Resource Center

Stories

The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast.

These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need.

Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:



Search results for "Department of Health Services" ...

  • Hospital at Risk

    My investigation of the Minnesota Security Hospital, a state-run facility that provides psychiatric treatment to nearly 400 adults deemed "mentally ill and dangerous," uncovered high rates of violence and injuries of employees and patients at the facility, a critical shortage of psychiatrists, and widespread confusion among employees about what to do when a patient becomes violent. I found that much of confusion was the result of the abrasive, threatening management style of head administrator David Proffitt, who was hired in 2011 to reform the facility. I began investigating Proffitt and found he was hired without a basic background check. I uncovered many troubling details from Proffitt's past, including domestic violence, a PhD from a now-defunct online degree mill, a forced resignation from his previous job as the administrator of a private psychiatric hospital in Maine, and other failings. The state ordered Proffitt to resign and the Minnesota legislative auditor began an audit of the department's hiring practices. The assistant commissioner of the Department of Human Services who led the hiring search also resigned. The governor proposed $40 million in renovations to address safety concerns. Regulators from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration visited the facility for the first time in 21 years. The facility also implemented new training for employees to reduce violence. My investigation of the facility continues.

    Tags: Psychiatrists; domestic violence; injuries

    By Reporter: Madeleine Baran; Editors: Mike Edgerly; Chris Worthington

    Minnesota Public Radio (St. Paul, Minn.)

    2012

  • Champaign Pest Inspection

    The Champaign-Urbana Public Health District conducts about 1,300 inspections of restaurants and other food-service facilities next year. But, unlike many other health departments in the area and across the U.S., the district does nothing to publicize the results of these inspections.

    Tags: health inspection; food inspection; health department

    By Dan Petrella; Jennifer Wheeler; Pam Dempsey; Steve Contorno

    CU-CitizenAccess.org

    2011

  • Bad Medicine

    "This series details the history of a Kansas City area neurosurgeon who has a long history of malpractice cases involving paralysis, disfigurement and deaths yet maintains a spotless Kansas medical license."

    Tags: FOI; malpractice; Department of Health and Human Services

    By Alan Bavley

    The Kansas City Star

    2011

  • Home or Nursing Home: America's Empty Promise to Give the Elderly and Disabled a Choice

    "A new legal right gives the elderly and young people with disabilities in the Medicaid program the right to get their long-term health care at home, not in a nursing home. But the NPR investigation found that thise new right to choose one's care at home is largely denied to those who want it."

    Tags: nursing home; elder care; disabled; long-term care; medical care; community-based care; Department of Health and Human Services; American with Disabilities Act; Olmstead Decision

    By Joseph Shapiro; Susanne Reber; Steven Drummond; Robert Benincasa; John Poole; Andrew Prince; Alicia Cypress; Becky Lettenberger; Alyson Hurt, Nelson Hsu, Brandon Petrowsky; Barbara Van Woerkom; Marisa Penaloza; Christine Arrasmith

    National Public Radio

    2010

  • "Deaths at the State Hospital"

    This ongoing investigation reveals major misconduct by the Colorado Mental Health Institute in Pueblo, the largest public psychiatric hospital in the state. The investigative team exposed and detailed the deaths of four patients that resulted from the "mistakes, lack of training, incompetence and possible criminal neglect" carried out by hospital employees. The series also reveals the attempt of state human services officials to cover up the mistakes.

    Tags: mental health; patients; grand jury; DA; Pueblo; Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment; database; Pueblo State Hospital; Nexis-Lexis; 441.com; CoCourts.com; Colorado Bureau of Investigation

    By John Ferrugia; Jeff Harris; Arthur Kane; Tom Burke; Jason Foster; Brad Bogott

    KMGH-TV (Denver)

    2010

  • "Their Crime, Your Dime"

    Following several tips on possible "government waste," and schemes that target Seattle taxpayers, KING-TV produced this series of three stories titled "Their Crime, Your Dime." The team exposed how merchants operated a "broad scheme" that allowed citizens to convert their food stamps into cash. Another story revealed how "welfare recipients" were spending millions of "taxpayer cash in the state's casinos."

    Tags: food stamps; taxpayer; welfare; State Department of Social and Health Services; ATM; casino; public records; black market

    By Chris Ingalls; Kellie Cheadle; Steve Douglas; Mark Ginther

    KING-TV (Seattle)

    2010

  • "Insurer Targeted HIV Patients to Drop Coverage"

    In this four-month investigation, reporter Murray Waas reveals that the prominent insurance company WellPoint was targeting "policyholders recently diagnosed with breast cancer for the wrongful and sometimes illegal termination of their health insurance." Waas interviews several women whose insurance policies were terminated based on "flimsy or questionable evidence." Similarly, the insurance company Fortis was found to be targeting recently diagnosed HIV patients.

    Tags: cancer; HIV; breast cancer; Fortis; WellPoint; insurance; United Health Care; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; Obama

    By Murray Waas; Lewis Krauskopf; Jim Impoco; Claudia Parsons; Doina Chiacu

    Reuters

    2010

  • Medicare Fraud: The New Cocaine Cowboys

    Medicare Fraud has become one of the largest organized crimes in America. The investigation revealed that it costs “US taxpayers $60 billion in fraudulent Medicare benefits filed every year”. As a result of the first story, many groups moved in to initiate new laws, which would regulate Medicare and who gets the money.

    Tags: 60 Minutes; Department of Health and Human Services; congressional; health care; medical; medicine; schemes; insurance; clinics; system

    By Stephen Stock; Amber Statler-Matthews; Giovani Benitez; Adrienne Roark; Nick Gordillo

    WFOR-TV (Miami)

    2009

  • Senior Insecurity

    One of the most expensive health and human services program in California was designed to help the elderly and disabled afford basic necessities. The program, which costs “almost three billion dollars”, is covered by taxpayers. But when you look on the streets, you will see a number of elderly people living there because they aren’t able to pay for food and shelter. The issue that arises is how the money is being spent and whether the program is working or not.

    Tags: Supplemental Security Income (SSI); state budget cuts; money; income; federal government; Department of Social Services

    By Kelley Weiss

    Capital Public Radio (Sacramento, Calif.)

    2009

  • "First, Do No Harm/Behind The Curtain"

    Two women have come forward to say they were sexual assaulted by a male ER nurse while in the care of North Kansas City Hospital. The women were heavily drugged while the assaults occurred. KCTV reporters found that sexual assault on hospital patients is not as rare a problem as most might think. However, when asked about the issue, local advocacy groups, state nursing boards and even the senior V.P. of the Joint Commission were unaware it even existed.

    Tags: MOCSA; Joint Commission; Federal Department of Health and Human Services; North Kansas City Hospital; William Price; Center for Health Ethics; Sarah Breier; Missouri State Board of Nursing; Paul Schyve

    By Ash-har Quraishi; Chris Koeberl; Ken Ullery; Chris Henao

    KCTV-TV (Kansas City, Mo.)

    2009