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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 14, 2000
ARLINGTON, VA -- In an enormous breakthrough for the American Chiropractic
Association (ACA), the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia has
ruled that the ACA has standing to sue the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) over recent Medicare+Choice guidelines that the ACA
says have virtually excluded chiropractic services from the Medicare managed
care program. The federal judge's decision comes in response to a September
1999 motion to dismiss filed by HHS claiming that the ACA lacked standing
and that the District Court lacked jurisdiction to review the ACA's claims.
"The judge's ruling in our favor is a huge milestone for the ACA in our
lawsuit against the Health Care Financing Administration," said ACA
President James A. Mertz, DC, DACBR. "We have a clear win on the standing
issue that the ACA has the right to protect the interests of the
chiropractic profession and its members, and we are one step closer to
bringing this important action before the court."
In a 19-page opinion released July 7, the judge found that ACA does have
standing to sue since "the alleged injuries suffered by ACA members are
fairly traceable to the Secretary's (of HHS) conduct" and "the alleged
injuries suffered by ACA members are likely to be redressed by a favorable
decision in this case." The ACA first filed its lawsuit in November 1998,
claiming that new HHS guidelines unlawfully allow Medicare managed care
plans to substitute the services of other health care providers for services
that should legally be performed by doctors of chiropractic. An amended
complaint, challenging the sufficiency of an HHS report to Congress on the
utilization of chiropractic services, was filed last year.
In its motion to dismiss, HHS had argued that ACA must first attempt to have
its claims reviewed through an HHS administrative appeals process before a
federal court could exercise jurisdiction over the dispute. HHS had argued
that the Medicare Act requires that the ACA seek and receive a final
decision from HHS before going to federal court and also pointed to a recent
U.S. Supreme Court decision in Illinois Council vs. Shalala to support this
argument. However, because of the "anti-chiropractic bias that pervades
HHS," the ACA had argued that agency review was pointless since it would
essentially amount to "no review at all."
In his July 7 opinion, the judge specifically rejects the government's broad
interpretation of the U.S. Supreme Court decision and says a plaintiff may
obtain judicial review by a federal court if it can show that going through
the agency administrative adjudication of its claim would lead to "no review
at all." The judge also notes HHS' argument that Medicare regulations do
allow an enrollee, not an organization such as ACA, to request a review and
administrative appeal of HMO practices. However, the judge states that "the
court cannot ascertain whether, as a practical matter, those procedures will
lead to a review of the remaining claims" or whether requiring ACA to first
go through the administrative appeals process "will lead to the equivalent
of 'no review at all.'" As a result, the court has asked for a supplemental
briefing on the jurisdictional issue from both sides before July 28.
The only count in ACA's lawsuit not upheld in the July 7 opinion dealt with
the report by the Secretary of HHS on the utilization of chiropractic
services in Medicare HMOs - a victory that was already won by the ACA
without having to do battle in court The first count of ACA's amended
complaint challenged the content of the report that was mandated by Congress
in 1990. Although the report was due in 1993, it was not submitted until
April 1999 and failed to include the required "recommendations with respect
to any legislative and regulatory changes that the Secretary determines are
necessary to ensure access to such services." Just last month, the HHS
Office of Inspector General (OIG) finally issued a detailed report on the
utilization of chiropractic services in Medicare.
The court did find that the ACA had standing to assert its remaining counts.
Counts 2 and 3 alleged that the HHS secretary's policies unlawfully permit
non-chiropractors to perform manipulation of the spine to correct a
subluxation. Count 4 alleges that the secretary's policies unlawfully
permit a managed care organization to require a referral by a primary care
physician before a Medicare patient may visit and receive manual
manipulation of the spine to correct a subluxation from a chiropractor.
Count 5 alleges that the government has failed to ensure that managed care
organizations properly allocate portions of monthly, predetermined sums they
receive from Medicare for the coverage of manual manipulation of the spine
to correct a subluxation.
The ACA has long maintained that the administrative procedures under the
Medicare+Choice program do not adequately address the profound and inherent
problems contained in HCFA's continued refusal to recognize that only a
doctor of chiropractic may perform manual manipulation of the spine to
correct a subluxation.
"The ACA is in the battle to the end," said Dr. Mertz. "If the court
ultimately rules that other procedures must be followed, the ACA will follow
them. The ACA has learned that doing nothing accomplishes nothing. When
the ACA stands up for the rights of doctors of chiropractic and their
patients, the whole nation benefits. Never again will we be silent while
our members and their patients suffer discrimination."
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The American Chiropractic Association, the largest chiropractic organization in the country, provides lobbying, public relations, professional and educational opportunities for doctors of chiropractic, funds research regarding chiropractic and health issues and offers leadership for the advancement of the profession. The ACA promotes the highest standards of ethics and patient care, contributing to the health and well-being of millions of chiropractic patients.
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