Visiting and assisting veterinary clinics coast to coast over the years, Titan Group’s teams have witnessed a number of mysteries: where did the “good scissors” go, who heated up fish in the breakroom microwave, and who lost the billing paperwork. But there’s one mystery that’s no joke: missing controlled substances. We’ve spent years walking into vet clinics, (and plenty of pharmacies, hospitals, and distributors also) where something “just didn’t look right”, and it turned out the warning signs for drug diversion were there all along. The lesson learned: if you can spot the diversion clues early, it’s a lot easier to protect yourself, your staff, your license and – ultimately – patients and clients.
Controlled substances in veterinary practices are attractive targets for theft and misuse —too often by the clinic staff themselves. In diversion cases, Titan’s investigators often discover that weeks or months before the perpetrator was sending out the warning “messages” — changes in behavior, creating record discrepancies, or taking security shortcuts that no one questioned. A little awareness by other employees could have prevented an avalanche of problems.
In drug diversion cases, behavior changes can show up long before strange inventory numbers raise alarms. While no single indicator is proof of diversion, odd patterns or sudden changes in behavior should grab your attention
Titan Tip: No matter how long you’ve worked with some employees, stop thinking you know them. You likely have no idea what trauma, stress, problems or issues they’re facing in their lives. Putting aside your “familiarity bias” can improve your “problem radar”.
Some of the loudest alarm bells when diversion occurs are “ringing” in records. In Titan’s experience, when a practice is missing drugs, the paper trail holds the clues that tell the story:
Titan Tip: Limit access to controlled substances to the fewest staff members possible. And set up a clear, “zero tolerance” policy for chain of custody when ordering, receiving, or dispensing controlled substances.
Diversion doesn’t usually start with a dramatic heist — it starts with small, repeated crimes of opportunity that go unchecked. The most successful veterinary teams Titan works with are the ones that take security personally, hold each other accountable, and never assume “it could never happen here.” If you see something, document it, verify it, and act (such as calling Titan) — before a small red flag becomes a full-blown case.
Not sure if there are problems lurking at your practice? Take our FREE risk assessment or give TITAN a call at (347) 723-8019. It could mean the difference between a solvable problem and disaster.