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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 State
Audit of Department of State Actions To Prevent Unlawful Trafficking in Persons Practices When Executing Security, Construction, and Facility and Household Services Contracts at Overseas Posts
VA has a right to recover community care treatment costs for conditions unrelated to military service from veterans’ private health insurers. The VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) audit was conducted to determine how effectively the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) billed private insurers. Prior OIG work has shown that VHA has missed opportunities to recover funds that could be used to help finance care for other veterans.VHA’s Office of Community Care (OCC) manages community care programs and bills private insurers when needed. OCC must submit reimbursement claims before insurers’ deadlines are reached, or they may be denied.The OIG found OCC did not establish an effective process to ensure staff billed veterans’ private health insurers as required. An estimated 54 percent of billable community care claims paid between April 20, 2017, and October 31, 2020, were not submitted before filing deadlines expired. As a result, OCC did not collect an estimated $217.5 million that should have been recovered, a figure that could grow to $805.2 million by September 30, 2022, if problems are not corrected.OCC’s billing and revenue collection process also was not synchronized with insurers’ filing deadlines, and claims information was not always available for billing. Also, pending workload volume and staff shortages hindered effective billing. Although OCC was broadly aware of challenges to its process to bill and collect revenue from private insurers, its responses were not sufficient to correct these issues.VHA concurred with the OIG’s recommendations to develop procedures that prioritize processing to meet insurers’ filing deadlines and strengthen its information system controls to ensure information needed to process bills for reimbursement is complete and accurate. VHA should also assess staff resources and workload to make certain they are sufficiently aligned to process the anticipated volume of claims to be billed.
Financial Audit of the Rule of Law and Culture of Integrity Program in Paraguay Managed by lnstituto Desarrollo, Cooperative Agreement 72052619CA00002, for the Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2021
This report contains information about recommendations from the OIG's audits, evaluations, reviews, and other reports that the OIG had not closed as of the specified date because it had not determined that the Department of Justice (DOJ) or a non-DOJ federal agency had fully implemented them. The list omits information that DOJ determined to be limited official use or classified, and therefore unsuitable for public release.The status of each recommendation was accurate as of the specified date and is subject to change. Specifically, a recommendation identified as not closed as of the specified date may subsequently have been closed.
The objective was to determine the extent to which the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) mitigates safety risks by testing migrants for COVID-19 before transport on domestic commercial flights and whether a process is in place for escorting noncitizen unaccompanied children (UCs) during transport.