Audit Uncovers Questionable Jackson Memorial International Marketing Expenses

An audit by the Public Health Trust, which oversees Miami's Jackson Memorial Hospital has uncovered some questionable expenses by the health system's international marketing unit, Foundation Health Services, according to a report by the Miami Herald.

The non-profit Foundation Health Services came under scrutiny in October when a report from Miami-Dade County's inspector general criticized the unit's "wasteful spending" and demanded Jackson stop its relationships with FHS, according to the report.

The new internal audit uncovered $735 in supplies sent to the home of FHS' CEO as well as expenses for transportation passes for employees and 10 airfares more than $1,000.

Rolando Rodriguez, chief executive of FHS, said the expenses were legitimate, explainging that the supplies sent to his home were work-related and that employees receive transportation coverage and are allowed to take first-class flights when the flight is longer than six hours.

Jackson has since requested to form a new non-profit to takeover FHS' marketing services and agreed to make the entity subject to open-record laws, according to the report.

Read the Miami Herald report on Jackson Memorial Hospital.

Read more coverage on Jackson Memorial Hospital:

- Miami-Dade OIG Finds "Wasteful" Spending by Jackson Health's Foundation Health Services

-
Florida's Jackson Memorial Hospital May Receive Up To $50M in Federal Assistance

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