Statement of Organization, Functions and Delegations of Authority, 20297-20304 [E8-7823]
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cost. Untested messages can waste
communication resources and
opportunities because the messages can
be perceived as unclear or irrelevant.
Untested messages can also have
unintended consequences, such as
jeopardizing the credibility of Federal
health officials.
There is no cost to the respondents
other than their time.
ESTIMATED ANNUALIZED BURDEN HOURS
Number of
responses per
respondent
Number of
respondents
Data collection method
Average
burden per
response
(in hours)
Total burden
hours
Central Location Intercept Interviews ..............................................................
Telephone Interviews .......................................................................................
Individual In-depth Interview (Cognitive Interviews) ........................................
Focus Group Screenings .................................................................................
Focus Groups ..................................................................................................
Online Surveys ................................................................................................
300
300
200
900
300
400
12
12
10
10
20
12
5/60
4/60
6/60
3/60
8/60
6/60
300
240
200
450
........................
480
Total ..........................................................................................................
2,400
........................
........................
2,470
Dated: April 8, 2008.
Maryam I. Daneshvar,
Acting Reports Clearance Officer, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. E8–7973 Filed 4–14–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
Dated: April 4, 2008.
Elaine L. Baker,
Director, Management Analysis and Services
Office, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
[FR Doc. E8–8039 Filed 4–14–08; 8:45 am]
National Center for Injury Prevention
and Control/Initial Review Group,
(NCIPC/IRG)
Year 2008 Requests for Applications related
to the following individual research
announcement: TS08–001, Program on
Exposure-Dose Reconstruction and
Computational Methods to Quantify
Exposures to Hazardous Substances.
Agenda items are subject to change as
priorities dictate.
Contact Person for More Information: J.
Felix Rogers, Ph.D., M.P.H., NCIPC/ERPO,
CDC, 4770 Buford Highway, NE., M/S F62,
Atlanta, Georgia 30341, Telephone (770)
488–4334.
The Director, Management Analysis and
Services Office has been delegated the
authority to sign Federal Register notices
pertaining to announcements of meetings and
other committee management activities for
both CDC and the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry.
In accordance with section 10(a)(2) of
the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(Pub. L. 92–463), the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC)
announces the following meeting of the
aforementioned review group:
Dated: April 4, 2008.
Elaine L. Baker,
Director, Management Analysis and Services
Office, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
[FR Doc. E8–7975 Filed 4–14–08; 8:45 am]
Time and Date: 1 p.m.–3 p.m., May 9, 2008
(closed).
Place: Teleconference.
Status: The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with provisions set
forth in Section 552b(c)(4) and (6), Title 5,
U.S.C., and the Determination of the Director,
Management Analysis and Services Office,
CDC, pursuant to Section 10(d) of Public Law
92–463.
Purpose: This group is charged with
providing advice and guidance to the
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services, and the Director, CDC, concerning
the scientific and technical merit of grant and
cooperative agreement applications received
from academic institutions and other public
and private profit and nonprofit
organizations, including State and local
government agencies, to conduct research on
environmental exposures to hazardous
substances.
Matters to be Discused: The meeting will
include the review, discussion, and
evaluation of cooperative agreement
applications submitted in response to Fiscal
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
Advisory Committee to the Director,
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, (ACD, CDC)
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In accordance with section 10(a)(2) of
the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(Pub. L. 92–463), CDC, announces the
following meeting of the
aforementioned committee:
Time and Date: 8 a.m.—4 p.m., May 1,
2008.
Place: CDC, Tom Harkin Global
Communications Center, Auditorium B, 1600
Clifton Road, Atlanta, GA 30333.
Status: Open to the public, limited only by
the space available. The meeting room
accommodates approximately 150 people.
Purpose: The committee will provide
advice to the CDC Director on strategic and
other broad issues facing CDC.
Matters To Be Discussed: Agenda items
will include discussions on health systems
transformation.
Agenda items are subject to change as
priorities dictate.
Contact Person for More Information: Brad
Perkins, M.D., M.B.A., Executive Officer,
Advisory Committee to the Director, CDC,
1600 Clifton Road, NE., M/S D–14, Atlanta,
Georgia 30333; Telephone (404) 639–7000.
The Director, Management Analysis and
Services Office, has been delegated the
authority to sign Federal Register notices
pertaining to announcements of meetings and
other committee management activities, for
both the CDC and the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry.
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
Statement of Organization, Functions
and Delegations of Authority
Part C (Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention) of the Statement of
Organization, Functions, and
Delegations of Authority of the
Department of Health and Human
Services 45 FR 67772–76, dated October
14, 1980, and corrected at 45 FR 69296,
October 20, 1980, as amended most
recently at 73 FR 6728, dated February
2, 2008, is amended to reflect the
reorganization of the National Center for
Health Marketing, Coordinating Center
for Health Information and Service,
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Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
Section C–B, Organization and
Functions, is hereby amended as
follows: Delete in their entirety the
functional statements for the National
Center for Health Marketing (CPB), and
insert the following:
National Center for Health Marketing
(CPB). The mission of the National
Center for Health Marketing (NCHM) is
to protect and promote the public’s
health through collaborative and
innovative health marketing programs,
products, and services that are
customer-centered, science-based, and
high-impact.
In carrying out its mission, NCHM: (1)
Ensures the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) has the necessary
marketing and prevention research data
to develop information, interventions,
and programs that respond to
customers’ needs, values, and uses; (2)
develops and evaluates rigorous
research-based strategies for providing
information, programs, and services; (3)
develops and tests communication
messages and programs for public and
professional audiences; (4) ensures that
CDC risk and emergency
communication messages are effectively
delivered to targeted audiences; (5)
works collaboratively to manage the
CDC brand and ensures the CDC brand/
identity is promoted throughout all CDC
marketing/communication channels; (6)
provides value added cross-cutting
scientific support to ensure the best
available public health science is
rapidly and reliably translated into
effective practice and policy; (7) ensures
efficient, focused use of CDC’s expertise
and mechanisms for delivering health
information and services; (8) ensures
customers have effective, real-time
access to needed health and safety
information, interventions, and
programs through communication
channels they prefer; (9) delivers CDC
information and services to the public;
(10) ensures effective strategic
partnerships and alliances to extend
CDC’s reach; (11) increases public
awareness and partner actions to
enhance the public health
infrastructure; (12) helps people
understand public health and its
relevance and value to people across all
life stages; (13) fosters the development
and/or improvement of methods by
which the partnership of federal, state,
and local public health agencies can
assure the coordinated and effective
establishment of priorities and
responses to public health problems;
(14) maintains a forum for
communication, coordination,
collaboration, and consensus among the
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National Centers (NC) of CDC, public
agencies, and private organizations
concerned with ensuring the quality of
public health practice; (15) works
collaboratively with academic
institutions, especially schools of public
health and departments of preventive
medicine, to develop and evaluate all
aspects of marketing and
communication elements; (16) provides
a central service for consultation,
design, production, and evaluation of
media and instructional services to
support CDC’s delivery of public health
messages; (17) manages marketingrelated shared services and in carrying
out the above functions, collaborates, as
appropriate, with other Coordinating
Centers/Coordinating Offices (CC/CO),
NCs, and Staff Offices (SO) of CDC; (18)
oversees the management, development,
implementation, and evaluation of
CDC’s primary Web site, https://
www.cdc.gov and serves as a CDC-wide
resource for communication
technologies design, usability, and
maintenance; (19) leads CDC’s e-health
marketing/communication efforts; and
(20) leads NCHM efforts to apply new
technologies, social networks, virtual
worlds, and other new/emerging
technologies to develop, enhance,
maintain and deliver CDC information.
Office of the Director (CPB1). (1)
Manages, directs, coordinates, and
evaluates the activities of NCHM; (2)
develops goals and objectives and
provides leadership, policy formation,
scientific oversight, and guidance in
program planning, development, and
integration; (3) coordinates assistance
and oversight provided by NCHM to
other CDC components, federal, state,
and local government agencies, and the
private sector; (4) chairs the CDC
Excellence in Marketing Committee; (5)
provides leadership and coordination
for NCHM crosscutting programs
including Global Health Marketing,
Emergency Preparedness, Client and
Collaborator Relations, and other center
and agency-wide priority programs; (6)
establishes, administers, and
coordinates CDC’s health
communication and marketing policies
to ensure communication efforts reflect
the scientific integrity of all CDC
research, programs, and activities, and
information is factual, accurate, and
targeted toward improving public
health; (7) oversees NCHM-wide
administrative and program services,
and coordinates or assures coordination
with the appropriate CDC offices on
administrative and program matters; (8)
promotes, stimulates, conducts, and
supports research on health
communication topics of CDC-wide
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interest; (9) maintains liaison with
officials from the Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS), other
federal and state public health agencies,
and non-profit and voluntary health
agencies to coordinate health
communication programs of mutual
interest and concern; (10) manages and
coordinates staff professional
development trainings related to health
marketing and health communication;
(11) provides leadership and
coordination for NCHM client and
collaborator relationship activities; (12)
manages and coordinates HHS clearance
for CDC communications and marketing
programs and related products, and
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) clearance submissions for
marketing and communication research;
(13) develops new mechanisms for
agency-level communications with the
public including the CDC-INFO hotline
and e-mail response systems, CDC
publications system, electronic journals
and newsletters, and subscription e-mail
systems; and (14) establishes and
manages a unified, comprehensive,
high-quality CDC presence at selected
public health conferences and health
expositions.
Business Services Office (CPB13). (1)
Provides leadership, oversight, and
guidance in the management and
operations of NCHM’s programs; (2)
plans, coordinates, and provides
administrative management support,
advice, and guidance to NCHM, in the
areas of fiscal management, personnel,
travel, and other administrative
services; (3) coordinates the
development of the NCHM annual
budget submission and spending plans;
(4) directs and coordinates the activities
of the office; (5) conducts management
analyses of NCHM programs, resources,
and staff to ensure optimal utilization of
resources and accomplishment of
program objectives; (6) plans, allocates,
and monitors NCHM resources; (7)
maintains liaison and collaborates with
other CDC components and external
organizations in support of NCHM
management and operations; (8) plans,
allocates, and monitors NCHM-wide
administrative resources; (9) works
closely with other federal agencies
involved with NCHM interagency
agreements; (10) coordinates NCHM
requirements relating to procurement,
materiel management, and interagency
agreements; (11) develops and
implements administrative policies,
procedures, and operations, as
appropriate for NCHM, and prepares
special reports and studies, as required,
in the administrative management areas;
(12) provides coordinated services to
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NCHM for all internal conference/
meeting management; and (13)
collaborates, as appropriate, with the
CDC Office of the Director, other CDC
offices, domestic and international
agencies and organizations in carrying
out the above functions.
Extramural Services Activity
(CPB132). (1) Performs administrative
management functions for extramural
programs which are linked to research
and non-research activities of NCI–IM
and other CC/COs that utilize NCHM’s
and/or CCHIS’s extramural mechanisms;
(2) provides expertise in the funding
and administration of extramural
activities, including grants, cooperative
agreements and contracts; (3) triages
linked research projects and solicits
peer review services from the Office of
the Chief Science Officer; (4) conducts
annual program planning activities and
plans the award process cycle with
NCHM, other CC/CO/NCs and PGO
staff, (5) serves as the primary point of
contact with PGO; (6) provides technical
consultation on HHS and CDC/PGO
grant and cooperative agreement policy
and regulations; (7) provides fiscal
management and stewardship of
selected grants, contracts, and
cooperative agreements; and (8)
coordinates NCHM requirements
relating to selected contracts, grants,
cooperative agreements, and
reimbursable agreements.
MMWR Office (CPB14). (1) Manages
the MMWR series of publications
including the MMWR
Recommendations and Reports, CDC
Surveillance Summaries, and Annual
Summary of Notifiable Diseases; and (2)
develops, plans, coordinates, edits, and
produces the MMWR series, including
the MMWR Recommendations and
Reports, CDC Surveillance Summaries,
and Annual Summary of Notifiable
Diseases.
Health Communication Science Office
(CPB15). The Health Communication
Science Office (HCSO): (1) Serves as the
principal advisor to the CO/NC director
on communication and marketing
science, research and practice, (2) leads
respective CO/NC strategic planning for
communication and marketing science
programs and projects; (3) serves as key
focal point for integrating CO/NC
communications/health messages into
cohesive marketing campaigns targeted
to defined audiences to advance CDC’s
health protection goals; (4) collaborates
with other CO/NC in the development
of marketing communications targeted
to populations within certain life stages
or who would otherwise benefit from a
cross-functional approach; (5) ensures
use of scientifically sound research for
marketing and communication programs
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and projects; (6) serves as liaison to
internal and external groups (this
function does not apply to the National
Center for Health Statistics [NCHS]); (7)
develops and manages relationships
with internal and external partners and
customers (this function does not apply
to the National Center for
Environmental Health Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry nor to
the NCHS); (8) ensures accurate,
accessible, timely, and effective
translation of science for use by
multiple audiences (this function does
not apply to NCHS); (9) leads
identification and implementation of
information dissemination channels
(this function does not apply to NCHS);
(10) supervises and manages HCSO
activities, programs, and staff; (11) leads
audience segmentation research; (12)
analyzing context, situation, and
environment to inform Center-wide
communication and marketing programs
and projects; (13) develops and manages
clearance systems (this function does
not apply to NCHS); (14) provides
training and technical assistance; (15)
collaborates on health media
production, including graphics and
broadcast production; (16) provides
project management expertise (this
function does not apply to NCHS); (17)
collaborates on CDC brand management
activities; (18) collaborates with CDC
media relations staff to ensure
consistent and timely translation of
center-specific health information to
multiple audiences (this function does
not apply to NCHS).
The following functions (19–21) apply
only to the National Center for
Environmental Health Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry: (19)
collaborates with external organizations
and the news, public service, and
entertainment and other media to
ensure that effective findings and their
implications for public health reach the
public; (20) collaborates closely with
Divisions to produce materials designed
for use by the news media, including
press releases, letters to the editor,
public service announcements,
television programming, video news
releases, and other electronic and
printed materials; (21) coordinates the
development and maintenance of
center/agency-wide information systems
through an internet home page.
The following functions (22–23) apply
only to the National Center for Health
Statistics: (22) serves as the liaison to
internal and external groups for health
marketing activities; and (23) provides
project management expertise for health
marketing activities.
Division of Health Communication
and Marketing (CPBC). (1) Provides
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leadership in the development of CDC’s
priorities, strategies and practices for
effective health communication and
marketing to a wide range of target
audiences; (2) provides a CDC-wide
forum for the sharing of health
communication and marketing
information; collaboration across
programs; and discussion, development
and implementation of health marketing
policies and practices; (3) assists the
CC/CO/NC/SOs of CDC in conducting
formative, process and outcome
research, and evaluation of specific
applications of health communication
and marketing in program areas; (4)
assists the CC/CO/NC/SOs in
identifying appropriate target audiences
and messages; (5) assists the CC/CO/NC/
SOs and their constituents in
identifying and building expertise and
state-of-the-art technology, logistical
support, and other capacities required
for effective health communication and
marketing; (6) systematically conducts,
collects, assesses and disseminates
health communication and marketing
research, evaluation results, and
information on trends and emerging
issues; (7) provides leadership for and
ensuring coordination of risk,
emergency, and terrorism
communication; and (8) conducts
evidence-based reviews of effective
community health interventions.
Office of the Director (CPBC1). (1)
Develops, manages, directs, and
coordinates the implementation of
strategic priorities and programmatic
activities for the division; (2) establishes
division goals and objectives; (3)
provides oversight and coordination for
division activities including personnel,
budget, and administrative functions;
(4) advises the directors of NCHM,
CCHIS, CDC, and other CC/CO/NC/SOs
on all matters related to health
communication and marketing; (5)
ensures CDC health marketing and
communication activities follow policy
directions established by the HHS
Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs;
(6) provides leadership in the
development of CDC’s priorities,
strategies, and practices for effective
health communication and marketing
activities; (7) establishes strategy and
oversight for emergency and risk
communication efforts; (8) produces
periodic reports and publications; (9)
serves as point of contact and is
responsible for agency and CC/CO/NC
coordination for established
programmatic activities as well as new
initiatives; and (10) provides scientific
leadership and guidance to the division.
Marketing and Communication
Strategy Branch (CPBCB). (1) Provides a
broad range of support for consultation,
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coordination, and development of
health communication and marketing
program efforts across the agency; (2)
identifies and pursues opportunities for
bundling, embedding, and joint
dissemination of CDC information to
more effectively reach audiences; (3)
monitors and refines strategies and
messages based on evaluation and
feedback mechanisms; (4) consults on
conceptualizing, developing, planning,
executing, and evaluating CDC health
marketing and communication activities
and campaigns, media buys, Public
Service Announcements (PSA), and
other CDC information; (5) establishes
measures of success/effectiveness of
CDC communication efforts and
provides guidance to CDC programs on
applying these measures; (6) ensures
analytic function for interpretation of
data from centralized marketing
databases, sources of environmental
scanning, and communication literature
for use in development and
implementation of strategies for
communication activities; (7) provides
an integrated marketing perspective to
data collection and CDC data resources,
using data from various sources to
develop a more complete picture of the
public and its health concerns/interests
and to address cross cutting issues; (8)
provides for efficient, agency-wide
access to consumer-oriented databases
that can help support public health
marketing; (9) sponsors/initiates original
health communication and marketing
research; (10) manages a repository of
CDC and external research on the
effectiveness of programs and
interventions (both for public and sector
audiences), and promotes the use of
such evidence throughout CDC; (11)
ensures that the content of CDC
scientific communications is accessible
(available, understandable, actionable)
to audiences that may have specific
health literacy needs; (12) identifies and
implements strategies for health literacy
and multilingual translation and
delivery of CDC information tailored to
specific audiences for maximum health
impact; (13) tailors science-based
information to specific audiences based
on the knowledge, literacy levels, and
language, culture, interests, and level of
scientific sophistication of those
audiences; (14) identifies and
implements strategies for translation
and delivery of CDC information to key
targeted audiences for maximum health
impact; (15) directs, develops, and/or
collaborates on channels for reaching
the public with health messages that
positively impact health; and (16)
provides for systematic mechanisms for
gaining public input on health issues
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and priorities (e.g., advisory
mechanisms, focus groups, polling,
legislative and media tracking) and for
the systematic application of knowledge
gained from such input into agency
decision making.
Emergency and Risk Communication
Branch (CPBCC). (1) Identifies and
implements strategies for translation
and delivery of CDC’s risk and
emergency communication messages to
key targeted audiences for maximum
health impact; (2) monitors, evaluates,
and refines risk and emergency
communication messages and channel
selection, content, and use based on
feedback mechanisms; (3) evaluates the
reach and effectiveness of CDC’s risk
and emergency communication
messages and products; (4) ensures the
content of CDC’s risk and emergency
communication messages are accessible
(available, understandable, actionable)
and disseminated to the public and
target audiences; (5) tailors science
based information related to risk and
emergency communication messages for
key sector audiences using knowledge
of the interests and level of scientific
sophistication of those audiences; (6)
manages, evaluates, and coordinates
with selected/major channels CDC uses
to push risk and emergency
communication messages outward (e.g.,
media, distance learning, broadcast/
satellite capability, messaging through
Health Alert Network and the clinician
registry, postings on the CDC website,
and community and partner outreach);
(7) manages and evaluates the content
during national emergencies or
terrorism events on selected/major
channels the public uses to contact CDC
(e.g., Internet, phone hotlines, public
exhibition areas); (8) provides an
integrated marketing perspective to risk
emergency communication messages
data collection and CDC data resources,
using data from various sources to
develop a more complete picture of the
public and its health concerns/interests;
(9) provides for systematic mechanisms
for gaining public input on risk and
emergency communication messages
(e.g., advisory mechanisms, focus
groups, polling, legislative inquiries,
and media tracking), for getting
customer feedback on CDC programs
(Web site and 800 number feedback,
user surveys, feedback from partners,
media tracking), and for the systematic
application of knowledge gained from
such input into agency decision making;
(10) sponsors/initiates original research
related to risk and emergency
communication messages on customer
needs and interests; needs and interests
of key sectors and partners; audience
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segmentation; and approaches to
bundling and packaging of CDC
offerings; and (11) develops and
manages selected channels to deliver
national emergency and terrorismrelated messages.
Community Guide Branch (CPBCD).
(1) Convenes and supports the
independent Task Force on Community
Preventive Services, which develops
evidence-based recommendations for
the use or non-use of population-based
health interventions; (2) produces and
promotes the use of the Guide to
Community Preventive Services (aka
Community Guide) which is a
compilation of the systematic reviews,
evidence-based recommendations, and
research needs related to best public
health practices; (3) performs evidence
reviews of the efficacy and effectiveness
of prevention activities not associated
with the Community Guide; (4) assists
CDC and other federal and non-federal
partners in understanding, using,
refining, and communicating methods
for conducting systematic reviews; (5)
assists CDC and other federal and nonfederal partners in linking reviews of
evidence to guidelines development
and/or program implementation; (6)
coordinates and manages large and
diverse teams of internal and external
partners in the systematic review
process; (7) coordinates and manages a
working group of CDC, HHS, and
nongovernmental partners to develop
and/or refine methods for conducting
systematic reviews; (8) provides
consultations for implementing
Community Guide recommended
strategies; (9) coordinates and manages
a working group of CDC, HHS and
nongovernmental partners to diffuse
Community Guide reviews,
recommendations, and research needs
to appropriate audiences throughout the
U.S. health care and public health
systems; (10) participates in the
development of national and regional
public/private partnerships to enhance
prevention research and the translation
of evidence into policy and action; (11)
conducts selected scientific evaluation
of the center or division-related
prevention activities; (12)
communicates the Community Guide
reviews, recommendations, and
research needs beyond the Morbidity
and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)
and the American Journal of Preventive
Medicine/AJPM, publications via other
journals, books, the world wide Web,
and other media; (13) designs and
conducts programmatic, process and
outcome evaluation strategies for all
stages of development and diffusion of
the Community Guide; and (14) assists
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in making recommendations for
prevention and policy decisions.
Division of Partnerships and Strategic
Alliances (CPBD). (1) Provides
leadership in the development and
coordination of high-priority
partnerships and sets strategy and goals
for working with private and public
partnership sectors including business,
health care, education, federal agencies,
and faith and community organizations,
the public health community, especially
state and local health organizations and
their regional and national affiliate
organizations, and emergency planning,
preparedness, and response partners; (2)
identifies critical cross-CDC
relationships to maximize CDC’s
success in achieving priority health
goals; (3) develops protocols for
partnership ‘‘triage’’ to ensure timely
and effective coordination; (4) serves as
the agency-level contact on significant
issues for major partners, or priority
target partners; (5) provides leadership
in building strategic relationships with
new partners and extending the range of
existing partnerships; (6) develops and
maintains a database for high-priority,
cross-cutting relationships; (7) provides
leadership in developing systematic
mechanisms for gaining public and
private sectors and public health
systems’ input on health issues and
priorities; identifies and pursues
opportunities for broadening the range
of approaches used by programs; (8)
provides leadership in identifying and
implementing strategies for effective
delivery of CDC information to key
sector and public health systems’
audiences; (9) provides targeted,
science-based information for key sector
audiences; (10) provides leadership in
the development of new mechanisms for
agency-level communications with
specific sectors; (11) leads partner teams
in Director’s Emergency Operations
Center (DEOC) for emergency planning,
response, and recovery; (12) coordinates
field assignees for public health systems
and partnerships; and (13) manages
program management and project officer
coordination for all partnership
cooperative agreements including those
applications submitted under crosscutting CDC umbrella cooperative
agreements.
Office of the Director (CPBD 1). (1)
Manages, directs, and coordinates the
research agenda and activities of the
division; (2) maintains partnership
coordination database and directory; (3)
develops strategy and planning, and
provides leadership and guidance on
strategic planning, policy, program and
project priority planning and setting,
program management and operations for
agency-wide CDC partnerships; (4)
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identifies and prioritizes partnership
sectors; (5) establishes division goals,
objectives, and priorities; (6) monitors
progress in implementation of projects
and achievement of objectives; (7)
provides management, administrative,
and support services, and coordinates
with the NCHM OD on program and
administrative matters; (8) leads and
supports the Excellence in Partnership
Committee, representing the various
CDC Centers and coordinating agencywide partnership activities; (9) provides
liaison on partnerships with other CDC
organizations, other governmental
agencies, private organizations, and
other outside groups; (10) provides
scientific leadership and guidance to the
division; (11) leverages partner
relationships to improve CDC’s
translation of science and research to
practice; (12) leads activities to improve
partner engagement as a means of
informing CDC’s science and practice;
(13) collaborates with the CDC
Foundation in its activities with
businesses and business organizations;
(14) assesses partners’ needs and
opportunities to enhance health
protection; (15) coordinates and/or
collaborates on CDC representation on
HHS Healthy People 2010 and 2020;
and (16) provides oversight for program
management and project officer
coordination for all partnership
cooperative agreements including those
applications submitted under crosscutting CDC umbrella cooperative
agreements.
Public Health Partners and
Coordination Branch (CPBDB). (1)
Provides leadership within CDC, with
national public health organizations,
and with governmental public health
agencies to promote and support
effective national partnerships for
health promotion and disease
prevention; (2) supports program
management and project officers for all
partnership cooperative agreements
including those applications submitted
under cross-cutting CDC umbrella
cooperative agreements; (3) advises CC/
CO/NC/SOs on program activities that
strengthen the nation’s public health
system through effective linkages with
governmental public health agencies
and national public health
organizations; (4) supports and
encourages public health systems
research aimed at strengthening the
public health system with particular
emphasis on optimizing performance of
governmental public health agencies; (5)
monitors and evaluates the nation’s
public health system with regard to
emerging issues, system effectiveness
and progress on achieving CDC’s and
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the nation’s public health goals; (6)
provides knowledge and science based
information critical to the effectiveness
of the governmental public health
systems to public health agencies; (7)
provides leadership to CDC field staff in
encouraging strong public health system
capacity and partnerships; (8)
establishes and maintains program
linkages with the Office of Workforce
and Career Development and the Office
of the Chief of Public Health Practice to
facilitate systems development; and (9)
staffs the partner teams in the DEOC
partner desk.
Private/Public Partner Sectors Branch
(CPBDC). (1) Assures private and public
sector, and state and local health
organization management support in the
selection, prioritization and
implementation of CDC goals; (2)
leverages partner relationships to
improve CDC’ s translation of science
and research to practice; (3) supports
activities to improve partner
engagement as a means of informing
CDC’s science and practice; (4) provides
leadership to CDC and other
organizations to promote and support
effective partnerships for health
promotion and disease prevention in all
partnership sectors; (5) provides
leadership and supports CDC’s activities
related to business and worker
organizations, public and private
purchasers of health care, consumers,
health care consultants, academic
institutions, and others; (6) assists in
coordinating support for CDC’s
interactions with business collaboration
partners; (7) directs, coordinates, and
evaluates critical CDC activities with
major components of the health care
sectors; (8) serves as a focal point for
developing public and private sector
communications on health care issues
relevant to CDC’s goals; (9) supports the
collaboration with the CDC Foundation
in its activities with businesses and
business organizations; (10) establishes
data systems and knowledge required to
support public private alliances; (11)
coordinates collaborative activities of
the branch with other NCs, federal
agencies, professional societies, and
private health organizations; (12)
assures ongoing, effective
communication between the CDC and
key educational organizations on issues
related to the nation’s health; (13)
represents CDC to private sector
organizations such as the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations, the National
Quality Forum, the National Committee
for Quality Assurance, the Quality
Interagency Coordinating Task Force,
the National Quality Report, the
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Institute for Healthcare Improvement,
and others; (14) assists educational
organizations in implementing health
interventions to reduce high-priority
health risks among student populations;
(15) collaborates with other components
of CDC, Public Health Service, and
HHS, the U.S. Department of Education
and other federal agencies; national
professional, voluntary, and
philanthropic organizations; and
international agencies and other
organizations as appropriate; (16)
provides a federal partner interface with
CDC; (17) builds networks and partner
relationships; (18) provides leadership
and support to CDC’s activities related
to foundations, faith, and community
organizations, their constituencies, and
others; and (19) provides access for
faith- and-community-based
organizations to compete for federal
funds supporting delivery of public
services, including health-related
services.
Division of Electronic Health
Marketing (CPBG). (1) Supports NCHM
and CDC through the creation, design,
development, and evaluation of
effective communication technologies
that enhance the presentation and
distribution of CDC’s products and
services; (2) assists CDC information
developers in planning, designing,
usability testing, and maintaining Web
sites, mobile applications/devices, and
other communication technologies; (3)
provides leadership and management
for CDC’s Web site (https://www.cdc.gov)
and provides overall management,
guidance, and direction for CDC Web
sites and other communication
technologies; (4) develops a common
user interface for CDC Web sites and
ensures CDC branding across CDC’s
sites and other electronic products/
services; (5) provides leadership for
CDC–INFO, CDC’s telephone, e-mail,
and fulfillment services center; (6)
conducts and supports research in user
experience and communication
technology areas in collaboration with
other CDC/HHS organizations; (7)
creates and distributes tools, standards/
guidelines, and other resources to assist
CDC information developers in
designing usable, useful, and accessible
Web sites and other communication
technologies; (8) leads, coordinates,
and/or supports the identification,
evaluation, and implementation of new
communication technologies that are
relevant to CDC’s mission and goals; (9)
stays abreast of emerging and new
communications technologies and
identifies appropriate ones to adopt;
(10) provides in-depth professional
development in e-health and
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communication technologies research,
design, and evaluation to CDC staff/
contractors; (11) provides agency-wide
leadership, coordination, and/or
support of CDC’s presence in online
social networks; and (12) leads,
coordinates, and/or supports online
collaborations with partners.
Office of the Director (CPBG1). (1)
Develops, manages, directs, and
coordinates the implementation of
strategic priorities and programmatic
activities of the division; (2) establishes
division goals and objectives; (3)
provides oversight and coordination for
division activities including personnel,
budget and administrative functions; (4)
advises the directors of NCHM, CCHIS,
CDC, and the CC/CO/NC/SOs on all
matters related to e-health marketing,
new media, social networks, and user
experience; (5) ensures CDC’s e-health
activities follow policy directions
established by the HHS Assistant
Secretary for Public Affairs, OMB, and
others; (6) provides leadership in the
development of CDC’s priorities,
strategies, and practices for effective ehealth marketing, new media, social
networks, and user experience
activities; (7) produces periodic reports
and publications; (8) serves as point of
contact and is responsible for agency,
CC/CO/NC/SOs coordination for
established c-Health programmatic
activities as well as new initiatives; (9)
provides scientific leadership and
guidance to the division; (10) serves as
NCHIM liaison with the National Center
for Public Health Informatics and other
CDC CC/CO/NC/SOs for e-health-related
activities; (11) collaborates with the
Office of Workforce and Career
Development and others to provide indepth training and professional
development in research-based
communication technologies design and
development; (12) leads and coordinates
CDC.gov’s governance bodies (CDC.gov
Council, CDC.gov Executive Board,
CDC.gov Executive Committee, and
related workgroups), and e-Healthrelated Communities of Practice and
work groups; and (13) provides
oversight to CDC.gov and CDC-de web
efforts.
Digital Content and Marketing Branch
(CPBGB). (1) Develops policies,
guidance, and best practices to improve
the quality of CDC.gov content and
marketing activities; (2) coordinates
CDC.gov content and marketing
activities with CDC NCs and other
internal and external organizations; (3)
assists with planning, development,
deployment, and maintenance of a
Content Management System for
CDC.gov and other CDC sites; (4)
assesses CDC marketing priorities and
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ensures those priorities are reflected on
CDC.gov; (5) coordinates CDC’s risk and
emergency communications via e-health
communication channels; (6) assists
CDC CC/CO/NC/SOs with planning,
designing, and evaluating content and
marketing efforts for CDC Web sites and
other communication technologies
using research-based approaches/
methodologies; (7) manages CDC’s
primary Web site, https://www.cdc.gov,
and provides overall management,
content coordination, technology
coordination, site maintenance and
operations; (8) manages CDC–INFO,
CDC’s call center, e-mail responses, and
fulfillment contracts; (9) identifies gaps
in CDC.gov content and works with NCs
to fill those gaps; and (10) markets
CDC’s e-health products, services, and
tools and reporting the results of those
marketing efforts.
Interactive Media and User
Experience Branch (CPBGC). (1)
Creates/provides data collection tools to
assess the broad range of user needs,
requirements, limitations, and
satisfaction levels for CDC Web sites
and other communication technologies;
(2) develops evidence-based guidelines,
templates, and tools to guide CDC
information developers in design/
developing effective e-Health efforts; (3)
identifies potential communication
technologies (hardware, software, and
applications) and determines their
feasibility for application to CDC
products and services; (4) assists CDC
CC/CO/NC/SOs in implementing
relevant emerging technologies and
aiding in diffusing new technologies; (5)
evaluates emerging communication
technologies; (6) provides user centered
design services (user data collection,
prototype development, iterative
usability testing); (7) collects/analyzes
user data/metrics from communication
technologies (Web usage statistics,
online user performance tools, user
satisfaction tools, search logs, and other
sources) to assess system performance,
usability, accessibility, and usefulness;
(8) oversees the development and
management of a state-of-the-art
research/testing lab and training facility
designed to research and test new
communication technologies, design
ideas, and the accessibility of older and
newer software and technologies; (9)
leads, coordinates, and/or supports
NCHM efforts to identify, evaluate the
feasibility of, and implement new and
emerging communication technologies
that are relevant to CDC’s mission and
goals; and (10) conducts and supports
research in user experience, social
networks, and new media and
interactive communication technologies
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in collaboration with other CDC/HHS
organizations.
Division of Creative Services (CPBH).
(1) Manages and utilizes production
facilities and resources to create
effective programs for delivery of CDC
information to key target audiences; (2)
collaborates on development and
production of communication
campaigns, PSAs, and other CDC
information and services that are a high
priority for the agency and/or crosscutting; (3) provides and manages CDCwide services including graphic design
and production (e.g., documents,
posters, displays, visual presentations,
etc.), writer editor services, scientific
and event photographic services, and
mechanisms to reach primary broadcast
channels (e.g. broadcast, audio, and
video); (4) collects and/or facilitates
distribution of graphic, digital, and
broadcast materials; (5) produces and
collaborates on new broadcast
communication mechanisms (e.g. HHS
TV, CDC TV, radio/TV broadcasting,
pod casting, web casting, and video-ondemand) for agency-level
communications with the public and
partners to include selection and
promotion of content on selected
channels and evaluation of its reach; (6)
provides oversight for broadcast
delivery mechanisms for inbound and
outbound broadcast communications
(e.g., press conferences, interviews); and
(7) researches and works with other
agency programs to develop new
mechanisms to communicate with the
public.
Office of the Director (CPBH1). (1)
Develops, manages, directs, and
coordinates the implementation of
strategic priorities and programmatic
activities of the division; (2) establishes
division goals and objectives; (3)
provides oversight and coordination for
division activities including personnel,
budget and administrative functions; (4)
sets up and implements tracking and
triage system for managing incoming
requests for creative services as well as
tracking progress in accomplishing task
objectives and overall division
performance measures; (5) develops and
implements performance management
measures for the division; (6) establishes
and maintains quality assurance editing
to ensure service and product quality
are consistent with outside industry; (7)
overseas customer service performance
for CDC-wide service offerings; (8)
manages project and information
archives to facilitate knowledge
management and organizational
efficiency; (9) serves as point of contact
for agency graphics and broadcast
capabilities and is responsible for
agency wide coordination for
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established graphics and broadcast
programmatic activities and new
initiatives; (10) provides scientific
leadership and guidance to the division;
and (11) manages the Global Health
Odyssey, CDC’s scientific museum and
learning center.
Client Services Branch (CPBHB). (1)
Accepts, tracks, and triages client
requests for division services; (2) assigns
all creative service requests from across
the agency to appropriate division
branches or teams; (3) manages and
maintains an online request, work flow
tracking, and program service indicator
system; (4) manages large or
multidisciplinary projects through a
team of client service staff who serve as
the division’s creative project
coordinators with other organizations
within CDC; (5) gathers and monitors
customer satisfaction information and
addresses concerns as necessary; (6)
monitors and manages performance, and
evaluates and communicates findings to
the division leadership, CC/COs, and
Chief Management Officials for followup and potential action; (7) analyzes
data about services being provided to be
used to determine budget, equipment,
staffing and training needs; (8)
collaborates on the maintenance of the
Public Health Image Library, an internet
archive of CDC’s scientific and
historical photographs; and (9) provides
scientific and event photography.
Graphic Services Branch (CPBHC). (1)
Coordinates agency-wide graphics
activities; (2) designs, develops, and
produces graphic illustrations, scientific
posters, desktop presentations,
conference materials, brochures,
newsletters, and exhibits; (3) provides
high-end medical illustration and art
design for CDC products and services;
and (4) provides creative direction/
leadership for graphics products to
ensure consistency with established
agency guidelines and quality standards
set within the division.
Broadcast Branch (CPBHD). (1)
Develops, produces and manages audio,
video, and multimedia health media; (2)
provides agency-wide and global
communication capacity using state-ofthe-art high-definition broadcast,
Webcast and emerging health media
delivery channels on a real time and/or
recorded basis; (3) responsible for media
asset management of all broadcast video
and audio programming developed
within CDC; (4) supports the
communication needs of the CDC’s
DEOC to assure response capacity and
capability for emergency broadcasts; (5)
manages all CDC broadcast-grade audio
and video production requirements; (6)
develops and delivers television
programming, in coordination with
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20303
HITS, to deliver timely and accurate
information to improve health and
safety for the U.S. public and around the
world; (7) provides in-house creation,
duplication and format conversion of
products including VHS, S–VHS, DVD,
CD–R, DAT, Mini-Dy, Betacam-SP,
Digital-Betacam, DVC Pro-HD and
international formats such as PAL,
SECAM, SECAM–Il; (8) keeps abreast of
changing video formats to ensure CDC
keeps pace; (9) provides audio-only
production services including:
broadcast-grade, in-house audio
production, audio-for-video, audio
sweetening, mixing and editing to
picture, voice-over, narration, formatconversions and delivery; (10) provides
professional consultation and support in
the creation and production of emerging
health media transmission technologies;
(11) develops and collaborates on
agency-wide communication products
and processes through multimedia and
digital/electronic methods; (12)
produces graphic elements for national
and international television broadcast
programs, Web sites, and interactive
CD–Rom and DVDs using state-of-the-art
or leading edge technologies and
expertise; (13) collaborates with other
areas of NCHM, particularly the
Division of Electronic Health Marketing,
in reviewing potential communication
technology; (14) provides audio/video
engineering design, installation, setup
and maintenance for the Division of
Creative Services’ facilities, CDC
Director’s press room, DEOC and the
Continuity of Operations Site as
required; (15) manages and provides
leadership for the Public Health
Training Network; (16) manages and
coordinates the Public Health Grand
Rounds, a program to disseminate the
best practices in implementing public
health activities; and (17) develops and
manages distance education and health
communication products to reach
public health partners and professionals
in support of health priorities.
Writer Editor Services Branch
(CPBHE). (1) Provides production
editing services for CDC’s information
products; (2) provides production
editing services for Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)
publications, Emerging Infectious
Diseases (EID) Journal, and Preventing
Chronic Disease (PCD) Journal; (3)
provides substantive editing services for
CDC-authored written material; (4)
provides copy editing services; (5)
provides proofreading services; (6)
provides Web editing services; (7)
provides writing services, including
research; and (8) provides editorial
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consulting services, and training in
writing and editing.
After item (11) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CPC 1), National Center for Health
Statistics (CPC), add the following: (12)
serves as primary liaison between NCHS
and the National Center for Health
Marketing on communications and
marketing science, and its associated
research and practice; and (13) releases
and disseminates all NCHS statistical
products and related activities in a
mariner consistent with OMB Federal
Statistical Agency Directive No. 4.
After item (17) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CPE 1), National Center for Public
Health Informatics (CPE), add the
following: (18) serves as primary liaison
between NCPHI and the National Center
for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science,
and its associated research and practice.
After item (9) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CTB 1), National Center for
Environmental Health (CTB), add the
following: (10) serves as primary liaison
between NCEH and the National Center
for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science,
and its associated research and practice.
Delete in their entirety the title and
function statement for the Office of
Communications (CTB 12).
After item (9) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CTC 1), National Center for Injury
Prevention and Control (CTC), add the
following: (10) serves as primary liaison
between NCIPC and the National Center
for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science,
and its associated research and practice.
Delete in their entirety the title and
function statement for the Office of
Communication Resources (CTC 14).
After item (6) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CUB 1), National Center on Birth
Defects and Developmental Disabilities
(CUB), add the following: (7) serves as
primary liaison between NCBDDD and
the National Center for Health
Marketing on communications and
marketing science, and its associated
research and practice.
After item (10) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CUC1), National Center for Chronic
Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion (CUC), add the following:
(11) serves as primary liaison between
NCCDPHP and the National Center for
Health Marketing on communications
and marketing science, and its
associated research and practice.
After item (16) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CVG1), National Center for
Immunization and Respiratory Diseases
(CVG), add the following: (17) serves as
primary liaison between NCIRD and the
National Center for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science,
and its associated research and practice.
After item (14) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CVH 1), National Center for Zoonotic,
Vector-borne, and Enteric Diseases
(CVH), add the following: (15) serves as
primary liaison between NCZVED and
the National Center for Health
Marketing on communications and
marketing science, and its associated
research and practice.
After item (23) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CVJ 1), National Center for HIV/AIDS,
Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention
(CVJ), add the following: (24) serves as
primary liaison between NCHHSTP and
the National Center for Health
Marketing on communications and
marketing science, and its associated
research and practice.
After item (10) of the functional
statement for the Office of the Director
(CVK1), National Center for
Preparedness, Detection, and Control of
Infectious Diseases (CVK), add the
following: (11) serves as primary liaison
between NCPDCID and the National
Center for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science,
and its associated research and practice.
Dated: April 2, 2008.
Joseph Henderson,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC).
[FR Doc. E8–7823 Filed 4–14–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–18–M
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and
Families
Proposed Information Collection
Activity; Comment Request
Proposed Projects
Title: Family Violence Prevention and
Services: Grants to States; Native
American Tribes and Alaskan Native
Villages; and State Domestic Violence
Coalitions.
OMB No.: 0970–0280.
Description: The Family Violence
Prevention and Services Act (FVPSA),
as amended, authorizes the Department
of Health and Human Services to award
grants to States, Tribes—and Tribal
Organizations, and State Domestic
Violence Coalitions for family violence
prevention and intervention activities.
The proposed information collection
activities will be used to make grant
award decisions and to monitor grant
performance.
Respondents: State Agencies
Administering FVPSA Grants; Tribal
Governments and Tribal Organizations;
and State Domestic Violence Coalitions.
ANNUAL BURDEN ESTIMATES
Number of
respondents
Instrument
Number of
responses
per
respondent
Average
burden hours
per response
Total
burden
hours
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
State Grant Application ....................................................................................
Tribal Grant Application ...................................................................................
State Domestic Violence Coalition Application ................................................
State FVPSA Grant Performance Progress Report ........................................
Tribal FVPSA Grant Performance Progress Report ........................................
State Domestic Violence Coalition FVPSA Grant Performance Progress Report ...............................................................................................................
53
200
52
53
200
1
1
1
1
1
10
5
10
10
10
530
1,000
520
530
2,000
52
1
10
520
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: ....................................................
........................
........................
........................
3,700
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 73 (Tuesday, April 15, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 20297-20304]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-7823]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Statement of Organization, Functions and Delegations of Authority
Part C (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) of the
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority of
the Department of Health and Human Services 45 FR 67772-76, dated
October 14, 1980, and corrected at 45 FR 69296, October 20, 1980, as
amended most recently at 73 FR 6728, dated February 2, 2008, is amended
to reflect the reorganization of the National Center for Health
Marketing, Coordinating Center for Health Information and Service,
[[Page 20298]]
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Section C-B, Organization and Functions, is hereby amended as
follows: Delete in their entirety the functional statements for the
National Center for Health Marketing (CPB), and insert the following:
National Center for Health Marketing (CPB). The mission of the
National Center for Health Marketing (NCHM) is to protect and promote
the public's health through collaborative and innovative health
marketing programs, products, and services that are customer-centered,
science-based, and high-impact.
In carrying out its mission, NCHM: (1) Ensures the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has the necessary marketing and
prevention research data to develop information, interventions, and
programs that respond to customers' needs, values, and uses; (2)
develops and evaluates rigorous research-based strategies for providing
information, programs, and services; (3) develops and tests
communication messages and programs for public and professional
audiences; (4) ensures that CDC risk and emergency communication
messages are effectively delivered to targeted audiences; (5) works
collaboratively to manage the CDC brand and ensures the CDC brand/
identity is promoted throughout all CDC marketing/communication
channels; (6) provides value added cross-cutting scientific support to
ensure the best available public health science is rapidly and reliably
translated into effective practice and policy; (7) ensures efficient,
focused use of CDC's expertise and mechanisms for delivering health
information and services; (8) ensures customers have effective, real-
time access to needed health and safety information, interventions, and
programs through communication channels they prefer; (9) delivers CDC
information and services to the public; (10) ensures effective
strategic partnerships and alliances to extend CDC's reach; (11)
increases public awareness and partner actions to enhance the public
health infrastructure; (12) helps people understand public health and
its relevance and value to people across all life stages; (13) fosters
the development and/or improvement of methods by which the partnership
of federal, state, and local public health agencies can assure the
coordinated and effective establishment of priorities and responses to
public health problems; (14) maintains a forum for communication,
coordination, collaboration, and consensus among the National Centers
(NC) of CDC, public agencies, and private organizations concerned with
ensuring the quality of public health practice; (15) works
collaboratively with academic institutions, especially schools of
public health and departments of preventive medicine, to develop and
evaluate all aspects of marketing and communication elements; (16)
provides a central service for consultation, design, production, and
evaluation of media and instructional services to support CDC's
delivery of public health messages; (17) manages marketing-related
shared services and in carrying out the above functions, collaborates,
as appropriate, with other Coordinating Centers/Coordinating Offices
(CC/CO), NCs, and Staff Offices (SO) of CDC; (18) oversees the
management, development, implementation, and evaluation of CDC's
primary Web site, https://www.cdc.gov and serves as a CDC-wide resource
for communication technologies design, usability, and maintenance; (19)
leads CDC's e-health marketing/communication efforts; and (20) leads
NCHM efforts to apply new technologies, social networks, virtual
worlds, and other new/emerging technologies to develop, enhance,
maintain and deliver CDC information.
Office of the Director (CPB1). (1) Manages, directs, coordinates,
and evaluates the activities of NCHM; (2) develops goals and objectives
and provides leadership, policy formation, scientific oversight, and
guidance in program planning, development, and integration; (3)
coordinates assistance and oversight provided by NCHM to other CDC
components, federal, state, and local government agencies, and the
private sector; (4) chairs the CDC Excellence in Marketing Committee;
(5) provides leadership and coordination for NCHM crosscutting programs
including Global Health Marketing, Emergency Preparedness, Client and
Collaborator Relations, and other center and agency-wide priority
programs; (6) establishes, administers, and coordinates CDC's health
communication and marketing policies to ensure communication efforts
reflect the scientific integrity of all CDC research, programs, and
activities, and information is factual, accurate, and targeted toward
improving public health; (7) oversees NCHM-wide administrative and
program services, and coordinates or assures coordination with the
appropriate CDC offices on administrative and program matters; (8)
promotes, stimulates, conducts, and supports research on health
communication topics of CDC-wide interest; (9) maintains liaison with
officials from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), other
federal and state public health agencies, and non-profit and voluntary
health agencies to coordinate health communication programs of mutual
interest and concern; (10) manages and coordinates staff professional
development trainings related to health marketing and health
communication; (11) provides leadership and coordination for NCHM
client and collaborator relationship activities; (12) manages and
coordinates HHS clearance for CDC communications and marketing programs
and related products, and Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
clearance submissions for marketing and communication research; (13)
develops new mechanisms for agency-level communications with the public
including the CDC-INFO hotline and e-mail response systems, CDC
publications system, electronic journals and newsletters, and
subscription e-mail systems; and (14) establishes and manages a
unified, comprehensive, high-quality CDC presence at selected public
health conferences and health expositions.
Business Services Office (CPB13). (1) Provides leadership,
oversight, and guidance in the management and operations of NCHM's
programs; (2) plans, coordinates, and provides administrative
management support, advice, and guidance to NCHM, in the areas of
fiscal management, personnel, travel, and other administrative
services; (3) coordinates the development of the NCHM annual budget
submission and spending plans; (4) directs and coordinates the
activities of the office; (5) conducts management analyses of NCHM
programs, resources, and staff to ensure optimal utilization of
resources and accomplishment of program objectives; (6) plans,
allocates, and monitors NCHM resources; (7) maintains liaison and
collaborates with other CDC components and external organizations in
support of NCHM management and operations; (8) plans, allocates, and
monitors NCHM-wide administrative resources; (9) works closely with
other federal agencies involved with NCHM interagency agreements; (10)
coordinates NCHM requirements relating to procurement, materiel
management, and interagency agreements; (11) develops and implements
administrative policies, procedures, and operations, as appropriate for
NCHM, and prepares special reports and studies, as required, in the
administrative management areas; (12) provides coordinated services to
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NCHM for all internal conference/meeting management; and (13)
collaborates, as appropriate, with the CDC Office of the Director,
other CDC offices, domestic and international agencies and
organizations in carrying out the above functions.
Extramural Services Activity (CPB132). (1) Performs administrative
management functions for extramural programs which are linked to
research and non-research activities of NCI-IM and other CC/COs that
utilize NCHM's and/or CCHIS's extramural mechanisms; (2) provides
expertise in the funding and administration of extramural activities,
including grants, cooperative agreements and contracts; (3) triages
linked research projects and solicits peer review services from the
Office of the Chief Science Officer; (4) conducts annual program
planning activities and plans the award process cycle with NCHM, other
CC/CO/NCs and PGO staff, (5) serves as the primary point of contact
with PGO; (6) provides technical consultation on HHS and CDC/PGO grant
and cooperative agreement policy and regulations; (7) provides fiscal
management and stewardship of selected grants, contracts, and
cooperative agreements; and (8) coordinates NCHM requirements relating
to selected contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, and reimbursable
agreements.
MMWR Office (CPB14). (1) Manages the MMWR series of publications
including the MMWR Recommendations and Reports, CDC Surveillance
Summaries, and Annual Summary of Notifiable Diseases; and (2) develops,
plans, coordinates, edits, and produces the MMWR series, including the
MMWR Recommendations and Reports, CDC Surveillance Summaries, and
Annual Summary of Notifiable Diseases.
Health Communication Science Office (CPB15). The Health
Communication Science Office (HCSO): (1) Serves as the principal
advisor to the CO/NC director on communication and marketing science,
research and practice, (2) leads respective CO/NC strategic planning
for communication and marketing science programs and projects; (3)
serves as key focal point for integrating CO/NC communications/health
messages into cohesive marketing campaigns targeted to defined
audiences to advance CDC's health protection goals; (4) collaborates
with other CO/NC in the development of marketing communications
targeted to populations within certain life stages or who would
otherwise benefit from a cross-functional approach; (5) ensures use of
scientifically sound research for marketing and communication programs
and projects; (6) serves as liaison to internal and external groups
(this function does not apply to the National Center for Health
Statistics [NCHS]); (7) develops and manages relationships with
internal and external partners and customers (this function does not
apply to the National Center for Environmental Health Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry nor to the NCHS); (8) ensures accurate,
accessible, timely, and effective translation of science for use by
multiple audiences (this function does not apply to NCHS); (9) leads
identification and implementation of information dissemination channels
(this function does not apply to NCHS); (10) supervises and manages
HCSO activities, programs, and staff; (11) leads audience segmentation
research; (12) analyzing context, situation, and environment to inform
Center-wide communication and marketing programs and projects; (13)
develops and manages clearance systems (this function does not apply to
NCHS); (14) provides training and technical assistance; (15)
collaborates on health media production, including graphics and
broadcast production; (16) provides project management expertise (this
function does not apply to NCHS); (17) collaborates on CDC brand
management activities; (18) collaborates with CDC media relations staff
to ensure consistent and timely translation of center-specific health
information to multiple audiences (this function does not apply to
NCHS).
The following functions (19-21) apply only to the National Center
for Environmental Health Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry: (19) collaborates with external organizations and the news,
public service, and entertainment and other media to ensure that
effective findings and their implications for public health reach the
public; (20) collaborates closely with Divisions to produce materials
designed for use by the news media, including press releases, letters
to the editor, public service announcements, television programming,
video news releases, and other electronic and printed materials; (21)
coordinates the development and maintenance of center/agency-wide
information systems through an internet home page.
The following functions (22-23) apply only to the National Center
for Health Statistics: (22) serves as the liaison to internal and
external groups for health marketing activities; and (23) provides
project management expertise for health marketing activities.
Division of Health Communication and Marketing (CPBC). (1) Provides
leadership in the development of CDC's priorities, strategies and
practices for effective health communication and marketing to a wide
range of target audiences; (2) provides a CDC-wide forum for the
sharing of health communication and marketing information;
collaboration across programs; and discussion, development and
implementation of health marketing policies and practices; (3) assists
the CC/CO/NC/SOs of CDC in conducting formative, process and outcome
research, and evaluation of specific applications of health
communication and marketing in program areas; (4) assists the CC/CO/NC/
SOs in identifying appropriate target audiences and messages; (5)
assists the CC/CO/NC/SOs and their constituents in identifying and
building expertise and state-of-the-art technology, logistical support,
and other capacities required for effective health communication and
marketing; (6) systematically conducts, collects, assesses and
disseminates health communication and marketing research, evaluation
results, and information on trends and emerging issues; (7) provides
leadership for and ensuring coordination of risk, emergency, and
terrorism communication; and (8) conducts evidence-based reviews of
effective community health interventions.
Office of the Director (CPBC1). (1) Develops, manages, directs, and
coordinates the implementation of strategic priorities and programmatic
activities for the division; (2) establishes division goals and
objectives; (3) provides oversight and coordination for division
activities including personnel, budget, and administrative functions;
(4) advises the directors of NCHM, CCHIS, CDC, and other CC/CO/NC/SOs
on all matters related to health communication and marketing; (5)
ensures CDC health marketing and communication activities follow policy
directions established by the HHS Assistant Secretary for Public
Affairs; (6) provides leadership in the development of CDC's
priorities, strategies, and practices for effective health
communication and marketing activities; (7) establishes strategy and
oversight for emergency and risk communication efforts; (8) produces
periodic reports and publications; (9) serves as point of contact and
is responsible for agency and CC/CO/NC coordination for established
programmatic activities as well as new initiatives; and (10) provides
scientific leadership and guidance to the division.
Marketing and Communication Strategy Branch (CPBCB). (1) Provides a
broad range of support for consultation,
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coordination, and development of health communication and marketing
program efforts across the agency; (2) identifies and pursues
opportunities for bundling, embedding, and joint dissemination of CDC
information to more effectively reach audiences; (3) monitors and
refines strategies and messages based on evaluation and feedback
mechanisms; (4) consults on conceptualizing, developing, planning,
executing, and evaluating CDC health marketing and communication
activities and campaigns, media buys, Public Service Announcements
(PSA), and other CDC information; (5) establishes measures of success/
effectiveness of CDC communication efforts and provides guidance to CDC
programs on applying these measures; (6) ensures analytic function for
interpretation of data from centralized marketing databases, sources of
environmental scanning, and communication literature for use in
development and implementation of strategies for communication
activities; (7) provides an integrated marketing perspective to data
collection and CDC data resources, using data from various sources to
develop a more complete picture of the public and its health concerns/
interests and to address cross cutting issues; (8) provides for
efficient, agency-wide access to consumer-oriented databases that can
help support public health marketing; (9) sponsors/initiates original
health communication and marketing research; (10) manages a repository
of CDC and external research on the effectiveness of programs and
interventions (both for public and sector audiences), and promotes the
use of such evidence throughout CDC; (11) ensures that the content of
CDC scientific communications is accessible (available, understandable,
actionable) to audiences that may have specific health literacy needs;
(12) identifies and implements strategies for health literacy and
multilingual translation and delivery of CDC information tailored to
specific audiences for maximum health impact; (13) tailors science-
based information to specific audiences based on the knowledge,
literacy levels, and language, culture, interests, and level of
scientific sophistication of those audiences; (14) identifies and
implements strategies for translation and delivery of CDC information
to key targeted audiences for maximum health impact; (15) directs,
develops, and/or collaborates on channels for reaching the public with
health messages that positively impact health; and (16) provides for
systematic mechanisms for gaining public input on health issues and
priorities (e.g., advisory mechanisms, focus groups, polling,
legislative and media tracking) and for the systematic application of
knowledge gained from such input into agency decision making.
Emergency and Risk Communication Branch (CPBCC). (1) Identifies and
implements strategies for translation and delivery of CDC's risk and
emergency communication messages to key targeted audiences for maximum
health impact; (2) monitors, evaluates, and refines risk and emergency
communication messages and channel selection, content, and use based on
feedback mechanisms; (3) evaluates the reach and effectiveness of CDC's
risk and emergency communication messages and products; (4) ensures the
content of CDC's risk and emergency communication messages are
accessible (available, understandable, actionable) and disseminated to
the public and target audiences; (5) tailors science based information
related to risk and emergency communication messages for key sector
audiences using knowledge of the interests and level of scientific
sophistication of those audiences; (6) manages, evaluates, and
coordinates with selected/major channels CDC uses to push risk and
emergency communication messages outward (e.g., media, distance
learning, broadcast/satellite capability, messaging through Health
Alert Network and the clinician registry, postings on the CDC website,
and community and partner outreach); (7) manages and evaluates the
content during national emergencies or terrorism events on selected/
major channels the public uses to contact CDC (e.g., Internet, phone
hotlines, public exhibition areas); (8) provides an integrated
marketing perspective to risk emergency communication messages data
collection and CDC data resources, using data from various sources to
develop a more complete picture of the public and its health concerns/
interests; (9) provides for systematic mechanisms for gaining public
input on risk and emergency communication messages (e.g., advisory
mechanisms, focus groups, polling, legislative inquiries, and media
tracking), for getting customer feedback on CDC programs (Web site and
800 number feedback, user surveys, feedback from partners, media
tracking), and for the systematic application of knowledge gained from
such input into agency decision making; (10) sponsors/initiates
original research related to risk and emergency communication messages
on customer needs and interests; needs and interests of key sectors and
partners; audience segmentation; and approaches to bundling and
packaging of CDC offerings; and (11) develops and manages selected
channels to deliver national emergency and terrorism-related messages.
Community Guide Branch (CPBCD). (1) Convenes and supports the
independent Task Force on Community Preventive Services, which develops
evidence-based recommendations for the use or non-use of population-
based health interventions; (2) produces and promotes the use of the
Guide to Community Preventive Services (aka Community Guide) which is a
compilation of the systematic reviews, evidence-based recommendations,
and research needs related to best public health practices; (3)
performs evidence reviews of the efficacy and effectiveness of
prevention activities not associated with the Community Guide; (4)
assists CDC and other federal and non-federal partners in
understanding, using, refining, and communicating methods for
conducting systematic reviews; (5) assists CDC and other federal and
non-federal partners in linking reviews of evidence to guidelines
development and/or program implementation; (6) coordinates and manages
large and diverse teams of internal and external partners in the
systematic review process; (7) coordinates and manages a working group
of CDC, HHS, and nongovernmental partners to develop and/or refine
methods for conducting systematic reviews; (8) provides consultations
for implementing Community Guide recommended strategies; (9)
coordinates and manages a working group of CDC, HHS and nongovernmental
partners to diffuse Community Guide reviews, recommendations, and
research needs to appropriate audiences throughout the U.S. health care
and public health systems; (10) participates in the development of
national and regional public/private partnerships to enhance prevention
research and the translation of evidence into policy and action; (11)
conducts selected scientific evaluation of the center or division-
related prevention activities; (12) communicates the Community Guide
reviews, recommendations, and research needs beyond the Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) and the American Journal of Preventive
Medicine/AJPM, publications via other journals, books, the world wide
Web, and other media; (13) designs and conducts programmatic, process
and outcome evaluation strategies for all stages of development and
diffusion of the Community Guide; and (14) assists
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in making recommendations for prevention and policy decisions.
Division of Partnerships and Strategic Alliances (CPBD). (1)
Provides leadership in the development and coordination of high-
priority partnerships and sets strategy and goals for working with
private and public partnership sectors including business, health care,
education, federal agencies, and faith and community organizations, the
public health community, especially state and local health
organizations and their regional and national affiliate organizations,
and emergency planning, preparedness, and response partners; (2)
identifies critical cross-CDC relationships to maximize CDC's success
in achieving priority health goals; (3) develops protocols for
partnership ``triage'' to ensure timely and effective coordination; (4)
serves as the agency-level contact on significant issues for major
partners, or priority target partners; (5) provides leadership in
building strategic relationships with new partners and extending the
range of existing partnerships; (6) develops and maintains a database
for high-priority, cross-cutting relationships; (7) provides leadership
in developing systematic mechanisms for gaining public and private
sectors and public health systems' input on health issues and
priorities; identifies and pursues opportunities for broadening the
range of approaches used by programs; (8) provides leadership in
identifying and implementing strategies for effective delivery of CDC
information to key sector and public health systems' audiences; (9)
provides targeted, science-based information for key sector audiences;
(10) provides leadership in the development of new mechanisms for
agency-level communications with specific sectors; (11) leads partner
teams in Director's Emergency Operations Center (DEOC) for emergency
planning, response, and recovery; (12) coordinates field assignees for
public health systems and partnerships; and (13) manages program
management and project officer coordination for all partnership
cooperative agreements including those applications submitted under
cross-cutting CDC umbrella cooperative agreements.
Office of the Director (CPBD 1). (1) Manages, directs, and
coordinates the research agenda and activities of the division; (2)
maintains partnership coordination database and directory; (3) develops
strategy and planning, and provides leadership and guidance on
strategic planning, policy, program and project priority planning and
setting, program management and operations for agency-wide CDC
partnerships; (4) identifies and prioritizes partnership sectors; (5)
establishes division goals, objectives, and priorities; (6) monitors
progress in implementation of projects and achievement of objectives;
(7) provides management, administrative, and support services, and
coordinates with the NCHM OD on program and administrative matters; (8)
leads and supports the Excellence in Partnership Committee,
representing the various CDC Centers and coordinating agency-wide
partnership activities; (9) provides liaison on partnerships with other
CDC organizations, other governmental agencies, private organizations,
and other outside groups; (10) provides scientific leadership and
guidance to the division; (11) leverages partner relationships to
improve CDC's translation of science and research to practice; (12)
leads activities to improve partner engagement as a means of informing
CDC's science and practice; (13) collaborates with the CDC Foundation
in its activities with businesses and business organizations; (14)
assesses partners' needs and opportunities to enhance health
protection; (15) coordinates and/or collaborates on CDC representation
on HHS Healthy People 2010 and 2020; and (16) provides oversight for
program management and project officer coordination for all partnership
cooperative agreements including those applications submitted under
cross-cutting CDC umbrella cooperative agreements.
Public Health Partners and Coordination Branch (CPBDB). (1)
Provides leadership within CDC, with national public health
organizations, and with governmental public health agencies to promote
and support effective national partnerships for health promotion and
disease prevention; (2) supports program management and project
officers for all partnership cooperative agreements including those
applications submitted under cross-cutting CDC umbrella cooperative
agreements; (3) advises CC/CO/NC/SOs on program activities that
strengthen the nation's public health system through effective linkages
with governmental public health agencies and national public health
organizations; (4) supports and encourages public health systems
research aimed at strengthening the public health system with
particular emphasis on optimizing performance of governmental public
health agencies; (5) monitors and evaluates the nation's public health
system with regard to emerging issues, system effectiveness and
progress on achieving CDC's and the nation's public health goals; (6)
provides knowledge and science based information critical to the
effectiveness of the governmental public health systems to public
health agencies; (7) provides leadership to CDC field staff in
encouraging strong public health system capacity and partnerships; (8)
establishes and maintains program linkages with the Office of Workforce
and Career Development and the Office of the Chief of Public Health
Practice to facilitate systems development; and (9) staffs the partner
teams in the DEOC partner desk.
Private/Public Partner Sectors Branch (CPBDC). (1) Assures private
and public sector, and state and local health organization management
support in the selection, prioritization and implementation of CDC
goals; (2) leverages partner relationships to improve CDC' s
translation of science and research to practice; (3) supports
activities to improve partner engagement as a means of informing CDC's
science and practice; (4) provides leadership to CDC and other
organizations to promote and support effective partnerships for health
promotion and disease prevention in all partnership sectors; (5)
provides leadership and supports CDC's activities related to business
and worker organizations, public and private purchasers of health care,
consumers, health care consultants, academic institutions, and others;
(6) assists in coordinating support for CDC's interactions with
business collaboration partners; (7) directs, coordinates, and
evaluates critical CDC activities with major components of the health
care sectors; (8) serves as a focal point for developing public and
private sector communications on health care issues relevant to CDC's
goals; (9) supports the collaboration with the CDC Foundation in its
activities with businesses and business organizations; (10) establishes
data systems and knowledge required to support public private
alliances; (11) coordinates collaborative activities of the branch with
other NCs, federal agencies, professional societies, and private health
organizations; (12) assures ongoing, effective communication between
the CDC and key educational organizations on issues related to the
nation's health; (13) represents CDC to private sector organizations
such as the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations, the National Quality Forum, the National Committee for
Quality Assurance, the Quality Interagency Coordinating Task Force, the
National Quality Report, the
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Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and others; (14) assists
educational organizations in implementing health interventions to
reduce high-priority health risks among student populations; (15)
collaborates with other components of CDC, Public Health Service, and
HHS, the U.S. Department of Education and other federal agencies;
national professional, voluntary, and philanthropic organizations; and
international agencies and other organizations as appropriate; (16)
provides a federal partner interface with CDC; (17) builds networks and
partner relationships; (18) provides leadership and support to CDC's
activities related to foundations, faith, and community organizations,
their constituencies, and others; and (19) provides access for faith-
and-community-based organizations to compete for federal funds
supporting delivery of public services, including health-related
services.
Division of Electronic Health Marketing (CPBG). (1) Supports NCHM
and CDC through the creation, design, development, and evaluation of
effective communication technologies that enhance the presentation and
distribution of CDC's products and services; (2) assists CDC
information developers in planning, designing, usability testing, and
maintaining Web sites, mobile applications/devices, and other
communication technologies; (3) provides leadership and management for
CDC's Web site (https://www.cdc.gov) and provides overall management,
guidance, and direction for CDC Web sites and other communication
technologies; (4) develops a common user interface for CDC Web sites
and ensures CDC branding across CDC's sites and other electronic
products/services; (5) provides leadership for CDC-INFO, CDC's
telephone, e-mail, and fulfillment services center; (6) conducts and
supports research in user experience and communication technology areas
in collaboration with other CDC/HHS organizations; (7) creates and
distributes tools, standards/guidelines, and other resources to assist
CDC information developers in designing usable, useful, and accessible
Web sites and other communication technologies; (8) leads, coordinates,
and/or supports the identification, evaluation, and implementation of
new communication technologies that are relevant to CDC's mission and
goals; (9) stays abreast of emerging and new communications
technologies and identifies appropriate ones to adopt; (10) provides
in-depth professional development in e-health and communication
technologies research, design, and evaluation to CDC staff/contractors;
(11) provides agency-wide leadership, coordination, and/or support of
CDC's presence in online social networks; and (12) leads, coordinates,
and/or supports online collaborations with partners.
Office of the Director (CPBG1). (1) Develops, manages, directs, and
coordinates the implementation of strategic priorities and programmatic
activities of the division; (2) establishes division goals and
objectives; (3) provides oversight and coordination for division
activities including personnel, budget and administrative functions;
(4) advises the directors of NCHM, CCHIS, CDC, and the CC/CO/NC/SOs on
all matters related to e-health marketing, new media, social networks,
and user experience; (5) ensures CDC's e-health activities follow
policy directions established by the HHS Assistant Secretary for Public
Affairs, OMB, and others; (6) provides leadership in the development of
CDC's priorities, strategies, and practices for effective e-health
marketing, new media, social networks, and user experience activities;
(7) produces periodic reports and publications; (8) serves as point of
contact and is responsible for agency, CC/CO/NC/SOs coordination for
established c-Health programmatic activities as well as new
initiatives; (9) provides scientific leadership and guidance to the
division; (10) serves as NCHIM liaison with the National Center for
Public Health Informatics and other CDC CC/CO/NC/SOs for e-health-
related activities; (11) collaborates with the Office of Workforce and
Career Development and others to provide in-depth training and
professional development in research-based communication technologies
design and development; (12) leads and coordinates CDC.gov's governance
bodies (CDC.gov Council, CDC.gov Executive Board, CDC.gov Executive
Committee, and related workgroups), and e-Health-related Communities of
Practice and work groups; and (13) provides oversight to CDC.gov and
CDC-de web efforts.
Digital Content and Marketing Branch (CPBGB). (1) Develops
policies, guidance, and best practices to improve the quality of
CDC.gov content and marketing activities; (2) coordinates CDC.gov
content and marketing activities with CDC NCs and other internal and
external organizations; (3) assists with planning, development,
deployment, and maintenance of a Content Management System for CDC.gov
and other CDC sites; (4) assesses CDC marketing priorities and ensures
those priorities are reflected on CDC.gov; (5) coordinates CDC's risk
and emergency communications via e-health communication channels; (6)
assists CDC CC/CO/NC/SOs with planning, designing, and evaluating
content and marketing efforts for CDC Web sites and other communication
technologies using research-based approaches/methodologies; (7) manages
CDC's primary Web site, https://www.cdc.gov, and provides overall
management, content coordination, technology coordination, site
maintenance and operations; (8) manages CDC-INFO, CDC's call center, e-
mail responses, and fulfillment contracts; (9) identifies gaps in
CDC.gov content and works with NCs to fill those gaps; and (10) markets
CDC's e-health products, services, and tools and reporting the results
of those marketing efforts.
Interactive Media and User Experience Branch (CPBGC). (1) Creates/
provides data collection tools to assess the broad range of user needs,
requirements, limitations, and satisfaction levels for CDC Web sites
and other communication technologies; (2) develops evidence-based
guidelines, templates, and tools to guide CDC information developers in
design/developing effective e-Health efforts; (3) identifies potential
communication technologies (hardware, software, and applications) and
determines their feasibility for application to CDC products and
services; (4) assists CDC CC/CO/NC/SOs in implementing relevant
emerging technologies and aiding in diffusing new technologies; (5)
evaluates emerging communication technologies; (6) provides user
centered design services (user data collection, prototype development,
iterative usability testing); (7) collects/analyzes user data/metrics
from communication technologies (Web usage statistics, online user
performance tools, user satisfaction tools, search logs, and other
sources) to assess system performance, usability, accessibility, and
usefulness; (8) oversees the development and management of a state-of-
the-art research/testing lab and training facility designed to research
and test new communication technologies, design ideas, and the
accessibility of older and newer software and technologies; (9) leads,
coordinates, and/or supports NCHM efforts to identify, evaluate the
feasibility of, and implement new and emerging communication
technologies that are relevant to CDC's mission and goals; and (10)
conducts and supports research in user experience, social networks, and
new media and interactive communication technologies
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in collaboration with other CDC/HHS organizations.
Division of Creative Services (CPBH). (1) Manages and utilizes
production facilities and resources to create effective programs for
delivery of CDC information to key target audiences; (2) collaborates
on development and production of communication campaigns, PSAs, and
other CDC information and services that are a high priority for the
agency and/or cross-cutting; (3) provides and manages CDC-wide services
including graphic design and production (e.g., documents, posters,
displays, visual presentations, etc.), writer editor services,
scientific and event photographic services, and mechanisms to reach
primary broadcast channels (e.g. broadcast, audio, and video); (4)
collects and/or facilitates distribution of graphic, digital, and
broadcast materials; (5) produces and collaborates on new broadcast
communication mechanisms (e.g. HHS TV, CDC TV, radio/TV broadcasting,
pod casting, web casting, and video-on-demand) for agency-level
communications with the public and partners to include selection and
promotion of content on selected channels and evaluation of its reach;
(6) provides oversight for broadcast delivery mechanisms for inbound
and outbound broadcast communications (e.g., press conferences,
interviews); and (7) researches and works with other agency programs to
develop new mechanisms to communicate with the public.
Office of the Director (CPBH1). (1) Develops, manages, directs, and
coordinates the implementation of strategic priorities and programmatic
activities of the division; (2) establishes division goals and
objectives; (3) provides oversight and coordination for division
activities including personnel, budget and administrative functions;
(4) sets up and implements tracking and triage system for managing
incoming requests for creative services as well as tracking progress in
accomplishing task objectives and overall division performance
measures; (5) develops and implements performance management measures
for the division; (6) establishes and maintains quality assurance
editing to ensure service and product quality are consistent with
outside industry; (7) overseas customer service performance for CDC-
wide service offerings; (8) manages project and information archives to
facilitate knowledge management and organizational efficiency; (9)
serves as point of contact for agency graphics and broadcast
capabilities and is responsible for agency wide coordination for
established graphics and broadcast programmatic activities and new
initiatives; (10) provides scientific leadership and guidance to the
division; and (11) manages the Global Health Odyssey, CDC's scientific
museum and learning center.
Client Services Branch (CPBHB). (1) Accepts, tracks, and triages
client requests for division services; (2) assigns all creative service
requests from across the agency to appropriate division branches or
teams; (3) manages and maintains an online request, work flow tracking,
and program service indicator system; (4) manages large or
multidisciplinary projects through a team of client service staff who
serve as the division's creative project coordinators with other
organizations within CDC; (5) gathers and monitors customer
satisfaction information and addresses concerns as necessary; (6)
monitors and manages performance, and evaluates and communicates
findings to the division leadership, CC/COs, and Chief Management
Officials for follow-up and potential action; (7) analyzes data about
services being provided to be used to determine budget, equipment,
staffing and training needs; (8) collaborates on the maintenance of the
Public Health Image Library, an internet archive of CDC's scientific
and historical photographs; and (9) provides scientific and event
photography.
Graphic Services Branch (CPBHC). (1) Coordinates agency-wide
graphics activities; (2) designs, develops, and produces graphic
illustrations, scientific posters, desktop presentations, conference
materials, brochures, newsletters, and exhibits; (3) provides high-end
medical illustration and art design for CDC products and services; and
(4) provides creative direction/leadership for graphics products to
ensure consistency with established agency guidelines and quality
standards set within the division.
Broadcast Branch (CPBHD). (1) Develops, produces and manages audio,
video, and multimedia health media; (2) provides agency-wide and global
communication capacity using state-of-the-art high-definition
broadcast, Webcast and emerging health media delivery channels on a
real time and/or recorded basis; (3) responsible for media asset
management of all broadcast video and audio programming developed
within CDC; (4) supports the communication needs of the CDC's DEOC to
assure response capacity and capability for emergency broadcasts; (5)
manages all CDC broadcast-grade audio and video production
requirements; (6) develops and delivers television programming, in
coordination with HITS, to deliver timely and accurate information to
improve health and safety for the U.S. public and around the world; (7)
provides in-house creation, duplication and format conversion of
products including VHS, S-VHS, DVD, CD-R, DAT, Mini-Dy, Betacam-SP,
Digital-Betacam, DVC Pro-HD and international formats such as PAL,
SECAM, SECAM-Il; (8) keeps abreast of changing video formats to ensure
CDC keeps pace; (9) provides audio-only production services including:
broadcast-grade, in-house audio production, audio-for-video, audio
sweetening, mixing and editing to picture, voice-over, narration,
format-conversions and delivery; (10) provides professional
consultation and support in the creation and production of emerging
health media transmission technologies; (11) develops and collaborates
on agency-wide communication products and processes through multimedia
and digital/electronic methods; (12) produces graphic elements for
national and international television broadcast programs, Web sites,
and interactive CD-Rom and DVDs using state-of-the-art or leading edge
technologies and expertise; (13) collaborates with other areas of NCHM,
particularly the Division of Electronic Health Marketing, in reviewing
potential communication technology; (14) provides audio/video
engineering design, installation, setup and maintenance for the
Division of Creative Services' facilities, CDC Director's press room,
DEOC and the Continuity of Operations Site as required; (15) manages
and provides leadership for the Public Health Training Network; (16)
manages and coordinates the Public Health Grand Rounds, a program to
disseminate the best practices in implementing public health
activities; and (17) develops and manages distance education and health
communication products to reach public health partners and
professionals in support of health priorities.
Writer Editor Services Branch (CPBHE). (1) Provides production
editing services for CDC's information products; (2) provides
production editing services for Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
(MMWR) publications, Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID) Journal, and
Preventing Chronic Disease (PCD) Journal; (3) provides substantive
editing services for CDC-authored written material; (4) provides copy
editing services; (5) provides proofreading services; (6) provides Web
editing services; (7) provides writing services, including research;
and (8) provides editorial
[[Page 20304]]
consulting services, and training in writing and editing.
After item (11) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CPC 1), National Center for Health Statistics (CPC), add the
following: (12) serves as primary liaison between NCHS and the National
Center for Health Marketing on communications and marketing science,
and its associated research and practice; and (13) releases and
disseminates all NCHS statistical products and related activities in a
mariner consistent with OMB Federal Statistical Agency Directive No. 4.
After item (17) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CPE 1), National Center for Public Health Informatics (CPE),
add the following: (18) serves as primary liaison between NCPHI and the
National Center for Health Marketing on communications and marketing
science, and its associated research and practice.
After item (9) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CTB 1), National Center for Environmental Health (CTB), add
the following: (10) serves as primary liaison between NCEH and the
National Center for Health Marketing on communications and marketing
science, and its associated research and practice.
Delete in their entirety the title and function statement for the
Office of Communications (CTB 12).
After item (9) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CTC 1), National Center for Injury Prevention and Control
(CTC), add the following: (10) serves as primary liaison between NCIPC
and the National Center for Health Marketing on communications and
marketing science, and its associated research and practice.
Delete in their entirety the title and function statement for the
Office of Communication Resources (CTC 14).
After item (6) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CUB 1), National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental
Disabilities (CUB), add the following: (7) serves as primary liaison
between NCBDDD and the National Center for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science, and its associated research and
practice.
After item (10) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CUC1), National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion (CUC), add the following: (11) serves as primary
liaison between NCCDPHP and the National Center for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science, and its associated research and
practice.
After item (16) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CVG1), National Center for Immunization and Respiratory
Diseases (CVG), add the following: (17) serves as primary liaison
between NCIRD and the National Center for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science, and its associated research and
practice.
After item (14) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CVH 1), National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-borne, and
Enteric Diseases (CVH), add the following: (15) serves as primary
liaison between NCZVED and the National Center for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science, and its associated research and
practice.
After item (23) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CVJ 1), National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD,
and TB Prevention (CVJ), add the following: (24) serves as primary
liaison between NCHHSTP and the National Center for Health Marketing on
communications and marketing science, and its associated research and
practice.
After item (10) of the functional statement for the Office of the
Director (CVK1), National Center for Preparedness, Detection, and
Control of Infectious Diseases (CVK), add the following: (11) serves as
primary liaison between NCPDCID and the National Center for Health
Marketing on communications and marketing science, and its associated
research and practice.
Dated: April 2, 2008.
Joseph Henderson,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).
[FR Doc. E8-7823 Filed 4-14-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-18-M