Request for Applications for the Prevention of HIV/AIDS in Women Living in the Rural South Program, 18254-18261 [E7-6833]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 69 / Wednesday, April 11, 2007 / Notices
the Secretary, Assistant Secretary for
Resources and Technology, Office of
Resources Management, Attention:
Sherrette Funn-Coleman (0990–0221),
Room 537–H, 200 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington DC 20201.
Dated: April 4, 2007 .
Mary Oliver-Anderson,
Office of the Secretary, Paperwork Reduction
Act Reports Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. E7–6791 Filed 4–10–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–25–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Request for Applications for the
Prevention of HIV/AIDS in Women
Living in the Rural South Program
Office on Women’s Health,
Office of Public Health and Science,
Office of the Secretary, Department of
Health and Human Services.
ACTION: Notice.
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AGENCY:
Announcement Type: Competitive
Cooperative Agreement—FY 2007 Initial
announcement.
Funding Opportunity Number: Not
Applicable.
OMB Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance: The OMB Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance Number is 93.015.
DATES: No later than 5 p.m. Eastern
Time on June 11, 2007.
ADDRESSES: To receive consideration,
applications must be received by the
Office of Grants Management, Office of
Public Health and Science (OPHS),
Department of Health and Human
Services (DHHS) c/o WilDon Solutions,
Office of Grants Management
Operations Center, 1515 Wilson Blvd.,
Third Floor Suite 310, Arlington, VA
22209, Attention Office of Women’s
Health, HIV.
SUMMARY: This program is authorized by
42 U.S.C. 300u–2(a).
The mission of the Office on Women’s
Health (OWH) is to promote the health
of women and girls through genderspecific approaches. To that end, OWH
has established public/private
partnerships to address critical women’s
health issues nationwide. These include
supporting collaborative efforts to
provide accurate prevention education
to rural women living in the rural1
south2 rural South. The emphasis of
these efforts is on educational and
prevention counseling covering the full
spectrum of primary and secondary
1 Access: https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/graphics/ruralurban.htm for definitions.
2 Access: https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/graphics/ruralurban.htm for visual of U.S. south.
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prevention adapted to a female centered
perspective. This initiative is intended
to demonstrate a collaborative
partnership approach between the
grantee and local health or social service
providers, e.g., community health
centers, rural health centers, family
planning clinics, the Special
Supplemental Nutrition Program for
Women, Infants and Children (WIC),
community based organizations, faith
based organizations, public assistance
programs and local health departments.
The partnership is expected to be a
viable strategy for identifying and
educating rural women in a culturally
appropriate manner that reduces denial,
demystifies stigma, clarifies inaccuarate
information, and increases knowledge
for self-protection and access to
counseling and testing resources. It is
expected that the prevention education
model will provide accurate, culturally,
and linguistically appropriate
information to women at risk for or
living with HIV/AIDS in the rural south.
Funding will be directed at activities
designed to improve the delivery of
services to women disproportionately
impacted by HIV/AIDS.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
The primary purpose of this OWH
HIV/AIDS program is to increase HIV
prevention knowledge and reduce the
risk of contracting HIV among minority
women living in the rural south. The
goals for this program are:
Develop and sustain HIV prevention
services to increase awareness of and
receptivity to HIV prevention, including the
ABC 3—Abstinence, Being Faithful, Correct
and Consistent use of Condoms model,
among women living in rural communities in
the south experiencing high rates of HIV
infection within female populations.
Develop gender specific education and
prevention training modules on critical HIV/
AIDS primary and secondary prevention/
education information. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention recommended
effective interventions may be used as well
as adapted interventions which demonstrate
core elements of interventions with evidence
of effectiveness.4
Implement education and prevention
training modules that are culturally and
linguistically appropriate for women living
in rural communities in the south.
3 USAID. The ‘‘ABCs’’ of HIV prevention: Report
of a USAID technical meeting on behavior change
approaches to primary prevention of HIV/AIDS.
Washington, DC: Population, Health and Nutrition
Information Project, 2003.https://www.usaid.gov/
our_work/global_health/aids/TechAreas/
prevention/abc.pdf
4 Compendium of HIV Prevention Interventions
with Evidence of Effectiveness, CDC’s HIV/AIDS
Prevention Research Synthesis Project, November
1999.
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The OWH hopes to fulfill this purpose
by providing funding to targeted
community-based organizations to
enhance their prevention and support
activities to women living in the rural
south experiencing high rates of HIV
infection. The proposed program must
address false HIV information, stigma,
denial, knowledge, self-protection
behaviors and the importance of
knowing one’s seropositive status. A
gender specific approach shall be an
integral element of the selected
intervention. Information and services
provided must be culturally and
linguistically appropriate for the
individuals for whom the information
and services are intended. Women’s
health issues are defined in the context
of women’s lives, including their
multiple social roles and the importance
of relationships with other people to
their lives. This definition of women’s
health encompasses mental, dental, and
physical health and spans the life
course.
The objectives of the OWH program
are to:
1. Increase knowledge of accurate HIV
prevention information among women
living in rural communities in the
south.
2. Improve and increase access to
quality HIV prevention services to
women living with or at high risk for
HIV infection in rural communities in
the south.
3. Improve receptivity to and
awareness of HIV prevention education
necessary to reduce the stigma among
women in rural south communities.
4. Increase the number of women
living in the rural south voluntarily
receiving HIV testing.
In order to achieve the objectives of
the program the grantee shall: (1)
Establish partnership(s) with local
entities after reviewing city/county/
State data on HIV incidence among
women populations, exploring
challenges and trends which enable
risks and vulnerabilities of women
living in rural south communities. (2)
Develop and implement a gender
specific model ‘‘education and
prevention counseling’’ program to
provide accurate prevention education
to women living in the rural south.
Culture, language, and sub-cultures of
rural south populations are
considerations for appropriate program
components. (3) Develop or select use of
existing prevention education training
modules on critical HIV/AIDS primary
and secondary prevention and
education information. (4) Establish
Memoranda of Understanding with local
health care entities, social services, local
small businesses, community and faith
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based organizations as partners to
implement referral coordination for
counseling, HIV testing, well woman
screenings, and other social service
needs. (5) Visit local community
assistance offices/small businesses, faith
based organizations and other health/
social service programs as outreach to
communities and women living with
HIV/AIDS and who are at risk of
infection of HIV/AIDS/STDs. In
addition, the grantee shall submit
reports outlining program activities
(e.g., recruitment, participant retention),
which reflect how its implementation
process reflected an understanding of
the realities of women’s lives and
addressed the issues of the participants
to motivate continued participation.
Finally, the grantee shall develop a plan
to continue the program activities and
community linkages beyond OWH
funding and shall illustrate how
program performance addressed
community needs and the needs of
women living in rural south
communities experiencing high rates of
HIV infection.
The grantee is encouraged to attend at
least one national or regional HIV/AIDS
Conference (e.g., U.S. Conference on
AIDS, the CDC National HIV Prevention
Conference, etc.), and to seek updates in
HIV prevention strategies, therapies,
and priority activities as advised by the
CDC, the Health Resources and Services
Administration, and other public health
experts.
II. Award Information
The OWH program will be supported
through the cooperative agreement
mechanism. Using this mechanism, the
OWH anticipates making five awards in
FY 2007. The anticipated start date for
new awards is September 01, 2007, and
the anticipated period of performance is
September 01, 2007, through August 31,
2010. Approximately $500,000 is
available to make awards of up to
$100,000 total cost (direct and indirect)
for a 12-month period. However, the
actual number of awards made will
depend upon past performance and the
quality of the applications received and
the amount of funds available for the
program.
The program is a collaborative effort
between the OWH and the Office of
HIV/AIDS Policy, OPHS. These offices
will provide the technical assistance
and oversight necessary for the
implementation, conduct, and
assessment of program activities.
The applicant shall:
1. Develop and implement the model
described in the application.
2. Provide complete curricula, i.e.,
topics, content, participant workbook,
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participant evaluation forms, pre/post
instruments, and goals/objectives.
3. Describe training, teaching methods
and strategies, e.g., interactive exercises,
facilitated discussion, lectures, video/
films, community peers, etc., proposed
to deliver modules. Describe the
intervention format: one time session,
series of sessions occurring beyond one
day, one day session, etc.
4. Conduct outreach to local entities
and community representatives. Identify
locations for prevention education sites
and identify community liaisons for
assistance in identifying prospective
women participants.
5. Establish community partnerships
through Memoranda of Understanding.
6. Participate in special meetings and
projects/funding opportunities
identified by the OWH.
7. Adhere to all program requirements
specified in this announcement and the
Notice of Grant Award.
8. Submit required quarterly progress,
annual, and financial reports by the due
dates stated in this announcement and
the Notice of Grant Award.
9. Comply with the DHHS Protection
of Human Subjects regulations (which
require obtaining Institutional Review
Board approval), set out at 45 CFR Part
46, if applicable. General information
about Human Subjects regulations can
be obtained through the Office for
Human Research Protections (OHRP) at
https://www.hhs.gov/ohrp,
ohrp@osophs.dhhs.gov, or toll free at
(866) 447–4777.
The Federal Government will:
1. Conduct an orientation meeting for
the grantees within the first month of
funding.
2. Conduct at least one site visit
which includes some observation of
program progress.
3. Review and approve the prevention
education curricula for consistency with
the A-B-C strategy.
4. Review all quarterly, annual, and
final progress reports.
5. Review and concur with requested
project modifications.
6. Review timeline and
implementation plan.
7. Participate in telephone
conferences and other activities
supporting project performance
improvements and evaluation
The DHHS is committed to achieving
the health promotion and disease
prevention Objectives of Healthy People
2010 and the Healthy U.S. Initiative.
Emphasis will be placed on aligning
OWH activities and programs with the
DHHS Secretary’s four priority areas—
heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and HIV/
AIDS and with the Healthy People 2010:
Goal 2—eliminating health disparities
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due to age, gender, race/ethnicity,
education, income, disability, or living
in rural localities. More information on
the Healthy People 2010 objectives may
be found on the Healthy People 2010
Web site: https://www.health.gov/
healthypeople. One free copy may be
obtained from the National Center for
Health Statistics (NCHS), 6525 Belcrest
Road, Room 1064, Hyattsville, MD
20782 or telephone (301) 458–4636
[DHHS Publication No. (PHS) 99–1256].
This document may also be downloaded
from the NCHS Web site: https://
www.cdc.gov/nchs.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants
Eligible applicants must meet all of
the following criteria:
1. Organizations located in rural south
communities experiencing high HIV
prevalence among women;
2. Organizations in or adjacent to
rural communities located in the
South;4 and
3. Organizations which indicated
history of serving African American
women, Hispanic women, rural women,
poor women, women living with HIV/
AIDS, or whose lifestyles place them at
high risk for HIV/STD infection.
Eligible entities may include: non
profit community-based organizations,
faith-based organizations, national
organizations, colleges and universities,
clinics and hospitals, research
institutions, State and local government
agencies, tribal government agencies
and tribal/urban Indian organizations.
2. Cost Share or Matching
Cost Sharing or Matching funds are
not required for this program.
IV. Application And Submission
Information
1. Address To Request Application Kit
Application kits may be obtained by
accessing Grants.gov at https://
www.grants.gov or the e-Grants system
at www.grantsolutions.gov. To obtain a
hard copy of the application kit, contact
WilDon Solutions at 1–888–203–6161.
Applicants may fax a written request to
WilDon Solutions at 703–351–1135 or email the request to
OPHSgrantsinfor@teamwildon.com.
Applicants must be prepared using
Form OPHS–1, which can be obtained at
the Web site noted above.
2. Content and Format of Application
and Submission
All completed applications must be
submitted to the OPHS Office of Grants
Management at the above mailing
address. In preparing the application, it
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is important to follow ALL instructions
provided in the application kit.
Applications must be submitted on the
forms supplied (OPHS–1, Revised 3/
2006) and in the manner prescribed in
the application kits provided by the
OPHS. Applicants are required to
submit an application signed by an
individual authorized to act for the
applicant agency or organization and to
assume for the organization the
obligations imposed by the terms and
conditions of the grant award. The
program narrative should not be longer
than 25 double spaced pages, not
including appendices and required
forms, using an easily readable, 12 point
font. All pages, figures and tables
should be numbered.
A Dun and Bradstreet Universal
Numbering System (DUNS) number is
required for all applications for Federal
assistance. Organizations should verify
that they have a DUNS number or take
the steps necessary to obtain one.
Instructions for obtaining a DUNS
number are included in the application
package, and may be downloaded from
the Web site: https://www.dnb.com/US/
duns_update/. At a
minimum, each application for a
cooperative agreement grant funded
under this OWH announcement must:
Present a plan outlining steps to develop
and implement a gender specific model
program using an evidence based effective
intervention with trainers capable of
providing accurate prevention information in
a culturally and linguistically appropriate
manner to rural women in the south. Specify
the screening, development and or selection
process for the intervention model(s) and the
role of advisory committees and/or board of
directors.
Provide signed Memoranda of
Agreement(s) with partners to establish
linkages to identify women participants,
location of prevention education sites, and
for referral to available services for the
targeted population based upon prevention,
care, counseling, testing and social service
needs.
Detail/specify the roles and resources/
services that each partner organization brings
to the program, and the duration and terms
of agreement as confirmed by a signed MOU/
MOA between the applicant organization and
each partner. The partnership agreement(s)
(MOU/MOA) must name the individual who
will work with the program, describe their
function, and state their qualifications. The
documents, specific to each organization
(form letters are not acceptable), must be
signed by individuals with the authority to
represent and bind the organization (e.g.,
president, chief executive officer, executive
director) and submitted as part of the grant
application. Partnership agreements must be
on letterhead of partnering agency.
Demonstrate the ways the organization and
the prevention education services that are
coordinated through its partners are gender
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and age appropriate, women-focused,
women-friendly, women-relevant as well as
culturally and linguistically appropriate to
the target population.
Be a sustainable organization with an
established network of partners capable of
providing and coordinating a gender specific
prevention education model program in the
targeted community. The partners and their
roles and responsibilities to the program
must be clearly identified in the application.
OWH prefers that applicants have a
minimum of three years prior demonstrated
experience.
Demonstrate that any prevention
intervention (including prevention for
positives) contains the core elements of
interventions with evidence of effectiveness.
(See Compendium of HIV Prevention
Interventions with Evidence of Effectiveness,
from CDC’s HIV/AIDS Prevention Research
Synthesis Project, Nov. 1999; see CDC’s HIV
Prevention Strategic Plan 2005.)
Provide a time line and work plan for
Program Implementation for the funding
year, presented in correlation to goals,
objectives, and expected outcomes or targets,
demonstrating an understanding of the
relationship between programmatic activities
and HIV prevention outcomes.
Describe in detail plans for the local
evaluation of the program and when and how
the evaluation will be used to enhance the
program; and describe the approval process
of local and state review boards for local
evaluation surveys, focus groups, and other
client inquiries.
Describe the organization’s skill levels in
word processing and data management
(Word, Word perfect, excel); and specify the
filing, storage, and location of client files.
Format and Limitations of
Application: Applicants are required to
submit an original ink signed and dated
application and 2 photocopies. All
pages must be numbered clearly and
sequential beginning with the Project
Summary. The application must be
typed double-spaced on one side of
plain 8 1⁄2″ x 11″ white paper, using at
least a 12 point font, and contain 1″
margins all around.
The Project Summary and Project
Narrative must not exceed a total of 25
double-spaced pages, excluding the
appendices. The original and each copy
must be stapled; the application should
be organized in accordance with the
format presented in the RFA. An outline
for the minimum information to be
included in the ‘‘Project Narrative’’
section is presented below. The content
requirements for the Project Narrative
portion of the application are divided
into five sections and described below
within each Factor. Applicants must
pay particular attention to structuring
the narrative to respond clearly and
fully to each review Factor and
associated criteria. Applications not
adhering to these guidelines may not be
reviewed.
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Background (Understanding of the
Problem)
A. Organizations’ goals and
purpose(s).
B. Demographic profile and HIV
prevalence of target rural community
and counties with discussion of local
norms, tradition, culture of targeted
population.
C. Local needs assessment and gaps in
services, e.g., prevention, care, and
social services for targeted population.
D. Local program objectives
1. Tied to program goal(s);
2. Measurable with time frame.
E. Organizational charts that include
partners and a discussion of the
proposed resources to be contributed by
the partners, personnel, and their
expertise and how their involvement
will help achieve the program goals.
Implementation Plan (Approach)
A. Discuss gender specific program
elements.
B. Describe curriculum and its
appropriateness for target population.
C. Describe local evaluation tools,
indicators of increased knowledge,
reduction in attitudes/stigma, and an
increase number voluntarily undergoing
HIV testing.
D. Partnerships and referral system/
follow up.
Management Plan
A. Key project staff, their resumes,
and a staffing chart for budgeted staff.
B. To-be-hired staff and their
qualifications.
C. Staff responsibilities.
D. Management experience of the lead
agency and partners as related to their
role in the Program.
E. Management oversight of staff roles
and job performance.
F. Address maintenance of
confidentiality, ethics in performance,
and on-going staff training.
G. Explain decision making hierarchy.
Local Evaluation Plan
A. Purpose.
B. Describe tools and procedures for
measuring strengths and weaknesses.
C. Use of results to enhance programs.
D. Indicators that reflect goals/
objectives are being met.
Organizational Agency Qualifications
A. Agency history of performance in
prevention education, e.g., developing/
adapting prevention education
curricula, training skills and expertise,
certification in specific training
modules, measuring participant learning
and satisfaction.
B. Agency relationships, past and
current, with women focused programs,
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local health and social services
providers, and community based
organizations and representatives.
C. Community acceptance: staff
recognition, media, requests for agency
involvement.
D. Technical Assistance plans/
strategies.
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Appendices
A. Memorandums of Agreement/
Understanding/Partnership Letters.
B. Required Forms (Assurance of
Compliance Form, etc.).
C. Key Staff Resumes.
D. Charts/Tables (Partners, services,
population demographics, program
components, etc.).
E. Other attachments.
Use of Funds: A majority of the funds
from the award must be used to support
staff and efforts aimed at implementing
the program. The Program Coordinator,
or the person responsible for the day-today management of the program, must
devote at least a 75 percent level of
effort to the program. Funds may also be
used to transfer the lessons learned/
successful strategies/gender specific
approaches from the program (technical
assistance) through activities such as
showcasing the program at conferences,
meetings, and workshops; providing
direct technical assistance to other
communities; and providing technical
assistance to other rural south based
community organizations, or through
their professional organizations,
interested in working with women
living in the rural south who are living
with HIV/AIDS or who are at high risk
for HIV/STD infection. These may
include either process-based lessons
(i.e., How to bring multiple sectors of
community partners together) or
outcomes-based lessons (i.e., How to
increase the number of rural women
living in the south who voluntarily
undergo HIV testing).
Funds may be used for personnel,
consultants, supplies (including
screening, education, and outreach
supplies), and grant related travel.
Funds may not be used for construction,
building alterations, equipment,
medical treatment, or renovations. All
budget requests must be justified fully
in terms of the proposed goals and
objectives and include an itemized
computational explanation/breakout of
how costs were determined.
Meetings: The OWH will convene
grantees once a year for orientation. The
meeting will be held in the Washington
metropolitan area or in one of the ten
(10) DHHS regional office cities. The
budget should include a request for
funds to pay for the travel, lodging, and
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meals. The meeting is usually held
within the first six weeks post award.
3. Submission Date and Time
To be considered for review,
applications must be received by the
Office of Public Health and Science,
Office of Grants Management, c/o
WilDon Solutions, by 5 p.m. Eastern on
June 11, 2007. Applications will be
considered as meeting the deadline if
they are received on or before the
deadline date. The application due date
requirement in this announcement
supercedes the instructions in the
OPHS–1 form.
Submission Mechanisms
The Office of Public Health and
Science (OPHS) provides multiple
mechanisms for the submission of
applications, as described in the
following sections. Applicants will
receive notification via mail from the
OPHS Office of Grants Management
confirming the receipt of applications
submitted using any of these
mechanisms. Applications submitted to
the OPHS Office of Grants Management
after the deadlines described below will
not be accepted for review. Applications
which do not conform to the
requirements of the grant announcement
will not be accepted for review and will
be returned to the applicant.
While applications are accepted in
hard copy, the use of the electronic
application submission capabilities
provided by the Grants.gov and
GrantSolutions.gov systems is
encouraged. Applications may only be
submitted electronically via the
electronic submission mechanisms
specified below. Any applications
submitted via any other means of
electronic communication, including
facsimile or electronic mail, will not be
accepted for review.
In order to apply for new funding
opportunities which are open to the
public for competition, you may access
the Grants.gov Web site portal. All
OPHS funding opportunities and
application kits are made available on
Grants.gov. If your organization has/had
a grantee business relationship with a
grant program serviced by the OPHS
Office of Grants Management, and you
are applying as part of ongoing grantee
related activities, please access
GrantSolutions.gov.
Electronic grant application
submissions must be submitted no later
than 5 p.m. Eastern Time on the
deadline date specified in the DATES
section of the announcement using one
of the electronic submission
mechanisms specified below. All
required hardcopy original signatures
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and mail-in items must be received by
the OPHS Office of Grants Management,
c/o WilDon Solutions (1515 Wilson
Blvd., Suite 310, Arlington, VA 22209)
no later than 5 p.m. Eastern Time on the
next business day after the deadline
date specified in the DATES section of
the announcement.
Applications will not be considered
valid until all electronic application
components, hardcopy original
signatures, and mail-in items are
received by the OPHS Office of Grants
Management according to the deadlines
specified above. Application
submissions that do not adhere to the
due date requirements will be
considered late and will be deemed
ineligible.
Applicants are encouraged to initiate
electronic applications early in the
application development process, and to
submit early on the due date or before.
This will aid in addressing any
problems with submissions prior to the
application deadline.
Electronic Submissions Via the
Grants.gov Web Site Portal
The Grants.gov Web site Portal
provides organizations with the ability
to submit applications for OPHS grant
opportunities. Organizations must
successfully complete the necessary
registration processes in order to submit
an application. Information about this
system is available on the Grants.gov
Web site, https://www.grants.gov.
In addition to electronically
submitted materials, applicants may be
required to submit hard copy signatures
for certain Program related forms, or
original materials as required by the
announcement. It is imperative that the
applicant review both the grant
announcement, as well as the
application guidance provided within
the Grants.gov application package, to
determine such requirements. Any
required hard copy materials, or
documents that require a signature,
must be submitted separately via mail to
the OPHS Office of Grants Management,
c/o WilDon Solutions, and if required,
must contain the original signature of an
individual authorized to act for the
applicant agency and the obligations
imposed by the terms and conditions of
the grant award. When submitting the
required forms, do not send the entire
application. Complete hard copy
applications submitted after the
electronic submission will not be
considered for review.
Electronic applications submitted via
the Grants.gov Web site Portal must
contain all completed online forms
required by the application kit, the
Program Narrative, Budget Narrative
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and any appendices or exhibits. All
required mail-in items must received by
the due date requirements specified
above. Mail-In items may only include
publications, resumes, or organizational
documentation. When submitting the
required forms, do not send the entire
application. Complete hard copy
applications submitted after the
electronic submission will not be
considered for review.
Upon completion of a successful
electronic application submission via
the Grants.gov Web site Portal, the
applicant will be provided with a
confirmation page from Grants.gov
indicating the date and time (Eastern
Time) of the electronic application
submission, as well as the Grants.gov
Receipt Number. It is critical that the
applicant print and retain this
confirmation for their records, as well as
a copy of the entire application package.
All applications submitted via the
Grants.gov Web site Portal will be
validated by Grants.gov. Any
applications deemed ‘‘Invalid’’ by the
Grants.gov Web site Portal will not be
transferred to the GrantSolutions
system, and OPHS has no responsibility
for any application that is not validated
and transferred to OPHS from the
Grants.gov Web site Portal. Grants.gov
will notify the applicant regarding the
application validation status. Once the
application is successfully validated by
the Grants.gov Web site Portal,
applicants should immediately mail all
required hard copy materials to the
OPHS Office of Grants Management,
c/o WilDon Solutions, to be received by
the deadlines specified above. It is
critical that the applicant clearly
identify the Organization name and
Grants.gov Application Receipt Number
on all hard copy materials.
Once the application is validated by
Grants.gov, it will be electronically
transferred to the GrantSolutions system
for processing. Upon receipt of both the
electronic application from the
Grants.gov Web site Portal, and the
required hardcopy mail-in items,
applicants will receive notification via
mail from the OPHS Office of Grants
Management confirming the receipt of
the application submitted using the
Grants.gov Web site Portal.
Applicants should contact Grants.gov
regarding any questions or concerns
regarding the electronic application
process conducted through the
Grants.gov Web site Portal.
Electronic Submissions Via the
GrantSolutions System
OPHS is a managing partner of the
GrantSolutions.gov system.
GrantSolutions is a full life-cycle grants
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management system managed by the
Administration for Children and
Families, Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS), and is
designated by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) as one of the three
Government-wide grants management
systems under the Grants Management
Line of Business initiative (GMLoB).
OPHS uses GrantSolutions for the
electronic processing of all grant
applications, as well as the electronic
management of its entire Grant
portfolio.
When submitting applications via the
GrantSolutions system, applicants are
required to submit a hard copy of the
application face page (Standard Form
424) with the original signature of an
individual authorized to act for the
applicant agency and assume the
obligations imposed by the terms and
conditions of the grant award. If
required, applicants will also need to
submit a hard copy of the Standard
Form LLL and/or certain Program
related forms (e.g., Program
Certifications) with the original
signature of an individual authorized to
act for the applicant agency. When
submitting the required forms, do not
send the entire application. Complete
hard copy applications submitted after
the electronic submission will not be
considered for review.
Electronic applications submitted via
the GrantSolutions system must contain
all completed online forms required by
the application kit, the Program
Narrative, Budget Narrative and any
appendices or exhibits. The applicant
may identify specific mail-in items to be
sent to the Office of Grants Management
separate from the electronic submission;
however these mail-in items must be
entered on the GrantSolutions
Application Checklist at the time of
electronic submission, and must be
received by the due date requirements
specified above. Mail-In items may only
include publications, resumes, or
organizational documentation. When
submitting the required forms, do not
send the entire application. Complete
hard copy applications submitted after
the electronic submission will not be
considered for review.
Upon completion of a successful
electronic application submission, the
GrantSolutions system will provide the
applicant with a confirmation page
indicating the date and time (Eastern
Time) of the electronic application
submission. This confirmation page will
also provide a listing of all items that
constitute the final application
submission including all electronic
application components, required
hardcopy original signatures, and mail-
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in items, as well as the mailing address
of the OPHS Office of Grants
Management where all required hard
copy materials must be submitted.
As items are received by the OPHS
Office of Grants Management, the
electronic application status will be
updated to reflect the receipt of mail-in
items. It is recommended that the
applicant monitor the status of their
application in the GrantSolutions
system to ensure that all signatures and
mail-in items are received.
Mailed or Hand-Delivered Hard Copy
Applications
Applicants who submit applications
in hard copy (via mail or handdelivered) are required to submit an
original and two copies of the
application. The original application
must be signed by an individual
authorized to act for the applicant
agency or organization and to assume
for the organization the obligations
imposed by the terms and conditions of
the grant award.
Mailed or hand-delivered applications
will be considered as meeting the
deadline if they are received by the
OPHS Office of Grant Management, c/o
WilDon Solutions, on or before 5 p.m.
Eastern Time on the deadline date
specified in the DATES section of the
announcement. The application
deadline date requirement specified in
this announcement supersedes the
instructions in the OPHS–1.
Applications that do not meet the
deadline will be returned to the
applicant unread.
Applications will be screened upon
receipt. Those that are judged to be
incomplete or arrive after the deadline
will not be reviewed. Applications that
exceed the specified amount for a
twelve-month budget period may also
not be reviewed. Applications that are
judged to be in compliance will be
reviewed for technical merit in
accordance with DHHS policies.
Applications will be evaluated by a
technical review panel composed of
experts with experience with sex and
gender programs, program management,
service delivery, outreach, health
education, Healthy People 2000 and/or
Healthy People 2010, leadership
development and program assessment.
Consideration for award will be given to
applicants that best demonstrate
progress and/or plausible strategies for
eliminating health disparities through
sex and gender targeted HP 2010
objectives. Applicants are also advised
to pay close attention to the specific
program guidelines and general
instructions in the application kit.
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4. Intergovernmental Review
This program is subject to the Public
Health Systems Reporting
Requirements. Under these
requirements, a community-based nongovernmental applicant must prepare
and submit a Public Health System
Impact Statement (PHSIS). Applicants
shall submit a copy of the application
face page (SF–424) and a one page
summary of the project, called the
Public Health System Impact Statement.
The PHSIS is intended to provide
information to State and local health
officials to keep them apprised on
proposed health services grant
applications submitted by communitybased, non-governmental organizations
within their jurisdictions.
Community-based, non-governmental
applicants are required to submit, no
later than the Federal due date for
receipt of the application, the following
information to the head of the
appropriate State and local health
agencies in the area(s) to be impacted:
(a) A copy of the face page of the
application (SF 424), (b) a summary of
the project (PHSIS), not to exceed one
page, which provides: (1) A description
of the population to be served, (2) a
summary of the services to be provided,
and (3) a description of the coordination
planned with the appropriate state or
local health agencies. Copies of the
letters forwarding the PHSIS to these
authorities must be contained in the
application materials submitted to the
OWH.
This program is also subject to the
requirements of Executive Order 12372
that allows States the option of setting
up a system for reviewing applications
from within their States for assistance
under certain Federal programs. The
application kit to be made available
under this notice will contain a listing
of States that have chosen to set up a
review system and will include a State
Single Point of Contact (SPOC) in the
State for review. Applicants (other than
federally recognized Indian tribes)
should contact their SPOCs as early as
possible to alert them to the prospective
applications and receive any necessary
instructions on the State process. For
proposed projects serving more than one
State, the applicant is advised to contact
the SPOC in each affected State. A
complete list of SPOCs may be found at
the following web site: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants/
spoc.html The due date for State process
recommendations is 60 days after the
application deadline. The OWH does
not guarantee that it will accommodate
or explain its responses to State process
recommendations received after that
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date. (See Intergovernmental Review of
Federal Programs, Executive Order
12372, and 45 CFR Part 100 for a
description of the review process and
requirements.)
5. Funding Restrictions
Funds may not be used for
construction, building alterations,
equipment purchase, medical treatment,
renovations, or to purchase food.
6. Other Submission Requirements
Beginning October 1, 2003, all
applicants are required to obtain a Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
number as preparation for doing
business electronically with the Federal
Government. The DUNS number must
be obtained prior to applying for OWH
funds. The DUNS number is a ninecharacter identification code provided
by the commercial company Dun &
Bradstreet, and serves as a unique
identifier of business entities. There is
no charge for requesting a DUNS
number, and you may register and
obtain a DUNS number by either of the
following methods: Telephone, 1–866–
705–5711. Web site: https://
www.dnb.com/product/eupdate/
requestOptions.html. Be sure to click on
the link that reads, ‘‘DUNS Number
Only’’ at the right hand, bottom corner
of the screen to access the free
registration page. Please note that
registration via the web site may take up
to 30 business days to complete.
V. Application Review Information
1. Criteria: The objective technical
review of applications will consider the
following factors:
Factor 1: Implementation/Approach *
30%
This section must discuss:
1. Appropriateness of the existing
community resources and linkages
established to deliver accurate
prevention education to meet the
requirements of the program. Describe
other community providers that will be
affiliated with the program and their
role in service delivery.
2. Appropriateness of proposed
approach, e.g. evidence based
intervention and specific activities
described to address program objectives.
3. Gender specific elements of
proposed process.
4. Soundness of evaluation objectives
for measuring program effectiveness,
impact of prevention education on
knowledge and behavior, and
understanding the importance of
knowing one’s status.
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5. Appropriate MOU’s or Letters of
Intent should support assertions made
in this section.
Factor 2: Management Plan—20%
This section must discuss:
1. Applicant’s organization capability
to manage the project as determined by
the qualifications of the proposed staff
or requirements for ‘‘to be hired’’ staff;
2. Proposed staff level of effort;
management experience of the lead
agency; and the experience, resources
and role of each partner organization as
it relates to the needs and programs/
activities of the program;
3. Staff experience as it relates to
meeting the needs of the community
and populations served.
4. Detailed position descriptions,
resumes of key staff, and a staffing chart
should be included in the appendix.
Factor 3: Organizational/Agency
Qualifications—20%
This section should include
demonstrated knowledge of prevention
education intervention models,
relationships with rural women living
in rural communities in the south, and
agency history of services to poor
women, minority women, HIV infected
individuals, and HIV infected women.
Factor 4: Background/Understanding of
the Problem—15%
This section must discuss:
1. Description of the current state of
affairs for women living in rural
communities in the south regarding HIV
prevalence, socioeconomic status,
access to HIV testing, stigma and
availability of HIV prevention education
in addition to the review of issues for
women living in the program target
rural community.
2. Relevance of organizational goals
and purpose(s) to community and local
needs.
3. Challenges women face in seeking
HIV culturally and linguistically
appropriate education and counseling
and testing in the target rural
community and surrounding areas.
4. Outreach, logistics, and stigma
issues impacting the target rural
community.
Factor 5: Evaluation Plan—15%
Provide a clear statement of program
goal(s), feasibility and appropriateness
of the local evaluation plan, analysis of
results, and procedures to determine if
the program goals are met. Provide a
clear statement of willingness to
participate actively in the national OWH
evaluation.
Review and Selection Process:
Funding decisions will be made by the
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OWH, and will take into consideration
the recommendations and ratings of the
review panel, program needs,
geographic location, stated preferences,
and the recommendations of DHHS
Regional Women’s Health Coordinators
(RWHC).
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Award Notices
Successful applicants will receive a
notification letter from the Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Health (Women’s
Health) and a Notice of Grant Award
(NGA), signed by the OPHS Grants
Management Officer. The NGA shall be
the only binding, authorizing document
between the recipient and the OWH.
Notification will be mailed to the
Program Director identified in the
application. Unsuccessful applicants
will receive a notification letter with the
results of the review of their application
from the Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Health (Women’s Health).
2. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements
The regulations set out at 45 CFR
parts 74 and 92 are the Department of
Health and Human Services (DHHS)
rules and requirements that govern the
administration of grants. Part 74 is
applicable to all recipients except those
covered by part 92, which governs
awards to State and local governments.
Applicants funded under this
announcement must be aware of and
comply with these regulations. The CFR
volume that include parts 74 and 92
may be downloaded from https://
www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/
waisidx_03/45cfrvl_03.html.
The DHHS Appropriations Act
requires that, when issuing statements,
press releases, requests for proposals,
bid solicitations, and other documents
describing projects or programs funded
in whole or in part with Federal money,
all grantees shall clearly state the
percentage and dollar amount of the
total costs of the program or project
which will be financed with Federal
money and the percentage and dollar
amount of the total costs of the project
or program that will be financed by nongovernment sources.
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3. Reporting Requirements
In addition to those listed above, a
successful applicant will submit a
progress report and a final report. This
report shall provide a detailed summary
of major achievements, problems
encountered, and actions taken to
overcome them. Progress reports require
data collection into the matrix provided
by the national evaluator. The final
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report shall summarize the goals
achieved and lessons learned in the
course of the contract, and how the
program will be sustained. The report
shall be format established by the OWH,
in accordance with provisions of the
general regulations which apply under
‘‘Monitoring and Reporting Program
Performance,’’ 45 CFR Parts 74 and 92.
The purpose of the quarterly and annual
progress reports is to provide accurate
and timely program information to
program managers and to respond to
Congressional, Departmental, and
public requests for information about
the program. An original and one copy
of the quarterly progress report must be
submitted by, December 10, March 10,
June 10 and final report by August 25.
If these dates fall on a Saturday or
Sunday, the report will be due on
Monday.
A financial Status Report (FSR) SF–
269 is due 90 days after the close of each
12-month budget period.
VII. Agency Contact(s)
For application kits, information on
budget and business aspects, and
programmatic questions of the
application, please contact: WilDon
Solutions, Office of Grants Management
Operations Center, 1515 Wilson Blvd.,
Third Floor, Suite 310, Arlington, VA
22209 at 1–888–203–6161, e-mail
OPHSgrantinfo@teamwildon.com, or fax
703–351–1135.
VIII. Other Information
Three (3) OWH Prevention of HIV/
AIDS in Women Living in the Rural
South programs are currently funded by
the OWH. Information about these
programs may be found at the following
Web site:
https://www.womenshealth.gov/owh/
fund/index.htm.
Definitions
For the purposes of this cooperative
agreement program, the following
definitions are provided:
AIDS: Acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome is a disease in which the
body’s immune system breaks down and
is unable to fight off certain infections
and other illnesses that take advantage
of a weakened immune system.
Age-appropriate: Provision of
prevention education that adapts the
assessment and overall counseling
education to the developmental level of
the individual(s)
Community-based: The locus of
control and decision-making powers is
located at the community level,
representing the service area of the
community or a significant segment of
the community.
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Community-based organization:
Public and private, nonprofit
organizations that are representative of
communities or significant segments of
communities.
Community health center: A
community-based organization that
provides comprehensive primary care
and preventive services to medically
underserved populations. This includes
but is not limited to programs
reimbursed through the Federally
Qualified Health Centers mechanism,
Migrant Health Centers, Primary Care
Public Housing Health Centers,
Healthcare for the Homeless Centers,
and other community-based health
centers.
Comprehensive women’s health
services: Services including, but going
beyond traditional reproductive health
services to address the health needs of
underserved women in the context of
their lives, including recognition of the
importance of family relationships and
responsibilities. Services include basic
primary care services; acute, chronic,
and preventive services including
gender and age-appropriate preventive
services; mental and dental health
services; patient education and
counseling; promotion of healthy
behaviors (like nutrition, smoking
cessation, substance abuse services, and
physical activity); and enabling services.
Ancillary services are also provided
such as laboratory tests, X-ray,
environmental, social referral, and
pharmacy services.
Culturally competent: Information
and services provided at the educational
level and in the language and cultural
context that are most appropriate for the
individuals for whom the information
and services are intended. Additional
information on cultural competency is
available at the following Web site:
https://www.aoa.dhhs.gov/May2001/
factsheets/Cultural-Competency.html.
Cultural perspective: Recognizes that
culture, language, and country of origin
have an important and significant
impact on the health perceptions and
health behaviors that produce a variety
of health outcomes.
Enabling services: Services that help
women access health care, such as
transportation, parking vouchers,
translation, child care, and case
management.
Gender-Specific: An approach which
considers the social and environmental
context in which women live and
therefore structures information,
activities, program priorities and service
delivery systems to compliment those
factors.
Healthy People 2010: A set of national
health objectives that outlines the
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prevention agenda for the Nation.
Healthy People 2010 identify the most
significant preventable threats to health
and establishes national goals for the
next ten years. Individuals, groups, and
organizations are encouraged to
integrate Healthy People 2010 into
current programs, special events,
publications, and meetings. Businesses
can use the framework, for example, to
guide worksite health promotion
activities as well as community-based
initiatives. Schools, colleges, and civic
and faith-based organizations can
undertake activities to further the health
of all members of their community.
Health care providers can encourage
their patients to pursue healthier
lifestyles and to participate in
community-based programs. By
selecting from among the national
objectives, individuals and
organizations can build an agenda for
community health improvement and
can monitor results over time. More
information on the Healthy People 2010
objectives may be found on the Healthy
People 2010 web site: https://
www.health.gov/healthypeople.
HIV: The human immunodeficiency
virus that causes AIDS.
Holistic: Looking at women’s health
from the perspective of the whole
person and not as a group of different
body parts. It includes dental, mental, as
well as physical health.
Lifespan: Recognizes that women
have different health and psycho social
needs as they encounter transitions
across their lives and that the positive
and negative effects of health and health
behaviors are cumulative across a
woman’s life.
Prevention education: Accurate
information to increase knowledge of
methods and behaviors to keep
individuals from becoming infected
with HIV.
Dated: April 3, 2007.
Wanda K. Jones,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health,
(Women’s Health)
[FR Doc. E7–6833 Filed 4–10–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–33–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
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Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
[60Day–07–07AT]
Proposed Data Collections Submitted
for Public Comment and
Recommendations
In compliance with the requirement
of Section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the
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Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 for
opportunity for public comment on
proposed data collection projects, the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) will publish periodic
summaries of proposed projects. To
request more information on the
proposed projects or to obtain a copy of
the data collection plans and
instruments, call 404–639–5960 and
send comments to Joan Karr, CDC
Acting Reports Clearance Officer, 1600
Clifton Road, MS–D74, Atlanta, GA
30333 or send an e-mail to
omb@cdc.gov.
Comments are invited on: (a) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including
whether the information shall have
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology. Written comments should
be received within 60 days of this
notice.
Proposed Project
Quarantine Station Illness Response
Forms—Airline, Maritime, Land/Border
Crossing (0920–07AT)—New—National
Center for Preparedness, Detection, and
Control of Infectious Diseases
(NCPDCID) (proposed), Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Background and Brief Description
CDC is proposing to collect patientlevel clinical, epidemiologic, and
demographic data from ill travelers and
their possible contacts in order to fulfill
its regulatory responsibility to prevent
the importation of communicable
diseases from foreign countries (42 CFR
Part 71) and interstate control of
communicable diseases in humans (42
CFR Part 70).
Section 361 of the Public Health
Service (PHS) Act (42 U.S.C. 264)
authorizes the Secretary of Health and
Human Services to make and enforce
regulations necessary to prevent the
introduction, transmission or spread of
communicable diseases from foreign
countries into the United States. The
regulations that implement this law, 42
CFR Parts 70 and 71, authorize
quarantine officers and other personnel
to inspect and undertake necessary
control measures with respect to
conveyances (e.g., airplanes, cruise
ships, trucks, etc.), persons, and
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18261
shipments of animals and etiologic
agents in order to protect the public
health. The regulations also require
conveyances to immediately report an
‘‘ill person’’ or any death on board to
the Quarantine Station prior to arrival in
the United States. An ‘‘ill person’’ is
defined in statute by:
—Fever (≥100 °F or 38 °C) persisting ≥48
hours
—Fever (≥100 °F or 38 °C) AND rash,
glandular swelling, or jaundice
—Diarrhea (≥3 stools in 24 hours or
greater than normal amount)
The SARS situation and concern
about pandemic influenza and other
communicable diseases have prompted
CDC Quarantine Stations to recommend
that all illnesses be reported prior to
arrival.
CDC Quarantine Stations are currently
located at 20 international U.S. Ports of
Entry. When a suspected illness is
reported to the Quarantine Station,
officers promptly respond to this report
by meeting the incoming conveyance
(when possible), collecting information
and evaluating the patient(s), and
determining whether an ill person can
safely be admitted into the U.S. If
Quarantine Station staff are unable to
meet the conveyance, the crew or
medical staff of the conveyance are
trained to complete the required
documentation and forward it (using a
secure system) to the Quarantine Station
for review and follow-up.
To perform these tasks in a
streamlined manner and ensure that all
relevant information is collected in the
most efficient and timely manner
possible, Quarantine Stations use a
number of forms—the Airline Screening
and Illness Response Form, the Ship
Illness/Death Reporting Form, and the
Land/Border Crossing Form—to collect
data on passengers with suspected
illness and other travelers/crew who
may have been exposed to an illness.
These forms are also used to respond to
a report of a death aboard a conveyance.
The purpose of all three forms is the
same: To collect information that helps
quarantine officials detect and respond
to potential public health
communicable disease threats. All three
forms collect the following categories of
information: demographics and mode of
transportation, clinical and medical
history, and any other relevant facts
(e.g., travel history, traveling
companions, etc.). As part of this
documentation, quarantine public
health officers look for specific signs
and symptoms common to the nine
quarantinable diseases (Pandemic
influenza; SARS; Cholera; Plague;
Diphtheria; Infectious Tuberculosis;
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[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 69 (Wednesday, April 11, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 18254-18261]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-6833]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Request for Applications for the Prevention of HIV/AIDS in Women
Living in the Rural South Program
AGENCY: Office on Women's Health, Office of Public Health and Science,
Office of the Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Announcement Type: Competitive Cooperative Agreement--FY 2007
Initial announcement.
Funding Opportunity Number: Not Applicable.
OMB Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance: The OMB Catalog of
Federal Domestic Assistance Number is 93.015.
DATES: No later than 5 p.m. Eastern Time on June 11, 2007.
ADDRESSES: To receive consideration, applications must be received by
the Office of Grants Management, Office of Public Health and Science
(OPHS), Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) c/o WilDon
Solutions, Office of Grants Management Operations Center, 1515 Wilson
Blvd., Third Floor Suite 310, Arlington, VA 22209, Attention Office of
Women's Health, HIV.
SUMMARY: This program is authorized by 42 U.S.C. 300u-2(a).
The mission of the Office on Women's Health (OWH) is to promote the
health of women and girls through gender-specific approaches. To that
end, OWH has established public/private partnerships to address
critical women's health issues nationwide. These include supporting
collaborative efforts to provide accurate prevention education to rural
women living in the rural\1\ south\2\ rural South. The emphasis of
these efforts is on educational and prevention counseling covering the
full spectrum of primary and secondary prevention adapted to a female
centered perspective. This initiative is intended to demonstrate a
collaborative partnership approach between the grantee and local health
or social service providers, e.g., community health centers, rural
health centers, family planning clinics, the Special Supplemental
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC), community
based organizations, faith based organizations, public assistance
programs and local health departments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Access: https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/graphics/rural-urban.htm for
definitions.
\2\ Access: https://www.cdc.gov/hiv/graphics/rural-urban.htm for
visual of U.S. south.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The partnership is expected to be a viable strategy for identifying
and educating rural women in a culturally appropriate manner that
reduces denial, demystifies stigma, clarifies inaccuarate information,
and increases knowledge for self-protection and access to counseling
and testing resources. It is expected that the prevention education
model will provide accurate, culturally, and linguistically appropriate
information to women at risk for or living with HIV/AIDS in the rural
south.
Funding will be directed at activities designed to improve the
delivery of services to women disproportionately impacted by HIV/AIDS.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
The primary purpose of this OWH HIV/AIDS program is to increase HIV
prevention knowledge and reduce the risk of contracting HIV among
minority women living in the rural south. The goals for this program
are:
Develop and sustain HIV prevention services to increase
awareness of and receptivity to HIV prevention, including the ABC
\3\--Abstinence, Being Faithful, Correct and Consistent use of
Condoms model, among women living in rural communities in the south
experiencing high rates of HIV infection within female populations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ USAID. The ``ABCs'' of HIV prevention: Report of a USAID
technical meeting on behavior change approaches to primary
prevention of HIV/AIDS. Washington, DC: Population, Health and
Nutrition Information Project, 2003.https://www.usaid.gov/our_work/
global_health/aids/TechAreas/prevention/abc.pdf
_____________________________________-
Develop gender specific education and prevention training
modules on critical HIV/AIDS primary and secondary prevention/
education information. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
recommended effective interventions may be used as well as adapted
interventions which demonstrate core elements of interventions with
evidence of effectiveness.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Compendium of HIV Prevention Interventions with Evidence of
Effectiveness, CDC's HIV/AIDS Prevention Research Synthesis Project,
November 1999.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Implement education and prevention training modules that are
culturally and linguistically appropriate for women living in rural
communities in the south.
The OWH hopes to fulfill this purpose by providing funding to
targeted community-based organizations to enhance their prevention and
support activities to women living in the rural south experiencing high
rates of HIV infection. The proposed program must address false HIV
information, stigma, denial, knowledge, self-protection behaviors and
the importance of knowing one's seropositive status. A gender specific
approach shall be an integral element of the selected intervention.
Information and services provided must be culturally and linguistically
appropriate for the individuals for whom the information and services
are intended. Women's health issues are defined in the context of
women's lives, including their multiple social roles and the importance
of relationships with other people to their lives. This definition of
women's health encompasses mental, dental, and physical health and
spans the life course.
The objectives of the OWH program are to:
1. Increase knowledge of accurate HIV prevention information among
women living in rural communities in the south.
2. Improve and increase access to quality HIV prevention services
to women living with or at high risk for HIV infection in rural
communities in the south.
3. Improve receptivity to and awareness of HIV prevention education
necessary to reduce the stigma among women in rural south communities.
4. Increase the number of women living in the rural south
voluntarily receiving HIV testing.
In order to achieve the objectives of the program the grantee
shall: (1) Establish partnership(s) with local entities after reviewing
city/county/State data on HIV incidence among women populations,
exploring challenges and trends which enable risks and vulnerabilities
of women living in rural south communities. (2) Develop and implement a
gender specific model ``education and prevention counseling'' program
to provide accurate prevention education to women living in the rural
south. Culture, language, and sub-cultures of rural south populations
are considerations for appropriate program components. (3) Develop or
select use of existing prevention education training modules on
critical HIV/AIDS primary and secondary prevention and education
information. (4) Establish Memoranda of Understanding with local health
care entities, social services, local small businesses, community and
faith
[[Page 18255]]
based organizations as partners to implement referral coordination for
counseling, HIV testing, well woman screenings, and other social
service needs. (5) Visit local community assistance offices/small
businesses, faith based organizations and other health/social service
programs as outreach to communities and women living with HIV/AIDS and
who are at risk of infection of HIV/AIDS/STDs. In addition, the grantee
shall submit reports outlining program activities (e.g., recruitment,
participant retention), which reflect how its implementation process
reflected an understanding of the realities of women's lives and
addressed the issues of the participants to motivate continued
participation. Finally, the grantee shall develop a plan to continue
the program activities and community linkages beyond OWH funding and
shall illustrate how program performance addressed community needs and
the needs of women living in rural south communities experiencing high
rates of HIV infection.
The grantee is encouraged to attend at least one national or
regional HIV/AIDS Conference (e.g., U.S. Conference on AIDS, the CDC
National HIV Prevention Conference, etc.), and to seek updates in HIV
prevention strategies, therapies, and priority activities as advised by
the CDC, the Health Resources and Services Administration, and other
public health experts.
II. Award Information
The OWH program will be supported through the cooperative agreement
mechanism. Using this mechanism, the OWH anticipates making five awards
in FY 2007. The anticipated start date for new awards is September 01,
2007, and the anticipated period of performance is September 01, 2007,
through August 31, 2010. Approximately $500,000 is available to make
awards of up to $100,000 total cost (direct and indirect) for a 12-
month period. However, the actual number of awards made will depend
upon past performance and the quality of the applications received and
the amount of funds available for the program.
The program is a collaborative effort between the OWH and the
Office of HIV/AIDS Policy, OPHS. These offices will provide the
technical assistance and oversight necessary for the implementation,
conduct, and assessment of program activities.
The applicant shall:
1. Develop and implement the model described in the application.
2. Provide complete curricula, i.e., topics, content, participant
workbook, participant evaluation forms, pre/post instruments, and
goals/objectives.
3. Describe training, teaching methods and strategies, e.g.,
interactive exercises, facilitated discussion, lectures, video/films,
community peers, etc., proposed to deliver modules. Describe the
intervention format: one time session, series of sessions occurring
beyond one day, one day session, etc.
4. Conduct outreach to local entities and community
representatives. Identify locations for prevention education sites and
identify community liaisons for assistance in identifying prospective
women participants.
5. Establish community partnerships through Memoranda of
Understanding.
6. Participate in special meetings and projects/funding
opportunities identified by the OWH.
7. Adhere to all program requirements specified in this
announcement and the Notice of Grant Award.
8. Submit required quarterly progress, annual, and financial
reports by the due dates stated in this announcement and the Notice of
Grant Award.
9. Comply with the DHHS Protection of Human Subjects regulations
(which require obtaining Institutional Review Board approval), set out
at 45 CFR Part 46, if applicable. General information about Human
Subjects regulations can be obtained through the Office for Human
Research Protections (OHRP) at https://www.hhs.gov/ohrp,
ohrp@osophs.dhhs.gov, or toll free at (866) 447-4777.
The Federal Government will:
1. Conduct an orientation meeting for the grantees within the first
month of funding.
2. Conduct at least one site visit which includes some observation
of program progress.
3. Review and approve the prevention education curricula for
consistency with the A-B-C strategy.
4. Review all quarterly, annual, and final progress reports.
5. Review and concur with requested project modifications.
6. Review timeline and implementation plan.
7. Participate in telephone conferences and other activities
supporting project performance improvements and evaluation
The DHHS is committed to achieving the health promotion and disease
prevention Objectives of Healthy People 2010 and the Healthy U.S.
Initiative. Emphasis will be placed on aligning OWH activities and
programs with the DHHS Secretary's four priority areas--heart disease,
cancer, diabetes, and HIV/AIDS and with the Healthy People 2010: Goal
2--eliminating health disparities due to age, gender, race/ethnicity,
education, income, disability, or living in rural localities. More
information on the Healthy People 2010 objectives may be found on the
Healthy People 2010 Web site: https://www.health.gov/healthypeople. One
free copy may be obtained from the National Center for Health
Statistics (NCHS), 6525 Belcrest Road, Room 1064, Hyattsville, MD 20782
or telephone (301) 458-4636 [DHHS Publication No. (PHS) 99-1256]. This
document may also be downloaded from the NCHS Web site: https://
www.cdc.gov/nchs.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants
Eligible applicants must meet all of the following criteria:
1. Organizations located in rural south communities experiencing
high HIV prevalence among women;
2. Organizations in or adjacent to rural communities located in the
South;4 and
3. Organizations which indicated history of serving African
American women, Hispanic women, rural women, poor women, women living
with HIV/AIDS, or whose lifestyles place them at high risk for HIV/STD
infection.
Eligible entities may include: non profit community-based
organizations, faith-based organizations, national organizations,
colleges and universities, clinics and hospitals, research
institutions, State and local government agencies, tribal government
agencies and tribal/urban Indian organizations.
2. Cost Share or Matching
Cost Sharing or Matching funds are not required for this program.
IV. Application And Submission Information
1. Address To Request Application Kit
Application kits may be obtained by accessing Grants.gov at https://
www.grants.gov or the e-Grants system at www.grantsolutions.gov. To
obtain a hard copy of the application kit, contact WilDon Solutions at
1-888-203-6161. Applicants may fax a written request to WilDon
Solutions at 703-351-1135 or e-mail the request to
OPHSgrantsinfor@teamwildon.com. Applicants must be prepared using Form
OPHS-1, which can be obtained at the Web site noted above.
2. Content and Format of Application and Submission
All completed applications must be submitted to the OPHS Office of
Grants Management at the above mailing address. In preparing the
application, it
[[Page 18256]]
is important to follow ALL instructions provided in the application
kit. Applications must be submitted on the forms supplied (OPHS-1,
Revised 3/2006) and in the manner prescribed in the application kits
provided by the OPHS. Applicants are required to submit an application
signed by an individual authorized to act for the applicant agency or
organization and to assume for the organization the obligations imposed
by the terms and conditions of the grant award. The program narrative
should not be longer than 25 double spaced pages, not including
appendices and required forms, using an easily readable, 12 point font.
All pages, figures and tables should be numbered.
A Dun and Bradstreet Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number is
required for all applications for Federal assistance. Organizations
should verify that they have a DUNS number or take the steps necessary
to obtain one. Instructions for obtaining a DUNS number are included in
the application package, and may be downloaded from the Web site:
https://www.dnb.com/US/duns_update/. At a minimum, each
application for a cooperative agreement grant funded under this OWH
announcement must:
Present a plan outlining steps to develop and implement a gender
specific model program using an evidence based effective
intervention with trainers capable of providing accurate prevention
information in a culturally and linguistically appropriate manner to
rural women in the south. Specify the screening, development and or
selection process for the intervention model(s) and the role of
advisory committees and/or board of directors.
Provide signed Memoranda of Agreement(s) with partners to
establish linkages to identify women participants, location of
prevention education sites, and for referral to available services
for the targeted population based upon prevention, care, counseling,
testing and social service needs.
Detail/specify the roles and resources/services that each
partner organization brings to the program, and the duration and
terms of agreement as confirmed by a signed MOU/MOA between the
applicant organization and each partner. The partnership
agreement(s) (MOU/MOA) must name the individual who will work with
the program, describe their function, and state their
qualifications. The documents, specific to each organization (form
letters are not acceptable), must be signed by individuals with the
authority to represent and bind the organization (e.g., president,
chief executive officer, executive director) and submitted as part
of the grant application. Partnership agreements must be on
letterhead of partnering agency.
Demonstrate the ways the organization and the prevention
education services that are coordinated through its partners are
gender and age appropriate, women-focused, women-friendly, women-
relevant as well as culturally and linguistically appropriate to the
target population.
Be a sustainable organization with an established network of
partners capable of providing and coordinating a gender specific
prevention education model program in the targeted community. The
partners and their roles and responsibilities to the program must be
clearly identified in the application. OWH prefers that applicants
have a minimum of three years prior demonstrated experience.
Demonstrate that any prevention intervention (including
prevention for positives) contains the core elements of
interventions with evidence of effectiveness. (See Compendium of HIV
Prevention Interventions with Evidence of Effectiveness, from CDC's
HIV/AIDS Prevention Research Synthesis Project, Nov. 1999; see CDC's
HIV Prevention Strategic Plan 2005.)
Provide a time line and work plan for Program Implementation for
the funding year, presented in correlation to goals, objectives, and
expected outcomes or targets, demonstrating an understanding of the
relationship between programmatic activities and HIV prevention
outcomes.
Describe in detail plans for the local evaluation of the program
and when and how the evaluation will be used to enhance the program;
and describe the approval process of local and state review boards
for local evaluation surveys, focus groups, and other client
inquiries.
Describe the organization's skill levels in word processing and
data management (Word, Word perfect, excel); and specify the filing,
storage, and location of client files.
Format and Limitations of Application: Applicants are required to
submit an original ink signed and dated application and 2 photocopies.
All pages must be numbered clearly and sequential beginning with the
Project Summary. The application must be typed double-spaced on one
side of plain 8 \1/2\'' x 11'' white paper, using at least a 12 point
font, and contain 1'' margins all around.
The Project Summary and Project Narrative must not exceed a total
of 25 double-spaced pages, excluding the appendices. The original and
each copy must be stapled; the application should be organized in
accordance with the format presented in the RFA. An outline for the
minimum information to be included in the ``Project Narrative'' section
is presented below. The content requirements for the Project Narrative
portion of the application are divided into five sections and described
below within each Factor. Applicants must pay particular attention to
structuring the narrative to respond clearly and fully to each review
Factor and associated criteria. Applications not adhering to these
guidelines may not be reviewed.
Background (Understanding of the Problem)
A. Organizations' goals and purpose(s).
B. Demographic profile and HIV prevalence of target rural community
and counties with discussion of local norms, tradition, culture of
targeted population.
C. Local needs assessment and gaps in services, e.g., prevention,
care, and social services for targeted population.
D. Local program objectives
1. Tied to program goal(s);
2. Measurable with time frame.
E. Organizational charts that include partners and a discussion of
the proposed resources to be contributed by the partners, personnel,
and their expertise and how their involvement will help achieve the
program goals.
Implementation Plan (Approach)
A. Discuss gender specific program elements.
B. Describe curriculum and its appropriateness for target
population.
C. Describe local evaluation tools, indicators of increased
knowledge, reduction in attitudes/stigma, and an increase number
voluntarily undergoing HIV testing.
D. Partnerships and referral system/follow up.
Management Plan
A. Key project staff, their resumes, and a staffing chart for
budgeted staff.
B. To-be-hired staff and their qualifications.
C. Staff responsibilities.
D. Management experience of the lead agency and partners as related
to their role in the Program.
E. Management oversight of staff roles and job performance.
F. Address maintenance of confidentiality, ethics in performance,
and on-going staff training.
G. Explain decision making hierarchy.
Local Evaluation Plan
A. Purpose.
B. Describe tools and procedures for measuring strengths and
weaknesses.
C. Use of results to enhance programs.
D. Indicators that reflect goals/objectives are being met.
Organizational Agency Qualifications
A. Agency history of performance in prevention education, e.g.,
developing/adapting prevention education curricula, training skills and
expertise, certification in specific training modules, measuring
participant learning and satisfaction.
B. Agency relationships, past and current, with women focused
programs,
[[Page 18257]]
local health and social services providers, and community based
organizations and representatives.
C. Community acceptance: staff recognition, media, requests for
agency involvement.
D. Technical Assistance plans/strategies.
Appendices
A. Memorandums of Agreement/Understanding/Partnership Letters.
B. Required Forms (Assurance of Compliance Form, etc.).
C. Key Staff Resumes.
D. Charts/Tables (Partners, services, population demographics,
program components, etc.).
E. Other attachments.
Use of Funds: A majority of the funds from the award must be used
to support staff and efforts aimed at implementing the program. The
Program Coordinator, or the person responsible for the day-to-day
management of the program, must devote at least a 75 percent level of
effort to the program. Funds may also be used to transfer the lessons
learned/successful strategies/gender specific approaches from the
program (technical assistance) through activities such as showcasing
the program at conferences, meetings, and workshops; providing direct
technical assistance to other communities; and providing technical
assistance to other rural south based community organizations, or
through their professional organizations, interested in working with
women living in the rural south who are living with HIV/AIDS or who are
at high risk for HIV/STD infection. These may include either process-
based lessons (i.e., How to bring multiple sectors of community
partners together) or outcomes-based lessons (i.e., How to increase the
number of rural women living in the south who voluntarily undergo HIV
testing).
Funds may be used for personnel, consultants, supplies (including
screening, education, and outreach supplies), and grant related travel.
Funds may not be used for construction, building alterations,
equipment, medical treatment, or renovations. All budget requests must
be justified fully in terms of the proposed goals and objectives and
include an itemized computational explanation/breakout of how costs
were determined.
Meetings: The OWH will convene grantees once a year for
orientation. The meeting will be held in the Washington metropolitan
area or in one of the ten (10) DHHS regional office cities. The budget
should include a request for funds to pay for the travel, lodging, and
meals. The meeting is usually held within the first six weeks post
award.
3. Submission Date and Time
To be considered for review, applications must be received by the
Office of Public Health and Science, Office of Grants Management, c/o
WilDon Solutions, by 5 p.m. Eastern on June 11, 2007. Applications will
be considered as meeting the deadline if they are received on or before
the deadline date. The application due date requirement in this
announcement supercedes the instructions in the OPHS-1 form.
Submission Mechanisms
The Office of Public Health and Science (OPHS) provides multiple
mechanisms for the submission of applications, as described in the
following sections. Applicants will receive notification via mail from
the OPHS Office of Grants Management confirming the receipt of
applications submitted using any of these mechanisms. Applications
submitted to the OPHS Office of Grants Management after the deadlines
described below will not be accepted for review. Applications which do
not conform to the requirements of the grant announcement will not be
accepted for review and will be returned to the applicant.
While applications are accepted in hard copy, the use of the
electronic application submission capabilities provided by the
Grants.gov and GrantSolutions.gov systems is encouraged. Applications
may only be submitted electronically via the electronic submission
mechanisms specified below. Any applications submitted via any other
means of electronic communication, including facsimile or electronic
mail, will not be accepted for review.
In order to apply for new funding opportunities which are open to
the public for competition, you may access the Grants.gov Web site
portal. All OPHS funding opportunities and application kits are made
available on Grants.gov. If your organization has/had a grantee
business relationship with a grant program serviced by the OPHS Office
of Grants Management, and you are applying as part of ongoing grantee
related activities, please access GrantSolutions.gov.
Electronic grant application submissions must be submitted no later
than 5 p.m. Eastern Time on the deadline date specified in the DATES
section of the announcement using one of the electronic submission
mechanisms specified below. All required hardcopy original signatures
and mail-in items must be received by the OPHS Office of Grants
Management, c/o WilDon Solutions (1515 Wilson Blvd., Suite 310,
Arlington, VA 22209) no later than 5 p.m. Eastern Time on the next
business day after the deadline date specified in the DATES section of
the announcement.
Applications will not be considered valid until all electronic
application components, hardcopy original signatures, and mail-in items
are received by the OPHS Office of Grants Management according to the
deadlines specified above. Application submissions that do not adhere
to the due date requirements will be considered late and will be deemed
ineligible.
Applicants are encouraged to initiate electronic applications early
in the application development process, and to submit early on the due
date or before. This will aid in addressing any problems with
submissions prior to the application deadline.
Electronic Submissions Via the Grants.gov Web Site Portal
The Grants.gov Web site Portal provides organizations with the
ability to submit applications for OPHS grant opportunities.
Organizations must successfully complete the necessary registration
processes in order to submit an application. Information about this
system is available on the Grants.gov Web site, https://www.grants.gov.
In addition to electronically submitted materials, applicants may
be required to submit hard copy signatures for certain Program related
forms, or original materials as required by the announcement. It is
imperative that the applicant review both the grant announcement, as
well as the application guidance provided within the Grants.gov
application package, to determine such requirements. Any required hard
copy materials, or documents that require a signature, must be
submitted separately via mail to the OPHS Office of Grants Management,
c/o WilDon Solutions, and if required, must contain the original
signature of an individual authorized to act for the applicant agency
and the obligations imposed by the terms and conditions of the grant
award. When submitting the required forms, do not send the entire
application. Complete hard copy applications submitted after the
electronic submission will not be considered for review.
Electronic applications submitted via the Grants.gov Web site
Portal must contain all completed online forms required by the
application kit, the Program Narrative, Budget Narrative
[[Page 18258]]
and any appendices or exhibits. All required mail-in items must
received by the due date requirements specified above. Mail-In items
may only include publications, resumes, or organizational
documentation. When submitting the required forms, do not send the
entire application. Complete hard copy applications submitted after the
electronic submission will not be considered for review.
Upon completion of a successful electronic application submission
via the Grants.gov Web site Portal, the applicant will be provided with
a confirmation page from Grants.gov indicating the date and time
(Eastern Time) of the electronic application submission, as well as the
Grants.gov Receipt Number. It is critical that the applicant print and
retain this confirmation for their records, as well as a copy of the
entire application package.
All applications submitted via the Grants.gov Web site Portal will
be validated by Grants.gov. Any applications deemed ``Invalid'' by the
Grants.gov Web site Portal will not be transferred to the
GrantSolutions system, and OPHS has no responsibility for any
application that is not validated and transferred to OPHS from the
Grants.gov Web site Portal. Grants.gov will notify the applicant
regarding the application validation status. Once the application is
successfully validated by the Grants.gov Web site Portal, applicants
should immediately mail all required hard copy materials to the OPHS
Office of Grants Management, c/o WilDon Solutions, to be received by
the deadlines specified above. It is critical that the applicant
clearly identify the Organization name and Grants.gov Application
Receipt Number on all hard copy materials.
Once the application is validated by Grants.gov, it will be
electronically transferred to the GrantSolutions system for processing.
Upon receipt of both the electronic application from the Grants.gov Web
site Portal, and the required hardcopy mail-in items, applicants will
receive notification via mail from the OPHS Office of Grants Management
confirming the receipt of the application submitted using the
Grants.gov Web site Portal.
Applicants should contact Grants.gov regarding any questions or
concerns regarding the electronic application process conducted through
the Grants.gov Web site Portal.
Electronic Submissions Via the GrantSolutions System
OPHS is a managing partner of the GrantSolutions.gov system.
GrantSolutions is a full life-cycle grants management system managed by
the Administration for Children and Families, Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS), and is designated by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) as one of the three Government-wide grants management
systems under the Grants Management Line of Business initiative
(GMLoB). OPHS uses GrantSolutions for the electronic processing of all
grant applications, as well as the electronic management of its entire
Grant portfolio.
When submitting applications via the GrantSolutions system,
applicants are required to submit a hard copy of the application face
page (Standard Form 424) with the original signature of an individual
authorized to act for the applicant agency and assume the obligations
imposed by the terms and conditions of the grant award. If required,
applicants will also need to submit a hard copy of the Standard Form
LLL and/or certain Program related forms (e.g., Program Certifications)
with the original signature of an individual authorized to act for the
applicant agency. When submitting the required forms, do not send the
entire application. Complete hard copy applications submitted after the
electronic submission will not be considered for review.
Electronic applications submitted via the GrantSolutions system
must contain all completed online forms required by the application
kit, the Program Narrative, Budget Narrative and any appendices or
exhibits. The applicant may identify specific mail-in items to be sent
to the Office of Grants Management separate from the electronic
submission; however these mail-in items must be entered on the
GrantSolutions Application Checklist at the time of electronic
submission, and must be received by the due date requirements specified
above. Mail-In items may only include publications, resumes, or
organizational documentation. When submitting the required forms, do
not send the entire application. Complete hard copy applications
submitted after the electronic submission will not be considered for
review.
Upon completion of a successful electronic application submission,
the GrantSolutions system will provide the applicant with a
confirmation page indicating the date and time (Eastern Time) of the
electronic application submission. This confirmation page will also
provide a listing of all items that constitute the final application
submission including all electronic application components, required
hardcopy original signatures, and mail-in items, as well as the mailing
address of the OPHS Office of Grants Management where all required hard
copy materials must be submitted.
As items are received by the OPHS Office of Grants Management, the
electronic application status will be updated to reflect the receipt of
mail-in items. It is recommended that the applicant monitor the status
of their application in the GrantSolutions system to ensure that all
signatures and mail-in items are received.
Mailed or Hand-Delivered Hard Copy Applications
Applicants who submit applications in hard copy (via mail or hand-
delivered) are required to submit an original and two copies of the
application. The original application must be signed by an individual
authorized to act for the applicant agency or organization and to
assume for the organization the obligations imposed by the terms and
conditions of the grant award.
Mailed or hand-delivered applications will be considered as meeting
the deadline if they are received by the OPHS Office of Grant
Management, c/o WilDon Solutions, on or before 5 p.m. Eastern Time on
the deadline date specified in the DATES section of the announcement.
The application deadline date requirement specified in this
announcement supersedes the instructions in the OPHS-1. Applications
that do not meet the deadline will be returned to the applicant unread.
Applications will be screened upon receipt. Those that are judged
to be incomplete or arrive after the deadline will not be reviewed.
Applications that exceed the specified amount for a twelve-month budget
period may also not be reviewed. Applications that are judged to be in
compliance will be reviewed for technical merit in accordance with DHHS
policies. Applications will be evaluated by a technical review panel
composed of experts with experience with sex and gender programs,
program management, service delivery, outreach, health education,
Healthy People 2000 and/or Healthy People 2010, leadership development
and program assessment. Consideration for award will be given to
applicants that best demonstrate progress and/or plausible strategies
for eliminating health disparities through sex and gender targeted HP
2010 objectives. Applicants are also advised to pay close attention to
the specific program guidelines and general instructions in the
application kit.
[[Page 18259]]
4. Intergovernmental Review
This program is subject to the Public Health Systems Reporting
Requirements. Under these requirements, a community-based non-
governmental applicant must prepare and submit a Public Health System
Impact Statement (PHSIS). Applicants shall submit a copy of the
application face page (SF-424) and a one page summary of the project,
called the Public Health System Impact Statement. The PHSIS is intended
to provide information to State and local health officials to keep them
apprised on proposed health services grant applications submitted by
community-based, non-governmental organizations within their
jurisdictions.
Community-based, non-governmental applicants are required to
submit, no later than the Federal due date for receipt of the
application, the following information to the head of the appropriate
State and local health agencies in the area(s) to be impacted: (a) A
copy of the face page of the application (SF 424), (b) a summary of the
project (PHSIS), not to exceed one page, which provides: (1) A
description of the population to be served, (2) a summary of the
services to be provided, and (3) a description of the coordination
planned with the appropriate state or local health agencies. Copies of
the letters forwarding the PHSIS to these authorities must be contained
in the application materials submitted to the OWH.
This program is also subject to the requirements of Executive Order
12372 that allows States the option of setting up a system for
reviewing applications from within their States for assistance under
certain Federal programs. The application kit to be made available
under this notice will contain a listing of States that have chosen to
set up a review system and will include a State Single Point of Contact
(SPOC) in the State for review. Applicants (other than federally
recognized Indian tribes) should contact their SPOCs as early as
possible to alert them to the prospective applications and receive any
necessary instructions on the State process. For proposed projects
serving more than one State, the applicant is advised to contact the
SPOC in each affected State. A complete list of SPOCs may be found at
the following web site: https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants/spoc.html
The due date for State process recommendations is 60 days after the
application deadline. The OWH does not guarantee that it will
accommodate or explain its responses to State process recommendations
received after that date. (See Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs, Executive Order 12372, and 45 CFR Part 100 for a description
of the review process and requirements.)
5. Funding Restrictions
Funds may not be used for construction, building alterations,
equipment purchase, medical treatment, renovations, or to purchase
food.
6. Other Submission Requirements
Beginning October 1, 2003, all applicants are required to obtain a
Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number as preparation for doing
business electronically with the Federal Government. The DUNS number
must be obtained prior to applying for OWH funds. The DUNS number is a
nine-character identification code provided by the commercial company
Dun & Bradstreet, and serves as a unique identifier of business
entities. There is no charge for requesting a DUNS number, and you may
register and obtain a DUNS number by either of the following methods:
Telephone, 1-866-705-5711. Web site: https://www.dnb.com/product/
eupdate/requestOptions.html. Be sure to click on the link that reads,
``DUNS Number Only'' at the right hand, bottom corner of the screen to
access the free registration page. Please note that registration via
the web site may take up to 30 business days to complete.
V. Application Review Information
1. Criteria: The objective technical review of applications will
consider the following factors:
Factor 1: Implementation/Approach * 30%
This section must discuss:
1. Appropriateness of the existing community resources and linkages
established to deliver accurate prevention education to meet the
requirements of the program. Describe other community providers that
will be affiliated with the program and their role in service delivery.
2. Appropriateness of proposed approach, e.g. evidence based
intervention and specific activities described to address program
objectives.
3. Gender specific elements of proposed process.
4. Soundness of evaluation objectives for measuring program
effectiveness, impact of prevention education on knowledge and
behavior, and understanding the importance of knowing one's status.
5. Appropriate MOU's or Letters of Intent should support assertions
made in this section.
Factor 2: Management Plan--20%
This section must discuss:
1. Applicant's organization capability to manage the project as
determined by the qualifications of the proposed staff or requirements
for ``to be hired'' staff;
2. Proposed staff level of effort; management experience of the
lead agency; and the experience, resources and role of each partner
organization as it relates to the needs and programs/activities of the
program;
3. Staff experience as it relates to meeting the needs of the
community and populations served.
4. Detailed position descriptions, resumes of key staff, and a
staffing chart should be included in the appendix.
Factor 3: Organizational/Agency Qualifications--20%
This section should include demonstrated knowledge of prevention
education intervention models, relationships with rural women living in
rural communities in the south, and agency history of services to poor
women, minority women, HIV infected individuals, and HIV infected
women.
Factor 4: Background/Understanding of the Problem--15%
This section must discuss:
1. Description of the current state of affairs for women living in
rural communities in the south regarding HIV prevalence, socioeconomic
status, access to HIV testing, stigma and availability of HIV
prevention education in addition to the review of issues for women
living in the program target rural community.
2. Relevance of organizational goals and purpose(s) to community
and local needs.
3. Challenges women face in seeking HIV culturally and
linguistically appropriate education and counseling and testing in the
target rural community and surrounding areas.
4. Outreach, logistics, and stigma issues impacting the target
rural community.
Factor 5: Evaluation Plan--15%
Provide a clear statement of program goal(s), feasibility and
appropriateness of the local evaluation plan, analysis of results, and
procedures to determine if the program goals are met. Provide a clear
statement of willingness to participate actively in the national OWH
evaluation.
Review and Selection Process: Funding decisions will be made by the
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OWH, and will take into consideration the recommendations and ratings
of the review panel, program needs, geographic location, stated
preferences, and the recommendations of DHHS Regional Women's Health
Coordinators (RWHC).
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Award Notices
Successful applicants will receive a notification letter from the
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health (Women's Health) and a Notice of
Grant Award (NGA), signed by the OPHS Grants Management Officer. The
NGA shall be the only binding, authorizing document between the
recipient and the OWH. Notification will be mailed to the Program
Director identified in the application. Unsuccessful applicants will
receive a notification letter with the results of the review of their
application from the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health (Women's
Health).
2. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
The regulations set out at 45 CFR parts 74 and 92 are the
Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) rules and requirements
that govern the administration of grants. Part 74 is applicable to all
recipients except those covered by part 92, which governs awards to
State and local governments. Applicants funded under this announcement
must be aware of and comply with these regulations. The CFR volume that
include parts 74 and 92 may be downloaded from https://
www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/waisidx_03/45cfrvl_03.html.
The DHHS Appropriations Act requires that, when issuing statements,
press releases, requests for proposals, bid solicitations, and other
documents describing projects or programs funded in whole or in part
with Federal money, all grantees shall clearly state the percentage and
dollar amount of the total costs of the program or project which will
be financed with Federal money and the percentage and dollar amount of
the total costs of the project or program that will be financed by non-
government sources.
3. Reporting Requirements
In addition to those listed above, a successful applicant will
submit a progress report and a final report. This report shall provide
a detailed summary of major achievements, problems encountered, and
actions taken to overcome them. Progress reports require data
collection into the matrix provided by the national evaluator. The
final report shall summarize the goals achieved and lessons learned in
the course of the contract, and how the program will be sustained. The
report shall be format established by the OWH, in accordance with
provisions of the general regulations which apply under ``Monitoring
and Reporting Program Performance,'' 45 CFR Parts 74 and 92. The
purpose of the quarterly and annual progress reports is to provide
accurate and timely program information to program managers and to
respond to Congressional, Departmental, and public requests for
information about the program. An original and one copy of the
quarterly progress report must be submitted by, December 10, March 10,
June 10 and final report by August 25. If these dates fall on a
Saturday or Sunday, the report will be due on Monday.
A financial Status Report (FSR) SF-269 is due 90 days after the
close of each 12-month budget period.
VII. Agency Contact(s)
For application kits, information on budget and business aspects,
and programmatic questions of the application, please contact: WilDon
Solutions, Office of Grants Management Operations Center, 1515 Wilson
Blvd., Third Floor, Suite 310, Arlington, VA 22209 at 1-888-203-6161,
e-mail OPHSgrantinfo@teamwildon.com, or fax 703-351-1135.
VIII. Other Information
Three (3) OWH Prevention of HIV/AIDS in Women Living in the Rural
South programs are currently funded by the OWH. Information about these
programs may be found at the following Web site: https://
www.womenshealth.gov/owh/fund/index.htm.
Definitions
For the purposes of this cooperative agreement program, the
following definitions are provided:
AIDS: Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome is a disease in which the
body's immune system breaks down and is unable to fight off certain
infections and other illnesses that take advantage of a weakened immune
system.
Age-appropriate: Provision of prevention education that adapts the
assessment and overall counseling education to the developmental level
of the individual(s)
Community-based: The locus of control and decision-making powers is
located at the community level, representing the service area of the
community or a significant segment of the community.
Community-based organization: Public and private, nonprofit
organizations that are representative of communities or significant
segments of communities.
Community health center: A community-based organization that
provides comprehensive primary care and preventive services to
medically underserved populations. This includes but is not limited to
programs reimbursed through the Federally Qualified Health Centers
mechanism, Migrant Health Centers, Primary Care Public Housing Health
Centers, Healthcare for the Homeless Centers, and other community-based
health centers.
Comprehensive women's health services: Services including, but
going beyond traditional reproductive health services to address the
health needs of underserved women in the context of their lives,
including recognition of the importance of family relationships and
responsibilities. Services include basic primary care services; acute,
chronic, and preventive services including gender and age-appropriate
preventive services; mental and dental health services; patient
education and counseling; promotion of healthy behaviors (like
nutrition, smoking cessation, substance abuse services, and physical
activity); and enabling services. Ancillary services are also provided
such as laboratory tests, X-ray, environmental, social referral, and
pharmacy services.
Culturally competent: Information and services provided at the
educational level and in the language and cultural context that are
most appropriate for the individuals for whom the information and
services are intended. Additional information on cultural competency is
available at the following Web site: https://www.aoa.dhhs.gov/May2001/
factsheets/Cultural-Competency.html.
Cultural perspective: Recognizes that culture, language, and
country of origin have an important and significant impact on the
health perceptions and health behaviors that produce a variety of
health outcomes.
Enabling services: Services that help women access health care,
such as transportation, parking vouchers, translation, child care, and
case management.
Gender-Specific: An approach which considers the social and
environmental context in which women live and therefore structures
information, activities, program priorities and service delivery
systems to compliment those factors.
Healthy People 2010: A set of national health objectives that
outlines the
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prevention agenda for the Nation. Healthy People 2010 identify the most
significant preventable threats to health and establishes national
goals for the next ten years. Individuals, groups, and organizations
are encouraged to integrate Healthy People 2010 into current programs,
special events, publications, and meetings. Businesses can use the
framework, for example, to guide worksite health promotion activities
as well as community-based initiatives. Schools, colleges, and civic
and faith-based organizations can undertake activities to further the
health of all members of their community. Health care providers can
encourage their patients to pursue healthier lifestyles and to
participate in community-based programs. By selecting from among the
national objectives, individuals and organizations can build an agenda
for community health improvement and can monitor results over time.
More information on the Healthy People 2010 objectives may be found on
the Healthy People 2010 web site: https://www.health.gov/healthypeople.
HIV: The human immunodeficiency virus that causes AIDS.
Holistic: Looking at women's health from the perspective of the
whole person and not as a group of different body parts. It includes
dental, mental, as well as physical health.
Lifespan: Recognizes that women have different health and psycho
social needs as they encounter transitions across their lives and that
the positive and negative effects of health and health behaviors are
cumulative across a woman's life.
Prevention education: Accurate information to increase knowledge of
methods and behaviors to keep individuals from becoming infected with
HIV.
Dated: April 3, 2007.
Wanda K. Jones,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health, (Women's Health)
[FR Doc. E7-6833 Filed 4-10-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150-33-P