Breadcrumb

Biologic Implant Purchasing, Inventory Management, and Tracking Need Improvement

Report Information

Issue Date
Report Number
19-07053-51
VA Office
Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Report Author
Office of Audits and Evaluations
Report Type
Audit
Report Topic
Supplies and Equipment
Major Management Challenges
Stewardship of Taxpayer Dollars
Recommendations
11
Questioned Costs
$0
Better Use of Funds
$0
Congressionally Mandated
No

Summary

Summary
The OIG examined whether the VHA had effective procedures for (1) purchasing, (2) inventorying, and (3) tracking biologic implants such as skin substitutes and corneal or dental implants. The OIG found deficiencies in all three areas at four medical facilities it visited. The audit team determined that purchasing agents did not always record implant purchases properly or use the appropriate funds. The purchasing agents did not record 2,931 of 10,305 purchased biologic implants in the appropriate system. Instead, agents documented the implants in various local spreadsheets, databases, and third party systems. Purchasing agents sometimes improperly used logistics funds instead of prosthetic funds, which makes it difficult for VHA to fully account for biologic implant spending and effectively budget or use funds for other purposes. The OIG found that due to inadequate guidance, the facilities visited had an inaccurate inventory of biologic implants, did not use a standardized system, and did not consistently review inventory on hand. At the four facilities visited, staff could not locate 714 biologic implants in inventory, valued at almost $1.1 million. The audit team also found 288 unrecorded additional items, valued at almost $433,000, in storage locations. Poor inventory management can jeopardize prompt care, as medical providers may need to delay or cancel procedures if implants are unavailable. Finally, the facilities visited failed to track at least 45 percent of implants reported as used from October 2017 through March 2019. Further, VHA did not designate responsibility for overseeing tracking, develop a national policy on how facilities should track biologic implants, or have a standard tracking system that meets accreditation requirements. Effective tracking is needed for facilities to notify veterans if their implants are recalled by the manufacturers. VHA concurred with the OIG’s 11 recommendations to improve how it purchases, inventories, and tracks biologic implants.

Open Recommendation Image, SquareOpenClosed and Implemented Recommendation Image, CheckmarkClosed-ImplementedNot Implemented Recommendation Image, X character'Closed-Not Implemented
No. 1
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Provide clarifying guidance and controls to clinic staff on making determinations to send purchase requests and consult notifications to the appropriate purchasing agents.
No. 2
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Provide clarifying guidance to purchasing agents on how to effectively evaluate biologic implant purchase requests for the correct funding source.
No. 3
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Provide clarifying guidance to prosthetic agents to ensure they receive clinic staff consult notifications on all prosthetic purchases of biologic implants.
No. 4
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Create a biologic implant cost code for general-purpose funds to improve funding accountability and potentially assist in ensuring all biologic implant use is tracked.
No. 5
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Direct the Procurement and Logistics Office to clarify guidance on the use of an approved inventory management system specific to biologic implants and the related VHA network, office, and facility staff responsibilities.
No. 6
Open Recommendation Image, Square
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Monitor facility compliance with the use of an approved inventory management system for completeness and accuracy.
No. 7
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Direct the Procurement and Logistics Office to ensure logistics staff perform inventory reviews of biologic implants, as required.
No. 8
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Monitor medical facility compliance with required reviews of on-site inventory.
No. 9
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)

Establish a structure for oversight responsibility that can provide guidance for tracking implanted biologics.

No. 10
Closed and Implemented Recommendation Image, Checkmark
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)

Create policies and procedures for facilities to follow as they implement effective controls for tracking biologic implants.

No. 11
Open Recommendation Image, Square
to Veterans Health Administration (VHA)
Establish standardized systems and requirements for facility staff to appropriately record necessary biologic implant attributes for accurate and accessible tracking of recipients to advance patient safety.