            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

State Workers’ Insurance Fund,                   :
                                                 :
                               Petitioner        :
                                                 :
                       v.                        : No. 36 C.D. 2018
                                                 : Argued: November 15, 2018
Bureau of Workers’ Compensation                  :
Fee Review Hearing Office                        :
(Harburg Medical Sales Co., Inc.                 :
and Sofia Lam, MD),                              :
                                                 :
                               Respondents       :


BEFORE:        HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
               HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
               HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                  FILED: August 19, 2019


                 State Workers’ Insurance Fund (Insurer) petitions for review of the
December 8, 2017 order of a Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (Bureau), Fee
Review Hearing Officer ordering Insurer to reimburse Harburg Medical Sales
Company, Inc. (Provider) the amount of $5,599.96 for an electric scooter provided
to Lila Deans (Claimant).1 For the following reasons, we affirm.

       1
         The fee review process is initiated upon a provider’s filing of an application and
supporting documents with the Bureau within 30 days following notification of a disputed
treatment or 90 days following the original billing date of the treatment, whichever is later. 34 Pa.
Code §127.252. After the provider files the required documentation, the Bureau investigates the
matter and then renders an administrative decision within 30 days of receipt of the required
documentation. 34 Pa. Code §127.255. A provider or insurer may contest an adverse
                  The relevant facts are not in dispute. On March 7, 2016, Provider
submitted a bill to Insurer on an HCFA-1500 form seeking payment of $6,995.95
for an electric scooter dispensed to Claimant on March 4, 2016. Finding of Fact
(F.F.) No. 2. Box 19 of that form listed both “S. Lam, M.D.” and Dr. H. Abdel” as
the referring physicians. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 23a; F.F. No. 2. On March
22, 2016, Insurer notified Provider that the unpaid bill for the electric scooter was
being returned because a utilization review (UR) request had been filed with the
Bureau and remained pending.2 R.R. at 115a; F.F. No. 3. A UR determination was
issued on May 13, 2016, with respect to the treatment of Dr. Lam, which found the
prescription for an electric scooter from February 19, 2016, and ongoing to be
unreasonable and unnecessary.3 F.F. No. 9.
                  On May 20, 2016, before receiving an official denial from Insurer,
Provider filed an application for fee review4 pursuant to Section 306(f.1) of the



administrative decision by filing an appeal with the Bureau. 34 Pa. Code. §127.257. A hearing
officer holds a de novo hearing and then issues a written decision and order that can be appealed
to this Court. 34 Pa. Code §127.260.

       2
          The Bureau will return applications for fee review filed by providers if the insurer has
filed a request for UR of the treatment. 34 Pa. Code §126.555; Harburg Medical Sales Co. v.
Bureau of Workers’ Compensation (Employers Mutual Casualty Co.), 911 A.2d 214, 217 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2006). In a proceeding before a hearing officer, the insurer has the burden of proving the
existence of those circumstances. Id. at 216.

       3
         The reviewer, Michael Drass, M.D., noted that he spoke with Dr. Lam on May 5, 2016.
During that conversation, Dr. Lam reported that she did not approve the prescription order form,
which was completed and rubber-stamped with her signature by a member of her office staff at the
request of Joan Harburg. Ms. Harburg is a part owner of Provider. F.F. Nos. 9, 11.

       4
           Medical Fee Review Application Number MF-506018, R.R. at 27a.



                                                2
Workers’ Compensation Act (Act).5 While the fee review application was pending,
Insurer notified Provider that the unpaid bill for the electric scooter was being




       5
         Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §531. In relevant part, Section 306(f.1)
of the Act provides as follows:
               (2) Any provider who treats an injured employe shall be required to
               file periodic reports with the employer on a form prescribed by the
               department which shall include, where pertinent, history, diagnosis,
               treatment, prognosis and physical findings. The report shall be filed
               within ten (10) days of commencing treatment and at least once a
               month thereafter as long as treatment continues. The employer shall
               not be liable to pay for such treatment until a report has been filed.
                                             *   *    *
               (5) The employer or insurer shall make payment and providers shall
               submit bills and records in accordance with the provisions of this
               section. All payments to providers for treatment provided pursuant
               to this act shall be made within thirty (30) days of receipt of such
               bills and records unless the employer or insurer disputes the
               reasonableness or necessity of the treatment provided pursuant to
               paragraph (6). The nonpayment to providers within thirty (30) days
               for treatment for which a bill and records have been submitted shall
               only apply to that particular treatment or portion thereof in dispute;
               payment must be made timely for any treatment or portion thereof
               not in dispute. A provider who has submitted the reports and bills
               required by this section and who disputes the amount or timeliness
               of the payment from the employer or insurer shall file an application
               for fee review with the department no more than thirty (30) days
               following notification of a disputed treatment or ninety (90) days
               following the original billing date of treatment. If the insurer
               disputes the reasonableness and necessity of the treatment pursuant
               to paragraph (6), the period for filing an application for fee review
               shall be tolled as long as the insurer has the right to suspend payment
               to the provider pursuant to the provisions of this paragraph. Within
               thirty (30) days of the filing of such an application, the department
               shall render an administrative decision.
77 P.S. §531(2), (5).

                                                 3
returned based on the May 13, 2016 UR determination that the treatment was not
reasonable and not necessary. R.R. at 127a.
                 Thereafter, on August 8, 2016, the Bureau’s Medical Fee Review
Section circulated an administrative determination concluding that Provider was not
due payment for the electric scooter, because this “service [had] not been properly
billed.”6 R.R. at 32a; F.F. No. 5. Provider filed a request for a hearing with the
Medical Fee Review Hearing Office and the matter was assigned to a Workers’
Compensation Judge (WCJ) Hearing Officer for hearing and disposition. F.F. No.
6.



      6
          Section 127.203 of the Department’s cost containment regulations provides as follows:
               (a) Providers who treat injured employes are required to submit
               periodic medical reports to the employer, commencing 10 days after
               treatment begins and at least once a month thereafter as long as
               treatment continues. If the employer is covered by an insurer, the
               provider shall submit the report to the insurer.
               (b) Medical reports are not required to be submitted in months
               during which treatment has not been rendered.
               (c) The medical reports required by subsection (a) shall be submitted
               on a form prescribed by the Bureau for that purpose. The form shall
               require the provider to supply, when pertinent, information on the
               claimant’s history, the diagnosis, a description of the treatment and
               services rendered, the physical findings and the prognosis, including
               whether or not there has been recovery enabling the claimant to
               return to pre-injury work without limitations. Providers shall supply
               only the information applicable to the treatment or services
               rendered.
               (d) If a provider does not submit the required medical reports on the
               prescribed form, the insurer is not obligated to pay for the treatment
               covered by the report until the required report is received by the
               insurer.

34 Pa. Code §127.203.
                                                 4
              Insurer submitted medical records from Dr. Abdel and copies of the
UR and fee review determinations. Insurer also presented a sworn affidavit of Erin
Tansley, a management technician assigned by Insurer to handle this fee review
matter. F.F. No. 10. She noted that Insurer received the bill and a November 22,
2015 prescription from Dr. Abdel, but Insurer did not receive any documentation
from Dr. Abdel addressing the reasonableness or necessity of the treatment or the
causal relationship between the work injury and the electric scooter. According to
Tansley, in the absence of such records, a utilization review of Dr. Abdel’s treatment
was not ripe. Tansley also stated that Insurer contested liability for the electric
scooter, because the same was found unreasonable and unnecessary by the May 13,
2016 UR determination. R.R. at 87a.
              At the conclusion of the hearing, Insurer argued that the treatment was
not properly billed because Provider did not submit any medical records from Dr.
Abdel along with the bill. Insurer also contested liability for the treatment based on
the May 13, 2016 UR determination. Although Insurer acknowledged that the UR
determination addressed treatment of Dr. Lam, and not Dr. Abdel, Insurer argued
that the exact same treatment that previously was determined to be unreasonable and
unnecessary was at issue in this proceeding.
              Provider submitted a May 5, 2017 affidavit of Joan Harburg, stating
in part:

             [Provider] dispensed a motorized scooter to [Claimant] for
             her work injury on prescription from Dr. Hany Abdel
             dated 11/22/2015. [Insurer] was billed along with the
             required LIBC-9 form and a copy of the prescription.
             [Insurer] sent an [explanation of benefits] denying
             payment due to a Utilization Review on Dr. Lam. Dr. Lam
             did not prescribe this device. To my knowledge there is
             no Utilization Review on Dr. Abdel. . . .

                                          5
R.R. at 125a. Harburg also noted that Insurer had not denied payment of the bill on
the ground that it was unrelated to the work injury.
              Provider asserted that the motorized scooter was properly billed to
Insurer with the requisite HCFA-1500 form, LIBC-9 form, and prescription.
Provider also argued that causation is not an issue in a fee review proceeding.
Additionally, Provider noted that the scooter was dispensed on a prescription by Dr.
Abdel and that the UR determinations cited by Insurer concerned a scooter
prescribed by Dr. Lam. Citing Bucks County Community College v. Workers’
Compensation Appeal Board (Nemes, Jr.), 918 A.2d 150 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007),
Provider emphasized that UR determinations are provider-specific and do not apply
to physicians not reviewed.
              In her December 8, 2017 decision, the Hearing Officer credited
Tansley’s statement that a May 13, 2016 UR determination found that an electric
scooter was unreasonable and unnecessary from February 9, 2016, and ongoing.
However, the Hearing Officer noted that the UR determination specifically
addressed treatment and care rendered by Dr. Lam, and not Dr. Abdel. The Hearing
Officer rejected Tansley’s statement that Insurer was not liable for the electric
scooter prescribed by Dr. Abdel based on the UR determination.
              The Hearing Officer credited Harburg’s statement in its entirety. The
Hearing Officer stated that Provider, a durable medical equipment company, would
not have had access to Dr. Abdel’s medical records, treatment notes, etc., and
concluded that Provider submitted all of the billing forms and medical reports
required under the law. Specifically, the Hearing Officer found that Provider
complied with 34 Pa. Code §127.203 and Section 306(f.1)(2) of the Act by
submitting the LIBC-9 form, the HCFA-1500 form, and the November 22, 2015


                                          6
prescription of Dr. Abdel for a motorized scooter. Therefore, the Hearing Officer
rejected the administrative determination that Insurer owed Provider $0 for the
electric scooter because it was not properly billed.
                 The Hearing Officer referenced the UR report relaying Dr. Lam’s
statement that Provider called Dr. Lam’s office and requested prescriptions for
durable medical equipment and that one of her employees rubber-stamped such
prescriptions, but the Hearing Officer recognized that the scope of a fee review
hearing is limited to the timeliness and/or amount of payment. The Hearing Officer
further noted that the only prescription offered into the record was the prescription
of Dr. Abdel. The Hearing Officer observed that utilization reviews are provider
specific, and for that reason, the Hearing Officer granted Provider’s request and
ordered Insurer to pay Provider $5,599.96 plus interest.7 F.F. No. 13g.
               On appeal to this Court,8 Insurer first argues that the Hearing Officer
erred in finding that Provider complied with the requirements of Section 306(f.1) of
the Act and 34 Pa. Code §127.203, when neither Provider nor Dr. Abdel submitted
medical records concerning Dr. Abdel’s treatment. In support, Insurer notes that the
LIBC-9 form recommends that durable medical equipment providers submit a
certificate of medical necessity. Insurer contends that without the documentation
necessary to determine the causal relationship between the scooter and the work


       7
          The amount represents 80% of the charge billed. See 34 Pa. Code §127.102, providing
that, if a Medicare payment mechanism does not exist for a particular product, the amount of
payment to the provider shall be either 80% of the usual and customary charge for that product in
the geographic area where rendered, or the actual charge, whichever is lower.

       8
         Our scope of review of a hearing officer’s order involving a medical fee review is limited
to determining whether constitutional rights were violated, whether an error of law was committed,
or whether necessary findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence. City of Philadelphia
v. Medical Fee Review Office (RJS Industries), 737 A.2d 356, 358 n.9 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1999).
                                                7
injury, liability remains at issue, and, consequently, the Hearing Officer should have
dismissed Provider’s hearing request for lack of jurisdiction.
             However, as Insurer acknowledges, the submission of a certificate of
necessity is a recommendation, not a requirement under the Act or Bureau
regulations. The Hearing Officer did not err in concluding that Provider submitted
all of the documentation required under the law.
             Moreover, if Insurer believed that the treatment was not causally related
to Claimant’s work injury, it could have filed a petition to review medical treatment.
See Rogele, Inc. v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Hall), 198 A.3d 1195,
1200 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018). In that case, we explained:
             [A]n employer is only liable to pay for a claimant’s
             medical expenses that arise from and are caused by a
             work-related injury. . . . Although the burden is initially on
             the claimant to establish that the injury is work-related,
             once the employer acknowledges liability for the injury,
             the claimant is not required to continually establish that
             medical treatment of that compensable injury is causally
             related because the injury for which the claimant is
             treating has already been established. . . . Accordingly,
             thereafter, the employer has the burden of proving that a
             medical expense is unreasonable, unnecessary, or is not
             related to the accepted work injury.

Id. (quotations and citations omitted). We further explained that a petition to review
medical treatment, filed directly with a WCJ, is the appropriate method to challenge
the causal connection between medical treatment and the work injury. Id.; Mercy
Douglas Corp. v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Davis), 713 A.2d 722, 725
(Pa. Cmwlth. 1998); Bloom v. Workmen’s Compensation Appeal Board (Keystone
Pretzel Bakery), 677 A.2d 1314, 1318 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1996).




                                           8
              Insurer next argues that the Hearing Officer erred in concluding that
Insurer should have incurred the expense of obtaining utilization review for the
treatment at issue. Insurer also contends that utilization review would have been
premature in this instance because, in the absence of documentation establishing a
relationship between the scooter and the work injury, causation and liability
remained at issue.
              However, Insurer’s challenge to the reasonableness and necessity of Dr.
Abdel’s treatment is not properly raised as a defense in the fee review process.
Workers’ Compensation Security Fund v. Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee
Review Hearing Office (Scomed Supply, Inc.), 195 A.3d 332, 334 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2018). The fee review process is intended to resolve disputes concerning the amount
or timeliness of payment for bills submitted by a provider. Section 306(f.1)(5) of the
Act, 77 P.S. §531(5).         The process is tolled if the insurer challenges the
reasonableness and necessity of treatment through the UR process, and it
presupposes that liability has been established. 195 A.3d at 334. Simply, the fee
review process “is not designed to encompass . . . an inquiry into the insurer’s
reasons for denying liability.” Id.
              The UR process is the sole means for determining if treatment is
reasonable and necessary, Zuver v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board
(Browning Ferris Industries of PA, Inc.), 755 A.2d 112, 114 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2000),
and it is well settled that a UR request is provider-specific. Section 306(f.1)(6) of
the Act, 77 P.S. §531(6); MV Transportation v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal
Board (Harrington), 990 A.2d 118 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010);9 Schenck v. Workers’

       9
         In MV Transportation, the employer filed a UR request seeking review of the claimant’s
physical therapy treatment rendered by Frank Shenko, LPT, and all passive and active physical


                                              9
Compensation Appeal Board (Ford Electronics), 937 A.2d 1156 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2007);10 Bucks County.11 The Hearing Officer correctly concluded that Insurer’s


therapy rendered by all providers at the same or different locations than Shenko. The UR reviewer
determined that the physical therapy treatment provided by Shenko was not reasonable and
necessary, that the UR was limited to the treatment provided by Shenko, and that any other
provider’s treatment would not be considered because the employer did not properly request UR
of any other provider. The WCJ upheld the UR determination and the Board affirmed.
        On appeal to this Court, the employer argued that it should not have to file a separate UR
request for each physical therapist operating under the supervision of one physician. Upon review,
we determined that the Board erred by relying upon Bucks County and Schenck in affirming the
WCJ’s decision because those cases dealt with treatment rendered by physicians, not physical
therapists. We concluded that, unlike physicians, physical therapists do not have the power to act
independently, but must act under a physician’s supervision. Thus, we held that an employer
seeking UR of a claimant’s entire course of physical therapy that is prescribed by one physician
must name the physician prescribing physical therapy and the facility where the claimant receives
that therapy. MV Transportation, 990 A.2d at 122.

       10
          In Schenck, the claimant originally received treatment for a work-related injury from Dr.
Dennis Zaslow, an orthopedic surgeon, from 1994 to 1997. Dr. Zaslow’s treatment was later
deemed to be unreasonable and unnecessary. Seven years later, the claimant returned to the same
medical office and received pain medication from Dr. Lance Yarus because Dr. Zaslow was no
longer located there. The employer refused to pay the medical bills incurred as a result of the
claimant’s treatment with Dr. Yarus because a prior UR determined that similar treatment rendered
by Dr. Zaslow was unreasonable and unnecessary. Relying on Bucks County, we agreed with the
claimant that a UR determination is specific to the provider whose treatment was reviewed. Thus,
we held that “an employer may not rely [upon] a UR determination [regarding] the reasonableness
and necessity of treatment rendered by a specific provider to justify nonpayment of medical bills
for similar treatment rendered by a different provider.” Schenck, 937 A.2d at 1157.

       11
          In Bucks County, the employer filed a UR request seeking review of treatment rendered
by Daniel Files, D.O., “and all other providers under the same license & specialty.” 918 A.2d at
151. However, the UR reviewer stated in his report that he reviewed the treatment provided by
Dr. Thomas Mercora, a physician associated with Dr. Files’ medical practice. Because the UR
sought review of Dr. Files’ treatment, and no evidence was submitted regarding such treatment,
the WCJ found that the UR report was invalid and the Board agreed. On appeal to this Court, the
employer argued that an employer/carrier should be permitted to request a UR of multiple health
care providers in one request form. Thus, the issue before this Court was whether a UR report is
valid where the report discusses the treatment provided by a physician not identified in the UR
request form but associated with the same medical practice as the identified provider. We


                                               10
challenge to the reasonableness and necessity of Dr. Abdel’s treatment must be
brought through a UR proceeding that specifically addresses Dr. Abdel’s treatment.
                In sum, Insurer had alternative remedies that it chose not to pursue.
Insurer did not question the reasonableness and necessity of Dr. Abdel’s treatment
by filing for utilization review of his treatment, nor did it challenge the causal
relationship of the treatment to the work injury by filing a petition to review medical
treatment. The matter before us involves the fee review process, which is intended
to resolve disputes concerning the amount or timeliness of payment. We discern no
error in the Hearing Officer’s decision.
                Accordingly, we affirm.12




                                                MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge




concluded that the language of 34 Pa. Code §127.452(d), stating that “the provider under review
shall be the provider who rendered the treatment,” was unambiguous and that legislative
amendment was necessary to permit a UR review of all of a claimant’s providers “regardless of
which provider was identified by [the] [e]mployer,” and we affirmed the Board’s order. Bucks
County, 918 A.2d at 154 (emphasis in original).

        12
            Insurer raises two additional arguments on appeal, that (1) the Hearing Officer’s finding
that the scooter was dispensed on March 4, 2016 is not supported by substantial evidence, and (2)
the Hearing Officer erred in failing to consider Provider’s allegedly improper conduct. The first
issue is irrelevant to our analysis, and the second is not properly raised in the course of a fee dispute
proceeding.
                                                  11
         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA


State Workers' Insurance Fund,          :
                                        :
                        Petitioner      :
                                        :
                  v.                    : No. 36 C.D. 2018
                                        :
Bureau of Workers' Compensation         :
Fee Review Hearing Office               :
(Harburg Medical Sales Co., Inc.        :
and Sofia Lam, MD),                     :
                                        :
                        Respondents     :


                                     ORDER


            AND NOW, this 19th day of August, 2019, the order of the Bureau of
Workers’ Compensation, Fee Review Hearing Office is AFFIRMED.




                                      __________________________________
                                      MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
