741 F.2d 1447 | D.C. Cir. | 1984
Opinion PER CURIAM.
Remaining in this case is the question of the Provider Reimbursement Review Board’s (“PRRB” or “Board”) jurisdiction over the claims of St. Vincent Hospital and Medical Center of Toledo (“St. Vincent”). We issued an opinion in this case on September 23, 1983, St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital Center v. Schweiker, 718 F.2d 459 (D.C.Cir.1983), but withheld judgment regarding PRRB jurisdiction because of the pending rehearing petition in Athens Community Hospital, Inc. v. Schweiker, 686 F.2d 989 (D.C.Cir.1982) (Athens I) The panel in Athens has now issued a modified opinion which we believe to be controlling. Athens Community Hospital, Inc. v. Schweiker, 743 F.2d 1 (D.C.Cir.1984) (Athens II). We therefore affirm the determination of the Deputy Administrator of the Health Care Financing Administration that the PRRB did not have jurisdiction over St. Vincent’s claims.
St. Vincent was the only hospital of the seventy-two involved in the group appeal here to include labor/delivery patients in its inpatient counts in calculating its routine average cost per diem when it timely filed its cost reports with its fiscal intermediary Blue Cross of Northwestern Ohio (“BCNO”), pursuant to 42 C.F.R. §§ 405.-453(f), 405.1081(b) (1977). After BCNO issued its Notice of Program Reimbursement (“NPR”) informing St. Vincent of the reim
Although the procedural posture of Athens differs somewhat from that here, we think that under the rationale of the opinion issued today in Athens the PRRB could not take jurisdiction over these claims.
St. Vincent’s primary contention is that because the intermediary reopened on an unrelated issue, it had to allow St. Vincent to introduce the labor room claim. Athens II discusses the effect of an intermediary’s refusal to reopen and makes clear that reopening is issue-specific and that the decision to reopen lies exclusively with the last decision-maker. Athens II, at 7, citing 42 C.F.R. § 405.1885(c). That is, if the intermediary has made a determination and it has not been appealed to the PRRB, then the intermediary alone decides whether to reopen. It is inconsistent with this concept to allow a provider, by appealing an item not previously claimed, to circumvent the intermediary’s decision not to reopen to include that item.
Reopening is only permitted to hear new evidence — not new claims. Athens I, 686 F.2d at 996 (emphasis in original). St. Vincent, however, was not trying to introduce new evidence; it was trying to make a claim it had not previously presented through its cost report. Athens II makes clear that BCNO was fully within its rights to refuse reopening for such purposes and that its determination not to reopen is final and conclusive under 42 C.F.R. § 405.-1885(c) (1983).
St. Vincent argues that this rule allows intermediaries to reopen reports in piecemeal fashion and that this is irrational and can be unfair. An intermediary could reopen a report to exclude a cost in one part of the report, for example, without at the same time including it in the part of the report where it is allowable. We disagree. For the intermediary to have disallowed such cost, it'must have appeared on the cost report. Because the cost would have been raised on the cost report and placed in dispute, the PRRB would have jurisdiction to resolve its proper disposition, and it is conceivable that doing so would require readjusting (or at least considering) other
For the reasons stated above and those in the opinion issued today by the panel in Athens II, we affirm the determination of the Deputy Administrator that the PRRB was without jurisdiction to hear the claim of St. Vincent Hospital and Medical Center of Toledo.
. In Athens, after the intermediary refused to reopen to entertain new claims and the PRRB declined to exercise jurisdiction over the new ■ claims, the district court ordered the PRRB to review the providers’ new claims. The panel in Athens today reaffirmed its holding that the PRRB properly declined to exercise jurisdiction. The question here is whether the PRRB has jurisdiction over claims not presented to the intermediary and not allowed to be presented through reopening by the provider.