OIG conducted a healthcare inspection to assess the merit of allegations from a complainant about mental health care provided to a patient at a Veterans Integrated Service Network 16 facility, prior to his suicide. We substantiated that the patient had been reasonably stable on his medication regimen, including clonazepam, for many years and that the patient was not placed back on his preferred medication (clonazepam) by psychiatrists despite his requests to do so. We substantiated that the patient was not admitted to the psychosocial residential rehabilitation treatment program and identified several barriers to the patient’s admission including misconceptions about admission criteria, delays in tuberculosis testing, poor communication between providers, and delays in contacting the patient. We found that, contrary to Veterans Health Administration (VHA) policy, the patient’s treatment preferences were not considered, nor was the patient informed of his right to appeal treatment decisions made by mental health staff. Furthermore, refusal on the part of the patient’s psychiatrist to treat the patient unless he agreed to not taking clonazepam created a treatment impasse and violated VHA policy.We found that because of limited availability of psychiatry appointments, the patient did not have timely access to mental health care after his discharges from community psychiatric hospitals and as his mental health condition worsened, other care options, such as Non-VA care, were not explored. We found that communication and planning by the patient’s mental health providers was not commensurate with the patient’s needs. In spite of the patient’s deteriorating mental health condition, multiple suicide attempts, and frequent hospitalizations, his underlying bipolar disease was not adequately treated, and ultimately, his poorly controlled mood disorder was the likely underlying cause for the patient’s suicidal thinking. We made 12 recommendations.
| Report Date | Agency Reviewed / Investigated | Report Title | Type | Location | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Veterans Affairs | Healthcare Inspection – Patient Mental Health Care Issues at a Veterans Integrated Service Network 16 Facility | Inspection / Evaluation | Agency-Wide | View Report | |
| Department of Defense | Marine Corps Assault Amphibious Vehicle Survivability Upgrade | Audit | Agency-Wide | View Report | |
| Department of Health & Human Services | Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation Understated Its Medicare Segment Pension Assets for Its Managerial Pension Plan | Audit |
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View Report | |
| Department of Health & Human Services | Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation Understated Its Medicare Segment Pension Assets for Its Managerial Retirement Program for Selected Locations | Audit |
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View Report | |
| Department of Health & Human Services | Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation Understated Its Medicare Segment Pension Assets for Its Employees' Pension Plan | Audit |
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View Report | |
| Department of Health & Human Services | North Carolina Did Not Always Verify Correction of Deficiencies Identified During Surveys of Nursing Homes Participating in Medicare and Medicaid | Audit | Agency-Wide | View Report | |
| National Science Foundation | Data Tampering / Sabotage / Fabrication | Investigation | Agency-Wide | View Report | |
| DOD Task Force for Business Stability Operations: $675 Million in Spending Led to Mixed Results, Waste, and Unsustained Projects | Audit | Agency-Wide | View Report | ||
| U.S. Postal Service | Postal Vehicle Service Fuel Cost and Consumption Strategies | Audit | Agency-Wide | View Report | |
| Department of Justice | Audit of the Office of Justice Programs Office for Victims of Crime Victim Compensation Formula Grants Awarded to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, Lansing, Michigan | Audit |
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View Report | |