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Brought to you by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Federal Reports
Report Date
Agency Reviewed / Investigated
Report Title
Type
Location
Department of the Interior
Summary: Evaluation of the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Cyber Threat Hunting Program
Audit of the Locally Incurred Costs of International Youth Foundation, Positive Youth Engagement Program in West Bank and Gaza, Under Prime Mercy Corps Cooperative Agreement 72029421C00004, November 17, 2022, to December 31, 2023
OIG conducted a review of recent human capital-related recommendations made to the agency and their corresponding reported statuses. The goal of this review was to help the Peace Corps leverage existing reviews and recommendations in determining where and how to direct its resources to better address its overarching human capital management challenge.
The VA Nebraska–Western Iowa Health Care System has a graduate medical education affiliation agreement with a local university. Under the agreement, the university provides the services of health professions trainees (residents) to the Omaha VA Medical Center, and VA reimburses the university for the residents’ services. Reimbursement is based on daily rates and fringe benefits provided by the medical center, which must document and certify VA-approved educational activities in educational activity records.
The medical center received a complaint alleging that a university official falsified records to inflate the time worked and signed the records as the VA site director, an act that would constitute a conflict of interest. The VA Office of Academic Affiliations asked the OIG to review six years of potential overbillings of residents’ time totaling about $1.9 million and examine the potential conflict of interest.
The OIG found the medical center did not have educational activity records for July 1, 2016, through June 30, 2020, as required. The OIG attempted to verify the progress notes the medical center used in the place of educational activity records but found them unreliable. Without reliable records, the audit team could not verify the attendance of the residents and could not determine whether the invoices were supported as required. Therefore, VA has no assurance that the residents participated in clinical and educational activities from July 1, 2016, through June 30, 2020, and may have overpaid for resident services.
For the period when the medical center did keep educational activity records, beginning July 1, 2020, the OIG was able to verify residents’ attendance and found no overbillings. Further, the OIG team did not find any conflicts of interest. Because educational activity records were implemented in July 2020, the OIG did not have any recommendations for the medical center.
This Office of Inspector General (OIG) Healthcare Facility Inspection program report describes the results of a focused evaluation of the care provided at the VA Texas Valley Coastal Bend Healthcare System in Harlingen.
This evaluation focused on five key content domains: • Culture • Environment of care • Patient safety • Primary care • Veteran-centered safety net
The OIG issued three recommendations for VA to correct identified deficiencies in two domains: 1. Environment of care • Toxic exposure screenings 2. Patient safety • Service-level workflows for test result communication • Peer Review Committee meeting attendance