MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff UMDNJ-University Hospital (“UMDNJ”), a provider of hospital services located in Newark, New Jersey, seeks judicial review of final decisions of the Secretary of Health and Human Services (“Secretary”) denying jurisdiction over Plaintiffs appeals of its Medicare reimbursement pertaining to the costs of UMDNJ’s “clinical medical education programs” for its 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2003 fiscal years. 1 The Provider Reimbursement Review Board (“PRRB” or “Board”) concluded that it did not have jurisdiction over the issue of reimbursement for the clinical medical education programs because plaintiff never sought reimbursement for those programs from its fiscal intermediary. Pl.’s Mot., Ex. 4.
Plaintiff contends that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bethesda Hosp. Ass’n. v. Bowen,
I. Factual Background
A. Statutory and Regulatory Framework
The Medicare statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1395 et seq., sets forth a federal health insurance program for the elderly and disabled. A hospital participates in Medicare under a “provider agreement” with the Secretary. 42 U.S.C. § 1395cc. In 1983, Congress enacted a Medicare reimbursement
The Secretary has delegated much of the responsibility for administering the Medicare Program to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”). See 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395h, 1395u. The Secretary, through CMS, delegates many of Medicare’s audit and payment functions to organizations known as fiscal intermediaries, which are generally private insurance companies. At the close of a fiscal year, a provider of services must submit to its intermediary a “cost report” showing both the costs incurred by it during the fiscal year and the appropriate share of those costs to be apportioned to Medicare. 42 C.F.R. § 413.24(f). The intermediary is required to analyze and audit the cost report and inform the provider of a final determination of the amount of Medicare reimbursement through a notice of program reimbursement (“NPR”). Id. § 405.1803. If a provider is unhappy with the total amount of reimbursement indicated by the NPR, it may appeal to the PRRB. The decision of the PRRB is final unless CMS reverses, affirms, or modifies it within 60 days from the provider’s receipt of the decision. 42 U.S.C. § 1395oo (f)(1); 42 C.F.R. §§ 405.1875(a), 405.1877(a). If the Administrator declines review, the Board’s decision is final and the provider must file a civil action within 60 days from receipt of the Board’s decision. Id.
B. Standard of Review
The Court may set aside the Board’s decision only if it is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law, or unsupported by substantial record evidence.”
HCA Health Services of Oklahoma, Inc. v. Shalala,
C. Plaintiffs Complaint
For fiscal years 2000-2003, UMDNJ submitted cost reports to its fiscal intermediary that did not claim costs related to its clinical medical education programs (“CMEP”). In each instance, after the intermediary issued the NPR for the respective cost year, the hospital filed an appeal of the NPR with the PRRB in accordance with the above regulations. In each appeal, plaintiff contested several is
II. Discussion
A. The Role of § 1395oo
The statutory provisions at issue in this case are subsections (a) and (d) of 42 U.S.C 1395oo. Subsection (a) establishes the jurisdiction of the Board, and states that a provider may obtain a hearing before the Board with respect to its cost report if
such provider (1) is dissatisfied with a final determination ... of its fiscal intermediary ... as to the amount of total program reimbursement due the provider ... for the period covered by such cost report ... (2) the amount in controversy is $10,000 or more, and (3) such provider filed its request for a hearing within 180 days ...”
42 U.S.C 1395oo (a). Subsection (d) establishes the power of the board once it has jurisdiction, and provides that:
A decision by the Board shall be based upon the record made at such hearing, which shall include the evidence considered by the intermediary and such other evidence as may be obtained or received by the Board, and shall be supported by substantial evidence when the record is viewed as a whole. The Board shall have the power to affirm, modify, or reverse a final determination of the fiscal intermediary with respect to a cost report and to make any other revisions on matters covered by such cost report (including revisions adverse to the provider of services) even though such matters were not considered by the intermediary in making such final determination.
Id.
at § 1395oo(d). Plaintiff argues it has satisfied the clear conditions of § 1395oo(a) and therefore § 1395oo(d) gives the Board the power to consider the CMEP issue even though it was not first considered by the fiscal intermediary. The Secretary disagrees, arguing that the statute is ambiguous, that plaintiff has not met the “dissatisfaction” requirement in subsection (a), and that its reading of the statute is entitled to deference because it is reasonable. Def.’s Reply at 2. Both parties argue that
Bethesda Hosp. Ass’n v. Bowen,
B. Bethesda Hosp. Ass’n v. Bowen
Plaintiff argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bethesda Hosp. Ass’n v. Bowen
allows the PRRB to entertain on appeal issues not first raised before the fiscal intermediary in the provider’s cost report. Am. Compl. ¶25. In
Bethesda,
the plaintiff hospitals challenged a 1979 regulation which limited reimbursement for certain malpractice insurance costs. In their cost reports for 1980, the hospitals followed the 1979 regulation in their apportionment of malpractice insurance costs and thereby effected a “self-disallowance” of malpractice costs in excess of those allowed by the 1979 regulation.
Id.
at 401,
The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve a split between the circuits and reversed, holding that “there is no statute or regulation that expressly mandates that a challenge to the validity of a regulation be submitted first to the fiscal intermediary.”
Id.
at 404,
Defendant counters that the Bethesda decision stands for the much narrower proposition that a hospital is not required to make futile claims before the fiscal intermediary for costs prohibited by the current regulations. Def.’s Reply at 11. The Secretary argues that under Bethesda a provider is still required to claim all costs to which it would be entitled otherwise. In support of this argument, defendant relies on the following dictum from the Bethesda decision. In describing the regulatory challenge brought by the petitioners, the Court noted that
Petitioners stand on different ground than do providers who bypass a clearly prescribed exhaustion requirement or who fail to request from the intermediary reimbursement for all costs to which they are entitled under applicable rules. While such defaults might well establish that a provider was satisfied with the amounts requested in its cost report and awarded by the fiscal intermediary, those circumstances are not presented here.
C. Post -Bethesda Circuit Split
There is a split among the circuit courts that have addressed this issue since the
Bethesda
decision. The Seventh Circuit has adopted the interpretation of
Bethesda
that the Secretary puts forth today, which precludes PRRB jurisdiction where the provider’s request would not have been futile.
Little Company of Mary Hosp. v. Shalala,
The First and Ninth Circuits, by contrast, have determined that the language of the Medicare statute provides for Board jurisdiction over claims not included in the initial cost report, whether they be inadvertently omitted or “self-disallowed.”
See Loma Linda University Medical Center v. Leavitt,
D. Statutory Analysis
Post
-Bethesda,
this Circuit has not specifically addressed the question of whether the PRRB can hear new issues on appeal that were not raised in the initial cost report submitted to the fiscal intermediary.
2
However, this Circuit has thorough
In HCA the D.C. Circuit ruled that there is a fundamental, jurisdictional difference between an appeal predicated upon an original NPR and one that is predicated on a revised NPR. In that case, the intermediary expressed its intention in 1989 to revisit certain specific items in its NPR for fiscal year 1985. The intermediary’s decision to reopen was within the three-year limitations period. The intermediary made several adjustments and the hospital timely appealed those adjustments to the Board. However, the hospital also attempted to add to the appeal the fiscal intermediary’s calculation of certain other costs which had been decided in the original 1985 NPR and not revisited since. The Board held that its jurisdiction on appeal was limited to the specific “matters adjusted by the revised NPR for which the 180-day appeals period had not yet expired.” Id. at 616. The plaintiff sought judicial review.
The district court upheld the Board’s interpretation of the statute, which limited the Board’s jurisdiction to only the specific issues that were the subject of the reopening, and rejected the hospital’s contention that the Board had jurisdiction over all cost items in the NPR by virtue of the reopening of certain other cost items. The D.C. Circuit affirmed, holding that
hearing rights before the Board challenging an intermediary’s decision [on] reopening are issue-specific: The separate and distinct determination gives a right to a hearing on the matters corrected by such determination. Thus, a revised NPR does not reopen the entire cost report to appeal. It merely opens those matters adjusted by the revised NPR.
Id. at 622 (internal citations omitted). In so finding, the Court determined that the reopening process was a creation of the regulations, authorized by the Secretary’s general rule-making authority under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1302 and 1395hh. Id. at 618. As such, the reopening process was not governed by the provisions of § 1395oo of the Medicare statute.
The Court explained that the Board’s jurisdiction on reopening did not originate in subsection 1395oo(a), as it does for
initial
review of an NPR. Thus, the Court determined that the Board’s “expansive
1. 1395oo(a) Requirements for jurisdiction
Unlike the hospital in HCA plaintiff seeks review of an initial NPR, and thus 1395oo(a) governs the Board’s jurisdiction. As stated above, a provider may obtain a hearing before the Board with respect to its cost report if
such provider (1) is dissatisfied with a final determination ... of its fiscal intermediary ... as to the amount of total program reimbursement due the provider ... for the period covered by such cost report ... (2) the amount in controversy is $10,000 or more, and (3) such provider filed its request for a hearing within 180 days ...”
42 U.S.C 1395oo(a). The parties do not dispute that plaintiff has satisfied the requirements of parts two and three, however defendant contends that plaintiff has not met the “dissatisfaction” requirement of part one because plaintiff necessarily cannot be dissatisfied with an intermediary’s determination of costs for which it did not request reimbursement. While the Secretary’s argument is not without logic, it is precisely the argument the Supreme Court rejected in Bethesda and contrary to the plain language of the statute.
Subsection 1395oo(a) clearly states that a provider, such as plaintiff, may obtain a Board hearing with respect to the cost report when it is dissatisfied with the intermediary’s final determination of the amount of
total
reimbursement. “Section 1395oo(a) does not say that a hearing may be obtained ... if a provider ‘is dissatisfied with a final determination of its intermediary as to the amount of reimbursement due on each claim’ — which the statute would do, in sum or substance, if the Secretary’s interpretation were plausible.”
Loma Linda,
In the instant case, plaintiff was clearly “dissatisfied” with the fiscal intermediary’s determination of total reimbursement for fiscal years 2000-2003 because it appealed multiple issues in each NPR. Its appeals were on time and the amounts exceeded the jurisdictional minimum. At that point, the Board had jurisdiction for a hearing, that according to the clear language of the statute, was with respect to the provider’s cost reports for the years in question. Id. at 1071. The Court is not persuaded to interpret the statute to grant a hearing based upon a provider’s expressed dissatisfaction with individual reimbursement determinations when the plain language clearly predicates the Board’s jurisdiction on a provider’s dissatisfaction with the “amount of total program reimbursement.” 42 U.S.C. 1395oo(a)(l)(A)(I).
2. 1395oo (d): The Board’s Scope of Review
As noted above, subsection (d) confers upon the Board
the power to affirm, modify, or reverse a final determination of the fiscal intermediary with respect to a cost report and to make any other revisions on matters covered by such cost report ... even though such matters were not considered by the intermediary in making such final determination.
Id. § 1395oo(d)(emphasis added). Quoting Bethesda, the HCA Court explained,
[t]his “language allows the Board, once it obtains jurisdiction pursuant to subsection (a), to review and revise a cost report with respect to matters not contested before the fiscal intermediary. The only limitation prescribed by Congress is that the matter must have been ‘covered by such cost report.’ ” 485 U.S. at 406 [108 S.Ct. 1255 ]. In other words, once Board jurisdiction pursuant to subsection (a) obtains, anything in the original cost report is fair game for a challenge by virtue of subsection (d). Thus were we to conclude that appeals to the Board of an intermediary’s reopening ultimately must rest on § 1395oo(a), the Hospital might find solid ground in § 1395oo(d) for appealing matters decided in the original NPR but never revisited since.
Plaintiff seeks review of an initial NPR, and therefore “anything in the original cost report is fair game for a challenge by virtue of subsection (d).”
Id.
As stated in
Bethesda
and repeated in
HCA,
once jurisdiction under subsection (a) is properly invoked, the “only limitation prescribed by Congress is that the matter must have been ‘covered by such cost report.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
As § 1395oo(a) explicitly requires only dissatisfaction with the total amount of program reimbursement in order to obtain a hearing, and § 1395oo(d) allows the Board to consider evidence not put before the intermediary and make modifications based upon that evidence, the Court cannot accept the Secretary’s contention that Congress actually intended to impose an issue-specific exhaustion requirement to access administrative appellate review. There is no such limitation on the Board’s jurisdiction or upon its power of review once jurisdiction is obtained.
In light of this clear statutory directive, the Court must reject the Secretary’s request for deference to its interpretation under
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
E. Proceedings on Remand
Having determined that the Board has jurisdiction over the costs related to the clinical medical education programs for fiscal years 2000-2003, the Court will now address plaintiffs request for an order directing the Board to review and rule upon this issue on the merits. Pl.’s Mot.
This conclusion not only flows directly from the statutory language, but addresses many of the policy concerns articulated by the Secretary in his brief and acknowledged by this Circuit in
Athens II,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED and defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED. This matter is remanded to the Provider Reimbursement Review Board for proceedings consistent with this opinion. An appropriate Order accompanies this opinion.
Notes
. Plaintiff initially also sought review of the Board’s decision pertaining to fiscal year 1999 but has since abandoned that claim. See generally Pl.'s Opp’n. Consequently, that claim is dismissed. Likewise, the Secretary initially moved to dismiss plaintiff's claim regarding fiscal year 2002 for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, but has since reconsidered and is no longer pursuing dismissal on this basis. Def.’s Reply at 1.
. Prior to the Supreme Court's decision in
Bethesda v. Bowen,
the D.C. Circuit definitively held that the PRRB does not have jurisdiction over appeals regarding costs not specifically claimed for reimbursement on a cost report.
Athens Community Hospital v. Schweiker,
