Appellants appeal from the trial court’s order dismissing their complaint challenging the constitutionality of that portion of Georgia’s Medicaid program which denies Medicaid coverage for medically necessary abortions. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
The challenged regulations are part of Georgia’s Medicaid program under which the State provides medical services to persons who meet certain financial eligibility requirements. See 42 USCA § 1396 et seq.; OCGA § 49-4-140 et seq. The program, set out in the Department of Community Health’s Policies and Procedures, provides payment for covered services when such services are medically necessary. See, e.g., Div. of Med. Assistance, Ga. Dept. of Community Health, Policies and Procedures for Medicaid /Peachcare for Kids, Definition 15 and § 105 (k) (July 1, 2004). With respect to abortion services in particular, the program provides that the State will reimburse for abortions performed on Medicaid-eligible patients only “if the life of the mother would be endangered if the fetus were carried to term or if the mother was a victim of rape or incest.” Div. of Med. Assistance, Ga. Dept. of Community Health, Policies and Procedures for Physician Services, § 904.2 (July 1, 2004); Div. of Med. Assistance, Ga. Dept. of Community Health, Policies and Procedures for Hospital Services, § 911.1 (July 1, 2004); Div. of Med. Assistance, Ga. Dept. of Community Health, Policies and Procedures for Family Planning Clinic Services, § 903 (July 1, 2004). In contrast, Medicaid-eligible women who carry their pregnancies to term are provided coverage for all medically necessary services.
Appellants are a physician and several health care facilities who have performed medically necessary abortions on low-income women in the past and have been refused payment under Georgia’s Medicaid plan and Leslie Roe, a Medicaid-eligible woman suffering from spina bifida and paralysis who lacked the funds for a medically necessary abortion. Appellees are the Commissioner of the Department of Community Health, members of the board of the department, and the director of the Department’s Division of Medical Assistance. In their complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief, appellants alleged that the program’s exclusion of medically necessary abortions violated the Georgia Constitution on privacy and equal protection grounds. The trial court dismissed the complaint in its entirety, holding that the medical provider appellants lacked third-party *434 standing to assert a claim on behalf of their Medicaid-eligible patients and that Roe’s individually asserted claim was barred because she failed to exhaust her administrative remedies. This appeal followed.
1. As a general rule, a litigant has standing to challenge the constitutionality of a law only if the law has an adverse impact on that litigant’s own rights.
Ambles v. State,
In the absence of our own authority, we frequently have looked to United States Supreme Court precedent concerning Article III standing to resolve issues of standing to bring a claim in Georgia’s courts. See, e.g.,
Bo Fancy Productions v. Rabun County Bd. of Commrs.,
Applying these criteria, the Supreme Court concluded in
Singleton v. Wulff,
We agree that under limited circumstances a litigant should be accorded standing to assert the rights of third parties and hereby adopt the third-party standing test set out in
Powers.
Applying the test to this case, we find the medical provider appellants have standing to challenge on behalf of their patients the State’s denial of Medicaid reimbursement for medically necessary abortions. These appellants properly asserted injury in fact insofar as they have a direct financial interest in obtaining State funding to reimburse them for the cost of abortion services provided to Medicaid-eligible women and have alleged that they performed and will continue to perform medically necessary abortions for which they will not be reimbursed
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under Georgia’s Medicaid program.
1
See
2. The trial court also dismissed Roe’s similar claims, finding they were not ripe for review because she failed to exhaust her administrative remedies. See
USA Payday Cash Advance Centers v. Oxendine,
In addition, the department conceded it has no authority under state statutory or constitutional law to provide reimbursement for medically necessary but non-life-threatening abortions not the result of rape or incest and that OCGA § 49-4-157 required the board to deny any claim seeking reimbursement for such abortions. See OCGA § 49-4-157 (Department of Community Health to “administer the state plan in a manner so as to receive the maximum amount of federal financial participation available in expenditures made under the state plan”). Appellees may not avoid judicial review for want of exhaustion of administrative remedies where the very rules of the department preclude both hearing and the remedy sought.
2
See
*437
Wilson v. Ledbetter,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
In rejecting the medical providers’ claim of third-party standing, the trial court erroneously concluded that “third-party standing for constitutional challenges [exists] only when the statute infringes upon the constitutional rights of that third party.” Our decisions make clear that a challenged statute need not affect a constitutionally-protected right in order to give the statute’s attacker standing to question the statute’s constitutionality. See
Bo Fancy Productions v. Rabun County Bd. of Commrs.,
supra,
Appellees also acknowledged that the plan requires a physician’s certification that abortion services are necessary to save the life of the mother in order for the department to even consider a claim for reimbursement for abortion services. While Roe’s medical providers certified that her abortion was “medically necessary,” it is undisputed that no physician has certified that such procedure was required to save her life.
