Department of Health and Human Services
DEPARTMENTAL APPEALS BOARD
Civil Remedies Division
In the Case of: Sam Williams, Jr., M.D., Petitioner,
- v. -
The Inspector General.
DATE: September 24, 1993
Docket No. C-93-014
Decision No. CR287
DECISION
By letter (Notice) of August 19, 1992, 1/ the Inspector General (I.G.) notified
Petitioner that he was being
excluded from participation in the Medicare, Medicaid, and Maternal and Child
Health Services Block
Grant and Block Grants to States for Social Services programs for three years.
2/ 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, distribu-tion,
prescription, or
dispensing of a controlled substance.
Petitioner requested a hearing and the case was assigned to me. I scheduled
an in-person hearing in this
case to begin on March 16, 1993, in San Diego, California. On February 23, 1993,
Petitioner requested a
continuance of this hearing. I rescheduled the hearing to begin on March 25,
1993. However, during a
telephone conference on March 17, 1993, Petitioner requested that his case be
heard via the submission of
written briefs and affidavits in lieu of an in-person hearing. The I.G. did
not object to Petitioner's request.
During this conference, Petitioner also: 1) waived his right to an in-person
hearing; 2) stipulated that the
I.G. had a basis upon which to exclude him; and 3) asserted that mitigating
circumstances exist requiring
that his period of exclusion be shortened. Specifically, Petitioner asserted
that, pursuant to 42 C.F.R.
1001.401(c)(3)(ii), no alternative sources of the type of health care items
or services Petitioner furnishes
are available. 3/
I have carefully considered the evidence submitted by the parties 4/, their
arguments, and the applicable
laws and regulations. I conclude that, pursuant to the criteria specified in
42 C.F.R. 1001.401, the three-
year exclusion is reasonable.
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 this is a proper basis for the I.G. to
exclude him from participating in
Medicare and Medicaid. March 23, 1993 Order (memorializing Petitioner's admissions
at the March 17,
1993 telephone conference); P. Br. 3 - 4; P. Prop. Find. 3.
ISSUE
The only issue in this case is whether or not the length of Petitioner's exclusion
should be shortened
pursuant to 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii). 5/
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
I. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law by Agreement of the Parties 6/
1. On December 3, 1990, Petitioner, a physician, was charged in the San Diego
Municipal Court with 12
felony counts of violating section 11153 of the California Health and Safety
Code, based on his allegedly
prescribing, without a legitimate medical purpose, the controlled substances
Fastin, Prelu-2, and Tylenol
with Codeine 3. I.G. Prop. Find. 1; I.G. Ex. 3.
2. On June 14, 1991, Petitioner pleaded guilty to Count 2 of the felony complaint,
prescribing the
controlled substance Fastin without a legitimate medical purpose. I.G. Prop.
Find. 2; P. Prop. Find. 7; I.G.
Ex. 2. 7/
3. 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.
I.G. Prop. Find. 3.
4. The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (Secretary)
delegated to the I.G. the
authority to determine, impose, and direct exclusions pursuant to sections 1128(a)
and (b) of the Act. I.G.
Prop. Find. 4, 6; 48 Fed. Reg. 21,662 (1983).
5. By letter dated August 19, 1992, the I.G. excluded Petitioner for three
years pursuant to section
1128(b)(3) of the Act. I.G. Prop. Find. 5; P. Prop. Find. 4.
6. Regulations published on January 29, 1992 establish criteria to be employed
by the I.G. in determining
to impose and direct exclusions pursuant to section 1128 of the Act. I.G. Prop.
Find. 7, 8; 42 C.F.R. Part
1001 (1992).
7. On January 22, 1993, the Secretary published a regulation directing that
the criteria to be employed by
the I.G. in determining to impose and direct exclusions pursuant to sections
1128(a) and 1128(b) of the Act
is binding on administrative law judges (ALJs), appellate panels of the Departmental
Appeals Board
(DAB), and federal courts in reviewing the imposition of exclusions by the I.G.
I.G. Prop. Find. 9; 42
C.F.R. 1001.1(b); 58 Fed. Reg. 5617, 5618 (1993).
8. My adjudication of the length of the exclusion in this case is governed
by the criteria contained in 42
C.F.R. 1001.401. I.G. Prop. Find. 10.
9. An exclusion imposed pursuant to section 1128(b)(3) must be for a period
of three years, unless the
aggravating or mitigating factors specified in the regulations form a basis
for lengthening or shortening that
period. I.G. Prop. Find. 11; 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c).
10. The I.G. has the burden of proving that aggravating factors as specified
in the regulations are present
in this case. I.G. Prop. Find. 12; 42 C.F.R. 1005.15(c).
11. The I.G. did not allege that any aggravating factors were present in this case. I.G. Prop. Find. 13.
12. Petitioner has the burden of proving that mitigating factors exist to justify
reducing an exclusion in a
section 1128(b)(3) case to a period less than the three-year bench mark established
by regulation. I.G.
Prop. Find. 14; 42 C.F.R. 1005.15(c).
13. Petitioner's office is located in southeast San Diego, California. I.G. Prop. Find. 17.
14. Petitioner practices internal medicine. I.G. Prop. Find. 18.
15. Prior to Petitioner's exclusion, more than 75 percent of Petitioner's patients
were Medicare
beneficiaries or Medi-Cal (the California Medicaid program) recipients. I.G.
Prop. Find. 19; I.G. Ex. 15 at
1.
16. The offices of 11 Medi-Cal providers who practice internal medicine within
1.5 miles or less of
Petitioner's office are located on streets served by public transportation.
I.G. Prop. Find. 23.
17. There is an emergency care facility which treats Medicare and Medi-Cal
patients located within 1.5
miles of Petitioner's office which is available to treat medical conditions
requiring immediate attention at a
time that a patient is unable to obtain medical care from a personal physician.
I.G. Prop. Find. 25.
18. 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.
I.G. Prop. Find. 28.
II. Other Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
19. Internists were once exclusively engaged in the practice of medicine related
to cardiology, nephrology,
gastroenterology, and allergy. They have now developed into a core of diagnosticians
for the
subspecialists of medicine. Internists generally practice medicine related to
certain illnesses which afflict
the elderly: arthritis, heart, kidney or liver dysfunction, high blood pressure,
and diabetes. P. Dec. 6 - 7.
20. There are at least 11 physicians who practice internal medicine within
1.5 miles or less of Petitioner's
office at 286 Euclid Avenue, San Diego, who are willing to accept new Medicare
and Medi-Cal patients.
I.G. Ex. 17 at 1 - 2; Finding 16.
21. There are at least six board-certified internists in southeast San Diego.
I.G. Ex. 17 at 2, 18 at 3; I.G. R.
Br. 8.
22. There are at least five board-eligible internists in southeast San Diego. I.G. Ex. 17 at 2, 18 at 3.
23. There are at least seven black internists and at least six black physicians
engaged in general
practice or family medicine in southeast San Diego.
P. Dec. 5.
24. Petitioner began referring his Medi-Cal patients to other physicians by
February 1992 and referred all
his Medicare patients to other physicians by
September 1992. P. Dec. 8.
25. Following Petitioner's exclusion, Malbour Watson, M.D., assumed the responsibility
for almost all of
Petitioner's patients covered under Medicare and Medi-Cal. P. Ex. 5 at 1; see
also P. Dec. 12.
26. Richard Butcher, M.D., a colleague of Petitioner's in family practice,
has provided alternative medical
services to Petitioner's former Medicare patients. P. Dec. 12.
27. Petitioner did not prove that his former Medicare and Medi-Cal patients
have been unable to establish
a long term treatment relationship with another physician. See Findings 24 -
26.
28. Petitioner did not prove that obtaining access to alternative sources of
medical care would create an
unreasonable hardship for his former patients. See Findings 16 - 17, 20 - 27.
29. Petitioner did not prove that his racial identity is an essential component
of the type of medical
services he delivers.
30. Petitioner did not prove that the health care services provided by family
or general practice physicians
are not comparable or equivalent to the health care services that practitioners
of internal medicine provide.
31. Petitioner did not prove that alternative sources of the type of health
care items or services that he
furnishes are not available.
32. Petitioner did not prove the presence of any mitigating factor under 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3).
33. There is no basis in the regulations to modify Petitioner's three-year exclusion.
34. The three-year exclusion imposed by the I.G. is reasonable. Findings 1 - 33.
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 this gives the I.G. a basis to exclude him from
participating in Medicare and
Medicaid. Petitioner has stipulated that my adjudication of this case is governed
by the criteria contained
in 42 C.F.R. 1001.401. The I.G. has imposed a three-year bench mark exclusion
and contends that none
of the factors for either lengthening or shortening an exclusion (identified
by regulation as either
aggravating or mitigating factors) are present in this case. Petitioner contends
that there are circumstances
defined by the regulations as mitigating which justify reducing his exclusion.
Petitioner asserts that the
weight of the evidence establishes that alternative sources of the type of health
care items or services he
provides are not available, and he cites the mitigating circumstance identified
in 42 C.F.R.
1001.401(c)(3)(ii). Thus, the only issue in this case is whether the length
of Petitioner's exclusion should
be shortened pursuant to 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii); i.e., whether alternative
sources of the type of
health care items or services Petitioner furnishes are not available.
I. For the mitigating factor at 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii) to apply, there
must be evidence proving that
the consequence of a provider's exclusion is that health care services be reduced
to a point where obtaining
alternative health care would impose unreasonable hardships on Medicare and
Medi-Cal beneficiaries and
recipients.
A 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, in determining the appropriate duration of an exclusion,
the fact finder will consider
Congress' interest in ensuring the protection of Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries
and recipients and
will balance that interest against the competing interest of ensuring that beneficiaries
and recipients will not
be deprived of needed health care as a result of a provider's exclusion. James
H. Holmes, M.D., DAB
CR270, at 15 - 16 (1993). 8/
As I observed in Holmes, 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 statute. I found, however, that 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 substitute for the items or services furnished by the excluded provider
without jeopardizing the
health of the recipients of those items or services. Id. at 13. The alternative
source must also be
"available." An alternative source is not available within the meaning
of the regulation if beneficiaries and
recipients cannot reasonably obtain the alternative health care. Id. at 14.
Therefore, alternative sources of
health care items or services of the type furnished by an excluded provider
are not reasonably available if
the beneficiary or recipient cannot use that source, such as if the alternative
health care provider does not
participate in Medicare or Medicaid. Id. at 14 - 15.
Regarding the geographic area that should be considered in determining whether
a lack of alternative
health care sources is a mitigating factor for purposes of 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii),
a provider must
show that there are no available alternative sources of public transportation
reasonably accessible for
patients. Id. at 23. Moreover, where a provider demonstrates the lack of available
alternative sources
through the inadequacy of public transportation, the provider must go further
and demonstrate that the use
of other means of transportation would result in unreasonable hardship to that
provider's former Medicare
and Medicaid patients. Id. Mere inconvenience resulting from the use of other
means of transportation
will not suffice. Id. In short, the use of such other transportation must be
so impractical that its use would
be a bar to using alternative sources of health care. Id.
Thus here, as in Holmes, I conclude that, in order for the mitigating factor
at 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii)
to apply, there must be evidence proving that the consequence of a provider's
exclusion is that health care
services would be reduced to a point where obtaining alternative sources of
health care would impose
unreasonable hardships on beneficiaries and recipients. Id. at 14. This is a
far more stringent test to meet
than showing merely a reduction in the availability of health care, since health
care services are necessarily
reduced when a provider is excluded. Id.
II. The burden of proving mitigating circumstances is on
Petitioner.
It is both logical and consistent with the regulations at 42 C.F.R. 1001.401
to place the burden of proving
mitigating circumstances on Petitioner. This includes placing on Petitioner
the burden of proving that
alternative sources of the type of health care he furnishes are not available.
The mitigating circumstances
identified in the regulations are in the nature of affirmative defenses and
the burden should fall on the
excluded party to prove the existence of affirmative reasons for imposing less
than the minimum exclusion
set forth in the regulations. Furthermore, my decision is consistent with the
burdens established in
exclusions imposed under section 1128 of the Act prior to the promulgation of
the current regulations and
is consistent also with burdens that have been established in other kinds of
cases in which the remedy is
exclusion. Holmes at 16 - 17; Bernardo G. Bilang, M.D., DAB 1295, at 10 (1992);
42 C.F.R. 1005.15(b).
III. Petitioner has not met his burden of proof.
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 practices internal medicine in southeast San Diego, California.
9/ Findings 13, 14. On June 14,
1991, Petitioner was convicted of prescribing the controlled substance Fastin
without a legitimate medical
purpose. Finding 2. By letter dated August 19, 1992, the I.G. excluded Petitioner
from Medicare and
Medicaid for three years, pursuant to section 1128(b)(3) of the Act. Prior to
his exclusion, more than 75
percent of Petitioner's patients were Medicare beneficiaries or Medi-Cal recipients.
Finding 15.
Petitioner's argument in mitigation of this three-year term is that alternative
sources of the type of health
care he provides (internal medicine) cannot be readily substituted for his medical
services without
jeopardizing the health of his Medicare and Medi-Cal patients. P. R. Br. 2.
A. Alternative sources of health care exist in
southeast San Diego.
In support of this argument, Petitioner contends that the community (demographic
area) within which I
should consider whether alternative health care services are available is southeast
San Diego, the location
of Petitioner's practice. P. Br. 5.
Petitioner asserts that southeast San Diego is a community with significant
Medicare, Medi-Cal, and other
funded health care demands. P. Br. 5. Specifically, Petitioner states that:
1) the population served is 26
percent black, 31 percent Hispanic, 20 percent Asian, and less than 22 percent
white non-Hispanic; 2)
approximately 250,000 minorities reside in southeast San Diego; and 3) rendering
services to this southeast
San Diego community are seven black internists and six black physicians in general
or family practice (not
certified in internal medicine). P. Dec. 5; Finding 23. 10/ Petitioner asserts
that my consideration should
be limited to this community due to the lack of available public transportation
within southeast San Diego
and the inability of residents of that community to travel to other areas of
San Diego for treatment. P. R.
Br. 2. He asserts further that such areas outside of southeast San Diego are:
1) "white and upper middle
class;" 2) not "inviting" to Petitioner's minority patients;
and 3) not available to Medicare and Medi-Cal
patients since less than 10 percent "have their own means of private transportation."
P. R. Br. 3.
In response to this argument, the I.G. asserts that there are numerous Medicare
and Medi-Cal providers
practicing internal medicine in the southeast San Diego community and, therefore,
consideration of
providers outside this limited area of San Diego is unnecessary. I.G. Br. 8.
The existence of alternative
providers is demonstrated by Petitioner's post-exclusion referral of his Medicare
and Medi-Cal patients to
Drs. Malbour Watson and Richard Butcher. Findings 25, 26. 11/ Moreover, assuming
that there were not
an adequate number of Medicare and Medi-Cal providers in southeast San Diego
-- thereby supporting the
conclusion of a lack of alternative sources of health care in that community
-- the record does not support
Petitioner's assertion of a lack of public transportation and the unwillingness
of physicians in other areas to
take new Medicare or Medi-Cal patients.
B. Alternative sources of health care exist outside
southeast San Diego also.
The I.G. points out that the public transportation system in San Diego County,
including southeast San
Diego, provides ample means by which Petitioner's former Medicare and Medi-Cal
patients can seek
alternative sources of health care. 12/ I.G. Br. 9; I.G. Ex. 16. Petitioner's
contention that some of his
patients are too frail to use public transportation to travel to areas outside
southeast San Diego is ill
founded; Petitioner has offered no proof to support it. Further, I find Petitioner's
contention to be suspect.
If I accept Petitioner's claim that only 10 percent of his Medicare and Medi-Cal
patients have access to
private transporta-tion, then 90 percent would have to either walk or use public
transportation to get to his
office. Considering their alleged infirmities, Petitioner would have only a
minimal number of Medicare or
Medi-Cal patients. Such a conclusion is not borne out by this record. Responding
to Petitioner's
unsupported contention that physicians outside the southeast San Diego community
(in communities such
as La Jolla, Hillcrest, or the beach areas) would not accept new Medicare and
Medi-Cal patients, the I.G.
surveyed physicians in these three areas and, contrary to Petitioner's contention,
identified two physicians
in each area who would accept new Medicare and Medi-Cal patients. 13/ Petitioner's
unsupported
argument that such areas are uninviting to his black patients is unpersuasive
and without support in the
record. The test for purposes of this mitigating factor is that seeking alternative
sources would impose an
unreasonable burden on his former Medicare and Medi-Cal patients. In short,
travel to such areas would
have to impose a bar to their receiving health care. Even assuming there is
discomfiture associated with
travel to these communities, Petitioner has failed to prove that such discomfort
rises to the level of being an
unreasonable burden.
Petitioner has failed to establish that the geographic area that must be considered
in applying the mitigating
factor regarding an alternative source of medical care should be limited to
southeast San Diego. He has
failed to show that there are no other physicians practicing internal medicine
who are not accessible to his
former Medicare and Medi-Cal patients through the use of public transportation
and that use of such public
transportation would result unreasonable hardship. Even assuming public transportation
was not available,
he further has failed to establish that use of other means of transportation
would be impractical and would
pose a barrier to obtaining access to alternative sources of medical care.
C. Other health care providers can provide health
care items or services to Petitioner's Medicare andMedi-Cal patients comparable
to those provided
by Petitioner.
Petitioner argues that I should consider his services against the services
of other internists only, not against
the services of other family or general practice physicians in his community.
Petitioner asserts "that the
minority physicians available within the [southeast San Diego] community are
lacking board-certification
and training as internists and are therefore unable to render the type of medical
services" that Petitioner
provided his former Medicare and Medi-Cal patients. P. Br. 6. Implicit in this
contention is that
Petitioner's racial status makes him unique and that the provision of health
care to his former patients by
non-black physicians will result in hardship for his former patients. P. Br.
6 - 7.
Petitioner argues further that, to the extent there are licensed internists
in the southeast San Diego
community, they are not accepting referrals, as their caseload is at maximum
capacity. He contends that
referral of his former patients to family or general practice physicians would
result in their receiving care
of a lesser quality since such practitioners are limited in the medical services
that they can render to
patients. Id. at 6 - 7.
The I.G. responds by arguing that there is no support for Petitioner's assertion
that black physicians in
southeast San Diego are lacking board certification and training as internists
and therefore cannot render
equivalent service to his former Medicare and Medi-Cal patients. I.G. Br. 12.
Further, the I.G. has
identified 11 Medicare and Medi-Cal providers located within 1.5 miles of Petitioner's
office who are
practicing internal medicine and who are willing to accept new Medicare and
Medi-Cal patients. Id. at 12 -
15; I.G. R. Br. 3; Finding 20. 14/ These results were based on a recent I.G.
survey of the offices of such
physicians, which determined their specialization through the use of: 1) the
American Board of Medical
Specialties' Compendium of Certified Medical Specialists, Vol. 2, Internal Medicine
717 (2nd ed. 1988-
89); and 2) the 1991 San Diego County Medical Society Membership Directory.
I.G. Br. 12 - 14; I.G. R.
Br. 15 - 16. 15/
Among the physicians identified by the I.G. survey were two internists, Drs.
Rodney Hood and Camille
Henry, whose offices are in the same building in which Petitioner's office is
located. I.G. Ex. 17 at 2. In
addition, at locations in the immediate vicinity of Paradise Valley Hospital
(which is approximately 1.5
miles south of Petitioner's office (Id. at 3; see Finding 17)) are the offices
of internists Terrance W. Crouch,
James Kyle, Matthew Williams, Ben Medina, Genaro Fernandez, Jasmine Chow, Jerome
Robinson, Lennie
de la Paz, and David Chang. I.G. Ex. 17 at 1 - 3. All of these physicians are
located on streets where
public transportation is available. Id. at 3; Finding 16. Finally, these physicians
have all indicated to the
I.G. that they will accept new Medicare and Medi-Cal patients. I.G. Ex. 17 at
1 - 2; Finding 20.
Petitioner challenges the qualifications of a number of the physicians identified
by the I.G. He claims that
Drs. Chang, de la Paz, and Robinson are specializing in family practice or general
medicine and are not
board-certified internists. He concludes that they "are not qualified as
to their training, years of practice,
certification or areas of specialization." P. R. Br. 3.
He also questions the manner in which the I.G's survey was conducted and points
out that the results are in
contrast with information Petitioner obtained when he was first excluded. Id.
at 4.
Such arguments have no merit. Petitioner offers no evidence to support his
assertions concerning the
deficiencies in the survey conducted by the I.G. In contrast, by referencing
these physicians' status with
regard to board-certification or eligibility as described in the Compendium
of Certified Medical Specialists
and in the I.G. survey, the I.G. has reaffirmed that the physicians referenced
by Petitioner are either board
certified or eligible. I.G. R. Br. 7 - 9; I.G. Ex. 17, 18. By relying on the
same sources, the I.G. has
established that, of the 11 southeast San Diego physicians surveyed, six are
board-certified internists and
five are board-eligible. I.G. R. Br. 8 - 9. Of equal significance, Petitioner
has failed to establish that the
health care services provided by either board-eligible internists or family
or general practice physicians are
not comparable or equivalent to the health care services provided by Petitioner.
To establish this,
Petitioner would have had to show some clear diminution in the quality of health
care by these alternative
providers. Petitioner has provided no evidence to show such diminution in this
case.
Finally, Petitioner asserts that his status as a black physician makes his
provision of medical services to the
minority community unique, and his exclusion (as a black physician who now has
to refer his patients to
other primary care physicians) has imposed a hardship on his former patients.
P. Br. 6. I find this
argument unpersuasive. Specifically, I find that for race to be a relevant factor
with regard to whether
alternative sources of health care are available, I would have to find that
a petitioner's race "is an essential
component of the medical items or services he delivers." Holmes at 25.
Petitioner has not made such a
showing in this case. Furthermore, Petitioner has not proved that he is the
only available black internist
who can serve Medicare and Medi-Cal patients in the southeast San Diego community.
Petitioner concedes that there are seven black internists and six black physicians
engaged in family practice
who serve the southeast San Diego community. Finding 23. He admits also that
at least one black internal
medicine physician is accepting referrals from his practice although he claims
this physician cannot
accommodate the total demand from Petitioner's former practice. P. Dec. 12.
Additional medical care is
provided to his former patients by family practice physicians Drs. Malbour Watson
and Richard Butcher.
16/ Id. Dr. Watson practices in the same location as Petitioner and is accepting
almost all of Petitioner's
patients covered under Medicare and Medi-Cal. P. Ex. 5.
Thus, the record supports that there are an ample number of physicians, including
a number of black
physicians, 1) who practice either internal medicine or family practice; 2)
who will accept new Medicare or
Medicaid patients; and 3) whose office locations are within 1.5 miles of Petitioner's
office. Considering
the availability of public transportation within the southeast San Diego community,
Petitioner's former
Medicare and Medi-Cal patients can receive alternative sources of health care
in that community or by
travelling to other nearby communities such as La Jolla, Hillcrest, or the beach
areas. Thus, there is no
showing by Petitioner that having to obtain alternative sources of health care
imposes an unreasonable
hardship on his former Medicare and Medi-Cal patients.
D. None of Petitioner's other arguments mitigate
against the reasonableness of his exclusion.
However, while Petitioner asserts that the only mitigating factor in this case
is whether or not alternative
health care sources exist, Petitioner has asked me to consider also "objective
indicia" of his medical
practice. P. R. Br. 5. Petitioner asserts that such indicia include his standing
in the community, his
reputation among his medical colleagues, and his personal attributes. He asserts
that these indicia reflect
upon his integrity, medical expertise, humanity, and the quality of the medical
services he renders.
However, it is not appropriate for me to consider such factors in evaluating
the existence of alternative
sources of health care. Besides the extreme difficulty of measuring the relative
value of such intangible
characteristics, such factors are, for the most part, unique to the individual
possessing them. Giving weight
to such factors in determining whether an exclusion is reasonable would amount
to rendering every
practitioner a sole source for the purposes of 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii).
Such a principle would make
this mitigating factor meaningless. Also, assuming that I accepted such criteria
as an appropriate formula
for measuring Petitioner's qualities for purposes of this mitigating factor,
Petitioner has offered no proof
that the physicians who have been identified as providing alternative sources
of health care are lacking in
any of these criteria.
Petitioner asks me to consider the opinions of the "policing agencies"
(the Medical Board and the DEA)
and how they reflect favorably on Petitioner's rehabilitation. P. R. Br. 5 -
8. However, while evidence as
to Petitioner's character, reputation, and medical competence may have been
persuasive had I been
evaluating this exclusion under the general "trustworthiness" criteria
by which I would have judged the
reasonableness of the length of Petitioner's exclusion prior to the promulgation
of the regulation at 42
C.F.R. 1001.401, I find that it does not bear directly on whether alternative
sources of the type of health
care items or services Petitioner furnishes (internal medicine) are available.
Petitioner asks me to consider also the impact of his exclusion on his practice
of internal medicine.
Petitioner asserts that a large part of his practice over recent years has consisted
of Medicare and Medi-Cal
patients and that his exclusion may mean the "death knell" of his
practice as he cannot sustain an inner-city
practice without participating in Medicare and Medi-Cal. P. Br. 5 - 6; P. Dec.
7 - 9, 13. Again, I find that
this argument does not directly address whether or not alternative sources of
medical care exist. The
adverse economic impact of the exclusion on Petitioner's practice is irrelevant
to my decision here. See
Anesthesiologists Affiliated, et al., DAB CR65, at 65 (1990), aff'd, 941 F.2d
678 (8th Cir. 1991). The only
relevant inquiry is, if Petitioner is no longer available to provide his services,
whether alternative sources of
medical care are reasonably available.
Petitioner states that he defers to my "discretionary powers under the
provisions of 42 C.F.R. [ ]
1001.401(c)(3)(ii)" to shorten the length of his exclusion. P. R. Br. 8.
However, under section
1001.401(c)(3)(ii), I have no discretion to modify a petitioner's three-year
minimum exclusion where a
petitioner has failed to establish the existence of a mitigating factor. Here,
Petitioner has the burden of
proof and he has not met it.
CONCLUSION
Petitioner has failed to meet his burden of proving that no alternative sources
of the type of health care
items or services he provides are available. Consequently, the three-year exclusion
imposed and directed
against Petitioner is reasonable.
______________________________
Edward D. Steinman
Administrative Law Judge
1. The only date reflected on the Notice is a date-stamped notation that Petitioner
received the Notice on
August 27, 1992. However, Petitioner has stipulated to the accuracy of the August
19, 1992 date.
Petitioner's Objections to the I.G.'s Proposed Findings of Fact and Exhibits
at page 1; I.G. Proposed
Finding 5.
2. Unless the context indicates otherwise, I use the term "Medicaid"
hereafter to represent all programs
other than Medicare from which Petitioner was excluded.
3. I use the following abbreviations when citing the parties' exhibits and
briefs and my findings of fact
and conclusions of law:
I.G.'s Exhibit I.G. Ex. (number at page)
Petitioner's Exhibit P. Ex. (number at page)
Petitioner's Brief P. Br. (page)
I.G.'s Response Brief I.G. Br. (page)
Petitioner's Reply P. R. Br. (page)
Brief
I.G.'s Reply Brief I.G. R. Br. (page)
I.G.'s Proposed I.G. Prop. Find. (number)
Findings
Petitioner's Proposed P. Prop. Find. (number)
Findings
Petitioner's Declaration P. Dec. (page)
My Findings and Finding (number)
and Conclusions
4. Each party has objected to proposed exhibits submitted by the other party.
The I.G. has proposed 18
exhibits in this case (I.G. Ex. 1 - 8, 10, and 12 - 20).
The I.G. initially proposed I.G. Ex. 9 and 11 (I.G. Ex. 9 was a copy of an accusation
made by the Medical
Board of California (California Board) against Petitioner. I.G. Ex. 11 was a
copy of a memorandum of
agreement/surrender of registration between Petitioner and the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA)).
In his brief of April 26, 1993, Petitioner objected to these exhibits, arguing
that the matters referenced by
these documents are collateral to and have no bearing on this case. P. Br. 4.
In the brief of June 28, 1993,
the I.G. withdrew I.G. Ex. 9 and 11, giving as reasons the new regulations and
Petitioner's stipulation
conceding the I.G.'s authority to exclude Petitioner. I.G. Br. 3. However, with
his reply brief, Petitioner
now seeks to have I.G. Ex. 9 and 11 admitted as his P. Ex. 11 (the California
Board action) and 12 (the
D.E.A. settlement). P. Ex. 11 also includes a stipulation settling Petitioner's
dispute with the California
Board. Petitioner has submitted these exhibits in order to show the opinions
of other "policing agencies"
with regard to Petitioner's medical services. P. R. Br. 6. Also with his reply
brief, Petitioner submitted P.
Ex. 10, a letter in support of Petitioner from the counselor in charge of Petitioner's
diversion program for
impaired physicians. See P. R. Br. 6.
Petitioner has objected to the admission of I.G. Ex. 4, 5, 6, and 8 as irrelevant.
Petitioner has objected to
the admission of I.G. Ex. 12, because it does not provide a reference date or
any self-authenticating
information. Petitioner has objected to the admission of I.G. Ex. 14, because
it does not provide the names
of physicians who participated in Medi-Cal (the California Medicaid program)
after the last quarter of
1992. Petitioner has objected to the admission of I.G. Ex. 17, because he believes
the I.G.'s survey is
distorted.
I reject as irrelevant I.G. Ex. 4, 5, 6, and 8. I admit I.G. Ex. 12 as authenticated
by I.G. Ex. 13 and 19. I
admit I.G. Ex. 14 as I find that the absence of physician data after the last
quarter of 1992 does not render
the prior data invalid. The subsequent data would be cumulative only. I admit
I.G. Ex. 17 as I do not find
the I.G.'s survey to be distorted. Further, I find that I.G. Ex. 12, 14, and
17 relate to my decision regarding
the alleged existence of alternative sources of health care.
The I.G. has objected to the admission of P. Ex. 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11,
and 12 as irrelevant. The I.G. has
objected to several paragraphs of P. Ex. 9 as the declarant's unsupported opinion,
which is unreliable, relies
on statistics not in evidence, covers matters on which the declarant is not
qualified to testify as an expert,
and is hearsay. I admit P. Ex. 1. I reject as irrelevant P. Ex. 2, 3, 4, 7,
8, 10, 11, 12, and pages 1, 2, 4, 5,
and 6 of P. Ex. 9.
5. Petitioner recognizes that, under the Act and regulations, I am unable to
consider the circumstances
surrounding his conviction as a mitigating factor shortening the length of his
exclusion. However,
Petitioner has requested that to the extent I can consider the circumstances
of his conviction in addressing
the reasonableness of his exclusion, I consider that he was isolated and targeted
for prosecution while
functioning as an impaired physician. P. Br. 3 - 4; P. Dec. 9 - 11. Petitioner
contends that, by making this
request, he is not seeking to challenge his criminal conviction or to revisit
legal defenses raised pursuant to
his conviction. Petitioner asserts that the mitigating factor in his case is
42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii). P.
Br. 4. The only mitigating factors I can consider are those set out at section
1001.401(c)(3). Thus, I am
unable to consider the circumstances surrounding Petitioner's conviction as
a mitigating factor shortening
the length of his exclusion. To the extent that there are irregularities associated
with his conviction, they
must be raised in another forum. See my discussion of the regulations, infra.
6. The findings of fact and conclusions of law in this section are based on
I.G. Prop. Find. 1 - 15, 17 - 19,
23, 25, and 28, and on P. Prop. Find. 1 - 6, and 8. Neither party agreed with
all of the other's proposed
findings, but did agree with these specific findings of fact and conclusions
of law. Petitioner's Objections
to the I.G.'s Proposed Findings of Fact and Exhibits 1 - 2; I.G. Br. 26. Therefore,
I have adopted these
findings of fact and conclusions of law without substantive changes. I have,
however, conformed the I.G.'s
findings with Petitioner's, sequentially numbered them, deleted some that are
not material to my Decision
(i.e., P. Prop. Find. 1 and 2, which relate to the I.G.'s attempt to exclude
Petitioner pursuant to other
sections of the Act prior to his exclusion under section 1128(b)(3), and P.
Prop. Find. 3, 5, and 6, which
refer to procedural matters), and conformed their style with the style I use
in other parts of this Decision.
7. Petitioner asserts that he entered his plea of guilty on June 14, 1991,
but that, under State law, a
conviction does not result until the date of sentencing. Petitioner asserts
further that his sentencing was
delayed until August 27, 1991. Thus, Petitioner asserts that his date of conviction
was August 27, 1991,
not June 14, 1991. P. Prop. Find. 7. The I.G. asserts that Petitioner was convicted
on June 14, 1991. I.G.
Br. 1, 21. On Petitioner's plea of guilty (I.G. Ex. 2), the presiding Judge
noted, "[t]he Court accepts
defendant's plea, and the defendant is hereby convicted on his plea." This
note was dated June 14, 1991.
Therefore, from the record before me, it appears that Petitioner was convicted
as of June 14, 1991.
However, whether or not Petitioner was convicted as of June 14, 1991 or August
27, 1991, is immaterial to
my Decision in this case. What is material to my decision is that Petitioner
has, in fact, been convicted.
8. In this Decision, I rely heavily on my decision in Holmes. In Holmes, I
set forth the legal standard
which I am following in this case, as the legal issues in both cases are identical.
The petitioner in Holmes,
as Petitioner here, was excluded for three years pursuant to section 1128(b)(3)
of the Act. Both the
petitioner in Holmes and Petitioner were excluded after January 29, 1992 (and
before January 22, 1993).
Both the petitioner in Holmes and Petitioner raised 42 C.F.R. 1001.401(c)(3)(ii)
as the sole mitigating
factor.
9. Petitioner has not specifically defined what he means by southeast San Diego.
The I.G. has defined it
as the area within a two-mile radius of Petitioner's office. I.G. Br. 9. Petitioner
has not objected to this
definition. P. R. Br. 1 - 8.
10. Dr. Richard O. Butcher, president of the National Medical Association,
indicated that one of his roles
is to get physicians to service Medicare and Medi-Cal patients in southeast
San Diego; he alleges it is
difficult to recruit physicians in that area due to the low reimbursement rate
for services covered under
Medicare and Medi-Cal. P. Ex. 1 at 1. In apparent contradiction of his own witness,
Petitioner asserts that
at least 13 physicians provide health care to this community. Finding 23.
11. Petitioner asserts that these physicians cannot carry the burden of all
his former program patients. P.
Dec. 12. Considering the other alternative medical sources available to any
patient who could not be
accommodated by these physicians, there is no hardship arising from any further
referrals for medical care.
12. I.G. Ex. 16 identifies the sources of public transportation in metropolitan
San Diego which provide
both services within southeast San Diego and from southeast San Diego to other
communities in
metropolitan San Diego such as La Jolla, Hillcrest or the beach areas.
13. The I.G. identified Mission Beach (selected as a "beach area")
as a community within San Diego
approximately 9 - 10 miles from Petitioner's office. La Jolla, also abutting
the ocean, was identified as
being 17 - 20 miles from Petitioner's office. Finally, Hillcrest, an area within
the City of San Diego, was
identified as being approximately 6 - 7 miles from Petitioner's office. I.G.
Br. 11.
14. In addition to these providers, there is an emergency care facility which
treats Medicare and Medicaid
patients located within 1.5 miles of Petitioner's office which is available
to treat medical conditions
requiring immediate attention at a time that a patient is unable to obtain medical
care from a personal
physician. Finding 17.
15. The I.G. requested that I take judicial notice of these publications, as
they are public documents. I.G.
Br. 13. In his reply brief, Petitioner could have, but did not, object to my
taking such notice.
16. The I.G. correctly points out that Petitioner's referral of his patients
to family practice physicians
suggests that Petitioner believes these physicians are competent and seriously
undercuts his claim that such
physicians provide care which is inferior to that of internists. I.G. Br. 19
- 20.