The inspector general’s office for Health and Human Services said Wednesday there will be a “wide-ranging” review of shelters where immigrant children are being held.

The agency will examine safety concerns as well as the performance of private contractors who are tasked with the taking care of children in federal custody.

A spokesperson for the inspector general office told The Post that the agency will be “conducting site visits to Office of Refugee Resettlement facilities nationwide.”

The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) is responsible for housing undocumented migrants.

“Our multidisciplinary team is specifically looking at ORR’s efforts to ensure the health and safety of unaccompanied children placed at its facilities,” the IG’s spokesperson, Tesia Williams, said.

“We anticipate releasing a report on our findings and recommendations by the end of this calendar year.”

ORR is caring for about 12,000 migrant children, including some 2,000 who arrived at the southwest border with a parent and were separated because of the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” policy.

A judge has ordered those children reunited with their parents.

With Post Wires