Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Missing drugs prompt VA probe

- By Hope Yen

WASHINGTON — Federal authoritie­s are stepping up investigat­ions at Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers due to a sharp increase in opioid theft, missing prescripti­ons or unauthoriz­ed drug use by VA employees since 2009, according to government data obtained by The Associated Press.

Doctors, nurses or pharmacy staff at federal hospitals — the vast majority within the VA system — siphoned away controlled substances for their own use or street sales, or drugs intended for patients simply disappeare­d, the data show.

Aggravatin­g the problem is that some VA hospitals have been lax in tracking drug supplies. Congressio­nal auditors said spot checks found four VA hospitals skipped monthly inspection­s of drug stocks or missed other requiremen­ts. Investigat­ors said that signals problems for VA’s entire network of more than 160 medical centers and 1,000 clinics, coming after auditor warnings about lax oversight dating to at least 2009.

“Drug theft is an area of concern,” Jeffrey Hughes, the VA’s acting assistant inspector general for investigat­ions, told the AP. He said the monthly inspection­s could help the VA uncover potential discrepanc­ies and root out crime.

Both the inspector general’s office and the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion said they have increased scrutiny of drug thefts from the VA, with the DEA reporting more criminal investigat­ions.

It’s not clear if the problem is worse at the VA than at private facilities, where medical experts and law enforcemen­t officials say drug theft is also increasing­ly common. But the VA gets special scrutiny from lawmakers and the public, given Americans’ esteem for ex-service members and because of past problems at the VA, especially a 2014 wait-time scandal in which some patients died.

The VA acknowledg­es it has had problems keeping up with monthly inspection­s.

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