SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-548-99T3
JOHN A. MURRAY,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
STATE HEALTH BENEFITS COMMISSION,
Respondent-Respondent.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued February 7, 2001 - Decided February 27, 2001
Before Judges King, Lefelt and Axelrad.
On appeal from a Final Determination of
the State Health Benefits Commission.
Appellant, John A. Murray, argued the
cause pro se.
Sherrie L. Gibble, Deputy Attorney
General, argued the cause for
respondent (John J. Farmer, Jr.,
Attorney General, attorney; Mary
C. Jacobson, Assistant Attorney
General, of counsel; B. Michelle
Albertson, Deputy Attorney General,
on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LEFELT, J.A.D.
Petitioner John A. Murray is a County College professor
insured under the State Health Benefits Plan ("State Plan").
Rather than selecting one of several Health Maintenance
Organizations or a "point of service plan" available under the
State Plan for State employees, Murray has chosen the traditional
plan. This plan provides partial indemnification to eligible
employees and permits participants to select their own doctors
and apply for payment to providers or reimbursement of incurred
medical expenses that are covered by the plan. In this appeal,
Murray seeks $170 reimbursement for colonic hydrotherapy
treatments that were denied by the State Health Benefits
Commission ("Commission") because the treatments were
experimental, not medically necessary, for general health
maintenance, and administered by an unauthorized provider.
Colonic hydrotherapy is also called colonic irrigation and
is similar to an enema, with the difference being the mechanism
used and the magnitude of the volume infused. This therapy
apparently was known to ancient Egyptians and Romans and has been
available in this country for centuries. Murray hopes to
establish that treatments, like colonic hydrotherapy, thought to
be safe and effective by complementary or alternative physicians,
should be reimbursable under the State Plan like treatments that
are prescribed by traditional doctors. This appeal, however, is
a poor vehicle to accomplish such a result, and we affirm, but
nevertheless express some concerns about the rationale the
Commission utilized to find that colonic irrigation was an
experimental treatment.
Before discussing Murray's treatments, we first explain the
basic administrative structure of the State Plan. The Commission
was established by N.J.S.A. 52:14-17.25 - 45, The New Jersey
State Health Benefits Program Act, to administer a program
providing comprehensive health care benefits for eligible public
employees, retirees and their dependents at reasonable cost. The
Commission is composed of the State Treasurer, the Commissioner
of Insurance and the Commissioner of Personnel. N.J.S.A. 52:14-
17.27. The Commission has entered into a contract with Blue
Cross Blue Shield to administer the traditional plan.
Previously, Prudential Insurance Company administered the
traditional plan. Neither Blue Cross Blue Shield nor Prudential
acts as insurers; rather, the State self-insures the cost of the
traditional plan, and the plan administrator reviews and pays
claims according to the plan. The Commission pays an
administrative fee and reimburses the administrator for paid
claims. The Commission retains final authority and financial
responsibility for the State Plan.
The traditional plan, that was selected by Murray, is
described in a booklet entitled "New Jersey State Health Benefits
Program Medical Plans Information Handbook." The Commission has
statutory authority to establish "such limitations, exclusions,
or waiting periods as the commission finds to be necessary or
desirable to avoid inequity, unnecessary utilization, duplication
of services or benefits otherwise available . . . ." N.J.S.A.
52:14-17.29(B). The Commission's contract with Blue Cross Blue
Shield establishes the types of services and supplies that are
covered as eligible services. Under N.J.A.C. 17:9-2.16, the
Commission has adopted by reference all of the policy provisions
in the contract "to the exclusion of all other possible
coverages." No benefits may be paid unless they are "stipulated
in the contracts held by the [Commission]." N.J.S.A. 52:14-
17.29(B).
Under the contract, the traditional plan pays only eligible
charges. An eligible charge is defined, in relevant part, as a
charge for services that: "are medically needed and appropriate
treatment for the medical condition; are listed in 'Services and
Supplies' [in another section of the contract]; are ordered by a
doctor (as defined by the plan) for treatment of illness or
injury;. . . and are not specifically excluded. . . ."
Furthermore, we explained in Heaton v. State Health Benefits
Comm'n,
264 N.J. Super. 141, 151 (App. Div. 1993) that the State
Plan was not to be considered a commercial insurance policy. The
Commission must balance its obligations of meeting the health
care needs of its members with a fiduciary obligation to make the
program cost effective. Consequently, interpretation of the State
Plan provisions is not approached as if we were analyzing
language in commercial insurance policies. Any ambiguous
provisions in the State Plan will not be construed against the
State as a contract of adhesion, which is the approach taken with
commercial policies. Kievit v. Loyal Protective Life Ins. Co.,
34 N.J. 475, 482 (1961).
The first colonic hydrotherapy was prescribed for Murray by
Dr. Oscar Kruesi as treatment for dysbiosis (microbiologic
abnormality in the colon or small intestine). A registered
nurse, Susan Richter, administered the treatment in her office on
June 21, 1995. Richter's charge for the treatment was $130.
Murray submitted a claim for reimbursement to the State Plan
together with Dr. Kruesi's prescription. Prudential, the claims
administrator at the time, paid the claim in full.
The second colonic hydrotherapy was prescribed by doctor
Rita Foss Morgan for recurring dysbiosis. It was administered by
Richter on October 7, 1996, fifteen months after the first
treatment. The charge was $100. Murray's claim for
reimbursement again was submitted with the doctor's prescription
this time to Blue Cross, which had replaced Prudential as the
claim administrator on January 1, 1996. Payment of the claim was
first deferred but later paid.
Dr. Kruesi prescribed the third treatment for Murray's
vitamin and mineral deficiencies and malabsorption. Richter
administered this treatment on January 17, 24 and 31, 1997,
three-and-one-half months after the second treatment. Richter's
charge was $270. Payment of this claim was again deferred
initially by Blue Cross but later paid.
The fourth, and last, treatment was again prescribed by Dr.
Kruesi to treat Murray for allergies, dysbiosis, malabsorption
and vitamin and mineral deficiencies. Richter administered this
treatment on July 24, 1997, six months after the third treatment,
and approximately one month after Blue Cross Blue Shield had
notified Murray that "your New Jersey State Health Benefits
Program does not provide benefits for Colonic Irrigation."
Because this treatment came after Murray had been advised that
these treatments were not covered, Blue Cross denied Murray's
reimbursement claim for Richter's $170 bill. This charge remains
unpaid and is the only monetary issue between the parties. It is
important to note also that Blue Cross Blue Shield has provided
coverage for all charges billed by Murray's doctors in connection
with their prescribing these treatments.
Murray requested a hearing before the Commission, and the
matter was transferred to the Office of Administrative Law
("OAL"). After conducting a plenary hearing, Administrative Law
Judge R. Jackson Dwyer concluded that Richter was not an eligible
provider, and that Murray's treatments after June 27, 1997 were
administered merely to maintain his overall health and thus were
ineligible maintenance treatments. He further concluded that
although colonic hydrotherapy was prescribed by a doctor, the
prevailing medical opinion within the appropriate specialty was
that such services were not safe and effective. Consequently,
colonic hydrotherapy was not a medically needed service.
Finally, Judge Dwyer concluded that colonic hydrotherapy could
not be considered experimental or investigational under the
applicable State Plan definition.
The Commission adopted Judge Dwyer's initial decision
completely except it modified his determination that colonic
hydrotherapy was not experimental or investigational. The
Commission explained its reasoning in the following fashion:
Although there do not appear to be any
ongoing clinical trials or research studies,
the procedure is nonetheless investigational
or experimental. Colonic hydrotherapy is
prescribed only by a few doctors practicing
integrative or alternative medicine. Since
it is not deemed safe and effective by the
appropriate specialty, it follows that the
procedure needs further evaluation before it
would be accepted as appropriate treatment.
Our review of agency determinations is quite limited. We
can overturn only those administrative determinations that are
arbitrary, capricious, unreasonable, or violative of expressed or
implicit legislative policies. Campbell v. Dep't of Civil Serv.,
39 N.J. 556, 562 (1963). We will also reverse administrative
decisions that are unsupported by substantial, or sufficient,
credible evidence in the record. See McDonald v. Pinchak,
139 N.J. 188 (1995); Henry v. Rahway State Prison,
81 N.J. 571, 579-
80 (1980). Substantial evidence is "such evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a
conclusion." In re Application of Hackensack Water Co.,
41 N.J.
Super. 408, 418 (App. Div. 1956). Furthermore, "[w]here there is
substantial evidence in the record to support more than one
regulatory conclusion, 'it is the agency's choice which
governs.'" In re Vineland Chemical Co.,
243 N.J. Super. 285, 307
(App. Div.), certif. denied,
127 N.J. 323 (1990) (quoting DeVitis
v. New Jersey Racing Comm'n,
202 N.J. Super. 484, 491 (App.
Div.), certif. denied,
102 N.J. 337 (1985)). In such a
situation, we cannot substitute our judgment for that of the
agency, even if we would have decided the case differently had we
heard the evidence.
Given the limited review standard that we must apply to
Murray's appeal, there is no question but that the Commission had
sufficient evidence in the record to deny Murray's claim.
Richter is a registered nurse. Under the State Plan, only
certified nurse practitioners and clinical nurse specialists
qualify as providers. The Commission is not a health insurance
company as defined by N.J.S.A. 17:48-1(e) and is not governed by
the statute which disallows discrimination against registered
nurses. N.J.S.A. 17:48E-12. Had Richter been working for the
prescribing doctor, the result might be different. But, she
bills separately for her services and consequently is not an
eligible provider under the State Plan.
Judge Dwyer considered the testimony of both the alternative
medicine experts as well as Dr. Schwartz, the State's
gastroenterologist. Thus, because both medical disciplines were
considered, we cannot conclude that the Commission's decision was
arbitrary, capricious or unreasonably biased in favor of
traditional medicine at the expense of alternative or
complementary medical practices. The record developed before
Judge Dwyer provides ample support for the Commission's final
decision. Thus, we cannot fault the Commission for concluding
that colonic hydrotherapy, as delivered to Murray, was not
covered under the traditional plan.
We are, nevertheless, concerned with two aspects of the
Commission's rationale for modifying the ALJ's decision and
determining that the treatment was experimental and
investigational under the State Plan. Under the plan, a
procedure is considered experimental or investigational, in
pertinent part, if:
The prevailing opinion within the
appropriate specialty of the United States
medical profession is that the service or
supply needs further evaluation for a
particular diagnosis or set of indications
before it is used outside clinical trials or
other research settings. The insurance
administrator will determine that based on:
a. published reports in authoritative medical
literature; and b. regulations, reports,
publications, and evaluations issued by
government agencies such as the Agency for
Health Care Policy and Research, the National
Institutes of Health, and the FDA.
Murray argues, based on the plan language, that there were
no planned or ongoing clinical trials or published research
studies or reports in authoritative medical literature or
governmental publications concerning colonic hydrotherapy. Thus,
Murray contends that there was no support for the Commission's
determination that colonic hydrotherapy was an experimental
treatment. Here, however, we agree with the Commission that the
plan does not restrict its determination solely to published
reports in authoritative medical literature or governmental
regulations, publications or evaluations. The Commission can
base its determination on whether the record developed
establishes that prevailing medical opinion regards a particular
treatment as experimental. As the Commission persuasively urged
at oral argument, if its determinations were limited to the
degree urged by Murray, then treatments that were totally bizarre
and unworthy of study, could not be declared experimental or
investigational.
However, the language of the State Plan requires that the
"insurance administrator," currently Blue Cross Blue Shield,
make its decision based on the available medical literature. The
administrator must follow the plan's directive. The language
provides that "[t]he insurance administrator will determine [the
experimental nature of the treatment] based on: a. published
reports in authoritative medical literature; and b.
[governmental] regulations, reports, publications and evaluations
. . . ." The administrator, thus, must determine whether a
particular treatment is experimental by evaluating the
authoritative medical literature, and by considering the other
portions of the State Plan, not quoted above, dealing with
clinical trials, FDA approval, a provider's institutional review
board, and research protocols. If the Commission does not wish
the administrator to be so limited, then the State Plan's
language must be modified.
In addition, we are somewhat concerned with the rationale
utilized by the Commission in making its determination concerning
the nature of the subject treatment. Despite the lack of
definitive medical studies, the Commission found that because the
procedure was prescribed only by doctors practicing alternative
medicine and was not deemed safe by traditional doctors, "it
follows that the procedure needs further evaluation before it
would be accepted as appropriate treatment."
Thus, the Commission determined that traditional
gastroenterologists constituted the "appropriate specialty of the
United States medical profession" and accepted Dr. Schwartz's
conclusion that the treatment was unsafe because it had no
benefits, and, therefore, its risks outweighed any potential
benefit. According to Dr. Schwartz the treatment was "at best
experimental," and at worst "quackery."
Once an entire treatment is labeled "experimental," it is
excluded from coverage regardless of whether or not the treatment
was promising or based on sound medical, biological or scientific
practices. If excluded as experimental, there is no coverage.
New alternative medical treatments should not be excluded
from coverage without careful consideration. "Insurer inclusion
of alternative and complementary therapies is likely to expand as
therapies gain acceptance and credibility, and gain support by
data showing that such treatment can contribute to health so as
to minimize insurers' overall costs." See, Michael H. Cohen,
Holistic Health Care: Including Alternative and Complementary
Medicine in Insurance and Regulatory Schemes,
28 Ariz.L.Rev. 83,
156 (1996). Currently, as Dr. Schwartz recognized, there are
many medical schools in the United States that are teaching
alternative approaches to some traditional practices. As more
and more doctors become familiar with alternative practices, we
can anticipate the availability and increasing utilization of
unstudied alternative treatments. Kathleen M. Boozang, Western
Medicine Opens the Door to Alternative Medicine,
24 Am.J.L.&Med. 185, 186-187 (1998). To some degree, the Commission's approach
relating to colonic hydrotherapy could be applied to any future
alternative treatment that is not generally recognized or
prescribed by traditional doctors. We urge the Commission not to
do so routinely. Let us try and explain our concerns.
In essence, the Commission has stated that because few to no
traditional doctors prescribe this treatment, then the
alternative practices must be experimental or investigational.
And, therefore, under this rationale, the converse is true, that
a treatment will become non-experimental only when traditional
doctors begin prescribing or become supportive of the treatment.
"Organized medicine, since its inception, has fought to maintain
a firm grip on the philosophy of health care generally, as well
as on the specific treatments patients should have available to
them." Id. at 186.
When other alternative medicine treatments are presented for
reimbursement, we hope that the Commission will determine with an
open mind which "appropriate specialty" should be searched for
"prevailing opinion." Assuming there are no ongoing or planned
trials or tests, and no definitive scientific reports or studies
regarding the new treatment, the Commission should carefully
consider whether the "appropriate specialty" should be
alternative licensed medical practitioners of the proposed
treatment rather than whatever traditional medical specialty may
be related to the treatment.
If a licensed alternative medical provider indicates that
the treatment is based on sound medical, biological or scientific
principles; widely prescribed and recognized by other alternative
medical providers; and considered efficacious and safe, the
Commission should not reject the treatment solely because
traditional doctors do not yet utilize the treatment or are
completely unfamiliar with the practice. Ibid. In that
instance, the new treatment should be carefully evaluated under
the other provisions of the plan, and not automatically excluded
solely because no traditional physician is as yet prescribing the
treatment.
With those words of caution, we recognize that in this case,
the record fully supports the Commission's approach to the
specific treatment involved. Only colonic hydrotherapy was found
to be experimental and excluded from coverage. There was
sufficient evidence for the Commission to conclude that this
particular treatment was potentially unsafe and inefficacious for
the purposes prescribed, and it was not error to consider the
gastroenterologist as the "appropriate specialty" to determine
whether this particular treatment requires further evaluation.
Therefore, in this instance, the Commission properly denied
reimbursement to Murray, and based on the review standard we must
apply, we have no choice but to affirm.
Affirmed.