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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 Agriculture
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Chief Information Officer, Fiscal Year 2024 Federal Information Security Modernization Act
The VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) conducted a healthcare inspection to assess an allegation of inadequate clinical care of a patient who died by suicide on the inpatient medical unit.In summer 2023, a physician admitted the patient to the facility’s medical unit, placed an order for one-to-one observation status (1:1) for suicidal ideation, started a Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment of Alcohol Revised (CIWA-Ar) protocol for treatment of alcohol withdrawal symptoms, and entered a consult to the psychiatry service. Four days later, the patient was found in the bathroom hanging from a necklace, having died by suicide.The OIG found that staff did not follow policy requirements to remove the patient’s belongings or reduce environmental risks. Additionally, a nurse failed to conduct a warm handoff as required for the completion of a Comprehensive Suicide Risk Evaluation (CSRE) after completing a positive suicide risk screening. The psychiatrist completed a telemental health evaluation of the patient but did not complete the required CSRE. On the third day of admission, the psychiatrist did not reassess the patient before changing the patient’s 1:1 order to every 15-minute checks and did not sign the evaluation note within the required 24-hour time frame, leaving the assessment unavailable to other providers.Nursing staff documented CIWA-Ar assessments every 1–4 hours and administered lorazepam as ordered except for one error. The medical unit nurse manager reported addressing the error, and the error had no impact on the patient’s outcome.Facility leaders evaluated processes related to the care of the patient through actions that included a root cause analysis in accordance with Veterans Health Administration policy. The resulting action plans addressed concerns identified in this report.The OIG made four recommendations to the Facility Director related to clinical screenings and evaluations, timely documentation, and removing environmental risks.
A Report of Investigation Into the Department's Release of Public Statements Concerning a Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, Election Fraud Investigation in September 2020
An Investigation of Allegations Concerning the Department of Justice's Handling of the Government's Sentencing Recommendation in United States v. Roger Stone
Ninety-Five Percent of IRS and Contractor Employees Were Tax Compliant; However, There Were Some Tax Delinquencies or Prior Conduct/Performance Issues.
We conducted a review to determine the Federal Student Aid office’s (FSA) actions to mitigate risks associated with the verification of identities in the FSA ID account creation process. Although we found that FSA had implemented controls to address identity verification risks associated with FSA ID account creation, it could take further actions by implementing preventive controls to better protect Title IV funds and the public from fraudulent activity. We found that approximately $27.3 million in Title IV funds was disbursed to suspected fraudulent FSA ID accounts. Further, although FSA has taken several steps to mitigate other risks to FSA ID accounts, these controls mitigate risks after the FSA ID account has been created and do not mitigate risk associated with the creation of the FSA ID account. We also identified a data reliability issue with the National Student Loan Data System data.