|
As a result of efforts by the Center for Medicare Advocacy and other attorneys,
two federal courts have recently ruled in favor of beneficiaries whose claims
for payment had been denied based on restrictive Medicare coverage rules.
In both cases the Centers For Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) reversed their
earlier position that services were “not reasonable and necessary” (42 U.S.C. §
1395y(a)(a)), and liberalized its coverage rules while the plaintiffs’ claims
were pending. The courts rejected CMS’ position that, to give the agency
time to implement changes in its payment procedures, it could refuse to cover
plaintiffs’ services even after finding that they met statutory requirements.
One of the cases was brought by a Medicare beneficiary who
received cryosurgery for prostate cancer on March 30, 1999. Guzzo v.
Thomas, No. 03-1346 (6th Cir. June 25, 2004) (not recommended for full-text
publication). In 1997 CMS had issued National Coverage Determination (NCD)
35-96, which stated that cryosurgery could not be considered reasonable and
necessary because the evidence was not yet sufficient to demonstrate its
effectiveness. On February 1, 1999, two months before plaintiff Guzzo
received cryosurgery, Medicare issued a Decision Memorandum finding that the
procedure was safe and effective. However, because the agency had made its
liberalized coverage rule applicable to services received on and after July 1,
1999, payment for that Mr. Guzzo’s services were denied. Reversing
the decisions upholding denial in the administrative and district court
proceedings, the Sixth Circuit reasoned that “entitlement to reimbursement is
triggered when the Government announces that a medical procedure is ‘reasonable
and necessary.’”
The second case involved a Medicare beneficiary who received
treatments called Enhanced External Counterpulsation (EECP or ECP) for his
severe angina in 1997 and 1998. Wallis v. Thompson, CIV
02-448-TUC-WDB (D.Ariz. Order January 20, 2004), Motion For Clarification
granted June 10, 2004. CMS had adopted a NCD in 1984 denying
Medicare coverage of EECP because there was not yet enough “published clinical
evidence” of its utility. Coverage of Mr. Wallis’ procedure was denied based on
the NCD, and he appealed the denial. In 1998 Medicare found that EECP was
“reasonable and necessary”, and later announced EECP would be covered only for
beneficiaries who received the service after July 1, 1999. The court
agreed with Mr. Wallis that the liberalized NCD should be applied retroactively
to claims in the appeal process. The court prohibited the agency from:
refusing to apply the less restrictive NCD adopted in 1998 to cover plaintiff’s
pending claims; and, refusing to apply revised NCDs authorizing Medicare
coverage of services formerly ruled “not reasonable and necessary” to claims
that are pending at the time of revision.
The rationales of these decisions could help many
beneficiaries, since NCDs and Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs) are widely
used by CMS to deny payment for services until studies have established their
safety and efficacy. Medicare beneficiaries whose appeals are pending when
the agency finds that the service meets the “reasonable and necessary” statutory
requirements may now successfully argue that they are entitled to coverage
although Medicare has not yet officially started paying for the service.
The Guzzo case was brought by Joseph K.Grekin of Schafer and
Weiner, PLLC, (248) 540-3340, with an amicus brief filed by Sally Hart of the
Center For Medicare Advocacy, (520)
322-0126 and Sarah Lenz Lock of AARP Foundation
Litigation, (202) 434-2060. The Wallis case was brought by Sally Hart and
Gill Deford of the Center For Medicare Advocacy, (520) 327-0547 and (860)
456-7790, respectively. |