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Brought to you by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Federal Reports
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Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Whistleblowing Works: How Inspectors General Respond to and Protect Whistleblowers
Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Report Description
To illustrate the importance of individuals coming forward to report waste, fraud, abuse, and misconduct to Offices of Inspector General (OIG), we used the search function on Oversight.gov and identified many examples of OIG investigations, audits, and reviews initiated or advanced because of a whistleblower disclosure. We present a sample of these reports and also summarize OIG efforts to protect whistleblowers from unlawful retaliation. Our whistleblower resources page on Oversight.gov provides more information on where to report of waste, fraud, abuse, or retaliation. Click the link below for more information.
The VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) conducted a healthcare inspection to evaluate factors that may have impacted or contributed to the unexpected death of a ventilator-dependent patient on the Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) unit at the VA San Diego Healthcare System and to follow-up on the facility’s response. The OIG could not determine what the ventilator settings were at the time of the patient’s death, because facility staff who inspected the ventilator immediately thereafter changed the settings to check whether alarms were functional and then reportedly returned the settings to the previous levels. The OIG determined the facility did not implement risk mitigation strategies for the use of the in-line Passy-Muir® Valve (PMV) on ventilated patients. The facility did not have a back-up monitoring plan when the ventilator alarms were off, patient criteria to determine when the valve should be removed, policies for facility staff and patient/family education on the use of the PMV, policies or procedures for monitoring and documenting ventilator and alarm settings while using the PMV, or a policy to use anti-disconnect devices. At the time of the patient’s death, the SCI unit used an outdated nurse call system that required the use of a splitter to connect the ventilator to the call system, none of the respiratory therapy staff had training or competency assessments related to PMV use, staff failed to report the patient’s ventilator tubing disconnections through the Patient Safety reporting system, and SCI leaders failed to follow the standard operating procedure for the management of clinical alarms. The OIG made five recommendations related to policy and training for use of the PMV on the SCI unit and the anti-disconnect device, potential issuance of a National Patient Safety Advisory, training for reporting patient safety issues, and reviewing clinical alarms according to facility policies.
Medicare spending is expected to exceed $1.5 trillion by 2028, more than double the $708 billion in spending in 2017. To help control Medicare spending, while promoting high-quality healthcare, CMS has been implementing alternative payment models that reward providers for the quality and value of services. This is part of the transition away from fee-for-service to value-based care.