The OIG, or Office of Inspector General, is the largest civilian oversight agency responsible for monitoring the Department of Health and Human Services' extensive portfolio of programs, which collectively exceed $2 trillion.
According to the HHS OIG About page, “OIG's mission is to provide objective oversight to promote the economy, efficiency, effectiveness, and integrity of HHS programs, as well as the health and welfare of the people they serve.”
The OIG ensures that HHS programs and operations are run honestly, effectively, and in compliance with the law. The OIG works independently, keeping both the Secretary of Health and Human Services and Congress in the loop about its findings. With a team of about 1,570 dedicated professionals—including auditors, investigators, and evaluators, and backed by experts in law, technology, cybersecurity, data analytics, medicine, and more—the OIG is all about making big, positive changes.
They aim to improve systems, spot problems, ensure everyone is accountable, and recover funds that have been wrongly used. This is achieved all while sticking to the highest standards of inspection and review set by top oversight authorities like the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency and the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
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The pillars of program integrity for the OIG within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) are as follows:
The first pillar involves knowing who you are doing business with and avoiding doing business with bad actors. It focuses on proactive measures to prevent fraudulent and non-compliant activities within HHS programs.
The second pillar is about identifying problems and implementing effective safeguards and sound management principles. It emphasizes the need to detect issues, vulnerabilities, and non-compliance within HHS programs.
The third pillar emphasizes taking appropriate action to correct program vulnerabilities and holding bad actors accountable. It involves enforcement actions against those who engage in fraudulent or misconduct activities related to HHS programs.
See also: Getting listed on the HHS Wall of Shame
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The role of the OIG is to provide independent oversight, audits, investigations, and guidance to ensure the integrity, compliance, and effectiveness of programs within the Department of Health and Human Services.
The core values of the OIG include integrity, excellence, accountability, independence, and teamwork.
Audits, investigations, and inspections.
To prevent and detect fraud, waste, abuse, and misconduct.