• Highlights of VA OIG's Oversight Work from August
    Sep 17 2025

    Each month, the VA Office of Inspector General publishes highlights of our oversight reports, congressional testimony, and investigative work. In August 2025, the VA OIG published 17 reports that included 72 recommendations to VA.

    Report topics included a review of medical facilities in VISN 12 (VA Great Lakes Health Care System) and whether they correctly identified veterans eligible for community care, informed them of their care options, and delivered timely care. Another report recommended VA medical facilities improve the monitoring of pharmacy automated dispensing cabinets for accountability over high-risk medications.

    VA OIG investigative efforts resulted in the conviction of a former nurse at a Texas VA medical center who falsely claimed she had checked on a patient who ultimately died. In addition, a former VA-appointed fiduciary was indicted for allegedly stealing more than $133,000 from an elderly veteran who resided at the Cincinnati VA Medical Center.

    Related Reports:

    · VISN 12 Needs to Improve How It Administers the Veterans Community Care Program

    · Pharmacy Automated Dispensing Cabinets Need Improved Monitoring for Accountability over High-Risk Medications

    · Inconsistent Implementation of VHA Oncology Program Requirements Due to Insufficient Oversight

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    5 mins
  • Highlights of VA OIG’s Oversight Work from July
    Aug 14 2025

    The Honorable Cheryl L. Mason was confirmed by the Senate as the inspector general of the VA on July 31, 2025, and shortly after being sworn in, took up her leadership of the VA OIG on August 4. IG Mason previously served as the chairman of the Board of Veterans’ Appeals at VA. For more information on IG Mason, see her bio.

    In July 2025, the VA OIG published 18 reports that included 101 recommendations. Report topics included a review of VBA’s planning and implementation of the Military Sexual Trauma Operations Center and its governance structure for processing these types of claims. Another healthcare inspection examined deficiencies in care at the Batavia Community Living Center that contributed to a resident’s death at the VA Western New York Healthcare System in Buffalo.

    On Capitol Hill, Shawn Steele, director of the human capital and operations division for the Office of Audits and Evaluations, testified on July 22 at a hearing before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee (HVAC). His testimony focused on the OIG’s findings in a recent report on deficiencies in VA’s oversight of recruitment, retention, and relocation incentive payments.

    VA OIG investigative efforts contributed to the indictment of 11 members of a transnational criminal organization who submitted billions in fraudulent claims to federal and private health insurance programs for durable medical equipment that was never prescribed or issued to the beneficiaries. In addition, a veteran pleaded guilty in Florida to VA disability compensation benefits fraud as the result of a proactive investigation. The loss to VA is about $1.1 million.

    Related Reports:

    • Implementation of a Military Sexual Trauma Operations Center Resulted in Minimal Change Despite Planned Intent to Improve Claims-Processing Accuracy

    • Deficiencies in Care at the Batavia Community Living Center Contributed to a Resident’s Death at the VA Western New York Healthcare System in Buffalo

    • Failures Related to the Care and Discharge of a Patient and Leaders’ Response at the VA New Mexico Healthcare System in Albuquerque
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    8 mins
  • Highlights of VA OIG’s Oversight Work from June
    Jul 15 2025

    Each month, the VA Office of Inspector General publishes highlights of our oversight reports, congressional testimony, and investigative work. In June 2025, the VA OIG published nine reports that included 81 recommendations. Report topics varied from an evaluation of VA’s governance of recruitment, relocation, and retention incentives awarded for VHA positions to mental health inspections of the VA Salem Healthcare System in Virginia and the VA Philadelphia Healthcare System in Pennsylvania.

    On Capitol Hill, Jennifer McDonald, PhD, director of the Community Care Division for the Office of Audits and Evaluations, testified on June 11 before the House Veterans’ Affairs’ Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. Her testimony focused on the impact of VHA’s pause in using its Program Integrity Tool—a system that consolidates community care payment data that is used, in part, to determine if veterans or their private insurance companies should be billed for care that is not connected to injuries or conditions related to their military service. She also highlighted the OIG’s work that identified deficiencies in how VA plans, implements, and remediates identified weaknesses in information technology modernization efforts.

    VA OIG investigative efforts resulted in the conviction of a chief executive officer of a healthcare software company for a billion-dollar fraud conspiracy. Meanwhile, VA OIG investigative efforts in Louisiana led to the sentencing of two individuals for fraudulently obtaining federal pandemic relief loans.

    Related Reports:

    • Recruitment, Relocation, and Retention Incentives for VHA Positions Need Improved Oversight

    • Mental Health Inspection of the VA Salem Healthcare System in Virginia

    • Mental Health Inspection of the VA Philadelphia Healthcare System in Pennsylvania
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    7 mins
  • Highlights of VA OIG’s Oversight Work from May
    Jun 17 2025

    Each month, the VA Office of Inspector General publishes highlights of our oversight reports, congressional testimony, and investigative work. In May 2025, the VA OIG published 11 reports that included 54 recommendations. Report topics varied from an audit of the VHA’s Pain Management, Opioid Safety, and Prescription Drug Monitoring Program to a healthcare inspection to assess allegations of deficiencies in the emergency department care provided to a patient at the Martinsburg VA Medical Center in West Virginia.

    On Capitol Hill, Deputy Assistant IG Brent Arronte, in the Office of Audits and Evaluations, testified on May 14 before the House Veterans’ Affairs’ Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs. His testimony focused on the OIG’s independent oversight of VA’s compensation and benefits programs, specifically how inadequate staff training combined with often unclear and inadequate guidance contribute to incorrect payments being made to veterans.

    VA OIG investigative efforts resulted in the sentencing of four defendants for their roles in an $110 million healthcare kickback scheme. Meanwhile, a former nurse at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center in Houston was indicted for falsely claiming she had checked on a patient who ultimately died.

    Read the full monthly highlights at: https://www.vaoig.gov/report/monthly-highlights

    Related Reports:

    • Better Communication and Oversight Could Improve How the Pain Management, Opioid Safety, and Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Manages Funds

    • Failure to Flag Fiduciaries Who Were Removed Results in Risk to Vulnerable Beneficiaries

    • Deficiencies in Emergency Care for a Female Veteran at Martinsburg VA Medical Center in West Virginia
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    6 mins
  • Highlights from VA OIG's 93rd Semiannual Report to Congress
    May 22 2025

    This Semiannual Report to Congress summarizes the independent oversight efforts of the VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) from October 1, 2024, through March 31, 2025.

    Visit the VA OIG's website to read the full report.

    For this six-month period, the VA OIG identified nearly $3.3 billion in monetary impact for a return on investment of $28 for every dollar spent on oversight. These figures do not include the inestimable value of the healthcare oversight work completed to help save the lives of veterans and ensure their access to top-level medical care.

    During this period, the Office of Investigations opened 256 cases and closed 213 (most opened in prior reporting periods), with efforts leading to 144 arrests. The OIG hotline staff triaged more than 17,000 contacts to help identify wrongdoing and address concerns with VA activities. The related work resulted in 598 administrative sanctions and corrective actions.

    The Office of Audits and Evaluations (OAE) produced 47 work products, including one VA management advisory memoranda on VA’s progress related to reducing overdose deaths. Also included were 16 oversight reports and 30 preaward and postaward contract audits and reviews to help VA obtain fair and reasonable pricing on products and services. OAE reports for the six-month period resulted in 146 recommendations for VA improvements.

    The Office of Healthcare Inspections (OHI) continued to provide the oversight necessary to assess VHA's delivery of high-quality care and leaders' efforts to build and uphold a culture that prioritizes patient safety. Of the 36 oversight products OHI published in the last six months, 10 were for-cause reports responsive to OIG hotline complaints. In addition to seven national reviews, OHI released 14 healthcare facility inspections, three care-in-the-community inspections, one mental health inspection, and one vet center inspection.

    The Office of Special Reviews (OSR) conducted 21 investigative interviews and issued one report addressing VA’s lapses in oversight of a grantee providing transitional housing services to veterans at risk for homelessness. Also during this period, OSR reviewed 12 allegations of possible whistleblower retaliation involving VA contractor's employees or grantees.

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    6 mins
  • Highlights of VA OIG’s Oversight Work from April
    May 15 2025

    The latest podcast episode of Veteran Oversight Now highlights the VA OIG’s oversight work during April 2025, including three healthcare facility inspections reports on facilities in Tennessee, New York, and Colorado.

    April 2025 Monthly Highlights
    Each month, the VA Office of Inspector General publishes highlights of our congressional testimony, investigative work, and oversight reports. In April 2025, the VA OIG published 12 reports that included 51 recommendations. Report topics varied from a review to determine whether claims processors are properly assigning effective dates for PACT Act-related claims to an inspection related to a patient’s delayed diagnosis and treatment for lung cancer at the VA Eastern Kansas Healthcare System in Topeka and Leavenworth.

    VA OIG investigative efforts helped resolved allegations that a drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility, Seabrook House in New Jersey, submitted claims to VA’s Community Care program and the state’s Medicaid program for short-term residential treatment and partial hospitalization care for which it was not properly licensed or contracted and misled state inspectors. In a civil settlement, Seabrook agreed to pay $19.75 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations. Of this amount, VA will receive $19.15 million.

    Meanwhile, 12 employees of the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center pleaded guilty to theft after receiving more than $396,000 in Pandemic Unemployment Assistance benefits by falsifying their applications and failing to disclose their employment and wages earned at VA, and a physician at the Bedford VA Medical Center in Massachusetts was arrested and charged in the District of Massachusetts with the receipt and possession of child pornography.

    Read the full monthly highlights.

    Related Reports:

    • The PACT Act Has Complicated Determining When Veterans’ Benefits Payments Should Take Effect
    • Delayed Diagnosis and Treatment for a Patient’s Lung Cancer and Deficiencies in the Lung Cancer Screening Program at the VA Eastern Kansas Healthcare System in Topeka and Leavenworth
    • Hiring of Claims Processors Generally Met Requirements and the Attrition Rate Remained Steady
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    10 mins
  • Highlights of VA OIG’s Oversight Work from March
    Apr 10 2025

    Each month, the VA Office of Inspector General publishes highlights of our investigative work, congressional testimony, and oversight reports. In March 2025, the VA OIG published 17 reports that included 101 recommendations. Report topics varied from a review of VHA and VBA fiscal year 2024 supplemental funding requests and mental healthcare services at a Massachusetts’ VA medical center to a review of the veteran self-scheduling process for community care and supply and equipment management deficiencies at a Texas VA medical center.

    VA OIG investigations led to the sentencing of a pharmacy operator who conspired with various doctors to charge government agencies for medically unnecessary compound prescriptions, pain creams, scar gels, and multivitamins primarily to patients covered under the Office of Workers’ Compensation Program. Elsewhere, a government subcontractor was sentenced to 12 months’ probation and ordered to pay restitution of more than $493,000 after previously pleading guilty to bank fraud. The company fraudulently obtained a Small Business Administration-backed Paycheck Protection Program loan. The company’s owner also agreed to pay more than $1.1 million as part of a civil settlement to resolve his own civil liability.

    This latest podcast episode of Veteran Oversight Now highlights the VA OIG’s oversight work from March 2025, including four healthcare facility inspections reports on facilities in Massachusetts, Georgia, Virginia, and Washington, DC.

    Related Reports:

    • The Causes and Conditions That Led to a $12 Billion Supplemental Funding Request
    • Review of VA’s $2.9 Billion Supplemental Funds Request for FY 2024 to Support Veterans’ Benefits Payments
    • Inadequate Governance Structure and Identification of Chief Mental Health Officers’ Responsibilities

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    7 mins
  • Highlights of VA OIG’s Oversight Work from February
    Mar 17 2025

    In this latest episode of Veteran Oversight Now, we’re bringing you highlights of our oversight work from February 2025.

    Hear Acting Inspector General David Case discuss VA’s challenges with implementing its new electronic health record system before Congress as well as Dr. Julie Kroviak, acting inspector general for the Office of Healthcare Inspections, who recently testified before Congress on concerns with VA community care. Plus updates on ongoing investigations and summaries of reports published last month. Visit the VA OIG website for a full list of oversight work completed in February.

    Related Report:

    • Lapse in Fiduciary Program Oversight Puts Some Vulnerable Beneficiaries at Risk
    • Staff Mitigated the Impact of Appointment Cancellations in a Mental Health Clinic at the VA Northern Indiana Healthcare System in Fort Wayne

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    10 mins