Court Opinion

ID: 864580
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-04-27 00:20:05.271536+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:25:58.318359
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                               NO. 2003-CC-00427-SCT

MISSISSIPPI STATE DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH AND REGENCY HOSPITAL
COMPANY, LLC

v.

RUSH CARE, INC.
d/b/a THE SPECIALTY
HOSPITAL OF MERIDIAN

DATE OF JUDGMENT:                         2/26/2003
TRIAL JUDGE:                              HON. PATRICIA D. WISE
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:                 JULIE ANN BOWMAN
                                          ANDY LOWRY
                                          THOMAS L. KIRKLAND, JR.
                                          SARAH E. BERRY
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                   KATHRYN RUSSELL GILCHRIST
                                          CHRISTOPHER A. SHAPLEY
                                          J. RICHARD BARRY
NATURE OF THE CASE:                       CIVIL - STATE BOARDS AND AGENCIES
DISPOSITION:                              REVERSED AND RENDERED - 09/02/2004
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:

      EN BANC.

      WALLER, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.   This matter is before the Court on appeal from a judgment of the Chancery Court of

the First Judicial District of Hinds County reversing the Mississippi State Department of

Health's decision to grant a certificate of need to Regency Hospital Company, LLC, for the

establishment of a 40-bed long-term acute care hospital in Meridian. We reverse the
chancellor's judgment and render judgment reinstating the Mississippi State Department of

Health's issuance of the certificate of need.

                                           FACTS

¶2.    Regency filed an application for a certificate of need ("CON") for the establishment

of a 40-bed long-term acute care hospital ("LTAC")1 in Meridian. Three hospitals are

located in Meridian: Riley Hospital, Rush Hospital and Jeff Anderson Regional Medical

Center.2 Rush currently operates an LTAC (The Specialty Hospital of Meridian) within its

hospital building. Regency's application proposed that 40 LTAC beds would be located on

the second floor of Riley, but that the LTAC hospital would be separate and independent

from Riley. At the time the CON application was filed, Riley operated 40 beds as acute care

medical-surgical beds on its second floor. Regency contends that the proposal therefore

would not increase the total number of licensed hospital beds in the Meridian area.

¶3.    Miss. Code Ann. §§ 41-7-171 to -209 (Rev. 2001) provides that the Mississippi State

Department of Health ("MDH") is the only agency to administer and supervise all health

planning responsibilities for the State. Miss. Code Ann. § 41-7-193 (Rev. 2001) requires,

inter alia, that a "certificate of need shall not be granted or issued to any person for any

proposal, cause or reason, unless the proposal has been reviewed for consistency with the

specifications and the criteria established by the State Department of Health and substantially

       1
        LTAC hospitals provide long-term acute care for patients, as opposed to those
patients who are admitted to undergo a procedure and a short-term recovery therefor.
Changes in Medicare coverage discouraging lengthy hospital stays have created the need for
LTAC hospitals.
       2
        Jeff Anderson supports Regency's application for a CON.

                                                2
complies with the projection of need as reported in the state health plan in effect at the time

the application for the proposal was submitted." The goals of the State Health Plan are to

provide some cost containment; to improve the health of Mississippi residents; to increase

the accessibility, acceptability, continuity, and quality of health services; and to prevent

unnecessary duplication of health resources. The Plan requires that an application for an

LTAC facility contain at least 450 examples of clinically appropriate restorative care

admissions with an average length of stay of 25 days and a projection of financial feasibility

by the end of the third year of operation.

¶4.    After the MDH approved Regency's CON, Specialty filed suit in the Chancery Court

of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, to contest the approval of the CON. After an

evidentiary hearing, the chancellor reversed the MDH's decision finding that it was arbitrary

and capricious and was not supported by substantial evidence. Specifically, the chancellor

found no credible evidence to support the MDH's findings that Regency's proposed LTAC

would admit 100% of the Meridian-area patients that it listed as LTAC-eligible and that the

proposed LTAC would not adversely impact Specialty's existing LTAC.

                                STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶5.    The standard of review for an appeal of a final order of the MDH is controlled by

Miss. Code Ann. § 41-7-201(2)(f) (Rev. 2001), which provides in part:

              The order shall not be vacated or set aside, either in whole or in
              part, except for errors of law, unless the court finds that the
              order of the State Department of Health is not supported by
              substantial evidence, is contrary to the manifest weight of the
              evidence, is in excess of the statutory authority or jurisdiction
              of the State Department of Health, or violates any vested
              constitutional rights of any party involved in the appeal . . . .

                                              3
This law constitutes nothing more than a statutory limitation upon the scope of judicial

review of administrative agency decisions, which is the arbitrary and capricious standard.

Delta Reg'l Med. Ctr. v. Miss. State Dep't of Health, 759 So. 2d 1174, 1176 (Miss. 2000)

(citing Magnolia Hosp. v. Miss. State Dep't of Health, 559 So. 2d 1042, 1044 (Miss.

1990)). Decisions of administrative agencies are given great deference. Delta Reg'l, 759
So. 2d at 1176 (citing Melody Manor Convalescent Ctr. v. Miss. State Dep't of Health, 546
So. 2d 972, 947 (Miss. 1989)). The burden of proof rests on the challenging party to prove

that the MDH erred. Delta Reg'l, 759 So. 2d at 1176 (citing Melody Manor, 546 So. 2d at

947).

                                      DISCUSSION

              I.     WHETHER REGENCY'S CON APPLICATION
                     WAS IN SUBSTANTIAL COMPLIANCE WITH
                     THE NEED METHODOLOGY FOR THE
                     ESTABLISHMENT OF AN LTAC HOSPITAL.

¶6.     Regency contends that the chancery court erred in reversing the MDH's approval of

its CON because the application was in substantial compliance with the 2002 Mississippi

State Health Plan, with the General Considerations stated in Chapter 8 of the CON Review

Manual, and with current federal and state rules and regulations. Specialty argues that the

CON application was not in substantial compliance with the Plan's need requirement because

Regency's projected average length of stay ("ALOS") numbers were unsupported; and not

all of the patients in the diagnostically related group ("DRG")3 submitted by Regency were

clinically appropriate. The Plan requires that an application for an LTAC facility contain at

        3
         DRGs are diagnosis codes promulgated by Medicare.

                                             4
least 450 examples of clinically appropriate restorative care admissions with an average

length of stay of 25 days.

       Clinically Appropriate DRGs

¶7.    Regency listed 241 probable admissions from Riley. To acquire this number,

Regency considered patients actually hospitalized from May 1, 2000, through May 31, 2001.

Regency listed 438 probable admissions from Jeff Anderson. To arrive at this number,

Regency looked at data from Jeff Anderson contained in the American Hospital Guide.4 It

then estimated a need for 59 additional LTAC beds in the Meridian area, excluding any

patients which might come from Meridian's third hospital, Rush. Located within the Rush

hospital building, Specialty gives admission preference to Rush patients due to its

contractual obligations with Rush.

¶8.    Regency also points out the need in the Meridian area for additional LTAC beds is

indicated by the fact that Specialty's number of beds has increased greatly since the unit's

establishment in 1996:

           Year          1996     1997     1998     1999      2000     2001     2002
      Number of
      LTAC Beds              20      40      40       40       49       49       49
      Total
      Occupancy          71%      55%       58%      75%     91.9%    93.5%    96.5%

       4
       Regency explains that the American Hospital Guide is a highly reputable compilation
of hospital data which contains actual patient census data for Jeff Anderson.

                                               5
       LTAC
       Occupancy         71%       55%      58%      71%       61%      71%      77%

¶9.     Regency also points out that Specialty has announced its intention to expand again

in the next few years. Also, Riley's CEO has stated that Riley has had trouble getting its

LTAC-eligible patients into an LTAC facility.5

¶10.    Specialty responds that its LTAC unit has never been full and that Regency

erroneously assumed that all of the patients from Riley and Jeff Anderson who had LTAC-

compatible DRGs would actually be admitted to an LTAC. A Specialty vice-president

testified at the hearing that, even if a patient has an LTAC-compatible DRG, he or she must

still meet certain criteria under federal guidelines. Regency's own witness also confirmed

this statement. Because of the federal government's extra admission criteria, Specialty has

admitted only 30% of patients with LTAC-compatible DRGs who have been referred to the

LTAC by their physicians.

¶11.    We find that the clinically-appropriate DRGs presented by Regency in the CON

application were supported by substantial evidence. The Plan requires that an application

for an LTAC facility contain at least 450 examples of clinically appropriate restorative care

admissions.    Regency listed 241 probable admissions from Riley and 438 probable

admissions from Jeff Anderson.        These probable admissions were based on actual

        5
         Regency argues that there is a perception among Meridian physicians that Specialty
has a "closed medical staff," which means that it does not admit patients from physicians
who are not on staff at Specialty. At the hearing, however, Specialty's representative
testified that Specialty has never had a closed medical staff, and that no physician who had
applied for privileges at Specialty has ever been refused. Specialty's representative also
provided evidence that Specialty has had admissions from Riley and Jeff Anderson.

                                             6
hospitalizations. At the hearing, Regency's representative testified that it had, since the filing

of the CON application, acquired patient data from Jeff Anderson and that this data showed

that Jeff Anderson had 833 patients with LTAC-appropriate DRGs. The chancellor therefore

erred when she substituted her judgment for that of the MDH.

       Average Length of Stay

¶12.   The Plan requires that an application for an LTAC facility contain at least 450

examples of clinically appropriate restorative care admissions with an average length of stay

(ALOS) of 25 days. The MDH does not provide a methodology with which applicant

hospitals may calculate an ALOS.

¶13.   Regency asserts that each LTAC-appropriate patient on its list would have an ALOS

of 29 days. It bases this conclusion on the fact that Riley LTAC-appropriate patients had an

ALOS of 18.2 days and Jeff Anderson LTAC-appropriate patients had an ALOS of 17 days.

Regency then assumed that these patients would have stayed in the hospital longer had the

respective hospital not discharged the patients due to Medicare's cut-off of benefits after a

short period of time. It also supports this conclusion with Medicare federal regulations

which state that the 97 DRGs listed by Regency had an "application yield" of 31 days.6 See

42 C.F.R. Parts 412, 413 & 476, Table 3.

¶14.   We find that Regency's calculation of average length of stay was supported by

substantial evidence and that the chancellor erred when she substituted her judgment for that

of the MDH.

       6
      Of course, again, the 97 DRGs used by Regency have not been identified, but
Medicare has listed 527 DRGs which are suitable for LTAC.

                                                7
              II.     WHETHER REGENCY'S PROPOSED LTAC
                      WILL RESULT IN AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON
                      EXISTING HEALTH SYSTEMS OR IN
                      UNNECESSARY DUPLICATION OF HEALTH
                      SERVICES.

¶15.   Specialty contends that the Regency CON will adversely affect it because, if

Regency's statistics are realized as projected, Specialty will lose 30% of its patient base and

$10 million in gross revenues. It asserts that if it loses $10 million in gross revenues, Rush

will have to close eight rural health clinics. However, Specialty presented no evidence to

support these allegations. In fact, it admitted that no financial analysis had been undertaken.7

¶16.   Instead, Specialty's own occupancy percentages and history of growth show that the

market for LTAC in the Meridian area is growing. Beginning with only 20 beds, Specialty

now has 49, and its occupancy percentage has pretty much stayed constant with the increase

of beds.8

¶17.   On the other hand, other LTACs in Mississippi have been established or are in the

process of being established. The fact that the trend toward the establishment and operation

       7
        The chancellor found that, assuming Regency's premise that its patients would come
from Riley and Jeff Anderson, and that 75% of Specialty's patients came from Rush and 25%
from Riley and Jeff Anderson, Specialty would lose that 25% from Riley and Jeff Anderson,
thereby resulting in financial loss. However, the chancellor's assumptions are impermissible
under Mississippi law because she drew inferences from inferences. See Masonite Corp. v.
Hill, 170 Miss. 158, 154 So. 295 (1934) (An inference may be based upon another inference,
but where ultimate inference has become only a more or less strong possibility, the proof is
insufficient to support a judgment).
       8
        The percentages dipped every time more beds were added, which is to be expected,
but they bounced back to the average rate within a year or two.

                                               8
of LTACs is growing will have an impact on the Meridian market. Some of those who now

utilize Specialty for long-term acute care might go elsewhere (Jackson or Hattiesburg).

¶18.   We find that the chancellor should have affirmed the MDH's findings that Regency's

LTAC hospital would not adversely affect other facilities because the MDH's findings were

supported by substantial evidence and were not arbitrary and capricious. We have upheld

the MDH's findings even where an imperfect analysis is used:

                However, the Chancery Court found the Department's method
                of population calculation must give way to use of an actual
                study of patient origins for a period of a year. In effect, that
                Court substituted its method of measuring the population
                criteria with that of the Department[]. While the Department's
                method of population analysis may be imperfect, it hardly
                approaches an arbitrary or capricious action. The Chancery
                Court erred in substituting its judgment for [that of the
                Department].

Miss. State Dep't of Health v. Southwest Miss. Reg'l Med. Ctr., 580 So. 2d 1238, 1242

(Miss. 1991).

                                       CONCLUSION

¶19.   We find that the Mississippi State Department of Health's grant of a certificate of need

to Regency Hospital Company, LLC, was supported by substantial evidence and was not

arbitrary and capricious. The learned chancellor erred in concluding otherwise. We

therefore reverse the chancery court's judgment and render judgment here reinstating the

MDH's decision to grant a certificate of need to Regency.

¶20.   REVERSED AND RENDERED.

     SMITH, C.J., COBB, P.J., EASLEY, DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, JJ.,
CONCUR. CARLSON, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION
JOINED BY GRAVES, J. DIAZ, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.

                                               9
       CARLSON, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:

¶21.   Because I find that the judgment of the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District

of Hinds County reversing the Mississippi Department of Health's decision to grant a

certificate of need to Regency Hospital Company, LLC, for the establishment of a 40-bed

long-term acute care hospital was eminently correct, I must respectfully dissent.

¶22.   The majority determines that Regency's CON application was in substantial

compliance with Miss. Code Ann. §§ 41-7-171 to -209 (Rev. 2001 & Supp. 2003) and its

methodology for the establishment of a long-term acute care hospital (LTAC). I must

disagree. The State Health Plan, requires that an application for an LTAC must contain at

least 450 examples of appropriate admissions in diagnostically related groups (DRGs). These

admissions must have an average length of stay (ALOS) of 25 days. Regency failed to

provide evidence that it substantially complied with either requirement.

¶23.   Regency contends that it would receive 241 probable admissions from Riley Hospital

and 438 probable admissions from Jeff Anderson Regional Medical Center. Specialty

Hospital testified that in over seven years of operating an LTAC, only 30% of patients with

LTAC-compatible DRGs were admitted to the LTAC. The reliability of Specialty's 30%

LTAC admission rate is proven by Regency's own exhibit regarding Riley's Population-

Based Long Term Acute Care Model which shows that nationally only 5% to 35% of

patients with LTAC-appropriate diagnoses are actually admitted to an LTAC. Using this

model, 35% of Regency's probable admissions would not constitute the 450 admissions

                                            10
required under the plan. Even if the almost 700 LTAC-compatible DRGs9 it listed had a 50%

admission rate, Regency still could not show that it would have the 450 admissions required

under the Plan. Also, Regency failed to produce a list of the 97 DRGs upon which it relied

to qualify the 679 probable admissions. Because it cannot be determined from the record if

the 97 DRGs considered by Regency to be LTAC-appropriate are indeed LTAC-appropriate,

there is no alternative other than to hold that the evidence relied upon by Regency to

establish the need of more LTAC beds in the Meridian area is unreliable.

¶24.     Regency further asserts that each LTAC-appropriate patient on its list would have an

ALOS of 29 days. Since there is no evidence in the record to support this conclusion, it is

based on opinion, estimates and speculation. Unsupported statements do not constitute

substantial evidence of compliance with minimum usage requirements as required for CON

approval. Miss. State Dep't of Health v. Natchez Cmty. Hosp., 743 So. 2d 973, 978 (Miss.

1999).

¶25.     It must also be noted that no other city in Mississippi has more than one LTAC.10 In

fact, the only city in the United States which has two LTACs is Akron, Ohio.

¶26.     Therefore, I would find that Regency did not support its assertions of need based on

clinically appropriate DRGs or ALOS. There was no evidence in the record that Specialty's

         9
        At the hearing, Regency's representative testified that it had, since the filing of the
CON application, acquired patient data from Jeff Anderson and that this data showed that
Jeff Anderson had 833 patients with LTAC-appropriate DRGs. However, even 35% of 1074
(Jeff Anderson's 833 plus Riley's 241), is 376, less than the 450 required under the Plan.
         10
      At the MDH hearing, an MDH officer testified that, at that time, there were four
LTACs in the state: one each in Jackson, Meridian, Gulfport and Biloxi.

                                              11
occupancy percentage had ever been 100%, that Specialty ever had a waiting list for patients,

or that Meridian-area LTAC-appropriate patients were going anywhere but Specialty for

long-term care. Because the chancellor correctly reversed the MDH's approval of Regency's

CON application, I would affirm the judgment of the Chancery Court of the First Judicial

District of Hinds County. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.

       GRAVES, J., JOINS THIS OPINION.

                                             12