Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, DAB No. 1378 (1993)

Department of Health and Human Services

DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD

Appellate Division

SUBJECT: Louisiana Department of  Health and Hospitals

DATE: January 7, 1993
Docket No. 91-104
Decision No. 1378

DECISION

The Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals (Louisiana) appealed a
decision by the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) disallowing
$1,344,569 in federal financial participation (FFP) claimed by Louisiana
under title XIX (Medicaid) of the Social Security Act for the period
November 1, 1985 through October 31, 1986.  HCFA determined that
Louisiana did not follow the applicable regulations in extending the
automatic cancellation dates of facilities' provider agreements.  HCFA
therefore found that Louisiana made unallowable payments to 30
facilities for periods in which no valid provider agreements were in
effect.  During the course of Board proceedings, HCFA withdrew the
disallowance for three facilities.

For the reasons discussed below, we sustain the disallowance with
respect to 18 facilities and reverse the disallowance for nine
facilities.

Statutory and Regulatory Background

Title XIX of the Social Security Act (Act) provides federal funding to
states for expenditures for "medical assistance" for needy individuals
under an approved state plan.  During the period at issue here, the Act
defined "medical assistance" to include payment for services provided by
intermediate care facilities (ICFs).  Section 1905(a) of the Act.  To
participate as an ICF, a facility had to meet standards specified in
HCFA regulations.  Section 1905(c) of the Act; 42 C.F.R. Part 442,
Subparts E, F, and G (1985).  Each facility had to have a provider
agreement with the "single state agency" designated to administer the
Medicaid state plan (also referred to in this decision as the "Medicaid
agency").  Section 1902(a)(27) of the Act.

A state survey agency performed surveys to determine whether a facility
wishing to participate in Medicaid met program requirements for
certification for participation as a Medicaid provider, so that the
Medicaid agency could enter into a provider agreement with it.  Sections
1902(a)(33)(B) and 1910(c) of the Act.  HCFA regulations in effect
during the relevant time period provided:

 . . . FFP is available in expenditures for . . . ICF services
 only if the facility has been certified as meeting the
 requirements for Medicaid participation, as evidenced by a
 provider agreement executed under this part.  An agreement is no
 longer valid evidence that a facility has met those requirements
 if HCFA determines that --

         *    *    *

 (2)  The survey agency failed to follow the rules and procedures
 for certification set forth in Subpart C of this part and
 [section] 431.610 of this subchapter;

         *    *    * (4)  The survey agency failed to use
 the Federal standards and the forms, methods and procedures
 prescribed by HCFA in current general instructions . . . for
 determining the qualifications of providers; or

 (5)  The agreement's terms and conditions do not meet the
 requirements of this subpart.

42 C.F.R. . 442.30(a) (1985).

In addition, implementing regulations at 42 C.F.R. . 442.16 provided
that a Medicaid agency could extend a provider agreement for a single
period of up to two months beyond the original expiration date of the
agreement, if it received written notice from the survey agency, before
the expiration date of the agreement, that the extension would not
jeopardize the patients' health and safety, and, as pertinent, that the
extension either was needed to prevent irreparable harm to the facility
or hardship to the recipients in the facility, or was needed because it
was impracticable to determine before the expiration date whether the
facility met the certification requirements.

Moreover, the regulations provided that if a survey agency found a
facility deficient in meeting the standards specified for ICFs under
Subpart E or F of Part 442, the survey agency could certify the facility
for Medicaid purposes under the following conditions:

 (a) The agency finds that the facility's deficiencies,
 individually or in combination, do not jeopardize the patient's
 health and safety, nor seriously limit the facility's capacity
 to give adequate care.  The agency must maintain a written
 justification of these findings.

 (b) The agency finds acceptable the facility's written plan for
 correcting the deficiencies.

42 C.F.R. . 442.105.

An automatic cancellation date is a date specified in a facility's
provider agreement on which certification of the facility will
automatically expire unless --

 (1) The survey agency finds that all deficiencies have been
 satisfactorily corrected; or

 (2) The survey agency finds and notifies the Medicaid agency
 that the facility has made substantial progress in correcting
 the deficiencies and has a new plan for correction that is
 acceptable.

42 C.F.R. . 442.111(c).

Procedural Background

The Board previously considered disallowances of payments to the same
facilities for the same time periods as are involved here.  Louisiana
Dept. of Health and Hospitals, DAB No. 1116 (1989). 1/  That decision
involved a disallowance issued by HCFA in April 1988 of FFP claimed for
payments to 140 long-term care facilities for periods during which HCFA
found that the facilities did not have valid provider agreements.  FFP
in payments to 33 of these facilities was disallowed based on HCFA's
determination that automatic cancellation dates (ACDs) of the
facilities' provider agreements were improperly extended.  In DAB No.
1116, the Board rejected HCFA's argument that the ACD of a facility's
provider agreement could never be extended under 42 C.F.R. . 442.16.
Id. at 27-29.  The Board concluded that until Louisiana had notice from
HCFA to the contrary, Louisiana could reasonably interpret section
442.16 to permit extensions of the provider agreements beyond ACDs,
provided that conditions set forth in that regulation were satisfied.
Thus, the Board reversed the disallowance for payments to the 33
facilities based on HCFA's finding that extensions of provider
agreements beyond the ACDs were improper.

HCFA requested partial reconsideration of the Board's decision regarding
these 33 facilities.  HCFA did not challenge the Board's holding that
Louisiana could have extended the provider agreements beyond the ACDs.
Rather, HCFA challenged what it saw as implicit in the Board's holding:
a finding that Louisiana's Certification and Transmittal forms (C&Ts)
for the questioned facilities constituted compliance with 42 C.F.R. .
442.16. 2/  HCFA contended that since the record failed to show that the
requirements of the regulation were met, such a finding was unwarranted.

In denying HCFA's request for reconsideration, the Board specifically
stated that it had neither held nor found that Louisiana met the
requirements of section 442.16 in extending the ACDs for these
facilities.  Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, Ruling on
Request for Reconsideration of DAB No. 1116, at 2.  The Board stated
that its decision did not preclude HCFA from requiring Louisiana to show
whether it had received C&Ts or other documentation from the survey
agency which met the requirements of section 442.16 before it extended
the provider agreements beyond the ACDs.

HCFA then notified Louisiana that it would conduct a review to determine
whether Louisiana complied with the requirements of section 442.16.
Louisiana was asked to provide documentation showing that the ACD
extensions for the questioned facilities were granted in accordance with
the requirements of section 442.16.  HCFA Exhibit (HE) 1.  Louisiana
submitted documentation including C&Ts in support of its position that
the provider agreements for the disputed facilities had been extended
properly.  State Exhibit (SE) 1-29.  HCFA agreed that one provider
agreement was properly extended and concluded that disallowances were
appropriate for 30 facilities because Louisiana had not met the
requirements of section 442.16 and had therefore improperly extended the
provider agreements beyond the ACDs. 3/  HCFA indicated that none of the
C&Ts used to extend the provider agreements for these facilities
contained the required assurance that the extension would not jeopardize
the patients' health and safety.  HCFA also found that some of the
questioned C&Ts did not meet certain other requirements of section
442.16 (discussed later).  As a result, HCFA disallowed $1,344,569, the
amount of FFP in payments made to these facilities for services provided
after the ACDs of the facilities' provider agreements and before the new
certification dates.  HCFA later withdrew the disallowances for three
facilities:  Bayou Village, Madison Parish Home for the Aged, and Port
Allen Care Center.  Letter to Board from HCFA dated April 14, 1992.

On appeal to the Board, Louisiana first argued that the disallowances
covering all 27 facilities in question here were barred by the
affirmative defense of res judicata.  Louisiana also argued that it had
no notice of the method for extending ACDs and, therefore, the
disallowances for all the facilities should be reversed.  In addition,
Louisiana argued that the ACDs were properly extended under section
442.16.  Louisiana contended further that ACDs were not necessary for
several facilities since there were no standard level deficiencies
involved.  Finally, Louisiana claimed that for certain other facilities,
it had shown substantial progress in correcting the deficiencies before
the ACD and that the ACD could have been rescinded.  We discuss each of
these arguments below.

I.  The affirmative defense of res judicata isinapplicable.

Louisiana argued that the affirmative defense of res judicata was
applicable here. 4/  It contended that the same parties and the same
action are involved as were involved in DAB No. 1116.  Louisiana claimed
that HCFA was therefore precluded from now bringing a separate
disallowance on the ground that Louisiana did not follow the
requirements of section 442.16 in extending the ACDs.  Louisiana argued
that HCFA could have brought up this ground for the disallowance in the
proceedings in the earlier appeal resulting in DAB No. 1116 and that
this would have prevented needless litigation and unnecessary burden and
expense.

Louisiana's argument, however, misconstrues the scope of DAB No. 1116
and the Ruling on Reconsideration related to that decision.  DAB No.
1116 merely decided the threshold legal issue of whether an ACD may be
extended.  That decision did not consider whether, for the facilities in
issue here, Louisiana had shown that it met the requisite requirements
for extending the ACD as set forth in section 442.16.  Moreover, in our
Ruling on Request for Reconsideration of DAB No. 1116, we specifically
stated that --

 The Board's decision does not preclude HCFA from requiring that
 Louisiana show whether it in fact has C&Ts or other documents
 which extend the ACDs for these facilities and which meet the
 requirements of section 442.16.  This does not mean, however,
 that we should reopen the proceedings leading to DAB No. 1116.
 If HCFA intends to disallow on the basis of section 442.16, that
 is an entirely new basis for a disallowance, and the appropriate
 procedure, under the circumstances here, would be for HCFA to
 issue a new determination.  This is particularly so since
 Louisiana has not yet had an opportunity to show HCFA that it
 met the requirements of 442.16 for the facilities, and it is
 unclear whether Louisiana would pursue an appeal if it cannot
 make such a showing.

Ruling on Reconsideration at 2-3.

While some of the same considerations which support application of res
judicata in court are relevant in administrative proceedings (and that
principle has been applied to administrative proceedings), there are
additional considerations present here.  HCFA's original findings were
based on its review of State documentation showing that Louisiana had
extended ACDs.  Determining whether Louisiana had met the specific
regulatory requirements for extending provider agreements would have
required review of further documentation, in Louisiana's possession, and
would have been unnecessary if the Board had agreed with HCFA's original
position.  Moreover, from the Board's standpoint, delay of the
proceedings to permit such further review was unwarranted since it
affected only a relatively small part of the disallowance, and it was
not clear that such review would result in any dispute which the Board
would need to resolve.  In such circumstances, the Board often chooses
to resolve only threshold issues, without prejudice to an agency's
ability to apply federal requirements which were not applied in an
initial audit.

Consequently, we conclude that since the issue before us in this appeal
was not considered in DAB No. 1116 and is a new basis for disallowance,
the defense of res judicata does not preclude the Board from hearing
this issue here.

II.  Louisiana had notice of the required method ofextending ACDs.

Louisiana argued that it had no reasonable notice of what was required
to extend ACDs.  Louisiana noted that in DAB No. 1116, HCFA originally
argued that ACDs could not be extended.  Louisiana contended that if
that was HCFA's argument there, it follows that HCFA had no procedures
for extending ACDs and could not rely on the very same provisions of
section 442.16 which HCFA previously had argued were inapplicable to
ACDs.

We find Louisiana's argument without merit.  The Board specifically
found in DAB No. 1116 that Louisiana could and did reasonably interpret
the regulations to permit extensions of provider agreements beyond ACDs.
The Board explained that, under section 442.16, provider agreements may
be extended beyond their original "expiration dates" and that this
reasonably could include ACDs since ACDs function as expiration dates.
However, the Board specified that "extending a provider agreement beyond
an ACD would require the written notice specified under section 442.16."
DAB No. 1116, at 28.

Louisiana argued here that it did not in fact rely on any specific
regulation as authorizing it to extend ACDs.  However, the only
authority for extending ACDs is the authority in section 442.16 to
extend provider agreements.  Consequently, the regulations cannot
reasonably be interpreted to permit a state to extend ACDs without
meeting the requirements of section 442.16. 5/

We conclude, therefore, that Louisiana had notice that, to properly
extend the ACDs, it was required to make the findings and to give the
written notice specified under section 442.16.

III.  Louisiana did not extend the provider agreementspursuant to the
requirements of section 442.16.

Louisiana argued that it had properly extended the ACDs of the provider
agreements for all the disputed facilities in accordance with the
requirements of 42 C.F.R. . 442.16.  It claimed that the statement by
the survey agency, included on each of the initial C&Ts, that none of
the deficiencies posed a threat to the health and safety of the
residents was sufficient notice to the Medicaid agency.  Quoting from
DAB No. 1116, Louisiana contended that it met the two purposes of the
regulation which are (1) "to ensure that the agency responsible for the
provider agreement knows that it has been extended" and (2) "to ensure
that the requisite findings are made before an extension is given."  DAB
No. 1116, at 20.  Consequently, in Louisiana's view, any failure to
execute a new C&T, before the ACD expired, which contained a statement
that there was no jeopardy to the health and safety of the patients
should be considered merely an administrative oversight.

We agree with HCFA that Louisiana did not extend the ACDs of the
disputed facilities in accordance with the requirements of the
regulations.  The regulations provided that a Medicaid agency could
extend a provider agreement for up to two months beyond its original
expiration date if it received written notice from the survey agency,
before the expiration date of the agreement, that the extension would
not jeopardize the patients' health and safety, and that the extension
is needed either to prevent irreparable harm to the facility or hardship
to the recipients in the facility, or is needed because it is
impracticable to determine, before the expiration date, whether the
facility meets certification standards.  42 C.F.R. . 442.16.

Contrary to Louisiana's assertions, this regulation clearly required
that an assurance be made in writing at the time an extension was
requested that the extension would not jeopardize the patients' health
and safety.  It is not sufficient that the original C&Ts contained that
assurance because circumstances might change between the time that
assurance is made in the C&T and the time an extension is granted.  We
have previously determined that the requirement for a contemporaneous
written notice of such a finding at the time an extension is requested
was more than a technical requirement, but was "intended to ensure that
patients are not left in a facility indefinitely without some assurance
that they will not be in jeopardy."  DAB No. 1116, at 21.  Moreover, in
Florida Dept. of Health and Rehabilitative Services, DAB No. 942 (1988),
the Board stated that the required notice that the extension would not
jeopardize the patients' health and safety "cannot be implied from the
mere fact of approval of the extension; such an interpretation would
make the requirement meaningless."  Id. at 9.

Thus, in order to establish that it complied with section 442.16,
Louisiana had to provide contemporaneous documentation containing the
requisite assurances.  We reviewed the C&Ts by which Louisiana attempted
to extend the ACDs for the facilities in dispute.  However, none of
these C&Ts contained the assurance that the extension would not
jeopardize the patients' health and safety. 6/ .Moreover, the
regulations specifically required that the written notice from the
survey agency be received by the Medicaid agency before the expiration
date of the agreement.  Thus, even if these C&Ts had contained the
requisite assurances, Louisiana still would not have fully complied with
the regulation.  The Board previously considered whether the requirement
of written notification of an extension was overly technical and could
be waived under certain circumstances.  The Board determined that this
requirement was clear from the regulation and could not be waived and
that the notice must be received by the Medicaid agency before the
expiration. 7/  New Mexico Human Services Dept., DAB No. 907 (1987).
Our review of Louisiana's documentation indicated that for all but three
of the disputed facilities, the C&Ts not only failed to contain the
required finding of no jeopardy to the patients but were submitted by
the survey agency to the Medicaid agency after the provider agreement
had expired.

On the basis of these findings, we conclude that Louisiana did not
extend the ACDs for the disputed facilities in accordance with the
requirements of 42 C.F.R. . 442.16.

IV.  Louisiana was required to set ACDs.

Louisiana argued that, since 42 C.F.R. . 442.105 provided that ACDs were
necessary only when a facility was "deficient in meeting the standards"
for Medicaid facilities, Louisiana was not required to set an ACD if a
facility had only "element level" deficiencies.  Louisiana asserted that
the facilities Manhattan Manor, Heritage Manor, St. Ann's Convalescent,
Glen Oaks, Glen Retirement Village, Greenhills Nursing Home, Pierremont,
Evangeline Oaks, Jefferson Health Care, Ringgold Nurse Care, St. Mary's
Guest Home, Meadowview, Pinehill Senior Citizens, Helena Community Home,
Springhill Community Home, and Consolata Home had only element level
deficiencies and no standard level deficiencies.  SE 30. 8/  Louisiana
also contended that, in training for state survey staff, a HCFA trainer
indicated that ACDs were set only for standard level deficiencies.
Louisiana argued that it had a practice of monitoring facilities
throughout the year which allowed it to require facilities to address
minor deficiencies and which was more stringent than required.
Louisiana asserted that it had used ACDs to monitor and achieve 100
percent compliance with all required elements and, thus, Louisiana
should not be penalized for complying with its own stricter standards.

We agree with HCFA that 42 C.F.R. . 442.105 did not stand for the
proposition that a facility with only element level deficiencies could
be certified without an ACD.  The term "standards" in that regulation
does not refer to standard-level deficiency as Louisiana argued; rather,
the context clearly indicates that "standards" means all the health and
safety requirements that a facility must meet.  Indeed, section 442.101
required notice that a facility either met any requirements not waived
or was "certified with provision for correcting deficiencies in meeting
those requirements . . . ."  Nothing in the applicable regulations
distinguishes between "standards" and "elements" or "standard level" and
"element level" deficiencies.  Louisiana presented nothing to support
its argument that the relevant statutory and regulatory authority made
some distinction between the kind of deficiencies.

Moreover, during the time period in dispute, HCFA consistently
interpreted this regulation to apply to all deficiencies, whether
element level or standard level, and to require a plan of correction for
even minor deficiencies.  In the preamble to proposed regulations to
amend section 442.105, HCFA explained that ACDs --

 were established to ensure timely corrections of all
 deficiencies. . . .  Because the automatic cancellation clause
 is applicable even when the deficiencies are minor, a
 substantial percentage of nursing homes is subject to automatic
 cancellation at any time.

47 Fed. Reg. 23405 (May 27, 1982)(emphasis added).  In fact, the
proposed regulations, which were never adopted in final, suggested
elimination of the requirement at 42 C.F.R. . 442.111 that an ICF
provider agreement, accepted on the basis of a plan of correction of
deficiencies, be automatically cancelled unless the deficiencies were
corrected by the predetermined date.  47 Fed. Reg. 23405 (1982).  The
language in the preamble and the fact that HCFA never implemented the
proposed provisions that would eliminate the requirement in section
442.111 for automatic cancellation clearly show that HCFA intended to
require a state to set an ACD if a state accepts a provider agreement on
the basis of a plan of correction of deficiencies, even if the
deficiencies are minor.

Louisiana also indicated that it believed HCFA's position to be that
ACDs applied only to standard level deficiencies on the basis of
comments made by HCFA staff during a training course for state surveyors
in December of 1986.  The only reference to this interpretation is in a
February 10, 1987 letter written by Louisiana to HCFA asking for
clarification of HCFA's position.  AF Ex. 21 of DAB No. 1116.  We do not
find this persuasive.  First, the letter merely indicated Louisiana's
understanding of HCFA's comments; it is not a HCFA statement of its
policy.  Moreover, this training course was conducted after the
disallowance period and the letter also was sent to HCFA well after the
disputed time period.  Thus, the record does not establish that HCFA
staff interpreted the regulation in the manner argued by Louisiana.
Furthermore, Louisiana's other documentation fails to support the
assertion that HCFA had stated such a policy during the period in
dispute.  A form letter the Medicaid agency sent to providers had three
possible situations for the Medicaid agency to check off: that the
provider was in full compliance with the certification standards; that
the provider was in compliance with standards with a waiver; or that the
provider's certification for participation was based on correctable
deficiencies subject to automatic cancellation if the deficiencies were
not corrected.  SE 2 at 3.  This form mirrors the regulatory requirement
for an ACD if participation is conditioned on correcting deficiencies.
We find, further, that at all times relevant to this dispute, it was
Louisiana's practice, consistent with the federal requirements, to set
an ACD if a provider agreement was accepted on the basis of a plan of
correction, even for deficiencies that were minor.  Since Louisiana set
ACDs for the facilities in question here, it was not confused or misled
by any ambiguity introduced by the use of the word "standards" in
section 442.105.

We conclude, therefore, that Louisiana had notice that it was required
to set an ACD for any provider agreement accepted on the basis of a plan
of correction of deficiencies in meeting federal requirements even if
the deficiencies were minor.

V.  Louisiana could have rescinded some of the ACDs for substantial
progress.

Under regulations applicable when a facility was certified with an ACD,
the certification would be automatically cancelled on the ACD unless --

 (1)  The survey agency finds that all deficiencies have been
 satisfactorily corrected; or

 (2)  The survey agency finds and notifies the Medicaid agency
 that the facility has made substantial progress in correcting
 the deficiencies and has a new plan for correction that is
 acceptable.

42 C.F.R. . 442.111(c).

Louisiana argued that for nine facilities the ACDs should have been
rescinded because the facilities had made substantial progress in
correcting their deficiencies. Louisiana did not claim that any of the
disputed facilities had corrected all deficiencies by the ACD; rather,
Louisiana claimed that it had conducted follow-up surveys prior to the
ACDs and that some of the facilities had made substantial progress in
correcting the deficiencies and had submitted acceptable plans of
correction. 9/

HCFA argued that Louisiana could not properly rescind the ACDs for these
facilities since the survey agency did not, prior to the ACDs,
specifically find that substantial progress had been made.  Moreover,
HCFA argued that Louisiana did not provide written notice to the
Medicaid agency that substantial progress had been made.

Louisiana responded that, even if it had not at the time specifically
made a finding of substantial progress for each facility, it had in
effect done so.  Louisiana presented testimony that the reason it had
not rescinded the ACDs at the time of the follow-up survey was that it
felt that its practice of requiring that all corrections be made before
rescinding the ACD (and, if necessary, extending the ACD to permit a
second follow-up visit) provided more leverage to ensure that the
providers would complete corrections.  Tr. at 31-32.  Louisiana asserted
that it would not have extended any provider agreement unless it had
accepted a new plan of correction and had determined that the provider
was likely to complete the corrections within the two-month extension
period.  Louisiana argued that it had therefore made findings which were
equivalent to substantial progress findings.  Louisiana presented
testimony by the manager of the state survey agency office responsible
for surveying nursing homes to support its argument that, prior to the
ACDs, each of these facilities had made substantial progress in
correcting deficiencies.

HCFA objected that it was too burdensome for it to have to evaluate,
after the fact, whether substantial progress had been made.  However,
HCFA presented testimony at the hearing from regional officials on what
their policy was for determining whether substantial progress had been
made and why they had concluded that the disputed facilities had not
made substantial progress.  At the hearing it became clear that the
parties had different interpretations of what was required for
substantial progress.  HCFA took the position that a facility had to
have made substantial progress in correcting each of its deficiencies.
Indeed, if a State surveyor had noted various subparts to a deficiency
finding, HCFA said that substantial progress was necessary for each
subpart.  Louisiana took the position that substantial progress had to
be based on evaluating a facility's progress in correcting its
deficiencies as a whole.

We discuss below whether Louisiana was required to give specific notice
to the Medicaid agency that these facilities had made substantial
progress in correcting their deficiencies, what substantial progress
means and who has the burden to show it, and finally, whether
substantial progress was made by these facilities in correcting their
deficiencies.  We conclude that Louisiana's failure to make specific
findings and to give notice about substantial progress does not require
a disallowance in the context here.  We further conclude that Louisiana
had the burden of showing that all nine facilities had made substantial
progress in correcting the deficiencies prior to the ACDs and met that
burden here.

 A.  Whether specific findings and notice of substantial progress
 were required

HCFA's authority to question whether these facilities were properly
certified stems from the provisions of 42 C.F.R. . 442.30.  These
provisions are known as procedural "look behind" provisions because they
allow HCFA to look behind a provider agreement where a state failed to
follow procedural requirements for survey and certification.  The effect
of a state's failure to follow procedural requirements is that the
provider agreement is no longer valid evidence that the facility met
certification requirements.

In Illinois Dept. of Public Aid, DAB No. 876 (1987), the Board
determined that a disallowance is not necessarily required in a
procedural "look behind" situation.  Rather, as the Board stated in DAB
No. 876, "the fact that a provider agreement was not executed in
accordance with the required procedures does not necessarily mean that a
state's evidence that the facility met the requirements for Medicaid is
insufficient."  Id. at 9.  Since in these cases, there is no question
that the facility provided services to eligible Medicaid recipients, the
state is entitled to FFP if it can show that the services met the
certification requirements.

In DAB No. 876, the Board stated that even though Illinois did not
comply with the procedures for certifying a facility with deficiencies
by setting an ACD, a disallowance was not warranted where a follow-up
survey showed correction of all deficiencies, so that the ACD (if set)
could have been rescinded.  The evidence was sufficient to show that the
facility was certifiable.  The Board specifically distinguished this
situation from other cases involving procedural "look behind" where the
procedural defect resulted in a lack of a specific type of documentation
required to show that the requirements for participation were met.  For
example, to extend a provider agreement, 42 C.F.R. . 442.16 requires
specific documentation, namely, written notice from the survey agency to
the Medicaid agency, prior to the ACD, containing specific findings.

HCFA argued here that, like the extension provision at section 442.16,
the regulation allowing for rescission of an ACD for substantial
progress required a specific type of notice.  Therefore, HCFA argued,
these facilities could not be found certifiable, even if they made
substantial progress, because Louisiana did not have any contemporaneous
documentation showing that such a notice had been given.

We disagree.  Section 442.111(c)(2) requires only that the survey agency
"find and notify" the Medicaid agency that substantial progress has been
made.  Unlike section 442.16, section 442.111 does not require that the
notice be written.  The requirement for written notice of an extension
of a provider agreement helps to assure that no extension is given
without a contemporaneous, documented finding that there is no jeopardy
to the health and safety of the patients from the extension.  After-the-
fact examination of the facility's status at the time of the extension
would not provide the same assurances.  However, HCFA did not point to
any comparable function special and separate written notice of
substantial progress would have served here.  Louisiana maintained
contemporaneous documentation from the follow-up surveys of the
corrections made by the facility.  The only apparent purpose written
notice to the Medicaid agency would have served would be to indicate
that the provider agreement, which would otherwise be automatically
cancelled on the ACD, was still in effect, and, therefore, Medicaid
payments to the facility were appropriate.  Here, since the survey
agency had notified the Medicaid agency to extend the provider
agreements, the lack of separate written notice of substantial progress
did not result in any apparent difference in program administration.

Consequently, we conclude that the mere lack of specific notice of
substantial progress to the Medicaid agency is not a basis for
sustaining the disallowance.

 B.  Who has the burden to show substantial progress

While we conclude that Louisiana was not required to give specific
written notice here of substantial progress, this does not mean that
there is no consequence to Louisiana's failure to follow the regulatory
procedures.  Since the provider agreement is no longer valid evidence
that the facility is certifiable, Louisiana had the burden to present
evidence sufficient to show that the facilities were otherwise
certifiable within the provisions of the regulation.  This would require
evidence that the facilities had made substantial progress in correcting
the deficiencies.  42 C.F.R. . 442.111(c)(2).  (HCFA did not deny that
the facilities had submitted acceptable plans of correction for
deficiencies remaining in the follow-up surveys, as required.)

We note that the fact that Louisiana had the burden to present evidence
showing substantial progress lessened the burden on HCFA.  While HCFA
objected to having to make any after-the-fact determination of whether
substantial progress had been made, in our view this result is required
by the wording of the procedural "look behind" provisions.  As discussed
above, under those provisions, failure to follow the procedures does not
result automatically in a disallowance; it simply affects the status of
the provider agreement as valid evidence of certifiability.  If HCFA
wanted to make disallowances automatic upon failure to meet procedural
requirements, it should have specifically provided this in its
regulations.  In any event, this is a time-limited problem, since
substantial revisions in the survey and certification process were made
as a result of legislation enacted in 1987.

 C.  What substantial progress means

At the hearing, HCFA explained for the first time that, in evaluating
whether the ACDs for the disputed facilities could have properly been
rescinded, HCFA regional officials had examined whether a facility had
made substantial progress in correcting each deficiency, and that, if
there were more than one subpart to a deficiency described under one
"tag number," they had examined whether substantial progress had been
made in correcting each subpart. 10/   Two of HCFA's witnesses testified
that the reason they had used this standard was that they thought the
regulation provided that the facility must have made substantial
progress in correcting "all" deficiencies.  Tr. at 14-19, 23-26, 54, and
163.

As Louisiana pointed out, however, the word "all" does not appear in
section 442.111(c)(2); it appears only in section 442.111(c)(1), which
allows rescission of the ACD when "all" corrections are completed by the
ACD.  The relevant wording allows rescission of the ACD where "the
facility has made substantial progress in correcting the deficiencies .
. . ."  42 C.F.R. . 442.111(c)(2) (emphasis added).  Contrary to what
HCFA's witnesses thought, the regulation does not say that the
substantial progress standard is applied to all deficiencies, nor does
it say that substantial progress must be made in correcting each
deficiency.  The wording of the regulation is thus consistent with
Louisiana's position that we should measure substantial progress by
examining the status of the deficiencies as a whole.

HCFA was unable to point to any provision in its State Operations Manual
or any other policy issuance that set out as HCFA's official
interpretation the interpretation HCFA advanced at the hearing.  The
only provision HCFA referred to was section 3020 of its State Operations
Manual, dated December 1985, which stated:

 "Substantial progress" means that corrections are well underway;
 that there is tangible and visible progress. . . .

 If the verification visit establishes that the facility . . .
 has made significant improvement justifying continuance of the
 agreement based on an updated plan of correction, complete the
 following . . . .

HE 6 (State Operations Manual, section 3020, dated 12/85).  This
description of substantial progress does not support the interpretation
of the regulation HCFA advanced here.  Rather, it supports Louisiana's
interpretation since it says that "corrections" must be well underway,
not that each correction must be well underway.

Finally, Louisiana submitted a form which HCFA at one time provided for
use in a follow-up review to summarize deficiencies not corrected.
While the form has space for evaluating each deficiency found in an
original survey, the alternatives to be checked indicate that the
deficiency has not been corrected and either "Acceptable Progress or
Effort Shown" or "Inadequate or No Action by the Provider."   SE 38.
Nowhere on the form does it require "substantial" progress for each
deficiency, nor even that acceptable progress must be made for each
deficiency in order to rescind the ACD.

As one of HCFA's witnesses indicated when first asked to define
substantial progress, the surveyor should determine whether the facility
has shown a willingness to correct the deficiencies, so that there is a
reasonable certainty that the facility will complete the corrections if
the ACD is rescinded.  Tr. at 54.  This would be necessary in order to
justify continuance of the provider in the program.  Moreover, we agree
with HCFA that substantial progress should not depend solely on numbers
of deficiencies corrected; the seriousness of any remaining deficiencies
should affect the evaluation of whether an ACD should be rescinded.
Indeed, Louisiana's witness acknowledged that these were relevant
considerations.  Tr. at 48.  However, we find no basis in the
regulation, or in the official issuances of HCFA, for the overly
stringent application of the substantial progress requirement here,
which was apparently based on a misreading of the regulation by regional
officials. 11/

Thus, we conclude that, under HCFA regulations applicable here, the
measure of substantial progress is whether, taken as a whole, the
facility has made tangible and visible progress in correcting the
deficiencies which evidences a willingness to correct the deficiencies
and which leaves no remaining deficiencies which are so serious that
rescission of the ACD (and continuing the provider in the program) would
not be appropriate.

 C.  Whether Louisiana met its burden to show thatsubstantial
 progress was made

Applying this standard for substantial progress, we find that Louisiana
met its burden of showing that all nine facilities had made substantial
progress in correcting the deficiencies prior to the ACD so that the ACD
could have been rescinded.  First, HCFA did not dispute that, for each
of the nine facilities, the documentation from the follow-up survey
establishes that each facility,  prior to the ACD, had completed
corrections of most of the deficiencies from the original survey. 12/
Thus, the evidence of progress is tangible and visible for each facility
and shows the provider's willingness to correct deficiencies.

HCFA also acknowledged that, with respect to some of the individual
deficiencies, the facilities had made substantial progress.  The
documentation from the follow-up surveys, together with testimony by
Louisiana's witness, who was familiar with the facilities, shows that
continuation of the providers in Medicaid was justified (in spite of the
remaining cited deficiencies in which HCFA did not find substantial
progress) because:

o  Some of the remaining problems cited as deficiencies were not in fact
deficiencies under the federal requirements as interpreted by HCFA;

o  Some of the citations were to State requirements which were more
stringent than the federal requirements and therefore were not federal
deficiencies;

o  The providers had corrected some subparts of the deficiencies
originally cited under the same "tag number" or had shown some effort
toward correction.

Based on his personal knowledge of the facilities involved, Louisiana's
witness also satisfactorily responded to questions raised by HCFA's
witnesses concerning whether some of the remaining deficiencies were
serious deficiencies which jeopardized the health and safety of the
residents and therefore required termination of the facilities.   We
found his testimony credible and based on sensible judgments concerning
whether the facilities' continuance in the program was justified.
Moreover, the concerns HCFA's witnesses raised, while legitimate in the
abstract, failed to consider the context here, where the original
surveyor had found that none of the deficiencies originally cited
jeopardized patient health or safety.  See 42 C.F.R. . 442.105(a).

On the whole, HCFA's evaluation of the facilities was colored by the
view that substantial progress had to be made for each deficiency.
Louisiana's evidence clearly showed substantial progress, under the
standard we set out above, based on HCFA's own policy documents.  For
example, Norman Care Center was the disputed facility with the most
deficiencies cited originally and the most deficiencies remaining at the
follow-up survey.  See, generally, SE 19; Tr. beginning at 124.  The
life safety code survey found three deficiencies, all of which had been
corrected.  The health survey found 65 deficiencies, of which five
remained uncorrected.  HCFA conceded that the facility had made
substantial progress in correcting two of those five deficiencies.

One of the remaining deficiencies was originally cited in three parts.
The facility was not re-cited for two of those parts.  The remaining
part had to do with covering food in a reach-in refrigerator.  On the
follow-up survey, the surveyor found that the food was covered with
foil, but re-cited the deficiency, apparently because he thought that
the containers should have lids.  HCFA conceded that there was no
requirement that the containers have their own lids, and the HCFA
surveyor said that he would not recommend terminating a facility for not
having lids.  Thus, we agree with Louisiana that this should not have
been cited as a deficiency.

The second remaining deficiency related to a requirement that medication
be stored in a locked cabinet.  The nurse distributing medications had
apparently not continuously observed the unlocked medication cart during
her drug "pass."  HCFA acknowledged that it had issued an instruction
around the period of the disallowance clarifying that continuous
observation of a cart during a drug pass was not required.  Thus, we
agree with Louisiana that this should not have been cited as a
deficiency.

The final deficiency was in the facility's medication error rate.  The
State Operations Manual requires that a deficiency be written if a
mistake is made in administering any significant drugs or if the drug
error rate for significant and insignificant drugs is 5% or more.  No
deficiency in administering a significant drug was noted, and
Louisiana's witness testified that it was State survey practice to cite
separately any significant drug error.  The HCFA surveyor said he also
would cite any significant drug error separately.  The facility was
cited for having a medication error rate of 12.6% and had reduced the
error rate to 8% by the follow-up survey.  The HCFA surveyor took the
position that to have substantial progress in correcting a deficiency in
medication error rates, the facility must reduce the rate to below 5%
and that to correct the deficiency the rate must be reduced to 0%.  He
based this position on the wording of the State Operations Manual, which
states that a surveyor should write a deficiency if the error rate is 5%
or more.  He said this meant that it was still considered a deficiency
so long as the rate was above 0%.  The HCFA surveyor could point to
nothing stating his interpretation that a reduction below 5% was
required for substantial progress, and we think this is an unreasonable
interpretation.

In effect, the State Operations Manual establishes a tolerance for
errors, which means that only a rate in excess of that tolerance will be
cited as a deficiency.  The ACD clearly could have been rescinded based
on correction of a deficiency if the rate had been reduced below 5%;
invoking the ACD on the basis that the rate had not been reduced to 0%
would have been subject to challenge by the facility in light of the
tolerance in the State Operations Manual.  To require the facility to
have achieved the same level for substantial progress as for correction
does not make sense.  As Louisiana pointed out, the facility here
reduced its error rate from 12.6% to 8%, bringing it more than halfway
toward the 5% rate.  In our view, this is tangible and visible evidence
that the facility had taken steps to correct the deficiency and could be
expected to complete its correction (as the facility in fact did by the
second follow-up), so the ACD could have been rescinded even under
HCFA's interpretation that substantial progress must be made for each
deficiency.

The facility's progress in correcting accurately cited deficiencies as a
whole is clearly "substantial progress" under any reasonable reading of
that term.

We have performed a similar analysis of the documentation and testimony
for each of the other eight facilities at issue here and reached the
same conclusion for each of those facilities.

In sum, we find that Louisiana met its burden of showing that these nine
facilities had made substantial progress in correcting the deficiencies.
Thus, we conclude that the ACDs could have been rescinded.  Since the
facilities were certifiable during the disallowance periods in question,
no disallowance is warranted, and we reverse the disallowance for these
facilities.

Conclusion

For the reasons discussed above, we uphold the disallowances in part and
reverse them in part as follows:

o  We uphold the disallowances for the following facilities: Consolata,
Oak Park Care Center, Glen Retirement Village, Manhattan Manor,
Hillhaven, Ringgold Nurse Care, Greenhill Nursing, Glen Oaks Home,
Helena Community Home (for two disallowance periods), Shreveport Manor,
Heritage Manor South, St. Ann's, Pierremont, Jefferson Health Care, St.
Mary's, Springhill, Hollier, and Meadowview.

o  We reverse the disallowances for the following facilities:  Lane
Memorial, South Park Guest Care, Norman Care, Prayer Tower, Fountain
Lodge, Rayne Guest House, Pinehill, Patio Lodge, and Evangeline Oaks.

HCFA should recalculate the disallowance amount in accordance with our
decision.  If Louisiana disagrees with the recalculation, it may return
to the Board on that limited issue, within 30 days of receiving the
recalculation.


   _____________________________ Donald F. Garrett

 

   _____________________________ Cecilia S. Ford

 

   _____________________________ Judith A. Ballard
   Presiding Board Member

1.  Louisiana had requested that the record in DAB No. 1116 be
incorporated by reference in this appeal.  We asked that the parties
specify which exhibits and testimony they wished to incorporate.
Louisiana specifically incorporated State Exhibits (Exs.) 2, 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 9, and 10 and the testimony of Charles Purcell at 27-104 of the
transcript of the prior hearing.  HCFA indicated it wished to
incorporate its exhibits designated as AF Exs. 15 and 21.

2.  A C&T is a form by which the state survey agency notifies the state
Medicaid agency and HCFA of action taken with regard to the
certification of a provider.

3.  HCFA originally looked at whether Louisiana properly extended the
automatic cancellation dates of provider agreements for 33 facilities.
HCFA determined that the ACD for Empire Community Home was properly
extended.  During these proceedings, HCFA looked at 32 facilities and
took no disallowance for St. Bernard - Girls or House on Royal because
no expenditures were made for services during the relevant time periods
at these two facilities.  Consequently, the provider agreements for 30
facilities were disputed here initially.  Louisiana, however, failed to
present documentation to support its arguments for one facility,
Hollier.  See SE 1 - 29.

4.  Res judicata is a rule that a final judgment or a decree on the
merits by a court of competent jurisdiction is conclusive of the rights
of the parties in all later suits on points and matters determined in
the former suit.  To be applicable, it requires identity in the thing
sued for, as well as identity of the cause of action and the parties to
the action.  BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 1305 (6th ed. 1990).

5.  Indeed, since ACDs are set for facilities with deficiencies, it is
even more important that the assurances required by section 442.16 be
given when ACDs are extended.

6.  For Helena Community Home, Louisiana did not provide a copy of the
C&T that actually extended the original ACD of August 30, 1986.  Rather,
Louisiana provided a C&T dated October 17, 1986, some two months after
the ACD, which stated it was rescinding the ACD.  Consequently,
Louisiana, in effect, had extended the ACD for two months and failed to
give the required notice.  Even if this C&T had contained the requisite
assurances, it would not have been timely.

7.  In DAB No. 1116, the Board found in particular circumstances that a
delay of one day in submitting the written findings did not violate the
regulations where there was other evidence that the Medicaid agency had
other timely notice of the findings from the survey agency.  Louisiana
did not argue that the same circumstances were present for the
facilities at issue here.

8.  Originally Louisiana also listed Port Allen Care Center in the group
of facilities for which it said ACDs should not have been established.
See SE 30.  HCFA, however, withdrew its disallowance for that facility
on another basis.  Louisiana also alternatively argued that Evangeline
Oaks and Pinehill Senior Citizens should be included not only with the
group of facilities to which this argument applied but with those
facilities for which ACDs should have been rescinded (discussed in
section V. below).  See SE 30 and 31; Letter from State to Board dated
May 6, 1992.  Later in the appeal proceedings, Louisiana indicated that
Consolata should have been included with the facilities for which it
argued an ACD should not have been established.  Letter from State to
Board dated March 5, 1992.

9.  These facilities are: Lane Memorial Hospital ICF (SE 4), South Park
Guest Care ICF (SE 16), Norman Care ICF (SE 19), Prayer Tower ICF (SE
20), Fountain Lodge ICF (SE 25), Rayne Guest House ICF (SE 27), Pinehill
ICF (SE 28), Patio Lodge ICF (SE 29), and Evangeline Oaks ICF (SE 17).
During the course of the proceedings, Louisiana had  made the same
argument for Oak Park Care Center ICF and Consolata ICF, but at the
hearing Louisiana presented evidence only with respect to the nine
facilities, withdrawing the argument for the other two facilities.  See
Transcript (Tr.) at 5, 8.

10.  "Tag numbers" are used for purposes of providing information on
deficiencies which can be fed into a computer.  Survey forms also
include "reference" numbers, which are citations to applicable
regulations.

11.  On cross-examination, Louisiana's witness acknowledged that he had
been informed by telephone of the regional office position.  Tr. at
50-51.  HCFA failed to establish, however, when this information was
provided.  Id.

12.  Lane Memorial Hospital corrected 8 out of 10 deficiencies.  Tr. at
33; SE 4.  South Park corrected 51 out of 52 deficiencies.  Tr. at 79
and 80; SE 16.  Norman Care corrected 60 out of 65 health deficiencies
and all three life safety code deficiencies.  Tr at 125; SE 19.  Prayer
Tower corrected all but 2 of the 22 health deficiencies and both of the
life safety code deficiencies originally cited.  Tr. at 170; SE 20.
Fountain Lodge corrected the one life safety code deficiency cited and
26 out of the 36 health deficiencies originally cited (and 6 out of the
10 remaining deficiencies were duplicate cross-references, so in effect
there were only 4 remaining).  Tr. at 186; SE 25.  Rayne Guest ICF
corrected all but one of the 42 health deficiencies cited and all four
of the life safety code deficiencies.  Tr. at 205 and 206; SE 27.
Pinehill ICF corrected all 13 health deficiencies and all but two of the
life safety code deficiencies.  Tr. at 228; SE 28.  Patio Lodge
corrected all but one of the eight life safety code deficiencies
originally cited, and all but 13 of the 57 health deficiencies cited
(and 8 out of the 13 remaining citations were duplicate
cross-references, so in effect there were only 5 remaining).  Tr. at
250; SE 29.  Evangeline Oaks corrected all 19 of the health deficiencies
originally cited and still had one life safety code deficiency.  Tr. at
104 and 105; SE