Filed 1/8/09
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
PROSPECT MEDICAL GROUP, INC., )
et al.,
)
)
Plaintiffs and
Appellants, )
) S142209
v. )
) Ct.App. 2/3 B172737
NORTHRIDGE EMERGENCY )
MEDICAL GROUP et
al., ) Los
Angeles County
) Super. Ct. No. BC300850
Defendants and
Respondents. )
___________________________________
)
)
PROSPECT HEALTH SOURCE
)
MEDICAL
GROUP,
)
) Ct.App. 2/3 B172817
Plaintiff and
Appellant, )
) Los Angeles County
v.
) Super. Ct. No. SC076909
)
SAINT JOHN’S EMERGENCY
)
MEDICINE SPECIALISTS, INC., et al.,
)
)
Defendants and
Respondents. )
__________________________________ )
A
health maintenance organization (HMO) commonly manages medical care in
California. In the typical model, familiar to many, doctors contract
to provide medical care to enrolled HMO members. Members generally
use the services of one of the contracting doctors. When they do, and
except for copayments the members must make when services are
rendered, the HMO (or its delegate) pays the doctor under the existing
contract. In this way, the parties agree upon, and know in advance,
what their obligations and rights are and who must pay, and how much,
for medical care.
The typical payment model sometimes breaks down, however, in the case
of emergency care. In an emergency, an HMO member goes to the nearest
hospital emergency room for treatment. The emergency room doctors at
that hospital may or may not have previously contracted with the HMO
to provide care to its members. In that situation, the doctors are
statutorily required to provide emergency care without regard to the
patient’s ability to pay. Additionally, when the patient is a member
of an HMO, the HMO is statutorily required to pay for the emergency
care.
For HMO members, it is always clear in advance who has to provide
emergency services — any emergency room doctor to whom the member goes
in an emergency — and who has to pay for those services — the HMO.
The conflict arises when there is no advance agreement between the
emergency room doctors and the HMO regarding the amount of the
required payment.
Thus, the potential inherently exists for disputes between the
emergency room doctors and the HMO regarding how much the HMO owes the
doctors for emergency services. When no preexisting contract exists,
the doctors sometimes submit a bill to the HMO that they consider
reasonable for the services rendered but that the HMO considers
unreasonably high; conversely, the HMO sometimes makes a payment that
it considers reasonable for the services rendered but that the doctors
consider unreasonably low. The resolution of such disputes can create
difficult problems.
But the question of how to resolve disputes between the doctors and
the HMO over the amount due for emergency care is not before us in
this case. The issue here is narrow, although quite important for
emergency room doctors, HMO’s, and their members: When the HMO
submits a payment lower than the amount billed, can the emergency room
doctors directly bill the patient for the difference between
the bill submitted and the payment received — i.e., engage in the
practice called “balance billing”?
Interpreting the applicable statutory scheme as a whole — primarily
the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act of 1975, Health and Safety
Code section 1340 et seq. (Knox-Keene Act) —
we conclude that billing disputes over emergency medical care must be
resolved solely between the emergency room doctors, who are entitled
to a reasonable payment for their services, and the HMO, which is
obligated to make that payment. A patient who is a member of an HMO
may not be injected into the dispute. Emergency room doctors may not
bill the patient for the disputed amount.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Because neither party petitioned the Court of Appeal for a rehearing,
we take our facts largely from that court’s opinion. (Richmond v.
Shasta Community Services Dist. (2004) 32 Cal.4th 409, 415; see
Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.500(c)(2).)
Plaintiffs and appellants, Prospect Medical Group, Inc., et alia
(collectively Prospect), are individual practice associations.
Prospect manages patient care by executing written contracts with
health care service plans.
It provides for medical care to persons who are members of a health
care service plan and who select a Prospect physician. Prospect also
provides billing services to the health care service plans contracted
with Prospect. As such, it is a “delegate” of those health care
service plans and is statutorily obligated to pay for emergency
services provided to patients who have subscribed to those health care
service plans. (§ 1371.4, subds. (b) & (e).)
Defendants and respondents, Northridge Emergency Medical Group and
Saint John’s Emergency Medicine Specialists, Inc. (collectively
Emergency Physicians), have exclusive licenses at two California
hospitals to provide emergency room physician care. Emergency
Physicians are health care providers and are statutorily required to
provide emergency care without regard to an individual’s insurance or
ability to pay. (§ 1317, subd. (d); see also 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd.)
When patients who are members of a health care service plan schedule
medical services in advance, they generally go to physicians with whom
the health care service plan or its delegate, like Prospect, has an
express preexisting contract. On occasion, when these same patients
need emergency medical care, they may be taken to a hospital where the
doctors staffing the emergency room do not have a preexisting contract
with the health care plan or its delegate. In this case, after
Emergency Physicians provided emergency medical services to patients
who were members of health care service plans that contracted with
Prospect, they submitted reimbursement claims to Prospect. Sometimes
Prospect paid Emergency Physicians less than the amount billed. In
those cases, Prospect paid what it alleged was reasonable for the
services rendered. Emergency Physicians then billed the patients
directly for the differences between the bills they submitted and what
Prospect paid. The parties refer to this practice as “balance
billing.”
After billing disputes arose between Prospect and Emergency
Physicians, Prospect filed two related actions against Emergency
Physicians seeking, among other things, a judicial determination that
(1) Emergency Physicians were entitled only to “reasonable”
compensation for emergency medical care, which Prospect claimed was
equivalent to the Medicare rate; and (2) the practice of balance
billing is unlawful. In one of the actions, Prospect alleged that
Saint John’s Emergency Medicine Specialists, Inc., “routinely bills
Prospect’s patients, threatens to turn over Prospect’s patients to an
outside collection agency, and threatens to take legal measures
against Prospect’s patients.” The trial court sustained Emergency
Physicians’ demurrers without leave to amend and entered judgments
accordingly. Prospect appealed both judgments, and the Court of
Appeal consolidated the appeals.
The Court of Appeal concluded that balance billing is not statutorily
prohibited. Second, it concluded that Prospect is not entitled to a
judicial declaration imposing the Medicare rate as the reasonable
rate. Third, it concluded the trial court abused its discretion by
denying leave to amend the complaint to permit Prospect to allege that
Emergency Physicians charged more than a reasonable rate for a
specific medical procedure. We granted Prospect’s petition for
review, which raised the sole question whether Emergency Physicians
may engage in balance billing.
II. Discussion
The Knox-Keene Act governs this case. “The Knox-Keene Act is a
comprehensive system of licensing and regulation under the
jurisdiction of the Department of Managed Health Care.” (Bell v.
Blue Cross of California (2005) 131 Cal.App.4th 211, 215 (Bell).)
In addition, one statute not part of the act is pertinent here.
Section 1317 requires emergency care providers to provide emergency
services without first questioning the patient’s ability to pay. (Bell,
supra, 131 Cal.App.4th at pp. 215-216 & fn. 4.) Federal law is
similar. (42 U.S.C. § 1395dd; see Bell, supra, at p.
215, fn. 4.)
Today, by statute, when emergency room doctors provide emergency
services, HMO’s are required to reimburse those doctors for the
services rendered to their subscribers or enrollees. As Bell
explained, the Knox-Keene Act “compels for-profit health care service
plans to reimburse emergency health care providers for emergency
services to the plans’ enrollees. . . . [S]ection 1371.4 provides
that a for-profit ‘health care service plan shall reimburse providers
for emergency services and care provided to its enrollees, until the
care results in stabilization of the enrollee, except as provided in
subdivision (c). As long as federal or state law requires that
emergency services and care be provided without first questioning the
patient’s ability to pay, a health care service plan shall not require
a provider to obtain authorization prior to the provision of emergency
services and care necessary to stabilize the enrollee’s emergency
medical condition.’ (§ 1371.4, subd. (b); see § 1371.4, subd. (f).)
‘Payment for emergency services and care may be denied only if the
health care service plan reasonably determines that the emergency
services and care were never performed . . . .’ (§ 1371.4, subd. (c);
see § 1371.4, subd. (f); and see Cal. Code Regs., tit. 28, § 1300.71,
subd. (a).)” (Bell, supra, 131 Cal.App.4th at p. 215.)
“Subdivision (b) of section 1371.4 was enacted in 1994 to impose a
mandatory duty upon health care plans to reimburse noncontracting
providers for emergency medical services. [Citations.]” (Id.
at p. 216.)
The combination of circumstances that (1) in an emergency a patient
might go to emergency room doctors who have no preexisting contractual
relationship with the HMO, (2) the doctors are required to render
emergency care without asking whether the patient can pay for it, and
(3) the HMO is required to pay the doctors for those services, creates
the problem underlying the issue before us. By the very nature of
things, disputes may arise regarding how much the emergency room
doctors may charge and how much the HMO must pay for emergency
services.
Regulations of the Department of Managed Health Care provide that the
HMO must pay “the reasonable and customary value for the health care
services rendered based upon statistically credible information that
is updated at least annually and takes into consideration: (i) the
provider’s training, qualifications, and length of time in practice;
(ii) the nature of the services provided; (iii) the fees usually
charged by the provider; (iv) prevailing provider rates charged in the
general geographic area in which the services were rendered; (v) other
aspects of the economics of the medical provider’s practice that are
relevant; and (vi) any unusual circumstances in the case . . . .”
(Cal. Code Regs., tit. 28, § 1300.71, subd. (a)(3)(B); see Bell,
supra, 131 Cal.App.4th at p. 216.) Thus, the HMO has a “duty
to pay a reasonable and customary amount for the services rendered.”
(Bell, supra, at p. 220.) But how this amount is
determined can create obvious difficulties. In a given case, a
reasonable amount might be the bill the doctor submits, or the amount
the HMO chooses to pay, or some amount in between. In Bell,
supra, 131 Cal.App.4th 211, the Court of Appeal interpreted the
Knox-Keene Act to permit, when disputes arise, emergency room doctors
to sue the HMO directly for the reasonable value of their services.
Prospect argues that section 1379, part of the Knox-Keene Act,
prohibits balance billing. That section, enacted in 1975 and never
amended, provides:
“(a) Every contract between a plan and a provider of health care
services shall be in writing, and shall set forth that in the event
the plan fails to pay for health care services as set forth in the
subscriber contract, the subscriber or enrollee shall not be liable to
the provider for any sums owed by the plan.
“(b) In the event that the contract has not been reduced to writing
as required by this chapter or that the contract fails to contain the
required prohibition, the contracting provider shall not collect or
attempt to collect from the subscriber or enrollee sums owed by the
plan.
“(c) No contracting provider, or agent, trustee or assignee thereof,
may maintain any action at law against a subscriber or enrollee to
collect sums owed by the plan.”
Although no express contractual relationship exists between
Prospect and Emergency Physicians, Prospect argues that the
combination of statutes requiring emergency room doctors to render,
and HMO’s to pay for, emergency services creates an implied
contract between emergency room doctors and HMO’s that has not been
reduced to writing under section 1379, subdivision (b). The Court of
Appeal disagreed. Interpreting section 1379 as a whole (but not in
the context of the Knox-Keene Act as a whole), it held that this
section does not cover the situation here. It found “that the
language of subdivision (b) of section 1379 refers to and includes
within its scope only voluntarily negotiated contracts between
providers of health care services, like Emergency Physicians, and
health care service plans or their delegates, like Prospect, based
upon traditional contractual principles such as a meeting of the
minds. Subdivision (b) does not include within its scope the implied
contract as Prospect asserts.” Accordingly, it “conclude[d] that
section 1379, subdivision (b), was not intended to, and does not,
prohibit the balance billing practices alleged in this case.”
Reading the language of section 1379 in isolation, it does not readily
apply to the precise situation here. No doubt the Legislature did not
contemplate the situation of this case in 1975, when it enacted
section 1379, for this situation did not exist in 1975. Section
1371.4, which obligates HMO’s to pay for emergency services to its
subscribers, was enacted in 1994, long after the Legislature enacted
section 1379. But we must not view section 1379 in isolation. “We do
not examine [statutory] language in isolation, but in the context of
the statutory framework as a whole in order to determine its scope and
purpose and to harmonize the various parts of the enactment.” (Coalition
of Concerned Citizens, Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (2004) 34
Cal.4th 733, 737.)
We
have already seen that in 1975, the Legislature banned balance billing
when an HMO is contractually obligated to pay the bill (§ 1379); that
since 1994, HMO’s have been obligated to pay for emergency care
(§ 1371.4); and that the Knox-Keene Act permits emergency room doctors
to sue HMO’s directly over billing disputes (Bell, supra,
131 Cal.App.4th 211). These provisions strongly suggest that doctors
may not bill patients directly when a dispute arises between doctors
and the HMO’s. Other provisions point in the same direction. Section
1317, subdivision (d), which requires emergency room doctors to render
emergency care without questioning a patient’s ability to pay, also
provides that “the patient or his or her legally responsible relative
or guardian shall execute an agreement to pay [for the services] or
otherwise supply insurance or credit information promptly
after the services are rendered.” (Italics added.) This provision
implies that once patients who are members of an HMO provide insurance
information, they have satisfied their obligation towards the
doctors. Section 1342, subdivision (d), expresses a legislative
intent to “[help] to ensure the best possible health care for the
public at the lowest possible cost by transferring the financial risk
of health care from patients to providers.”
Additionally, the Legislature contemplated there may be disputes over
the amounts owed to noncontracting providers such as emergency room
doctors, and therefore the Knox-Keene Act requires that each HMO
“shall ensure that a dispute resolution mechanism is accessible to
noncontracting providers for the purpose of resolving billing and
claims disputes.” (§ 1367, subd. (h)(2); see also § 1371.38, subd.
(a) [directing the Dept. of Managed Health Care to adopt regulations
ensuring that each HMO adopt a dispute resolution mechanism that is
“fair, fast, and cost-effective for contracting and noncontracting
providers”].) Finally, the Legislature has acted to protect the
interests of noncontracting providers in reimbursement disputes by
prohibiting HMO’s from engaging in unfair payment patterns involving
unjust payment reductions, claim denials, and other unfair practices
as defined, and by authorizing monetary and other penalties against
HMO’s that engage in these patterns. (§ 1371.37; see also § 1371.39
[authorizing providers to report HMO’s that engage in unfair payment
patterns to the Dept. of Managed Health
Care].)
The only reasonable interpretation of a statutory scheme that (1)
intends to transfer the financial risk of health care from patients to
providers; (2) requires emergency care patients to agree to pay for
the services or to supply insurance information; (3) requires
HMO’s to pay doctors for emergency services rendered to their
subscribers; (4) prohibits balance billing when the HMO, and not the
patient, is contractually required to pay; (5) requires adoption of
mechanisms to resolve billing disputes between emergency room doctors
and HMO’s; and (6) permits emergency room doctors to sue HMO’s
directly to resolve billing disputes, is that emergency room doctors
may not bill patients directly for amounts in dispute. Emergency room
doctors must resolve their differences with HMO’s and not inject
patients into the dispute. Interpreting the statutory scheme as a
whole, we conclude that the doctors may not bill a patient for
emergency services that the HMO is obligated to pay. Balance billing
is not permitted.
Any doubt about the meaning of the Knox-Keene Act in this regard is
easily resolved when legislative policy is considered. If statutory
language permits more than one reasonable interpretation, courts may
consider extrinsic aids, including the purpose of the statute, the
evils to be remedied, and public policy. (Torres v. Parkhouse Tire
Service, Inc. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 995, 1003.) We perceive a clear
legislative policy not to place patients in the middle of billing
disputes between doctors and HMO’s. Indeed, the Department of Managed
Health Care argued in Bell, and the Court of Appeal concluded,
that doctors may directly sue HMO’s to resolve billing disputes in
order to avoid the necessity of balance billing. The Bell
court quoted the department’s argument: “ ‘If providers are precluded
from bringing private causes of action to challenge health plans’
reimbursement determinations, health plans may receive an unjust
windfall and patients may suffer an economic hardship when providers
resort to balance billing activities to collect the difference between
the health plan’s payment and the provider’s billed charges. If
collection actions are pursued, unsuspecting enrollees can be forced
to reimburse the full amount of a provider’s billed charges even
though those charges are in excess of the reasonable and customary
value of the services rendered. [¶] The prompt and appropriate
reimbursement of emergency providers ensures the continued financial
viability of California’s health care delivery system. . . . [D]enying
emergency providers judicial recourse to challenge the fairness of a
health plan’s reimbursement determination[] allows a health plan to
systematically underpay California’s safety-net providers and
unnecessarily involve[s] the patient[s] in billing disputes
between the provider and their health plan[s].’ ” (Bell,
supra, 131 Cal.App.4th at p. 218, italics added.)
Because emergency room doctors prevailed in Bell, supra,
131 Cal.App.4th 211, and won the right to resolve their disputes
directly with HMO’s, no reason exists to permit balance billing.
Thus, the Department of Managed Health Care, which supported doctors’
rights to sue the HMO’s directly in Bell, has appeared in this
case as amicus curiae supporting patients’ rights to be free of
balance billing.
When a dispute exists between doctors and an HMO, the bill the doctors
submit may or may not be the reasonable payment to which they are
entitled. The Bell court made clear that an HMO does not have
“unfettered discretion to determine unilaterally the amount it will
reimburse a noncontracting provider . . . .” (Bell, supra,
131 Cal.App.4th at p. 220.) But the converse is also true; emergency
room doctors do not have unfettered discretion to charge whatever they
choose for emergency services. Emergency room doctors and HMO’s must
resolve their disputes among themselves. Interjecting patients into
the dispute by charging them for the amount in dispute has only an in
terrorem effect. As Prospect notes, although emergency room doctors
“are entitled to ‘reasonable’ compensation for the services rendered,
they cannot lawfully seek unreasonable payment from anyone.” But a
patient will have little basis by which to determine whether a bill is
reasonable and, because the HMO is obligated to pay the bill, no
legitimate reason exists for the patient to have to do so. Billing
the patient, and potentially attempting to collect from the patient,
will put unjustifiable pressure on the patient, who will often
complain to the HMO, which complaints will in turn pressure the HMO to
make the payment even if it is unreasonable. Such a billing practice
is not a legitimate way to resolve disputes with an HMO.
Emergency Physicians and their supporting amici curiae argue that
emergency room doctors are entitled to a reasonable fee for their
services, and that HMO’s must be held accountable and forced to pay a
reasonable amount for those services. An amicus curiae brief
supporting Emergency Physicians adds arguments that the California
Constitution “requires that emergency physicians receive adequate
compensation to cover their losses for serving the indigent,” and that
“California’s emergency departments are already operating at capacity
and risk jeopardizing quality of care.” These arguments do not
address the issue before us. Emergency room doctors are
entitled to reasonable payments for emergency services rendered to HMO
patients. All we are holding is that this entitlement does not
further entitle the doctors to bill patients for any amount in
dispute.
Emergency Physicians argue that two recent bills that the Legislature
passed but the Governor vetoed show that the Legislature believes that
balance billing is currently permitted. (Sen. Bill No. 981 (2007-2008
Reg. Sess.); Assem. Bill No. 2220 (2007-2008 Reg. Sess.).) We find no
significance in these bills. They were legislative attempts to
address broader concerns and, perhaps, clarify what is currently
unclear. The Governor’s veto messages state that he opposes balance
billing but found the bills objectionable in other respects. This
area of the law might benefit from comprehensive legislation. Failed
attempts to provide some such legislation do not help us interpret the
existing statutory scheme.
In
support of its conclusion that emergency room doctors may engage in
balance billing, the Court of Appeal cited a regulation that became
operative sometime before 1978 and requires health care service plans
to advise their subscribers that “in the event the health plan fails
to pay a noncontracting provider, the member may be liable to the
noncontracting provider for the cost of the services.” (Cal. Code
Regs., tit. 28, § 1300.63.1, subd. (c)(15).) This regulation, the
Court of Appeal believed, shows that the Department of Managed Health
Care “recognizes balance billing.” (As noted, that department argues
against permitting balance billing in this case.) In our view, the
regulation does not support the conclusion that balance billing is
permissible in the situation here. It was promulgated long before the
statute obligating HMO’s to pay for emergency services was enacted in
1994 and governs a different situation. HMO members are not
required to go to doctors who have contracted with their HMO. In
a nonemergency situation, members may, if they choose, seek
professional services from anyone. If they obtain services from a
noncontracting provider, the HMO might not be obligated to pay all or
even part of that provider’s bill, depending on the exact terms of the
health care plan. If the HMO is not obligated to pay the
noncontracting provider, obviously, the member would be liable
to pay for the services. This circumstance does not change the fact
that under the Knox-Keene Act, HMO members are not liable to
pay for emergency care.
The Court of Appeal also relied on the fact that the Department of
Managed Health Care had, in the past, proposed but never adopted a
regulation that would prohibit balance billing. While this matter was
pending before this court, the Department of Managed Health Care did
adopt a regulation that defines balance billing as an unfair billing
pattern. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 28, § 1300.71.39.) The parties
dispute the meaning and validity of this regulation and whether we
should give it deference. We need not get into such matters.
Although we have given some deference to contemporaneous
interpretations of a statute by an administrative agency charged with
its administration, especially when the interpretation is in the form
of a regulation adopted in accordance with the Administrative
Procedure Act (e.g., Sara M. v. Superior Court (2005) 36
Cal.4th 998, 1011-1014), here the regulation — adopted during the
pendency of this litigation — is not contemporaneous with the
statutory scheme. It is doubtful that we owe the regulation any
deference. (See Dyna-Med, Inc. v. Fair Employment & Housing Com.
(1987) 43 Cal.3d 1379, 1389 [not deferring to a noncontemporaneous
interpretation]; Jones v. Tracy School Dist. (1980) 27 Cal.3d
99, 107 [not deferring to an interpretation by an agency after the
agency had become an amicus curiae in the case].) We base our holding
on our interpretation of the relevant statutory scheme and not on the
previous absence or current presence of any regulation.
The parties discuss the larger problem of adequate compensation for
emergency room doctors. But this larger issue is not before us. Like
the Bell court, “we reject the parties’ suggestion that we can
solve the societal and economic problems defined by their rhetoric,
and emphasize that our decision is limited to the precise issue before
us . . . .” (Bell, supra, 131 Cal.App.4th at p. 222.)
III. Conclusion
We
reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal and remand the matter for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CHIN, J.
WE CONCUR:
GEORGE, C.J.
KENNARD, J.
BAXTER, J.
MORENO, J.
CORRIGAN, J.
McDONALD,
J.*
_____________________________
* Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal,
Fourth Appellate District, Division One, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.