The Ex Parte Young Exception: A Lifeline for Healthcare Providers Offering Medicare and Medicaid Services

The Ex parte Young Exception: A Lifeline for Healthcare Providers Offering Medicare and Medicaid Services

Healthcare providers participating in the Medicare and Medicaid programs face an intricate web of regulations and enforcement actions.

Disputes with state officials over payment practices, reimbursement rates, or compliance with federal laws can sometimes lead to financial hardship or even threaten the survival of a practice. Fortunately, providers may be able to use the Ex parte Young exception to challenge state actions that may violate federal law. This legal doctrine can be a powerful tool for providers to seek relief in federal court without running afoul of state sovereign immunity. And this exception is underused.

For example, healthcare providers that feel that a state Medicaid program is violating federal standards for reimbursement cannot directly sue the state for damages. However, they can use the Ex parte Young exception, named after a landmark 1908 U.S. Supreme Court case, to sue state officials to correct ongoing violations of federal law.

This doctrine creates a narrow but essential carve-out from the Eleventh Amendment, which generally prohibits federal lawsuits against states.

In the context of Medicare and Medicaid, healthcare providers can use the Ex parte Young exception to seek injunctive relief against state officials when state actions or enforcement of state laws conflict with federal statutes governing these programs.

Key elements of the Ex parte Young doctrine include the following:

  • State officials as defendants: The lawsuit must target state officials responsible for enforcing the disputed law or regulation, rather than the state itself.
  • Ongoing violation: The action must involve an ongoing violation of federal law, rather than a past one.
  • Prospective relief: The relief sought must be prospective, such as an injunction to stop illegal enforcement of a state law, rather than retroactive monetary damages.

Providers facing disputes with state Medicaid agencies or officials often encounter issues like improper reimbursement rates, unlawful audit practices, or state regulations that conflict with federal laws. The Ex parte Young exception gives providers a pathway in federal court to challenge such actions, which might otherwise be shielded by sovereign immunity. In doing so, it helps providers:

  • Prevent the enforcement of unlawful state actions: State Medicaid agencies may attempt to implement policies or take actions that violate federal Medicaid law. Ex parte Young allows providers to halt these actions through injunctive relief;
  • Ensure compliance with federal standards: States administer Medicaid, but they must do so within the boundaries of federal law. Providers can use Ex parte Young to enforce federal standards when states deviate; and
  • Protect reimbursement rates: If state-set reimbursement rates for Medicaid services fall below the federally mandated levels, providers can challenge these rates in federal court.

Some examples of providers winning under Ex parte Young include the following:

  • Managed Pharmacy Care v. Sebelius (2012). In this case, California’s Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) reduced Medicaid reimbursement rates for healthcare providers. Managed Pharmacy Care, along with other provider groups, sued under Ex parte Young, arguing that the state’s reduced rates conflicted with federal Medicaid law. The Ninth Circuit agreed with the providers, granting them relief by ruling that the state’s rate reductions violated the federal requirement to ensure that Medicaid patients had sufficient access to services. Outcome: The court held that the state’s action conflicted with federal law, and the providers successfully stopped the rate cuts.
  • Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, Inc. (2015). In this case, healthcare providers in Idaho used the Ex parte Young exception to sue state officials for setting Medicaid reimbursement rates too low to meet federal Medicaid standards. Although the case ultimately reached the U.S. Supreme Court on a different legal issue, lower courts had permitted the Ex parte Young claim to proceed, allowing the providers to challenge state actions that conflicted with federal law regarding Medicaid reimbursement. Outcome: The providers were able to use Ex parte Young to access federal courts and challenge inadequate Medicaid reimbursement rates, although the case was decided on other grounds.
  • Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc. v. Commissioner of the Indiana State Department of Health (2018). Planned Parenthood sued Indiana state officials under Ex parte Young, seeking to block a law that would have excluded them from Medicaid funding. The organization argued that the law violated federal Medicaid statutes, which protect patients’ right to choose their healthcare provider. The Seventh Circuit ruled in favor of Planned Parenthood, holding that the state’s actions violated federal law, and granted the injunction to prevent the law from being enforced. Outcome: The Ex parte Young exception allowed Planned Parenthood to prevent the state from enforcing an illegal regulation that would have violated federal Medicaid law.

The Ex parte Young exception provides a vital legal pathway for healthcare providers to challenge state actions that conflict with federal Medicare and Medicaid laws. By targeting state officials who enforce these policies, providers can protect their right to fair reimbursement, stop the enforcement of federally unlawful state laws, and ensure compliance with federal standards. Cases like those involving rate reductions and unlawful exclusion from Medicaid funding demonstrate the power of this doctrine in ensuring that providers are treated fairly, and that states adhere to federal healthcare laws.

For Medicare and Medicaid providers, the Ex parte Young exception is more than just a legal technicality – it’s a lifeline that can help ensure they can continue serving patients while safeguarding their financial stability.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Knicole C. Emanuel Esq.

For more than 20 years, Knicole has maintained a health care litigation practice, concentrating on Medicare and Medicaid litigation, health care regulatory compliance, administrative law and regulatory law. Knicole has tried over 2,000 administrative cases in over 30 states and has appeared before multiple states’ medical boards. She has successfully obtained federal injunctions in numerous states, which allowed health care providers to remain in business despite the state or federal laws allegations of health care fraud, abhorrent billings, and data mining. Across the country, Knicole frequently lectures on health care law, the impact of the Affordable Care Act and regulatory compliance for providers, including physicians, home health and hospice, dentists, chiropractors, hospitals and durable medical equipment providers. Knicole is partner at Nelson Mullins and a member of the RACmonitor editorial board and a popular panelist on Monitor Monday.

Related Stories

Leave a Reply

Please log in to your account to comment on this article.

Featured Webcasts

Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Accurately determining the principal diagnosis is critical for compliant billing, appropriate reimbursement, and valid quality reporting — yet it remains one of the most subjective and error-prone areas in inpatient coding. In this expert-led session, Cheryl Ericson, RN, MS, CCDS, CDIP, demystifies the complexities of principal diagnosis assignment, bridging the gap between coding rules and clinical reality. Learn how to strengthen your organization’s coding accuracy, reduce denials, and ensure your documentation supports true medical necessity.

December 3, 2025

Proactive Denial Management: Data-Driven Strategies to Prevent Revenue Loss

Denials continue to delay reimbursement, increase administrative burden, and threaten financial stability across healthcare organizations. This essential webcast tackles the root causes—rising payer scrutiny, fragmented workflows, inconsistent documentation, and underused analytics—and offers proven, data-driven strategies to prevent and overturn denials. Attendees will gain practical tools to strengthen documentation and coding accuracy, engage clinicians effectively, and leverage predictive analytics and AI to identify risks before they impact revenue. Through real-world case examples and actionable guidance, this session empowers coding, CDI, and revenue cycle professionals to shift from reactive appeals to proactive denial prevention and revenue protection.

November 25, 2025
Sepsis: Bridging the Clinical Documentation and Coding Gap to Reduce Denials

Sepsis: Bridging the Clinical Documentation and Coding Gap to Reduce Denials

Sepsis remains one of the most frequently denied and contested diagnoses, creating costly revenue loss and compliance risks. In this webcast, Angela Comfort, DBA, MBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, provides practical, real-world strategies to align documentation with coding guidelines, reconcile Sepsis-2 and Sepsis-3 definitions, and apply compliant queries. You’ll learn how to identify and address documentation gaps, strengthen provider engagement, and defend diagnoses against payer scrutiny—equipping you to protect reimbursement, improve SOI/ROM capture, and reduce audit vulnerability in this high-risk area.

September 24, 2025

Trending News

Featured Webcasts

AI in Claims Auditing: Turning Compliance Risks into Defensible Systems

As AI reshapes healthcare compliance, the risk of biased outputs and opaque decision-making grows. This webcast, led by Frank Cohen, delivers a practical Four-Pillar Governance Framework—Transparency, Accountability, Fairness, and Explainability—to help you govern AI-driven claim auditing with confidence. Learn how to identify and mitigate bias, implement robust human oversight, and document defensible AI review processes that regulators and auditors will accept. Discover concrete remedies, from rotation protocols to uncertainty scoring, and actionable steps to evaluate vendors before contracts are signed. In a regulatory landscape that moves faster than ever, gain the tools to stay compliant, defend your processes, and reduce liability while maintaining operational effectiveness.

January 13, 2026
Surviving Federal Audits for Inpatient Rehab Facility Services

Surviving Federal Audits for Inpatient Rehab Facility Services

Federal auditors are zeroing in on Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF) and hospital rehab unit services, with OIG and CERT audits leading to millions in penalties—often due to documentation and administrative errors, not quality of care. Join compliance expert Michael Calahan, PA, MBA, to learn the five clinical “pillars” of IRF-PPS admissions, key documentation requirements, and real-life case lessons to help protect your revenue.

November 13, 2025
E/M Services Under Intensive Federal Scrutiny: Navigating Split/Shared, Incident-to & Critical Care Compliance in 2025-2026

E/M Services Under Intensive Federal Scrutiny: Navigating Split/Shared, Incident-to & Critical Care Compliance in 2025-2026

During this essential RACmonitor webcast Michael Calahan, PA, MBA Certified Compliance Officer, will clarify the rules, dispel common misconceptions, and equip you with practical strategies to code, document, and bill high-risk split/shared, incident-to & critical care E/M services with confidence. Don’t let audit risks or revenue losses catch your organization off guard — learn exactly what federal auditors are looking for and how to ensure your documentation and reporting stand up to scrutiny.

August 26, 2025

Trending News

Happy National Doctor’s Day! Learn how to get a complimentary webcast on ‘Decoding Social Admissions’ as a token of our heartfelt appreciation! Click here to learn more →

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 1 with code CYBER25

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 2 with code CYBER24