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Brought to you by the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency
Federal Reports
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Agency Reviewed / Investigated
Report Title
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Department of Justice
Audit of the Office of Justice Programs Regional Information Sharing Systems Grants Awarded to the Middle Atlantic – Great Lakes Organized Crime Law Enforcement Network, Newtown, Pennsylvania
This Office of Inspector General (OIG) Comprehensive Healthcare Inspection Program report provides a focused evaluation of the quality of care delivered in the inpatient and outpatient settings of the VA St. Louis Health Care System and multiple outpatient clinics in Illinois and Missouri. The inspection covers key clinical and administrative processes that are associated with promoting quality care. For this inspection, the areas of focus were Leadership and Organizational Risks; Quality, Safety, and Value; Medical Staff Privileging; Environment of Care; Medication Management: Long-Term Opioid Therapy for Pain; Mental Health: Suicide Prevention Program; Care Coordination: Life-Sustaining Treatment Decisions; Women’s Health: Comprehensive Care; and High-Risk Processes: Reusable Medical Equipment. The executive leadership team had worked together for over two years. Survey results indicated that employees were generally satisfied. However, patient survey results were often lower than the corresponding VHA averages, indicating multiple opportunities for system leaders to improve satisfaction. The OIG identified the lack of a permanent pain director as an area of vulnerability for the healthcare system. Executive leaders were able to speak knowledgeably about performance improvement actions taken during the previous 12 months, employee satisfaction, and patient experiences. The OIG issued 20 recommendations for improvement in seven areas: (1) Quality, Safety, and Value • Improvement action implementation and monitoring • Utilization management processes • Root cause analysis processes (2) Medical Staff Privileging • Professional practice evaluation processes • Provider exit review forms (3) Environment of Care • Geriatric mental health unit safety (4) Medication Management • Behavior risk assessment • Urine drug testing • Informed consent • Patient follow-up after therapy initiation • Pain Committee activities (5) Mental Health • Community outreach activities • Patient follow-up visits • Staff training (6) Women’s Health • Women Veterans Health Committee membership and activities (7) High-Risk Processes • Bioburden testing • Staff training
In FY 2015, the Postal Service began planning the acquisition process for a new purpose-built, Next Generation Delivery Vehicle (NGDV) to start replacing the current LLV fleet beginning in FY 2018 through FY 2019. However, by the end of FY 2019, the Postal Service had not awarded the estimated $5-6 billion contract(s) for the production of the NGDV. Due to frequent changes to the NGDV acquisition timeline, the planned production deployment date is now scheduled for January 2022. Our objective was to assess the Postal Service’s acquisition strategy for delivery and collection vehicles.
When Congress established average sales price (ASP) as the basis for reimbursement for Medicare Part B drugs (generally, drugs that are injected or infused in physicians’ offices or hospital outpatient settings), it also provided a mechanism for monitoring market prices and limiting potentially excessive payment amounts. The Social Security Act (the Act) mandates that OIG compare ASPs with average manufacturer prices (AMPs). If OIG finds that the ASP for a drug exceeds the AMP by a certain percentage (currently 5 percent), the Act directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to substitute the ASP-based payment amount with a lower calculated rate. Through regulation, CMS outlined that it would make this substitution only if the ASP for a drug exceeded the AMP by 5 percent in the two previous quarters or three of the previous four quarters.
When Congress established average sales prices (ASPs) as the basis for Medicare Part B drug reimbursement, it also provided a mechanism for monitoring market prices and limiting potentially excessive payment amounts. Generally, Part B-covered drugs are those that are injected or infused in physicians' offices or hospital outpatient settings. The Social Security Act (the Act) mandates that OIG compare ASPs with average manufacturer prices (AMPs). If OIG finds that the ASP for a drug exceeds the AMP by a certain percentage (currently 5 percent), the Act directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to substitute the ASPbased payment amount with a lower calculated rate. Through regulation, CMS outlined that it would make this substitution only if the ASP for a drug exceeds the AMP by 5 percent in the two previous quarters or three of the previous four quarters.
Financial Audit of the Merit and Need-Based Scholarship Program Phase 11 in Pakistan Managed by the Higher Education Commission, Grant 391-G-00-04-01023-12, July 1, 2018 to June 30, 2019