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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 981–1,000 of 1,223 reports, containing 4,008 recommendations Sorted by latest release date
  • Indiana Did Not Always Comply With Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program Requirements

  • Nebraska Did Not Invoice Rebates to Manufacturers for Physician-Administered Drugs Dispensed to Enrollees of Medicaid Managed-Care Organizations

  • The Administration for Children and Families Region X Did Not Always Resolve Head Start Grantees' Single Audit Findings in Accordance With Federal Requirements

  • Potential Misclassifications Reported by Drug Manufacturers May Have Led to $1 Billion in Lost Medicaid Rebates

  • The Administration for Children and Families Did Not Always Resolve American Indian and Alaska Native Head Start Grantees' Single Audit Findings in Accordance With Federal Requirements

  • Lincare Pharmacy Services Inc. Generally Complied With Medicare Requirements When Billing for Inhalation Drugs

  • Some Massachusetts Group Homes for Children in Foster Care Did Not Always Comply With State Health and Safety Requirements

  • Texas Did Not Bill Manufacturers for Some Rebates for Pharmacy Drugs of Medicaid Managed-Care Organizations

  • Office of Refugee Resettlement Unaccompanied Alien Children Grantee Review—His House

  • Pine Bluff Jefferson County Economic Opportunities Commission Did Not Always Operate Its Head Start Program in Accordance With Federal Requirements

  • Not All of Missouri's Child Care Subsidy Program Payments Complied With Federal and State Requirements

  • Two Indian Health Service Hospitals Had System Security and Physical Controls for Prescription Drug and Opioid Dispensing but Could Still Improve Controls

  • CMS Did Not Adequately Address Discrepancies in the Coding Classification for Kwashiorkor

  • New Jersey Claimed Hundreds of Millions in Unallowable or Unsupported Medicaid School-Based Reimbursement

  • Excluding Noncovered Versions When Setting Payment for Two Part B Drugs Would Have Resulted in Lower Drug Costs for Medicare and its Beneficiaries

  • CMS Generally Met Requirements in Round 2 of the DMEPOS Competitive Bidding Program

  • Texas Managed Care Organizations Received Medicaid Capitation Payments After Beneficiary's Death

  • North Carolina Did Not Comply With Federal and State Requirements When Making Medicaid Cost-Sharing Payments for Professional Medical Services

  • Medicare Compliance Review of Rush University Medical Center

  • Ohio Received Millions in Unallowable Bonus Payments