MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
This action arises out of a federal criminal investigation of a Massachusetts physician (“Doctor”), a provider with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, for health care fraud. The government suspects that the Doctor bills Medicare for an expensive specialized treatment for patients with a rare disease when the patients have not been properly diagnosed with the disease. The government served Blue Cross with an administrative subpoena under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, 18 U.S.C. § 3486(a)(1)(A), asking for documents reviewed as part of its internal medical peer review committee’s ongoing (but incomplete) inquiry into the Doctor’s activities in this area. Blue Cross refused to produce those documents, asserting a federal medical peer review privilege. The govern
After hearing on September 26, 2005, the government modified its document request to exclude any interim or final reports or opinions of the peer review committee. Instead, the government now seeks (1) documents related to statements and representations by the Doctor, his counsel or representatives, as part of the peer review process; (2) documents relied on by the Doctor to support any positions he took as part of the peer review process; (3) documents provided by anyone other than the Doctor for consideration by the peer review committee; (4) any settlement agreements between Blue Cross and the Doctor arising out of the peer review process; and (5) any reporting by Blue Cross to any national registries or databases regarding any action taken with respect to the Doctor.
After review of the magistrate judge’s Order, the Court ALLOWS the government’s motion to compel, subject to a protective order.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
An interesting threshold question is the proper standard of review under the Federal Magistrate’s Act, 28 U.S.C. § 636. The answer turns on whether the motion to compel is dispositive under § 636(b)(1)(B) or nondispositive under § 636(b)(1)(A). If the motion is dispositive, as the government now contends, then the Court must engage in de novo review of the magistrate judge’s order. Fed.R.Civ.P. 72(b). If the motion is non-dispositive, then the Court may only modify the order to the extent that it is “clearly erroneous or contrary to law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 72(a). The Court referred the matter to the magistrate judge for ruling in a pro forma order, and the magistrate judge denied the motion.
Rule 72, which was adopted in 1983, refers to all matters which can be heard and determined by a magistrate judge as “nondispositive,” and all motions as to which a magistrate judge may only make a recommendation as “dispositive.”
Phin-ney v. Wentworth Douglas Hosp.,
Many courts have treated similar motions to enforce or quash administrative subpoenas, or the like, as dispositive motions for purposes of review where the matter involving the subpoena constitutes the entire case before the Court.
See, e.g., Nat’l Labor Relations Bd. v. Frazier,
966
In this case, the government’s motion to compel production of documents pursuant to a subpoena is the entire proceeding before this Court. The only matter for this Court to decide is whether to enforce the subpoena. As such, the decision both “determines with finality the duties of the parties” and “seals with finality the district court proceeding and is subject to appellate review.”
See Frazier,
B. Federal Medical Peer Review Privilege
The Court must decide whether to recognize a federal medical peer review privilege. No court in the First Circuit or District of Massachusetts has yet done so under federal law, but Massachusetts state law does recognize the privilege.-
2
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. Ill, § 204(a) (stating that “the proceedings, reports, and records of a medical peer review committee shall be confidential and ... not be subject to subpoena or discovery, or introduced into evidence in any judicial or administrative proceeding”). As Magistrate Judge Collings stated in his decision, “there is no extant federal peer review privilege and ... most federal courts, including the Supreme Court, have declined to recognize a state peer review privilege in a federal case.” (Mem. & Order 4 (citations omitted).)
See also Nilavar v. Mercy Health System-Western,
In federal question cases, federal common law controls the existence and application of evidentiary privileges.
See
Fed. R.Evid. 501 (stating that privilege “shall be governed by the principles of the common law as they may be interpreted by the courts of the United States in the light of reason and experience”). The Supreme Court has directed that although courts have the power to be flexible and adaptive
When the forum state has recognized a particular privilege, a court may take that into account when deciding whether to recognize that privilege as part of federal law.
See Jaffee v. Redmond,
Although this Court must take the Massachusetts statute into account, it must also heed the Supreme Court’s directive in
University of Pennsylvania
that courts should be “especially reluctant to recognize a privilege in an area where it appears that Congress has considered the relevant competing concerns but has not provided the privilege itself.”
Just as Congress chose not to include a privilege for educational institutions in the Civil Rights Act, Congress similarly chose not to include a medical peer review privilege in the Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986, 42 U.S.C. §§ 11101-11152 (“HCQIA”). The Act was designed to provide “incentive and protection for physicians engaging in effective professional peer review.” 42 U.S.C. § 11101(5) (2005). As such, Congress extended qualified immunity from suit to those conducting such peer reviews. 42 U.S.C. § 11111(a)(2) (2005). Significantly, Congress did not also create a federal eviden-tiary privilege for most documents produced during such a review, indicating that it “not only considered the importance of maintaining the confidentiality of the peer review process, but took the action it believed would best balance protecting such confidentiality with other important federal interests.”
Teasdale v. Marin Gen. Hosp.,
It is against this background that the Court must decide whether to recognize a federal medical peer review privilege. The First Circuit case
In re Hampers
guides district courts in determining whether to recognize a state privilege under Federal Rule 501.
While the Massachusetts medical peer review privilege satisfies the first three elements, under the fourth prong of
Hampers,
this Court must weigh the benefits of enforcing the privilege against the costs.
Marshall v. Spectrum Med. Group,
Blue Cross alleges that they will not be able to retain outside consultants to aid or convince other institutions to share information in the peer review process if the process is subject to public disclosure. Consistent with this position, Massachusetts courts have recognized that the Massachusetts privilege is justified by the need to foster “rigorous and candid evaluation of professional performance by a provider’s peers.”
Swatch v. Treat,
Given that the HCQIA already provides for qualified immunity from suit for those participating in peer reviews and that the production of documents would be subject to a protective order to preserve confidentiality, any concerns about discouraging rigorous and honest evaluation of physician conduct by public disclosure have been minimized.
See Syposs v. United States,
In
Hampers,
the First Circuit counseled that courts should “seek a more particular-istic answer than the macrocosmic one that effective federal criminal law enforcement is more important than” the state interest sought to be protected by the state privilege.
See Hampers,
The Supreme Court has several times refused to recognize a privilege when doing so would inhibit a federal investigation.
See United States v. Gillock,
Furthermore, the federal interest in this investigation is to enforce laws against health care fraud, an interest other federal courts have found sufficiently strong to refuse to recognize a federal medical peer review privilege.
See In re Baptist Mem. Hosp.,
Additionally, this decision comports with the findings of the vast majority of federal courts that have faced this issue in other contexts.
See, e.g., Virmani v. Novant Health, Inc.,
As such, the government has shown sufficiently that the costs of withholding the documents would outweigh the benefits of recognizing a medical peer review privilege in the context of a federal criminal investigation. Therefore, the Court will not recognize a federal medical peer review privilege under Rule 501. 4
III. CONCLUSION
The motion to compel production (Docket No. 2.), as modified, is ALLOWED. 5
Notes
. Blue Cross did produce documentation generated in an investigation by its fraud prevention and investigative unit, including two expert reports.
. One Court in the District of Massachusetts has applied § 204(a), but that was in a wrongful death case removed on the basis of diversity.
Hughes v. Am. Regent Labs.,
. Unlike this case, the university sought to assert a privilege which was unrecognized in Pennsylvania state law.
. In light of the weight of authority declining to recognize a federal peer review privilege, the standard of review is not dispositive here. Thus, even if an administrative subpoena were a nondispositive matter, I conclude that the recognition of a federal privilege is contrary to law under 28 U.S.C. § 636.
. One issue that neither side has addressed is whether the HCQIA allows the government access to any reporting by Blue Cross to national registries or databases. Some caselaw suggests that this information is privileged under 42 U.S.C. § 11137(b)(1).
See Med. Soc'y v. Mottola,
