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VA Acquisition Management: Additional Actions Needed in Serving Veterans with Sleep Apnea

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Report Type Reports and Testimonies
Report Date Sept. 26, 2024
Release Date Sept. 26, 2024
Report No. GAO-24-107010
Summary:
What GAO Found

To help veterans suffering from sleep apnea—a common condition that occurs when a sleeping person's airway becomes blocked—the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides positive airway pressure (PAP) devices as a treatment. Approximately 1.4 million veterans received PAP devices from 2016–2023.

VA began an initiative to centralize the contracting and distribution of PAP devices and supplies to help address issues experienced in its prior approach. Before the initiative, VA medical centers ordered PAP devices through a decentralized system, leading to inconsistent supply availability, prices, and care for veterans. VA set goals for the centralized PAP distribution initiative including increased efficiency, reduced costs, and improved care for veterans.

Distribution Lines at the Department of Veterans Affairs Service and Distribution Center



VA made several changes to implement the initiative, such as awarding national contracts, updating two IT systems, renovating a warehouse and increasing staff, and revising the ordering process for devices and supplies. While implementing these changes, VA addressed challenges such as the recall of certain PAP devices by a major manufacturer in June 2021.

According to VA officials leading the initiative, they have yet to develop metrics to monitor performance because they are still dealing with issues that arose from the recall. One area where GAO found performance issues was the call center that veterans can contact for reordering PAP supplies. GAO's analysis of call center wait times from November 2022 through November 2023 found that 37 percent of calls were answered. However, 63 percent were unanswered because the caller hung up before reaching a representative. DLC officials stated that over half of these terminated calls were addressed through subsequent callback and services were provided to the caller. For veterans needing assistance, this could delay reordering of needed PAP supplies. Without establishing objectives and metrics to monitor the performance of the initiative, VA cannot track whether it is addressing the issues that prompted these changes, or whether it is meeting the needs of veterans who use PAP devices and supplies to treat their sleep apnea.

Why GAO Did This Study

Sleep apnea is a prevalent respiratory disability for which veterans receive benefits. VA spent approximately $2 billion acquiring sleep apnea care devices and supplies over the last 8 years. GAO added VA's acquisition management to its High-Risk Series in 2019 due to numerous challenges to efficiently purchasing goods and services.

GAO was asked to review VA's initiative to centralize the distribution of PAP devices. This report assesses (1) the basis for VA's decision to centralize the distribution of PAP devices and supplies; (2) changes VA made to implement the initiative; (3) challenges experienced in implementing the initiative; and (4) how VA monitors the initiative's performance.

To conduct this work, GAO made a site visit to the Service and Distribution Center where orders for PAP devices and supplies are filled and shipped, reviewed contract files and other program documentation, analyzed ordering system data, and interviewed VA officials and sleep medicine clinicians.

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