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MS.01.01.01: A Corporate Lawyer’s Perspective

MS.01.01.01: A Corporate Lawyer’s Perspective. Presented by David L. Kyger Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP David.Kyger@smithmoorelaw.com 300 N. Greene Street, Suite 1400 Greensboro, NC 27401 T: 336.378.5551 F: 336.433.7453.

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MS.01.01.01: A Corporate Lawyer’s Perspective

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  1. MS.01.01.01: A Corporate Lawyer’s Perspective Presented by David L. Kyger Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP David.Kyger@smithmoorelaw.com 300 N. Greene Street, Suite 1400 Greensboro, NC 27401 T: 336.378.5551 F: 336.433.7453 To ask a question during the presentation, click the Q&A menu at the top of this window, type your question in the Q&A text box, and then click “Ask.” After you click Ask, the button name will change to “Edit.” Questions will be queued and most will be answered at the end of the meeting as time allows.

  2. Question 1 • What are other names for MS.01.01.01?

  3. Answer 1 • MS.01 Cubed • MS.01 Q? Not. • MS “too many numbers”

  4. Question 2 • What is the most reassuring thing you’ve read or heard concerning compliance with MS.01.01.01?

  5. Answer 2 • “Given the flexibility provided for in the revised standard, a limited amount of revision is all that may be needed. In some cases, no revisions may be required.” • Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Standard MS.01.01.01, The Joint Commission website

  6. Question 3 • What is the “flexibility” referred to in the previous answer? Where does this added flexibility come from?

  7. EP 3 Every requirement set forth in Elements of Performance 12 through 36 must be in the medical staff bylaws. These requirements may have associated details, some of which may be extensive; such details may reside in the medical staff bylaws, rules and regulations, or policies. The organized medical staff adopts what constitutes the associated details, where they reside, and whether their adoption can be delegated. Adoption of associated details that reside in medical staff bylaws cannot be delegated. For those Elements of Performance 12 through 36 that require a process, the medical staff bylaws include at a minimum the basic steps, as determined by the organized medical staff and approved by the governing body, required for implementation of the requirement. The organized medical staff submits its proposals to the governing body for action. Proposals become effective only upon governing body approval. (See the Leadership chapter for requirements regarding the governing body’s authority and conflict management processes.)

  8. Answer 3 • Medical staff bylaws must contain “every requirement” set forth in Elements of Performance 12 through 36, but only a basic framework, not all the details. Use EP’s 12 - 36 as a checklist against existing medical staff bylaws. • For EP’s that require a process, the medical staff bylaws need only contain the basic steps required for implementation. • The details do not have to appear in the medical staff bylaws. • The details can be placed in freestanding policies, rules or regulations.

  9. Question 4 • EP 3 says that the details may reside in the medical staff bylaws, rules and regulations, or policies. Does it really make a difference where the organized medical staff (OMS) puts the details, as between the bylaws, the rules and regulations, or the policies?

  10. Answer 4 • It can make a difference in the process for changing the details, and, accordingly, in the ease or lack thereof associated with amendments. • Remember that the medical staff bylaws can only be amended by the voting members of the OMS, so if the details are in the bylaws a vote of OMS is required • As between rules and regulations on the one hand and policies on the other, assume that the OMS has delegated to the Medical Executive Committee the authority to change the details. Look at EP 9.

  11. EP 9 If the voting members of the organized medical staff propose to adopt a rule, regulation, or policy, or an amendment thereto, they first communicate the proposal to the medical executive committee. If the medical executive committee proposes to adopt a rule or regulation, or an amendment thereto, it first communicates the proposal to the medical staff; when it adopts a policy or an amendment thereto, it communicates this to the medical staff. This Element of Performance applies only when the organized medical staff, with the approval of the governing body, has delegated authority over such rules, regulations, or policies to the medical executive committee.

  12. Answer 4 (cont’d.) • Thus, if the details are placed in the rules and regulations, the MEC must give the OMS prior notice of changes. • In contrast, if the details are placed in policies, prior notice is not required.

  13. Question 5A • What’s the next most reassuring thing you’ve heard or read about compliance with MS.01.01.01?

  14. Answer 5A • “Do what makes sense, in good faith.” • Representatives of The Joint Commission, speaking at an AHLA webinar in September, 2010

  15. Question 5B • Do you buy that?

  16. Answer 5B • [This slide under construction.]

  17. Question 6 • From your standpoint as a corporate lawyer focused on governance issues, what is the most troubling thing about MS.01.01.01?

  18. Answer 6 • MS.01.01.01 can put the governing body (e.g., the hospital’s board of trustees) in a no-win situation. • For example, suppose applicable law is amended, and an amendment to medical staff bylaws, rules or regulations is required in order to comply with the law as amended. (EP 4 provides that the medical staff bylaws, rules and regulations, and policies, the governing body bylaws, and the hospital policies must be compatible with each other and compliant with law.) • If the organized medical staff (OMS) won’t agree to the change, the governing body is stuck, because only the OMS “adopts and amends” medical staff bylaws, subject to governing body approval (under EP 2).

  19. Question 7 • What’s the big deal about the governing body being in this situation?

  20. Answer 7 • Members of the governing body have fiduciary duties (often articulated as a duty of care, a duty of loyalty, and a duty of obedience) that, if breached, can result in individual liability

  21. Question 8 • Doesn’t EP 11 offer some help to the governing body in the hypothetical no-win situation you describe?

  22. EP 11 In cases of a documented need for an urgent amendment to rules and regulations necessary to comply with law or regulation, there is a process by which the medical executive committee, if delegated to do so by the voting members of the organized medical staff, may provisionally adopt and the governing body may provisionally approve an urgent amendment without prior notification of the medical staff. In such cases, the medical staff will be immediately notified by the medical executive committee. The medical staff has the opportunity for retrospective review of and comment on the provisional amendment. If there is no conflict between the organized medical staff and the medical executive committee, the provisional amendment stands. If there is conflict over the provisional amendment, the process for resolving conflict between the organized medical staff and the medical executive committee is implemented. If necessary, a revised amendment is then submitted to the governing body for action.

  23. Answer 8 • No. EP 11 allows for a process, where there is a need for an “urgent amendment” to the organization’s “rules and regulations,” in which the Medical Executive Committee can speak for the OMS (if the OMS has delegated that authority), and can provisionally adopt rules and regulations that comply with the law as amended, and, if it does so, the governing body may provisionally approve an urgent amendment. • Neither EP 11 nor any other EP allows unilateral action by the governing body in amending the medical staff bylaws, or the medical staff rules and regulations.

  24. Question 9 • What is the governing body’s “right path” in such cases?

  25. Answer 9 • According to The Joint Commission, the answer lies in communication, collaboration and conflict resolution, by and among the governing body, the Medical Executive Committee, and the Organized Medical Staff.

  26. Standards For Corrective Action Presented by: Samuel O. Southern Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP 434 Fayetteville Street, Suite 2800 Raleigh, NC 27601 T: 919.755.8730 F: 919.838-3127

  27. Standards For Corrective Action • Improving Quality of Care • Protecting Participants with Immunity and Confidentiality • Minimizing Claims (from both physician and patient) • Meeting Joint Commission Requirements

  28. Professional Review Actions Focus: How Hospitals should undertake professional review actions based on the competence or professional conduct of a physician • Which conduct affects or could affect adversely the health or welfare of a patient or patients, and • Which conduct affects (or may affect) adversely the clinical privileges of the physician

  29. Guidance For Effective Corrective Action (1) HCQIA -- provides IMMUNITY (2) Joint Commission – creates STANDARDS (3) Statutes – protect CONFIDENTIALITY (4) NC case law -- creates DUTY to monitor MDs

  30. Caught In The Cross-Fire • Failure to follow controlling authority in (1) – (4) can put hospitals in a cross-fire from three directions • Patients • Members of the Medical Staff • Joint Commission • Horns of the Dilemma • Get sued by the patient, if you fail to take corrective action against the bylaws • Get sued by the MD, if you do take corrective action

  31. N.C. State Law: A Legal Duty To Monitor And Oversee State Law: Hospital has a duty to make a reasonable effort to monitor and oversee the care being provided by physicians to hospital patients Bost v. Riley, 44 N.C. App. 638, 262 S.E.2d 291, cert. denied, 300 N.C. 194, 269 S.E.2d 621 (1980) Blanton v. Moses Cone Hosp., 319 NC 372, 354 S.E.2d 455 (1957) The Supreme Court, Webb, J., held in Blanton that: 1) Hospital owed duty of care to patient to ascertain that doctor, who was not agent of hospital, was qualified to perform operation 2) Hospital had duty to monitor and supervise physician's overall performance in hospital on ongoing basis

  32. How Do Hospitals Comply With The Legal Duty? • How does a hospital "monitor and oversee" physician care? Through its Medical Staff by • Credentialing • Recredentialing • Performance Improvement • Peer Review • Corrective Action/Professional Review Action

  33. HCQIA Immunity • Health Care Quality Improvement Act. 42 U.S.C. § 11111 • Provides immunity from damages for those who participate in professional review actions, so long as they conduct the professional review within the safe harbor of HCQIA

  34. Insuring HCQIA Immunity From Damages • If a professional review action meets all the standards specified in section 11112(a) of HCQIA, no person shall not be liable in damages under any law

  35. Exceptions • Statutory immunity may be lost if • Violation of civil rights • Knowingly provide false information • Failure to comply with reporting requirements of HCQIA

  36. Navigating The Safe Harbor Of HCQIA • What must a hospital do to bring itself within the safe harbor of HCQIA? • 42 U.S.C. § 11112(a).For purposes of immunity, a professional review action must be taken (1) in the reasonable belief that the action was in the furtherance of quality health care (2) after a reasonable effort to obtain the facts of the matter (3) after adequate notice and hearing procedures are afforded to the physician involved (4) in the reasonable belief that the action was warranted by the facts known after such reasonable effort to obtain facts and after meeting the requirement of paragraph (3) • Summary: Adhere to (1)-(4) and immunity attaches to the proceedings

  37. Presumption Of Compliance With Standards • A professional review action shall be presumed to have met the preceding standards necessary for immunity unless the presumption is rebutted by a preponderance of the evidence • The Statute puts the B/P on the person/entity who seeks to attack the recommendations sought to be enforced • The lesson here: The law does not place the B/P on the Hospital (although the Hospital, through bylaws, hearing plan, etc. can place the burden on itself) • B/P is NOT on the hospital to show clinical deficiencies, disruptive behavior or anything else

  38. Burden Of Proof: Check The Bylaws • Many hearings turn on the question of who has the B/P • Bylaws usually answer the question Example #1: B/P is on hospital to prove by a preponderance of the evidence Example #2: B/P is on practitioner to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the hospital's decision was arbitrary, unreasonable, or not supported by the evidence

  39. Notice And Hearing Requirements • A health care entity is deemed to have met the adequate notice and hearing requirement of HCQIA if the following conditions are met or waived • The physician has been given notice stating: • that a professional review action has been proposed • the reasons for the proposed action • the physician has the right to request a hearing • the physician's rights at the hearing

  40. Additional Notice When A Hearing Is Requested • If a hearing is requested, the physician must be given additional notice stating • the place, time, and date, of the hearing, which date shall not be less than 30 days after the date of the notice • a list of the witnesses (if any) expected to testify at the hearing on behalf of the professional review body

  41. Practitioner Rights At The Hearing • An impartial “decider” is: • a mutually acceptable" arbitrator • a hearing officer appointed by the entity • a panel not in "direct economic competition” • Representation by an attorney • To have a record made of the proceedings (but must pay for his/her own copy) • To call, examine, and cross-examine witnesses • To present evidence determined to be relevant by the hearing officer, regardless of its admissibility in a court of law • To submit a written statement at the close of the hearing • To receive the written recommendation of the panel, including a statement of the basis for the recommendations • To receive a written decision of the health care entity, including a statement of the basis for the decision

  42. Exceptions To “Trial Before Punishment” • If suspension/restriction of clinical privileges is less than 14 days, during which an investigation is being conducted, OR • In the case of summary suspension, where the failure to act "may result in an imminent danger to the health of any individual" • Practitioner may be suspended, with hearing to come later • Immunity is preserved for participants

  43. Joint Commission Overview • MS is responsible for the ongoing evaluation of the competency of practitioners who are privileged • MS must maintain bylaws that define its responsibilities for the oversight of care, treatment and services • MS primary responsibility is to provide oversight of care provided by practitioners with privileges

  44. MS Bylaws As A Contract • Maintained by the Medical Staff • Must be approved by governing body • Joint Commission • Bylaws create a “system of rights and responsibilities” between MS and the governing body • Bylaws creates a “system of rights and responsibilities” between the MS and its members • Bylaws are contractual: • Virmani v. Presbyterian, 127 NC App 71, 448 SE 2d 284 (1997)

  45. Joint Commission – Other Governing Documents • MS may create them, including policies, procedures, rules and regs, fair hearing plan, etc. • But the requirements of the Elements of Performance ("EPs") for MS.01.01.01 “must be retained in the MS bylaws.”

  46. Joint Commission: Elements Of Performance For MS 01.01.01 Which Are Related To Corrective Action • EP 28 • Indications for automatic suspension of a practitioner's MS membership or clinical privileges • EP 29 • Indications for summary suspension of a practitioner's MS membership or clinical privileges • EP 30 • Indications for recommending termination or suspension of medical staff membership, and/or termination, suspension, or reduction of clinical privileges • EP 31 • The process for automatic suspension of a practitioner's medical staff membership or clinical privileges • EP 32 • The process for summary suspension of a practitioner's medical staff membership or clinical privileges • EP 33 • The process for recommending termination or suspension of medical staff membership, and/or termination, suspension, or reduction of clinical privileges • EP 34 • The fair hearing and appeal process, which at a minimum shall include • The process for scheduling hearings and appeals • The process for conducting hearings and appeals • EP 35 • The composition of the fair hearing committee

  47. MS Standard 10.01.01 Corrective Action • There are mechanisms including a fair hearing and appeal process for addressing adverse decisions regarding reappointment, denial, reduction, suspension, or revocation of privileges that may relate to quality of care, treatment, and services issues • Designed to allow the practitioner the opportunity to: • Defend himself/herself before an impartial panel • Appeal any adverse decision to the GB

  48. Elements Of Performance (EPS) For MS 10.01.01 • Provide a fair process that may differ for members and non-members of the MS • Provide a mechanism to schedule a hearing • Identify procedures for the hearing to follow • Identify the composition of the hearing panel, with provision for impartial peers • Provide a mechanism for appeal to the governing body

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