VA Health Care
Veterans at Risk from Inconsistent Screening of Practitioners
Gao ID: GAO-04-625T March 31, 2004
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) employs about 190,000 individuals including physicians, nurses, and therapists at its facilities. It supplements these practitioners with contract staff and medical residents. Cases of practitioners causing intentional harm to patients have raised concerns about VA's screening of practitioners' professional credentials and personal backgrounds. This testimony is based on GAO's report VA Health Care: Improved Screening of Practitioners Would Reduce Risk to Veterans, GAO-04-566 (Mar. 31, 2004). GAO was asked to (1) identify and assess the extent to which selected VA facilities comply with existing key VA screening requirements and (2) determine the adequacy of these requirements for its practitioners.
GAO identified key VA screening requirements that include verifying state licenses and national certificates; completing background investigations, including fingerprinting to check for criminal histories; and checking national databases for reports of practitioners who have been professionally disciplined or excluded from federal health care programs. GAO reviewed 100 practitioners' personnel files at each of four facilities it visited and found mixed compliance with the existing key VA screening requirements. GAO also found that VA has not conducted oversight of its facilities' compliance with the key screening requirements. GAO found adequate screening requirements for certain practitioners, such as physicians and dentists, for whom all licenses are verified by contacting state licensing boards. However, existing screening requirements for others, such as nurses and respiratory therapists currently employed in VA, are less stringent because they do not require verifying all state licenses and national certificates. Moreover, they require only physical inspection of these credentials rather than contacting licensing boards or certifying organizations. Physical inspection alone can be misleading; not all credentials indicate whether they are restricted, and credentials can be forged. VA also does not require facility officials to query, for other than physicians and dentists, a national database that includes reports of disciplinary actions and criminal convictions involving all licensed practitioners. In addition, many practitioners with direct patient care access, such as medical residents, are not required to undergo background investigations, including fingerprinting to check for criminal histories. This pattern of gaps and mixed compliance with key VA key screening requirements create vulnerabilities to the extent that VA remains unaware of practitioners who could place patients at risk.
GAO-04-625T, VA Health Care: Veterans at Risk from Inconsistent Screening of Practitioners
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Testimony:
Before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, Committee on
Veterans' Affairs, House of Representatives:
United States General Accounting Office:
GAO:
For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EST:
Wednesday, March 31, 2004:
VA Health Care:
Veterans at Risk from Inconsistent Screening of Practitioners:
Statement of Cynthia A. Bascetta:
Director, Health Care--Veterans' Health and Benefits Issues:
GAO-04-625T:
GAO Highlights:
Highlights of GAO-04-625T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on
Oversight and Investigations, Committee on Veterans' Affairs, House of
Representatives
Why GAO Did This Study:
VA employs about 190,000 individuals including physicians, nurses, and
therapists at its facilities. It supplements these practitioners with
contract staff and medical residents. Cases of practitioners causing
intentional harm to patients have raised concerns about VA‘s screening
of practitioners‘ professional credentials and personal backgrounds.
This testimony is based on GAO‘s report VA Health Care: Improved
Screening of Practitioners Would Reduce Risk to Veterans, GAO-04-566
(Mar. 31, 2004). GAO was asked to (1) identify and assess the extent to
which selected VA facilities comply with existing key VA screening
requirements and (2) determine the adequacy of these requirements for
its practitioners.
What GAO Found:
GAO identified key VA screening requirements that include verifying
state licenses and national certificates; completing background
investigations, including fingerprinting to check for criminal
histories; and checking national databases for reports of practitioners
who have been professionally disciplined or excluded from federal
health care programs. GAO reviewed 100 practitioners‘ personnel files
at each of four facilities it visited and found mixed compliance with
the existing key VA screening requirements. GAO also found that VA has
not conducted oversight of its facilities‘ compliance with the key
screening requirements.
GAO found adequate screening requirements for certain practitioners,
such as physicians and dentists, for whom all licenses are verified by
contacting state licensing boards. However, existing screening
requirements for others, such as nurses and respiratory therapists
currently employed in VA, are less stringent because they do not
require verifying all state licenses and national certificates.
Moreover, they require only physical inspection of these credentials
rather than contacting licensing boards or certifying organizations.
Physical inspection alone can be misleading; not all credentials
indicate whether they are restricted, and credentials can be forged. VA
also does not require facility officials to query, for other than
physicians and dentists, a national database that includes reports of
disciplinary actions and criminal convictions involving all licensed
practitioners. In addition, many practitioners with direct patient
care access, such as medical residents, are not required to undergo
background investigations, including fingerprinting to check for
criminal histories. This pattern of gaps and mixed compliance with key
VA key screening requirements create vulnerabilities to the extent that
VA remains unaware of practitioners who could place patients at risk.
What GAO Recommends:
GAO recommended that VA expand its existing verification process to
require that all state licenses and national certificates be verified
by contacting state licensing boards and national certifying
organizations, expand the query of a national database to include all
licensed practitioners, and fingerprint all practitioners who have
direct patient care access. GAO also recommended that VA conduct
oversight of its facilities to ensure their compliance with all
screening requirements. VA generally agreed with the report‘s findings
and plans to develop a detailed action plan to implement GAO‘s
recommendations.
www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-625T.
To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on
the link above. For more information, contact Cynthia A. Bascetta at
(202) 512-7101.
[End of section]
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:
I am pleased to be here today to discuss the findings and
recommendations in our report, which you are releasing today, on the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) policies and practices for
screening health care practitioners.[Footnote 1] VA employs about
190,000 individuals, including physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and
therapists, at its facilities, and it supplements these practitioners
with contract staff, medical consultants, and medical residents. VA has
screening requirements intended to help ensure that its health care
practitioners' professional credentials are verified and their personal
backgrounds are checked for evidence of incompetence or criminal
behavior.
While such requirements cannot guarantee safety in health care
settings, they are intended to minimize the chance of patients
receiving care from someone who is incompetent or who may intentionally
harm them. According to medical forensic experts, however, the
deliberate harm of patients by health care practitioners is a problem
in the health care sector in general. The well-publicized case of Dr.
Michael Swango, who pleaded guilty to murdering three veterans while a
medical resident training at the VA facility in Northport, New York,
and was sentenced to three consecutive life terms without the
possibility of parole, illustrates the potentially disastrous effect of
inadequate screening of health care practitioners.
You asked us to examine VA's policies and practices intended to ensure
that health care practitioners at its facilities have appropriate
professional credentials and personal backgrounds to provide safe care
to veterans. Specifically, we (1) identified key VA screening
requirements and assessed the extent to which selected VA facilities
complied with these screening requirements for its health care
practitioners and (2) determined the adequacy of the key VA screening
requirements for health care practitioners.
To do our work, we selected 43 occupations in which practitioners have
direct patient care access or have an impact on patient care and
identified the key screening requirements that applied to these
occupations.[Footnote 2] To identify the key screening requirements, we
reviewed VA employment screening policies and interviewed VA
headquarters and facility officials and practitioners. To assess the
extent to which VA facilities complied with the key screening
requirements, we visited four VA facilities and reviewed a
statistically random sample of about 100 practitioners' personnel files
at each site. We selected facilities to visit based on geographic
variation, affiliations with medical schools to train residents, and
types of health care services provided. Additionally, we obtained
documentation on how quickly facilities took action after obtaining the
results of background investigations. Our results cannot be generalized
to other facilities. To determine the adequacy of the key screening
requirements, we examined whether these screening requirements were
complete, and whether VA applied them to all practitioners it intended
to hire, practitioners currently employed in VA, contract health care
staff, medical residents, and volunteers. We also interviewed
representatives of state licensing boards and national certifying
organizations and officials and representatives of organizations that
operate national databases containing information on state licenses and
national certificates. We did our work from August 2003 through March
2004 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing
standards.
In summary, we identified key VA screening requirements and found mixed
compliance with these requirements in the four facilities we visited.
The key screening requirements are those that are intended to ensure
that VA facilities employ health care practitioners who have valid
professional credentials and personal backgrounds to safely deliver
health care to veterans. While we found that all facilities generally
checked, on a periodic basis, the professional credentials of
practitioners currently employed in VA, they did not verify all of the
credentials of all of the practitioners they intended to hire.
Furthermore, VA facilities varied in how quickly they took action after
obtaining the results of background investigations. During the site
visit at one facility, we discovered returned background investigation
results that were over a year old but had not been reviewed. We brought
them to the attention of facility officials, who reviewed the reports
and then terminated a nursing assistant who had been fired by a
previous non-VA employer for patient abuse. Although VA established an
office more than a year ago to perform oversight of human resources
functions, including whether its facilities comply with these key
screening requirements, that office has not conducted any compliance
reviews at facilities. Furthermore, VA has not implemented a policy for
the human resources program evaluation to be performed by this office
and has not provided funds to support this office. This pattern of
mixed compliance creates vulnerabilities to the extent that VA remains
unaware of practitioners it employs who could place patients at risk.
We also found gaps in the key VA screening requirements that VA
officials used to verify the professional credentials and personal
backgrounds of health care practitioners. We found adequate screening
requirements for certain practitioners, such as physicians and
dentists, for whom facilities are required to verify all licenses by
contacting state licensing boards. However, existing screening
requirements for others, such as nurses currently employed in VA, are
less stringent because they do not require that facilities verify all
state licenses that a nurse may holdæonly one must be checkedæand they
require only physical inspection of the license rather than contacting
the state licensing board to verify the status of the license. VA also
does not require verifying national certificatesæthe credentials held
by other health care practitioners, such as respiratory therapistsæby
contacting the national certifying organizations for practitioners VA
intends to hire and periodically for those employed in VA. Physical
inspection alone can be misleading; not all professional credentials
indicate whether they have had disciplinary actions taken against them,
and credentials can be forged. VA also does not require facility
officials to query a national database, for other than physicians and
dentists, that contains reports of professional disciplinary actions
and criminal convictions, involving all licensed practitioners. In
addition, many practitioners with direct patient care access, such as
medical residents, are not required to undergo background
investigations, including fingerprinting to check for criminal
histories.
To better ensure the safety of veterans receiving health care at VA
facilities, in our report we recommend that VA conduct more thorough
screening of practitioners VA intends to hire and practitioners
currently employed in VA by expanding its verification requirement that
facility officials contact state licensing boards and national
certifying organizations for all state licenses and national
certificates; expanding the query of a national database to include all
licensed practitioners that VA intends to hire and periodically for
practitioners currently employed in VA; and requiring fingerprint
checks for all health care practitioners who were previously exempted
from background investigations and who have direct patient care access.
Furthermore, we recommend that VA conduct oversight to help ensure that
facilities comply with all screening requirements. In commenting on a
draft of our report, VA generally agreed with our findings and
conclusions and stated that it will develop a detailed action plan to
implement our recommendations.
Background:
VA operates the largest integrated health care system in the United
States providing care to nearly 5 million veterans per year. The VA
health care system consists of hospitals, ambulatory clinics, nursing
homes, residential rehabilitation treatment programs, and readjustment
counseling centers. In addition to providing medical care, VA is the
largest educator of health care professionals, training more than
28,000 medical residents annually as well as other types of trainees.
State licenses are issued by state licensing boards, which generally
establish licensing requirements, and licensed practitioners may be
licensed in more than one state.[Footnote 3] "Current and unrestricted
licenses" are licenses that are in good standing in the state where
they are issued. To keep a license current, practitioners must renew
their licenses before they expire and meet renewal requirements
established by state licensing boards. Renewal requirements include
criteria, such as continuing education, but renewal procedures and
requirements vary by state and occupation. When a licensing board
discovers a licensee is in violation of licensing requirements or
established law, for example, abusing prescription drugs or
intentionally or negligently providing poor quality care that results
in adverse health effects, it may place restrictions on or revoke a
license. Restrictions imposed by a state licensing board can limit or
prohibit a practitioner from practicing in that particular state. Some,
but not all, state licenses are marked to indicate that the licenses
have had restrictions placed on them. Generally, state licensing boards
maintain a database of information on restrictions, which employers can
obtain at no cost either by accessing the information on a board's Web
site or by contacting the board directly.
National certificates are issued by national certifying organizations,
which are separate and independent from state licensing
boards.[Footnote 4] These organizations establish professional
standards that are national in scope for certain occupations, such as
respiratory and occupational therapists. Practitioners who are required
to have national certificates to work at VA must have current and
unrestricted certificates. Practitioners may renew these credentials
periodically by paying a fee and verifying that they obtained required
educational credit hours. A national certifying organization can
restrict or revoke a certificate for violations of the organization's
professional standards. Like state licensing boards, national
certifying organizations maintain databases of information on
disciplinary actions taken against practitioners with national
certificates, and many can be accessed at no cost.
VA Facilities Demonstrated Mixed Compliance with Key VA Screening
Requirements:
We identified key VA screening requirements and found mixed compliance
with these requirements in the four facilities we visited. The key
screening requirements are those that are intended to ensure that VA
facilities employ health care practitioners who have valid professional
credentials and personal backgrounds to deliver safe health care to
veterans. None of the four VA facilities complied with all of the
screening requirements. In addition, VA does not currently conduct
oversight of its facilities to determine if they comply with the key
screening requirements.
Key VA screening requirements include:
* verifying the professional credentials of practitioners VA intends to
hire;
* verifying periodically the professional credentials of practitioners
currently employed in VA facilities;
* querying, prior to hiring, the Department of Health and Human
Services' Office of Inspector General's List of Excluded Individuals
and Entities (LEIE) to identify practitioners who have been excluded
from participation in all federal health care programs;[Footnote 5]
* ensuring that background investigations are requested or completed
for practitioners currently employed in VA facilities;
* ensuring that the Declaration for Federal Employment form (Form 306)
is completed by practitioners currently employed in VA facilities; and:
* verifying that the educational institutions listed by a practitioner
VA intends to hire are checked against lists of diploma mills that sell
fictitious college degrees and other fraudulent professional
credentials.
To show the variability in the level of compliance among the four VA
facilities we visited, we measured their performance in five of the six
screening requirements, against a compliance rate of at least 90
percent for each requirement, even though VA policy allows no deviation
from these requirements. Table 1 summarizes the compliance results we
found for the five requirements among the four VA facilities we
visited. For the sixth requirement to match the educational
institutions listed by a practitioner against lists of diploma mills,
we asked facility officials if they did this check and then asked them
to produce the lists of diploma mills they use.
Table 1: Facilities' Rate of Compliance with Existing Key VA Screening
Requirements:
Key screening requirements: Credentials verified for practitioners VA
intends to hire;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility A:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility B:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility C:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility D:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent.
Key screening requirements: Credentials verified for practitioners
currently employed in VA;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility A:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility B:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility C:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility D:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater.
Key screening requirements: LEIE queried for practitioners VA intends
to hire;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility A:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility B:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility C:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility D:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent.
Key screening requirements: Background investigation requested or
completed for practitioners currently employed in VA;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility A:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility B:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility C:
Compliance rate less than 90 percent;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility D:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater.
Key screening requirements: Declaration for Federal Employment form
completed for practitioners currently employed in VA;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility A:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility B:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility C:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater;
Compliance with key screening requirements[A]: Facility D:
Compliance rate 90 percent or greater.
Source: GAO analysis of VA facility files.
Note: Some screening requirements do not require verifying all licenses
a practitioner might hold or verifying professional credentials by
contacting state licensing boards or national certifying organizations.
[A] Tested for significance at the 95 percent confidence level.
[End of table]
All four facilities generally complied with VA's existing policies for
verifying the professional credentials of practitioners currently
employed in VA facilities, either by contacting the state licensing
boards for practitioners such as physicians or physically inspecting
the licenses or national certificates for practitioners such as nurses
and respiratory therapists. They also generally ensured that
practitioners VA intended to hire had completed the Declaration for
Federal Employment form, which requires the practitioner to disclose,
among others things, criminal convictions, employment terminations, and
delinquencies on federal loans. However, three of the facilities did
not follow VA's policies for verifying the professional credentials of
practitioners VA intends to hire, and three did not compare
practitioners' names to LEIE prior to hiring them. Two of the four
facilities conducted background investigations on practitioners
currently employed in their facilities at least 90 percent of the time,
but the other two facilities did not.
We also asked officials whether their facilities checked the
educational institutions listed by a practitioner VA intended to hire
against a list of diploma mills to verify that the practitioner's
degree was not obtained from a fraudulent institution. An official at
one of the four facilities told us he consistently performed this
check. Officials at the other three facilities stated that they did not
perform the check because they did not have lists of diploma mills.
In addition to assessing the rate of compliance with the key screening
requirements, we found that VA facilities varied in how quickly they
took action to deal with background investigations that returned
questionable results, such as discrepancies in work or criminal
histories. The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) gives a VA facility
up to 90 days to take action after the facility receives investigation
results with questionable findings. We reviewed the timeliness of
actions taken by facility officials from August 1, 2002, through August
23, 2003, at the 4 facilities we visited and 6 additional facilities
geographically spread across the VA health care system. We found that
officials at 5 of the 10 facilities took action within the 90-day time
frame, with the number of days ranging on average from 13 to 68.
Officials at 3 facilities exceeded the 90-day time frame on average by
36 to 290 days. One facility took action on its cases prior to OPM
closing the investigation, and another facility did not have the
information available to report.
One of the cases that exceeded the 90-day time frame involved a nursing
assistant who was hired to work in a VA nursing home in June 2002. In
August 2002, OPM sent the results of its background investigation to
the VA facility, reporting that the nursing assistant had been fired
from a non-VA nursing home for patient abuse. During our review, we
found this case among stacks of OPM results of background
investigations that were stored in a clerk's office on a cart and in
piles on the desk and on other workspaces. After we brought this case
to the attention of facility officials in December 2003, they reviewed
the report and then terminated the nursing assistant, who had worked at
the VA facility for more than 1 year, for not disclosing this
information on the Declaration for Federal Employment form.
VA has not conducted oversight of its facilities' compliance with the
key screening requirements. Instead, VA has relied on OPM to do limited
reviews of whether facilities were meeting certain human resources
requirements, such as completion of background investigations. These
reviews did not include determining whether the facilities were
verifying professional credentials. Although VA established the Office
of Human Resources Oversight and Effectiveness in January 2003 to
conduct such oversight, the office has not conducted any facility
compliance evaluations. In addition, VA has not implemented a policy
for the human resources program evaluation to be performed by this
office and has not provided the resources necessary to support this
office.
Gaps in Key VA Screening Requirements Create Vulnerabilities:
Gaps in VA's requirements for screening the professional credentials
and personal backgrounds of practitioners create vulnerabilities in its
screening processes that could place patients at risk by allowing
health care practitioners who might harm patients to work in VA
facilities. For certain VA practitioners, screening requirements
include the verification of all state licenses by contacting the state
licensing boards to verify that licenses are current and unrestricted.
For example, all state licenses for physicians and dentists are
verified by contacting state licensing boards to ensure the licenses
are in good standing when VA intends to hire them and periodically
during employment. Similarly, all licenses for nurses and pharmacists
VA intends to hire are verified by contacting the state licensing
boards. However, once hired, periodic screening for nurses and
pharmacists simply involves a VA official's physical inspection of one
state license, even if the practitioner has multiple state licenses,
creating a gap in the verification process.
VA's requirements allow a practitioner to select the license under
which he or she will work in VA, and this license can be from any
state, not necessarily the one in which the VA facility is located. A
practitioner may have a restricted state license as a result of a
disciplinary action, yet show a facility official a license from
another state that is unrestricted. VA facility officials informed us
that checking one state license was sufficient because state licensing
boards share information on disciplinary actions and licenses are
marked when restricted. However, according to state licensing board
officials, one cannot determine with certainty that a license is valid
and unrestricted unless the licensing board is contacted directly.
These officials explained that state licensing boards do not always
exchange information about disciplinary actions taken against a
practitioners and not all states mark licenses that are restricted.
Moreover, licenses can be forged, even though state licensing boards
have taken steps to minimize this problem. Therefore, physical
inspection of a license alone can be misleading.
To supplement the screening of the state licenses of physicians and
dentists, VA requires facilities to query two national databasesæthe
National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB) and the Federation of State
Medical Boards (FSMB) databaseæwhich contain information about
disciplinary actions taken against practitioners. Another available
national database, the Healthcare Integrity and Protection Data Bank
(HIPDB), contains information on professional disciplinary actions and
criminal convictions involving all licensed health care practitioners,
not just physicians and dentists. VA is currently accessing HIPDB
automatically when it queries NPDB for physicians and dentists because
the databases share information. However, VA does not require its
facilities to do so for all licensed practitioners even though it is
authorized to query HIPDB without a fee.
VA also requires that practitioners it intends to hire and who must
have national certificates to work in VA facilities, such as
respiratory therapists, disclose the national certificates and any
state licenses they have ever held. However, VA facility officials are
not required to check state licenses disclosed by these practitioners
and are only required to physically inspect the national certificates.
As with physical inspection of state licenses, physical inspection of
national certificates alone can be misleading; not all certificates are
marked if restricted, and they can be forged. The only way to know with
certainty if a national certificate is current and unrestricted is to
contact the issuing national certifying organization.
In addition to gaps in VA's verification of professional credentials,
VA has not implemented consistent background screening requirements,
which would include fingerprint checks, for all practitioners. Although
VA requires background investigations for some practitioners currently
employed in VA, it does not require these investigations for all types
of practitioners. VA requested and received OPM's permission to exempt
certain categories of health care practitioners from background
investigations based on VA's assessment that these types of
practitioners do not need to be investigated. Table 2 lists the
practitioners that VA exempts from background investigations.
Table 2: Types of Practitioners VA Exempts from Background
Investigations:
Types of practitioners VA exempts: Contract health care practitioners
or practitioners who work without direct compensation from VA;
Length of appointment:
* 6 months or less in a single continuous appointment or series of
appointments.
Types of practitioners VA exempts: Medical consultants;
Length of appointment:
* 1 year or less and not reappointed;
* 1 year or more but less than 30 days in a calendar year and not
reappointed.
Types of practitioners VA exempts: Medical residents;
Length of appointment:
* 1 year or less of continuous service at a VA facility.
Source: Department of Veterans Affairs, VA Manual MP-1, Part I, Chapter
5, Change 1 (Washington, D.C.: 1979).
[End of table]
OPM began to offer a fingerprint-only checkæa new screening optionæfor
use by federal agencies in 2001. Compared to background investigations,
which typically take several months to complete, fingerprint-only check
results can be obtained within 3 weeks at a cost of less than
$25.[Footnote 6] In commenting on a draft of our report, VA said that
it planned to implement fingerprint-only checks for all contract health
care practitioners, medical residents, medical consultants, and
practitioners who work without direct compensation from VA, as well as
certain volunteers. However, VA has not issued guidance to its
facilities instructing them to implement fingerprint-only checks on all
these practitioners. VA did issue guidance to its facilities to
implement fingerprint-only checks for volunteers who have access to
patients, patient information, or pharmaceuticals.
Implementing fingerprint-only checks for practitioners who are
currently exempt from background investigations would detect
practitioners with criminal histories. According to the lead VA Office
of Inspector General investigator in the Dr. Swango case, if Dr. Swango
had undergone a fingerprint check at the VA facility where he trained,
VA facility officials would have identified his criminal history and
could have taken appropriate action. Additionally, one of the
facilities we visited had implemented fingerprint-only checks of
medical residents training in the facility and contract health care
practitioners. An official at this facility stated that fingerprint-
only checks of medical residents and contract practitioners were a
necessary component of ensuring the safety of veterans in the facility.
FSMB in 1996 recommended that states perform background investigations,
including criminal history checks, on medical residents to better
protect patients because residents have varying levels of unsupervised
patient care.
Concluding Observations:
VA's screening requirements are intended to ensure the safety of
veterans by identifying practitioners with restricted or fraudulent
credentials, criminal backgrounds, or questionable work histories.
However, compliance with the existing key screening requirements was
mixed at the four facilities we visited. None of the four facilities
complied with all of the key VA screening requirements. However, all
four facilities generally complied with VA's requirement to
periodically verify the credentials of practitioners for their
continued employment. Although VA created the Office of Human Resources
Oversight and Effectiveness in January 2003 expressly to provide
oversight of VA's human resources practices at its facilities, it has
not provided resources for this office to carry out its oversight
function. Without such oversight, VA cannot provide reasonable
assurance that its facilities comply with requirements intended to
ensure the safety of veterans receiving health care in VA facilities.
Even if VA facilities had complied with all key screening requirements,
gaps in VA's existing screening requirements allow some practitioners
access to patients without a thorough screening of their professional
credentials and personal backgrounds. For example, although the
screening requirements for verifying professional credentials for some
occupations, such as physicians, are adequate, VA does not apply the
same screening requirements for all occupations with direct patient
care access. Specifically, VA does not require that all licenses be
verified, or that licenses and national certificates be verified by
contacting state licensing boards or national certifying organizations.
Similarly, while VA relies on two national databases to identify
physicians and dentists who have disciplinary actions taken against
them, VA does not require facility officials to query HIPDB. This
national database provides information on reports of professional
disciplinary actions and criminal convictions that may involve
currently employed licensed practitioners and those VA intends to hire.
As part of its query of another database, VA accesses HIPDB
automatically for physicians and dentists, but practitioners such as
nurses, pharmacists, and physical therapists do not have their state
licenses checked against this national database. In addition, VA does
not require all practitioners with direct patient care access, such as
medical residents, to have their fingerprints checked against a
criminal history database. These gaps create vulnerabilities that could
allow incompetent practitioners or practitioners with the intent to
harm patients into VA's health care system. In light of the gaps we
found and mixed compliance with the key screening requirements by VA
facilities, we believe effective oversight could reduce the potential
risks to the safety of veterans receiving health care in VA facilities.
In our report, we recommend that VA take the following four actions:
* expand the verification requirement that facility officials contact
state licensing boards and national certifying organizations to include
all state licenses and national certificates held by practitioners VA
intends to hire and currently employed practitioners,
* expand the query of the Healthcare Integrity and Protection Data Bank
to include all licensed practitioners that VA intends to hire and
periodically query this database for practitioners currently employed
in VA,
* require fingerprint checks for all health care practitioners who were
previously exempted from background investigations and who have direct
patient care access, and:
* conduct oversight to help ensure that facilities comply with all key
screening requirements for practitioners VA intends to hire and
practitioners currently employed by VA.
Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared remarks. I will be pleased to
answer any questions you or other Members of the Subcommittee may have.
Contact and Acknowledgments:
For further information regarding this testimony, please contact
Cynthia A. Bascetta at (202) 512-7101. Mary Ann Curran and Marcia Mann
also contributed to this statement.
FOOTNOTES
[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, VA Health Care: Improved Screening
of Practitioners Would Reduce Risk to Veterans, GAO-04-566 (Washington,
D.C.: Mar. 31, 2004).
[2] Although VA has many employment screening requirements, such as
whether the applicant is a United States citizen, we selected only
those requirements that pertain to patient safety, such as verification
of credentials and background investigations.
[3] State licenses are issued by offices in states, territories,
commonwealths, or the District of Columbia, collectively referred to as
state licensing boards.
[4] Some practitioners may hold both national certificates and state
licenses.
[5] LEIE, a database maintained by the Department of Health and Human
Services' Office of Inspector General, provides information to the
public, health care providers, patients, and others relating to parties
excluded from participation in Medicare, Medicaid, and all federal
health care programs.
[6] Departments and agencies may obtain fingerprints in two ways:
either using paper or using computerized technology, which became
available in 1999. Computerized technology typically produces
fingerprint match results in 2 days.