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Physician payment issues

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AMA v. United HealthCare and Metropolitan Life Insurance (S.D.N.Y.)

Issue

The issue in this class action lawsuit, filed on March 15, 2000, is whether two managed care organizations, United HealthCare (UHC) and Metropolitan Life Insurance, have been understating their calculation of “usual, customary, and reasonable” charges when paying physicians or reimbursing patients for out-of-network medical services.

AMA interest

The AMA supports fair policies and practices regarding payment for physician services.

Case summary

Most reimbursement health insurance policies provide that out of network insurance benefits are to be based on whichever of the following amounts is lowest: (i) the physician’s actual charge; (ii) the physician’s usual charge; or (iii) the “reasonable and customary charge” for the services.  The “reasonable and customary charge” is defined as “the usual charge of other doctors or other providers of similar training or experience in the same or similar geographic area for the same or similar service or supply.”  This payment scheme is commonly called “usual, customary and reasonable” or UCR.  The insurance company determines the reasonable and customary portion of the UCR charge, supposedly based on information available to it but not to the general public.

This suit alleges that UHC’s subsidiary, Ingenix Corp., has developed a database to determine UCR and frequently uses unreliable or insufficient data to make that determination.  The plaintiffs assert that the reasonable and customary charges for certain procedures are substantially higher than the insurance companies allow.

The AMA, the Medical Society of the State of New York, the Missouri State Medical Association, individual physicians and subscribers/beneficiaries are named plaintiffs.  Several unions of New York State employees have also joined the case as additional plaintiffs.  The suit alleges that the plaintiffs are representatives of a large class of physicians, subscribers, and beneficiaries.

The principal claim is against UHC and is for enforcement of the defendants’ insurance policies under ERISA.  Alleging that UHC breached its contracts with subscribers and violated its fiduciary obligations, the suit claims: (1) UHC must, at least when specific fees are at issue, disclose the internal data it uses to pay benefits under its policies; and (2) UHC fails to pay physicians or reimburse patients the “usual, customary and reasonable” charges for the services billed.

On Oct. 22, 2002, the Court ruled on a motion by UHC to dismiss the Third Amended Complaint, upholding the principal claims but dismissing some of the minor ones.  The court ordered that “before engaging in what will likely be a massive exchange of documents in merits discovery” the parties should resolve the standing of the various plaintiffs, the exhaustion of administrative remedies, and the identification of the proper defendants.  The court allowed “Stage One Discovery” on these “threshold” issues but deferred general discovery until the “threshold” issues could be resolved. 

On Dec. 29, 2006, the court granted the plaintiffs’ request to add to their complaint counts based on federal racketeering, antitrust, and various state laws.  On June 15, 2007, the court granted summary judgment to UHC on certain of the threshold issues that were to be considered under Stage One of the case.  It held that the plaintiffs would have to demonstrate that they had exhausted their contractual remedies in order to recover damages for breach of the benefit plan documents.  It also held that the medical societies were not proper parties for some of the claims based on ERISA.  However, the court also denied UHC’s summary judgment motion as to several counts, allowing them to stand.

The plaintiffs have moved to certify a class of beneficiaries of the "Empire Plan," an HMO for New York state and municipal employees.  They have also moved for partial summary judgment on liability and on the right to injunctive relief for one of the large insurance plans before the court.  These motions have been fully briefed for many months and await decision.

The plaintiffs filed a Fourth Amended Complaint on July 11, 2007.  UHC has moved to dismiss most of its counts, that motion has been briefed and the parties await a ruling.

On February 13, 2008, the New York Attorney General announced that he had commenced a broad investigation into the use by insurers of defective databases when determining “usual, customary and reasonable” payments made to out of network healthcare providers.  The Attorney General also announced his intention to bring suit against UHC related to defects in its Ingenix database.  The Attorney General’s investigation is ongoing and may result in investigations by regulators in other states. 

AMA involvement

The AMA is a named plaintiff in the case.

American Society of Anesthesiologists/Wisconsin Blue Cross Litigation

Issue

The issue in this case was whether an insurance company had improperly “bundled” and “downcoded” medical services provided by anesthesiologists, which resulted in underpayment to those anesthesiologists for the services provided.

AMA interest

The AMA supports fair payment to physicians for their medical services.

Case summary

A number of Wisconsin anesthesiologists complained of improper “bundling” (i.e., packaging of medical services for payment purposes) and “downcoding” by Wisconsin Blue Cross/Blue Shield, contrary to standard Current Procedural Technology (“CPT”) coding guidelines for classification of physicians’ services.  The Litigation Center supported the Wisconsin anesthesiologists in their efforts to secure just payments from Wisconsin Blue. 

When the anesthesiologists informed Wisconsin Blue that the AMA was supporting them, Wisconsin Blue initiated settlement discussions.  The case settled in the anesthesiologists’ favor.

Litigation Center involvement

The AMA provided general consultation and referral to expert witnesses, as well as publicly declaring support for the physicians.

Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield Lupron Payments

Issue

The issue in this administrative proceeding was whether a Medicare fiscal intermediary could recover alleged overpayments it had made to physicians for prescription medications, when the physicians were without fault and the fiscal intermediary had implemented ambiguous and inconsistent payment policies. 

AMA interest

The AMA opposes unfair and untimely efforts by payers to recover money paid to physicians for their services, particularly if the physicians continued to render services or incur expenses under the good faith belief that the money they were being paid was the amount they were entitled to receive.

Case summary

Approximately 120 urologists, oncologists, and other physicians (located primarily in Oklahoma and New Mexico), resisted an attempt by Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Arkansas (Arkansas Blue), a Medicare fiscal intermediary, to secure a refund of alleged overpayments made for Lupron.  Fiscal intermediaries operate under directives from  the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which funds Medicare.  Lupron, most commonly prescribed by urologists and oncologists, is a drug used to treat prostate cancer, among other medical conditions.  Because prostrate cancer is an age-related illness, many of the patients using it are covered by the Medicare program.

Beginning in July, 2001, Arkansas Blue announced that it would no longer reimburse physicians who administered Lupron at the Lupron average wholesale price.  Instead, Arkansas Blue would pay at the scheduled rate for a less expensive drug, Zoladex, which Arkansas Blue claimed was equally effective.  These announcements, however, were ambiguous and inconsistent, and Arkansas Blue continued to pay physicians at the Lupron price through approximately March, 2003. 

In April, 2004, Arkansas Blue sent letters to physicians within its coverage area advising them of overpayments for Lupron and requesting records pertaining to Lupron usage as a basis for refund of the supposed overpayments.  Arkansas Blue claimed the overpayments ranged from around $10,000 to $200,000 per physician.  The total refund claim came to several million dollars.

Under the Medicare laws, if an amount paid to a provider of services is beyond the amount allowable under those laws, the excess may be recovered from the provider, subject to certain exceptions.  One of those exceptions is that an overpayment may not be recovered if "such provider of services … was without fault with regard to the payment of such excess over the correct amount."  The physicians argued that they were “without fault” and therefore had no obligation to repay the alleged overpayments.  They further argued that, due to the ambiguities and inconsistencies of the Arkansas Blue payment policies, coupled with its continued reimbursement at Lupron rates, the physicians could not have been expected to know that they would only be paid at Zoladex rates.

Ultimately, CMS accepted the physicians’ “without fault” argument.  As a result, CMS sent letters to the physicians who protested the repayment letters, stating that it would not allow Arkansas Blue to recoup the supposed overpayments. 

Litigation Center involvement

The Litigation Center contributed toward the physicians' legal expenses.

California Medical Association v. Aetna U.S. Healthcare
2002 Cal. LEXIS 2290 (Cal. S.Ct. Mar. 27 2002 (Decision without published decision))

Issue

The issue in this case was whether under a California statute, HMOs were required to pay physicians who had rendered services to the HMO’s patients, after the bankruptcy of the Independent Practice Associations with which those physicians had been under contract. 

AMA interest

The AMA supports fair and prompt compensation of physicians for the services they render. 

Case summary

In California, HMOs are licensed and regulated under the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act of 1975.  California HMOs commonly contract with unlicensed and unregulated organizations known as Independent Practice Associations (“IPAs”), which, in turn, contract with individual physicians.  The HMOs reimburse the IPAs through capitated payments (i.e., set payments per patient); however, the IPAs usually pay the physicians on a fee for service basis.  The contracts between the physicians and the IPAs typically state that the physicians must “look solely” to the intermediaries for payment.  There is no direct contractual relationship (legally, “privity”) between the HMOs and the individual physicians.

Several of the large IPAs with offices in California (and in other states, particularly Texas) went bankrupt.  When this occurred, many physicians, who had already rendered services to the HMOs’ patients, had only an unsecured claim in bankruptcy court for the money that the IPAs owed them.  Unsecured creditors are nearly the lowest priority of potential claimants in a bankruptcy case.  Therefore, the physicians received little or nothing for their services from the bankrupt IPAs.  They thus asked the HMOs to pay them for their services to the HMOs’ patients.

In response to these requests, the HMOs contended that they had no privity with the physicians.  Under the common law of contracts, any money the HMOs owed was to the bankruptcy estate.  Thus, the HMOs argued, the physicians, who contracted with the defunct IPAs, bore the risk of their insolvency.

Section 1371 of the Knox-Keene Act, a prompt payment law, states that a managed care plan must pay uncontested claims within 30 or 45 working days (depending on the circumstances) of the plan’s receipt of the claim.  The last sentence of this section states as follows:

“The obligation of the plan to comply with this section shall not be deemed to be waived when the plan requires its medical groups, independent practice associations, or other contracting entities to pay claims for covered services.”

The California Medical Association (CMA) solicited California physicians with claims against bankrupt IPAs to assign those claims to it.  As a result, CMA accumulated tens of millions of dollars of such claims.  CMA sued several of the large California managed care organizations for recovery of this money.  CMA contended that the HMOs, exercising their market power, insisted that physicians contract with the IPAs, rather than the HMOs.  At the same time, the HMOs knew that their capitation payments to the IPAs were so small that the IPAs stood a substantial risk of insolvency.  The principal CMA legal theory was that Knox-Keene Act §1371 repeals the common law requirement of contractual privity and mandates that the managed care organizations pay CMA as the physicians’ assignee.

The trial judge dismissed the CMA lawsuit based on the pleadings, and the Court of Appeal affirmed the dismissal.  CMA asked the California Supreme Court to hear the case on a discretionary basis.  However, on March 27, 2002, the California Supreme Court, with one justice dissenting, declined to hear the case.

Litigation Center involvement

The Litigation Center filed a letter brief with the California Supreme Court, supporting the CMA request.  The letter brief emphasized the importance of the case, both within California and the entire United States.

View the letter brief (PDF, 65KB).

In Re Managed Care Litigation—Provider Track Cases (S.D. Fla.)

Issue

The issue in this case was whether various health insurance/managed care companies had conspired to defraud physicians through their payment practices.

AMA interest

The AMA supports fair and prompt payment to physicians for their services.

Case summary

These consolidated class actions, initiated by several individual physicians and medical societies, alleged that the principal managed care organizations in the United States conspired to defraud physicians and other health care providers, in violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act.  Most of the defendants settled.

The settlements, among other things, required the defendants to disclose their coding edits (i.e., changes made to the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes), adopt certain CPT conventions, clarify the criteria under which medical procedures will be deemed “medically necessary,” fund a charitable foundation, and reimburse up to several hundred million dollars to the class of plaintiff physicians.

Three of the defendants, however, were granted summary judgments.  In essence, the court ruled that parallel actions by separate business enterprises, even if those actions may have been illegal, are not, by themselves, sufficient evidence of a RICO conspiracy. 

AMA involvement

In addition to its participation as a named plaintiff in one of the original cases brought prior to the multidistrict consolidation, the AMA assisted the plaintiffs with substantial technical advice on coding and other payment issues.  The AMA also helped to educate physicians about the settlements and to work with individual physicians and groups recovering past claims as part of these settlements.

Medical Association of Georgia v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Georgia, Inc.
(Fulton County, Ga. Super. Ct.), 536 S.E.2d 184 (Ga. Ct. App. 2000
)

Issues

The issues in this case were whether Georgia Blue was required to provide its panel physicians with its fee schedule and the method by which that fee schedule was calculated.

AMA interest

The AMA supports fair policies and practices regarding payment for physician services.

Case summary

The Medical Association of Georgia (“MAG”) and four of its members sued for a declaration that Georgia Blue had breached its provider contracts in a number of respects.  The trial court ruled against the claims of the plaintiffs.  The Georgia Court of Appeals, however, held that unless the provider contract with the physicians specifies otherwise, a health insurance company must provide its doctors with its fee schedule and “the precise methodology that is used for determining payments.”  The appellate court remanded the case to the trial court, with instructions to order Georgia Blue to follow its ruling.  The Georgia Supreme Court denied requests from both sides to review the appellate court’s decision. 

Following remand, the trial court ordered Georgia Blue to provide the information ordered by the Court of Appeals.  Georgia Blue subsequently certified to the court that it had complied with the trial court’s and Court of Appeals’ orders. 

MAG later asked the trial court to hold Georgia Blue in contempt of court, because although Georgia Blue had disclosed its fee schedule, it had not disclosed the various edits in its payment software which could significantly alter the payments made to physicians.  On this basis, MAG argued that Georgia Blue had not disclosed “the precise methodology … used for determining payments,” as the Georgia Court of Appeals had required. 

The court denied MAG’s contempt motion.  It indicated that Georgia Blue’s practice of bundling fees was a matter separate from its failure to disclose its fee schedule.  MAG appealed from that order, but withdrew that appeal after determining that Georgia Blue was disclosing its payment edits.

Litigation Center involvement

The AMA asked the trial court for leave to join the case as an additional plaintiff, but that request was denied.

Merkle v. Aetna Health 940 So.2d 1190 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App., 4th Dist. 2006)

Issue

The issue in this case was whether an out-of-network physician could sue HMOs to recover the full value of his fees for emergency services provided under statutory mandate to the HMOs’ beneficiaries.

AMA interest

The AMA supports fair payments to physicians for their medical services.

Case summary

Dr. Merkle, an orthopedic surgeon, sued four HMOs in the Circuit Court for Palm Beach County, Florida, alleging that he was outside the HMOs’ networks but regularly provided emergency medical services for their beneficiaries.  For these services, the HMOs paid him at Medicare reimbursement rates, “plus a small premium.”  The HMOs’ payments systematically fell below his usual charges, and they also fell substantially below the usual and customary charges for such services in Palm Beach County. 

The Florida Emergency Services Statute specifically required Dr. Merkle to provide his emergency services to HMO patients, even though he was out-of-network, yet the law prohibited him from balance billing the patients.  However, Florida law also required the HMOs to reimburse him for his services at the lesser of (a) his charges, (b) the usual and customary charges for similar services in Palm Beach County, or (c) whatever charge the HMOs and he agreed upon within 60 days of the submittal of his claim.  Since he had not come to an agreement with the HMOs, their payments fell below the legally designated standards. 

The HMOs argued that the Emergency Services Statute was not intended to allow physicians or other providers of emergency medical services to bring a lawsuit against them to recover fees.  Rather, they argued, the providers are constrained to follow a complex administrative procedure of the HMOs and the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration, as their exclusive remedy.  The trial court accepted this argument and entered judgment for the HMOs.  Dr. Merkle was not permitted to file an amended complaint, and he appealed.

The Florida District Court of Appeal reversed the trial court and found for Dr. Merkle, holding that the Florida Emergency Services Statute implied a private right of action and he was thus entitled to bring a lawsuit for its violation.
 
Litigation Center involvement

The amicus brief, submitted by the Litigation Center, the Florida Medical Association, two specialty medical societies, and the Florida Hospital Association, argued that the Florida legislature intended to allow providers of emergency medical services to sue the HMOs for the fair value of their fees.

View the brief (PDF, 769KB).

North Texas Specialty Physicians v. FTC (5th Cir.)

Issue

The issue in this case is whether an independent practice association’s (IPA) business should be reviewed by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) under a full market “rule of reason” antitrust law analysis rather than a more limited, “quick look” or “inherently suspect” analysis.

AMA interest

The AMA believes that the FTC should adopt a less stringent approach to its scrutiny of physician practices.

Case summary

The FTC challenged the refusal of North Texas Specialty Physicians (NTSP), an IPA of approximately 600 physicians, to participate in contracting activities with several health insurance companies.  The members of NTSP, however, retained the right to decide for themselves whether they would contract independently with the insurance companies.  The FTC ruled, without a complete market analysis, that NTSP’s joint contracting activities with payors would have an anticompetitive effect on the market and amounted to unlawful horizontal price fixing, in violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act.  NTSP appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

Litigation Center involvement

The Litigation Center, together with the Texas Medical Association, filed an amicus curiae brief, arguing that NTSP had not engaged in a price-fixing scheme and that the FTC had used the wrong evidentiary standard (a “quick look” or “inherently suspect” approach, rather than a full market “rule of reason” analysis) to measure the legality of NTSP’s business activities.

View the brief (PDF, 1MB).

Palmetto Pathology Services, P.A. v. Health Options, Inc.
(Fla. App.)

Issue

The issue in this case is whether Florida statutory and regulatory law requires HMOs to pay pathologists for hospital based services, even if the pathologists are not themselves within the HMO networks, so long as the hospitals are within the HMO networks.

AMA interest

The AMA believes that physicians should be fairly compensated for their professional services.

Case summary

Eleven different pathology groups sued three HMOs in 14 lawsuits filed in Florida courts, under similar legal theories. 

The pathologists were outside the HMOs’ networks but were based at hospitals within those networks.  The HMOs’ contracts with their patient subscribers required the HMOs to cover “professional clinical pathology laboratory services” (i.e., the services provided by the pathologists in performing and evaluating laboratory tests for the patient subscribers).  Pursuant to Florida statute, the pathologists were not allowed to charge the HMO subscribers directly for these services.  Fla. Stat. § 641.3154(1).  Instead, the pathologists submitted their bills to the HMOs.

The HMOs refused to pay those bills, as they were out of their network.  The pathologists nonetheless argued that the HMOs were liable for payment under Section 69O-191.049(2) of the Florida Administrative Code, which provides:

“In the event the HMO has not contracted directly with a hospital based physician provider delivering services in the hospital, including, but not limited to, pathologists, radiologists, anesthesiologists, and emergency room physicians, the HMO shall pay for medically necessary and approved physician care rendered to a non-Medicare subscriber at a contracted hospital which services are covered by the HMO subscriber contract.” 

In the first of these cases to go to trial, the court ordered the HMOs to pay the pathologists $1,546,479 as the reasonable value of their services.

The HMOs appealed, and the case is now being briefed.

Litigation Center involvement

The Litigation Center assisted with the interpretation of various Current Procedural Technology (CPT) codes at issue in the lawsuit.  Additionally, the Litigation Center joined the College of American Pathologists in an amicus curiae brief supporting the right of pathologists to collect the “clinical component” of their services from HMOs under Florida law.


Prospect Medical Group v. Northridge Emergency Medical Group
39 Cal. Rptr.3d 456 (Cal. App. 2006)

Issues

The principal issues in this case are whether, under California law, (a) out-of-network physicians who provide emergency services can “balance bill” (i.e., bill patients for the remaining balance after an insurer/managed care organization has paid a portion of the fee charged) patients who subscribe to managed care plans and (b) the Medicare rate for physician services (and the services of other health care providers) should be deemed “reasonable” compensation for those services. 

AMA interest

The AMA believes that physicians should be fairly paid for their services, particularly when those services are rendered under emergency situations and under the force of legal compulsion.

Case summary

Northridge Emergency Medical Group and a co-defendant, Saint John’s Emergency Medicine Specialists, Inc. (“the physicians”), rendered emergency room medical services to a number of patients covered by a managed care plan.  The physicians did not participate in the plan, and they submitted bills for their services to Prospect Medical Group.   Prospect, in turn, paid the physicians the Medicare payment rates for the services rendered.  In most instances, this was less than the amount the physicians had billed.

The physicians then billed the patients for the difference between the Prospect payments and the amount of their usual charges.  The patients forwarded their bills to Prospect.

On receiving the balance bills, Prospect sued the physicians.  The suit sought a declaratory judgment that the physicians were entitled only to “reasonable” compensation for the medical services rendered and that the Medicare rates were reasonable.  It also sought an injunction against the balance billing.

Prospect contended that §1379 of the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act, Cal. Health & Saf. Code §1379, prohibited the balance billing.  Section 1379 provides:

“"(a) Every contract between a plan and a provider of health care services shall be in writing, and shall set forth that in the event the plan fails to pay for health care services as set forth in the subscriber contract, the subscriber or enrollee shall not be liable to the provider for any sums owed by the plan.

(b) In the event that the contract has not been reduced to writing as required by this chapter or that the contract fails to contain the required prohibition, the contracting provider shall not collect or attempt to collect from the subscriber or enrollee sums owed by the plan.

(c) No contracting provider, or agent, trustee or assignee thereof, may maintain any action at law against a subscriber or enrollee to collect sums owed by the plan."

The physicians moved to dismiss the complaint, which motion the judge granted.  Prospect appealed to the California Court of Appeal.

On the first issue, which involved the right to balance bill patients, Prospect argued on appeal that the physicians were operating under an unwritten “implied in law” contract and therefore §1379(b) prohibited the balance billing.  The physicians argued, however, that a contract implied in law is not the type of contract contemplated under §1379, and so the statute is inapplicable.  The Court of Appeal resolved this issue in favor of the physicians and allowed balance billing.

The second issue was whether the physicians were required to accept the Medicare rate as full reimbursement for their services.  The Court of Appeal held that the physicians were entitled to receive the fair market value of their services.  Furthermore, the Court of Appeal found, fair market value should be based on several factors, and the Medicare rate did not necessarily fulfill those factors.  Thus, the Court of Appeal ruled in favor of the physicians on this issue, too.

Prospect has again appealed, this time to the California Supreme Court. 

Litigation Center involvement

The California Medical Association (CMA) filed an amicus brief supporting the emergency physicians, which the Litigation Center joined.  The Litigation Center also contributed to CMA’s subsidy of the Northridge physicians’ litigation expenses.

View the brief (PDF, 1MB).

Solomon v. Aetna U.S. Healthcare, (Pa. S.Ct.) 797 A.2d 346 (Pa. Super.Ct. 2002)

Issues

The issues in this appeal were (a) whether physicians may bring a lawsuit on their own behalf under the Pennsylvania Healthcare Act (“Act 68”) to receive interest on untimely payments from a health insurance company and (b) whether physicians have an implied contractual right to receive such interest.

AMA interest

The AMA supports fair policies and practices regarding payment for physician services.

Case summary

This case was brought as a purported class action on behalf of physicians and other health care providers practicing in Pennsylvania who had signed participation contracts with Aetna U.S. Healthcare.  The complaint alleged a variety of contractual breaches, including failure to reimburse pre-approved medical services and failure to pay claims in a timely fashion.  The complaint sought interest on late payments pursuant to Act 68 and pursuant to an implied right under the participation contract. 

The trial court dismissed a number of the claims on motion and held, via a summary judgment, for the defendants on the remaining claims.  The court noted that the alleged unpaid amounts were, by admission of the plaintiffs, in fact paid.  The court further found that a private physician, acting on his own behalf, could not seek interest on these late payments in a lawsuit.  The court held that Act 68 allows interest charges only at the order of the Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner, which had not happened here.    Furthermore, the court held, the provider contract neither explicitly nor implicitly promised to pay interest charges.

The plaintiff physicians appealed to the Superior Court which affirmed, holding, among other things, that physicians do not personally have the right to sue for the late payment interest that the Pennsylvania statues require be paid to them.

The plaintiffs then asked the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to hear the case.  However, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied the petition for review, concluding the lawsuit.

Litigation Center involvement

The Pennsylvania Medical Society and the Litigation Center filed an amicus curiae brief in the Superior Court in support of the physicians.  The brief argued that an implied private right of action should be found under Act 68. 

The Litigation Center, along with the Pennsylvania Medical Society, also submitted two amicus curiae briefs to support the physicians’ request for appeal in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.  The first brief pointed out that 47 states have laws governing prompt payment of medical claims, and some of the courts interpreting their state laws have resolved the private right of action issue differently from the Pennsylvania Superior Court.  The second brief advised the Supreme Court of a recent decision by the United States Supreme Court, to whom the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has traditionally looked for guidance, which sets forth new criteria to establish the viability of an implied private right of action.  Thus, this matter is of great national importance, and the issues are unsettled.  Both considerations were offered as reasons for granting Supreme Court review.

View the Superior Court brief (PDF, 141KB).

View the first Pennsylvania Supreme Court brief (PDF, 34KB).

View the second Pennsylvania Supreme Court brief (PDF, 25KB).

1 Notwithstanding its name, Prospect Medical Group is actually a managed care organization and not a group of physicians or other health care providers.

Last updated:Mar 24, 2008
Content provided by: Office of the General Counsel