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Recommendations Tracker

HHS-OIG provides independent and objective oversight that promotes economy, efficiency, and effectiveness in HHS programs and operations. To drive this positive change, we produce reports and identify recommendations for improvement. We have developed this public-facing page for tracking all of our open recommendations.

Use the “Top Unimplemented” View below to read OIG’s Top Unimplemented Recommendations—a subset that we think, if implemented, would have the most impact (learn more). Notable differences from our previous Top Unimplemented Recommendations report include:

  • The list is comprised of individual recommendations from OIG reports, not rolled up by topic.
  • No arbitrary cap is imposed on the number of recommendations included.
  • Status updates as recommendations are implemented.

Summary of All Recommendations

Updated Monthly · Last updated on November 15, 2024

1,310

Unimplemented
recommendations

$270.4B

Potential savingsfrom unimplemented recommendations

2,698

Implemented and Closed
recommendations
since FY 2017

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OIG Recommendations Grouped by Report

Showing 921–940 of 1,223 reports, containing 4,008 recommendations Sorted by latest release date
  • Iowa Complied With Most Federal Requirements Prohibiting Medicaid Payments for Inpatient Hospital Services Related to Provider-Preventable Conditions

  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Met Many Requirements of the Improper Payments Information Act of 2002 but Did Not Fully Comply for Fiscal Year 2017

  • Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation Understated Medicare's Share of the Medicare Segment Excess Pension Assets

  • Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation Understated Medicare Administrative Contract Allowable Pension Costs

  • The University of Alabama at Birmingham Overstated Chilled Water Costs in Its Facilities and Administrative Cost Proposal

  • The National Institutes of Health, Division of Financial Advisory Services Did Not Always Establish Final Indirect Cost Rates in Accordance With Federal Requirements

  • Cahaba Government Benefits Administrators, LLC, Generally Claimed Allowable Medicare Pension Costs

  • Cahaba Government Benefits Administrators, LLC, Understated Medicare Administrative Contract Allowable Pension Costs

  • Cahaba Safeguard Administrators, LLC, Understated Medicare Administrative Contract Allowable Pension Costs

  • Florida Did Not Always Verify Correction of Deficiencies Identified During Surveys of Nursing Homes Participating in Medicare and Medicaid

  • Cahaba Government Benefits Administrators, LLC, Overstated Its Medicare Segment Pension Assets

  • Cahaba Safeguard Administrators, LLC, Understated Its Medicare Segment Pension Assets

  • Most of New York's Claims for Federal Reimbursement for Monthly Personal Emergency Response Service Charges Did Not Comply With Medicaid Requirements

  • Colorado Did Not Always Comply With Federal Requirements When Expending Federal Establishment Grant Funds Allocated for Its Shared Eligibility System Costs

  • CMS's Policies and Procedures Were Generally Effective in Ensuring That Prescription Drug Coverage Capitation Payments Were Not Made After the Beneficiaries' Dates of Death

  • The Indian Health Service's Controls Were Not Effective in Ensuring That Its Travel Card Program Complied With Federal Requirements and Its Own Policy

  • The National Institute of Health in Mozambique Did Not Always Manage and Expend the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief Funds in Accordance With Award Requirements

  • CMS Paid Practitioners for Telehealth Services That Did Not Meet Medicare Requirements

  • Texas Did Not Make Increased Primary Care Provider Payments and Claim Reimbursement in Accordance With Federal Requirements

  • Colorado Claimed Some Unallowable Medicaid Payments for Targeted Case Management Services