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MERIDIAN, INC.; MERIDIAN NURSING CENTERS, INC.; AND BREVARD MERIDIAN LIMITED PARTNERSHIP vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 86-000064 (1986)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 86-000064 Latest Update: Nov. 13, 1986

Findings Of Fact The facts in this case are uncontroverted. Meridian's original application for a 120-bed nursing home was updated to seek instead approval for a 60-bed freestanding nursing home. This facility will be located at the southern end of the county, near the communities of Palm Bay and Malabar. The applicant has agreed to provide services to Medicaid-eligible persons at a percentage reflecting the previous year's county average, up to a rate of 50 percent of patient days. HRS' computation of nursing home bed need for Brevard County projects a need for 68 beds in July 1988, the relevant planning horizon. The witnesses for both parties concur that the application, as updated, meets all relevant criteria for approval. Although the latest financial statement relates to the company's fiscal year ending August 31, 1985, the firm commitments and the pro formas included within the application leave no question as to the financial feasibility of the proposed facility. Meridian maintains a good line of credit to handle cash flow at start up and reasonably projects a positive net income for the second year of operation.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing, it is RECOMMENDED that a Final Order be entered granting a certificate of need to Meridian for a 60-bed nursing home in Brevard County and reflecting the voluntary dismissal of the petition filed by Beverly Enterprises in this consolidated proceeding. DONE and RECOMMENDED this 13th day of November 1986, in Tallahassee, Florida. MARK CLARK Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 FILED with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 13th day of November 1986. COPIES FURNISHED: Robert D. Newell, Jr., Esquire 200 South Monroe Street Suite B Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Richard A. Patterson, Esquire Assistant General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard 4th Floor Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 E. G. Boone, Esquire Robert T. Klingbeil, Jr., Esquire 1001 Avenida del Circo P. O. Box 1596 Venice, Florida 34284 William Page, Jr. Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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CONVALESCENT SERVICES, INC., AND PINELLAS HEALTHCARE, LTD. vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 87-003492 (1987)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 87-003492 Latest Update: Apr. 01, 1988

The Issue The broad issue in this proceeding is whether either of the petitioners should be granted a community nursing home CON. The parties disagree as to the appropriate application of the need methodology described in Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), F.A.C. Both Petitioners argue that the approved bed inventory should be determined as of December 1, 1986, at the same time that the number of licensed beds was determined for the January 1987 batching cycle. HRS computed approved beds as of the date that the supervisor signed its State Agency Action Report (SAAR), in May 1987. The parties further disagree as to the effect of subsequent changes to a Final Order in Wuesthoff Health Services, Inc., et al. v. HRS, cited above, originally entered in April 1987.

Findings Of Fact BMI's application number 5010, and Manor's application number 5022, were timely filed for review by HRS in the January 1987 batching cycle. Both applications were denied in HRS' State Agency Action Report (SAAR) dated May 19, 1987. BMI previously received a CON for 73 nursing home beds in Brevard County. Its current application is for 47 additional beds, to create a single 120-bed facility. The entire facility is currently under construction, with the intention that the portion unlicensed as nursing home beds will be utilized as a distinct section of adult congregate living facility (ACLF) beds. Manor also previously received a CON for 60 nursing home beds in Brevard County. CON number 3828 was granted in a prior batching cycle after the current application for 120 beds was filed. At the final hearing, Manor explained that it is now seeking only 60 more beds as it intends to construct a 120-bed facility in Brevard County. In their pre-hearing stipulation the parties agreed that if numeric need is demonstrated, numeric need would first be met through partial or total approval of BMI's application. If the need exceeds 47 beds, the excess should be applied toward determination of approval of Manor's application. The parties also stipulated that all criteria, except those directly related to numeric need for the projects, have either been satisfied by both applicants or are not applicable to this proceeding. In calculating bed need for Brevard County, the parties have agreed, through their exhibits and testimony, that the first portion of the need methodology in Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), F.A.C., yields a subdistrict allocation of 1560 community nursing home beds. It is further undisputed that the relevant number of licensed beds for the period in question is 1,180 beds. The version of Rule 10-5.011(1)(k) F.A.C. in effect at the time of review requires that licensed beds be counted as of December 1, 1986, for the January 1987 batching cycle. The rule is silent as to when approved beds should be counted. Both applicants argue that approved beds should be counted at the same time as licensed beds for consistency and planning purposes. The current version of Rule 10-5.011(1)(k) F.A.C., known as the fixed pool rule, establishes a bed need for each batching cycle, thus providing the certainty and consistency sought by Petitioners' health planners. Prior to its adoption of the fixed pool rule, HRS experimented with various policies as to the determination of "current" data utilized in the need methodology. At the time of the January 1987 batching cycle, HRS' non-rule policy regarding approved beds was to count those beds as of the date that health services and facilities consultant supervisor signs off on the SAAR. In this case, that individual was Reid Jaffe, and the date was May 11, 1987. At the hearing, Mr. Jaffe explained the policy was an attempt to reach a balance between deriving a proper number of beds and minimizing the duplication of services and overbedding. Because the need for future beds is partially predicated on how many beds have already been approved, the Department felt it necessary to take into consideration all those beds which had been approved up until its decision time. Generally the difference between the number of beds published in initial projections of need by HRS' Office of Comprehensive Health Planning and the number of approved beds considered at the time of the decision, are those beds which were approved in final orders issued during that period. Contrary to Petitioners'assertions, those beds which became licensed after the December 1st cut-off date, but before the SAAR sign off, were not lost, but rather were computed by HRS as "approved" beds under the policy. The policy described by Reid Jaffe in his testimony at final hearing is also reflected in HRS' Final Order in Broward Healthcare, Ltd., d/b/a Broward Convalescent Center v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 9 FALR 1974 (DOAH #86- 2708, Order dated March 21, 1987), aff. per curiam, without opinion, January 21, 1988, 1st DCA case no. BT-258. Utilizing the HRS policy of counting approved beds at the time the supervisor signs the SAAR yields the following total: Approved Facilities Beds Date Approved West Melbourne Health Care 60 7/27/84 Unicare Health Facility of Brevard 120 5/30/86 Brevard Medical Investors 73 9/02/86 Meridian 60 2/ /87 Palm Bay Care Center 60 4/17/87 Forum Group 60 4/17/87 Courtney Springs 36 4/17/87 Total 469 In its SAAR, HRS neglected to include the 60 beds approved for Meridian. These beds were properly included by the applicants' health care planner in her adjustment to the SAAR count and HRS agrees the beds should be included. (See transcript, p. 20 and HRS proposed finding of fact #6.) In June 1985, Courtney Springs received a CON for 36 beds in Broward County. The action was challenged, and the proceeding was consolidated with challenges by other applicants who were denied CONs in the same batching cycle. Wuesthoff Health Services, Inc., et al. v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services and Courtney Springs, consolidated cases #85-2868, 85- 2936, 85-2934, 85-3243, 85-3322, 85-3365, 85-3366. In its Final Order, filed on April 17, 1987, HRS granted 60 beds each to Palm Bay Care Center, Forum Group and Courtney Springs. The Final Order was corrected on May 19, 1987, to provide that the award to Courtney Springs was 36, rather than 60 beds, as there was no intent to award the facility more beds than originally provided. In all other respects the final order of April 17, 1987, remained in full force and effect. On July 6, 1987, another order was entered and styled "Amended Final Order." The stated purposes of the amendment were to correct a scrivener's error in failing to serve the final order on a moving party, Brevard Medical Investors, Ltd., (BMI) and to give that party an "opportunity to exercise its right to judicial review." The Amended Final Order addressed BMI's lack of standing for failure to file a timely petition to intervene in the consolidated Wuesthoff cases. This is the only subject of the amended final order. The original final order, dated April 17, 1987, did not address this subject. It is not at all clear that the "Amended Final Order" dated July 6, 1987, amends the April 17, 1987, Final Order, since it references only an April 9th Final Order, not the April 17th Final Order. The record in this proceeding does not include a subsequent correction of "scriveners error", if indeed the referenced date was an error. The applicants argue that the 120 beds awarded to Forum Group and Palm Care should not be regarded as ?approve even under HRS' policy, since the amended final order was dated in July 1987, well after the SAAR was signed by Reid Jaffe in May. Application of this theory would result in 349 approved beds, and a net bed need of 66 beds in the January 1990 planning horizon. (Manor Care, exhibit #5) Application of Petitioners' theory that approved beds should be counted on December 1, 1986, results in 289 approved beds, and a need for 120 beds in the January 1990 planning horizon. HRS' application of its policy regarding the time at which approved beds are to be counted results in 469 approved beds, and a surplus of 42 beds in the January 1990 planning horizon. There is no evidence in this proceeding of circumstances which would justify the approval of beds in excess of a net bed allocation derived through the bed need methodology in Rule 10-5.011(1)(k), F.A.C.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing, it is, hereby RECOMMENDED: That the CON applications by BMI and Manor for nursing home beds in Brevard County be denied DONE and RECOMMENDED this 1st day of April, 1988, in Tallahassee, Florida. MARY CLARK Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 1st day of April, 1987. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER The following reflect on my specific rulings on the findings of fact proposed by the parties: Petitioners' Proposed Findings Adopted in paragraph 1. Adopted in paragraph 5. Adopted in paragraph 4. Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence. Reid Jaffe testified that need for 12 beds exists, but this conclusion did not include the 60 beds approved for Meridian in February 1987. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence and to the legal effect of the changes to HRS' April 1987 Final Order. Adopted, as to the characterization of applicants' position, in paragraph 7. Adopted in paragraph 7. Rejected as contrary to the weight of evidence. Rejected as unnecessary. 11-12. Adopted in paragraph 8. Rejected as contrary to the evidence and law. Rejected as contrary to the evidence. Rejected as unnecessary. Rejected as immaterial. Rejected as irrelevant. 18-19. Rejected as immaterial. Adopted in paragraph 7. Adopted in paragraph 3. 22-26. Rejected as immaterial and irrelevant. Respondents' Proposed Findings 1-2. Adopted in paragraph 1. Adopted in paragraph 3. Adopted in paragraph 2. Addressed in paragraph 11. Adopted in paragraphs 9 and 10. Adopted in paragraph 8. Adopted in paragraph 10. 9-11. Rejected as unnecessary. Adopted in paragraph 6. Adopted in paragraph 9. Adopted in paragraph 15. COPIES FURNISHED: W. David Watkins, Esquire Oertel & Hoffman, P. A. Post Office Box 6507 Tallahassee, Florida 32314-6507 Donna H. Stinson, Esquire Moyle, Flanigan, Katz, Fitzgerald & Sheehan, P. A. The Perkins House Suite 100 118 North Gadsden Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Theodore E. Mack, Esquire Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services Regulation and Health Facilities 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Sam Power, Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Suite 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 Gregory L. Coler, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 John Miller, Esquire General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Building One, Suite 407 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700 =================================================================

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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GULF COURT NURSING CENTER vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES; PROVINCIAL HOUSE OF FLORIDA, INC.; ET AL., 82-001698 (1982)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 82-001698 Latest Update: Mar. 29, 1984

Findings Of Fact Prior to the hearing, the parties filed a Pretrial Stipulation which essentially sets forth the following facts contained in paragraphs 1 through 9: The Intervenors Beverly Enterprises, Inc. (hereafter "Beverly"), and Provincial House of Florida (hereafter "Provincial House"), filed their applications for certificates of need on March 18, 1981, and January 28, 1981, respectively. At the time Beverly and Provincial House filed their applications for 120-bed nursing home facilities, they were batched together with Health Care Management, Inc. (hereafter "Health Care"). Shortly thereafter, Health Care was granted a certificate of need to construct a 120-bed nursing home facility and Beverly's and Provincial House's applications were denied on July 8, 1981, and June 3, 1981, respectively. Beverly and Provincial House timely filed petitions with the Division of Administrative Hearings contesting the denial of their respective applications. By Stipulation dated December 29, 1981, Beverly and Provincial House were granted certificates of need which gave each the right to construct a 96- bed nursing home facility. This Stipulation was later amended on February 21, 1982, to authorize construction of two 72-bed nursing homes in Lee County, Florida. Based upon the new 1982 Health Systems Plan for Lee County, an additional 143 beds were determined to be needed for Lee County for the year 1985. Neither Beverly nor Provincial House resubmitted their applications when the new bed need was established. Rather, as part of the settlement in Provincial House, Inc. v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, Case No. 81-1793, and Beverly Enterprises v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, Case No. 81-2037, the certificates of need were granted based upon receipt of ". . . updated population figures which demonstrated additional need for nursing home beds in the County." Petitioner's Exhibit 3. At the time the Department entered into the Stipulation with Beverly and Provincial House, it did not consider Gulf Court's then pending application. The sole reason the certificate of need was denied to Gulf Court Nursing Center on March 30, 1982, was that there were no longer beds available and there was no need as a direct result of granting the two certificates of need to Beverly and Provincial House. Since Gulf Court's application was never simultaneously reviewed or considered by the Department with either Beverly or Provincial House's applications, a comparative hearing was not held in this case. Gulf Court, Beverly and Provincial House all meet the criteria for issuance of a certificate as set forth in Rule 10-5.11, Florida Administrative Code. The Respondent Department routinely awards certificates of need on a first-come, first-serve basis to applicants denied certificates due to a lack of need in a previous cycle, who file Chapter 120 appeals, without reviewing pending applications filed in the current cycle.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED: That the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services enter a Final Order finding that, under the circumstances presented in this case, Gulf Court is entitled to a comparative and competitive review with Provincial House and Beverly Enterprises, Inc. DONE AND ENTERED this 10th day of February 1984 in Tallahassee, Florida. SHARYN L. SMITH 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 10th day of February 1984. COPIES FURNISHED: John C. Dent, Jr., Esquire DENT PFLUGNER ROSIER AND HENDRICKS 2 North Tuttle Avenue Sarasota, Florida 33577 Steven Huss, Esquire Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1317 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301 G. Boone, Esquire Susan Lee Stockham, Esquire 1001 Avenida del Circo Post Office Box 1596 Venice, Florida 32484 Alicia Jacobs, General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301 David H. Pingree, Secretary Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32301 =================================================================

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
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HERITAGE HEALTHCARE CENTER (BEVERLY ENTERPRISES - FLORIDA, INC., D/B/A BEVERLY GULF COAST) vs AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE ADMINISTRATION, 97-005847 (1997)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Sarasota, Florida Dec. 11, 1997 Number: 97-005847 Latest Update: Dec. 06, 2002

The Issue The issue is whether Respondent properly changed Petitioner's licensure status to conditional on June 23, 1997.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner owns and operates a nursing home in Venice, Florida. Respondent conducted a relicensure survey of Petitioner's nursing home on June 12, 1997. On June 23, 1997, Respondent issued Petitioner a new license, effective June 12, 1997, through October 31, 1997, for a skilled nursing facility. However, as a result of the deficiencies found in this survey, Respondent rated the renewal license as conditional. A resurvey on August 6, 1997, revealed that Petitioner had corrected all of the cited deficiencies, so Respondent issued a standard license, effective August 6. There are three ratings for a license: superior, standard, and conditional. Prior to the June 12 renewal, Petitioner's license was rated superior. The issuance of a conditional license adversely affects a licensee in one and possibly two ways. First, the conditional license hinders marketing and employee recruiting and retention. Second, the conditional license may affect Medicaid reimbursement levels. Even though Respondent rerated the nursing home as standard, the earlier conditional rating remains meaningful because it means that Petitioner cannot gain a superior rating for the next licensing period. Another factor militating against a determination that the present proceeding is moot is Respondent's procedure by which it does not provide licensees with an opportunity for a hearing prior to changing the rating of their nursing home licenses. As an incidental complaint to the issuance of a conditional license, Petitioner also complains of the procedure by which this Respondent issues this conditional license. Without having given Petitioner an opportunity for a hearing based on a proposed or tentative decision to change Petitioner's rating, Respondent simply issued the conditional license and gave Petitioner an opportunity to challenge this action, after the fact, in a formal administrative hearing. A mootness determination on these facts would insulate Respondent's initial action from effective challenge, despite the obvious economic impacts of the initial action. The June 12 survey reports cites three sets of Class II deficiencies, which were identified as Tags F 225, F 309, and F 314. These three tags were the sole bases for the issuance of a Conditional license. Tag F 225 concerns the investigation and documentation of an alleged incident of abuse of a resident by one of Petitioner's employees. The survey report asserts that Petitioner did not satisfy applicable legal requirements by failing, in violation of its own policies, to document in the resident's file the results of an abuse investigation report. Tag F 225 and the testimony of Respondent's witnesses at the hearing are vague as to whether the issue under Tag F 225 is that Petitioner failed to conduct an appropriate investigation or failed to document adequately that it had conducted an investigation. When pressed, Respondent's witnesses chose failure to document, perhaps in deference to the fact that Petitioner's employees clearly conducted an investigation. The alleged incident underlying this issue did not constitute abuse. A staffperson grabbed a resident's arm for an appropriate purpose and did not injure or harm the resident. Petitioner's investigation properly concluded that there was no abuse. As discussed under the conclusions of law, the subsubsubparagraph of the federal regulation allegedly violated under this tag requires only that Petitioner report to appropriate authorities any knowledge of actions by a "court of law" against an employee suggestive of unfitness to serve as facility staff. There is no proof of action by a court of law; this missing fact alone ends the inquiry under this tag. Additionally, Petitioner nonetheless reported the unfounded allegations to the state agency charged with investigating allegations of abuse, and the state agency concluded that the charge was unfounded. Tag F 309 concerns the quality of care received by six residents. As to Resident Number 6, who was in the final stages of a terminal illness, the survey report asserts that Petitioner kept him in isolation and did not offer him opportunities for socialization. Testimony at the hearing revealed that the resident was dying and did not want to socialize, but Respondent's witness opined that this was not an appropriate option. No evidence suggested that the dying resident suffered any diminution of ability to eat or use language. Respondent's witness labored under the misconception that the cited federal regulation addresses socialization (as opposed perhaps to the role of socialization in facilitating the more specific activities actually mentioned by the regulation, which is discussed in the conclusions of law). Even if the federal regulation were so broad, which it is not, the evidence certainly suggests that any diminution in socialization was unavoidable due to the resident's terminal clinical condition. The evidence reveals that Resident Number 6, who had had a gangrenous foot, suffered a staph infection of his gangrenous right foot. He was depressed, fatigued, and in pain; however, he was freely visited by staff and family. As to Resident Number 8, who had had a stroke, the survey report asserts that Petitioner failed to provide him his restorative therapy of walking and failed to document this therapy. At the time of the survey, Petitioner was short of restorative staff due to a scheduled vacation and an unscheduled bereavement absence due to the suicide of an employee's brother. When a restorative aide, who was on vacation, appeared at the nursing home and attempted to provide Respondent's surveyor with documentation concerning the therapy administered to Resident Number 8, the surveyor rejected the documentation on the grounds that it did not sufficiently identify the resident or therapist. Resident Number 8 suffered some loss of functioning--i.e., the ability to walk 400 feet--but the record does not link this loss of functioning to any brief interruption in his restorative therapy. As to Resident Number 9, the survey report states that, during the two days that surveyors were at the facility, she did not ambulate, even though her restorative nursing plan called for daily ambulation. However, she suffered no harm during this insignificant interruption in her program, from which she was successfully discharged a couple of weeks after the survey. As to Resident Number 13, who was 102 years old, the survey report notes that he was supposed to ambulate in a wheelchair. One of Respondent's surveyors noticed that a staffperson was pushing this resident's wheelchair. However, staff had assumed the responsibility of pushing this resident's wheelchair for him after he had developed pressure sores on his heels. The evidence fails to show that Petitioner's care for the treatment of Resident Number 13 had anything to do with his loss of function. As to Resident Number 26, the survey report asserts that his physician had ordered an increase in dosage of Prilosec, which aids digestion by treating the acidity associated with peptic ulcers. Three weeks passed before Petitioner's staff noticed that the change, which was on the resident's chart, had not yet been implemented. They implemented the change prior to the survey, and notified the resident's physician of the error in medication administration a couple of days later. The survey report states that Petitioner's staff documented, on May 30, 1997, that Resident Number 26 had lost 4.8 pounds, or 5.7 percent of his body weight, in one week. This weight loss occurred during the latter part of the period during which Resident Number 26 was receiving less than his prescribed amount of medication. Two of Petitioner's witnesses testified, without elaboration, that the medication error did not cause the weight loss. The survey report implies otherwise, although Respondent's witnesses were not as pronounced as Petitioner's witnesses in dealing with any link between the medication error and the weight loss. Absent the weight loss, the medication error-- consisting of a failure to raise a digestive medication--would have been insignificant and insufficient grounds for a Class II deficiency on the cited basis. However, there was a serious weight loss while the resident was undermedicated. The lack of evidence in the record proving that there was or was not a causal link between the weight loss and undermedication means that the party bearing the risk of nonpersuasion loses on this issue. As discussed in the conclusions of law, Respondent has the burden of proof; thus, for this reason alone, Petitioner prevails on this issue. As to the last resident under Tag F 309, who was not identified, the survey asserts that a restorative aide commented that he used to walk 440 feet, but does not anymore because he thinks that he does not have to. This scanty allegation provides no basis for citing Petitioner with a deficiency, even if it applies to Resident Number 8, as appears probable. Tag F 314 also concerns a quality-of-care issue-- specifically, the development and treatment of pressure sores in three residents. As to Resident Number 1, who had been in the nursing home for three years, the survey report states that, on May 12, 1997, he had developed a Stage II pressure sore on his right outer ankle. The survey report asserts that Petitioner failed to provide sufficient care to prevent the development of this pressure sore, that Resident Number 1 had suffered pressure sores in 1995, and that Petitioner should have known and treated Resident Number 1 on the basis of his being at risk for developing pressure sores. Despite a failure to document, Petitioner's staff adequately treated Resident Number 1 once the pressure sore developed. Nursing assistants required that he wear silicone pressure booties and that lotion be rubbed on the irritated skin. In addition, Petitioner has shown that the clinical condition of Resident Number 1 made pressure sores unavoidable. One of Petitioner's Assistant Directors of Nursing testified that Resident Number 1 had poor pedal pulses, indicative of poor circulation, and a history of peripheral neuropathy. The resulting decreased sensation in his feet would prevent him from feeling increased pressure and thus the need to move his feet. Despite preventative measures, Resident Number 1 developed pressure sores due to these clinical conditions. As to Resident Number 7, who had been in the nursing home for six years, the survey report asserts that she had a Stage II pressure sore--meaning that the skin was broken--but was allowed to remained seated in the same position for two hours in a position in which the pressure on the sore on her buttock was not relieved. The survey report does not allege that this pressure sore developed while Resident Number 7 resided in the nursing home. Resident Number 7 had severe dementia and was a total-care patient. She could not move independently. In fact, she sat, unmoved, in a chair for at least 4 and 3/4 hours on one of the days of the survey. The failure to move Resident Number 7 raises serious questions about the adequacy of Petitioner's treatment. However, Petitioner's Assistant Director of Nursing answered these questions when she testified that the one- centimeter pressure sore healed five days after the survey. Thus, Petitioner provided Resident Number 7 with the necessary treatment and services to promote healing. As to Resident Number 13, who had been in the nursing home for less than three months, the survey report alleges that he had developed pressure sores while in the nursing home. Resident Number 13 was the 102-year-old resident who is also discussed in Tag F 309. The survey report alleges that, on April 24, 1997, Resident Number 13 had a red left heel, red right foot, and pink right heel; on May 1, 1997, he had soft and red heels; on May 7 and 14, 1997, his pressure sores could not be staged due to dead tissue surrounding the sores; on May 20, 1997, his left heel was documented as a Stage II pressure sore, but the right heel could not be staged due to dead tissue; and Petitioner's staff did not implement any treatment until May 12, 1997. Respondent proved the allegations cited in the preceding paragraph except for the last concerning a failure to implement any treatment until May 12. Petitioner's Assistant Director of Nursing testified that Patient Number 13 was frail and debilitated. If this is a clinical condition, it is the only statement of Patient Number 13's clinical condition contained in the record. The Assistant Director of Nursing testified that the pressure sore on the left heel healed by June 3 after the usual treatment measures of turning and repositioning and heel protectors. She testified that the pressure sore on the right heel improved somewhat, but had not healed by the time of his death in January 1998 of presumably unrelated causes. The testimony of the Assistant Director of Nursing rebuts any evidence concerning inadequate treatment of Resident Number 13, but does not establish that the development of his pressure sores was clinically unavoidable. Her testimony as to Resident Number 1 identified clinical conditions that, when coupled with the early implementation of preventative measures, established that Resident Number 1's pressure sore was unavoidable. As to Resident Number 13, the Assistant Director of Nursing also testified of early implementation of preventative measures, but, in contrast to her testimony concerning Resident Number 1, she described little, if anything, of any clinical condition making the pressure sores unavoidable. If the intent of the Assistant Director of Nursing was to imply that old age coupled with frailty and debilitation provide the necessary clinical justification, she failed to establish the necessary causal relationships among pressure sores, advanced age, and frailty and debilitation-- even if the frailty and debilitation were relative to other 102-year-olds, which the record does not reveal, as opposed to the frailty and debilitation, relative to the general population, that one might expect in a 102-year-old. Without more detailed evidence concerning Resident Number 13's clinical condition, Petitioner effectively invites the creation of a safe harbor from liability for the development of pressure sores in 102-year-olds or even 102-year-olds who are frail and debilitated for their age, and the administrative law judge declines either invitation.

Recommendation It is RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Health Care Administration enter a final order dismissing the petition filed by Petitioner and rating Petitioner's license as conditional for the relevant period. DONE AND ENTERED this 7th day of July, 1998, 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 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 7th day of July, 1998. COPIES FURNISHED: Donna H. Stinson Broad and Cassell Post Office Drawer 11300 Tallahassee, Florida 32302-1300 Karel Baarslag Agency for Health Care Administration State Regional Service Center 2295 Victoria Avenue Fort Myers, Florida 33901 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 Douglas M. Cook, Director Agency for Health Care Administration Post Office Box 14229 Tallahassee, Florida 32317-4229

Florida Laws (3) 120.57400.23425.25 Florida Administrative Code (1) 59A-4.128
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES vs. BEVERLY ENTERPRISES-FLORIDA, INC., 83-003894 (1983)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 83-003894 Latest Update: Aug. 07, 1984

Findings Of Fact On February 19, 1981, Certificate of Need No. 1843 was issued to Medical Investment Corp. to construct and operate a 120-bed nursing home in Tallahassee, Florida. Thereafter, status reports were filed by Medical Investment Corp. at regular intervals; a six-month extension was granted of the time in which the project was to be completed; and Beverly Enterprises-Florida, Petitioner, acquired the assets of Medical Investment Corp. Construction of the nursing home remained on schedule; however, before opening, Beverly Enterprises decided to experiment with the concept of converting some of the rooms to Adult Congregate Living Facilities (ACLF) rooms. Without major structural change, six of the authorized nursing home rooms were converted and two storerooms in the same wing were modified to create a 12-bed ACLF with four private and four semi-private rooms. On or before the scheduled date to open the facility as a nursing home, the facility was sufficiently complete to obtain a certificate of occupancy from the local building official and licenses from Respondent. In accordance with Respondent's desires, a license was issued on June 9, 1984, for a 12-unit ACLF and on July 5, 1983, for a 114-bed nursing home. License No. p-2-37-0224 was issued for the ACLF and License No. 1274 for the 114-bed nursing home. Respondent intended the ACLF to serve Alzheimer's patients in stages 1 and 2 who needed supervision but not the nursing home care that was required as the disease progressed in later stages. These rooms were furnished comparable to that of a nice Holiday Inn (Exhibit 14). Respondent's rates for the ACLF rooms are $50 per day semi-private and $55 per day private. After being notified that the CON for 120 beds had been reduced to the 114 beds licensed by Petitioner because those six beds were not under continuous construction after they were licensed as ACLF beds on June 9, 1983, Respondent filed this petition to contest the conclusion of Petitioner that those six beds had become null and void by reason of not being under construction at the conclusion of the time period authorized for the project. Respondent had not made final payment to the contractor during this period, a punch list of items requiring completion before final payment was provided to the contractor, one additional dryer was installed in the laundry room as required by the plans and specifications, and modifications to two linen lockers were completed after the 114 beds were licensed. As a result of this work, Respondent contends that construction was not complete and was perforce continuing after the license was issued. As a matter of agency policy Petitioner considers construction complete when the facility is ready for occupancy and is licensed to accept patients.

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FORT MYERS CARE CENTER, INC. vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 78-002505 (1978)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 78-002505 Latest Update: May 03, 1979

Findings Of Fact FMCC's application is to provide a 102-bed long-term care nursing facility in Fort Myers, Florida, while AHC's and HSI's applications are to provide 120-bed long-term nursing care facilities. When each of these applications was presented to the south Central Florida Health Systems Council, Inc. (HSA), the application of FMCC was approved and forwarded to Respondent recommending approval and the other two applications were disapproved and so forwarded. The primary reason given by HSA for disapproving HSI's application was lack of firm financing and for disapproving AHC's application was cost of construction. Trained personnel to man the proposed facilities are in short supply in Lee County. Applicants' plans to import personnel, if necessary, from other parts of the country were supported by no evidence to indicate such personnel would be amenable to move to Lee County. All applications were disapproved by Respondent and each applicant requested a hearing which resulted in this consolidated hearing. At present there are 741 existing or approved long-term care nursing home beds in Lee County, Florida. A 120-bed facility at Cape Coral became operative in February, 1979 and a 60-bed addition to Beacon-Donegan Manor nursing home has also been approved. Prior to the opening of the newest 120-bed facility at Cape Coral, the occupancy rate for the other long-term care nursing homes was greater than 90 percent. Due to its recent opening, no evidence was presented as to the occupancy rate in Lee County following the opening of the Cape Coral facility. The population of Lee County in 1978 was 184,841 with 41,984 more than 65 years old, which is less than 23 percent of the population. This is in line with the population forecasts by the University of Florida and validates the estimated 1980 population figures which were used by all parties in submitting their applications. In 1978 Respondent proposed a State Health Plan which included a determination that the long-term care nursing home bed needs were 27 per 1,000 population greater than 65 years old. This determination was unacceptable to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) whose decision is binding on Respondent. In refusing to accept this standard, HEW reaffirmed the requirement that the formula contained in the Hill-Burton Act be utilized in determining certificates of need. Following the Hill-Burton formula results in no additional long-term care nursing home beds needed in Lee County. Modification of the results produced by use of the Hill-Burton formula when extenuating and mitigating circumstances exist is authorized by the Florida Medical Facilities Plan. Accordingly, when use of Hill-Burton formula produces results contrary to obvious facts, such as a showing of no need for additional facilities when occupancy rates are high and long waiting lists for admission exists, these extenuating circumstances are considered and a finding of need is made. The parties stipulated that extenuating circumstances, notably the greater than 90 percent occupancy rate in nursing homes in 1977 and most of 1978 and the existing waiting lists created need for 100 to 120 additional beds. No evidence was presented establishing a need for more than 100-120 additional long-term care nursing home beds in Lee County. In fact, no evidence was presented showing the current occupancy rate, current waiting lists, or any other information not previously submitted to the Health Systems Agency was here presented other than the latest Census Report, which merely confirmed the accuracy of the forecasts. Even if the 27 beds per 1,000 population greater than 65 which was proposed by the South Central Florida Health Systems Agency were used to establish the number of beds needed, their limitation, that no more than 50 percent be added in the two-year planning period, would preclude approving more than one additional nursing home at this time. Absent evidence showing a need for more than one additional nursing home, the only issue remaining is which of the applicants is best qualified to provide the best service at the lowest cost for the stipulated need. HSI submitted proposed construction costs and patient charges in line with those submitted by FMCC. However, although their application states, and the Health Systems Agency apparently accepted, their allegation that an option to lease had been obtained on the property on which the proposed facility was to be erected, testimony at the hearing disclosed that only an oral agreement to lease the property had been obtained by HSI. An oral agreement affecting a long-term lease of real property comes within the Statute of Frauds and is unenforceable. This fact alone renders all cost estimates submitted by HSI suspect. Further, the financing proposed by HSI to construct the facility shows less than $200,000 equity capital available and a requirement to borrow $1,300,000. One ground noted by the Health Systems Agency for disapproving this application was the inadequacy of their financing. No evidence presented at this hearing contradicted this Health System Agency's finding. AHC operates some 50 nursing homes in 14 states with two nursing homes in the Orlando area. A certificate of need has been obtained for a third nursing home in Jacksonville. Florida Living Care, Inc., the parent corporation of FMCC, manages some 44 nursing homes and owns 25. It has certificates of need for 6 nursing homes in Florida, one of which is completed and in operation, while 3 are under construction. AHC proposes to finance 87 percent of the cost of the 120-bed project, or $2,160,000, in a 40-year loan at 8.5 percent interest. FMCC proposes to finance 80 percent of the cost of a 102-bed project, or $1,000,000, in a 25-year loan at 9.5 percent interest. Although no testimony regarding the current status of mortgage money was presented, it is recognized that interest rates are at historically high levels and that FMCC is more likely to get financing on the terms it proposed than is AHC on the terms the latter proposed. HSI proposed costs and charges result in average costs of $30.16 per patient per day. FMCC proposed costs and charges result in average costs of $30.96 per patient per day. AHC proposed costs and charges result in average costs of $34.40 per patient per day. No significant difference exists in the services proposed by each of the applicants. Savings from combined purchasing can result when numerous facilities are operated. Both AHC and FMCC are in a better position in this regard than is HSI. Additional savings in group food purchasing can result when facilities are within 200 miles of each other. The facilities FMCC's parent corporation is opening in Sebring and Port Charlotte are close enough to Fort Myers to allow group food purchasing for these facilities. AHC's construction costs are approximately 50 percent higher per bed than are the costs submitted by FMCC and HSI. This factor must result in higher charges to amortize these higher construction costs.

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KENSINGTON MANOR, INC. vs DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 90-003665 (1990)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tallahassee, Florida Jun. 13, 1990 Number: 90-003665 Latest Update: Mar. 14, 1991

Findings Of Fact The department hereby adopts and incorporates by reference the findings of fact set forth in the Recommended Order.

Recommendation It is recommended that a Final Order be entered granting Kensington Manor Inc. CON No. 6430 to construct a 120 bed nursing home and to rehabilitate the existing 147 bed nursing home to an 87 bed nursing home in Sarasota County. RECOMMENDED this 14th day of March, 1991, in Tallahassee, Florida. K. N. AYERS Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Desoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, FL 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 14th day of March, 1991. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NO. 90-3665 Petitioner's proposed findings are accepted, except #5. Sentence stating "There are no laundry facilities in the nursing home." is rejected as inconsistent with proposed finding #7. Respondent's proposed findings are also accepted. Most of the defects in the application which Respondent finds to be not in compliance with the statutory requirements were corrected by the testimony at this hearing. COPIES FURNISHED: Alfred W. Clark, Esquire 1725 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, FL 32308 Richard Patterson, Esquire 2727 Mahan Drive Tallahassee, FL 32308 Sam Power Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, FL 32399-0700 Linda Harris General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, FL 32399-0700 =================================================================

Florida Laws (2) 395.003400.062
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HEALTH QUEST CORPORATION (SARASOTA COUNTY) vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES AND TRECOR, INC., D/B/A BURZENSKI NURSING HOME, 88-001945 (1988)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 88-001945 Latest Update: Mar. 14, 1989

The Issue Whether a certificate of need for an additional 60 nursing home beds to be located in Sarasota County, Florida, in July, 1990, should be granted to any of the four competing certificate of need applicants in these proceedings?

Findings Of Fact Procedural. Arbor, Health Quest, HCR, Trecor and fourteen other applicants filed certificate of need applications with the Department in the October, 1987, nursing home bed certificate of need review cycle of the Department for Sarasota County. Each of the applicants involved in these cases filed a letter of intent with the Department within the time required for the filing of letters of intent for the October, 1987, nursing home bed certificate of need review cycle. Each of the applicants involved in these cases filed their certificate of need application within the time required for the filing of certificate of need applications for the October, 1987, nursing home bed certificate of need review cycle. The applications were deemed complete by the Department. The Department completed its State Agency Action Report for the October, 1987, nursing home bed review cycle on February 19, 1988. The State Agency Action Report relevant to these cases was published by the Department in the Florida Administrative Weekly on March 4, 1988. The Department proposed to approve the certificate of need application filed by Trecor and to deny all other applications. Eleven of the applicants whose certificate of need applications were denied by the Department filed Petitions pursuant to Section 120.57(1), Florida Statutes, challenging the Department's proposed action. All of the Petitioner's except the three Petitioners in these cases withdrew their Petitions. The Parties. The Department. The Department is the agency responsible for reviewing certificate of need applications for or nursing home beds to be located in Sarasota County, Florida. Arbor. Arbor is a nursing home company that designs, develops, constructs and operates nursing homes. Arbor's corporate headquarters are located in Lima, Ohio. Arbor owns and operates eighteen nursing home and adult congregate living facilities comprising approximately 2,218 beds. In Florida, Arbor owns Lake Highlands Nursing and Retirement Center in Clermont, The Village at Brandon, and The Village at Countryside. In Florida, Arbor is currently developing certificate of need approved facilities in Clay, Orange, Polk, Pinellas and Sarasota Counties. Arbor formed Sarasota Health Center, Inc., to hold the certificate of need it is seeking in this proceeding. Although this corporation is in form the applicant, Arbor is in substance the applicant in these proceedings. Health Quest. Health Quest is an Indiana corporation which has been in the business of constructing and operating nursing homes and retirement housing facilities for approximately twenty years. Health Quest currently operates eleven nursing centers and three retirement housing developments. In Florida, Health Quest operates three nursing centers and two retirement housing developments. The nursing centers are located in Sarasota, Jacksonville and Boca Raton, Florida. The Jacksonville center is located adjacent to, and is operated in conjunction with, a retirement facility. The facility located in Sarasota is Regents Park of Sarasota (hereinafter referred to as "Regents Park"), a 53-bed sheltered nursing center. Regents Park is located at Lake Pointe Woods, a Health Quest retirement community, which includes 212 independent living apartments and 110 assisted living apartments. The assisted living apartments qualify as an adult congregate living facility. The 53 sheltered nursing home beds are authorized as part of a living care complex pursuant to Chapter 651, Florida Statutes. Health Quest has received approval from the Department to locate 60 nursing home beds, which Health Quest has received as part of a certificate of need for 180 nursing home beds, at Regents Park. The other 120 approved nursing home beds will be located at another facility to be constructed in Sarasota County by Health Quest. Health Quest also has two other projects under construction in Florida: a new facility in Winter Park, Florida, and a new facility in Sunrise, Florida. HCR. HCR is a corporation engaging in the business of designing, developing, constructing and operating nursing homes and related facilities. HCR is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Owens Illinois Corporation. HCR operates approximately 125 facilities with approximately 16,000 beds. HCR has designed and built over 200 nursing homes and related health care facilities. 24 HCR owns and operates ten nursing homes in Florida, including Kensington Manor, a 147-bed nursing center located in Sarasota County, Florida. HCR also has ten other projects being developed in Florida. Trecor. Trecor is a Florida corporation formed to engage in the business of developing and operating facilities within the full spectrum of the health care industry. Trecor was founded in 1985 when it acquired Burzenski Nursing Home (hereinafter referred to as "Burzenski"). Trecor does not own or operate any other health care facility. Burzenski is an existing nursing home with 60 dually certified beds located in the City of Sarasota. The facility was built in 1955 as a private residence. An addition to the facility was constructed in 1962. The Proposals. Arbor's Proposal. Pursuant to a stipulation with the Department dated September 9, 1987, Arbor received certificate of need 4182. Certificate of need 4182 authorizes Arbor to construct a 60-bed nursing home in Sarasota County. 20. Arbor's approved 60-bed nursing home facility will consist of 18,000 gross square feet. Costs of $2,200,000.00 have been approved by the Department in the certificate of need issued for the facility. Arbor intends to develop certificate of need 4182 by building a facility large enough for 120 beds. This facility will house the approved 60 nursing home beds and, if Arbor's application in this case is not approved, an additional 60 beds, licensed as adult congregate living facility beds. In this proceeding Arbor is requesting approval of a proposed conversion of the 60 adult congregate living facility beds to 60 nursing home beds. Arbor has proposed the construction of an additional 18,000 gross square feet to house the additional 60 nursing home beds sought in this proceeding. The proposed cost of the proposal is $2,380,000.00. The total cost of 120 bed facility will be $4,580,000.00. Health Quest's Proposal. Health Quest is seeking approval to convert its 53 sheltered nursing center beds at Regents Park to nursing home beds and to add 7 nursing home beds. The 60 nursing home beds are to be housed in the new community nursing home facility at Regents Park. The beds will be housed in 30,945 square foot of the Regents Park facility. Health Quest also intends to add 60 nursing home beds, which have already been approved by the Department, to Regents Park. The certificate of need application filed by Health Quest indicates that its proposal involves no capital costs. This is incorrect. There will be minimal costs associated with the addition of the 7 additional nursing home beds being sought by Health Quest which it has failed to include in its proposal. Health Quest did not present evidence concerning the total cost of the facility it plans to use to house the proposed 60 beds or the cost of the 60 beds already approved by the Department which it plans to add to Regents Park. HCR's Proposal. HCR is seeking approval to construct a new, freestanding 60-bed nursing home in Sarasota County. HCR's proposal also includes a 31-bed adult congregate living facility. The nursing home component will consist of 25,600 gross square feet (including 2,300 square feet to be used for adult day care). The total facility will consist of 43,000 gross square feet. Total capital cost for the nursing home component is estimated to be $2,519,000.00. The total cost, including the costs attributable to proposed adult day care services, is $2,657,000.00. The cost of the 31-bed adult congregate living portion of the project will be $1,800,000.00. The total cost of HCR's planned facility is $4,457,000.00. Trecor's Proposal. Trecor is seeking approval to construct a 60-bed addition to the Burzenski 60-bed nursing home. Burzenski is located at 4450 Eighth Street, Sarasota, Florida. The building in which the existing 60 nursing home beds are housed will be replaced by Trecor with a new building. The existing Burzenski building has out-lived its useful life and contains several structural deficiencies. Operations are severely restricted and inefficient. Existing three and four bed wards limit the placement of residents. The existing building does not comply with all current licensure requirements. The noncompliance, however, was "grandfathered" in. In order to replace its existing building with a modern building which meets all current licensure requirements, Trecor applied for a certificate of need in 1985 to build a replacement facility on an adjoining parcel of real estate for which Trecor held an option to purchase at the time. This application was approved on December 4, 1985. After an error by Trecor caused the time established for exercising the certificate of need to pass and a requested six-month extension of the certificate of need was denied by the Department, the certificate of need to construct the replacement facility lapsed. Another application for a replacement facility was filed in January, 1987. This application was approved by the Department in May, 1987. The replacement facility was not, however, constructed. Subsequently, in April and May, 1988, the Department determined that replacement of the existing building was exempt from certificate of need review. Trecor now proposes to add 60 nursing home beds at the same time that it builds its replacement facility for its existing 60 nursing home beds. The new nursing home beds will be housed on a second floor to be built on the replacement facility. In Trecor's application for (30 additional nursing home beds, Trecor has proposed the addition of 12,061 gross square feet to its replacement facility and a project cost of $885,210.00. The cost of Trecor's replacement facility will be $1,303,424.00 plus a $1,400,000.00 debt on the existing building. The total cost of Trecor's 120 bed facility will be $3,588,634.00. Section 381.705(1)(a), Florida Statutes. Numeric Need. Pursuant to the need methodology of Rule 10- 5.011(1)(k)(2), Florida Administrative Code, there is a need for an additional 75 community nursing home beds for Sarasota County for July, 1990, the planning horizon applicable in these cases. All of the applicants have agreed with the Department's determination of the need for additional nursing home beds for Sarasota County. All of the applicants are seeking to provide 60 of the needed nursing home beds. The District Health Plan. The district health plan for the Department's District 8, which includes Sarasota County, provides certain standards and criteria to be considered in determining community nursing home care need. The policy guidelines and their application, if applicable to the applicants in this proceeding, are as follows: Community nursing home services should be available to the residents of each county within District Eight. Sarasota County is a separate planning subdistrict for community nursing home beds. Therefore, this guideline should be applied to Sarasota County. All of the applicants will increase the availability of nursing home services to the residents of Sarasota County. Community nursing home beds should be geographically distributed throughout the counties of District Eight to promote optimal availability and accessibility. The 2,264 existing licensed and 283 approved community nursing home beds located, or to be located in Sarasota County, are already geographically distributed throughout Sarasota County. All of the applicants will increase geographic distribution of beds throughout Sarasota County, regardless of where they may be located. At a minimum, community nursing home facilities should make available, in addition to minimum statutory regulation, in the facility or under contractual arrangements, the following services: pharmacy g. occupational therapy laboratory h. physical therapy x-ray i. speech therapy dental care j. mental health counseling visual care k. social services diet therapy l. medical services All of the applicants will meet thin guideline. New and existing community nursing home bed developments should dedicate 33-1/3 percent of their beds to use for Medicaid patients. The applicants have proposed to provide the following percentage of care to Medicaid patients: Arbor: 45% Health Quest: 16.7% HCR: 42% Burzenski: 59% 1st Year; 60% 2d Year. All of the applicants except Health Quest comply with this guideline. Community nursing home facilities in District Eight should expand their financial base to include as many reimbursement mechanisms as are available to them including Medicare, Medicaid, Champus, VA, and other third-party payers, and private pay. This guideline applies to existing facilities. None of the applicants are proposing to "expand their financial bases" in the manner suggested in this guideline. Community nursing home (skilled and intermediate care) facilities in each county should maintain an occupancy rate of at least 90 percent. This guideline has been filled. New community nursing home facilities may be considered for approval when existing facilities servicing comparable services areas cannot reasonably, economically, or geographically provide adequate service to these service areas. Existing facilities cannot reasonably meet the need for the 75 additional nursing home beds in Sarasota County for July, 1990. No new community nursing home facility should be constructed having less than 60 beds. However, less than 60 beds may be approved as part of an established acute care hospital facility. All of the applicants meets this guideline. Expansion of existing facilities to 120 beds should be given priority over construction of new facilities in the health service area. The proposals of Arbor, Health Quest and Trecor meet this guideline. The proposal of HCR does not meet this guideline. Each nursing home facility should have a patient transfer agreement with one or more hospitals within an hour's travel time, or the nearest hospital within the same community. All of the applicants meet, or will meet, this guideline. The proposed project should have a formal discharge planning program as well as some type of patient follow-up service with discharge/transfer made available seven days a week. All of the applicants meet this guideline. Nursing home services should be within at least one hour typical travel time by automobile for at least 95 percent of all residents of District Eight. This guideline is not applicable. Community nursing homes should be accessible to residents throughout District Eight regardless of their ability to pay. All of the applicants meet this guideline. Health Quest meets this guideline less than the other applicants because of its minimal Medicaid commitment. All community nursing homes and applicants for community nursing homes should document their history of participation in Medicaid and medicare programs, and provide data on an ongoing basis to the District Eight Local Health Council as requested. All of the applicants meet this guideline. Health Quest has not, however, provided Medicaid care at Regents Park. Health Quest does provide Medicaid at all its other nursing centers and will obtain Medicaid certification at Regents Park if its application for a certificate of need in this case is approved. Medicare is not provided at Burzenski at this time. Burzenski will, however, provide Medicare at its proposed facility. Failure of a holder of a certificate of need to substantially comply with statements of intent made in the application and relied upon the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services as set forth in the Certificate shall be cause for the Department to initiate an action for specific performance, fines as specified in s. 381.495(3), or injunctive relief. This guideline is not applicable. Need for Services. HCR conducted a "non-numeric community need survey" in Sarasota County. Based upon this survey, HCR has suggested that there is an unmet need for 1,600 nursing home beds for Sarasota County for Alzheimer patients and other dementia patients. HCR's conclusions concerning unmet need for services for Sarasota County are unrealistic. HCR failed to prove that any need in Sarasota County for services for Alzheimer patients and others is not being met adequately. Services for Alzheimer patients are currently being provided by Trecor and Health Quest. HCR and Trecor have proposed to dedicate 30 of their proposed nursing home beds to the care of Alzheimer patients and patients with other forms of dementia. All of the applicants propose to provide a full range of services to their residents, including sub-acute care. Other Considerations. Health Quest's avowed purpose for the proposed conversion of its 53 sheltered beds is to insure that Regents Park remains available for use by the general public. Florida law allows sheltered nursing home beds to be used by persons other than residents of an adult congregate living facility for five years from the issuance of a license for the sheltered nursing home beds. Regents Park received its license in November, 1986. Therefore, its sheltered nursing home beds can remain available for use by the general public until November, 1991. Health Quest has received a certificate of need for 180 nursing home beds for Sarasota. Health Quest intends on placing 60 of those beds at Regents Park. The other 120 beds will be placed at another facility to be constructed in Sarasota County. Health Quest may be able to use some of its 180 approved nursing home beds to avoid the closing of Regents Park to the general public. Health Quest has not, however, explored this alternative. Health Quest's decision not to pursue this course of action is based in part on its decision that the 43% Medicaid care required for its certificate of need for 180 nursing home beds is not acceptable at Regents Park. Health Quest has failed to prove that its proposal is needed because of its desire to convert its sheltered beds to community nursing home beds. Section 381.705(1)(b), Florida Statutes. The evidence in this case failed to prove that like and existing health care services in Sarasota County are not available, efficient, appropriate, accessible, adequate or providing quality of care except to the extent that existing services cannot meet the need for 75 additional nursing home beds in Sarasota County. Section 381.705(1)(c), Florida Statutes. Arbor. Two of Arbor's three licensed facilities in Florida are currently rated superior. The other facility is rated standard. Arbor's proposal may qualify it for a superior rating at its proposed facility. Arbor proposes to provide sufficient services, safeguards and staff. Arbor should be able to provide adequate quality of care in its proposed facility. Health Quest. Health Quest has a corporate policy of emphasizing quality of care. It attempts to obtain the highest quality rating in every community it serves. Health Quest's facilities in Jacksonville and Boca Raton have been rated superior. Health Quest's Sarasota facility has not been in operation long enough to qualify for a superior rating. Health Quest's Sarasota facility offers a high level of staffing, including a Human Resources Director, who is responsible for personnel administration and training, a full time social activities director and an activities coordinator. It also has a high nursing ratio. Health Quest is proposing the highest level of staffing of the applicants in this proceeding. Extensive training and development of staff at Health Quest's Sarasota facility is provided. Orientation training and in-service training on an on- going basis will be provided. Health Quest proposes to provide sufficient services, safeguards and staff. Health Quest should be able to provide adequate quality of care in its proposed facility. HCR. HCR's existing Sarasota nursing home has received a license with a standard rating. Other HCR facilities have received standard ratings, including some facilities which were acquired by HCR with superior ratings. HCR also has facilities which have been rated superior. HCR will enhance the quality of care available by providing a full range of services, from the least intensive level (adult day care) to the most intensive levels (i.e., sub- acute care). HCR's proposal to provide adult day care, a dedicated Alzheimer's unit, sub-acute care and respite care, and its adult congregate living facility will enhance quality of care in Sarasota County. HCR adheres to extensive quality assurance standards and guidelines. HCR provides adequate training, exceeding state minimum requirements, for its staff. HCR proposes to provide sufficient services, safeguards and staff. HCR should be able to provide adequate quality of care in its proposed facility. Trecor. Trecor has contracted with Central Care, Inc., a Florida corporation providing a full spectrum of health care and retirement living services, to manage its facility. Trecor provides education and training for its staff on an ongoing basis. Even though Trecor is operating in an inadequate building, Trecor received a superior rating in 1986-1987 and 1987-1988. Trecor proposes to provide sufficient services, safeguards and staff. Trecor should be able to provide adequate quality of care in its proposed facility. Section 381.705(1)(e), Florida Statutes. None of the applicants provided sufficient proof to conclude that they will provide joint, cooperative or shared health care resources sufficient to provide them with an advantage over the other applicants. Section 381.705(1)(f), Florida Statutes. None of the applicants proved that there is any need in the service district for special equipment or services which are not reasonably and economically accessible in adjoining areas. Section 381.705(1)(g), Florida Statutes. None of the applicants proved that this criterion applies in this proceeding. Section 381.705(1)(h), Florida Statutes. All of the applicants' proposals will be accessible to all residents of the service district. Health Quest will, however, provide less access to Medicaid residents than the other applicants. Trecor will attempt to initiate internship and training programs for area nursing and allied health programs, and provide clinical placements. Health Quest participates in training programs for nurses from Sarasota Vocational/Technical school. A certified nursing aide program is also offered by Health Quest through Sarasota Vocational/Technical School. All of the applicants will be able to attract and maintain the staff necessary to operate their proposed facilities. HCR is proposing to provide the highest salaries and benefits for staff. Health Quest already has staff for its existing 53 beds. Health Quest is adding, however, 60 nursing home beds to Regents Park. HCR failed to prove that all of the existing staff will be used to staff the proposed 60 nursing home beds and not the already approved 60 nursing home beds. Section 381.705(1)(i), Florida Statutes. Immediate Financial Feasibility. Short-term financial feasibility is the ability of an applicant to finance a project. Arbor. The total projected cost of Arbor's proposed 60-bed addition is $2,380,000.00. The total cost for its 120-bed facility is $4,580,000.00. Arbor's projected costs are reasonable. Arbor is proposing to contribute 10% of the cost of its proposal and finance the remaining 90%. Arbor has $39,000,000.00 in bank lines of credit, of which $34,000,000.00 remain available for development of Arbor's proposed project. Arbor also has sufficient money market funds to meet its projected equity contribution of 10%. Arbor has demonstrated immediate financial feasibility of its proposed project. Health Quest. Health Quest indicated in its application that there were no capital costs associated with its proposal. This is not correct. It will have some minor costs for the addition of the seven new nursing home beds it is seeking. Health Quest's proposal is the lowest in terms of additional capital costs which must be incurred. Most of the capital costs associated with the 53 nursing home beds it is seeking were already incurred when it built Regents Park. Health Quest did not provide proof of the cost of Regents Park. The unaudited financial statements of Health Quest indicate that it experienced a loss of $3,200,000.00 in 1986 and a loss of $5,000,000.00 in 1987. Health Quest has net worth and equity of $300,000.00 on over $200,000,000.00 in assets. The losses Health Quest has been experiencing have been the result of Health Quest's development activities. Health Quest can finance its project with internal funds. The evidence failed to prove that Health Quest must liquidate assets to generate operating funds. Health Quest demonstrated immediate financial feasibility of its proposed project. HCR. HCR's total estimated project costs for its 60-bed facility is $2,657,000.00. This amount includes the cost of the portion of the project to be used for adult day care ($138,000.00). The costs to be incurred for the adult congregate living facility is $1,800,000.00. HCR's projected costs are reasonable. HCR intends to contribute 25% of the total project costs and finance the remaining 75%. HCR has sufficient funds on hand to fund 25% of its project costs. In fact, HCR has the ability to contribute 100% of the total project costs. HCR has lines of credit with banks and other sources of obtaining financing for the project, including a loan from its parent corporation. HCR has demonstrated immediate financial feasibility of its proposed project. Trecor. The total cost of Trecor's proposed 60-bed nursing home addition is $885,210.00. The total cost of replacing the existing Burzenski building is projected as $3,588,634.00 ($885,210.00 for the proposed addition; $1,400,000.00 debt on the existing building; and $1,303,424.00 for the replacement of the existing building). Trecor is proposing to contribute 10% of the proposed project costs, or $88,521.00, and to finance the remaining 90%. To finance the entire project will require an equity contribution of over $300,000.00. Trecor has experienced operating losses in 1986 and 1987 and has a negative net worth of $259,000.00. Trecor has a positive cash flow, however. Trecor does not have sufficient equity to contribute 10% of the proposed project costs. The Board of Directors of Trecor has, however, adopted a resolution indicating Trecor's intent to provide the necessary contribution. Trecor can obtain the necessary funds from its owners if necessary. NCNB has expressed an interest in financing the rest of the project. Although NCNB has not legally committed to such an arrangement, it is reasonable to conclude that a satisfactory loan agreement can be reached with NCNB or Barnett Bank. Trecor has demonstrated immediate financial feasibility of its proposed project. Long-Term Financial Feasibility. Long-term financial feasibility is the ability of an applicant to operate a project at a profit, generally measured at the end of the second year of operation. Arbor. At the formal hearing Arbor presented an updated pro forma. Arbor suggested that the purpose of the updated pro forma was to reflect increased personnel costs and reduced utilization from 97% to 95%. According to Arbor, the changes reflect changes caused by inflation and "actual experience." The updated pro forma submitted by Arbor includes substantial increases in salary expense ranging from 10% to 30% (and one increase of 50%). The updated pro forma also includes at least one position not included in the original pro forma filed with Arbor's application. Arbor's original pro forma understated salary expenses. The updated salary expenses were foreseeable, and should have been foreseen, when Arbor filed its application. The updated pro forma was accepted into evidence over objection. In the updated pro forma, Arbor has projected a loss of $347,043.00 from revenue of $2,034,837.00 for the first year of operation and a profit of $41,833.00 from revenue of $3,016,512.00 for the second year of operation. Arbor has projected a payor mix of 45% Medicaid, 5% Medicare and 50% private pay. These projections are reasonable. Arbor's projected fill-up rate is reasonable. Arbor's projected charges are reasonable. The evidence failed to prove that Arbor's projected revenue and expenses as contained in its original application are reasonable. The evidence also failed to prove that Arbor's projected expenses as contained in its updated pro forma are reasonable either. Arbor has failed to prove that its project is feasible in the long term. Health Quest. Health Quest is operating at close to capacity at Regents Park and is already charging close to its projected patient charges. The facility has been operating at a loss. The facility experienced a profit only during its latest month of operation. The addition of Medicaid beds will erode Health Quest's revenues to some extent. Health Quest has projected a profit of $16,663.00 from revenue of $1,771,303.00 for the first year of operation and a profit of $40,698.00 from revenue of $1,850,156.00 for the second year of operation. Health Quest is projecting a payor mix of 16.7% Medicaid, 4.2% medicare and 79.2% private pay. These projections are reasonable. Regents Park opened in November, 1986, and filled up rapidly. It has been operating at full occupancy and with a waiting list. Health Quest's estimated fill up rate is reasonable in light of this fact. Health Quest has failed to prove that its project is feasible in the long term. HCR. HCR has projected a loss of $267,436.00 on $1,068,427.00 of revenue for its first year of operation and a profit of $62,729.00 on $1,772,399.00 of revenue for its second year of operation. HCR has projected a payor mix of 42% Medicaid, 4% medicare and 54% private pay. These projections are reasonable. HCR's projected fill-up rate to 95% occupancy is reasonable. HCR's projected patient charges are reasonable. HCR's projected revenue and expenses are reasonable. HCR's project is feasible in the long term. (4). Trecor. Trecor has projected a profit of $77,458.00 on revenue of $2,481,229.00 for the first year of operation and a profit of $367,896.00 on revenue of $3,106,152.00 for the second year of operation. The pro forma submitted by Trecor is for the 120-bed nursing home facility and not just the proposed 60-bed project. Trecor has a negative net worth and Trecor has been operating at a loss. Trecor has projected a payor mix of 59% Medicaid, 3.5% medicare, 34% private pay and 3.5% V.A. These projections are reasonable. Trecor has estimated it will achieve 50% occupancy in the first month of operation and an occupancy of 96% by the seventh month. This is a fill up rate of 2 residents a week. Arbor and HCR have projected fill up rates of 2 residents a month. Trecor does not expect to lose any patients during construction of its facility. Trecor is currently at full occupancy and has a waiting list. Trecor's projected fill up rate is achievable. Trecor's projected patient charges are reasonable. They are the lowest of the competing applicants. Trecor has failed to include some expenses in its projections. Trecor left $50,000.00 of administrative salaries out of its projections and FICA is underestimated because Trecor used the old rate. When these expenses are taken into account, Trecor's project is still financially feasible. Trecor's projected revenue and expenses, except as noted above, are reasonable. Trecor's project is feasible in the long term. Section 381.705(1)(1), Florida Statutes. Based upon the projected rates for nursing home services to be charged by the applicants, Arbor and Trecor will have the least adverse impact on patient charges, followed by HCR. Health Quest will have the greatest adverse impact on patient charges. Generally, all of the applicants will enhance competition if their projects are approved. Section 381.705(1)(m), Florida Statutes. Arbor. Arbor's building will contain 36,000 gross square feet, with 18,000 gross square feet attributable to the 60 nursing home beds it is seeking in this proceeding. The cost of Arbor's proposed 60-bed addition is $2,380,000.00 ($132.22 per square foot) and the cost of its entire project is $4,580,000.00. The projected cost of construction is $1,228,000.00, a cost of $68.22 per square foot. Arbor's projected costs are reasonable. Arbor's proposed building will provide 300 square feet per bed. Arbor plans to build its prototype 120-bed nursing home facility. It has used its 120-bed nursing home plans for other Florida projects. These plans have been approved by the Department's Office of Licensure and Certification. Arbors' building will comply with all code and regulatory requirements. The building will be constructed on a 6.5 acre site which is appropriately zoned and of sufficient size. The design of Arbor's proposed building and the proposed methods of construction are reasonable. Health Quest. Health Quest has already constructed the building in which its proposed 60 nursing home beds dire to be located. The building is already licensed. The building complies witch all code and regulatory requirements. A total of 30,945 square feat will be devoted to the nursing home portion of Regents Park. This is the largest of the proposed facilities. The proposed building will have 515 square feet per bed. There are no construction costs to be incurred for Health Quest's proposal. Construction costs have already been incurred to construct the facility in which Health Quest's proposed beds will be housed. Health Quest's building design is of the highest quality. HCR. HCR is proposing to construct a 60-bed nursing home. Additional space for 31 adult congregate living beds and for an additional 60 nursing home beds will also be built. The facility will include a dedicated 30-bed Alzheimer's unit. The inclusion of this unit requires more space. The proposed HCR building will consist of 25,600 square feet for the 60-bed nursing home. This includes the $138,240.00 cost and the 2,300 square feet of the adult day care unit. The projected cost of HCR's project is $2,657,000.00 or $103.79 per square foot. The projected cost of constructing HCR's proposed building is $1,536,000.00 or $60.00 a square foot. HCR's projected costs are reasonable. 166. HCR's facility will consist of 426 square feet per bed. 167. HCR's facility will comply with code and regulatory requirements. 168. HCR's design and methods of construction are reasonable. 169. HCR's facility will incorporate energy conservation measures. Trecor. The Trecor proposal entails the addition of a 60-bed patient wing on the second floor of a two-story building. The first floor of the building will be constructed by Trecor to replace its existing building. Approval of the replacement facility is not part Trecor's proposal at issue in this proceeding. The plans for the replacement building and the addition thereto have been developed together. The plans can be modified to insure that all of the proposed services can be accommodated in the building. The proposed Trecor building will be constructed in phases. First, the portion of the new building which will house the 120 nursing home beds will be constructed. Patients will then be transferred to the newly constructed facility. All of the existing building except the kitchen and administration facilities will then be demolished. Patients will be fed out of the existing kitchen and the administrative functions will be handled form the old administrative facilities. The new kitchen, dining and administrative offices will then be constructed. When this portion of the building is completed, the old kitchen and administrative offices will be demolished. Although inconvenient, Trecor should be able to continue to provide quality of care during the construction period. The other applicants have raised a number of issues concerning the Trecor building. The issues do not, however, involve violations of code or regulatory requirements for nursing home facilities. Trecor's building will contain a total of 31,398 square feet. This total includes 19,337 square feet attributable to the existing 60 nursing home beds and 12,061 square feet attributable to the 60 nursing home beds at issue in this proceeding. The proposed building is relatively small. Trecor's architect did a very good job of properly using the relatively small parcel of real estate he had to work with. The small size of the building, however, accounts for the lower cost of the Trecor proposal. The evidence failed to prove that Trecor cannot provide adequate care, despite the building's size. The cost of Trecor's proposed 60-bed addition is $885,210.00 ($73.39 per square foot) and the cost of its replacement facility is $1,303,424.00. The projected cost of construction for Trecor's proposed 60-bed addition is $592,500.00, a cost of $49.13 per square foot. Questions have been raised concerning the project development costs and the estimated architecture/engineer fees for Trecor's project. Trecor did not include all of the expenses for these items in the projected costs of its proposed 60-bed addition because the costs were included as part of building the replacement facility. Some of those costs could have been included as part of the cost of the proposal being reviewed in this proceeding. If those costs had been included, their inclusion would not affect the conclusions reached in this proceeding concerning the reasonableness of Trecor's project. Trecor's projected costs are reasonable. Trecor's proposed building will provide 201 square feet for the proposed 60 nursing home beds, 322 square feet for the existing 60 nursing home beds and 261 square feet for the total 120 nursing home beds. Trecor's building will comply with all code and regulatory requirements. The Trecor facility will be located on 1.97 acres. The design of the Trecor building and the proposed methods of construction are reasonable. Trecor's facility will incorporate energy conservation measures. Section 381.705(1)(n), Florida Statutes. All of the applicants have a history of providing care to Medicaid patients. Health Quest, however, does not provide care to Medicaid patients at Regents Park. If Health Quest's application is approved, Regents Park will become Medicaid certified. The projected Medicaid of the applicants is as follows: Arbor: 45% Health Quest 16.7% HCR 42% Burzenski 59% first year; 60% second year All of the applicants except Health Quest are proposing to provide at least 42% Medicaid, which is the average Medicaid provided in Sarasota County.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Department issue a Final Order granting Trecor's application for certificate of need number 5443 and denying Arbor's application for certificate of need number 5841, Health Quest's application for certificate of need number 5442 and HCR's application for certificate of need number 5437. DONE and ENTERED this 14th day of March, 1989, in Tallahassee, Florida. LARRY J. SARTIN 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 14th day of March, 1989. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NOS. 88-1945; 88-1949; 88-1950 The parties have submitted proposed findings of fact. It has been noted below which proposed findings of fact have been generally accepted and the paragraph number(s) in the Recommended Order where they have been accepted, if any. Those proposed findings of fact which have been rejected and the reason for their rejection have also been noted. Arbor's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1 10-13. 2 1 and 29-33. 3 15-21 and hereby accepted. 4 19-20, 34 and 36. 5 22-25. 6 37-40. 7 26-27. 28, 41 and 44-47. Trecor applied for a certificate of need in January, 1987, not May, 1987. Hereby accepted. Not all of the applicants in this proceeding, however, have met the minimum criteria for the issuance of a certificate of need. Not supported by the weight of the evidence and a statement concerning the proceedings. 51. The last two sentences are argument. 51. The fifth through ninth sentences are argument. The evidence proved that Health Quest is adding 60 nursing home beds to its existing facility. Therefore, if its application in this case is approved it will have a 120-bed nursing home facility. 51. The last five sentences are statements of law and argument. Statement of law or not supported by the weight of the evidence. 15 64-66. 16 67-69 and 73. 74 and hereby accepted. The last two sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. 43 and 81. The fifth, sixth and eighth sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. The third, fourth and seventh sentences are hereby accepted. Although this proposed finding of fact, except the last sentence, is generally correct, this is not the only factor to consider in determining whether an applicant can provide quality of care. Argument, not relevant to this proceeding or not supported by the weight of the evidence. 52-55 and hereby accepted. The last sentence, except the reference to the state health plan, is hereby accepted. The second, sixth, ninth, tenth and eleventh sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence or are argument. See 52-56. Argument. 56 and hereby accepted. 85, 87-88 and hereby accepted. The last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 51, 60-61 and 86. The second, third, sixth, eighth, ninth and tenth sentences are not relevant to this proceeding, not supported by the weight of the evidence or argument. 26 92 and 114. 27 95-97 and 106-107. 28 98 and 100. 109-111. The last five sentences are argument and not supported by the weight of the evidence. See 111-113. 97 and 107. Short-term financial feasibility of Health Quest is not moot and Trecor can finance its project with the assistance of its shareholders. Hereby accepted. The last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 115 and 118. The last four sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence or are argument. 119-120. The last two sentences are not relevant to this proceeding or are not supported by the weight of the evidence. See 123. 34 130 and 134. 125, 127 and 132. The fifth sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. The last sentence is hereby accepted. 136-137 and 143. The first and last sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. 38-39 Not supported by the weight of the evidence, argument, not relevant to these proceedings or taken into account in determining the weight to be accorded to testimony. 40 Hereby accepted. The first and last sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. 41 139-141. 42 See 97, 103, 107, 113, 124, 129, 135 and 145. Arbor has not proven that it is financially feasible in the long term. The last three sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. 43, 46 and 56 Statements of law. 146 and hereby accepted. Hereby accepted. 47 148 and 153-155. 48 157-158, 160 and 175. 49 161-163 and 175. 171, 175, 180 and hereby accepted. The sixth, ninth and tenth sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. 171. The last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 52-54 Not supported by the weight of the evidence, argument or not relevant to this proceeding. 55 185 and 187-188. The last sentence is argument. 57-58 These proposed findings of fact are contrary to the stipulation of the parties. The parties stipulated prior to commencement of the formal hearing in this case that the criteria to be considered in determining which applicant was entitled to a certificate of need were contained in Section 381.705, Florida Statutes. Additionally, the Department accepted all of the applicants' certificate of need applications as being complete. It would not be proper for the Department to now disqualify an applicant on the grounds that its application is not complete. Health Quest's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1 1. 2 32, 34, 37 and 41. 3 2. 4 3. 4 and 6. 7. Not all of the applicants filed petitions. 7 48. 8 15-16. 9 67-68. 10 17-19. 11 21. 12 19. 13 58-59. See 57. The weight of the evidence did not prove that Regents Park will be closed to the public "unless Health Quest's application for conversion to community status is approved." 14-15 Not supported by the weight of the evidence and not relevant to this proceeding. 16 See 36. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. 17-19 Not supported by the weight of the evidence or not relevant to this proceeding. 20 70 and hereby accepted. 21, 24, 27, 30-48, 52, 54-57, 61, 64, 70, 77, 88-89, 93, 95, 97, 107-108, 110-111, 113, 118, 124, 126, 128-129, 132, 135-136 and 138-139. Hereby accepted. 22 Hereby accepted and summary of testimony. The last two sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. See 91. 23 72. 25-26 88 and hereby accepted. 56 and hereby accepted. Not relevant to this proceeding. 49 Hereby accepted. The last two sentences are not relevant to this proceeding, are based upon hearsay and constitute opinion testimony from a nonexpert witness. 50 69. 51 Not relevant to this proceeding or based upon hearsay. 53 126 and 128. 58 Hereby accepted. The last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 59 157. 60, 65-67, 71, 91, 112, 114-116, 121-122 and 125 Not supported by the weight of the evidence. 62 Not relevant to this proceeding. 63 51 and 185-186. 68 100-101. 69 102. 72 51. The last sentence is rejected. The parties stipulated prior to commencement of the formal hearing in this case that the criteria to be considered in determining which applicant was entitled to a certificate of need were contained in Section 381.705, Florida Statutes. The parties did not indicate that Section 381.703(1)(b)1, Florida Statutes, was at issue in this proceeding or that Section 381.705(1)(a), Florida Statutes, does not apply. 73-76 Not relevant to this proceeding. The issue is not just whether nursing home services are available to all residents of the service area. Also at issue is whether each applicant is proposing to serve all of the residents of the service area. Health Quest's proposal does indicate Health Quest intends on serving a significant portion of Sarasota County's Medicaid population. 78 60-61. The portion of this proposed finding of fact prior to subparagraph a, the portion of subparagraph a appearing on page 19 of the proposed recommended order and subparagraphs b-d are rejected as argument, statements of law or as not being supported by the weight of the evidence. 79-82 Although generally correct, these proposed findings of fact are argument. 83 Not relevant to this proceeding. 84-86 Summary of testimony and argument. 87 Hereby accepted. The last sentence is not relevant to this proceeding or supported by the weight of the evidence. 90, 92 Not relevant to this proceeding. 94 Summary of testimony and argument. 96 Hereby accepted. The last sentence and the last half of the second sentence are rejected as not being relevant to this proceeding. 98-106 These proposed findings of fact were taken into account in determining the weight to be given testimony and other evidence. 109 Although the first sentence is correct, the rest of the proposed finding of fact is not relevant to this proceeding or not supported by the weight of the evidence. 117, 119-120 Not relevant to this proceeding. 123 108. The portion of this proposed finding of fact contained on page 30 of the proposed recommended order is primarily argument and not supported by the weight of the evidence. 127 143. 130-131 and 133-134 Not supported by the weight of the evidence, cumulative or not relevant to this proceeding. 137 The first sentence is hereby accepted. The rest of the proposed finding of fact is not supported by the weight of the evidence, argument or not relevant to this proceeding. Summary of testimony. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. The first two sentences are hereby accepted. The rest of the proposed finding of fact is argument and not supported by the weight of the evidence. HCR's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1 48. 2, 4-9, 13-14, 16, 19-20, 22-23, 27, 30-32, 35, 41-42, 45, 47, 49-51, 53, 63-67, 71 and 75 Hereby accepted. 3, 15 and 33 Not supported by the weight of the evidence. Hereby accepted. The last sentence, as it applies to Sarasota County, is not supported by the weight of the evidence. Although generally true, this proposed finding of fact, as it applies to Sarasota County, is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 12 55. 17 37-4 and 55. 18 Hereby accepted, except that the first sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 21 51 and 86. 24 51. The parties stipulated that the state health plan has been met by all of the applicants. 25 22-25. 26 76-78 and hereby accepted. 77 and hereby accepted. 78 and hereby accepted. 34 106-107. 36 Although generally true, the evidence failed to prove that HCR would provide these benefits without cost to its proposed Sarasota facility. 37 131-132. 38 133. 39 134-135. 40 89-90. 43 39-40, 163-164 and 166. 44 152, 167-170, and 180. 46 169-170. 48 165-166. 52 Hereby accepted. The weight of the evidence failed to prove that appropriate services for "AD patients" are not adequately available. 54 The parties stipulated that the state health plan has been met by all of the applicants. 55 2-3. 56-58 These proposed findings of fact are contrary to the stipulation of the parties. The parties stipulated prior to commencement of the formal hearing in this case that the criteria to be considered in determining which applicant was entitled to a certificate of need were contained in Section 381.705, Florida Statutes. Additionally, the Department accepted all of the applicants' certificate of need applications as being complete. It would not be proper for the Department to now disqualify an applicant on the grounds that its application is not complete. 59 148-149. 60 Taken into account in determining the weight to be given to testimony. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. 61 123. 62 Hereby accepted except the last two sentences which are not supported by the weight of the evidence. 68-69 115-117. 70 Not relevant to this proceeding. 72 41, 45-47, 175-176, 180 and hereby accepted. Hereby accepted except the third through fifth sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. Not supported by the weight of the evidence and not relevant to this proceeding. Hereby accepted except the last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. The first sentence is hereby accepted. The rest of the proposed finding of fact is not supported by the weight of the evidence. Taken into account in determining the weight to be given testimony and other evidence. Not relevant to this proceeding. 80-81 Not supported by the weight of the evidence. 109-110. The last three sentences are not relevant to this proceeding. Hereby accepted, except for the first two sentences, which are not supported by the weight of the evidence. Hereby accepted except the third and last sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. See 136. Not relevant to this proceeding. Trecor's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1-6, 20-24, 27, 29-32, 35, 37-39 and 56. Hereby accepted. 7 28 and 41-42. 8 41, 43 and 81. 9 26-27. 10 41, 44 and 81. 11 44-45. 12 46 and 171. 13 173. 14 46, 171-172 and 174. 15-16 173. The last sentence of proposed finding of fact 16 is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 17 181. 18 54-55 and hereby accepted. 19 79. 25 40, 47, 109, 111-112 and hereby accepted. 26 175 and 177. 28 178 and hereby accepted. 33 184 and hereby accepted. 34 138 and 142. 36 139-141. 40 50. 41 51. 42 51. The last three sentences are not supported by the weight of the evidence. Although the Arbor site was not disclosed, the weight of the evidence supports a conclusion that Arbor's proposal meets this portion of the district plan. 43-47 51. 48 51. The last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 49-50 51 and hereby accepted. 51 51 and hereby accepted. The last sentence is not supported by the weight of the evidence. 52-53 51. Argument. 51 and hereby accepted. The Department's Proposed Findings of Fact Proposed Finding Paragraph Number in Recommended Order of Fact Number of Acceptance or Reason for Rejection 1 48. 2-3 49. 4 Not relevant to this proceeding. 5-6 Conclusions of law. Not supported by the weight of the evidence. Contrary to a stipulation of the parties that all of the parties meet the state health plan to the extent that it is applicable. See 63. 10, 13, 15 and 17 Hereby accepted. 11 See 64-84 concerning Section 381.705(1)(c), Florida Statutes. The parties stipulated that Section 381.705(1)(d), Florida Statutes, had been met or did not apply. 12 86 and 129. 14 Not relevant in this de novo proceeding and not supported by the weight of the evidence. 16 See 60-62. COPIES FURNISHED: Steven W. Huss, Esquire 1017 Thomasville Road, Suite C Tallahassee, Florida 32303 Charles M. Loeser Assistant General Counsel Health Quest Corporation 315 West Jefferson Boulevard South Bend, Indiana 46601 James M. Barclay, Esquire 231 A East Virginia Street Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Alfred W. Clark, Esquire Post Office Box 623 Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Jay Adams, Esquire Jay Adams, P.A. 1519 Big Sky Way Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Theodore E. Mack Assistant General Counsel Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 2727 Mahan Drive Fort Knox Executive Center Tallahassee, Florida 32308 Sam Power, Clerk Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services 1323 Winewood Boulevard Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0700

Florida Laws (1) 120.57
# 8
HEALTH CARE AND RETIREMENT CORPORATION OF AMERICA, D/B/A HEARTLAND OF HILLSBOROUGH vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 85-003217 (1985)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 85-003217 Latest Update: Nov. 03, 1986

The Issue The issue to be determined in this case is whether Respondent, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, should grant the application of Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America, d/b/a Heartland of Hillsborough (HCR), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3217, or Forum Group, Inc., sponsor of Retirement Living of Hillsborough County (Forum), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3376, or both, for a certificate of need to construct and operate a 60-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. Paddock Meadows Convalescent Centers, Florida Convalescent Centers, Inc., and Angel1 Care, Inc., petitioners in Case Nos. 85-3362, 85-4124 and 86-0905, respectively, voluntarily dismissed their petitions shortly before the final hearing in this case. (Health Quest Corporation and Health Quest Realty (Hillsborough County), petitioners in Case No. 85-2923, voluntarily dismissed their petition on or about April 1, 1986.

Findings Of Fact The HCR Proposal. Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America, d/b/a Heartland of Hillsborough (HCR), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3217, has been in the business of nursing home construction and operation for over 20 years. HCR currently operates approximately 10,000 beds in 17 states. It has developed over 200 facilities. HCR's proposed project would benefit financially to some extent from economies of scale of having a network of similar facilities. HCR originally applied for a certificate of need to construct and operate a 120-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. During the pendency of this proceeding, HCR down-sized its proposed project to 60 beds and made other amendments. The down-sizing and amendments are reflected in a supplemental application which was served on Respondent, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services (HRS), but was not filed with the local health council. It is not clear whether the supplemental application was filed with HRS's Office of Community Medical Facilities. The supplemental application adopts by reference but does not re-type certain portions of the original application. Those portions of the original application were not introduced in evidence or otherwise made a part of the record of this proceeding. In HCR's supplemental application, the down-sized 60-bed nursing home is accompanied by a 60-bed adult congregate living facility housed in the part of the building originally proposed to house another 60 nursing home beds. In addition, the supplemental application reflects a new emphasis on treatment of patients with Alzheimer's and related diseases (dementia). HCR proposes a facility which will include a 60-bed nursing home, an adult congregate living facility, and an adult day-care component. The facility will offer programs specially designed for Alzheimer's disease victims, and, in its adult day care and assisted living areas, will provide programs which are designed to delay institutionalization as long as possible. The facility will provide staffing and special capabilities to accommodate the unique characteristics of dementia (Alzheimer's) patients, to allow the wandering Alzheimer's patient more freedom, and to shelter the non-dementia (non-Alzheimer's) patient from unnecessary contact with the dementia (Alzheimer's) patient. Alzheimer's disease is a progressive, organic brain disease which causes brain cells to die at a rate much more rapid than in the normal aging process. As the brain slowly dies and degenerates, other functions of the body dependent upon the brain's messages begin to deteriorate. The initial effects of the disease, such as forgetfulness and disorientation, are subtle, but the disease progresses through several stages where, increasingly, the disease victim is unable to perform normal daily functions or care for himself and, ultimately, loses the ability to control basic bodily functions and becomes bedridden. Alzheimer's disease is a disease of the elderly victims at two levels of the disease require inpatient care. Some victims develop psychiatric manifestations of the disease and short-term hospitalization or stabilization to enable the family caregiver to manage the patient still in the home setting. As victims reach the later stages of the disease, caregivers must consider institutional placement in a setting where there is a 24-hour-a-day care, seven days a week. In these later stages, the patients require total care which usually cannot be managed on a full-time basis at home, particularly by persons without significant resources. The primary caregiver of Alzheimer's disease patients is an older spouse, but in some instances it may. be an adult child. Ideally, inpatient programs for Alzheimer's disease victims would be designed with a continuum of care to minimize frequent changes in the victim's environment. In other words, the Alzheimer's care program would offer a range of care for patients who move through the various stages of Alzheimer's disease, from ambulatory to bed bound. Day care is an important component of the continuum development of Alzheimer's components for day-care programs in of care in an Alzheimer's program, because it offers rest to the family by placing the victim in a special care facility for a full day. The State of Florida allocated resources for the 1985 legislative session. Sophisticated, high-tech nursing care is required for patients in the later stages of the disease who have lost the ability to swallow, feed themselves, and perform other necessary/ bodily functions. Providing care from day care through high-tech care in the same facility minimizes frequent relocation of the Alzheimer's patient and facilitates the family coming to terms with the final outcome of the disease, where the family must relinquish total care to an institution. Alzheimer's disease victims in the middle and late stages of the disease who are still ambulatory exhibit the tendency to wander aimlessly. Nursing home care for such victims must provide a safe and secure environment in which the Alzheimer's patients may wander without endangering themselves or others. Otherwise, these patients will wander away from the facility and get lost or wander into dangerous traffic situations. Alzheimer's victims often disrupt the routine of non- Alzheimer's patients and the staff of the facilities by their constant wandering and by entering other patients' rooms and going through other patients' belongings. Special Alzheimer's units expect this behavior and make provisions to control it without physical or chemical constraint. In state-of-the-art Alzheimer's care, the physical nature of the decor and design of a nursing home appropriate for Alzheimer's care ideally would provide a safe and secure environment for the wandering, unstable Alzheimer's victim and provide a pleasant, therapeutic environment which copes with the patient's lost ability to synthesize data. Fixtures in the nursing home would be appropriately designed to enable the Alzheimer's patient to distinguish between significant fixtures, such as commodes, sinks, and wastebaskets. Ideally, activity areas for Alzheimer's patients would be separate from other nursing home patients, because of the Alzheimer's patient's disruptive wandering, absence of inhibitions and short attention spans which require a variety of activities and programs to accommodate. The staff of an Alzheimer's care program must be able to deal with the Alzheimer's patient. The staff will seldom see any improvement in the condition of the patient and will seldom get any positive feedback from the patient. Staffing patterns in Alzheimer's programs need to be more intense than average because the staff must deal with patients who have lost the ability to care for themselves. There is a need for closer supervision than is needed by the typical nursing home patient. Such a program also requires a social worker to develop the individual treatment plan for the patient and an occupational therapist to teach the patients those functions which the patients are continually losing. An Alzheimer's program within an adult congregate living facility is within the continuum of care required for some patients. The care provided here is less intense than that provided in a nursing home. However, once the victim loses basic bodily functions and begins wandering, the adult congregate living facility is no longer able to deal with these patients. Adult congregate living facilities and boarding homes in Hillsborough which accept Alzheimer's victims are frequently required to discharge such victims when the care becomes too difficult. In Hillsborough County, there are no nursing homes which provide state-of-the-art inpatient care designed for the care and treatment of Alzheimer's disease patients. Although there are two adult congregate living facilities in Hillsborough County which accept Alzheimer's disease patients, these facilities do not have safeguards for the wandering patient. Nursing homes traditionally deal with wandering Alzheimer's patients by physically restraining the patients or by chemically restraining the patients through the use of drugs. A state-of-the-art program designed to meet the special needs of Alzheimer's disease victims eliminates or reduces the need for physical and chemical restraints. HCR intends to offer a service, from day care through inpatient nursing care, that is designed for the needs of the typical Alzheimer's patient. In addition to the Alzheimer's patient, many patients not diagnosed as Alzheimer's disease victims but who are cognitively impaired (suffering from dementia) would also benefit from the service designed for the Alzheimer's patient. The adult day-care portion of the facility will allow the Alzheimer's victim to remain at home much of the day but allow the family and the well spouse to have time to provide for their own personal needs. The assisted living (adult congregate living) portion of the facility would be available for Alzheimer's victims not requiring advanced nursing care and would be available as a facility where the well spouse and the Alzheimer's victim could live together and both benefit from support services. The nursing home portion of the facility would offer special designs and programs to meet the needs of a maximum of 15 Alzheimer's patient in the middle stages, where wandering is a particular problem, as well as the needs of patients in the latter stages and death. The care available for the Alzheimer's disease victim in the latter stages of the disease (high-tech care) will also be available and appropriate for patients discharged from acute care hospitals who still need nursing care prior to returning home. The level of staffing provided in the HCR facility is higher than one would expect to find in the typical nursing home. The staffing proposed assumes that 15 of the patients will be Alzheimer's wanderers. HCR proposes a staffing higher than the typical nursing home because of the personal attention required for state-of-the-art Alzheimer's patient care and HCR's intent to reduce the amount of medication and physical restraint imposed upon the Alzheimer's patient. Increased staffing will encourage the Alzheimer's patient to retain whatever cognitive capabilities they have for as long as possible and will reduce the disruption experienced in a normal nursing home when the Alzheimer's disease patients wander, disrupt other patients, and generally disrupt the nursing home. The HCR facility will provide an area for wandering patients and a fenced courtyard which will allow wandering patients to have outside activity without danger of leaving the facility. The facility includes a therapeutic kitchen important to the Alzheimer's patient who retains some cognitive recognition of kitchen activities. A separate dining room for the Alzheimer's patient will be provided in order to accommodate the increased spillage experienced by Alzheimer's patient and the risk of incontinence, which is very disruptive and disturbing to non-Alzheimer's patients. wandering patients will be continuously monitored through the use of an electronic wristband which will prevent the patient from wandering outside of the facility and those areas where the wandering patient could cause problems. Dementia patients are now being cared for and treated in existing nursing homes in Hillsborough County. There was no persuasive evidence that patients have been denied access to nursing home beds in Hillsborough County. The features proposed in HCR's supplemental application would allow HCR to provide better quality care and treatment for those patients. However, HCR has only committed to treat up to 15 Alzheimer's patients in the "wandering" stage. That degree of commitment and the extent to which those special features for the care and treatment of dementia patients are needed would not themselves justify the proposed project absent an overall need for additional nursing home beds. HCR is in the process of purchasing four existing. nursing homes from Care Corporation. HCR did not prove that it has studied whether renovation of those facilities to accommodate special features for the care and treatment of Alzheimer's patients would not be less costly, more efficient or more appropriate alternatives to this proposed project or that they are not practicable. The project proposed in HCR's supplemental application is immediately and long-term financially feasible. HCR is a subsidiary of Owens-Illinois. On December 31, 1985, Owens- Illinois had total assets of approximately $3.3 billion, total current assets of approximately $903 million, and cash of approximately $47 million. Meanwhile, current liabilities were approximately $723 million and total shareholders' equity was approximately $1,559,000,000. In addition, HCR proved that it would be able to finance the approximately $2.2 million total project costs by borrowing 75% at favorable interest rates and funding the remaining 25% out of HCR's equity. Making reasonable, conservative assumptions--including an 11.5% interest rate, a January 1989 opening of the facility, and 40% Medicaid utilization on a patient day basis--the project can be anticipated to break even during year two of operation and earn approximately $158,000 during year two of operations. The nursing home portion of the facility and the day- care element adjacent to the nursing home portion will comprise 25,000 square feet; the nursing home portion alone will contain 23,000 gross square feet, or 383 gross square feet per bed. The construction costs for the nursing home and day-care portion of the facility will be $1,458,000, or $58.32 per square foot for the 25,000 square foot area; the cost of construction for the 23,000 gross square foot for the nursing home portion is $1,341,360. The cost per bed for construction of the nursing home portion of the facility is $22,356. The total project costs for the facility estimated by HCR and the cost per bed of the facility includes both the nursing home and adult day-care portion of the facility; when the adult day-care portion of the facility (8 percent of the construction costs) is taken into consideration, the total project cost becomes $2,083.360, at a cost per bed of $34,722. The estimated project cost for the nursing home portion of HCR's proposed facility is as follows: Feasibility studies $15,000; legal and accounting fees $32,000; plan review $8,000; subtotal of project development costs (the foregoing three items) $55,000; costs for financing $120,000; architectural and engineering fees $15,000; site survey and soil investigation $5,000; subtotal of the foregoing professional services $20,000; construction costs $1,458,000 (which includes the day-care portion of the facility but would be reduced to $1,341,360 for the nursing home portion alone); equipment costs $222,000; land acquisition costs $200,000; interest during construction $125,000; total project costs $2,200,000 ($2,083,360 when the adult day-care portion of the facility is excluded). All 60 of the nursing home beds in HCR's proposed facility will be certified both for Medicare and Medicaid utilization. However, in its supplemental application, HCR limits its commitment to serve Medicaid patients to 40% of its patient days. The increased cost of special features for Alzheimer's patients influenced HCR's financial decision not to commit to a higher percentage of Medicaid utilization. HCR has received approximately 13 certificates of need to develop nursing homes in Florida. HCR has completed three nursing homes, and HCR has seven projects under construction. Various difficulties prevented HCR from initiating construction of three projects for which it received certificates of need in 1981 and 1982. HCR has experienced no problems in initiating construction of its certificates of need obtained since that time, and its experience in Florida renders it unlikely that its previous failure to commence construction of facilities will reoccur. HCR acknowledges that it has previously sold and does not now operate nursing homes for which it had obtained certificates of need in Florida. However, these sales were facilities in the same building as the nursing home. A dietician and central kitchen and central laundry will serve all three levels. Housekeeping, building supervision, building plant, and other building maintenance operations will be centralized, saving some expenses. The Forum Proposal. Forum Group, Inc., sponsor of Retirement Living of Hillsborough County (Forum), Petitioner in Case No. 85-3376, is a general partner in a Florida partnership named Retirement Living of Hillsborough County. Forum originally applied for and continues to apply for a certificate of need to construct and operate a 60-bed nursing home. Like the project proposed in HCR's supplemental application, Forums proposal includes aspects in addition to the nursing home. Forum's proposed nursing home would be connected to a 15-bed wing of private rooms for patients who need assistance in their personal care and access to some of the capabilities of a nursing home on an intermittent basis but do not need nursing home care full-time. This is-bed wing would have separate dining facilities. This "personal care unit" will cost patients approximately $40 to $60 a day. In Forum's proposed nursing home, three wings, like the "personal care unit," would radiate from a hub where the nursing station would be located. Twenty of the sixty beds would be in private rooms occupied by private patients. Ten of those beds would be designated for skilled nursing care and ten for intermediate care. Of the 40 beds located in 20 semi-private rooms, 36 would be certified for Medicaid use, leaving 4 to be certified for Medicare use. Eighteen of the 40 beds would be for intermediate care, and 22 of the 40 beds would be for skilled nursing care. Forum's skilled nursing care would include "hi- tech" skilled nursing comparable to HCR's. A central corridor with central kitchen facilities and building maintenance facilities connects the three nursing home wings and the personal care unit wing with a retirement living center. The retirement living center will be able to accommodate 120 residents. Residents will be under a one year lease arrangement instead of an endowment-type arrangement. Monthly lease payments will probably fall between $950 and $1700 per month. The rental includes one meal a day in the retirement living center's dining room, weekly house cleaning, 24-hour security, transportation by automobile to appointments, banks, and doctor's offices and by mini-bus to shopping and theatres, availability of an on-call nurse, utilities, taxes, and the. services of a social director. The retirement living center will be marketed as a luxury facility to elderly persons approximately 75 years of age with an annual income of between $15,000 and $35,000. Forum projects initial utilization of all 36 Medicaid certified beds by Medicaid patients, resulting in 60% Medicaid utilization by patient day. However, that percentage would change with time. At first, residents of the retirement living apartments would not be expected to move immediately to the nursing home portion of the facility. The projected fill-up for the nursing home portion initially would not be derived from the initial fill-up of the retirement living apartments. Eventually, however, 10 to 15% of the residents of the retirement living apartments would require nursing home care, and approximately 50% of the patients in the nursing home will be, former residents of the retirement living section. In 10 to 12 years, the percentage of Medicaid utilization can be expected to drop, with a floor of approximately 45% Medicaid utilization by patient day. Like HCR's proposed project, Forum's proposal will benefit financially to some extent from the location of other facilities in the same building as the nursing home. A dietician and central kitchen and central laundry will serve all three levels. Housekeeping, building supervision, building plant, and other building maintenance operations will be centralized, saving some expenses. Like HCR, but probably not to the same extent, Forum would be able to benefit financially to some extent from the economies of scale of having a network of similar facilities (including approximately 11 facilities like the proposed project and approximately 20 free-standing nursing homes.) Location of the retirement center and the personal care unit in the same building with the nursing home will afford Forum some advantages in caring for its nursing home patients. First, some of the patients can be expected to use two or all three of the levels of care available in the complex as their medical condition worsens or, in some cases, improves. This would aid in the continuity of Forum's care and reduce the emotional strain of changing levels of care (since the patients do not have to move to a totally new location and environment.) Second, to the extent nursing home patients continue to have an independent means to pay to reside in the retirement living center or the personal care unit, those patients will have an incentive to improve their health so as to be able to move back to the retirement living center or personal care unit from the nursing home unit. (Obviously, these benefits would not apply to Medicaid patients in the nursing home.) Third, general education in health and hygiene of persons residing in the retirement living center and personal care unit will help to some degree in keeping them out of the nursing home or aiding their recovery if in the nursing home for short-term care. Like HCR, Forum also has the ability to provide quality nursing home care. However, Forum's proposal does not have the special features for care of Alzheimer's disease and other dementia patients proposed by HCR in its supplemental application. While some of those state-of-the-art special features could be incorporated by Forum during construction of its proposed nursing home, others could not, and Forum does not have the overall emphasis or commitment to provide those special features that HCR does. The total cost of Forum's nursing home proposal is approximately $2,200,000. This includes no interest cost during construction since Forum has decided to, and has the financial ability to, pay for the construction entirely out of its cash reserves. Forum has approximately $40,272,000 in cash assets. It has approximately $69,210,000 worth of current assets and only approximately $23,192,000 worth of current liabilities. Its total assets are approximately $290,747,000 and it has approximately $151,155,000 worth of common shareholders' equity. Its net income for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1986, was approximately $15,012,000. As a result, Forum's nursing home proposal is immediately financially feasible. Making reasonable, conservative assumptions including 13% interest on borrowed capital, late 1987 or early 1988 occupancy and 60% Medicaid utilization by patient day, Forum's nursing home proposal probably will break even in mid-year two and will earn approximately S69,000 net income in year two of operations. The following are Forum's final project development costs: feasibility studies $20,000, legal and accounting fees $30,000, development expenses $10,000, subtotal of the foregoing three categories $60,000; architectural and engineering fees $70,000, site survey and soil investigation $15,000, for a total cost for professional services total of $85,000; site preparation work $40,000, construction costs of $1,345,598, and contingency fees of $45,661, for a total construction cost of $1,390,258; fixed equipment cost of $65,998, moveable equipment cost of $128,850, tax-freight contingency and escalation provisions of $44,160 for a subtotal of equipment costs of $239,000; land acquisition of costs of $400,000, no interest costs during construction, pre-opening expenses' of $25,000, and, finally, a total project cost of $2,199,258. The expected construction cost per bed comes to approximately $23,171, and the total cost per bed comes-to approximately $36,165. HRS Rule Need Methodology. Rule 10-5.11(21)(b), Florida Administrative Code, provides the HRS bed need rule methodology for determining projected need for new or additional community nursing home beds. The methodology provided in Rule 10-5.11(21) is as follows: Departmental Goal. The Department will consider applications for community nursing home beds in context with applicable statutory and rule criteria. The Department will not normally approve applications for new or additional community nursing home beds in any departmental service district if approval of an application would cause the number of community nursing home beds in that departmental service district to exceed the number of community nursing home beds calculated by the methodology described in subsections (21)(b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), and (h) of this rule. Need Methodology. In addition to other relevant statutory and rule criteria to be used in considering the allocation of new or additional community nursing home beds, the Department will determine if there is a projected need for new or additional beds three years into the future according to the methodology specified under subparagraphs 1 through 10. This methodology provides for adjustments to current community nursing home bed rates based upon expected changes in the proportion of district residents age 75 + and the current utilization of community nursing home beds in the subdistricts designated by local health councils. In districts with a high proportion of elderly residents living in poverty, the methodology specifies a minimum bed rate. A = (POPA X BA) + (POPB X BB ): Where: A is the district's age-adjusted Number of community nursing home beds for the review cycle for which a projection is being made. POPA is the population age 65-74 years in relevant departmental district projected three years into the future. BA is the estimated current bed rate for the population age 65-74 years and over in the relevant district. BB is the estimated current bed rate for the population age 75 years and over in the relevant district. BA=LB/POPC + (6 X POPD): Where: LB is the number of licensed community nursing home beds in the relevant district. POPC is the current population age 65-74 years. POPD is the current population age 75 years and over. BB = 6 X BA SAA X (LBD/LB) X (OR/.90): Where: SA is the preliminary subdistrict allocation of community nursing home beds. LBD is the number of licensed community Nursing beds in the relevant subdistrict. Or is the average occupancy rate for all licensed community nursing homes within the subdistrict of the relevant district. Review of applications submitted for the July batching cycle shall be based upon occupancy rate data for the months of October through March preceding that cycle; applications submitted for the January batching cycle shall be based upon occupancy rate data for the months of April through September preceding that cycle. For the purposes of this rule, the occupancy data to be considered shall be that collected by the Department's Office of Healthcare Planning and Development or a contractor assigned to collect the data. In departmental districts where the percentage of persons age 65 and older living in poverty, according to the latest available U.S. census, exceeds the statewide average poverty rate for the 65 and older population and the sum of the currently licensed and certificate of need approved beds for community nursing homes within a district is less than 27 beds per thousand residents age 65 and older, the district shall be allocated a total of 27 community nursing home beds per thousand residents age 65 and older in the current year. This allocation is expressed as follows: If (Ls + AB ) /POPE is less than 27/1000 and PBD is greater than PBS, then: PA(27 X POPE)/1000 Where: AB is the number of certificate of need approved beds for community nursing homes in the relevant district. PBD is the percentage of persons age 65 and older below the poverty level within the district. PBS is the percent of persons age 65 and older below the poverty level within the state. PA is the poverty-adjusted number of beds in the relevant district. POPE is the sum of POPC and POPD. * * * 9. The net bed allocation for a sub-district which is the number of beds available for Certificate of Need approval, is determined by subtracting the total number of licensed and 90% of the approved beds within the relevant departmental subdistrict from the bed allocation determined under subparagraphs 1 through 9 unless the subdistrict's average estimated occupancy rate for the most recent six months is less than 80%, in which case the net bed allocation is zero. Prior to August 20, 1985, HRS had a long-standing policy interpreting the methodology as requiring use of population and occupancy rate at the time of the formal administrative hearing, if any, as the current population (POPC and POPD) and occupancy rate (OR) in the formula. HRS also subtracted the number of nursing home beds licensed and approved as of the date of the formal administrative hearing, if any, from the gross number of nursing home beds needed to determine the net need for nursing home beds proposed in a pending certificate of need application. Since the decision in Gulf Court Nursing Center vs. Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, 483 So. 2d 700 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985), modified on rehearing (Fla. 1st DCA 1986), HRS adopted a new policy interpreting its rule methodology and the Gulf Court decision. HRS now interprets Gulf Court's reference to a "fixed pool of beds.' available in a given certificate of need application batching cycle to fix the health planning horizon in the rule methodology at three years into the future from the filing deadline for the certificate of need application batching cycle in question. Accordingly, POPA and POPB under the rule methodology represents the most current projection of population in the respective age cohorts on the fixed planning horizon. As before the Gulf Court decision, all other elements of the methodology including the figures for POPC, POPD, and OR are updated to the time of the formal administrative proceeding. Under its policy interpreting the rule methodology and the Gulf Court decision, HRS obtains the subdistrict occupancy rate (OR), by taking the average occupancy rate during the most recent six-month period for which data is available--in this case, from October 1, 1985 through March 31, 1986. However, the current population figures (POPC and POPD) HRS uses are the figures available closest to the date of the formal administrative hearing in this case on July 1, 1986. Under its policy, the occupancy rate (OR) does not relate to the figures for current population (POPC and POPD) to which it logically should relate. HRS did not satisfactorily explain the rationality of its policy. Meanwhile, there was ample evidence supporting the rationality of using as POPC and POPD the population at the midpoint of the time period used force determining occupancy rate (OR). In this case, since occupancy rate (OR) is determined by averaging the occupancy rates during the period from October 1, 1985 through March 31, 1986, the current population (POPC and POPD) should be the populations of the respective age cohorts on January 1, 1986. Otherwise, HRS' policy interpreting its rule methodology and the Gulf Court decision is a rational effort to reconcile the Gulf Court decision with the certificate of need statute, other conflicting court decisions and principles of sound health planning. It suffices here to say that, notwithstanding the Gulf Court decision, the evidence in this case does not establish the existence of a "fixed pool" of needed nursing home beds for which the applicants in this case applied. See Conclusions of Law 1 through 13 below. In addition, sound health planning not only dictates the use of the most recently available population projections (POPA and POPB) and the most current data (POPC, POPD, and OR) for determining current bed rates (BA and BB) under the rule methodology, but also would counsel against relying on state or district health plan determinations of a "fixed pool of beds" based upon inferior data and evidence. Departure from these sound health planning principles is likely to result in certificates of need for nursing home beds that are not needed or, in some cases, the denial of certificates of need for nursing home beds that are needed. See Appendix, paragraph B.4, below. For purposes of calculating need under the HRS rule need methodology, the appropriate health planning district is District VI, and the appropriate subdistrict is Hillsborough County. There currently are 5,617 licensed nursing home beds in District VI (LB). The District VI population for persons aged 65 to 74 on January 1, 1986 (POPC) is 131,501. The District VI population for persons aged over 75 for January 1, 1986 (POPD) is 91,433. The bed rate for the portion of the current population aged 65 to 74 (BA) is 0.008259. The bed rate for the portion of the current population aged over 75 (Bs) is 0.049554. The projected District VI population for persons aged 65 to 74 on January 1, 1988 (POPA) is 139,903. The projected District VI population for persons aged over 75 on January 1, 1988 (POPD) is 100,175. Using the bed rates for the two age cohorts (BA and BB) and the projected populations for those age cohorts on January 1, 1988 (POPA and POPB), the gross projected District VI nursing home bed need for January 1, 1988 (A) is 6,119.6. The occupancy rate for District VI nursing home beds between October 1, 1985 and March 31, 1986 (OR) was 93.3646%. This was the most current figure available at the time of the hearing. At the time of the formal administrative hearing, there were 2,512 licensed beds in Hillsborough County (LBD). At the time of the formal administrative hearing, there were 368 approved nursing home beds for the Hillsborough County subdistrict (AB). Using the figures for projected District VI bed need (A), licensed beds in District VI (LB), licensed beds for the Hillsborough County subdistrict (LBD) and the occupancy rate (OR), the allocation of nursing home beds for the Hillsborough County subdistrict (SA), is 2,839. The beds that will be available in Hillsborough County on January 1, 1988, is 2,843 (LBD plus .9 AB), leaving a surplus of 4 nursing home beds in Hillsborough County on January 1, 1988 under the HRS rule need methodology, as properly interpreted. In District VI, the percentage of persons aged 65 and older living in poverty, according to the latest available. U.S. census, exceeds the statewide average poverty rate for the 65 and older population, but the sum of the currently licensed and certificate of need approved beds for community nursing homes within District VI is approximately equal to 27 beds per thousand persons aged 65 and older, and no poverty adjustment is required under Rule 10-5.11(21)(b)5., Florida Administrative Code. State Health Plan. The State Health Plan endorses the concept of an integrated continuum of long-term care services. Forum's proposal integrates retirement living with minimal skilled nursing care needs, skilled and intermediate nursing care in a nursing home setting, and personal assistance care a middle ground between the two. Similarly, HCR's proposal integrates (1) adult congregate living with minimal requirement for skilled nursing care to limited nursing care provided to an Alzheimer's patient being primarily cared for by a spouse, and (2) skilled and intermediate nursing care in a nursing home setting, and (3) a range of specialized nursing services for the Alzheimer's patient in the second and third stages of the disease. The HCR proposal also integrates day care and respite services for Alzheimer's patients being cared for primarily for by relatives in their own homes. Addressing a related concern, the State Health Plan also endorses pre-admission screening to determine the level of care needed by a potential nursing home patient. This serves to foster a system of health care that seeks to promote "wellness" and independence of the patient. Both applicants will have some type of pre-admission screening process. Both applicants' proposals include on-site non-nursing home living facilities, and a decision would have to be made which of those two environments are appropriate for a particular patient. Forum also has personal assistance care which would require more precise screening, and Forum appeared more intent on establishing effective pre-admission screening procedures and cooperating with the state-sponsored CARES (Comprehensive Assessment and Review for Extended services) program aimed at diverting potential patients who do not truly need nursing home services. Both proposals also seek to promote "wellness" and independence of the patient. Both include less restrictive settings than nursing home care for patients who do not yet need full-time nursing services. For some patients, the less restrictive setting can serve as an incentive to recover from illnesses and shorten short-term nursing home stays. Again, Forum's proposal, with its three levels of care and more attractive retirement living setting, better fosters these objectives. Finally, the State Health Plan highlights the elderly's need for information on providers' charge structures and acceptance of Medicaid/Medicare assignment. It expresses a goal of availability of services to the medically indigent, and recommends adherence to the applicable local health plan's expectations. See Finding Of Fact 61 below. District VI Health Plan. As its second priority, the District VI Health Plan states that applicants for a certificate of need for nursing home services in the Northwest subdivision of the Hillsborough County subdistrict should commit, at minimum, 18.6% of its services to the care of Medicaid eligible patients. Forum's application commits 60% of its patient days to Medicaid during the first year of operation. HCR's commitment is only 40%. However, HCR's commitment is on a permanent basis, and Forum's actual Medicaid utilization can be expected to drop over the first ten years of operation with a floor of approximately 45%. The actual percentage of Medicaid days for the period January to March 1986, for Hillsborough County was 70%. The District VI Health Plan also ranks the Northwest subdivision of the Hillsborough County subdistrict as the first priority for location of new or additional nursing home services when needed in District VI. Both applicants propose to locate their projects in the Northwest subdivision of the Hillsborough County subdistrict. Another priority in the District VI Health Plan is to give preference to applicants with a documented history of implementing their certificates of need within the statutory time frames. Forum had no history in Florida but a good record of follow-through elsewhere. HCR has a history of mixed results in Florida but offered good explanations for the instances of delay in implementing certain certificates of need in earlier years, and the evidence was not persuasive that either Forum or HCR should be given a competitive advantage regarding this priority. The District VI Health Plan sets a 90% occupancy threshold for the continuous period of six months before additional beds are approved. This threshold has been met in Hillsborough County for at least three years. Current occupancy in Hillsborough County is 93.3646%. The District VI Health Plan states that applications for additional nursing home beds in a subdistrict should be considered against the availability of alternative forms and settings for long-term care. In this case, there was no evidence of alternatives to nursing home services other than the alternatives within the proposed projects. However, neither of the applicants will go forward with the retirement living or personal assistance care or adult congregate living alternatives without the attached nursing home. No specialized state-of-the- art Alzheimer's disease programs are now available in District VI. See Finding Of Fact 71 below. The District VI Health Plan states that applications should be reviewed with the goal that nursing home services be within 30 minutes travel time of 90% of urban residence and 45 minutes of 90% of rural residents. There was no evidence in this case regarding geographic access of the urban and rural populations or that the proposed projects would make Finally, the District VI Health Plan states that applicants should be evaluated as to their achievement of superior quality ratings by HRS and other indications of quality as available. Both applicants adequately establish that they will be able to provide quality nursing home services. It can be anticipated that both will seek and obtain a superior rating for its proposed facility. Other Pertinent Criteria. Both applicants propose projects which will be accessible to schools for health professions in Hillsborough County, such as colleges and trade schools for training and teaching purposes. In addition to its Medicaid utilization commitment previously discussed. Forum will establish a $10,000 fund, to be replenished annually, for indigent patients to draw upon as necessary for payment of nursing home services. This fund is intended to address, for example, the circumstance that could arise if a private pay nursing home patient runs out of money and all 36 Medicaid-certified nursing home beds are occupied. Unless the fund pays for the patient, the patient would have to be transferred to another nursing home. However, Forum does not yet nursing home services accessible to residents now outside the applicable travel time have any guidelines or criteria for the operation of the fund. Both Forum and HCR propose facilities to provide nursing home services. Neither applicant seeks to justify the need for its proposed nursing home on need for services that can be provided other than through a nursing home. No applicant in this batching cycle seeks to add beds as an alternative to new construction. Existing nursing home beds are alternatives to the proposals only if there is no need for additional nursing home beds. There is no existing alternative to the special Alzheimer's program proposed by HCR. Existing nursing homes serve Alzheimer's patients but not with state-of-the-art nursing home care. However, renovation of facilities HCR is in the process of purchasing from Care Corporation to accommodate special features for the treatment of Alzheimer's patients might be an alternative to the construction of a new nursing home for the purpose of providing those services. HCR did not prove that it has studied those alternatives and found either that they would not be less costly, more efficient or more appropriate or that they would not be practicable. Both HCR and Forum, through their network of retirement centers and nursing homes, generate economies of scale in centralized operations and management functions and in acquisition of equipment. As a larger nursing home company, HCR's economies of scale would be greater than Forum's. In addition, by combining different levels of care on one campus, both applicants can enjoy further economies in dietary, laundry, medical supply and bookkeeping operations. Both HCR and Forum can adequately meet manpower requirements for their proposed facilities with a combination of in-house transfers and recruiting from the local community. There was no evidence that approval of a new 60-bed nursing home facility in Hillsborough County would have a significant negative impact on the financial viability of existing nursing homes. Current occupancy rates are high, reducing patients' choice in the selection of a nursing home. The last 240 nursing home beds opened to patients in Hillsborough County quickly were absorbed by the demand for those services. Neither HCR nor Forum now own or operate a nursing home in the Tampa Bay area. However, HCR is in the process of acquiring four nursing homes from Care Corporation. As a result, HCR would have more control over the market than Forum and would have the potential eventually to use its market power to decrease competition. But at this time, it can be anticipated that either proposal would foster competition and promote quality assurance and effectiveness. Balanced Consideration of the Criteria. HCR and Forum are worthy applicants who have conceived and proposed nursing home projects worthy of consideration. However, balancing consideration of all of the criteria, and giving due weight to the HRS rule need methodology, it is found that there is no need at this time for a new 60-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. There is no numeric need under the rule, and no special circumstances were proved by documentation of denied access to currently licensed but unoccupied beds or of need exceeding the number of licensed unoccupied and currently approved nursing home beds. Meanwhile, the special Alzheimer's program HCR proposes does not independently support construction of a new 60-bed nursing home. Renovation of the four nursing homes HCR is in the process of purchasing from Care Corporation might be a less costly, more efficient and more appropriate alternative to construction of a new 60-bed nursing home to provide special Alzheimer's programs in Hillsborough County. However, if there were a need for 60 additional nursing home beds, HCR's Alzheimer's program would be enough to give it a competitive advantage over Forum's proposal.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings Of Fact and Conclusions Of Law, it is recommended that Respondent, Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, enter a final order denying the applications of both Health Care and Retirement Corporation of America, Petitioner in Case No. 85-3217, CON Action No. 3818, and Forum Group, Inc., Petitioner in Case No. 85-3376, CON Action No. 3817, for a certificate of need to construct and operate a new 60-bed nursing home in Hillsborough County. RECOMMENDED this 3rd day of November, 1986, in Tallahassee, Florida. J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 3rd day November, 1986.

Florida Laws (2) 120.57120.68
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HEALTH CARE ASSOCIATES (POLK COUNTY NURSING HOME) vs. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, 83-000819 (1983)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 83-000819 Latest Update: Oct. 04, 1983

Findings Of Fact Under the methodology in effect at the time these applications were submitted there were 74 beds available in the Polk County area according to the 1982 Health Systems Plan of the now defunct South Central Florida Health Systems Council. Based upon this plan, and without further study of the need for additional nursing home beds, Petitioner Haines City Health Care Center on October 14, 1982 filed an application for a certificate of need to add 72 beds to a nursing home under construction in Haines City, Florida (Exhibit 1) and Petitioner, Health Care Associates, on October 15, 1982, filed an application for a certificate of need to construct a 120-bed skilled nursing home in Lakeland, Florida (Exhibit 3). This was amended to request a certificate of need to construct a 74-bed nursing home. Effective November 15, 1982 Chapter 10-5, Florida Administrative Code was amended and Rule 10-5.11(21)(b) established a new methodology for determining need for nursing home beds in both the regions and the sub-regions. Using this methodology and counting the beds approved but not yet in service, DHRS found an excess of 517 nursing home beds in Polk County through 1985 in lieu of the 74 additional beds reported as needed in the Health Systems Plan. (Exhibit 6). Projecting the need to 1986 and using the methodology of Rule 10- 5.11(21)(b), Florida Administrative Code and counting those beds approved but not yet licensed results in an excess of of 367 beds in Polk County and an excess of 464 beds districtwide (T p.79). Both Petitioners presented testimony indicating they are experienced nursing home operators and capable of operating nursing homes. Although no specific cost figures were presented to support the testimony of either Petitioner that it would be a cost effective operator, it is obvious, but not here relevant, that it would be less expensive per bed to add beds to the facility under construction at Haines City than to acquire property and construct a new facility at Lakeland. Exhibit 1 reflects costs of $1,250,000 for the 72 bed addition at Haines City while Exhibit 3 reflects costs of $2,738,000 for a new 120-bed nursing home at Lakeland. No competent evidence was submitted by either Petitioner to establish a need for any additional nursing home beds. Petitioner's Quality Health Facilities, Inc., witness acknowledged no study had been done by his organization to demonstrate a need for additional beds in Polk County, while Petitioner's Health Care Associates, witness relied upon his expertise in operating nursing homes in Florida and general observations of the population growth to conclude additional nursing home beds could be utilized. No statistical information was submitted to support this bare opinion.

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