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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 941–960 of 1,223 reports, containing 4,008 recommendations Sorted by latest release date
  • Idaho Received Millions in Unallowable Bonus Payments

  • Drug Supply Chain Security: Dispensers Received Most Tracing Information

  • New Jersey Claimed Federal Medicaid Reimbursement for Children's Partial Hospitalization Services That Did Not Meet Federal and State Requirements

  • New York Did Not Comply With Federal Grant Requirements for Claiming Marketplace Contract Costs to Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program

  • Some Washington State Group-Care Facilities for Children in Foster Care Did Not Always Comply With State Health and Safety Requirements

  • Aurum Institute Generally Managed and Expended the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief Funds in Accordance With Award Requirements

  • Many Medicare Claims for Outpatient Physical Therapy Services Did Not Comply With Medicare Requirements

  • Hospitals Did Not Comply With Medicare Requirements for Reporting Certain Cardiac Device Credits

  • Review of the Department of Health and Human Services' Compliance with the Federal Information Security Modernization Act of 2014 for Fiscal Year 2017

  • Oklahoma Did Not Have Procedures to Identify Provider-Preventable Conditions on Some Inpatient Hospital Claims

  • BCFS Health and Human Services Did Not Always Comply With Federal Requirements Related to Less-Than-Arm's-Length Leases

  • California Made Medicaid Payments on Behalf of Newly Eligible Beneficiaries Who Did Not Meet Federal and State Requirements

  • The National Institutes of Health Did Not Always Administer Superfund Appropriations During Fiscal Year 2015 in Accordance With Federal Requirements

  • Arizona Did Not Bill Manufacturers for Some Rebates for Drugs Dispensed to Enrollees of Medicaid Managed-Care Organizations

  • Wisconsin Physicians Service Paid Providers for Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Services That Did Not Comply With Medicare Requirements

  • Medicare Improperly Paid Providers for Specimen Validity Tests Billed in Combination With Urine Drug Tests

  • Medicare Compliance Review of Memorial University Medical Center

  • Oklahoma Did Not Always Comply With Requirements for Providing Health Care Services to Children in Foster Care

  • Medicare Needs Better Controls To Prevent Fraud, Waste, and Abuse Related to Chiropractic Services

  • Arkansas Claimed Unallowable Federal Reimbursement for Some Medicaid Physician-Administered Drugs