Depatment of Health and Human Services
DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD
Civil Remedies Division
In the Case of: James H. Holmes, M.D., Petitioner,
- v.-
The Inspector General.
DATE: June 7, 1993
Docket No. C-93-010
Decision No. CR270
DECISION
On October 15, 1992, the Inspector General (I.G.) notified Petitioner that
he was being excluded from
participation in the Medicare and State health care programs for three years.
1/ The I.G. told Petitioner that
he was being excluded under section 1128(b)(3) of the Social Security Act (Act),
based on Petitioner's
conviction of a criminal offense related to the unlawful manufacture, distribution,
prescription, or
dispensing of a controlled substance.
Petitioner requested a hearing and the case was assigned to me. On December
29 and 30, 1992, I held a
hearing in Sacramento, California. On January 22, 1993, during the period that
the posthearing briefing
schedule was in progress, the Secretary published regulations containing provisions
described as a
clarification of the exclusion regulations published January 29, 1992. I invited
the parties to address the
issue of the impact of these clarifying regulations on this case in their posthearing
briefs.
The parties subsequently filed posthearing briefs and reply briefs. In his
posthearing reply brief, Petitioner
indicated that he did not contest the authority of the I.G. to exclude him pursuant
to section 1128(b)(3) of
the Act, but he contended that the duration of the three-year exclusion is excessive
under the circumstances
of this case.
Each party submitted a proposed exhibit with their posthearing submissions.
By letter dated March 17,
1993, I established a schedule which provided the parties the opportunity to
object to the admissibility of
the proposed exhibits and to reply to any objections.
Both parties subsequently filed objections to the exhibits and the I.G. filed
a reply to Petitioner's objections.
For reasons explained in Part I of this decision, I deny both parties' motions
to admit these exhibits into
evidence.
I have carefully considered the evidence that I admitted at the hearing, the
parties' arguments, and the
applicable regulations. I conclude that the three-year exclusion imposed and
directed by the I.G. is
reasonable pursuant to the criteria specified in 42 C.F.R. 1001.401.
ADMISSION
Petitioner does not dispute that he was convicted of a criminal offense within
the meaning of section
1128(b)(3) of the Act. He admits that the I.G. has the authority to exclude
him from participating in the
Medicare and Medicaid programs. Petitioner Posthearing Reply Brief at 3-4.
ISSUE
Whether it is reasonable to exclude Petitioner for a period of three years.
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW (FFCLs)
1. Petitioner is a medical doctor who has been engaged in the private practice
of medicine since 1976. Tr.
at 199. 2/
2. On November 13, 1991, a misdemeanor complaint was filed in the San Joaquin
Municipal Court by the
California Attorney General's Office against Petitioner. I.G. Ex. 2.
3. The complaint charged Petitioner with eight counts of willfully and unlawfully
prescribing Tylenol with
Codeine No. 3, to an undercover operator, without legitimate medical purpose
and while not acting in the
usual course of his professional practice. I.G. Ex. 2.
4. Tylenol with Codeine No. 3 is a controlled substance. Tr. at 43.
5. On January 6, 1992, Petitioner pled guilty to one count in the complaint.
The court accepted the plea
and sentenced Petitioner to "three years probation on the condition he
complete 108 hours of community
service, pay $6,500 for cost of investigation, not prescribe for future indications,
and not prescribe without
a medical diagnosis." I.G. Ex. 4.
6. Petitioner was convicted of a criminal offense relating to the unlawful
manufacture, distribution,
prescription, or dispensing of a controlled substance within the meaning of
section 1128(b)(3) of the Act.
FFCLs 2-5.
7. The Secretary delegated to the I.G. the authority to determine, impose,
and direct exclusions pursuant to
section 1128 of the Act. 48 Fed. Reg. 21,662 (1983).
8. By letter dated October 15, 1992, the I.G. excluded Petitioner pursuant
to section 1128(b)(3) of the Act
for a period of three years.
9. The I.G. has authority to impose and direct an exclusion pursuant to section
1128(b)(3) of the Act.
FFCLs 6-7.
10. Regulations published on January 29, 1992 establish criteria to be employed
by the I.G. in determining
to impose and direct exclusions pursuant to sections 1128(a) and (b) of the
Act. 42 C.F.R. Part 1001
(1992).
11. The regulations published on January 29, 1992 include criteria to be employed
by the I.G. in
determining to impose and direct exclusions pursuant to section 1128(b)(3) of
the Act. 42 C.F.R.
1001.401.
12. On January 22, 1993, the Secretary published a regulation which directs
that the criteria to be
employed by the I.G. in determining to impose and direct exclusions pursuant
to sections 1128(a) and (b)
of the Act are binding also upon administrative law judges, appellate panels
of the Departmental Appeals
Board, and federal courts in reviewing the imposition of exclusions by the I.G.
42 C.F.R. 1001.1(b); 58
Fed. Reg. 5617, 5618 (1993).
13. My adjudication of the length of the exclusion in this case is governed
by the criteria contained in 42
C.F.R. 1001.401. FFCLs 10-12.
14. An exclusion imposed pursuant to section 1128(b)(3) of the Act must be
for a period of three years,
unless aggravating or mitigating factors specified in the regulations form a
basis for lengthening or
shortening that period. 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(1).
15. The I.G. has the burden of proving that aggravating factors exist which
justify increasing an exclusion
imposed pursuant to section 1128(b)(3) of the Act beyond the three-year benchmark
established by
regulation. 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(2)(i)-(iv); 42 C.F.R. 1005.15(c).
16. The I.G. did not allege that any aggravating factors specified in the regulations are present in this case.
17. Petitioner has the burden of proving that mitigating factors exist which
justify reducing an exclusion
below the three-year benchmark established by regulation. 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(i)-(ii);
42 C.F.R.
1005.15(c).
18. Petitioner alleged that, as a result of his exclusion, alternative sources
of the type of health care items
or services that he furnishes are not available within the meaning of 42 C.F.R.
1001.401(c)(3)(ii).
Petitioner Posthearing Brief at 4-5.
19. Petitioner did not allege that any other mitigating factors specified in
the regulations are present in this
case.
20. Petitioner's office is located in the city of Stockton. Tr. at 62.
21. The nature of Petitioner's medical practice is general and family practice.
The types of medical
problems he treats are diabetes, hypertension, minor heart problems, sore throats,
and fevers. The majority
of his patients are adults. Tr. at 178, 216-17.
22. Petitioner has more than 3,000 patients under his care. Tr. at 265. Prior
to his exclusion,
approximately 65 percent of Petitioner's patients were either Medicare or Medicaid
patients. P. Ex. 6; Tr.
at 167-68, 268.
23. There are approximately 600 physicians in the Stockton area. Tr. at 245.
24. Approximately 55 physicians or clinics in the Stockton area specialize
in general and family practice.
I.G. Ex. 14 at 18-19.
25. There are at least five private practitioners specializing in Petitioner's
area of general and family
practice in the Stockton area who have expressly indicated a willingness to
accept new Medicare and
Medicaid patients. At least four of these practitioners are located within a
six-mile radius of Petitioner's
office. Tr. at 145-49, 150, 248, 288, 290.
26. The record is devoid of evidence showing that Petitioner's former Medicare
and Medicaid patients
have been unable to establish a long term treatment relationship with a general
or family practitioner in the
Stockton area.
27. The fact that some of Petitioner's former Medicare and Medicaid patients
have been unable to make an
appointment with a physician at the time that they asked for one is not a basis
for finding that these patients
were unable to establish a long term treatment relationship with a physician.
Tr. at 187-88, 287-88.
28. There are several emergency care facilities which treat Medicare and Medicaid
patients located within
a seven-mile radius of Petitioner's office which are available to treat medical
conditions requiring
immediate attention at a time that a patient is unable to obtain medical care
from a personal physician. Tr.
at 62, 287-88.
29. Given the general nature of Petitioner's practice, there is no basis for
limiting consideration of the
availability of alternative sources of health care to only general and family
practitioners.
30. An endocrinologist who comes to Petitioner's office to treat Petitioner's
former Medicare and Medicaid
patients on a temporary basis is an alternative source of medical care for these
patients until they can
establish a long term treatment relationship with a physician. Tr. at 170-71,
175, 186, 201.
31. The evidence fails to establish that obtaining access to alternative sources
of medical care would create
an unreasonable hardship for Petitioner's former patients.
32. Petitioner has not proved that his race is an essential component of the
type of medical items or
services he delivers.
33. The Secretary did not intend that an otherwise reasonable exclusion be
reduced because a provider's
patients might be forced to obtain medical care from other comparable sources.
34. Petitioner failed to prove that alternative sources of the type of health
care items or services that he
furnishes are not available.
35. Petitioner did not prove the presence of any mitigating factors under 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3).
36. There is no basis under the regulations for me to modify the three-year
exclusion which the I.G.
imposed against Petitioner.
37. The three-year exclusion which the I.G. imposed is reasonable pursuant
to the criteria specified in 42
C.F.R. 1001.401.
RATIONALE
Petitioner does not dispute that he was convicted of a criminal offense within
the meaning of section
1128(b)(3) of the Act and that the I.G. has authority to exclude him from participating
in the Medicare and
Medicaid programs. What is at issue here is whether it is reasonable to exclude
Petitioner for a period of
three years. On January 29, 1992, the Secretary published regulations which,
among other things, establish
criteria to be employed by the I.G. in determining the length of exclusions
imposed pursuant to section
1128(b)(3) of the Act. 42 C.F.R. 1001.401. In considering the issue of the reasonableness
of the length
of the exclusion, the threshold question is whether these regulations apply
to this case.
I. I am required to apply 42 C.F.R. 1001.401 in adjudicating the length of the exclusion in this case.
Prior to the January 29, 1992 regulations, when determining whether the length
of an exclusion was
reasonable, administrative law judges usually evaluated an excluded party's
"trustworthiness" in order to
gauge the risk that a party might pose in terms of the harm Congress sought
to prevent when it enacted
section 1128. Appellate panels of the Departmental Appeals Board (DAB) have
approved the use of the
term "trustworthiness" as a shorthand term for those cumulative factors
which govern the assessment of
whether a period of exclusion imposed by the I.G. is reasonable. Hanlester Network,
et al., DAB 1347, at
45-46 (1992).
The January 29, 1992 regulations create substantive changes in the law with
respect to the imposition of
exclusions. For example, the January 29, 1992 regulations establish a benchmark
of three years for all
exclusions imposed pursuant to section 1128(b)(3) of the Act. 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(1).
In addition, the
regulations specifically preclude consideration of factors for either lengthening
or shortening an exclusion
imposed pursuant to section 1128(b)(3) which are not identified by the regulation
as either "mitigating" or
"aggravating". 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(2), (c)(3). It is undisputed
that the January 29, 1992 regulations
alter the substantive rights of Petitioner because they limit the mitigating
factors that can be considered in
Petitioner's favor and would bar Petitioner from presenting evidence which is
relevant to trustworthiness to
provide care. 3/
Subsequent to the publication of the January 29, 1992 regulations, administrative
law judges issued a series
of decisions, all of which held that the Secretary did not intend these regulations
to govern administrative
law judge decisions as to the reasonableness of exclusion determinations. Bertha
K. Krickenbarger, R.Ph.,
DAB CR250 (1993); Charles J. Barranco, M.D., DAB CR187 (1992); Narinder Saini,
M.D., DAB CR217
(1992). The Krickenbarger decision held specifically that section 1001.401 of
the regulations, governing
the I.G.'s exclusion determinations under section 1128(b)(3) of the Act (which
is at issue here also), did not
apply in administrative hearings concerning such exclusions. In addition, an
appellate panel of the
Departmental Appeals Board (DAB) held that the January 29, 1992 regulations
do not retroactively apply
in cases involving exclusion determinations made prior to the regulations' publication
date. Behrooz
Bassim, M.D., DAB 1333, at 5-9 (1992).
The present case does not involve an issue of retroactive application of regulations,
because the exclusion
determination is dated October 15, 1992, which is subsequent to the publication
of the January 29, 1992
regulations. Therefore, the question before me is whether the Secretary intended
these regulations to apply
as criteria for adjudication of the length of exclusions at the level of administrative
hearings.
Throughout this proceeding, the I.G. has consistently maintained the position
that 42 C.F.R. 1001.401
establishes criteria by which exclusions must be adjudicated at hearings before
administrative law judges.
The I.G. contends that none of the factors identified as aggravating or mitigating
in section 1001.401 of the
regulations are present in this case, and, therefore, the regulations require
that I sustain the three-year
exclusion. Tr. at 6-8.
Petitioner contends that one of the mitigating factors specified in the January
29, 1992 regulations at 42
C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii) applies to this case. He alleges that, as a result
of his exclusion, alternative
sources of the type of health care items or services that he furnishes are not
available. Petitioner
Posthearing Brief at 4-5. I permitted both parties to present evidence on this
factor at the hearing.
In addition, Petitioner contends that factors related to his trustworthiness
to provide care which are not
specified in the regulations should be considered in determining the reasonableness
of the length of his
exclusion. Tr. at 13-15, 17-18. At the hearing, I permitted both the I.G. and
Petitioner to present evidence
as to Petitioner's trustworthiness to provide care. My ruling permitting such
evidence was based on the
body of decisions issued by administrative law judges which interpreted the
regulations. As of the time
that I held the hearing in December 1992, these decisions holding that the regulations
did not apply as
criteria for review of exclusions at the administrative hearing level constituted
the Secretary's final
interpretation of the regulations. Thus, I allowed the parties free rein to
offer evidence at the hearing
concerning Petitioner's trustworthiness to provide care, as well as evidence
which falls within the ambit of
the factors enumerated in 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c).
On January 22, 1993, the Secretary published regulations containing provisions
which are described as a
clarification of the scope and purpose of the exclusion regulations published
January 29, 1992. These
regulations state in part that:
The regulations in . . . [Part 1001] are applicable and binding on the Office
of Inspector
General (OIG) in imposing and proposing exclusions, as well as to Administrative
Law Judges (ALJs), the
Departmental Appeals Board (DAB), and federal courts in reviewing the imposition
of exclusions by the
OIG . . .
58 Fed. Reg. 5618 (to be codified at 42 C.F.R. 1001.1(b)). Interpretive comments
to these new
regulations emphasize that the exclusion determination criteria contained in
Part 1001 must be applied by
administrative law judges in evaluating the length of exclusions imposed and
directed by the I.G.
The clarification was made applicable to cases which were pending on January
22, 1993, the clarification's
publication date. 58 Fed. Reg. 5618. It is undisputed that the present case
was pending on January 22,
1993.
I must now apply to this case the criteria for determining the length of exclusions
set forth in 42 C.F.R.
1001.401. In this case, the I.G. imposed the three-year benchmark exclusion
and contended that no
aggravating or mitigating factors specified in the regulations are present.
Citing the mitigating
circumstance identified at 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii), Petitioner asserts
that the exclusion is
unreasonable because alternative sources of the type of health care items or
services he furnishes are not
available. At issue is whether a reduction of the three-year exclusion is justified
in this case on the grounds
that alternative sources of the type of health care items or services furnished
by Petitioner are not available.
Inasmuch as the evidence adduced at the hearing concerning Petitioner's trustworthiness
to provide care
does not fall within the ambit of this factor, I may no longer consider it as
relevant to my decision
concerning the length of the exclusion. Therefore, I make no findings concerning
that evidence. 4/ I do so
notwithstanding the body of administrative law judge decisions which found that
the January 29, 1992
regulations do not establish criteria for administrative law judges' review
of exclusions. The January 22,
1993 clarification overruled those decisions, and it overruled my ruling in
this case that evidence which
related to Petitioner's trustworthiness is relevant to my determining whether
the exclusion is reasonable. 5/
Attached to the I.G.'s posthearing brief was a copy of an Accusation filed
against Petitioner by the Medical
Board of the State of California. 6/ The I.G. moved that I admit this document
into evidence. This
document was not presented timely by the I.G. pursuant to the schedule that
I established for the exchange
of exhibits. However, the I.G. showed extraordinary circumstances justifying
the failure to timely
exchange this document prior to the hearing. The hearing in this case took place
on December 29, 1992
and the I.G. avers that he was not aware of the existence of this document,
which is dated December 22,
1992, until after the hearing.
The I.G. contends that if I decide that the former standard of trustworthiness
continues to apply in
determining the reasonableness of the exclusion, then this document is relevant
as evidence of the
seriousness of the criminal offense underlying Petitioner's exclusion. I deny
the I.G.'s motion to admit this
document for this purpose because such standard of trustworthiness does not
apply to this case.
Alternatively, the I.G. argues that this document is relevant as further evidence
of the I.G.'s authority to
exclude. I deny the I.G.'s motion to admit this document for this purpose because
the issue of the I.G.'s
authority to exclude is not in dispute. Accordingly, I deny the I.G.'s motion
to admit this document on the
grounds that it is not relevant to my decision in this case. Since this document
is irrelevant and therefore
not admissible into evidence, I need not consider the question of whether its
admission would cause
substantial prejudice to Petitioner.
Petitioner submitted a proposed exhibit subsequent to the hearing and moved
that I admit it into evidence.
7/ While Petitioner does not directly state why this document is relevant, it
appears that he is using it to
attempt to minimize the seriousness of his offense under the former standard
of trustworthiness. I deny
Petitioner's motion. This exhibit was not presented timely pursuant to the schedule
I established for the
exchange of exhibits and Petitioner offered no explanation for his failure to
timely exchange it.
Furthermore, this exhibit is not relevant to the mitigating circumstance regarding
the availability of
alternative sources of medical care, specified in 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii),
which is in dispute.
II. A three-year exclusion is reasonable pursuant to the regulatory criteria set forth at 42 C.F.R. 1001.401.
Having determined that I am bound by the January 29, 1992 regulations, I must
evaluate the evidence in
this case under the regulatory criteria set forth in 42 C.F.R. 1001.401. The
I.G. imposed the three-year
benchmark exclusion and contends that none of the factors for either lengthening
or shortening an
exclusion identified by the regulation as either aggravating or mitigating are
present in this case. Petitioner
contends that there are circumstances defined by the regulations as mitigating
which justify reduction of
the exclusion imposed against him. He asserts that the weight of the evidence
establishes that alternative
sources of the type of health care items or services which he provides are not
available, citing the
mitigating circumstance identified in 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii).
A. The standard to be applied in interpreting 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii)
is evident from the language of
the regulations, their context, the preamble to the regulations, and Congress'
purpose in enacting the
exclusion law.
The mitigating factor identified at 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii), that alternative
sources of the type of
health care items or services furnished by the individual or entity are not
available, is not defined by the
regulations. However, the meaning of this mitigating factor is evident from
the language of the
regulations, their context, the preamble to the regulations, and Congress' purpose
in enacting the exclusion
law.
In the absence of a regulatory definition of this factor, the words describing
this mitigating factor should be
given their common and ordinary meaning. The word "alternative" is
defined in the Random House
Dictionary of the English Language, 2d Edition (1987), as "affording a
choice of two or more things,
propositions, or courses of action." "Available" is defined as
"suitable or ready for use or service; at hand."
I conclude from these common definitions that in order for the mitigating circumstance
in 42 C.F.R.
1001.401(c)(3)(ii) to apply, the evidence must show that alternative sources
(sources that can be chosen
instead) of the type of health care furnished by an excluded provider are not
available (suitable or ready for
use or service).
Looking at the phrase "alternative sources" in this context, it is
evident that the Secretary contemplated that
the alternative sources would take the place of or be a substitute for the type
of health care provided by the
excluded provider. I conclude from this that in order to qualify as an "alternative
source" within the
meaning of the regulations, the alternative source must provide health care
items or services that are
comparable or equivalent in quality to the type of items or services provided
by the excluded provider.
The alternative source must be able to substitute for the items or services
furnished by the excluded
provider without jeopardizing the health of the recipients of those items or
services.
Guidance as to the meaning of the phrase "not available" can be found
from language contained in the
preamble to the January 29, 1992 regulations. The preamble states:
Comment: Proposed 1001.201 through 1001.801 provided that it will be a mitigating
factor if
alternative sources of the type of health care items or services furnished by
the excluded individual or
entity are not available. A number of commentators believe that the regulations
should be modified to state
that it will be mitigating if alternative sources are not reasonably available.
Response: We believe this is implicit in the regulations. The purpose of this
mitigating factor
is to protect program beneficiaries, and if services are not reasonably available
to them then, as a practical
matter, they are not available. Of course in evaluating the factor, we will
look to whether there are service
providers who accept Medicare and Medicaid patients, rather than merely whether
services are available
generally.
57 Fed. Reg. 3315-3316 (1992).
As the preamble states, the alternative sources of health care items or services
of the type furnished by the
excluded individual or entity are not available if such sources are not reasonably
available. The phrase
"not reasonably available" contemplates that an alternative source
is not available in circumstances where
Medicare and Medicaid patients are not able to reasonably obtain the type of
medical services provided by
the excluded provider in a practicable manner consistent with the Secretary's
objective to protect program
beneficiaries and recipients from being deprived of needed health care as a
result of a provider's exclusion.
Under this standard, even if an alternative source of health care is identified
as being present to provide the
type of health care provided by the excluded provider, the alternative source
would not be "available"
within the meaning of the regulations if, as a practical matter, program beneficiaries
and recipients cannot
reasonably obtain the alternative health care.
On the other hand, merely showing that the consequence of an exclusion is a
reduction in the availability of
items or services is not tantamount to showing that those items or services
are not reasonably available.
Certainly, any provider could show that health care services to program beneficiaries
and recipients are less
available because the provider is excluded. However, in order for the mitigating
factor at 42 C.F.R.
1001.401(c)(3)(ii) to apply, there must be a showing that a consequence of an
exclusion is a reduction in
health care services to the point that obtaining alternative sources of health
care imposes an unreasonable
hardship on Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries and recipients. This is a far
more stringent test to meet
than showing merely a reduction in the availability of health care.
In addition, the language in the preamble emphasizes that reasonable availability
of alternative sources of
health care must be viewed in the context of the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Alternative sources of
health care items or services of the type furnished by the excluded provider
are not reasonably available if
Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries and recipients cannot avail themselves of
the alternative sources of
health care. For example, it does little good for a Medicare or Medicaid patient
to go to an alternative
health care provider if that provider does not participate in the Medicare and
Medicaid programs. What
matters to Medicare and Medicaid patients is to have alternative sources available
to them.
For additional guidance as to the meaning of 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii),
it is instructive to look at the
purpose of the exclusion law.
In 1987, Congress amended section 1128 of the Act by enacting the Medicare
and Medicaid Patient and
Program Protection Act of 1987, Public Law 100-93, 101 Stat. 680. These amendments
significantly
expanded the authorities under which the Secretary could exclude individuals
and entities from the
Medicare and Medicaid programs. The purpose of the 1987 amendments is to protect
the beneficiaries and
recipients of federally funded health care programs from incompetent practitioners
and from inappropriate
or inadequate care. S. Rep. No. 109, 100th Cong., 1st Sess. 1, reprinted in
1987 U.S.C.C.A.N. 682.
The legislative history of the 1987 amendments suggests that the Secretary
(or the Secretary's delegate, the
I.G.) should consider the following factors in setting the duration of exclusions
under section 1128(b):
In the case of all exclusions other than those under 1128(a) and 1128(b)(12),
the Committee
intends that, in setting the period of exclusion, the Secretary will take into
consideration such factors as the
seriousness of the offense, the impact of both the offense and the exclusion
on beneficiaries, and any
mitigating circumstances, such as the availability of alternate providers of
needed health care services.
S. Rep. No 109, 100th Cong., 1st Sess. 12 (emphasis added.), reprinted in 1987
U.S.C.C.A.N. 693. The
January 29, 1992 regulations implemented the provisions of the 1987 amendments
to section 1128.
Congress' intention that the availability of alternate providers be considered
in setting the duration of the
length of exclusions under section 1128(b) is embodied in the regulations at
42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii),
which provide that a showing that "[a]lternative sources of the type of
health care items or services
furnished by the individual or entity are not available" may be considered
as a basis for shortening a period
of exclusion.
In view of the fact that the purpose of the exclusion law is to protect Medicare
and Medicaid beneficiaries
and recipients from providers who render inappropriate or inadequate care, the
regulation at 42 C.F.R.
1001.401(c)(3)(ii) contemplates that the factfinder, in determining the appropriate
duration of an exclusion,
will consider the government interest in ensuring the protection of Medicare
and Medicaid beneficiaries
and recipients and balance that interest against the competing government interest
in ensuring that
Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries recipients will not be deprived of needed
health care as a result of a
provider's exclusion.
B. Petitioner has the burden of proving mitigating circumstances, including
the burden of proving that
alternative sources of health care items or services of the type he provides
are not available.
The regulations at 42 C.F.R. 1001.401 do not allocate specifically the parties'
respective burdens of proof
in establishing the existence of aggravating and mitigating factors. Instead,
section 1005.15(c) of the
regulations expressly reserves the duty of allocating the burden of proof in
cases governed by 42 C.F.R.
1001.401 to administrative law judges. I conclude that it is logical and consistent
with the language and
structure of the regulations to place the burden of proving mitigating circumstances
on Petitioner, including
the burden of proving that alternative sources of the type of health care he
furnishes are not available.
It is plain from the language and structure of 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c) that the
Secretary intended the
mitigating circumstances identified in those regulations to be in the nature
of affirmative defenses to the
imposition of a three-year exclusion that would otherwise be mandated by the
regulations. 8/ Logically,
the burden should fall on excluded parties to prove the existence of affirmative
reasons for imposing less
than regulation-mandated minimum exclusions. It does not make practical sense
to require the I.G. to
prove a negative -- the absence of mitigating circumstances -- in cases where
he has imposed the
regulation-mandated minimum exclusion.
Furthermore, my decision to place on Petitioner the burden of proof for establishing
the presence of
mitigating circumstances is consistent with the burdens which have been established
in exclusions imposed
under section 1128 of the Act prior to the promulgation of the regulations.
An appellate panel of the DAB
held in such a case that there is a "general principle that a petitioner
has the burden of proving factors
which would tend to reduce the exclusion period." Bernardo G. Bilang, M.D.,
DAB 1295, at 10 (January
27, 1992). In addition, placing the burden on Petitioner to establish the presence
of mitigating
circumstances is consistent with the burdens that have been established in other
kinds of cases in which
exclusion is the remedy. For example, in certain other kinds of cases brought
under the Act, the non-
federal party has the burden of proving the presence of mitigating circumstances
which would justify
reduction of a penalty, an assessment, or an exclusion. 42 C.F.R. 1005.15(b).
C. Petitioner has not met his burden of proving that by virtue of his exclusion,
alternative sources of the
type of health care items or services that he provides are not available.
Based on my review of the evidence of record, I conclude that Petitioner has
failed to sustain his burden of
proving that alternative sources of the type of health care he provides are
not available.
Petitioner is a medical doctor who has been engaged in the private practice
of medicine since 1976. FFCL
1. The nature of his medical practice is general and family practice. The types
of medical problems he
treats are diabetes, hypertension, minor heart problems, sore throats, and fevers.
The majority of his
patients are adults. FFCL 21. His office is located in the city of Stockton.
FFCL 20. Petitioner has more
than 3,000 patients under his care. Prior to his exclusion, approximately 65
percent of Petitioner's patients
were either Medicare or Medicaid patients. FFCL 22.
Evidence adduced at the hearing shows that there are approximately 600 physicians
in the Stockton area.
FFCL 23. Moreover, the yellow pages of the Stockton telephone directory lists
approximately 55
physicians and clinics holding themselves out to the public as specializing
in "Family and General
Practice." I.G. Ex. 14 at 18-19. This evidence shows that medical care
is available in the Stockton area
and that there are a substantial number of physicians and clinics in the area
which engage in the same type
of medical practice as Petitioner.
The preamble to the regulations indicates that in evaluating the availability
of alternative sources of health
care pursuant to 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii), the Secretary contemplates that
the factfinder "will look to
whether there are service providers who accept Medicare and Medicaid patients,
rather than merely
whether services are available generally." 57 Fed. Reg. 3316. Evidence
as to the availability of family and
general practice medical services to Medicaid and Medicare patients was adduced
at the hearing.
The I.G. submitted a computer printout, obtained from the California Department
of Health Services
(CDHS), which identifies physicians whose offices are located in the same zip
code area as Petitioner and
who are active Medicare and Medicaid providers. I.G. Ex. 11; Tr. at 65-70. In
addition, the physicians are
identified on the printout by physician specialty codes which are listed in
another document produced by
the I.G. I.G. Ex. 13. According to the testimony of Petitioner's office assistant,
the zip code area in which
Petitioner's office is located has a radius of less than a mile. Tr. at 156-57.
The I.G. asserts that this
evidence shows that there are at least 13 Medicare and Medicaid providers who
practice family and general
medicine within a mile of Petitioner's office. I.G. Posthearing Brief at 27.
The I.G. contends that by
enrolling as a provider of services in the Medicare and Medicaid programs, a
physician indicates a
willingness to treat the beneficiaries and recipients of such programs. I.G.
Posthearing Brief at 31. In
addition, the I.G. adduced evidence showing that there are several medical clinics
within a few miles of
Petitioner's office in the Stockton area which accept Medicare and Medicaid
patients. Tr. at 358-65. 9/
Evidence adduced at the hearing shows also that there are three hospital emergency
room facilities which
accept Medicare and Medicaid patients. One of these hospital emergency room
facilities is located within
walking distance to Petitioner's office, and the other two are within a seven-mile
radius of Petitioner's
office. Tr. at 62, 287-88.
Petitioner contends that the Medicare and Medicaid provider enrollment statistics
produced by the I.G.
have limited significance because enrollment statistics do not guarantee that
all those enrolled in the
Medicare and Medicaid programs do, in fact, accept new patients. Petitioner
Posthearing Reply Brief at 7.
10/ In addition, Petitioner does not dispute that the Stockton area has medical
clinics and hospital
emergency room facilities which accept Medicare and Medicaid patients. He argues,
however, that
treatment rendered at these facilities is not a comparable alternative to the
type of treatment he provides to
his patients. In essence, he argues that the personal relationship and bond
that develops between a patient
and his physician is an integral component of the quality of medical care provided
by a private practitioner.
He states that he has medical records of some patients spanning more than a
decade and that he can treat
not only the physical ailments of a patient, but also his underlying needs.
He asserts that hospital
emergency rooms and medical clinics are not geared to providing this type of
ongoing care and treatment
and that they do not maintain the personalized records which are mandatory to
providing this specialized
care. Petitioner Posthearing Brief at 9.
Even if I frame this inquiry with the limitations urged by Petitioner, the
record contains evidence showing
that there are alternative sources of health care available in the Stockton
area. I assume, for the sake of
argument, that Petitioner is correct in his assertion that a provider's willingness
to accept Medicare and
Medicaid patients cannot be inferred from provider statistics alone. In addition,
I assume, for the sake of
argument, that Petitioner is correct in his assertion that medical care provided
by hospital emergency rooms
and medical clinics is not comparable to a long term treatment relationship
with a personal physician.
Even operating under these assumptions, the record shows that there are several
private practitioners
specializing in Petitioner's area of general and family practice in the Stockton
area who have offered
specific assurances that they will accept new Medicare and Medicaid patients.
In fact, Petitioner's own
witnesses have identified five such practitioners.
One of Petitioner's witnesses, the Executive Director of the San Joaquin Medical
Society, testified that
based on the Society's most current information, there are three general practitioner
physicians in the
Stockton area who accept new Medicare or Medicaid patients: Dr. Newman, Dr.
Boettger, and Dr. Punla.
Tr. at 248, 261.
Another of Petitioner's witnesses, his office assistant, testified that on
the day before the hearing she called
the offices of all the names of individual physicians listed under "family
and general practice" in the yellow
pages of the Stockton telephone directory and asked whoever answered the phone
if the physician would
accept new Medicaid patients. Petitioner's office assistant stated that she
was informed that three general
practitioner physicians would accept new Medicaid patients: Dr. Newman, Dr.
Tanson, and Dr. Barber.
Tr. at 145-47, 150. Thus, evidence adduced by Petitioner's own witnesses shows
that there are at least five
general and family practice physicians in the Stockton area who have expressly
indicated a willingness to
accept new Medicare or Medicaid patients. 11/ The record shows also that at
least four of these physicians
are located six miles or less from Petitioner's office. 12/
While Petitioner does not dispute that there are at least five physicians practicing
general and family
medicine in the Stockton area who are willing to accept new Medicare or Medicaid
patients, he asserts that
"there are not enough physicians similarly situated to fill the void left
by [Petitioner's] revocation from
participation." Petitioner Posthearing Reply Brief at 11. Petitioner has
the burden of proving this
assertion, and he has not presented any evidence to support it. Unsubstantiated
conclusory statements of
this type are not sufficient to sustain Petitioner's burden of proof. While
Petitioner argues that "there are
really only a very limited number of doctors available to take on all of the
patients form[er]ly treated by
Petitioner," he does not provide any evidence showing that the general
and family practitioners who are
willing to accept new Medicare or Medicaid patients are unable to absorb Petitioner's
Medicare and
Medicaid caseload. Petitioner Posthearing Reply Brief at 8.
The Executive Director of the San Joaquin Medical Society testified that some
of Petitioner's former
Medicare and Medicaid patients called his office and requested the names of
alternative physicians who
would accept Medicare and Medicaid patients and these patients were referred
to Dr. Newman, Dr.
Boettger, and Dr. Punla. Significantly, this witness testified that, as far
as he knew, none of Petitioner's
patients called back to report that they had been unable to find a doctor to
treat them. Tr. at 261.
Petitioner's office assistant testified that approximately 30 of Petitioner's
former Medicare and Medicaid
patients have called her office to complain that they were unable to make an
appointment with another
doctor at the time that they needed a doctor. Petitioner's office assistant
stated that she responded to these
calls by referring the former patients to Dr. Newman or Dr. Tanson and that
as far as she knows, these
patients either went to these doctors or received treatment at hospital emergency
rooms. Tr. at 187-88.
The record is devoid of evidence showing that Petitioner's former Medicare
and Medicaid patients have
been unable to establish a long term treatment relationship with a personal
physician. While there is
evidence that a small percentage of Petitioner's Medicare and Medicaid patients
have been unable to obtain
an appointment with a private physician at the time that they asked for one,
there is no evidence that this
occurred repeatedly to these individuals. No physician can guarantee that he
or she will always be
available to see patients whenever they call for an appointment. The fact that
some of Petitioner's former
patients had to wait to see a physician is not a basis for finding that they
were unable to establish a
treatment relationship with the physician. In addition, it is undisputed that
there are emergency care
facilities available in the Stockton area in situations where a patient has
a medical problem requiring
immediate attention at a time when a personal physician is unable to see a patient.
Furthermore, the evidence fails to establish that obtaining access to alternative
sources of medical care
creates an unreasonable hardship for Petitioner's former Medicare and Medicaid
patients. The evidence
shows that at least four of the five physicians specializing in general and
family practice who expressly
indicated a willingness to treat Medicare and Medicaid patients are located
within six miles of Petitioner's
office. One of these, Dr. Tanson, is only one mile from Petitioner's office.
In addition, there are several
emergency care facilities located within a seven-mile radius of Petitioner's
office, and one hospital
emergency room is only one half mile from his office. The evidence fails to
establish that Petitioner's
patients would be forced to travel unreasonably long distances to obtain medical
care.
The record shows also that Petitioner's office is on a bus line, and that approximately
one-third of
Petitioner's patients travel by bus to Petitioner's office. Tr. at 179. Two
of Petitioner's former Medicare
and Medicaid patients testified that Petitioner's office is conveniently located
for them because they are
able to use a bus to get to his office. Tr. at 382, 386. While Petitioner's
office has the advantage of being
on a bus line, the evidence of record does not show that Petitioner's former
patients would be unable
because of a lack of transportation to obtain alternative medical care. 13/
The burden of proving that alternative sources of health care are unavailable
is on Petitioner. While
Petitioner emphasizes that his office is conveniently located because it is
on a bus line, there might be
alternative sources of medical care which also are on a bus line. Petitioner
has not shown that there are no
alternative sources of medical care in Stockton which are on a bus line. Even
assuming, for the sake of
argument, that he is the only source of medical care in Stockton that is on
a bus line, Petitioner must then
show that being forced to use a different mode of transportation to obtain comparable
medical care would
create an unreasonable hardship for his patients. I accept that, in some instances,
the unavailability of
public transportation might inconvenience Petitioner's patients. Inconvenience,
however, is not the
standard to be used in applying the mitigating factor under 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii).
The standard to
be applied is whether alternative sources are not reasonably available. There
must be a showing that the
absence of public transportation would not only inconvenience patients, but
that it would be so impractical
that it would create a barrier to obtaining access to alternative sources of
medical care. Petitioner has made
no such showing in this case.
Moreover, the record shows that Petitioner is attempting to accommodate the
needs of his patients by
making available to them an alternative source of medical care located in his
own office. Petitioner's office
assistant testified that, in addition to referring Petitioner's former Medicare
and Medicaid patients to Dr.
Newman and Dr. Tanson, who are both general and family practitioners, she referred
them also to a
physician named Dr. Faidi. Tr. at 170-71, 175. Dr. Faidi is an endocrinologist
who is enrolled in the
Medicare and Medicaid programs. Tr. at 186, 201. Petitioner testified that Dr.
Faidi recently opened his
own medical practice and he is trying to build it up. Since he is not very busy,
he has agreed to see
Petitioner's former Medicare and Medicaid patients. Tr. at 201. Dr. Faidi has
his own practice at a
different location, but he comes into Petitioner's office on a part-time basis
to see Petitioner's former
Medicare and Medicaid patients. Tr. at 171, 175.
While Dr. Faidi has a specialty in endocrinology, there is no evidence that
he is not qualified to treat the
types of medical conditions Petitioner treats. Indeed, it can be inferred from
the fact that Petitioner allows
Dr. Faidi to come to his office to treat his former patients that he views Dr.
Faidi as being able to provide
competent medical care which will not jeopardize the health of his patients.
Given the general nature of
Petitioner's practice, there is no basis for limiting consideration of the availability
of alternative sources of
health care to only general and family practitioners.
Petitioner testified that he did not expect his arrangement with Dr. Faidi
to continue on a permanent basis.
Tr. at 201. However, even if this arrangement continues for only a short period
of time, the medical
treatment provided by Dr. Faidi is an alternative source of medical care at
least until Petitioner's patients
establish a long term treatment relationship with another physician.
Petitioner's office assistant testified that Petitioner's Medicare and Medicaid
patients are not happy that
Petitioner is no longer treating them. She testified that many of Petitioner's
patients are trying to wait
before changing doctors and that those who have seen Dr. Faidi "don't care
for him too much." Tr. at 171,
186. The fact that some of Petitioner's patients are not pleased with having
to change doctors and elect not
to avail themselves of the opportunity to be treated by another physician is
not a basis for finding that
alternative sources of medical care are not available. In addition, the fact
that some of the patients who
have used the services of other physicians still would prefer to be treated
by Petitioner is not a basis for
finding that alternative sources of medical care are not available. There must
be an affirmative showing
that the services rendered by the other physicians cannot be substituted for
the services of the excluded
provider without jeopardizing the health and safety of Petitioner's patients.
Petitioner argues also that as a Black family practitioner, he has an awareness
of the problems associated
with being an ethnic minority in a city which is as racially diverse as Stockton.
Citing statistics for San
Joaquin County which show high mortality rates for Black babies, high numbers
of children born to
teenage mothers, and high per capita rates of welfare dependency, Petitioner
contends that as a Black
family practitioner he is particularly qualified to provide health services
which meet the needs of the
community. Petitioner Posthearing Brief at 6; Tr. at 11, 13. Petitioner acknowledges
that 35 percent of his
patients are Caucasian. Notwithstanding this, he argues that the 65 percent
of his patients who are not
Caucasian have special needs that need to addressed by a Black family practitioner.
Petitioner Posthearing
Reply Brief at 7. While Petitioner does not dispute that there are three other
Black family practitioners
who are willing to take Medicare and Medicaid patients, he argues that they
are unable to handle all of
Petitioner's minority patients. He points out that one of them is under criminal
investigation and that the
other two "have fairly large practices of their own." Petitioner Posthearing
Reply Brief at 6. 14/
Petitioner's argument is unpersuasive. Petitioner cites statistics which are
not in evidence to support his
argument. Even if I were to accept that the problems Petitioner identifies do
exist, he does not provide any
evidence to support his assertion that, as a Black family practitioner, he is
uniquely qualified to address
these problems. 15/ Although it is possible that a Black family practitioner
may have an awareness of what
it means to be part of an ethnic minority group, this does not mean that Petitioner's
minority patients would
not be able to receive comparable medical treatment from a physician who is
not a Black family
practitioner. In order for race to be relevant as a basis for limiting the consideration
of the availability of
alternative sources of medical care, Petitioner must demonstrate that being
a Black family practitioner is an
essential component of the medical items or services he delivers. He has made
no such showing in this
case. Moreover, even assuming for the sake of argument that the race of one's
physician is relevant,
Petitioner has proffered no evidence showing that other Black physicians in
the community are not
available to treat Petitioner's patients. Merely asserting that they have "fairly
large practices of their own"
is not sufficient to show that they are unavailable to provide medical care.
Petitioner argues that he is the "sole source of essential specialized
services" in his community because he
has a longstanding treatment relationship with many of his patients, spanning
almost two decades. He
asserts that he is "one" with the patients he treats and that he is
their primary source of medical, physical,
and emotional care. According to Petitioner, no other physician "can offer
the same services to [his]
patients because that bond took years to develop." Petitioner Posthearing
Brief at 5, 9-10. 16/
What Petitioner is saying, in essence, is that no medical alternative is sufficient
because it is not his care. It
goes without saying that on some level the medical care provided by every physician
is unique and cannot
be exactly duplicated by other physicians. Certainly, the regulations do not
contemplate that alternative
sources of care means care that is rendered under exactly the same circumstances
as that given by the
excluded provider. Otherwise, the Secretary would not have used the word "alternative".
Under
Petitioner's reading of the regulation, the mitigating factor in section 1001.401(c)(3)(ii)
would apply in
every case, and remove the need for a review process altogether. The Secretary
did not intend that an
otherwise reasonable exclusion be reduced because a provider's patients might
be forced to obtain medical
care from other comparable sources during the period of the exclusion.
Petitioner has not shown that there exist mitigating circumstances as defined
by 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3).
Accordingly, there is no justification to modify the three-year exclusion which
the I.G. imposed and
directed against Petitioner.
CONCLUSION
I conclude that the three-year exclusion which the I.G. imposed and directed
against Petitioner is
reasonable, pursuant to the criteria specified in 42 C.F.R. 1001.401.
___________________________
Edward D. Steinman
Administrative Law Judge
1. "State health care program" is defined by section 1128(h) of the
Social Security Act to cover three
types of federally financed health care programs, including Medicaid. Unless
the context indicates
otherwise, I use the term "Medicaid" hereafter to represent all State
health care programs from which
Petitioner was excluded.
2. The exhibits and the transcript of the hearing will be referred to as follows:
Hearing Transcript Tr. at (page)
Petitioner Exhibits P. Ex. (number at page)
I.G. Exhibits I.G. Ex. (number at page)
3. Moreover, 42 C.F.R. 1001.401 limits my consideration of aggravating factors
to those specifically
mentioned therein, and so could, under the appropriate scenario, impair the
I.G.'s ability to demonstrate
that a petitioner is deserving of a lengthy exclusion.
4. For example, Petitioner presented the testimony of character witnesses who
testified as to his
trustworthiness to provide care. In addition, Petitioner testified as to his
motivation for his wrongdoing.
He stated that he was not motivated to unlawfully prescribe controlled substances
for personal gain.
Instead, he explained that he prescribed the controlled substances because he
wanted to be a "good guy".
Petitioner asserted that he honestly believed that the patient who received
the unlawful prescription had
pain from time to time and Petitioner did not want the patient to have to incur
the expense of making
repeated office visits. Tr. at 275, 278. Petitioner averred also that he had
learned to avoid making the
errors in judgment that resulted in his conviction. Tr. at 215. Had I been permitted
to rely on this
evidence, it might have served as a basis to reduce the exclusion. On the other
hand, Petitioner admitted
that he falsified his medical records when it appeared that his prescribing
records might be questioned by
investigators. Tr. at 274. This evidence of Petitioner's lack of trustworthiness
might have served as a basis
to find that the three-year exclusion is consistent with the Act's remedial
purpose, had I been permitted to
rely on it.
5. A clarifying point must be made here. In cases where evidence is adduced
establishing the existence
of an aggravating or a mitigating factor, the regulations do not provide a clear
analytic guideline that can
be used to determine the weight to be given such evidence in evaluating the
reasonableness of an
exclusion. Consequently, in my opinion, a limited "trustworthiness"
analysis should be applied in such
circumstances. Thus, the evidence establishing any such factor should be evaluated
to determine the length
of time that is necessary for a petitioner to no longer pose a threat to the
Medicare and Medicaid programs
and whether the length of the exclusion is "extreme or excessive"
in light of the nature of such threat. For
example, if Petitioner had established the lack of available alternative sources
of medical care and the I.G.
was able to counter such mitigation by providing the existence of one or more
aggravating factors, then I
would use the above limited "trustworthiness" analysis to determine
the length of the exclusion. However,
even under this approach, neither the I.G. nor Petitioner would be permitted
to offer evidence of other
indices of trustworthiness outside the ambit of the enumerated factors set forth
in the regulations. The
regulations as recently clarified no longer allow application of the former
general standard of
trustworthiness.
6. The I.G. originally identified this document as "Attachment A."
By letter dated March 19, 1993, the
I.G. resubmitted this document as I.G. Ex. 21. I will identify this document
as I.G. Ex. 21.
7. Petitioner identified this document as "Attachment A." I will identify this document as P. Ex. 8.
8. The regulations allow excluded parties to aver also that mitigating circumstances
exist to offset
aggravating circumstances that might otherwise be used by the I.G. to justify
imposing exclusions which
exceed the minimum exclusion periods prescribed by the regulations. 42 C.F.R.
1001.401(c).
9. At the hearing, a witness for the I.G. offered testimony in which he stated
that approximately three
miles or less from Petitioner's office there were four medical clinics which
accept Medicare and Medicaid
patients. Tr. at 358-65. At page 5 of his posthearing reply brief, Petitioner
alleged that some of these
clinics were up to seven miles from Petitioner's office. He did not cite any
support for his assertion.
However, even assuming for the sake of argument that Petitioner's unsupported
assertions are correct, it is
undisputed that there are several medical clinics within a seven-mile radius
of Petitioner's office.
10. Petitioner also takes issue with the accuracy of the provider enrollment
information supplied by
CDHS. During his testimony, Petitioner mentioned several perceived inaccuracies.
Tr. at 233-37.
However, the only inaccuracy he mentioned in his posthearing reply brief was
that one of the 13 listed
providers is retired. Petitioner Posthearing Reply Brief at 6.
11. While each witness gave the names of three physicians who accept Medicare
or Medicaid patients,
Dr. Newman was mentioned twice. In addition, I note that one of the I.G.'s witnesses
testified that there is
another general practitioner, Dr. Buckingham, who has a large Medicare and Medicaid
practice which is
located approximately one mile from Petitioner's office. This witness testified
that he was unsure if Dr.
Buckingham was accepting new Medicare and Medicaid patients. Tr. at 96-98.
12. Dr. Newman is between four to six miles from Petitioner's office. Tr. at
148-49, 290. Dr. Barber is
between two to five miles from Petitioner's office. Tr. at 148, 290. Dr. Boettger
is four miles from St.
Joseph's Hospital which is less than one-half mile from Petitioner's office.
Tr. at 248, 288. Dr. Tanson is
approximately one mile from Petitioner's office. Tr. at 290.
13. Indeed, although one witness stated that she did not drive, she indicated
that she could get a ride with
friends and that her husband had a car and drives. Tr. at 383-84.
14. While Petitioner does not specifically refer to the three Black physicians
by name, the record shows
that Dr. Tanson, Dr. Newman, and Dr. Buckingham are Black. Tr. at 96, 178-79,
260. In addition, the
record shows that one of the three physicians has been criminally indicted for
involvement in an
automobile accident fraud ring, but that he is still practicing medicine. Tr.
at 370.
15. It is noteworthy that the Executive Director of the San Joaquin Medical
Society testified that none of
Petitioner's former patients specifically asked to be referred to a Black physician.
Tr. at 260.
16. Although Petitioner argues that he is the "sole source of essential
specialized services" in the
community he serves, this is not the appropriate test to be applied as a mitigating
factor for exclusions
under section 1128(b)(3) of the Act. As the I.G. points out, an excluded provider's
being a "sole source of
essential specialized services in a community" may be the basis upon which
a State may request a waiver
from the I.G. of an exclusion under the mandatory provisions of section 1128(a)
of the Act. 42 C.F.R.
1001.1801(b). At pages 8-9 of his posthearing brief, Petitioner refers to guidance
furnished in the
preamble to the regulations on the issue of "sole community physicians."
This reference is inapplicable
because the "sole community physician" standard also relates to circumstances
under which a State may
seek, and the I.G. may grant, a waiver of an exclusion under section 1128(a)
of the Act. 42 C.F.R.
1001.1801(b). Moreover, since these standards are grounds for a waiver of exclusion
rather than merely a
reduction of its length, it is reasonable to conclude that, if they were to
apply to this case, Petitioner would
have to meet even more stringent tests on the issue of the availability of other
providers than is required
under 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii).