Here - California Medical Association
Transcription
Here - California Medical Association
No. B238867 IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT, DIVISION THREE CENTINELA FREEMAN EMERGENCY MEDICAL ASSOCS., et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. HEALTH NET OF CALIFORNIA, INC., et al., Defendants and Respondents, Appeal from the Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles Case No. BC 415203 Honorable John Shepard Wiley APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO FILE AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF AND AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF OF CALIFORNIA MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, CALIFORNIA HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION, CALIFORNIA ORTHOPAEDIC ASSOCIATION, CALIFORNIA RADIOLOGICAL SOCIETY AND CALIFORNIA SOCIETY OF PATHOLOGISTS IN SUPPORT OF APPELLANTS CENTINELA FREEMAN EMERGENCY MEDICAL ASSOCIATES et al. Francisco J. Silva, SBN 214773 Long X. Do, SBN 211439 Michelle Rubalcava, SBN 229947 Center for Legal Affairs CALIFORNIA MEDICAL ASSOCIATION 1201 J Street, Suite 200 Sacramento, CA 95814 Telephone: (916) 444-5532 Facsimile: (916) 551-2885 Counsel for California Medical Association, California Hospital Association, California Orthopaedic Association, California Radiological Society and California Society of Pathologists CERTIFICATE OF INTERESTED ENTI'I'IES OR PERSONS Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Three Centinela Freeman Emergency Med. Assocs. et al. v. Health Net ofCalifornia, Inc. et al. Appeal1Vo.B238867 There are no interested entities or parties that must be listed in this certificate under California Rules of Court, rule 8.208(d)(3). DATED: .Jvly-27, 2013. :Sw'-c. t.r.N) By:~ ;r Long X. Do Attorneyfor California Medical Association, California Hospital Association, California Orthopaedic Association. California Radiological Society, and California Society of Pathologists TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ....................................................................... iii APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO FILE AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF ...................................................... A 1 I. INTERESTS OF AMICI CURIAE ..................................................... AI ll. PURPOSE OF THE AMICI CURIAE BRIEF ................................... A3 AMICUS CU,RIAE BRIEF .......... ................................................................. ! I. INTR.ODUCTION ................................................................................ 1 II. INTERESTS OF AMICI CURIAE ........................................................ 3 III. BACKGROUND .................................................................................. 6 A. RBO FAILURES AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY 7 B. LEGISLATIVE RESPONSE TO THE RBO FAILURES 10 C. REGULATIONOFTHERBOMARKET 13 IV. DISCUSSION ..................................................................................... 17 A. OCHS IS CONTROLLING PRECEDENT THAT ESTABLISHES THE AVAILABILITY OF A NEGLIGENT DELEGATION CLAIM. 17 l. Ochs Is Consistent with Other Cases in Recognizing the Statutory Efficacy of a Delegation. ....................................... 17 2. Ochs Also Goes Further than any Other Case to Recognize Boundaries on a Health Plan's Delegation Power................ 18 3. Ochs Is Good Law................................................................ 19 4. There Is No "Safe Harbor'' Created by Section 1371.4 to Bar a Negligent Delegation Claim...........- .................................. 22 B. A NEGUGENT DELEGATION CLAIM STRENGTHENS THE DELEGATION MODEL. 25 1. Health Plans Are in the Best Position to Promptly Address Problems with their Delegated RBOs ................................... 26 i 2. V. A Negligent Delegation Claim Would Complement the DMHCs Regulatory Authority over the Delegation Model. ................................................................. 29 CONCLUSION ................................................................................... 31 ii TABLE OF AUTHORITIES Cases California Emergency Physicians Medical Group (2003) Ill Cal.App.4th 1127 ....................................................... 18, 19, 21, 23 California Medical Association v. Aetna U.S. Healthcare ofCalifornia, Inc. (2001) 94 Cal.App.4th 151 ............................................................................. 18 Cel-Tech Communications, Inc. v. Los Angeles Cellular Telephone Co. (1999) 20 Cal.4th 163 ................. -................ ,...................... ~ ....................................... 23 Chambers v. Unemployment Ins. Appeals Bd. (1973) 33 Cal.App.3d 923 .............................................................................. 25 Coast Plaza Doctors Hospital v. UHP Healthcare (2002) 105 Cai.App.4th 693 ........................................................................... 20 Desert Healthcare District v. PacifiCare FHP, Inc. (2001) 94 Cal.App.4th 781 ................................................................. 18, 19,21 Gentry v. Ebay, Inc. (2002) 99 Cal.App.4th 816 ............................................................................. 23 Harshbarger v. City of Colton (1988) 197 Cal.App.3d 1335 .......................................................................... 24 J'Aire Corp. v. Gregory (1979) 24 Cal.3d 799 .......................................................................... 21~ 22,29 Ochs v. PaciftCare ofCalifornia {2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 782 .................................................................... passim Ott v. Alfa-Laval Agri, Inc. (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 1439 ........................................................................... 21 Weirum v. RK.O General, Inc. (1975) IS Cal.3d 40 ........................................................................................ 22 Williams v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. (1990) 216 Cal.App.3d 1540 .......................................................................... 24 Statutes Health & Safety Code §1347.15 ........................................................................... 10 Health & Safety Code§ 1371.4 ...................................................................... passim Health & Safety Code §1375.4 ................................................................. 10,13, 20 Regulations 22 C.C.R. § 1300.75.4.2.................................................-.....................'" ........................... 12 28 C.C.R. §1300.70............................................................................................... 26 28 C.C.R. §1300.74.4.4......................................................................................... 30 28 C.C.R. §1300.74.4.5 ......................................................................................... 30 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.1 ......................................................................................... 28 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.3 .......................................................... ,. .................................. 28 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.8................................................................................... 13, 14 Rules Rule 8.200(c) of the California Rules of Court....................................................... 1 iii Other Authorities CapMetrics, California Physician Group Solvency Standards at 1 (Aug. 2002), prepared for the California HealthCare Foundation, available online at http://www.chct:org/-/media!MEDIA%20LIBRARY %20Files/PDF/S/PDFo/o20SolvencyCapMetricsFullReport.pdf......... 6, 8, 9, 12 Debra L. Roth & Deborah Reidy Kelch, Making Sense ofManaged Care Regulation in California at 20-21 (Dec. 2001), prepared for the California HealthCare Foundation, available online at http://www.chcf.org/-/media/MEDIA%20LffiRARY%20Files/PDFIMIPDF% 20MakingSenseManagedCareRegulation.pdf .................................................. 7 Dennis Balmer, Minimum Solvency Criteria Discussion, Presentation Slides for the DMHC at 10 (May 9, 2013), available online at http://www.dmhc.ca.gov/library/fssb/presentations/pdppsr.pdf...................:. 14 Gloria J. Bazzoli, et al., Managed Care An'angements ofHealth Networks and Systems: A Review of the 1999 Experience, 26 J. AMBUL. CARE, no. 3 at 226 (2003) .........................................................................................................~...... 7 Michael D. Dalzell, California Physicians Struggling- Problems Aheadfor Other States?, MANAGED CARE (Oct. 1999), available online at http://www .managedcaremag.com/archives/9910/991 O.calmodel.html ........... 8 Michelle Yaman~ Provider Solvency Update, Presentation Slides for the DMHC at 3 (May 9, 2013), available online at http://www .dmhc.ca.gov/library/fssb/presentations/psup.pdf ........................ 13 S.B. 260, Bill Analysis at p. 2, Assem. Comm. on Approp. (Apr. 11, 2000), available online at http://www.lcginfo.ca.gov/pub/99-00/bill/sen/sb_0251300/sb_260_ cfa_20000411_135334_ asm_ comm.html .............~ .................... 11 Senator Jackie Speier, Chilling Statistics on Patient Impact, and How Policymaking Helps, remarks given to the California HealthCare Foundation (Oct. 2001), available online at http://www.chcf.org/-/ media/MEDIA%20LffiRARYo/o20Files/PDF/S/PDF%20SolvencySmartRcma rks.p(lf ..............,..............................................................•................................. 9 iv APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO FILE AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF Pursuant to rule 8.200(c) of the California Rules of Court ("CRC"), the California Medical Association, the California Hospi1al Association, the California Orthopaedic Association, the California Radiological Society and the California Society of Pathologists (collectively, "Healthcare Providers") hereby request permission to file the attached amicus curiae brief in support of Plaintiffs and Appellants Centinela Freeman Emergency Medical Associates et al. ("Centinela physicians"). There are no disclosures to be made under CRC, rule 8.200(c)(3). I. INTERESTS OF AMICI CURIAE The California Medical Association ("'CMA") is a non-profit, incorporated professional association of approximately 3 7,000 physician members. CMA 's membership is comprised of California physicians practicing medicine in all modes and specialties~ including provicting emergency medical care. CMA' s primary purposes are to promote the science and art of medicine, the care and well-being of patients, the protection of public health, and the betterment of the medical profession. CMA and its members share the objective of promoting high-quality, accessible and cost-effective health care for the people of California whether through managed healthcare systems, government programs or other direct arrangements with patients. Al The California Hospital Association ("CHAn) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to representing the interests of hospitals and health systems in California. CHA has more than 400 hospital and health system members, including general acute care hospitals, children's hospitals, rural hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, academic medical centers, county hospitals, investor-owned hospitals, and multi-hospital health systems. CHA's primary purposes are to provide its members with state and federal representation in an effort to improve health care quality, access and coverage and maintain public trust in health care. The California Orthopaedic Association ("COA") is the statewide nonprofit incorporated professional association for orthopaedic surgeons. There are 2,000 members of COA, which comprises approximately 70 percent of all orthopaedic surgeons practicing in California. The organization was founded in 1975 with the mission of ensuring that all patients receive the highest quality musculoskeletal care in a timely manner. Orthopaedic surgeons are routinely called to the emergency room to render care to patients seeking emergency medical care. California Radiological Society ("CRS") is a non-profit corporation of approximately 2,000 board-certified diagnostic radiologists and radiation oncologists practicing in the State of California. CRS is a chapter of the American College of Radiology. Its primary pmpose is to advance the science of radiology, improving radiologic service to patients and the A2 medical community, and studying the economics of radiology; the encouragement of improved and continuing education for radiologists; and the establishment and maintenance of high medical and ethical standards in the practice of radiology. The California Society of Pathologists ("CSP") is a nonprofit association serving as the premiere state organization to represent pathologists in government affairs. CSP advocates on behalf of its members in all areas affecting the medical practice of pathology, including reimbursement, clinical lab regulation and compensation and government health programs. licensing, workers' Pathologists regularly provide specialist care to patients requiring emergency medical care. ll. PURPOSE OF THE AMICI CURIAE BRIEF The key question of this case is whether the Knox-Keene Act's laws and regulations absolve a health plan from liability when it delegates payment responsibility to a risk-bearing organization ("RBO") that fails to pay a medical claim. The health plan defendants take the position that they can never be held liable after a delegation is made, regardless how irresponsible a health plan may be in entering into and maintaining a risk sharing arrangement with a fmancially precarious RBO. The Healthcare Providers disagree, and their amicus curiae brief explains why. A3 Together, the Healthcare Providers represent the backbone of California's health care delivery system. They have experience, historical knowledge and substantive expertise with managed care systems and the laws and regulations governing managed care and health insurance. One or more of the Healthcare Providers sponsored, or were integral in the passage of, many bills of legislation that have shaped the Knox-Keene Act, including the provisions governing risk sharing arrangements between health plans and RBOs. By their brief the Healthcare Providers trace the history of the RBO delegation model and the development of Knox-Keene laws and regulations governing risk sharing arrangements, as well as the relevant case law. They delve into practical and policy implications. Within this broader context, the Healthcare Providers explain how a claim of negligent delegation fits naturally within the Knox-Keene Act's delegation model. The Healthcare Providers accordingly believe their amicus curiae brief can assist the Court by bringing the expertise and experience of the organized community of medical professionals and hospitals to bear on the important issues that are raised in this case. A4 For the foregoing reasons, the Healthcare Providers respectfully request that the Court accept and file their attached amicus curiae brief. DATED: June 27, 2013. Respectfully, Center for Legal Affairs CALIFORNIA MEDICAL ASSOCIATION L~ngX.Do By: r Attorneys for Amici Curiae California Medical Association, California Hospital Association, California Orthopaedic Association, California Radiological Society, and California Society of Pathologists AS AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF I INTRODUCTION California's large and complex managed healthcare market depends on stability and predictability. History teaches that this is especially true when it comes to the delegation model within the Knox-Keene Act's scheme of managed care. Wide scale failures of delegated risk-bearing organizations ("RBOs") in the late 1990s and early 2000s affected more than one million Californians and left thousands of physicians and other health care providers in the lurch with millions of dollars in unpaid medical claims. The impact of these failures has left indelible marks on the healthcare community. In the. instant case, La Vida's 1 failure generated the same widespread negative impact on patients and providers that was seen in the wake of the RBO failures nearly 15 years ago. The problem of earlier RBO failures was a reckless delegation of responsibility by some health plans (usually due to inadequate capitation rates) coupled with an inability of some RBOs to responsibly take on risk and manage their financial affairs, without adequate oversight from their contracting health plans and regulators like the Department of Managed 1 "La Vida" refers to La Vida Medical Group & IPA, La Vida Prairie Medical Group and La Vida Multispecialty Medical Centers. 1 Health Care ("DMHC"). In large measure, these same problems underlie La Vida's failure in 2010. Plaintiffs and Appellants Centinela Freeman Emergency Medical Associates and Centinela Radiology Medical Group (collectively, "Centinela physicians") provided emergency medical care to enrollees of the Health Plans2, who had been delegated to La Vida for responsibility to pay for their medical care. As with the RBO failures from not so long ago, the Centinela physicians are not going to get reimbursed by La Vida. They consequently are seeking to get just compensation for their services from the Health Plans that delegated risk to La Vida, and only because those Health Plans for years knew or should have known that La Vida was unable to pay medical claims while still continuing to send more emollees through their doors. Otherwise, fue Centinela physicians will have no remedy to obtain reimbursement for emergency medical care that they were required to provide under state and federal law. By this amicus curiae brief, the California Medical Association, the California Hospital Association, the California Orthopaedic Association, the California Radiological Society and the California Society of 2 The "Health Plans" are Respondents and Defendants Health Net of California, Inc., Blue Cross of California dlbla Anthem Blue Cross, PacifiCare of California, California Physicians' Service dlbla Blue Shield of California, Cigna HealthCare of California, Inc., Aetna Health of California, Inc., and SCAN Health Plan. 2 Pathologists (collectively, "Healthcare Providers") urge the Court to apply its own case precedent to afford the Centinela physicians fairness and justice and to instill stability and strength in the RBO market. This Court in Ochs v. PacifiCare of California (2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 782, 797, recognized a narrow "claim of negligent delegation" when a health care provider "suffers an economic loss because [a health plan] contracted with [a risk-bearing organization] when it knew or should have known that [the risk-bearing organization] was insolvent." No other state appellate court has contradicted Ochs for this holding, which is squarely applicable to and dispositive of the present case. h explained herein, not only does the principle of stare decisis warrant application of Ochs to this case, recognizing a negligent delegation claim here comports with wise public policy and fits within the regulatory scheme created by the Knox-Keene Act The judgment of the trial court should be reversed and the Centinela physicians should be permitted to assert their negligent delegation claim. II INTERESTS OF AMICI CURIAE The California Medical Association ("CMA'') is a nonprofit, incorporated professional association of approximately 37,000 physician members. CMA's membership is comprised of California physicians 3 practicing medicine in all modes and specialties, including emergency room and specialist physicians providing emergency medical care. CMA' s primary pwposes are to promote the science and art of medicine, the care and well-being of patients, the protection of public health, and the betterment of the medical profession. CMA and its members share the objective of promoting high-quality, accessible and cost-effective health care for the people of California whether through managed healtbcare systems, government programs or other direct arrangements with patients. The California Hospital Association ("CHA") is a nonprofit organization dedicated to representing the interests of hospitals and health systems in California. CHA has more than 400 hospital and health system members, including general acute care hospitals, children's hospitals, rural hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, academic medical centers, county hospitals. investor-owned hospitals, and multi-hospital health systems. CHA 's primary purposes are to provide its members with state and federal representation in an effort to improve health care quality, access and coverage and maintain public trust in health care. The California Orthopaedic Association ("COA'') is the statewide nonprofit incotporated professional association for orthopaedic surgeons. There are 2,000 members of COA, which comprises approximately 70 percent of all orthopaedic surgeons practicing in California. The organization was founded in 1975 with the mission of ensuring that all 4 patients receive the highest quality musculoskeletal care in a timely manner. Orthopaedic surgeons are routinely called to the emergency room to render care to patients seeking emergency medical care. California Radiological Society ("CRS ") is a nonprofit corporation of approximately 2,000 board-certified diagnostic radiologists and radiation oncologists practicing in the State of California. CRS is a chapter of the American College of Radiology. Its primary purpose is to advance the science of radiology, improving radiologic service to patients and the medical community, and studying the economics of radiology; the encouragement of improved and continuing education for radiologists; and the establishment and maintenance of high medical and ethical standards in the practice of radiology. The California Society of Pathologists ("CSP") is a nonprofit association serving as the premiere state organization to represent pathologists in government affairs. CSP advocates on behalf of its members in all areas affecting the medical practice of pathology, including reimbursement, clinical lab regulation and compensation and government health programs. licensing, workers' Pathologists regularly provide specialist care to patients requiring emergency medical care. The Healthcare Providers represent the community of organized medical professionals and hospitals forming the backbone of California's healthcare delivery system. They have experience, historical knowledge s and substantive expertise with health plans and the laws and regulations governing managed care. One or more of the Healthcare Providers sponsored, or were integral in the passage of, many bills of legislation that have shaped the Knox-Keene Act, including provisions governing risk sharing arrangements between health plans and RBOs. m BACKGROUND California has been a pioneer in healthcare management and delivery systems. It is the birthplace of the modern HMO and has led the nation in developing the delegation model whereby a health plan transfers responsibility to arrange and pay for medical care to an RBO, usually large physician groups or independent practice associations ("IPA"). RBOs started to form in California in the 1980s as a way for physicians to compete with established HMOs, which dominated the managed care market with effective cost-containment models in an era of ron-away healthcare inflation. 3 3 See CapMetrics, California Physician Group Solvency Standards at 1 (Aug. 2002), prepared for the California Healtb.Care Foundation, available online · at http://www.chcf.org/-/media/MEDIA%20LIBRARY %20Files/PDF/S/PDF%20SolvencyCapMetricsFullReport.pdf ("Solvency Standards Report"). 6 By today's standards, there was little oversight or government regulation of the RBO market, and by the late 1990s, many RBOs were in trouble due to inadequate capitation rates and mismanagement or other financial stresses. Hundreds closed or went into bankruptcy. The legislative reaction to the RBO failures of this time introduced a basic regulatory structure that has been tweaked over time. Nevertheless, as demonstrated by the case of La Vida, to this day RBOs still can and do fail with devastating consequences on access to physicians, quality of medical care and stability in the healthcare marketplace. . A. RBO FAILURES AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY By 1999 nearly 73 percent of Knox-Keene health plans utilized the delegation model to shift responsibility to RBOs to provide primary care coverage, and forty percent of health plans utilized capitation contracts for 4 specialist care. With 52 percent of Californians enrolled in a Knox-Keene health plan during this time amounting to 17 million people, and a majority of health plans delegating primary and specialty care to RBOs, s the RBO market became quite hot RBOs, however, increased their scope of 4 See Debra L. Roth & Deborah Reidy Kelch, Maldng Sense of Managed Care Regulation in California at 20-21 (Dec. 2001), prepared for the California HealthCare Foundation, available online at http://www.chcf.org/-/media/MEDIA%20LffiRARY%20Files/PDFIM/PD fO/o20MakingSenseManagedCareRegulation.pdf. 5 Gloria J. Bazzoli, et al., Managed Care Arrangements of Health Networks and Systems: A Review of the 1999 Experience, 26 J. AMBUL. CARE, no. 3 at 226 (2003). 7 financial risk without developing necessary capacity in information technology, actuarial risk, utilization management, administration and management leadership to accommodate such growth. 6 Health plans also played a role in Wldermining the RBO market. Although average health plan premiums increased in the 1990s (as they continue to do so now)J the average RBO capitation rates paid ·by health plans plummeted in the 1990s. The average capitation rate per patient in 1993 was $45 and by 1999 it decreased to $23. 7 These numbers can translate to RBOs having a negative working capital position. 8 Working capital measures an RBO's ability to meet its short-term liabilities and can be seen as a measure of fmancial solvency. It is total current assets minus total current liabilities. Two major RBOs went out of business in 1998, MedPartners and FPA Medical Management, leaving thousands of physicians with a total of more than $100 million in unpaid bills. 9 A study of RBO failures found that, from 1997 to 2000, 53 medical groups or IPAs closed, went into 6 Solvency Standards Report, supra, at I. 7 Michael D. Dalzell, California Physicians Struggling - Problems Ahead for Other States?, MANAGED CARE (Oct. 1999), available online at http://www.managedcaremag.com/archives/991 0/991 O.calmodel.html. 8 See Solvency Standards Report, supra, at 13-14. 9/d. 8 bankruptcy or were merged into other groups. 10 The following chart, taken from the Solvency Standards Report (infra at page 40), shows the impact of these closures on covered lives. Memben .Uf«ted by Group Closam Year Groups Members Averages 97 3 16,500 5,500 98 5 26,700 5,340 99 23 213,580 9,286 OD 22 806,600 36,664 TolaJs 53 1,063,380 The loss of an RBO can have far reaching consequences. Not only can it affect physician income and cash floW to support their own practices, RBO failures can affect the financial health of health plans, patient access to care and quality of care. RBO failures also can disrupt continuity of care because patient-physician relationships can be terminated as a consequence, leaving treatment and diagnostic regimes incomplete. For instance, the failure of K.PC Medical Management displaced 240,000 members and caused 2,000 pap smears and 200 biopsies to go unread. 11 10 /d. at 39. 11 Senator Jackie Speier, Chilling Statistics on Patient Impact, and How Policymaking Helps, remarks given to the California HealthCare Foundation (Oct 2001), available online at http://www.chcf.org/-/ media/MEDIA%20LIBRARY%20Files/PDF/S/PDfOA.20SolvencySmartR.e marks.pdf. 9 B. LEGISLATIVE RESPONSE TO THE RBO FAILURES In response to the RBO failures, the 1999-2000 California Legislature passed, and the Governor signed, Senate Bill no. 260, Stats. 1999, ch. 529 ("S.B. 260"). The bill required RBOs to register with the DMHC and submit quarterly fmancial statements. It also created the Financial Solvency Standards Board ("FSSB") within the DMHC to oversee the reporting standards and RBO market. See Health & Safety Code §1347.15. Through S.B. 260, the DMHC for the first time rated the financial health of RBOs using four reporting standards that remain in place today: • Whether the RBO pays claims in a timely manner in accordance with section 1371 12 ; • Whether the RBO estimates its liabilities for incurred but not reported claims based on an methodology acceptable to the DMHC; • Whether the RBO has a positive tangible net equity ("TNE,) for the reporting period; and • Whether the RBO has a positive working capital position. See Health & Safety Code §1375.4(b)(l)(A)(i)-(iv). 12 Unless otherwise noted, all statutory references are to the Health and Safety Code. 10 The financial solvency measures set forth in S.B. 260 were intended to "enhance consumer protection for patients served by risk-bearing health care provider organizations ... [and] to assure the actuarial soundness of all groups that assume responsibility for providing health care to consumers."13 The California Association of Health Plans - of which all of the Health Plans are members- opposed S.B. 260 and its efforts to impose regulatory structure on the RBO market. The health plans fundamentally objected to the DMHC serving as a "regulator of all licensees that assume financial risk for providing health care." 14 In other words, the health plans wanted no oversight of their risk sharing arrangements with RBOs. Notwithstanding the health plans' objections, the financial reporting standards still may not have been able to adequately measure an RBO' s financial solvency because they failed to account for the nature of the prepaid cash flow cycle for claims un,der which RBOs operate. By way of illustration, FPA Medical Management (one of the two major RBO failures in 1999) reported a positive working capital position of $4.9 million and a positive TNE of $12.8 million in financial disclosures made as of March 13 See S.B. 260, Bill Analysis at p. 2, Assem. Comm. on Approp. (Apr. 11, 2000), available online at http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/99- 00/billlsen!sb_0251-300/sb_260_cfa_20000411_135334_asm_comm.html. 14Id. 11 31, 1998.u This RBO would have passed the solvency standards of S.B. 260, yet it filed for bankruptcy within four months of this reporting date. Health plans typically pay RBOs a capitation fee in the month for which the RBO has responsibility to manage care for an enrollee. It generally takes 60-90 days for the RBO to receive a claim from a treating physician after a patient receives care and to pay that claim. The lag in time between when an RBO receives a capitation payment and when it must use part or all of the capitation payment to pay out claims can cause cash flow problems, especially when the RBO must also pay outstanding bills for salary, benefits, and vendors. The key to RBO solvency may be a measure of the RBO's available cash compared to its current liabilities, or the cash-to-claims ratio, which can fluctuate wildly over any given period. Given the inadequacy of the original financial solvency standards, the DMHC adopted a regulation that requires quarterly reporting by RBOs of the cash-to-claims ratio in addition to the original requirements ofSB 260. See 22 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.2(b). As experience with the DMHC's regulation of RBOs instructs, this still may not be adequate to protect against RBO failure because an RBO's financial condition is susceptible to numerous factors that can change quickly within quarterly or annual reporting periods. By the time the DMHC finds out See Solvency S~dards Report, supra, at 3, table 1-1. 15 12 about a drastic change in an RBO's financial condition, it may be too late for regulatory action to save the RBO. C. REGULATION OF THE RBO MARKET RBOs continue to have a strong presence in the managed care market today. According to the DMHC, there were 181 RBOs reporting financial information at the end of2012. 16 As of2013, the DMHC had 233 assigned identification numbers for RBOs. Based on information provided by the DMHC, CMA believes approximately eight million California lives are currently covered by an RBO. This also means thousands of physicians and other health care providers will interface with the delegation model and be subject to RBOs. The current regulatory scheme, however, is inadequate to protect these providers and their patients when RBOs fail or engage in improper behavior. In addition to the reporting requirements under the Kilox~Keene Act and DMHC regulations, RBOs can be regulated through a corrective action plan process when, in the discretion of the DMHC, an RBO has been deficient on one or more financial solvency standard. See Health & Safety Code §1375.4 (b)(4); 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.8. The DMHC reports that it has issued 118 corrective action plans, and that 78 percent of these arose 1 ~ichelle Yamanaka, Provider Solvency Update, Presentation Slides for the DMHC at 3 (May 9, 2013), available online at http://www.dmhc.ca.gov/library/fssblpresentations/psup.pdf. 13 out of RBO failure to meet financial solvency measurements. 17 Seventeen percent of the corrective action plans were unsuccessful. 18 That is a significant number of RBO failures that were not prevented or remedied through the existing regulatory structure. Developing and implementing a corrective action plan is a protracted and slow process. It involves multiple steps with numerous deadlines and opportunities for an RBO or a health plan to delay and object. See, e.g., 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.8 (allowing for self-initiated corrective action proposal, consultation among the DMHC, RBO and health plan, objections by the health plan or RBO and a final settlement conference). Furthermore, it can take months or years before this protracted process is even initiated by the DMHC. With no other regulatory mechanism to monitor and address RBO's in distress, the Knox-Keene Act's corrective action plan process standing alone is inadequate. The factual allegations in this case demonstrate this very point: • For each quarter from the beginning of 2007 until June 2010 when La Vida ceased operations, it failed to comply with multiple financial solvency requirements, 17 including the Dennis Balmer, Minimum Solvency Criteria · Discussion, Presentation Slides for the DMHC at 10 (May 9, 2013), available online at http://www.dmhc.ca.gov/library/fssb/presentations/pdppsr.pdf. 18/d. 14 requirements for maintaining a positive working capital, TNE and cash-to-claims ratios. Appellants~ Appendix ("AA") ~8 . La Vida also fell short with respect to timely payment of hundreds of provider claims. Id. • The Health Plans were well aware of La Vida's deteriorating financial condition because La Vida submitted financial statements to the Health Plans on a periodic basis as required by its delegation contracts and Knox-Keene laws and regulations. AA,49. • Throughout the duration of their agreements with La Vida, the Health Plans also knew that their capitation payments were insufficient to cover the costs of medical claims. AA ~SO. • La Vida also advised the Health Plans that its lender filed bankruptcy in October 2009 and consequently withdrew $4 million from La Vida's account. AA ~S 1. • Despite being advised of La Vida's financial troubles on an ongoing basis both directly by La Vida and indirectly by health care providers who were not being paid by La Vida, the Health Plans continued delegating payment responsibility to. La Vida. AA ~52. • Around May· and June 2010, years after La Vida began openly demonstrating financial instability, the Health Plans finally 15 discontinued their capitation payments to La Vida and terminated their risk-sharing agreements. AA 'i56. The Health Plans only terminated their agreements with La Vida after being forced to do so pW"Suant to DMHC de-delegation orders. AA ,57. Whereas the statutory reporting requirements and corrective action plan process imposed on RBOs focus on financial solvency and an RBO,s ability to remain operational, there other are consequences on providers and patients that can arise short of ceasing operations when an RBO financially distressed. Is Of course, RBOs can fail to pay claims, but experience teaches that they resort to other means to avoid payment, incluWng: • Failing to pay claims in a timely fashion; • Holding payment after sending out checks; • Refusing to pay statutory interest on late paid claims; • Refusing to respond to claims status inquiries from providers; • Asserting that claims were lost or not received; • Underpaying claims by down-coding or bundling services; and • Underpaying claims below usual and customary rates. DMHC corrective action plans often fail to address these other problems that arise when RBOs become financially distressed. 16 IV DISCUSSION The troubled history of the RBO market from its inception to date, notwithstanding the DMHC's oversight of the market, demonstrates the necessity of additional mechanisms to bolster the delegation model. As this Court has already recognized, holding health plans liable when they negligently delegate payment responsibility is a measured approach that can provide the needed support for the delegation model while fitting naturally within the governing Knox-Keene laws and regulatory scheme. A. IS CONTROLLING PRECEDENT THAT ESTABLISHES THE AVAILABILITY OF A NEGLIGENT DELEGATION CLAIM. OCHS The Health Plans hyperbolize the nature of this appeal when they claim that the plaintiffs are seeking a "court-imposed structural change to California's managed health care system" or ask the Court ·'to re-write the Knox-Keene Act." Joint Respondents' Brief ("JRB") at 2. In fact, the Court is presented with a straightforward question whether to apply its own existing case precedent to a narrow set of facts. Nothing about that would require the sort of drastic measures forewarned by the Health Plans. 1. Ochs Is Consistent with Other Cases in Recognizing the Statutory Efficacy of a Deleaation. In Ochs v. PacifiCare of California (2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 782, 787, Division Six of this Court held that "a health care service plan is not 17 statutorily obligated to pay for emergency services when it has delegated its payment responsibilities to a contracting medical provider that becomes insolvent and is unable to pay.'' In this respect, Ochs is the last in a group of cases that arose from the wake of the IP A failures at the tum of the century. The earlier decisions came out of the Fourth Appellate Disttict: California Emergency Physicians Medical Group (2003) Ill Cal.App.4th 1127 ("Emergency Physicians.,); Desert Healthcare District v. PacifiCare FHP. Inc. (200 1) 94 Cal.App.4th 781 ("Desert Healthcare,); and California Medical Association v. Aetna U.S. Healthcare ofCalifornia, Inc. (2001) 94 Cal.App.4th 151 ("CMA"). These cases broadly foreclosed efforts by providers to hold health plans categorically liable when their delegated RBOs failed to pay medical claims, regardless how responsibly or irresponsibly the health plans undertook the delegation. 2. Ochs Also Goes Further than any Other Case to Recognize Boundaries on a Health Plan's Delegation Power. Unlike the Fourth Appellate District cases, however, Ochs alone went further to recognize that a delegation of payment responsibility can only absolve a health plan of liability if the delegation is done responsibly. Thus, the Court additionally held that a health plan ''may be liable for emergency services when it has acted negligently in delegating its payment responsibilities." Ochs, 115 Cal.App.4th at 787 (emphasis added). The Court recognized this as a "claim of negligent delegation," and that it can 18 arise when a provider "suffered an economic loss because [the health plan] contracted with [an RBO] when it knew or should have known that [the RBO] was insolvent." /d. at 797. 3. Ochs Is Good Law. No appellate opinion contradicts, disagrees with or criticizes either of this Court's holdings in Ochs. Ochs's recognition of a negligent delegation claim stands to this day. The Health Plans cannot dispute this and instead ·argue cryptically that Ochs represents a "departure from the weight of California precedent," presumably represented by Emergency Physicians, Desert Healthcare and CMA. See JRB at 31. The Health Plans, however, are wrong. Ochs is wholly consistent with the Fourth Appellate District cases in giving full effect to a delegation made under section 1371.4(e). The point of "departure," if there is one, is not a point of conflict. Ochs departs from the Fourth Appellate District cases only by going beyond their holdings to recognize a negligent delegation claim. None of the Fourth Appellate District cases addressed this separate and independent issue, much less disapproved of a negligent delegation claim. The question in this case is neither to re-question or reshape the delegation· authority of section 1371.4(e) nor to construe the meaning of a delegation. No one is asking the Court to revisit or to depart from the holdings of Ochs, Emergency Physicians, Desert Healthcare and CMA as 19 to the effect of a delegation made under section 1371.4(e). And certainly this case does not threaten to undermine the delegation model itself. See infra Part B. Health plans can continue to delegate payment responsibility and risk to an RBO. If they act negligently in making or maintaining the delegation, Ochs will apply in those specific circumstances to hold the health plans accountable to providers who do not get reimbursed because the health plans• delegated·RBO fails to pay. To be sure, the Knox-Keene Act contemplates that a health plan may be held liable under theories based on common law or other law. Section 1371.25 provides, "nothing in this section shall preclude a finding of liability on the part of a plan . . . based on the doctrines of equitable indemnity, comparative negligence, contribution, or other statutory or common law bases for liability." See also Coast Plaza Doctors Hospital v. UHP Healthcare (2002) 105 Cal.App.4th 693, 706. More to the point, although the Knox-Keene Act recognizes that an RBO "is responsible for the processing and payment of claims by providers," it also explicitly states that "[n]othing in this subparagraph in any way limits, alters, or abrogates any responsibility of a health care service plan under existing law." Health & Safety Code §1375.4(g)(l)(C). Ochs's negligent delegation claim is based on recognition of a common law duty as a matter of public policy ''to manage one's business affairs to protect against the economic loss of a third party." Ochs, 115 20 Cal.App.4th at 797. Furthermore, the claim reflects well established common law "that liability for negligent conduct may be imposed when a duty is owed to the plaintiff or to a class of which the plaintiff is a member." I d. In reaching this latter conclusion, Ochs squarely rejected an argument that the Health Plans have repeated in this case, see JRB at 40, that they owed no duty of care to the Centinela physicians because "their conduct was not intended to affect plaintiffs" in particular: We reject Pacifi.Care's argument that a claim of negligent delegation is precluded because it would require a showing that the allegedly negligent conduct was intended to affect Ochs specifically, rather than simply the class of emergency physicians who treat PacifiCare/FHN enrollees. This argument is based on language in Emergency Physicians and Desert Healthcare to the effect that when economic damages are sought, the conduct must have been intended to affect the specific plaintiff rather than persons of the class to which the plaintiff belongs. [Citations omitted.] But it is well established that liability for negligent conduct may be imposed when a duty is owed to the plaintiff or to a class ofwhich the plaintiff is a member. Ochs, 115 Cal.App.4th at 797 (citing Ott v. Alfa-Laval Agri, Inc. (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 1439, 1449, and J'Aire Corp. v. Gregory (1979) 24 Cal.3d 799, 803). By insisting on the existence of a duty owed to the Centinela physicians in particular, not only do the Health Plans stand contrary to this Courfs reasoning in Ochs but they also fail to account for the California Supreme Court's note that courts have "repeatedly eschewed overly rigid common law formulations of duty in favor of allowing compensation for 21 foreseeable injuries caused by a defendant's want of ordinary care." J'Aire, ·24 Cal.3d at 805. Thus, "[w]hile the question whether one owes a duty to another must be decided on a case-by-case basis, every case is governed by the rule of general application that all persons are required to use ordinary care to prevent others from being injured as a result of their conduct. ... [F]oreseeability of the risk is a primary consideration in establishing the element of duty." Id. at 806 (quoting Weirum v. RKO General, Inc. (1975) 15 Ca1.3d 40, 46).19 4. There Is No "Safe Harbor" Created by Section 1371.4 to Bar a Negligent Delegation Claim. Equally wtpersuasive is the Health Plans' reliance on what they call a "safe harbor" created out of section 1371.4(e)'s delegation authority. The Health Plans' grossly oversimplify in arguing that "[w]hen a statute permits certain conduct, no liability for that conduct can attach under any legal theory." JRB at 22. None of the cases cited by the Health Plans supports any such broad principle. 1 ~e Health Plans' insistence on a strict application of the Biakanja factors as the only means to recognizing a duty of care cannot be reconciled with their admission that the factors are used to find a duty of care "when only injury to prospective economic advantage is claimed." JRB at 43. Here, of course, the plaintiffs seek more than "only injury to prospective economic advantage.'' They have provided valuable emergency medical services and have been left uncompensated. There is nothing prospective about their injuries due to the Health Plans' negligence. In any case, application of the Biakanja factors would still permit recognition of a negligent delegation in this case, as the Centinela physicians have explained in their briefs. See Appellants' Reply Brief at 29-39. 22 Emergency Physicians discussed the safe harbor principle arising out of the unfair competition law, Business and Professions Code section 17200. The law prohibits business acts or practices that are "unlawful." "By proscribing 'any unlawful' business practice, section 17200 borrows violations of other laws and threats them as unlawful practices that the unfair competition law makes independently actionable.'' Cei-Tech Communications, Inc. v. Los Angeles Cellular Telephone Co. (1999) 20 Ca1.4th 163, 180. Within this context of the unfair competition law, courts have held that when a specific legislation authorizes certain conduct. i.e. provides a "safe harbor," a plaintiff may not use the general unfair competition law to assault that harbor. /d. at 182. Emergency Physicians's reliance on the safe harbor principle was addressed to an unfair competition law claim in that case. It certainly does not extend the principle to all torts and common law claims as the Health Plans claim. Unlike an unfair competition claim, a claim of negligent delegation does not borrow or rely upon violation of some other statute (certainly not section 1371.4). The "safe harbor" principle derived from the unfair competition law has no application. The Health Plans also cite Gentry v. Ebay, Inc. (2002) 99 Cal.App.4th 816. The court there rejected a common law claim of negligence against an internet auction service for failing to authenticate fraudulently signed sports memorabilia. See id. at 833-34. The court relied 23 not on the Health Plans' so-called "safe harbor" principle but on a federal statute, 47 U.S.C. section 230(c)(l), that preempted state law and expressly granted federal immunity to any cause of action that would make an internet service provider liable for information originating with a third party user of the service. Gentry has no application here because no statute affords the Health Plans absolute immunity from liability for delegation. Harshbarger v. City of Colton (1988) 197 Cal.App.3d 1335, also cited by the Health Plans (JRB at 22), is similar inapplicable. The court rejected a claim of negligence against a city for hiring a bad home inspector. There was no reference to anything resembling a "safe harbor'' principle but rather the court based its decision on Government Code section 818.6, which expressly grants governments absolute immunity to any liability for injury caused by a negligent inspection. See id. at 1346-47. Finally, the Health Plans' reliance on Williams v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. (1990) 216 Cal.App.3d 1540, is misplaced. The court there rejected a claim of breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing against an insurer for cancelling a home policy after the insurer determined the property did not meet its underwriting requirements for earthquake insurance coverage. The court held, "because that contention [of breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing] rests on the assertion that the cancellation was prohibited by the earthquake insurance law, our conclusion that no statutory violation occurred is dispositive of the issue." 24 ld. at 1549. It is hard to imagine how this holding even applies here, where the Centinela physicians do not allege that the Health Plans have violated section 1371.4. The Centinela physicians allege that the Health Plans negligently delegated their payment responsibilities to La Vida because they knew or should have known that La Vida would be unable to pay medical claims due to its financial precariousness. That is enough to state a claim of negligent delegation under Ochs that is independent of section 1371.4. There is no reason why Ochs should not be applied to these factual allegations. See Chambers v. Unemployment Ins. Appeals Bd. (1973) 33 Cal.App.3d 923, 928 (holding decision made by division of district court of appeal should ordinarily be followed by another division of such district). B. A NEGLIGENT DELEGATION CLAIM STRENGTHENS THE DELEGATION MODEL. The Court need not do more to resolve this appeal than apply Ochs to recognize a claim of negligent delegation against the Health Plans. However, the Health Plans spend much time and effort trying to assail the negligent delegation claim on policy grounds. The Health Plans primarily argue that imposing a responsibility on health plans to eDSW'e the financial stability of the delegation model would somehow undemrine the delegation model. On the contrary, recognizing a negligent delegation claim would strengthen, not weaken, the delegation model because it would place 25 responsibility on the participants in the market who are in the best position to know and to act in rare situations when RBOs become financially distressed. Moreover. imposing liability on health plans only when they negligently delegate would not serve to chill delegation and capitation arrangements. A negligent delegation claim would arise only in narrow circumstances because the majority of risk arrangements between health plans and RBOs are responsibly undertaken and maintained. 1. Health Plans Are in the Best Position to Promptly Address Problems with their Delegated RBOs. As noted, RBO financial failures often arise due to cash flow problems that can occur with little notice, and these solvency issues can cause other problems for providers besides lack of reimbursement for medical care. It is necessary that measures be in place to ensure prompt attention and action to prevent an RBO from getting into trouble. The Knox-Keene Act already puts the health plans in the best position to do this. The Health Plans would have the Court believe that they have no responsibilities over RBOs as soon as the ink dries on a capitation contract. Nothing could be further from the truth. DMHC regulations expressly require health plans that have capitation or risk-sharing arrangements with RBOs to "[e]nsure that each contracting provider has the administrative and financial capacity to meet its contractual obligations., 26 28 C.C.R. § 1300.70(b)(2(H)( 1). The Knox-Keene Act and DMHC regulations thus broadly require that health plans continually monitor the financial health of their delegated RBOs and the fiscal soundness of capitation arrangements. Health plans are also required to actively and continually assist their RBOs to understand risk arrangements. For example,20 every capitation contract must obligate the health plan to continually provide a large amount of financial and other relevant information to the RBO including, among others things: • Co-payment and deductible amounts; • The amount of capitation to be paid per enrollee per month; • A matrix of responsibility for medical expenses (physician, institutional, ancillary, and pharmacy) which will be allocated to the RBO· ' • Expected and projected utilization rates and unit costs for each major expense service group, the source of the data and the actuarial methods employed in determining the utilization rates and unit costs by benefit plan type for the type of risk arrangement; and 2 '7he Centinela physicians have enumerated in detail the many duties and obligations imposed on health plans to monitor their delegated RBOs, to assist their RBOs understand financial risk in order to remain solvent, and -to take appropriate action to prevent an RBO from failing. See Appellants Reply Brief at 11 - 15. The Healthcare Providers here focus only on an illustrative sampling of the obligations. 27 • All factors used to adjust payments or risk-sharing targets, including but not limited to the following: age, sex, localized geographic area, family size, experience rated, and benefit plan design, including co-payment/deductible levels. See 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.1. Health plans additionally are required to provide timely information to their RBOs as circumstances changes. Plans must disclose to their delegated RBOs information about enrollees added or terminated wtder each benefit plan contract served by the organization and a reconciliation of the variances between current and prior disclosures. 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.1(a)(2) and (3). Health plans also are obligated to keep vigil for any event that ''materially alters the [RBOs '] financial situation, or threatens its solvencyu and report such events to the DMHC within five business days ofleaming about the event. See 28 C.C.R. §1300.75.4.3(e). Health plans are already in the best position to know when their delegated RBOs face financial distress that can threaten insolvency and to take appropriate action. As shown in the case of La Vida, however, health plans cannot be relied upon on their own initiative to protect enrollees and treating providers. They instead are relying on a slow and protracted regulatory process that has proven to be inadequate at preventing and redressing harm from RBO failures. 28 A negligent delegation claim would encourage health plans to take their delegation responsibilities more seriously and engage more actively with RBOs that the plans know or should know need attention. Such a claim would not hold health plans responsible every time their delegated RBO fails, but rather would only hold those health plans accountable when they have acted negligently in delegating risk and discharging the responsibilities that go with such a delegation. Imposing liability through tort negligence is appropriate in these circumstances because the health plans are in the best position to foresee when RBOs may fail and cause harm to treating providers. See J'Aire, 24 Cal.3d at 806 ("Rather ·than traditional notions of duty, this court has focused on foreseeability as the key component necessary to establish liability [for negligence]"). 2. A Negligent Delegation Claim Would Complement the DMHCs Regulatory Authority over the Delegation Model. A negligent delegation claim would require more vigilance by the health plans over the delegation model and serve to complement the DMHC's regulatory oversight As already noted, health plans are in the best position to continuously monitor the delegation model and take quick action as necessary. But the Health Plans seem to suggest that they are powerless to take action in the face of a faiiing RBO given the existence of the Knox~Keene Act's corrective action plan process. See JRB at 15~16. That simply is not true, especially when the 29 Knox~Kcene Act imposes primary responsibility on health plans to broadly ensure that their delegated RBOs are financially capable of managing risk and paying medical claims. Nothing in the Knox-Keene Act or DMHC regulations would prevent a health plan from taking action to address RBO insolvency or fmancial distress. It is one thing, as the Health Plans have pointed out, to penalize a health plan for refusing or failing to comply with a DMHCordered corrective action plan. See 28 C.C.R. §1300.74.4.5(a)(4) and (d). It is another thing all together to suggest that plans cannot do anything else to protect providers and patients from an RBO failure except what is spelled out in a corrective action plan. The Knox-Keene Act contains no such prohibition but rather compels health plans to continually monitor their delegated RBOs' health and take action when necessary. Furthermore, the Knox-Keene Act expressly recognizes a health plan's right, albeit subject to DMHC oversight, to reassign enrollees due to a delegated RBO's financial distress even if the RBO is compliant with a DMHC-approved corrective action plan. See 28 C.C.R. §1300.74.4.4 (a)(6). This provision recognizes the dual responsibilities of health plans not only to comply with a corrective action plan but also to take other action that may be necessary when RBOs are in jeopardy of insolvency. 30 v CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, the Healthcare Providers urge the Court to reverse the judgment of the trial court and permit the Centinela physicians to pursue their claim of negligent delegation against the Health Plans. DATED: June27, 2013. Respectfully, Center For Legal Affairs CALIFORNIA MEDICAL ASSOCIATIOl\ 4iJ By. I1llg£no Attorneys for Amici Curiae California Medical Association, California Hospital Association, California Orthopaedic Association, California Radiological Society, and California Society of Pathologists 31 CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE I HEREBY CERTIFY: This brief is reproduced using a proportional spaced typeface of 13 points. This office uses Microsoft Word, which reports that this amicus curiae brief contains 6,578 words. DATED: llily27, 2013. Jv~ (iV\AJ) By: L@_ {LOngx.Do Attorney for Amici Curiae California Medical Association, California Hospital Association, California Orthopaedic Association, California Radiological Society, and California Society of Pathologists PROOF OF SERVICE Centinela Freeman Emergency Medical Associates et al v. Health Net of California. Inc. et al., Appeal No. B228867 (Second Appellate District, Division Three) I, Melanie Newneyer. hereby declare: I am employed in Sacramento, California. I am over the age of eighteen years and am not a party to the above-entitled action. My business address is 1201 J Street, Suite 200, Sacramento, California 95814. On June 27, 2013, I served the documents as indicated below: APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO FILE AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF AND AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF OF CALIFORNIA MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, CALIFORNIA HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION, CALIFORNIA ORTHOPAEDIC ASSOCIATION, CALIFORNIA RADIOLOGICAL SOCIE1Y AND CALIFORNIA SOCIETY OF PAffiOLOGISTS IN SUPPORT OF APPELLANTS CENTINELA FREEMAN EMERGENCY MEDICAL ASSOCIATES et al. Electronic Service: By sending a PDF format copy to the California Supreme Court,s electronic notification address pursuant to rule 8.212 of the California Rules of Court. U.S. Mail: By placing a true copy thereof in a sealed envelope with firstclass postage thereon fully prepaid, in the United States Postal Service Mail at Sacramento, California addressed as set forth below: Andrew H. Selesnick Jason 0. Cheuk MICHELMAN & ROBINSON, LLP 15760 Ventura Blvd., 5th Floor Encino, CA 91436 Margaret M. Grignon Kurt C. Petersen Kenneth N. Smersfelt Zarah A. Jaltorossian REED SMITH LLP 355 S. Grand Ave., Suite 2900 Los Angel~ CA 90071 Attorneys for Plaintiffs and Appellants CENTINELA FREEMAN EMERGENCY MEDICAL ASSOCIATES et al. Attorneys for Defenda'ht and Respondent BLUE CROSS OF CALIFORNIA DBA ANTHEM BLUE CROSS Jennifer S. Romano CROWELL & MORINO LLP 515 South Flower St., 40th Floor Los Angeles, CA 90071 Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent PACIFICA.RE OF CAUFORNIA DBA SECURE HORIZONS REALm PLAN OF AMERICA William A. Helvestine Ethan P. Schu1man Damian D. Capozzola CROWELL & MORINO LLP 275 Battery St., 23Jd Floor San Francisco, CA 94111 Attorneys for Defendants and Respondents HEALTH NET OF CAliFORNIA, INC. Kirk A. Patrick Heather L. Richardson OffiSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP 333 S. Grand Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90071-3197 Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent .AETNA HEALTH OF CALIFORNIA, INC. Gregory N. Pimstone Joanna S. McCallum Jeffrey J. Maurer MANATI, PHELPS & PHILLIPS LLP 11355 W. Olympic Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90064 Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent CALIFORNIA PHYSICIANS' SERVICE, INC. DBA BLUE SHIEW OF CALIFORNIA William P. Donovan Mathew D. Caplan DLA PIPER LLP {US) 1999 Avenue ofthe Stars, 4th Floor Los Angeles, CA 90067 Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent C/GNA HEALTHCARE OF CALIFORNIA, INC. Don A. Hernandez Jamie L. Lopez HERNANDEZ, SCHAEDEL & ASSOCS., LLP 2 N. Lake Ave., Suite 930 Pasadena, CA 91101 Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent SCAN HEALTH PLAN Ron. John S. Wiley, Jr. Los Angeles Superior Court Central Civil West, Dept. 311 600 S. Commonwealth Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90005 Case No. BC449056 Consumer Law Section Los Angeles District Attorney 210 West Temple St, Suite 1800 Los Angeles, CA 90012-3210 Appellate Coordinator Office of the Attorney General Consumer Law Section 300 S. Spring St. Los Angeles, CA 90013 Service pursuant to B&P Code § 17209 and CRC, rule 8.29(a) and (b) Service pursuant to B&P Code §17209 and CRC, rule 8.29(a) and (b) I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of California that the foregoing is true and correct. xecuted on June 27, 2013, at Sacramento, California.