The settlement audit of central government subsidies for basic medical insurance for urban and rural residents in Anhui Province has been completed, led by the Ministry of Finance Anhui Supervision Bureau. The bureau focused on two core aspects—authenticity of enrollment data and compliance of fund allocation—to ensure the audit process followed established rules.

Regarding enrollment data, provincial industry authorities used a standardized data screening plan developed by the Anhui Supervision Bureau to conduct full comparisons and verifications of provincial enrollment data, removing invalid or duplicate enrollments that did not meet policy requirements. The Anhui Supervision Bureau provided on-site guidance throughout, verifying original scripts and analyzing comparison logic to confirm the reliability of screening results and the accuracy of enrollment data.

In the fund allocation process, auditors strictly referred to national subsidy standards for basic medical insurance for urban and rural residents, accurately calculating the total subsidy amounts from each level of government, and verified the transfer of subsidy funds into social security fund accounts by checking receipts and reconciling arrival times and amounts. Additionally, the bureau randomly selected some grassroots areas for in-depth checks on the implementation of county-level fiscal subsidies to ensure timely and full fund delivery and stable operation of local medical insurance funds.

To strengthen the audit foundation, the Anhui Supervision Bureau regularly organized key personnel to study policy documents on medical insurance subsidies, unifying audit criteria, refining operational procedures, and clarifying responsibilities. It also actively coordinated with the Provincial Department of Finance and the Provincial Medical Insurance Bureau, establishing mechanisms for communication, information sharing, and collaboration, forming a work framework led by the supervision bureau with departmental cooperation covering key stages such as application, screening, feedback, and rectification.

The Anhui Supervision Bureau also intensified routine dynamic oversight, conducting periodic checks on enrollment data and fund flows. For problems such as irregular enrollment or delayed fund allocation, it urged industry authorities to lead rectification efforts, improve management systems, and prevent fund usage risks at the source.