AMERICAN HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION V. BOWEN
834 F. 2d 1037 (D.C. Cir. 1987)
NATURE OF THE CASE: This was a dispute Peer Review Organizations. Bowen (D) sought review
of a decision which held that a number of Ds' communications were invalid for failure to
comply with the Administrative Procedure Act's notice and comment requirements, and that
peer review organization request for proposals, and the contracts entered into thereunder,
were violative of 5 U.S.C.S. 553.
FACTS: Congress created Peer Review Organizations (PRO) to oversee the expenditure of
Medicare money by doctors and hospitals. PRO's would contract with HHS, conduct a review,
and determine if doctors and hospitals were performing within certain standards. Congress
painted with a broad brush, leaving D to fill in many important details of the workings of
peer review. The amendments require D to designate geographic areas generally corresponding
to each state, to be served by individual peer review organizations. The agency has broad
discretion in negotiating each of these contracts. Congress left much of the specifics of
the hospital-PRO relationship to the inventiveness of D, empowering it to promulgate
regulations governing PROs in order to implement the peer review program. The legislative
history of the peer review amendments suggests that this was no oversight: Congress
apparently expected D to design and put into place the numerous procedures necessary to
administer the PRO program. If the report was negative, HHS would not pay certain Medicare
reimbursement funds or it might impose other sanctions. Regulations were created for PRO's
including their activities and enforcement powers. HHS did not follow notice and comment
procedures in taking all of these steps, but it did for some of them. D concedes that
neither the transmittals, the RFP, nor the contracts ultimately entered into were issued
pursuant to the notice and comment procedures generally required by 553 of the APA.
American (P) petitioned D for rulemaking asking for a complete set of regulations governing
PROs. D refused. A sued to have the transmittals and directives declared invalid for failure
to comply with Section 553 comment and notice. The district court, on cross-motions for
summary judgment and on D's motion to dismiss, held that virtually all of D's
communications, with the exception of Medicare Hospital Manual Transmittal No. 367 and
Medicare Intermediary Manual Transmittal No. 1079, 3789c, were invalid for failure to
comply with the APA's notice and comment requirements. The court's May 30, 1986 order also
invalidated the RFPs and the contracts entered into thereunder as violative of 553. D
appealed.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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