96-004031CON Fmc Hospital, Ltd. vs. The North Broward Hospital District, D/B/A Broward General Medical Center And Agency For Health Care Administration
 Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Tuesday, April 21, 1998.


View Dockets  
Summary: North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General met criteria for issuance of certificate of need (CON) to convert acute care to psychiatric beds; recommended denial based on request for twice as many beds as needed.

1STATE OF FLORIDA

4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS

8FMC HOSPITAL, LTD., )

12)

13Petitioner, )

15)

16vs. ) Case No. 96-4031

21)

22AGENCY FOR HEALTH CARE )

27ADMINISTRATION and THE NORTH )

32BROWARD HOSPITAL DISTRICT, )

36d/b/a BROWARD GENERAL MEDICAL )

41CENTER, )

43)

44Respondents. )

46_______________________________)

47RECOMMENDED ORDER

49Pursuant to notice, a formal hearing was held in this case

60on October 28-31, and November 3, 1997, in Tallahassee, Florida,

70before Eleanor M. Hunter, a duly designated Administrative Law

79Judge of the Division of Administrative Hearings.

86APPEARANCES

87For Petitioner FMC Hospital, Ltd:

92David C. Ashburn, Esquire

96Gunster, Yoakley, Valdes-Fauli

99& Stewart

101215 South Monroe Street, Suite 830

107Tallahassee, Florida 32301

110For Respondent North Broward Hospital District:

116Stephen A. Ecenia, Esquire

120R. David Prescott, Esquire

124Rutledge, Ecenia, Underwood

127Purnell & Hoffman, P.A.

131Post Office Box 551

135Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0551

138For Respondent Agency for Health Care Administration:

145Paul Vazquez, Esquire

148Agency for Health Care Administration

153Fort Knox Building 3

1572727 Mahan Drive, Suite 3431

162Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403

165STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES

169Whether the certificate of need application to convert

17730 acute care beds to 30 adult psychiatric beds at Broward

188General Medical Center meets the statutory and rule criteria for

198approval.

199PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

201The North Broward Hospital District (NBHD) submitted a

209certificate of need (CON) application to the Agency for Health

219Care Administration (AHCA) in the first hospital batching cycle

228of 1996. In that application, NBHD proposed to convert 30 acute

239care beds to 30 adult psychiatric beds at Broward General

249Medical Center (Broward General). NBHD owns and operates

257Broward General in AHCA District 10, Broward County, Florida.

266AHCA reviewed and preliminarily decided to approve the

274application and to issue CON Number 8425 to the NBHD. See 22

286Florida Administrative Weekly 29 (7/19/96). On August 9, 1996,

295FMC Hospital, Ltd. (FMC) filed a Petition for Formal

304Administrative Proceedings challenging the issuance of CON 8425.

312AHCA referred the Petition to the Division of Administrative

321Hearings for formal hearing.

325At the hearing, NBHD presented the testimony of Ruth

334Eldridge, expert in hospital administration; Michael Elwell,

341expert in mental health care program administration; Linda

349Berger, expert in health care planning and health care finance;

359Edward L. Hengtgen, Jr., expert in health care architecture;

368Mariamma Pyngolil, expert in mental health program development

376and administration; Sharon Gordon-Girvin, expert in health care

384planning; Timothy P. Menton, expert in hospital administration

392and health care finance; and Elizabeth Dudek, expert in health

402care planning who was also a witness for AHCA. NBHD's

412Exhibits 1-20 were received in evidence.

418FMC presented the testimony of Margaret D. DeNarvaz, expert

427in hospital administration; Joanne Correia Kent, expert in

435psychiatric clinical operations, psychiatric program

440development, and psychiatric program administration; Merle Bass,

447expert in health care finance and accounting; and Patricia

456Greenberg, expert in health planning. FMC's Exhibits 1-11 were

465received in evidence.

468The transcript of the hearing was received on November 21,

4781997. Following the granting of a Motion for Extension of Time,

489the parties filed proposed findings of fact and conclusions of

499law on December 31, 1997.

504FINDINGS OF FACT

5071. The North Broward Hospital District (NBHD) is a special

517taxing district established by the Florida Legislature in 1951

526to provide health care services to residents of the northern

536two-thirds of Broward County. NBHD owns and operates four acute

546care hospitals: Coral Springs Medical Center, North Broward

554Medical Center, Imperial Point Medical Center (Imperial Point),

562and Broward General Medical Center (Broward General). NBHD also

571owns

572and/or operates primary care clinics, school clinics, urgent

580care centers, and a home health agency.

5872. FMC Hospital, Ltd., d/b/a Florida Medical Center (FMC)

596is a 459-bed hospital with 74 inpatient psychiatric beds,

60551 for adults separated into a 25-bed adult unit and a 26-bed

617geriatric psychiatric unit, and 23 child/adolescent psychiatric

624beds. FMC is a public Baker Act receiving facility for children

635and adolescents and operates a mental health crisis

643stabilization unit (CSU) for children and adolescents. FMC also

652operates separately located facilities which include a partial

660hospitalization program, an adult day treatment program, and a

669community mental health center. At Florida Medical Center

677South, FMC operates another day treatment program and partial

686hospitalization program.

6883. The Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) is the

698state agency which administers the certificate of need (CON)

707program for health care services and facilities in Florida.

7164. The NBHD applied for CON Number 8425 to convert 30

727acute care beds to 30 adult psychiatric beds at Broward General.

738Broward General operates approximately 550 of its total 744

747licensed beds. It is a state Level II adult and pediatric

758trauma center and the tertiary referral center for the NBHD,

768offering Level II and III neonatal intensive care, pediatric

777intensive care, cardiac catheterization and open heart surgery

785services. Broward General has 68 adult psychiatric beds and is

795a public Baker Act receiving facility for adults.

8035. Public Baker Act receiving facilities have state

811contracts and receive state funds to hold involuntarily

819committed mental patients, regardless of their ability to pay,

828for psychiatric evaluation and short-term treatment. See

835Subsections 394.455(25) and (26), Florida Statutes. Although

842they serve different age groups, both FMC and Broward General

852are, by virtue of contracts with the state, public Baker Act

863facilities. When a Baker Act patient who is an indigent child

874or adolescent arrives at Broward General, the patient is

883transferred to FMC. FMC also typically transfers indigent Baker

892Act adults to Broward General.

8976. At Broward General, psychiatric patients are screened

905in a separate section of the emergency room by a staff which has

918significant experience with indigent mental health patients. If

926hospitalization is appropriate, depending on the patient's

933physical and mental condition, inpatient psychiatric services

940are provided in either a 38-bed unit on the sixth floor or a 30-

954bed unit on the fourth floor of Broward General.

9637. In July 1995, Broward General also started operating a

97320-bed mental health CSU located on Northwest 19th Street in

983Fort Lauderdale. Prior to 1995, the County operated the 19th

993Street CSU and 60 CSU beds on the grounds of the South Florida

1006State Hospital (SFSH), a state mental hospital. Following an

1015investigation of mental health services in the County, a grand

1025jury recommended closing the 60 CSU beds at SFSH because of

"1036deplorable conditions." In addition, the grand jury

1043recommended that the County transfer CSU operations to the NBHD

1053and the South Broward Hospital District (SBHD). As a result,

1063the SBHD assumed the responsibility for up to 20 CSU inpatients

1074a day within its existing 100 adult psychiatric beds at Memorial

1085Regional Hospital.

10878. The NBHD assumed the responsibility for up to 40 CSU

1098inpatients a day, including 20 at the 19th Street location. The

1109additional 20 were to be redirected to either the 68 adult

1120psychiatric beds at Broward General or the 47 adult psychiatric

1130beds at Imperial Point.

11349. CSU services for adult Medicaid and indigent patients

1143in the NBHD service area were transferred pursuant to contracts

1153between the NBHD and Broward County, and the NBHD and the State

1165of Florida, Department of Children and Family Services

1173(formerly, the Department of Health and Rehabilitative

1180Services). Based on the agreements, the County leases the 19th

1190Street building in which Broward General operates the CSU. The

1200County also pays a flat rate of $1.6 million a year in monthly

1213installments for the salaries of the staff which was transferred

1223from the County mental health division to the NBHD. The

1233County's contract with the NBHD lasts for five years, from

1243December 1995 to September 2000. Either party may terminate the

1253contract, without cause, upon 30 days notice.

126010. The State contract, unlike that of Broward County,

1269does not provide a flat rate, but sets a per diem reimbursement

1281rate of approximately $260 per patient per day offset by

1291projected Medicaid revenues. The State contract is renewable

1299annually, but last expired on June 30, 1997. The contract was

1310being re-negotiated at the time of the hearing in

1319November 1997. Based on actual experience with declining

1327average lengths of stay for psychiatric inpatients, the contract

1336was being re-negotiated to fund an average of 30, not a maximum

1348of 40 patients a day.

135311. If CON 8425 is approved, NBHD intends to use the

1364additional 30 adult psychiatric beds at Broward General to meet

1374the requirements of the State and County contracts, while

1383closing the 19th Street CSU and consolidating mental health

1392screening and stabilization services at Broward General. NBHD

1400proposes to condition the CON on the provision of 70 percent

1411charity and 30 percent Medicaid patient days in the 30 new

1422beds. By comparison, the condition applicable to the existing

143168 beds requires the provision of 3 percent charity and 25

1442percent Medicaid. When averaged for a total of 98 beds, the

1453overall condition would be 23.5 percent charity and 26.5 percent

1463Medicaid, or a total of 51 or 52 percent.

147212. The proposed project will require the renovation of

148110,297 gross square feet on the fourth floor of Broward General

1493at a cost of approximately $450,000. The space is currently an

1505unused section of Broward General which contains 42

1513medical/surgical beds. Twelve beds will be relocated to other

1522areas of the hospital. The renovated space will include

1531seclusion, group therapy, and social rooms, as well as 15 semi-

1542private rooms. Twelve of the rooms will not have separate

1552bathing/showering facilities, and seven of those will also not

1561have toilets within the patients' rooms.

1567Need in Relation to State and District

1574Health Plans - Subsection 408.035(1)(a), Florida Statutes

158113. The District 10 allocation factors include a

1589requirement that a CON applicant demonstrate continuously high

1597levels of utilization. The applicant is given the following

1606evidentiary guidelines:

1608a. patients are routinely waiting for

1614admissions to inpatient units;

1618b. the facility provides significant

1623services to indigent and Medicaid

1628individuals;

1629c. the facility arranges transfer for

1635patients to other appropriate facilities;

1640and

1641d. the facility provides other medical

1647services, if needed.

165014. Broward General does not demonstrate continuously high

1658utilization by having patients routinely waiting for admission.

1666Broward General does meet the other criteria required by

1675allocation factor one.

167815. The second District 10 allocation factor, like

1686criterion (b) of the first, favors an applicant who commits to

1697serving State funded and indigent patients.

170316. Broward General is a disproportionate share Medicaid

1711provider with a history of providing, and commitment to continue

1721providing, significant services to Medicaid and indigent

1728patients. In fact, the NBHD provides over 50 percent of both

1739indigent and Medicaid services in District 10. See also

1748Subsection 408.035(1)(n), Florida Statutes.

175217. Allocation factor three for substance abuse facilities

1760is inapplicable to Broward General which does not have substance

1770abuse inpatient services.

177318. Allocation factor 4 for an applicant with a full

1783continuum of acute medical services is met by Broward General.

1793See also Rule 59C-1.040(3)(h), Florida Administrative Code.

180019. Broward General complies with allocation factor 5 by

1809participating in data collection activities of the regional

1817health planning council.

182020. The state health plan includes preferences for

1828(1) converting excess acute care beds; (2) serving the most

1838seriously mentally ill patients; (3) serving indigent and Baker

1847Act patients; (4) proposing to establish a continuum of mental

1857health care; (5) serving Medicaid-eligible patients; and

1864(6) providing a disproportionate share of Medicaid and charity

1873care. Broward General meets the six state health plan

1882preferences. See also Rule 59C-1.040(4)(e)2., Florida

1888Administrative Code, and Subsection 408.035(1)(n), Florida

1894Statutes.

189521. Broward General does not meet the preference for acute

1905care hospitals if fewer than .15 psychiatric beds per 1000

1915people in the District are located in acute care hospitals. The

1926current ratio in the District is .19 beds per 1,000 people.

1938Rule 59C-1.040(4)(3)3, Florida Administrative Code, also

1944requires that 40 percent of the psychiatric beds needed in a

1955district should be allocated to general hospitals. Currently,

1963approximately 51

1965percent, 266 of 517 licensed District 10 adult inpatient

1974psychiatric beds are located in general acute care hospitals.

198322. On balance, the NBHD and Broward General meet the

1993factors and preferences of the health plans which support the

2003approval of the CON application. See also Rule 59C-

20121.040(4)(e)1. and Rule 59C-1.030, Florida Administrative Code.

2019Numeric Need

202123. The parties stipulated that the published fixed need

2030pool indicated no numeric need for additional adult inpatient

2039psychiatric hospital beds. In fact, the numeric need

2047calculation shows a need for 434 beds in District 10, which has

2059517 beds, or 83 more than the projected numeric need. In 1994-

20711995, the District utilization rate was approximately 58

2079percent.

208024. The NBHD asserts that the need arises from "not

2090normal" circumstances, specifically certain benefits from

2096closing the 19th Street CSU, especially the provision of better

2106consolidated care in hospital-based psychiatric beds, and the

2114establishment of a County mental health court.

212125. The NBHD acknowledges that AHCA does not regulate CSU

2131beds through the CON program and that CSU beds are not intended

2143to be included in the calculation of numeric need for adult

2154psychiatric beds. However, due to the substantial similarity of

2163services provided, NBHD contends that CSU beds are de facto

2173inpatient psychiatric beds which affect the need for CON-

2182regulated psychiatric beds. Therefore, according to the NBHD,

2190the elimination of beds at SFSH and at the 19th Street CSU

2202require an increase in the supply of adult psychiatric beds.

2212The NBHD also notes that approval of its CON application will

2223increase the total number of adult psychiatric hospital beds in

2233Broward County, but will not affect the total number of adult

2244mental health beds when CSU and adult psychiatric beds are

2254combined. After the CSU beds at SFSH closed, the total number

2265of adult mental health beds in the County has, in fact, been

2277reduced.

227826. NBHD projected a need to add 30 adult psychiatric beds

2289at Broward General by combining the 1995 average daily census

2299(ADC) of 48 patients with its assumption that it can add up to

231210, increasing the ADC to 58 patients a day in the existing 68

2325beds. Based on its contractual obligation to care for up to 40

2337CSU inpatients a day, the NBHD projects a need for an additional

234930 beds.

235127. The projection assumed that the level of utilization

2360of adult inpatient psychiatric services at Broward General would

2369remain relatively constant. With 40 occupied beds added to the

237948 ADC, NBHD predicted an ADC of 88 in the new total of 98 beds,

2394or 90 percent occupancy.

239828. The assumption that the ADC would remain fairly

2407constant is generally supported by the actual experience with

2416ADCs of 48.1, 51.5, and 45.8 patients, respectively, in 1995,

24261996, and the first seven months of 1997. NBHD's second

2436assumption, that an ADC of 40 CSU patients will be added is not

2449supported by the actual experience. Based on the terms of the

2460State and County contracts, up to 20 CSU patients have already

2471been absorbed into the existing beds at the Imperial Point or

2482Broward General, which is one explanation for the temporary

2491increase in ADC in 1996, while up to 20 more may receive

2503services at the 19th Street location. In 1996 and 1997, the ADC

2515in the 19th Street CSU beds was 15.3 and 14.2, respectively,

2526with monthly ranges in 1997 from a high of 17 in April to a low

2541of 12 in June. The relatively constant annual ADCs in

2551psychiatric and CSU beds are a reflection of increasing

2560admissions but declining average lengths of stay for psychiatric

2569services.

257029. The NBHD also projects that it will receive referrals

2580from the Broward County Mental Health Court, established in June

25901997. The Court is intended to divert mentally ill defendants

2600with minor criminal charges from the criminal justice system to

2610the mental health system. Actual experience for only three

2619months of operations showed 7 or 8 admissions a month with

2630widely varying average lengths of stay, from 6 to 95 days. The

2642effect of court referrals on the ADC at Broward General was

2653statistically insignificant into the fall of 1997. Newspaper

2661reports of the number of inmates with serious mental illnesses

2671do not provide a reliable basis for projecting the effect of the

2683mental health court on psychiatric admissions to Broward

2691General, since it is not equipped to handle violent felons.

270130. One of Broward General's experts also compared

2709national hospital discharge data to that of Broward County. The

2719results indicate a lower use rate in Broward County in 1995 and

2731a higher one in 1996. That finding was consistent with the

2742expert's finding of a growth in admissions and bed turnover rate

2753which measures the demand for each bed. The expert also

2763considered the prevalence of mental illness and hospitalization

2771rates. The data reflecting expected increases in admissions,

2779however, was not compared to available capacity in the County

2789nor correlated with declining lengths of stay.

279631. The District X: Comprehensive Health Plan 1994

2804includes an estimate of the need for 10 CSU beds per 100,000

2817people, or a total of 133 CSU beds needed for the District. FMC

2830argues that the calculation is incorrect because only the adult

2840population should be included. Using only adults, FMC

2848determined that 116 CSU beds are needed which, when added to 434

2860adult psychiatric beds needed in the February 1996 projection,

2869gives a bed need for all mental health beds of 550. That total

2882is less than the actual combined total number of 567 mental

2893health beds, 517 adult psychiatric beds plus 50 CSU beds in

29041995. Whatever population group is appropriate, the projection

2912of the need for CSU beds is not reliable based on the evidence

2925that, since the end of 1995, CSU services have been and,

2936according to NBHD, should continue to be absorbed into hospital-

2946based adult psychiatric units. For the same reason, the

2955increase in adult psychiatric bed admissions from 1995 to 1996

2965does not establish a trend towards increasing psychiatric

2973utilization, but is more likely attributable to the closing of

2983CSU beds at SFSH.

298732. FMC's expert's comparison of data from three selected

2996months in two successive years is also not sufficient to

3006establish a downward trend in utilization at the 19th Street

3016CSU, neither is the evidence of a decline in ADC by one patient

3029in one year. Utilization is relatively static based on ADCs in

3040existing Broward County adult psychiatric beds and in CSU beds.

3050FMC established Broward General's potential to decrease average

3058lengths of stay by developing alternative non-inpatient services

3066as FMC has done and Broward General proposes to do. See Finding

3078of Fact 37.

308133. Based on local health council reports, FMC's data

3090reflects a rise in the ADC at Broward General to 52.7 in 1996,

3103and a return to 46 in the first seven months of 1997. Using a

311714.2 ADC for the 19th Street CSU, FMC projects that Broward

3128General will reach an ADC of approximately 60 in the first year

3140of operations if the CON is approved, not 88 as projected.

315134. Broward General acknowledged its capacity to add 10

3160more patients to the ADC without stress on the system. Having

3171already absorbed 20 of up to 40 CSU patients at Imperial Point

3183and Broward General in 1996 and 1997 resulting in an ADC of 48,

3196and given the capacity to absorb 10 more, the NBHD has

3207demonstrated a need to accommodate an ADC of 10 more adult

3218psychiatric patients at Broward General, or a total ADC of 68

3229patients. The need to add capacity to accommodate an additional

323910 patient ADC was not shown to equate to a need for 30

3252additional beds, which would result in an ADC of 68 patients in

326498 beds, or 69 or 70 percent occupancy.

3272Special Circumstances - Rule 59C-1.040(4)(d)

327735. The psychiatric bed rule provides for approval of

3286additional beds in the absence of fixed numeric need. The

"3296special circumstance" provision applies to a facility with an

3305existing unit with 85 percent or greater occupancy. During the

3315applicable period, the occupancy at Broward General was 74.15

3324percent. However, occupancy rates have exceeded 95 percent in

3333the CSU beds on 19th Street.

333936. If up to 20 patients on 19th Street are added to the

335248 ADC at Broward General, the result is that the existing 68

3364beds will be full. A full unit is operationally not efficient

3375or desirable and allows no response to fluctuations in demand.

3385Therefore, the state has established a desirable standard of 75

3395percent occupancy for psychiatric units, a range which supports

3404the addition of 10 to 15 psychiatric beds at Broward General.

3415Available Alternatives - Subsection 408.035(1)(b)

3420and (d), Florida Statutes, and Rule 59C-1.040(4)(e)4.,

3427Florida Administrative Code

343037. The psychiatric bed rule provides that additional beds

3439will "not normally" be added if the district occupancy rate is

3450below 75 percent. For the twelve months preceding the

3459application filing, the occupancy rate in 517 adult psychiatric

3468beds in District 10 was approximately 58 percent. FMC's expert

3478noted that each day an average of 200 adult psychiatric beds

3489were available in District 10. Broward General argues that the

3499occupancy rate is misleading. Five of the nine facilities with

3509psychiatric beds are freestanding, private facilities, which are

3517ineligible for Medicaid participation. Historically, the

3523freestanding hospitals have also provided little charity care.

3531One facility, University Pavilion, is full.

353738. Of the four acute care hospitals with adult

3546psychiatric beds, Memorial Hospital in the SBHD, is not

3555available to patients in the NBHD service area. Imperial Point,

3565the only other NBHD facility with adult psychiatric beds, is not

3576available based on its occupancy rate for the first seven months

3587of 1997 of approximately 81 percent, which left an average of 9

3599available beds in a relatively small 47-bed unit. That leaves

3609only Broward General and FMC to care for Medicaid and indigent

3620adult psychiatric patients. FMC is the only possible

3628alternative provider of services, but Broward General was

3636recommended by the grand jury and was the only contract

3646applicant. The occupancy rate in FMC's 51 adult beds was

3656approximately 80 percent in 1995, 73 percent in 1996, and 77

3667percent for the first seven months in 1997. FMC has reduced

3678average lengths of stay by having patients "step down" to

3688partial hospitalization, day treatment and other outpatient

3695services of varying intensities. The same decline in average

3704lengths of stay is reasonably expected when Broward General

3713implements these alternatives.

371639. Adult psychiatric services are also accessible in

3724District 10 applying the psychiatric bed rule access standard.

3733That is, ninety percent of the population of District 10 has

3744access to the service within a maximum driving time of forty-

3755five minutes.

375740. The CSU license cannot be transferred to Broward

3766General. Broward County holds the license for CSU beds which,

3776by rule, must be located on the first floor of a building.

3788Although Broward General may not legally hold the CSU license

3798and provide CSU services on the fourth floor of the hospital,

3809there is no apparent legal impediment to providing CSU services

3819in psychiatric beds.

3822Quality of Care - Subsection 408.035(1)(c), Florida Statutes

3830and Rule 1.040(7), Florida Administrative Code

383641. Broward General is accredited by the Joint Commission

3845on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations. The parties

3853stipulated that Broward General has a history of providing

3862quality care. Broward General provides the services required by

3871Rule 59C-1.040(3)(h), Florida Administrative Code.

3876Services Not Accessible in Adjoining Areas;

3882Research and Educational Facilities; Needs of HMOs;

3889Services Provided to Individuals Beyond the District;

3896Subsections 408.035(1)(f),(g),(j), and (k), Florida Statutes

390442. Broward General does not propose to provide services

3913which are inaccessible in adjoining areas nor will it provide

3923services to non-residents of the district. Broward General is

3932not one of the six statutory teaching hospitals nor a health

3943maintenance organization (HMO). Therefore, those criteria are

3950of no value in determining whether this application should be

3960approved.

3961Economics and Improvements in Service from

3967Joint Operation - Subsection 408.035(1)(e), Florida Statutes

397443. The consolidation of the psychiatric services at

3982Broward General is reasonably expected to result in economies

3991and improvements in the provision of coordinated services to the

4001mentally ill indigent and Medicaid population. Broward General

4009will eliminate the cost of meal deliveries and the transfer of

4020medically ill patients, but that potential cost-saving was not

4029quantified by Broward General.

4033Staff and Other Resources - Subsection 408.035(1)(h),

4040Florida Statutes

404244. The parties stipulated that NBHD has available the

4051necessary resources, including health manpower, management

4057personnel, and funds to implement the project.

4064Financially Feasibility - Subsection 408.035(1)(h) and (i),

4071Florida Statutes

407345. The parties stipulated that the proposed project is

4082financially feasible in the immediate term. The estimated total

4091project cost is $451,791, but NBHD has $500,000 in funds for

4104capital improvements available from the County and $700,000 from

4114the Florida Legislature. As stipulated by the parties, NBHD has

4124sufficient cash on hand to fund the project.

413246. Regardless of the census, the County's contractual

4140obligation to the NBHD remains fixed at $1.6 million. The State

4151contract requires the prospective payment of costs offset by

4160expected Medicaid dollars. If the number of Medicaid eligible

4169patients decreases, then state funding increases

4175proportionately. The state assumed that 20 percent of the

4184patients would qualify for Medicaid, therefore it reimburses the

4193per diem cost of care for 80 percent of the patients. One audit

4206indicated that 30 percent of the patients qualified for

4215Medicaid, so that State payments for that year were higher than

4226needed. The State contract apparently makes no provision to

4235recover excess payments.

423847. The application projects a net profit of $740,789 for

4249the first year of operations, and a net profit of $664,489 for

4262the second year. If the State contract with NBHD is renewed to

4274contemplate an average of 30 patients per day as opposed to up

4286to 40 patients per day, then annual revenue could be reduced up

4298to $400,000. Projected net profit will, nevertheless, exceed

4307expenses when variable expenses are reduced correspondingly.

431448. If 20 state funded patients are already in psychiatric

4324beds, and 20 more could be transferred from 19th Street, the

4335result is an ADC of 68. Based on the funding arrangements,

4346there is no evidence that the operation of a total of 98 beds

4359could not be profitable, even with an ADC of 68, although it

4371would be wasteful to have 30 extra beds.

4379Impact on Competition, Quality Assurance

4384and Cost-Effectiveness - Subsection 408.035(1)(l),

4389Florida Statutes

439149. With a maximum of 68 inpatients or more realistically,

4401under the expected terms of a renegotiated State contract, 58 to

441260 inpatients in 98 beds, Broward General will reasonably

4421attempt to expand the demand for its inpatient psychiatric

4430services. Within the NBHD's legal service area, one-third of

4439adult psychiatric patients not admitted to Broward General are

4448admitted to FMC.

445150. Assuming a proportionate impact on competitors, FMC's

4459expert projected that one-third of approximately 30 unfilled

4467beds at Broward General will be filled by patients who would

4478otherwise have gone to FMC. The projection of a loss of 9

4490patients from the ADC of FMC is reasonably based on an analysis

4502showing comparable patient severity in the most prevalent

4510diagnostic category. Given the blended payor commitment of

4518approximately 51 or 52 percent total for Medicaid and charity in

452998 beds, Broward General will be able to take patients from

4540every payor category accepted at FMC.

454651. The loss of 9 patients from its ADC can reduce

4557revenues by $568,967 at FMC. The impact analysis is reasonably

4568based on lost patient days since most payers use a per diem

4580basis for compensating FMC. For example, although Medicare

4588reimbursement is usually based on diagnosis regardless of length

4597of stay, it is cost-based for the geriatric psychiatric unit.

4607Net profit at FMC, for the year 1996-1997, was expected to be

4619approximately $4.5 million.

462252. FMC will also experience increased costs in

4630transporting indigent patients from FMC to Broward General for

4639admission and treatment. Because of the additional distance,

4647the cost to transfer indigent patients is $20 more per patient

4658from FMC to Broward General than it is from FMC to the 19th

4671Street CSU. FMC typically stabilizes indigent adult psychiatric

4679inpatients, then transfers them to either the 19th Street CSU or

4690Broward General. From March through September of 1997, FMC

4699transported approximately 256 indigent patients from FMC to the

470819th Street CSU.

471153. In terms of quality assurance, the consolidation of

4720psychiatric services at Broward General will allow all patients

4729better access to the full range of medical services available at

4740Broward General.

474254. The NBHD's operation of the 19th Street CSU is

4752profitable. Approval of the CON application should reasonably

4760eliminate all costs associated with operation of the 19th Street

4770facility, and shift more revenues from the State and County

4780contracts to Broward General. Some savings are reasonably

4788expected from not having meal deliveries to 19th Street or

4798patient transfers for medical care. The NBHD did not quantify

4808any expected savings.

4811Costs and Methods of Construction

4816- Subsection 408.035(1)(m), Florida Statutes

482155. Broward General will relocate 12 of 42

4829medical/surgical beds and convert 30 medical/surgical beds to 30

4838adult psychiatric beds on one wing of the fourth floor, which is

4850currently unused. Fifteen semi-private medical/surgical patient

4856rooms will be converted into semi-private adult psychiatric

4864rooms. Existing wards will be converted to two social rooms,

4874one noisy and one quiet. With the removal of the walls of some

4887offices, the architect designed a group therapy room. An

4896existing semi-private room will be used as a seclusion room. Of

4907the fifteen semi-private rooms, twelve will not have bathing or

4917showering facilities and seven will not have toilets within the

4927patients' rooms. At the time the hospital was constructed, the

4937state required only a lavatory/sink in each patient room.

4946AHCA's architect agreed to allow Broward General to plan to use

4957central bathing and toilet facilities to avoid additional costs

4966and diminished patient room sizes. Because the plan

4974intentionally avoids construction in the toilets, except to

4982enlarge one to include a shower, there is no requirement to

4993upgrade to Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) standards.

5001Therefore, the $23,280 construction cost contingency for code

5010compliance is adequate.

501356. Although the projected construction costs are

5020reasonable and the applicable architectural code requirements

5027are met, the design is not the most desirable in terms of

5039current standards. Patient privacy is compromised by the lack

5048of toilets for each patient room.

5054Past and Proposed Provision of Services to Promote

5062a Continuum of Care in a Multi-level System -

5071Subsection 408.035(1)(o), Florida Statutes

507557. Broward General is a tertiary acute care facility

5084which provides a broad continuum of care. Because it already

5094operates the CSU and provides CSU services in adult psychiatric

5104beds, the proposal to relocate patients maintains but does not

5114further promote that continuum of care. Broward General's plan

5123to establish more alternatives to inpatient psychiatric care

5131does promote and enhance its continuum of care.

5139Capital Expenditures for New Inpatient Services -

5146Subsection 408.035(2), Florida Statutes

515058. Broward General is not proposing to establish a new

5160health service for inpatients, rather it is seeking to relocate

5170an existing service without new construction. The criteria in

5179this Subsection are inapplicable.

5183Factual Conclusions

518559. Broward General did not establish a "not normal"

5194circumstance based on the grand jury's findings and

5202recommendations. The grand jury did not recommend closing 19th

5211Street facility. Broward General did generally establish not

5219normal circumstances based on the desirability of consolidating

5227mental health services at Broward General to provide a single

5237point of entry and to improve the quality of care for the 19th

5250Street facility patients.

525360. Broward General failed to establish the need to add 30

5264beds to accomplish the objective of closing the 19th Street

5274facility. Although the existing beds at Broward General may

5283reasonably be expected to be full as a result of the transfer of

529619th Street patients, the addition of 30 beds without sufficient

5306demand results in an occupancy rate of 69 or 70 percent, from an

5319ADC of 68 patients in 98 beds. Broward General has requested

5330approximately twice as many beds as it demonstrated it needs.

534061. Broward General's CON application on balance satisfies

5348the local and state health plan preferences. In general, FMC is

5359the only alternative facility in terms of available beds, but is

5370not the tax-supported public facility which the grand jury

5379favored to coordinate mental health services. Broward General

5387meets the statutory criteria for quality of care, improvements

5396from joint operations, financial feasibility, quality assurance,

5403cost-effectiveness, and services to Medicaid and indigent

5410patients.

541162. The proposal is not the most desirable architecturally

5420considering current standards. More importantly, Broward

5426General did not demonstrate that it can achieve its projected

5436occupancy without an adverse impact on FMC. The NBHD proposal

5446will add too many beds to meet the targeted state occupancy

5457levels in relatively a static market.

546363. Broward General's application does not include a

5471partial request for fewer additional beds which would have

5480allowed the closing of 19th Street, while maintaining some empty

5490beds for demand fluctuations and avoiding an adverse impact on

5500FMC.

5501CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

550464. The Division of Administrative Hearings has

5511jurisdiction over the subject matter of and parties to this

5521proceeding pursuant to Subsections 120.57(1) and 408.039(5),

5528Florida Statutes.

553065. As the applicant, the NBHD has the burden of

5540demonstrating its entitlement to the CON based on a balanced

5550consideration of the statutory and rule criteria. Boca Raton

5559Artificial Kidney Center v. Department of Health and

5567Rehabilitative Services , 475 So. 2d 260 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985).

5577Florida Department of Transportation v. JWC Company, Inc. , 396

5586So. 2d 178 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981).

559366. FMC has standing, pursuant to Subsection

5600408.039(5)(c), Florida Statutes, as an existing provider of

5608adult inpatient psychiatric services in District 10 which will

5617be substantially adversely affected by the issuance of CON 8425.

562767. There is no fixed numeric need for psychiatric beds in

5638District 10. The lack of numeric need is not determinative of

5649the outcome of any CON case, particularly one like this in which

"5661not normal" circumstances are demonstrated. Sarasota County

5668Public Hospital Board v. Department of Health and Rehabilitative

5677Services , 11 FALR 6248 (DHRS November 17, 1989).

568568. The special or not normal circumstances demonstrated

5693by the NBHD are the improvements in quality assurance and cost

5704efficiency, the enhanced quality of services to mental health

5713patients at Broward General, and the combined occupancy rates in

5723the CSU and the adult psychiatric beds. See Rule 59C-

57331.040(4)(d), Florida Administrative Code; and Humana, Inc. v.

5741Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services , 469 So. 2d 889

5751(Fla. 1st DCA 1985).

575569. The proposal, is generally consistent with the factors

5764and preferences in the district and state health plans, as

5774required by Subsection 408.035(1)(a), Florida Statutes.

578070. Broward General has a history of providing quality

5789care and the range of services required for psychiatric

5798patients, in compliance with Rule 59C-1.040(3)(h), Florida

5805Administrative Code, and Subsection 408.035(1)(c), Florida

5811Statutes.

581271. Subsections 408.035(1)(f), (g),(j), and (k) are

5820inapplicable or not met by Broward General. Without a competing

5830applicant which is a teaching hospital or an HMO, those criteria

5841do not assist in determining whether the CON should be issued.

585272. Although not quantified, Broward General is reasonably

5860expected to derive an economic benefit from providing

5868psychiatric care at a single location, consistent with

5876Subsection 408.035(1)(e), Florida Statutes.

588073. NBHD has the resources to accomplish the proposed

5889project and to operate it in a financially feasible manner in

5900the immediate and long term. Subsections 408.035(1)(h), and

5908(i), Florida Statutes.

591174. The proposal to create excess capacity at Broward

5920General is not the most cost-effective and will substantially

5929and adversely affect that at FMC, which is inconsistent with

5939Subsection 408.035(1)(l), Florida Statutes.

594375. The design of the psychiatric unit is the least

5953costly, but not the most effective in terms of patient care and

5965privacy. Subsection 408.035(l)(m), Florida Statutes.

597076. Broward General and NBHD have a commendable record of

5980providing care to Medicaid and indigent patients, in compliance

5989with Subsection 408.035(1)(n), Florida Statutes.

599477. Broward General plans to expand alternatives to

6002inpatient psychiatric care. Subsection 408.035(1)(o), Florida

6008Statutes.

600978. The addition of 30 beds at Broward General is not

6020supported by the need to close 20 beds at the 19th Street CSU

6033nor the speculative impact of the mental health court.

6042Therefore, the proposal will not achieve the desired average

6051annual occupancy rate of 75 percent, set in Rule 59C-

60611.040(4)(c)5., Florida Administrative Code.

606579. The approval of beds in excess of those needed is

6076risky. That excess capacity can be detrimental to a worthy

6086applicant in a future batching cycle. See Beverly Enterprises-

6095Florida, Inc., etc. v. Agency for Health Care Administration ,

6104DOAH Case No. 92-6656 (F.O. 10/17/94).

6110RECOMMENDATION

6111Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of

6121Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Agency for Health Care

6131Administration deny the application of the North Broward

6139Hospital District for Certificate of Need Number 8425 to convert

614930

6150medical/surgical beds to 30 adult psychiatric beds at Broward

6159General Medical Center.

6162DONE AND ENTERED this 21st day of April, 1998, in

6172Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.

6176___________________________________

6177ELEANOR M. HUNTER

6180Administrative Law Judge

6183Division of Administrative Hearings

6187The DeSoto Building

61901230 Apalachee Parkway

6193Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060

6196(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675

6200Fax Filing (850) 921-6847

6204Filed with the Clerk of the

6210Division of Administrative Hearings

6214this 21st day of April, 1998.

6220COPIES FURNISHED:

6222Sam Power, Agency Clerk

6226Agency for Health Care Administration

6231Fort Knox Building 3

62352727 Mahan Drive, Suite 3431

6240Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403

6243Paul J. Martin, General Counsel

6248Agency for Health Care Administration

6253Fort Knox Building 3

62572727 Mahan Drive, Suite 3431

6262Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403

6265Paul Vazquez, Esquire

6268Agency For Health Care Administration

6273Fort Knox Building 3

62772727 Mahan Drive, Suite 3431

6282Tallahassee, Florida 32308-5403

6285Stephen A. Ecenia, Esquire

6289R. David Prescott, Esquire

6293Rutledge, Ecenia, Underwood,

6296Purnell & Hoffman, P.A.

6300Post Office Box 551

6304Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0551

6307David C. Ashburn, Esquire

6311Gunster, Yoakley, Valdes-Fauli

6314& Stewart, P.A.

6317215 South Monroe Street, Suite 830

6323Tallahassee, Florida 32301

6326NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS

6332All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within

634215 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions

6353to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that

6364will issue the Final Order in this case.

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Date
Proceedings
Date: 07/06/1998
Proceedings: Final Order filed.
PDF:
Date: 07/02/1998
Proceedings: Agency Final Order
Date: 06/11/1998
Proceedings: (D. Ashburn, W. Hyde) Motion for Withdrawal and Substitution of Counsel filed.
PDF:
Date: 04/21/1998
Proceedings: Recommended Order
PDF:
Date: 04/21/1998
Proceedings: Recommended Order sent out. CASE CLOSED. Hearing held October 28-31 and November 3, 1997.
Date: 12/31/1997
Proceedings: Joint Proposed Recommended Order of the Agency for Hearing Care Administration and the North Broward Hospital District filed.
Date: 12/31/1997
Proceedings: FMC Hospital, Inc.`s Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law filed.
Date: 12/19/1997
Proceedings: Order Granting Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed Recommended Orders (until 12/31/97) sent out.
Date: 12/17/1997
Proceedings: (Petitioner) Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed Recommended Orders filed.
Date: 11/21/1997
Proceedings: (6 Volumes) Transcript filed.
Date: 10/28/1997
Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
Date: 10/27/1997
Proceedings: Joint Prehearing Stipulation filed.
Date: 10/21/1997
Proceedings: Order Amending Hearing Schedule sent out. (hearing set for Oct. 28-31 & Nov. 3-5, 1997)
Date: 10/20/1997
Proceedings: (FMC) Motion for Amendment of Hearing Schedule (filed via facsimile).
Date: 10/15/1997
Proceedings: Florida Medical Center`s Emergency Motion to Compel Deposition Discovery of Ruth Eldridge (filed via facsimile).
Date: 10/06/1997
Proceedings: North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General Medical Center`s Supplemental Witness List filed.
Date: 10/01/1997
Proceedings: FMC Hospital, LTD.`s Supplemental Witness List (filed via facsimile).
Date: 09/26/1997
Proceedings: North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General Medical Center`s Supplemental Witness List filed.
Date: 09/19/1997
Proceedings: Notice of Filing Witness and Exhibit Lists; North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General Medical Center`s Preliminary Witness List; North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General Medical Center`s Preliminary Exhibit List filed.
Date: 09/19/1997
Proceedings: FMC Hospital, LTD.`s Witness & Exhibit List (filed via facsimile).
Date: 07/08/1997
Proceedings: Order Cancelling and Rescheduling Hearing sent out. (hearing set for Oct. 27-31, 1997; 10:00am; Tallahassee)
Date: 07/03/1997
Proceedings: Letter to EMH from R. Prescott Re: Motion for Continuance filed.
Date: 06/25/1997
Proceedings: (Respondent) Motion for Continuance filed.
Date: 04/28/1997
Proceedings: (From D. Ashburn) Notice of Change of Address filed.
Date: 01/31/1997
Proceedings: Order Cancelling and Rescheduling Hearing sent out. (hearing reset for July 14-18, 1997; 10:00am; Tallahassee)
Date: 01/30/1997
Proceedings: Joint Agreed Motion for Continuance filed.
Date: 01/28/1997
Proceedings: North Broward Hospital District`s Responses to FMC Hospital Ltd.`s First Request for Production of Documents; North Broward Hospital District`s Notice of Service of Answers to FMC Hospital, Ltd.`s First Interrogatories filed.
Date: 01/16/1997
Proceedings: (From T. Konrad) (2) Notice of Cancelling Deposition Duces Tecum; Notice of Cancelling Deposition(s) Duces Tecum; Notice of Taking Depositions Duces Tecum; Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum filed.
Date: 01/08/1997
Proceedings: Amended Notice of Hearing (as to Style Only) sent out. (hearing set for Feb. 10-14, 1997; 10:00am; Tallahassee)
Date: 01/08/1997
Proceedings: (From T. Konrad) (2) Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum; Notice of Taking Deposition(s) Duces Tecum filed.
Date: 01/06/1997
Proceedings: Letter to EMH from S. Ecenia Re: Amended Notice of Hearing filed.
Date: 01/03/1997
Proceedings: Notice of Hearing sent out. (hearing set for Feb. 10-14, 1997; 10:00am; Tallahassee)
Date: 12/30/1996
Proceedings: (Respondent) Response to Administrative Law Judge`s Request for Available Dates for Final Hearing filed.
Date: 12/27/1996
Proceedings: FMC Hospital, Ltd.'s Responses to North Broward Hospital District's First Request for Production of Documents; FMC Hospital, Ltd.'s Objections to the North Broward Hospital District's First Set of Interrogatories; FMC Hospital, Ltd.'s Notice of Service of
Date: 12/27/1996
Proceedings: Notice of Service of FMC Hospital, Ltd.'s First Set of Interrogatories to the North Broward Hospital District; FMC Hospital, Ltd. d/b/a Florida Medical Center First Request for Production to North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General Medical Ce
Date: 12/13/1996
Proceedings: (From P. Vazquez) Notice of Appearance filed.
Date: 11/27/1996
Proceedings: North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General Medical Center`s Notice of Service of First Set of Interrogatories to FMC Hospital, Ltd. d/b/a Florida Medical Center filed.
Date: 11/27/1996
Proceedings: North Broward Hospital District d/b/a Broward General Medical Center`s First Request for Production of Documents to FMC Hospital, Ltd. d/b/a Florida Medical Center filed.
Date: 11/15/1996
Proceedings: Letter to WAB from S. Ecenia Re: Response to Order filed.
Date: 10/04/1996
Proceedings: (From S. Ecenia) Response to Order of Prehearing Instructions filed.
Date: 09/20/1996
Proceedings: Letter to hearing officer from S. Ecenia Re: Mr. Ashburn`s letter requesting hearing officer avoid scheduling hearing prior to 12/1/96 filed.
Date: 09/20/1996
Proceedings: Letter to hearing officer from D. Ashburn Re: Scheduling conflict filed.
Date: 09/19/1996
Proceedings: Letter to WAB from Stephen Ecenia (RE: response to initial order) filed.
Date: 09/18/1996
Proceedings: Order of Prehearing Instructions sent out.
Date: 09/03/1996
Proceedings: (From T. Konrad) Notice of Appearance filed.
Date: 08/30/1996
Proceedings: Notification card sent out.
Date: 08/28/1996
Proceedings: Notice; Petition for Formal Administrative Proceedings filed.

Case Information

Judge:
ELEANOR M. HUNTER
Date Filed:
08/28/1996
Date Assignment:
11/25/1996
Last Docket Entry:
07/06/1998
Location:
Tallahassee, Florida
District:
Northern
Agency:
ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED
Suffix:
CON
 

Related DOAH Cases(s) (2):

Related Florida Statute(s) (4):

Related Florida Rule(s) (2):