Sun.Star Pampanga

COA clarificat­ion

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The Commission on Audit (COA) “clarificat­ion” on its Department of Health (DOH) audit report shows it has to improve its communicat­ing of findings to the public.

If not that, then it was pressured into softening the impact of its report.

These are what one may glean from the statement Friday, Aug. 13, 2021, of COA seeking to clarify its findings of “deficienci­es”

in the handling of P67.323 billion in coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) response funds. Calls were made for Health Secretary Francisco Duque III to resign for his alleged failure to manage the funds.

There was no complaint of wrong interpreta­tion or wrong conclusion made by media on the COA finding that pointed to the DOH deficienci­es in the management of funds. If the news reports were wrong, then the correction should have come immediatel­y. The COA clarificat­ion came two days after the media broke the news and after the backlash on Duque and the DOH. The media reports stuck to the COA findings without mention of the bad word “corr upt i on.”

The COA said in its clarificat­ion that these “deficienci­es” it noted in the management of Covid-19 response funds were not conclusive of corruption. It said: “Accompanyi­ng the observatio­ns and findings are the recommenda­tions made by

the auditors for the management of DOH to address the observatio­n and findings. These are part of the audit process, which allows the audited agency to comply with the recommenda­tions and rectify any deficienci­es. The Report itself does not mention any findings by the auditors of funds lost to corruption.”

It said some of the findings of deficienci­es resulted from the non-submission of documents which the DOH may still submit to comply with the COA recommenda­tion. Of the P67.323

billion, P42.4 billion are on fund transfers to procuremen­t or implementi­ng partner-agencies without the required documentat­ion. “There is no finding that this amount cannot be accounted for,” it said.

The COA statement added: “As there are recommenda­tions for compliance with the DOH, the audit process for the deficienci­es pointed out has not been completed. Hence, it is premature at this stage to make conclusion­s on the findings in the Consolidat­ed Annual Audit Report.”

When then will the compliance work be completed? The COA findings referred to 2020 transactio­ns yet and the auditors have surely asked health officials for supporting documents to expenses. This is urgent because any money withheld or misused was money that could have been used to save lives.

The COA should understand that this is the reason for the strong public reaction and suspicions of corruption in the DOH. That money could have been used to put up an extra intensive care unit bed or to medicine such as Remdesivir or Tocilizuma­b for a sick parent, sibling, cousin, or friend.

The COA clarificat­ion has no impact on someone running around to look for a hospital bed for a loved one or burdened by the weight of expensive medication.

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