Opinion for the court per curiam.
The Secretary of Health and Human Services appeals from summary judgment for appellee on a petition for review of the Secretary’s determination that appellee’s “Gerontological Treatment Center” was not a “Special Care Unit” within the meaning of 42 C.F.R. § 405.452(d)(10) as it appeared in fiscal year 1975, see 37 Fed.Reg. 10354 (1972). Because the Secretary’s interpretation of this Medicare regulation was reasonable, and not contrary to law, and because substantial evidence in the record establishes that appellee’s Center was not a Special Care Unit according to the Secretary’s interpretation, we reverse.
In this case the Secretary was called upon to resolve an ambiguity in a Medicare regulation that, in effect, classified all relevant inpatient hospital care as occurring within either a “Routine Care” center or a “Special Care Unit.”
See
42 C.F.R. § 405.452(d) (1975) . The basic statutory provisions authorizing such a regulation do not direct the Secretary to distinguish between the two classes of hospital care,
see
42 U.S.C. §§ 1302, 1395x(v)(1)(A) (1976), and for the first five years of its operation the Medicare program recognized only one class of care for purposes of reimbursement. Thus the Special Care Unit regulation depended entirely on the Secretary’s judgment that recognizing two classes of hospital care would best further the purposes of the Medicare program, and the initial decision where to draw the line was for the Secretary alone.
Cf. State of Florida v. Mathews,
Judicial review of such determinations is limited by the familiar standards of 5 U.S.C. § 706 (1976). Furthermore, where the decision under review involves an agency’s interpretation of its own regulations, forming part of a complex statutory scheme which the agency is charged with adminis
*814
tering, the arguments for deference to administrative expertise are at their strongest.
See Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Milhollin,
In the case before us the regulation at issue was ambiguous. Special Care Units were defined as those providing “extraordinary and concentrated” care “on a continuous basis,” like one set of facilities— chiefly “intensive care units” — and unlike some other facilities — such as “maternity labor rooms.” To determine whether appellee’s Gerontological Treatment Center came within the terms of the definition, the Secretary compared it to intensive care units and found that the degree of care it provided was less concentrated and continuous.
See
Joint Appendix at 19-20. Appellee argues that its Center should have been compared to routine care facilities instead, and that the care it provided was considerably more concentrated and continuous than that provided in routine care facilities. While appellee’s interpretation has much to recommend it, neither this court nor the District Court,
This is not to say that we are unconcerned about some implications of the Secretary’s decision that are peculiar to this case. Unlike the medical facilities that have been the subject of litigation elsewhere, the Center involved in this case was designed to treat conditions that by definition only older patients suffer. The Medicare program also primarily serves older patients. Thus the percentage of Medicare beneficiaries in the population that appellee’s Center sought to serve was much higher than the percentage of Medicare beneficiaries served by other intermediate-level hospital facilities, such as the “Definite Care Unit” at issue in
John Muir Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Schweiker,
*815 Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the District Court is hereby directed to enter summary judgment for the Secretary.
So ordered.
Notes
We note that the Ninth Circuit has twice sustained similar interpretations by the Secretary of this same regulation.
See John Muir Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Schweiker,
