2017. She has lived in Miami her entire life. Ms. Jimenez has been involved in initiatives to make her hospital more efficient. She is supportive of efforts to reduce inpatient hospitalizations and length of stay, as this is what is best for patients. Overall, the hospital length of stay is dropping, which adds to the decreasing demand for inpatient services. CGH is accredited by the Joint Commission, has received multiple awards, and provides high-quality care to its patients. It also has contracts with a broad array of managed care companies as do the other Tenet hospitals. CGH treats Medicaid patients, and its total Medicaid rate is less than $3,500 per inpatient. The hospital has a program similar to PGH to help patients get qualified for Medicaid and other resources. CGH also provides services to indigent patients, and self-pay/charity is about 6% of the hospital’s total admissions. The hospital does not transfer patients just because they are indigent. Physicians are compensated to provide care in the emergency room and are expected to continue with that care if the patients are admitted to the hospital, even if they do not have financial resources. CGH also pays income and property taxes, but does not receive any taxpayer support. CGH generally serves the Little Havana, Flagami, Miami, and Coral Gables communities, and its service area overlaps with those of the applicants. In order to better serve its patients and to help it compete in the highly competitive Miami-Dade County marketplace, CGH is developing a freestanding ED at the corner of Bird Road and Southwest 87th Avenue, which is scheduled to open in January 2020. This will provide another resource for patients in the proposed service areas. Ms. Jimenez had reviewed the CON applications at issue in this case. She does not believe that either hospital should be approved because it will drain resources from CGH, not only from a financial standpoint, but also physician and nurse staffing. CGH experiences physician shortages. Urologists are in short supply, as are gastrointestinal physicians that perform certain procedures. Hematology, oncology, and endocrinology are also specialty areas with shortages. The addition of another hospital will exacerbate those shortages at CGH. While CGH does not have a large market share in the proposed PSA of either applicant, anticipated impact from approval of either is real and substantial. A contribution margin loss of $1.2 to $2.2 million per year, as projected by Tenet’s healthcare planner, would be significant. The drain on resources, including staff and physicians, is also of significant concern. Hialeah Hospital Dr. Jorge Perez testified on behalf of Hialeah. Dr. Perez is a pathologist and medical director of laboratory at the hospital. More significantly, Dr. Perez has been on the hospital’s staff since 2001 and has served in multiple leadership roles, including chair of the Performance Improvement Council, chief of staff; and since 2015, chair of the Hialeah Hospital Governing Board. Hialeah offers obstetrics services and a Level II NICU with 12 beds. Approximately 1,400 babies a year are born there. Hialeah’s occupancy has been essentially flat for the past three years, at below 40%, and it clearly has ample excess capacity. On an average day, over 200 of Hialeah’s beds are unoccupied. Like other hospitals in the county, Hialeah has a number of competitors. The growth of managed care has affected the demand for inpatient beds and services at Hialeah. Hialeah treats Medicaid and indigent patients. Approximately 15% of Hialeah’s admissions are unfunded. As with its sister Tenet hospitals, Hialeah is a for- profit hospital that pays taxes and does not receive tax dollars for providing care to the indigent. Dr. Perez succinctly and persuasively identified a variety of reasons why no new hospital is needed in Doral. First and foremost, there is plenty of capacity at the existing hospitals in the area, including Hialeah. Second, both inpatient admissions and length of stay continue trending downward. Care continues to shift toward outpatient services, thereby reducing the demand for inpatient care. According to Dr. Perez, if a new hospital is approved in Doral it will bring with it adverse impacts on existing hospitals, including Hialeah. A new hospital in Doral will attract patients, some of which would have otherwise gone to Hialeah. Moreover, Doral has more insured patients, meaning the patients that would be lost would be good payors. There would also be a significant risk of loss of staff to a new hospital. Dr. Perez’s testimony in this regard is credible. Statutory and Rule Review Criteria In 2008, the Florida Legislature streamlined the review criteria applicable for evaluating new hospital applications. Mem’l Healthcare Grp. v. AHCA, Case No. 12- 0429CON, RO at 32 (Fla. DOAH Dec. 7, 2012). The criteria specifically eliminated included quality of care, availability of resources, financial feasibility, and the costs and methods of proposed construction. Lee Mem’l Health System v. AHCA, Case No. 13-2508CON, RO at 135 (Fla. DOAH Mar. 28, 2014). The remaining criteria applicable to new hospital projects are set forth at section 408.035(1), Florida Statutes. Section 408.035(1)(a): The need for the healthcare facilities and health services being proposed. Generally, CON applicants are responsible for demonstrating need for new acute care hospitals, typically in the context of a numeric need methodology adopted by AHCA. However, AHCA has not promulgated a numeric need methodology to calculate need for new hospital facilities. Florida Administrative Code Rule 59C-1.008(2)(e) provides that if no agency need methodology exists, the applicant is responsible for demonstrating need through a needs assessment methodology, which must include, at a minimum, consideration of the following topics, except where they are inconsistent with the applicable statutory and rule criteria: Population demographics and dynamics; Availability, utilization and quality of like services in the district, subdistrict, or both; Medical treatment trends; and Market conditions. Both applicants propose to build small community hospitals providing basic acute care and OB services in the Doral area of western Miami-Dade County. Both applicants point to the increasing population and the lack of an acute care hospital in Doral as evidence of need for a hospital. The DMC application focuses largely on geographic access concerns, while the JW application is premised upon six arguments as to why JHS contends its proposed JW hospital should be approved. The lack of a hospital in Doral is not itself an indication of need.3/ In addition, population growth, and the demands of the population for inpatient hospital beds, cannot be considered in a vacuum. Sound healthcare planning requires an analysis of existing area hospitals, including the services they offer and their respective locations; how area residents travel to existing hospitals, and any barriers to access; the utilization of existing hospitals and amount of capacity they have; and other factors which may be relevant in a given case. Doral is in the west/northwest part of Miami-Dade County, in between the Miami International Airport (to the east) and the Everglades (to the west). It is surrounded by major roadways, with US Highway 27/Okeechobee Road running diagonally to the north, US Highway 836/Dolphin Expressway running along its southern edge, US Highway 826/Palmetto Expressway running north-south to the east, and the Florida Turnpike running north- south along the western edge of Doral. To the west of the Turnpike is the Everglades, where there is minimal population and very limited development possible in the future. The City of Doral itself has an area of about 15 square miles, and is only two or three times the size of the Miami International Airport, which sits just east of Doral. Much of Doral is commercial and industrial, with the largest concentration of residential areas being in the northwest part of the city. While there is unquestionably residential growth in Doral, the population of Doral is currently only about 59,000 people. Doral is not as densely populated as many areas of Miami-Dade County, has a number of golf course communities, and is generally a more affluent area with a higher average household income than much of Miami-Dade County. JW proposes to locate its hospital on the eastern side of Doral, just west of Miami International Airport, while the DMC site is on the western side of Doral, just east of the Everglades. JW’s site is located in an industrial area with few residents, while the DMC site is located in an area where future growth is likely to be limited. Both sites have downsides for development of a hospital, with both applicants spending considerable time at hearing pointing out the flaws of each other’s chosen location. Both applicants define their service areas to include the City of Doral, but also areas outside of Doral. Notably, the entire DMC service area is contained within KRMC’s existing service area, with the exception of one small area. While the population of Doral itself is only 59,000 people, there are more concentrated populations in areas outside of Doral (except to the west). However, the people in these areas are closer to existing hospitals like PGH, Hialeah, KRMC, and others. For the population inside Doral, there are several major roadways in and out of Doral, and area residents can access several existing hospitals with plenty of capacity within a 20-minute drive time, many closer than that. It was undisputed that inpatient acute care hospital use rates continue to decline. There are different reasons for this, but it was uniformly recognized that decreasing inpatient use rates, and a shift toward outpatient services, are ongoing trends in the market. These trends existed at the time of the Batch One Case. As observed by Tenet’s healthcare planner at hearing: “The occupancy is lower today than it was two years ago, the use rates are lower, and the actual utilization is lower.” Both applicants failed to establish a compelling case of need. While there is growth in the Doral area, it remains a relatively small population, and there was no evidence of community needs being unmet. Sound healthcare planning, and the statutory criteria, require consideration of existing hospitals, their availability, accessibility, and extent of utilization. These considerations weigh heavily against approval of either CON application, even more so than in the prior case. Section 408.035(1)(b): The availability, accessibility, and extent of utilization of existing healthcare facilities and health services in the service district of the applicant; and Section 408.035(1)(e): The extent to which the proposed services will enhance access to healthcare for residents of the service district. As stated above, there are several existing hospitals in close proximity to Doral. Thus, the question is whether they are accessible and have capacity to serve the needs of patients from the Doral area. The evidence overwhelmingly answers these questions in the affirmative. Geographic access was a focal point of the DMC application, which argued that there are various barriers to access in and around Doral, such as a canal that runs parallel to US Highway 27/Okeechobee Road, train tracks and a rail yard, industrial plants, and the airport. While the presence of these things is undeniable, as is the fact that there is traffic in Miami, based upon the evidence presented, they do not present the barriers that DMC alleges. Rather, the evidence was undisputed that numerous hospitals are accessible within 20 minutes of the proposed hospital sites, and some within 10 to 15 minutes. All of Doral is within 30 minutes of multiple hospitals. These are reasonable travel times and are not indicative of a geographic access problem, regardless of any alleged “barriers.” In addition, existing hospitals clearly have the capacity to serve the Doral community, and they are doing so. Without question, there is excess capacity in the Miami-Dade County market. With approximately 7,500 hospital beds in the county running at an average occupancy just over 50%, there are around 3,500 beds available at any given time. Focusing on the hospitals closest to Doral (those accessible within 20 minutes), there are hundreds of beds that are available and accessible from the proposed service areas of the applicants. KRMC is particularly noteworthy because of its proximity to, and market share in, the Doral area. The most recent utilization and occupancy data for KRMC indicate that it has, on average, 100 vacant beds. This is more than the entire 80-bed hospital proposed in the DMC application (for a service area that is already served and subsumed by KRMC). Moreover, KRMC is expanding, and will soon have even more capacity at its location less than a 10-minute drive from the DMC site. From a programmatic standpoint, neither applicant is proposing any programs or services that are not already available at numerous existing hospitals, and, in fact, both would offer fewer programs and services than other area hospitals. As such, patients in need of tertiary or specialized services will still have to travel to other hospitals like PGH, KRMC, or JMH. Alternatively, if they present to a small hospital in Doral in need of specialized services, they will then have to be transferred to an appropriate hospital that can treat them. The same would be true for babies born at either DMC or JW in need of a NICU. Similarly, there are bypass protocols for EMS to take cardiac, stroke, and trauma patients to the closest hospital equipped to treat them, even if it means bypassing other hospitals not so equipped, like JW and DMC. Less acute patients can be transported to the closest ED. And since both applicants are building FSEDs in Doral, there will be ample access to emergency services for residents of Doral. This criterion does not weigh in favor of approval of either hospital. To the contrary, the evidence overwhelmingly established that existing hospitals are available and accessible to Doral area residents. Section 408.035(1)(e), (g) and (i): The extent to which the proposed services will enhance access to healthcare, the extent to which the proposal will foster competition that promotes quality and cost-effectiveness, and the applicant’s past and proposed provision of healthcare services to Medicaid patients and the medically indigent. It goes without saying that any new hospital is going to enhance access to the people closest to its location; but as explained above, there is no evidence of an access problem, or any pressing need for enhanced access to acute care hospital services. Rather, the evidence showed that Doral area residents are within very reasonable travel times to existing hospitals, most of which have far more extensive programs and services than either applicant is proposing to offer. Indeed, the proposed DMC service area is contained within KRMC’s existing service area, and KRMC is only 10 minutes from the DMC site. Neither applicant would enhance access to tertiary or specialized services, and patients in need of those services will still have to travel to other hospitals, or worse, be transferred after presenting to a Doral hospital with more limited programs and services. Although it was not shown to be an issue, access to emergency services is going to be enhanced by the FSEDs being built by both applicants. Thus, to the extent that a new hospital would enhance access, it would be only for non-emergent patients in need of basic, non-tertiary level care. Existing hospitals are available and easily accessible to these patients. In addition, healthy competition exists between several existing providers serving the Doral area market. That healthy competition would be substantially eroded by approval of the DMC application, as HCA would likely capture a dominant share of the market. While approval of the JW application might not create a dominant market share for one provider, it would certainly not promote cost-effectiveness given the fact that it costs the system more for the same patient to receive services at a JHS hospital than other facilities. Indeed, approval of JW’s application would mean that the JW campus will have the more expensive hospital-based billing rates. Florida Medicaid diagnosis related group (DRG) payment comparisons among hospitals are relevant because both DMC and JW propose that at least 22% of their patients will be Medicaid patients. Data from the 2017-18 DRG calculator provided by the Medicaid program office was used to compare JHS to the three Tenet hospitals, KRMC, and Aventura Hospital, another EFD hospital in Miami-Dade County. The data shows that JHS receives the highest Medicaid rate enhancement per discharge for the same Medicaid patients ($2,820.06) among these six hospitals in the county. KRMC receives a modest enhancement of $147.27. Comparison of Medicaid Managed Care Reimbursement over the period of fiscal years 2014-2016 show that JHS receives substantially more Medicaid reimbursement per adjusted patient day than any of the hospitals in this proceeding, with the other hospitals receiving between one-third and one-half of JHS reimbursement. In contrast, among all of these hospitals, KRMC had the lowest rate for each of the three years covered by the data, which means KRMC (and by extension DMC) would cost the Medicaid program substantially less money for care of Medicaid patients. Under the new prospective payment system instituted by the State of Florida for Medicaid reimbursement of acute care hospital providers, for service between July 1, 2018, and March 31, 2019, JHS is the beneficiary of an automatic rate enhancement of more than $8 million. In contrast, KRMC’s rate enhancement is only between $16,000 and $17,000. Thus, it will cost the Medicaid program substantially more to treat a patient using the same services at JW than at DMC. Furthermore, rather than enhance the financial viability of the JHS system, the evidence indicates that the JW proposal will be a financial drain on the JHS system. Finally, JHS’s past and proposed provision of care to Medicaid and indigent patients is noteworthy, but not a reason to approve its proposed hospital. JW is proposing this hospital to penetrate a more affluent market, not an indigent or underserved area, and it proposes to provide Medicaid and indigent care at a level that is consistent with the existing hospitals. JHS also receives the highest Low Income Pool (LIP) payments per charity care of any system in the state, and is one of only a handful of hospital systems that made money after receipt of the LIP payments. HCA-affiliated hospitals, by comparison, incur the second greatest cost in the state for charity care taking LIP payments into consideration. Analysis of standardized net revenues per adjusted admission (NRAA) among Miami-Dade County acute care hospitals, a group of 16 hospitals, shows JHS to be either the second or the third highest hospital in terms of NRAA. KRMC, in contrast, part of the EFD/HCA hospitals, is about 3% below the average of the 16 hospitals for NRAA. DMC’s analysis of standardized NRAA using data from 2014, 2015, and 2016, among acute care hospitals receiving local government tax revenues, shows JHS receives more net revenue than any of the other hospitals in this grouping. Using data from FY 2014 to FY 2016, DMC compared hospital costs among the four existing providers that are parties to this proceeding and JMH as a representative of JHS. Standardizing for case mix, fiscal year end, and location, an analysis of costs per adjusted admission shows that the hospitals other than JMH have an average cost of between a half and a third of JMH’s average cost. The same type of analysis of costs among a peer group of eight statutory teaching hospitals shows JHS’s costs to be the highest. It should also be noted that if JW were to fail or experience significant losses from operations, the taxpayers of Miami-Dade County will be at risk. In contrast, if DMC were to fail financially, EFD/HCA will shoulder the losses. When the two applications are evaluated in the context of the above criteria, the greater weight of the evidence does not mitigate in favor of approval of either. However, should AHCA decide to approve one of the applicants in its final order, preference should be given to DMC because of its lower costs per admission for all categories of payors, and in particular, the lower cost to the Florida Medicaid Program. In addition, the risk of financial failure would fall upon EFD/HCA, rather than the taxpayers of Miami-Dade County. Rule 59C-1.008(2)(e): Need considerations. Many of the considerations enumerated in rule 59C- 1.008(2)(e) overlap with the statutory criteria, but there are certain notable trends and market conditions that warrant mention. Specifically, while the population of Doral is growing, it remains relatively small, and does not itself justify a new hospital. And while there are some more densely populated areas outside of the city of Doral, they are much closer to existing hospitals having robust services and excess capacity. Doral is a more affluent area, and there was no evidence of any financial or cultural access issues supporting approval of either CON application. The availability, utilization, and quality of existing hospitals are clearly not issues, as there are several existing hospitals with plenty of capacity accessible to Doral area residents. In terms of medical treatment trends, it was undisputed that use rates for inpatient hospital services continue trending downward, and that trend is expected to continue. Concomitantly, there is a marked shift toward outpatient services in Miami-Dade County and elsewhere. Finally, both applicants are proposing to provide OB services without a NICU, which is below the standard in the market. While not required for the provision of obstetrics, NICU backup is clearly the most desirable and best practice. For the foregoing reasons, the considerations in rule 59C-1.008(2)(e) do not weigh in favor of approval of either hospital.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Healthcare Administration enter a final order denying East Florida-DMC, Inc.’s CON Application No. 10432 and denying The Public Health Trust of Miami-Dade County, Florida, d/b/a Jackson Hospital West’s CON Application No. 10433. DONE AND ENTERED this 30th day of April, 2019, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S W. DAVID WATKINS Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 30th day of April, 2019.

Florida Laws (10) 120.52120.569120.57120.595408.035408.036408.037408.039408.043408.0455 Florida Administrative Code (2) 28-106.20459C-1.008
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