Burke, A. v. Independence Blue Cross, Aplt. , 171 A.3d 252 ( 2017 )


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  •                                     [J-18-2017]
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    EASTERN DISTRICT
    SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.
    ANTHONY BURKE, BY HIS PARENT                 :   No. 23 EAP 2016
    AND NATURAL GUARDIAN, JOHN                   :
    BURKE,                                       :   Appeal from the Judgment of Superior
    :   Court entered on 11/13/15 at No. 2299
    Appellee                 :   EDA 2011, affirming and remanding the
    :   order entered on 7/19/11 in the Court of
    :   Common Pleas, Philadelphia County,
    v.                            :   Civil Division at No. 2226 February
    :   Term 2010
    :
    INDEPENDENCE BLUE CROSS,                     :
    :   ARGUED: March 8, 2017
    Appellant
    OPINION
    CHIEF JUSTICE SAYLOR                                   DECIDED: October 5, 2017
    The questions presented concern whether a law requiring private insurance
    companies to provide coverage for treatment of autism spectrum disorders invalidates
    express, contractual place-of-services exclusions pertaining to the delivery of such
    services in schools.
    Among other modifications to the Insurance Company Law of 1921, 1 Act 62 of
    2008 amended this statutory regime to require that certain group health insurance
    policies provide coverage for the “treatment of autism-spectrum disorders,” subject to an
    1
    Act of May 17, 1921, P.L. 682, No. 284 (as amended 40 P.S. §§341 - 991.2610).
    initial $36,000 maximum benefit annually.2 Per this amendment -- denominated by the
    Insurance Department as the “Autism Coverage Law” -- relevant treatment is defined to
    include “medically necessary pharmacy care, psychiatric care, psychological care,
    rehabilitative care and therapeutic care” prescribed and provided in accordance with Act
    62. 40 P.S. §764h(f)(14).
    The Law specifically recognizes therapy or treatment in the nature of “applied
    behavioral analysis,” or “ABA,” which is defined as:
    the design, implementation and evaluation of environmental
    modifications, using behavioral stimuli and consequences, to
    produce socially significant improvement in human behavior
    or to prevent loss of attained skill or function, including the
    use of direct observation, measurement and functional
    analysis of the relations between environment and behavior.
    Id. §764h(f)(1). Also of particular relevance to this appeal, the statute allows for some
    policy-based restrictions upon coverage, as follows:
    Coverage under this section shall be subject to copayment,
    deductible and coinsurance provisions and any other general
    exclusions or limitations of a health insurance policy or
    government program to the same extent as other medical
    services covered by the policy or program are subject to
    these provisions.
    Id. §764h(c) (emphasis added).
    In April 2009, the Insurance Department published a notice offering guidance
    concerning the “general exclusions or limitations” language quoted above. There, the
    Department took the position that the Law forbids policy exclusions that eliminate
    coverage for the types of treatment for autism spectrum disorders specifically delineated
    in the statute, such as ABA.       According to the Department, the statutory terms
    2
    Act of July 9, 2008, P.L. 885, No. 62, §3 (codified as 40 P.S. §764h) (the “Autism
    Coverage Law” or the “Law”).
    [J-18-2017] - 2
    sanctioning general exclusions pertained only to services or treatments for autism
    spectrum disorders that were not particularized in the enactment. By way of example,
    the Department explained, “if a policy generally excludes acupuncture treatment, and an
    autism provider believes that acupuncture may provide some benefit to his autism
    patient, that particular treatment may nonetheless be excluded from the mandated
    coverage.” Pa. Ins. Dep’t, Autism Coverage; Notice 2009-03, 
    39 Pa. Bull. 1927
     (Apr.
    11, 2009).
    Anthony Burke is a child who has been diagnosed with an autism-spectrum
    disorder. As pertinent here, throughout the first six months of 2010, Anthony and his
    family were covered by a group health insurance policy (the “Policy”) with Appellant,
    Independence Blue Cross (“Insurer”),3 maintained through the employer of John Burke,
    Anthony’s father.4 Initially, Anthony received ABA treatment at home.
    In August 2009, before the Autism Coverage Law became effective relative to the
    Burkes’ coverage, the family requested benefits, under the Policy, for ABA services to
    be provided at the parochial elementary school attended by Anthony. Insurer, however,
    denied coverage through an administrator of mental health benefits, on account of an
    express place-of-services exclusion in the Policy delineating that services would not be
    covered if the care was provided in certain locations, including schools.5         After
    3
    On July 1, 2010, the health plan converted to a different type of policy, such that the
    parties have agreed that Insurer cannot be accountable for coverage outside the time
    window from January 1, 2010, through July 1, 2010.
    4
    Throughout this opinion, references to Mr. Burke are to his representational capacity,
    on Anthony’s behalf.
    5
    Specifically, the exclusion prescribes:
    Except as specifically provided in this contract, no benefits
    will be provided for services, supplies or charges:
    (continued…)
    [J-18-2017] - 3
    unsuccessful administrative appeals to Insurer, the Burkes requested an independent
    external review by an agency appointed by the Department of Insurance, see 40 P.S.
    §764h(k)(1), which upheld the denial.
    On Anthony’s behalf, Mr. Burke filed in the common pleas court a complaint
    couched in the nature of a statutory appeal, see id. §764h(k)(2), and as a plea for
    declaratory and injunctive relief. He averred that Anthony had received a physician’s
    diagnosis of Pervasive Development Disorder – Not Otherwise Specified, a form of
    autism spectrum disorder. Additionally, it was alleged that the doctor had prescribed
    ABA, including “Therapeutic Staff Support,” entailing the use of a “shadow,” i.e., an
    individual who accompanies the patient throughout his daily routine to assist in
    maintaining focus.
    In a motion for judgment on the pleadings, Mr. Burke argued that the place-of-
    services exclusion in the Policy was nullified, as it pertained to in-school services, by the
    Autism Coverage Law. In this regard, Mr. Burke relied upon the express requirement
    that coverage for ABA must be afforded.          See, e.g., Motion for Judgment on the
    Pleadings at 12-13 (“Defendant contends that the general exclusion of services in
    school allows them to circumvent the intent of Act 62 and exclude ABA coverage.”).
    With regard to the terms of the Law allowing for exclusions, Mr. Burke took the position
    that the language was ambiguous, because an interpretation allowing any exclusion,
    including, for example, one for ABA services, would undermine the effect of the statute.
    (…continued)
    •   For care in a nursing home, home for the aged,
    convalescent home, school, institution for retarded children,
    custodial care in a skilled nursing facility.
    Undated Stipulation submitted in Burke ex rel. Burke v. Indep. Blue Cross, No. 2226,
    Feb. Term 2010 (C.P. Phila.) (emphasis added).
    [J-18-2017] - 4
    Accordingly, Mr. Burke urged the court to apply principles of statutory construction.
    See, e.g., Norfolk S. Ry. Co. v. PUC, 
    621 Pa. 312
    , 328, 
    77 A.3d 619
    , 629 (2013)
    (“Where ambiguities exist, [courts] employ principles of statutory construction[.]”).
    In terms of the language and purposes of the Autism Coverage Law, Mr. Burke
    stressed that the statute defines ABA to encompass the “evaluation of environmental
    modifications,” subsuming the use of “direct observation” and analysis of the relations
    between “environment” and behavior.            40 P.S. §764h(f)(1) (emphasis added).
    According to Mr. Burke, absent the ability of a services provider to employ direct
    observation and analysis, and to design and implement environmental modifications
    that are effective in the school environment, ABA therapy is thwarted.6 Indeed, Mr.
    Burke posited that “to eliminate coverage of ABA in school is to eliminate an entire
    category of ABA.” Plaintiff’s Brief at 21.
    Pursuing another avenue of statutory construction, Mr. Burke further highlighted
    the guidance provided by the Insurance Department.            See 1 Pa.C.S. §1921(c)(8)
    (prescribing for consideration of legislative and administrative interpretations of
    ambiguous statutes). He argued:
    Notice 2009-03 makes clear, that under Act 62, a policy
    exclusion cannot legally apply to the provision of the
    services specified in the statute, including Applied
    Behavioral Analysis.      The distinctions drawn by the
    Insurance Department in Notice 2009-03 would have no
    meaning if [Insurer] were permitted to apply a limitation that
    6
    See Plaintiff’s Brief dated Feb. 15, 2011, in Burke, 2226, Feb. Term 2010 [hereinafter
    “Plaintiff’s Brief”], at 21 (“[T]he location or setting where ABA therapy takes place is, by
    definition, an inherent component of ABA.”); id. (“ABA provided at home . . . does not,
    by definition, address behavioral issues at school.”); id. (“Given the amount of time
    children spend in school, denying coverage for ABA in school creates an exclusion that
    would deny school aged children the very treatment services Act 62 was enacted to
    provide.”).
    [J-18-2017] - 5
    effectively prevented [Anthony] from receiving mandated
    treatment in the very environment for which it has been
    prescribed.
    Memorandum of Law in Support of Plaintiff’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings filed
    June 22, 2010, in Burke, No. 2226, Feb. Term 2010, at 14.7 In this vein, Mr. Burke
    urged that that agency’s interpretation should be afforded great deference. See, e.g.,
    id. at 13.
    Additionally, Mr. Burke pointed to supportive letters of four legislators, including
    the primary sponsor of the Law, which had been entered into the record.           He also
    invoked the principle of statutory construction sanctioning the presumption that “the
    General Assembly intends to favor the public interest as against any private interest.” 1
    Pa.C.S. §1922(5). In this regard, Mr. Burke asserted that the public interest espoused
    by the Law is the provision for access to treatment for children and youth with autism
    spectrum disorders via mandatory insurance coverage.
    Accounting for Insurer’s position that Anthony was entitled to auxiliary services,
    including ABA, from the School District of Philadelphia, Mr. Burke denied this assertion
    and contended that, in any event, any such entitlement would not relieve Insurer of its
    coverage responsibility under the Autism Coverage Law. In this line of argument, Mr.
    Burke pointed to a prescription, in subsection (d.1) of the enactment, specifying that:
    This section shall not be construed as requiring coverage by
    insurers of any service based solely on its inclusion in an
    individualized education program. Consistent with Federal
    or State law and upon consent of the parent or guardian of
    7
    The Insurance Department submitted an amicus brief in the litigation before the
    common pleas court, consistent with its notice. See Memorandum of Amicus Curiae
    Pa. Ins. Dep’t & Pa. Ins. Comm’r dated June 22, 2010, in Burke, No. 2226, Feb. Term
    2010, at 9 (advocating that “[a] general exclusion may not be applied in a way that
    would eviscerate a mandate” in the Autism Coverage Law for treatment of autism
    spectrum disorders).
    [J-18-2017] - 6
    the covered individual, the treatment of autism spectrum
    disorders may be coordinated with any service included in
    an individualized education program. Coverage for the
    treatment of autism spectrum disorders shall not be
    contingent upon a coordination of services with an
    individualized education program.
    40 P.S. §764h(d.1).
    Mr. Burke urged that subsection (d.1) should be understood to reflect the
    General Assembly’s intention that treatment services like ABA would be provided for,
    and covered, in school. See, e.g., Plaintiff’s Brief at 15 (“The plain language of Act 62
    makes it clear that an insurer is not exempt from its obligation to cover mandated autism
    treatment services like ABA because these services may be available to the covered
    individual through his individualized education program.”).        Indeed, he posited that
    subsection (d.1) would lack any purpose if the Legislature did not intend insurers to
    cover treatment services such as ABA in school. See id. at 22.
    In its response, Insurer relied centrally upon the Autism Coverage Law’s explicit
    allowance for “any other general exclusions.” 40 P.S. §764h(c). The company took the
    position that Mr. Burke’s and the Insurance Department’s various constructions of the
    statute were manifestly contrary to this provision’s plain language.
    Insurer explained that place-of-services exclusions are general in nature, in that
    they are not limited to treatment for autism or any other specific condition, but rather,
    categorically preclude benefits relating to all forms of services in particular locations.
    On the other hand, Insurer stressed, the Law’s domain is limited to specified types of
    services and their associated scope. Particularly given that the statute does not identify
    where services are to be provided, Insurer maintained that it was free to exclude
    locations for legitimate business reasons, such as the disadvantages resulting from an
    insurer’s inability to monitor care rendered in school settings.
    [J-18-2017] - 7
    Insurer explained, however, that it had no quarrel with the proposition that “a
    general exclusion cannot preclude coverage for autism services mandated by the
    statute.” Memorandum of Law of Defendant dated March 1, 2011, in Burke, No. 0226,
    Feb. Term 2010 [hereinafter “Defendant’s Memorandum”], at 10 n.16.                Insurer
    elaborated as follows:
    A common example of how the mandate would apply is that
    when a policy does not include prescription drug benefits, as
    many policies do not, the autism mandate would require that
    autism-related      prescription  drugs       be    covered
    notwithstanding that the policy did not cover any other
    prescription drugs.
    Id. Thus, Insurer appeared to concede that the statute did not allow for any and all
    general exclusions. Rather, at least in this discrete passage of its presentation, Insurer
    recognized that implementation of some general exclusions could intrude impermissibly
    upon the essential statutory coverage mandate.
    Apparently attempting to demonstrate that the needs of autistic schoolchildren
    are otherwise met, Insurer continued with an extensive presentation concerning the
    federal government’s involvement in the provision of school-based services, primarily
    under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 
    20 U.S.C. §§1400
     – 1487. See,
    e.g., Memorandum of Law of Defendant dated July 12, 2010, in Burke, No. 0226, Feb.
    Term 2010, at 8 (“[T]he primary mandate for the provision of autism-related services lies
    with the IDEA and the School District.”); Defendant’s Memorandum at 16 (positing that
    the “IDEA imposes upon state and local educational agencies the duty to find disabled
    children in private schools, and provide them with necessary services, even if such
    services must be provided at religious schools”). With respect to subsection (d.1) of the
    Autism Coverage Law, Insurer portrayed this as a coordination-of-benefits provision
    between health plans and individual education plans. See id.; see also id. at 15 (“[T]he
    [J-18-2017] - 8
    autism mandate is only one portion of a more complete picture of services to which
    plaintiff is entitled.”); id. at 18 (stating that the Autism Coverage Law is designed to
    “supplement school-based and school-funded services mandated pursuant to IDEA”).8
    In this regard, Insurer acknowledged its own responsibility for coverage outside the
    school setting. See id. at 9; see also id. at 11 (“Subject to its general exclusion, [the
    Policy] covers [autism-related] services in all locations except in a school setting.”).
    Delving into the purposes of the enactment, Insurer explained that, in public
    hearings, the Secretary of Public Welfare “provided a clear understanding not only of
    the circumstances under which the statute was enacted, but also the mischief to be
    remedied, and the object to be attained.” Id. at 11 (alluding to 1 Pa.C.S. §1921(c)).
    Insurer noted that the Secretary had testified that most families who are provided
    autism-based services are covered by private health insurance, but that their insurance
    did not cover such care.       As a result, “families of children with autism [had] no
    alternative but to enroll their child in medical assistance.” Id., Ex. 2, at 10 (reflecting a
    transcription of the video-recorded testimony of the Secretary).
    Insurer did not read the Insurance Department’s notice as displacing place-of-
    services exclusions.      In any event, it explained that an administrative agency’s
    interpretation of a statute carries little weight when that interpretation is inconsistent with
    the statute itself. See, e.g., Office of Admin. v. PLRB, 
    591 Pa. 176
    , 190 n.11, 
    916 A.2d 541
    , 549 n.11 (2007). With respect to the presumption that the public interest is to be
    favored over any private ones, Insurer asserted that the analysis “is not as simple as the
    private financial interest of [Insurer] versus that of providing services to autistic
    children,” since Insurer is a nonprofit corporation. Defendant’s Memorandum at 14.
    8
    Notably, Insurer has not tendered its arguments pertaining to the IDEA to this Court in
    the present briefing.
    [J-18-2017] - 9
    The common pleas court dismissed the motion for judgment on the pleadings
    and treated the complaint as a statutory appeal, to be decided on the record and the
    briefs, supplemented by a stipulation per which Mr. Burke and Insurer agreed that: “The
    only issue before this court going forward is whether or not Act 62 voids the ‘place of
    service’ exclusion in the Independence Blue Cross policy for the period of January 1,
    2010 through July 1, 2010.”9 The court then sustained the appeal and reversed the
    external review organization’s approval of Insurer’s denial of coverage. See Burke ex
    rel. Burke v. Indep. Blue Cross, No. 2226, Feb. Term 2010, slip op. at 10, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *6 (C.P. Phila. July 19, 2011).
    In its opinion, the common pleas court adopted Mr. Burke’s position that,
    because ABA therapy is a treatment which specifically must be provided per the Autism
    Coverage Law, coverage simply cannot be subject to contractual exclusion. Initially, the
    court determined that Section 764h(c) is ambiguous, explaining:
    While [Section 764h(c)] does facially state that insurers may
    opt not to provide coverage pursuant to a “general
    exclusion,” § 764[h](a) of the same law states that insurers
    must cover ABA services. Because a facial reading of these
    two provisions would cause them to conflict with one
    another, there is an ambiguity in the Statute as a whole even
    though there may not be one inherent in the text of § 764h(c)
    when viewed in isolation. . . . Beyond the tension between
    these two provisions, the very phrase “general exclusions” is
    susceptible enough to interpretation that it creates some
    ambiguity in and of itself.
    Id. at 4, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *2. Accordingly, the court referenced rules of statutory
    construction, chiefly, that “[t]he object of all interpretation and construction of statutes is
    to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the General Assembly.”            
    Id.
     (quoting 1
    9
    This stipulation initially was omitted from the certified record but was later added via a
    joint motion to supplement. See Pa.R.A.P. 1926(b).
    [J-18-2017] - 10
    Pa.C.S. §1921(a)); see also id. at 8, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *4 (indicating that Mr.
    Burke’s construction “best comports with the normal canons of statutory construction,
    avoids the possible neutering of the Act, and gives weight to the Insurance
    Department’s interpretation”).
    Consonant with the views of Mr. Burke and the Insurance Department, the
    county court reasoned that, because the statutory definition of ABA centers on
    environmental considerations, the place of services -- at least as it pertains to a venue
    where a patient spends a substantial amount of his or her waking hours -- cannot be
    decoupled from the services themselves.       See id. at 9, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *5
    (“[E]ven though [Anthony] is covered for ABA outside of the school setting, [Insurer’s]
    interpretation would render meaningless the mandate that insurance carriers cover ‘the
    treatment of autism spectrum disorders.’” (quoting 40 P.S. §764h(a)). The court further
    pronounced that: “The delivery of ABA services in a school environment has been
    proven effective as a treatment for autism spectrum disorder[s].” Id.
    In terms of the IDEA, the court found no compelling reason to believe that the
    General Assembly designed the Autism Coverage Law to require private-insurance
    coverage for treatment only where it was previously unavailable. In support, the court
    posited that legislatures “commonly create overlapping statutes as a way to ensure
    some particular result.” Id. at 5, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *3; see also 
    id.
     (indicating that
    “[a] rule of statutory construction that presumed that every statutory scheme was sole
    lord and sovereign over the facts it was designed to address would require drastic
    reimagining of, for example, the Rehabilitation Act and the Americans with Disabilities
    [J-18-2017] - 11
    Act, or of the Clean Water Act; or the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act and the
    Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980.”).10
    Insurer appealed to the Superior Court.           After an initial round of review
    concerning jurisdiction,11 the Superior Court affirmed in a divided opinion and remanded
    for a determination of any damages. See Burke ex rel. Burke v. Indep. Blue Cross, 
    128 A.3d 223
    , 234 (Pa. Super. 2015). Centrally, the majority agreed with the common pleas
    court’s assessment that the Law requires Insurer to extend coverage for ABA services
    delivered in school, despite the general exclusion in the Policy. See 
    id.
    At the outset of its opinion, the majority addressed Insurer’s contention that the
    appeal was “moot,” because Mr. Burke did not allege that any ABA services had, in fact,
    been provided to Anthony at his parochial school, and he did not seek any damages for
    any expenses that they may have incurred for ABA services after Insurer denied his
    request for coverage. The majority rejected these contentions based upon exceptions
    to the mootness doctrine. See Burke, 128 A.3d at 227-28.12 Further, the majority
    10
    In terms of the Insurance Department’s position, the common pleas court rejected a
    required-deference approach but nevertheless decided the case in a manner that was
    consistent with core assertions by the agency. See id. at 8, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *4.
    11
    The Superior Court initially concluded that the common pleas court lacked subject
    matter jurisdiction over the case; however, this Court reversed and remanded for
    consideration of the appeal’s merits. See Burke ex rel. Burke v. Indep. Blue Cross, 
    628 Pa. 147
    , 162, 
    103 A.3d 1267
    , 1276 (2014). Specifically, we determined that, although a
    statutory appeal was unavailable to Mr. Burke, the matter should have been treated as
    in the nature of a declaratory judgment proceeding. See id. at 159-61, 103 A.3d at
    1274-75.
    12
    In its petition for allowance of appeal, Insurer attempted to present a claim that the
    Superior Court’s decision was purely advisory, and a nullity, on account of Mr. Burke’s
    purported failure to request coverage after the Autism Coverage Law became effective.
    This Court, however, specifically declined to accept review of the question. After oral
    argument before this Court, Insurer then filed an application for leave to file a post-
    (continued…)
    [J-18-2017] - 12
    tailored its remand directive to incorporate a requirement for the common pleas court to
    determine “whether any services were actually provided to [Anthony] during the
    stipulated time period and what, if anything, he had to pay out-of-pocket for services
    rendered.” Id. at 229.
    Proceeding to the sole stipulated issue, the majority agreed with the common
    pleas court’s finding of an inherent ambiguity or conflict between the Law’s central
    requirement of coverage for treatment of autism spectrum disorders, including ABA, and
    its allowance for general exclusions. Like the county court, the majority found that
    implementation of in-school exclusions would undermine the statute’s core mandate.
    See id. at 233 (“By including ABA services among a specific list of treatments that
    insurance carriers must cover, we agree with the trial court that the legislature did not
    intend for ABA services to be excluded from coverage for a particular child because of
    where those services would be provided.”). With reference to the Department’s parallel
    (…continued)
    submission communication, again attempting to raise this concern (among several
    others).
    We note that all of the conditions underlying the assertions of mootness and
    abstractness being presented by Insurer existed at the time that the parties entered
    their stipulation that: “The only issue before this court going forward is whether or not
    Act 62 voids the ‘place of service’ exclusion in the Independence Blue Cross policy for
    the period of January 1, 2010 through July 1, 2010.” From our point of view, this
    agreement diminishes Insurer’s standing to advance, during the ensuing appellate
    process, previously-available supplementary claims.
    We appreciate both that Insurer has retained appellate counsel and that the types of
    concerns that it wishes to raise can be considered by this Court of its own accord.
    Nevertheless, in light of the parties’ stipulation -- as well as the public importance of
    deciding the issue before us, see Burke, 628 Pa. at 155, 103 A.3d at 1271-72 -- we are
    disinclined to do so.
    [J-18-2017] - 13
    assessment, the majority afforded this “some weight” and indicated that the
    interpretation was supported by the rules of statutory construction. Id.13
    Former Justice, now Senior Judge Fitzgerald authored a dissenting opinion.
    While commenting that the provision of insurance coverage for autism-related services
    is a laudable goal, he discerned no statutory basis to support the majority’s
    construction.   See Burke, 128 A.3d at 234 (Fitzgerald, S.J., dissenting) (“If our
    Legislature intended for private health insurers to cover ABA services provided in
    schools, then it could have explicitly excluded such services from the limiting provision
    at 40 P.S. §764h(c).”).
    In the present briefing to this Court, Insurer maintains its central position that the
    plain language of the Autism Coverage Law permits it to deny coverage for services in a
    school setting pursuant to the place-of-services exclusion in the Policy. See, e.g., Brief
    for Appellant at 11 (“The Superior Court Majority clearly ignored the unambiguous
    language of Act 62 when it eliminated, in wholesale fashion, an exception in Act 62 that
    permitted insurers to apply general exclusions in their policies to services covered by
    Act 62.”). The company criticizes the intermediate court’s holding, along with that of the
    county court, for ignoring plain statutory terms “under the pretext of pursuing [the
    statute’s] purpose.” Id.; see also id. at 13, 16 (charging that the appellate-court majority
    invaded the province of the Legislature and acted by “judicial fiat”). In this regard,
    Insurer stresses that all provisions of a statute must be given effect. See, e.g., id. at 23
    (“If the General Assembly intended the specified services to be covered irrespective of
    13
    As to the IDEA, the majority indicated that the federal statute could not be read to
    require school districts to provide services to disabled children who have enrolled
    voluntarily in private schools. See id. at 233-34 (collecting cases). Again, Insurer has
    not carried its arguments concerning the IDEA into its presentations to this Court;
    therefore, we decline to afford further consideration to the company’s previous
    arguments on this point.
    [J-18-2017] - 14
    any exclusion or limitation in the policy, as the Department interprets the Act, the
    general exclusions language would be mere surplusage, which is impermissible under
    statutory construction principles.” (citing, inter alia, 1 Pa.C.S. §§1921(a) and (b)).
    Insurer additionally highlights that neither courts nor administrative agencies are at
    liberty to deviate from explicit terms of a statute in pursuit of some perceived contrary
    purpose. See, e.g., id. at 20 (citing Pa. Sch. Bds. Ass’n, Inc. v. PSERB, 
    580 Pa. 610
    ,
    623, 
    863 A.2d 432
    , 440 (2004)).
    For his part, Mr. Burke continues to advance his position that there is an
    essential conflict between the statutory mandate requiring insurers to afford coverage
    for ABA and an exclusion of coverage for in-school services. According to Mr. Burke,
    Insurer’s reading isolates the language pertaining to exclusions from the remainder of
    the Law, contrary to this Court’s decisions. See, e.g., A.S. v. PSP, ___ Pa. ___, ___,
    
    143 A.3d 896
    , 906 (2016) (emphasizing the role of context in performing statutory
    construction). Mr. Burke also maintains that ABA is unique among the services defined
    in Act 62 in that the “environment” in which the service takes place is an integral part of
    the service, explaining that:
    [Insurer’s] coverage of ABA in the home does not save [the]
    exclusion of ABA in the environment of school. The home
    environment is very different than school. Anthony Burke’s
    home environment includes Anthony’s parents and brother
    while the school environment includes other students and
    teachers. Interacting appropriately with adults and peers
    who are not family presents many different challenges than
    interacting with immediate family members. The school
    environment also includes stressors from academic activities
    which are the central focus of school but not typically of
    home. Different behavioral expectations may well exist
    between school and home.
    [J-18-2017] - 15
    Brief for Appellee at 10.14 It is Mr. Burke’s contention that excluding coverage of ABA in
    school would “render hollow” Act 62’s mandate of coverage of ABA. Brief for Appellee
    at 8 (quoting Ins. Fed’n of Pa., Inc. v. Com. Ins. Dep’t, 
    601 Pa. 20
    , 36, 
    970 A.2d 1108
    ,
    1118 (2009)).15 The Insurance Department has submitted a supportive amicus brief.
    Upon review, we agree with Mr. Burke that the Autism Coverage Law is
    materially ambiguous in relevant aspects.       Initially, the statute indicates that the
    mandatory coverage is subject to “copayment,” “deductible,” and “coinsurance”
    provisions and “any other” general exclusions or limitations.         40 P.S. §764h(c)
    (emphasis added). Ordinarily, one would expect the substance of a catchall provision
    opening with the term “any other” to connote items of a similar class or character as
    preceding ones. Accord 1 Pa.C.S. §1903(b) (reflecting the principle of ejusdem generis,
    i.e., that “[g]eneral words shall be construed to take their meanings and be restricted by
    preceding particular words”).16 “Exclusions,” however, are of a substantially different
    14
    Community Behavioral Health – a non-profit corporation that contracts with the City of
    Philadelphia to manage the delivery of certain behavioral health services – has filed an
    amicus brief on the Burkes’ behalf, substantially elaborating upon their position in the
    above respects. See, e.g., Brief for Amicus Cmty. Behavioral Health at 3 (contending
    that Insurer’s “antiquated exclusion policy literally cripples therapists’ use of peer
    integration as a treatment opportunity in a most opportune environment”).
    15
    Mr. Burke supplements the arguments that he presented to the common pleas and
    intermediate courts with a number of other contentions that we find it unnecessary to
    address here.
    16
    In response to the dissent, we are not applying the principle of ejusdem generis at
    this juncture, but rather, are addressing the statute’s use of the word “other” and
    commenting on the attendant awkwardness, which exacerbates the material ambiguity
    discussed below. The contrary approach of simply disregarding the associating term
    “other,” as the dissent apparently would do, see Dissenting Opinion, slip op. at 4 n.3, is
    in tension with the axiom that all words are to be given effect if possible. See 1 Pa.C.S.
    §1921(a); Northwood Constr. Co. v. Twp. of Upper Moreland, 
    579 Pa. 463
    , 478 n.11,
    (continued…)
    [J-18-2017] - 16
    nature from copayments, deductibles, and coinsurance, given, for example, that
    exclusions can operate to foreclose coverage for entire categories of risk and treatment
    (contrasting with merely spreading a portion of treatment costs to others). In other
    words, conceptually, it is disharmonious to envision copayments, deductibles, and
    coinsurance as “exclusions,” such that there could be “other general exclusions” along
    the lines of such offsets.17
    Moreover, as previously related, Insurer acknowledged in the common pleas
    court that insurers simply cannot invoke general exclusions to deny coverage for an
    entire category of treatment for which coverage is otherwise specifically required by the
    Autism Coverage Law. See Defendant’s Memorandum at 10 n.16 (“[W]hen a policy
    does not include prescription drug benefits, as many policies do not, the autism
    mandate     would    require   that   autism-related     prescription   drugs   be   covered
    notwithstanding that the policy did not cover any other prescription drugs.”). In the
    context of this materially ambiguous statute, therefore, there is some unstated line
    (…continued)
    
    856 A.2d 789
    , 799 n.11 (2004) (explaining that the Court is “not at liberty to ignore”
    statutory terms).
    17
    To comport more closely with Insurer’s position, the statute would be better written as
    follows:
    Coverage under this section shall be subject to copayment,
    deductible and coinsurance provisions, and any other
    general exclusions, or any other general limitations of a
    health insurance policy . . .
    Such formulation would widen the scope of the initially-enumerated items and
    encompass a subsequent catchall term broad enough to subsume those foregoing
    items.
    [J-18-2017] - 17
    between permissible and impermissible general exclusions that must be discerned
    through the application of principles of statutory construction.18
    The Insurance Department’s construction of the statute in its notice seeks to
    resolve this ambiguity by per se forbidding exclusions foreclosing coverage pertaining to
    the categories of care specified in the Law (i.e., “medically necessary pharmacy care,
    psychiatric care, psychological care, rehabilitative care and therapeutic care,” 40 P.S.
    §764h(f)(14)). As stated in the notice, however, this construction does not answer the
    question of whether a reasonable place-of-service exclusion would be permissible.19
    Relative to an in-school exclusion, the Department closes this gap in its amicus brief via
    the assertion that application of such an exclusion to in-school services would
    “eviscerate the statutory mandate to cover ABA services.”            Brief for Amici Pa. Ins.
    Comm’r & Pa. Ins. Dep’t at 12.
    With respect to the Insurance Department’s position that the Legislature did not
    intend to permit exclusions that would eviscerate aspects of the coverage for autism
    18
    In this regard, we reject Insurer’s assertions that the Superior Court majority, by
    invoking the tools of statutory construction, acted by “judicial fiat,” under pretext, or
    otherwise improperly. Rather, as in so many other instances, the intermediate court
    was faced with experimental, remedial legislation which does not appear to have
    anticipated that substantial difficulties would arise in the application and, thus, is unclear
    concerning important details.
    The dissent’s categorical approach (which is apparently that all general exclusions are
    permissible, including ones which would obviate pillars of the coverage otherwise
    provided for in the Autism Coverage Law such as pharmacy care), is contrary to
    Insurer’s own argument as noted above and is manifestly inconsistent with the statutory
    scheme of which Section 764h(c) is a part. Accord Burke, 128 A.3d at 233; Burke, No.
    2226, Feb. Term 2010, slip op. at 4, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *2.
    19
    For example, if it is immaterial where ABA treatment is conducted, the Insurance
    Department’s assertion that the services “must be provided” apparently would be
    vindicated via the provision of out-of-school therapy. Pa. Ins. Dep’t, Autism Coverage;
    Notice 2009-03, 39 Pa. Bull. at 1927.
    [J-18-2017] - 18
    treatment services that the Assembly has provided are mandatory, we find this to be
    soundly supported through the application of principles of statutory construction. These
    include our consideration of the occasion and necessity for the statute, the
    circumstances under which it was enacted, the mischief to be remedied, the object to be
    attained, the consequences of the particular interpretation, the contemporaneous
    legislative history, and the administrative interpretation of the statute. See 1 Pa.C.S.
    §1921.
    Plainly, and as recognized by Insurer before the common pleas court, the
    General Assembly sought to aid autistic children and youth and their families -- and to
    alleviate the need for them to resort to governmental medical assistance -- by tasking
    private insurers with shouldering, at least in large measure, the financial burden of
    medically-necessary treatments for the condition.        Accordingly, we agree that the
    Legislature intended to permit only general exclusions that would not substantially
    undermine the mandatory coverage requirement.
    Our determination in this regard is also supported by the ejusdem generis
    principle.   See 1 Pa.C.S. §1903(b).        Again, since copayments, deductions, and
    coinsurance are forms of offset that do not substantially undermine coverage for
    treatment of any particular type, we take the Law’s ambiguous allowance for “other
    general exclusions” to mean not only exclusions that are not targeted to autism-related
    services, but also those of a type which do not defeat the mandatory coverage specified
    in the statute. 40 P.S. §764h(c).20
    20
    We do not regard the present case as an apt opportunity to delve into the various
    degrees of judicial deference afforded to administrative agencies in different settings.
    See, e.g., Nw. Youth Servs., Inc. v. DPW, 
    620 Pa. 140
    , 157-59, 
    66 A.3d 301
    , 311-13
    (2013). Here, we simply observe that our own application of principles of statutory
    construction comports with that of the Insurance Department, as related in its notice.
    (continued…)
    [J-18-2017] - 19
    Finally, we will consider Mr. Burke’s and his amici’s assertion that enforcement of
    the Policy’s exclusion for in-school services would substantially undermine the Law’s
    coverage mandate. Since the statute requires coverage for specified forms of care that
    are “medically necessary,” 40 P.S. §764h(f)(14), the analysis on this point collapses into
    a more conventional assessment of medical necessity serving as a litmus for coverage.
    See, e.g., Tagliati v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 
    720 A.2d 1051
    , 1055-58 (Pa. Super. 1998)
    (considering whether a particular diagnostic procedure was medically necessary so as
    to meet the threshold for mandatory first-party benefits coverage under the financial
    responsibility statute pertaining to motor vehicles). In this regard, the issue further
    devolves to whether provision of ABA therapy in school is medically necessary, or
    whether out-of-school treatment might be sufficient to meet the treatment need.
    It is significant, as Insurer highlights, that the record presented to us is lacking in
    factual support, and the issue of medical necessity is one which is often fact-bound.
    See, e.g., Moure v. Raeuchle, 
    529 Pa. 394
    , 406-07, 
    604 A.2d 1003
    , 1009 (1992)
    (reflecting review of a jury determination subsuming considerations of medical
    (…continued)
    We also find insufficient evidence in the statute to suggest that the Legislature intended
    for private insurance coverage to depend on the unavailability of services funded by
    governmental entities or others, such as those which may be offered in school. Accord
    Burke, No. 2226, Feb. Term 2010, slip op. at 5, 
    2011 WL 10525398
    , at *3 (“There is no
    compelling reason to believe that the General Assembly drafted [the Law] with the
    intention of ensuring autism treatment only in situations in which that treatment was
    previously unavailable.”). Although the statute is also materially ambiguous in this
    regard, the very limited coordination-based provision in the Law suggests that the
    Legislature did not wish to adjust the responsibility of private insurance companies on
    account of services which otherwise might be offered in schools. See 40 P.S.
    §764h(d.1) (“Coverage for the treatment of autism spectrum disorders shall not be
    contingent upon a coordination of services with an individualized education program.”).
    Moreover, one of the main purposes of the Law, as recognized by Insurer, was to
    relieve families of the necessity to rely upon government assistance in assuring care for
    their children. See supra.
    [J-18-2017] - 20
    necessity). See generally Jeffrey R. Sang, First-Party Insurance Coverage for Medically
    Necessary Treatment, 15 AM. JUR. POF 3d 355 (2017) (discussing complexities
    involved in defining and determining medical necessity). Moreover, the conclusion that
    treatment is medically necessary plainly encompasses medical judgment, and this Court
    is circumspect about making appellate-level pronouncements about such matters.
    Nevertheless, as Mr. Burke stresses and the Law explicitly recognizes, ABA is an
    environmentally sensitive form of therapy. Ultimately, we simply do not believe that the
    Legislature intended to permit insurers to exclude coverage in the sensory-laden
    educational environment where children spend large portions of their days, or to require
    families to litigate the issue of medical necessity discretely in individual cases to secure
    such location-specific coverage for the treatment. We also take some guidance from
    the fact that the General Assembly discussed coordination of coverage with individual
    education programs in schools, although we recognize that only a modest amount of
    weight can be allocated to this point.      See 40 P.S. §764h(d.1).21      Additionally, we
    construe the statute liberally, in furtherance of its remedial aims, see 1 Pa.C.S.
    §1928(c), and, again, note that the Insurance Department’s position is in alignment.
    We hold that the Policy’s place-of-services exclusion is ineffective, under the
    Autism Recovery Law, to foreclose coverage for ABA treatment provided at school.
    The order of the Superior Court is affirmed and the matter is remanded, through
    the Superior Court to the common pleas court, for further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion and the intermediate court’s previous remand directive.
    Jurisdiction is relinquished.
    21
    Our reluctance to accord too much weight to the statute’s allusions to such
    coordination is on account of the observation, reflected in Insurer’s presentation, that
    the Legislature could have specifically indicated that coverage for in-school services
    was mandatory, but it did not do so.
    [J-18-2017] - 21
    Justices Baer, Donohue and Dougherty join this opinion.
    Justice Mundy files a dissenting opinion.
    Justice Todd did not participate in the decision of this case.
    Justice Wecht did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
    [J-18-2017] - 22