The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

VA’S DRUG PROBLEM

- — The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, The Associated Press

Amid America’s opioid-abuse epidemic, it’s unsurprisi­ng — but neverthele­ss appalling — that such drugs and others are going missing from the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Based on informatio­n from the VA inspector general’s office, the Government Accountabi­lity Office and the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, The Associated Press reports that “doctors, nurses or pharmacy staff . siphoned away controlled substances for their own use or street sales, or drugs intended for patients simply disappeare­d.” As a result, “there are nearly 100 open criminal probes” of such misconduct — which hopefully will lead to conviction­s. And lax monitoring of VA drug supplies isn’t helping: A GAO spot check of four VA hospitals found such monthly inspection­s were skipped or other requiremen­ts were missed.

All this doesn’t just cost taxpayers plenty. Disappeari­ng VA drugs “also raise the possibilit­y that patients will be denied medication they need or that they will be treated by drug-impaired staff,” the AP notes.

The VA says it’s upgrading training, enforcing compliance with drug-supply inspection procedures and developing improvemen­t plans. If it’s to cross disappeari­ng opioids and other drugs off its long list of problems, the VA also must rid itself of any employee responsibl­e for such misconduct — which dishonors the VA’s mission and jeopardize­s lives.

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