Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 5804-5812 [2012-2531]
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5804
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 24 / Monday, February 6, 2012 / Notices
to distinguish these trends from
transitory phenomena.
Current Actions: The Federal Reserve
proposes to add 20 domestically
chartered commercial banks with $2 to
$10 billion in total assets to the current
reporting panel and reduce the
minimum asset size for panel
institutions from $3 billion to $2 billion.
The Federal Reserve believes that the
additions to the panel would provide a
more comprehensive picture of
differences in funding conditions at the
largest banks and regional banks, and
deeper coverage of banks that lend in
commercial real estate and small
business markets. The reporting panel
selection criteria for the FR 2023 are
consistent with those criteria from the
FR 2018. The proposed FR 2023 panel
revisions are necessary in order to
maintain consistency with the proposed
panel revision in the FR 2018.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, February 1, 2012.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2012–2578 Filed 2–3–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
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Formations of, Acquisitions by, and
Mergers of Bank Holding Companies
The companies listed in this notice
have applied to the Board for approval,
pursuant to the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.)
(BHC Act), Regulation Y (12 CFR part
225), and all other applicable statutes
and regulations to become a bank
holding company and/or to acquire the
assets or the ownership of, control of, or
the power to vote shares of a bank or
bank holding company and all of the
banks and nonbanking companies
owned by the bank holding company,
including the companies listed below.
The applications listed below, as well
as other related filings required by the
Board, are available for immediate
inspection at the Federal Reserve Bank
indicated. The applications will also be
available for inspection at the offices of
the Board of Governors. Interested
persons may express their views in
writing on the standards enumerated in
the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1842(c)). If the
proposal also involves the acquisition of
a nonbanking company, the review also
includes whether the acquisition of the
nonbanking company complies with the
standards in section 4 of the BHC Act
(12 U.S.C. 1843). Unless otherwise
noted, nonbanking activities will be
conducted throughout the United States.
17:27 Feb 03, 2012
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, February 1, 2012.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2012–2577 Filed 2–3–12; 8:45 am]
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and Acquisition Policy and
Accountability, Division of Acquisition
on (202) 205–4321 or at
terry.frederick@hhs.gov.
Dated: January 30, 2012.
Angela Billups,
Senior Procurement Executive, Associate
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Acquisition,
Office of Grants and Acquisition Policy and
Accountability, Assistant Secretary for
Financial Resources, Office of the Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012–2536 Filed 2–3–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–24–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
Statement of Organization, Functions,
and Delegations of Authority
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Public Availability of the Department of
Health and Human Services FY 2011
Service Contract Inventory
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Financial Resources, Office
of Grants and Acquisition Policy and
Accountability, Division of Acquisition,
Department of Health and Human
Services.
ACTION: Notice of Public Availability of
FY 2011 Service Contract Inventories.
AGENCY:
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
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Unless otherwise noted, comments
regarding each of these applications
must be received at the Reserve Bank
indicated or the offices of the Board of
Governors not later than March 2, 2012.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas (E.
Ann Worthy, Vice President) 2200
North Pearl Street, Dallas, Texas 75201–
2272:
1. Independent Bank Group, Inc.,
McKinney, Texas; to merge with I Bank
Holding Company, Inc., Lakeway,
Texas, and thereby indirectly acquire I
Bank Texas, SSB, Austin, Texas.
In accordance with Section
743 of Division C of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2010 (Pub. L.
111–117), Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) is publishing
this notice to advise the public of the
availability of its FY 2011 Service
Contract inventory. This inventory
provides information on service contract
actions over $25,000 that were made in
FY 2011. The inventory has been
developed in accordance with guidance
issued on November 5, 2010 by the
Office of Management and Budget’s
Office of Federal Procurement Policy
(OFPP). OFPP’s guidance is available at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
default/files/omb/procurement/memo/
service-contract-inventories-guidance11052010.pdf. HHS has posted its
inventory and a summary of the
inventory on the HHS homepage at the
following link: https://www.hhs.gov/
grants/servicecontractsfy11.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Questions regarding the service contract
inventory should be directed to Terry
Frederick in the HHS/Office of the
Secretary, Assistant Secretary for
Financial Resources, Office of Grants
SUMMARY:
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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 77 FR 509–11, dated
January 5, 2012) is amended to reflect
the reorganization of the National
Center for Chronic Disease Prevention
and Health Promotion, Office of
Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and
Environmental Health, 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
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion (CUC), the Office of the
Director (CUC1), the Technical
Information and Services Branch
(CUC12), and the Extramural Research
Program Office (CUC18), and insert the
following:
National Center for Chronic Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion
(CUC). Plans, directs, and coordinates a
national program for the prevention of
premature mortality, morbidity, and
disability due to heart disease, cancer,
stroke, diabetes, arthritis, oral disease
and other major chronic diseases,
conditions, and adverse health
outcomes, including reproductive
outcomes, and the prevention of
associated major risk factors, including
tobacco use, poor nutrition, and
physical inactivity; and promotes the
overall health of the population across
the life span, and the health of
population subgroups with
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disproportionate burdens of chronic
diseases, conditions and risk factors. In
carrying out this mission, the Center: (1)
Plans, directs, and supports populationbased policy, environmental,
programmatic and infrastructure
interventions to promote population
health and well-being, increase healthy
life expectancy, improve quality of life,
increase productivity, and reduce health
care costs; (2) provides national and
international leadership in the
development, implementation,
evaluation, and dissemination of
effective programs for chronic disease
prevention, risk factor reduction, and
health promotion; (3) plans, develops,
implements, maintains and
disseminates information for action
from surveillance systems to monitor
and understand the distribution of
chronic diseases and conditions, and
risk factors, and take appropriate action
to address them; (4) conducts
epidemiologic and behavioral
investigations and demonstrations
related to major health behaviors,
including tobacco use, nutrition, family
planning, alcohol use, and physical
activity in conjunction with state, tribal,
local and territorial health agencies,
academic institutions, national, state
and local partners and community
organizations; (5) plans, directs, and
conducts epidemiologic and evaluative
investigations and interventions to
improve health care access, utilization,
and quality of health services in order
to better prevent and control chronic
diseases, conditions, and selected
adverse reproductive outcomes, and
reduce health risk behaviors; (6) serves
as the primary focus for assisting states
and localities through grants,
cooperative agreements, and other
mechanisms, in establishing and
maintaining chronic disease prevention
and health promotion programs; (7)
provides training and technical
consultation and assistance to states and
localities in planning, establishing,
maintaining, and evaluating prevention
and control strategies for selected
chronic disease and health promotion
activities; (8) fosters collaboration and
coordination of chronic disease
prevention and health promotion
activities across the Center by leading
and facilitating join planning,
consultation, program management and
evaluation, and technical assistance to
state, tribal, local and territorial
partners; (9) provides technical
consultation and assistance to other
nations in the development and
implementation of programs related to
chronic disease prevention and health
promotion, and selected adverse
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reproductive outcomes; and (10) in
carrying out the above functions,
collaborates as appropriate with other
centers and offices of CDC, other PHS
agencies, domestic and international
public health agencies, and voluntary
and professional health organizations.
Office of the Director (CUC1). (1)
Manages, directs, coordinates, and
evaluates the national and international
activities and programs of the National
Center for Chronic Disease Prevention
and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP); (2)
develops goals and objectives and
provides leadership, policy formulation,
scientific oversight, and guidance in
program planning and development; (3)
coordinates expert consultation and
assistance provided by NCCDPHP to
other CDC components, other PHS
agencies, and federal, state, tribal, local
and territorial government agencies,
health care and related organizations,
national and international health-related
voluntary organizations, employers and
businesses, private sector organizations,
and other nations, and facilitates
collaboration with these entities; (4)
provides and coordinates science and
administrative support services for
NCCDPHP programs, including
guidance and coordination for grants,
cooperative agreements, and other
assistance mechanisms; (5) provides
support and quality assurance functions
for human subjects protection, scientific
clearance of information products
produced by the Center, and plans,
develops, and coordinates extramural
research activities in cooperation with
centers, divisions, and offices; (6)
provides support and coordination for
ongoing internal and external review of
scientific and programmatic activities
and ensures compliance with relevant
rules, regulations and guidance
documents; (7) coordinates, manages,
and supports analyses of surveillance
systems and activities in support of
programs carried out by various
NCCDPHP components; (8) coordinates
the recruitment, assignment, technical
supervision, and career development of
staff, including field assignees, with
emphasis on goals for affirmative action;
(9) provides technical information
services to facilitate dissemination of
significant information to NCCDPHP
staff, various federal, state, and local
health agencies, professional and
voluntary organizations, and through
them to selected target populations; and
(10) supports ongoing publication of
Preventing Chronic Disease: Public
Health Research Practice and Policy as
a resource for public health
professionals.
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Health Communication Science Office
(CUC1B). The Health Communication
Science Office (HCSO) provides ongoing
communication leadership and support
to NCCDPHP’s Office of the Director and
divisions in furthering the center’s
mission to prevent chronic diseases and
promote overall health. The HCSO (1)
plans, develops, conducts, and
evaluates cross-cutting communication
projects and campaigns to inform
media, health professionals, and the
public about the prevention of chronic
diseases and the promotion of healthy
behaviors; (2) provides media,
communication, and marketing support
to NCCDPHP’s divisions and programs;
(3) facilitates cross-division
coordination of health communication
activities, sharing of lessons learned,
and development of best practices; (4)
serves as primary liaison between
NCCDPHP and CDC’s Office of the
Associate Director for Communication
on communication and marketing
science and its associated research and
practice; (5) prepares CDC and HHS
press releases and media advisories,
responds to center-level media
inquiries, and coordinates and clears
division-level media inquiries; (6)
provides media relations support and
training to NCCDPHP scientists and
communication specialists; (7) manages
a centralized system for tracking and
analyzing media coverage of NCCDPHP
issues and data releases; (8) provides
technical writing and editing support to
NCCDPHP scientific authors; (9)
designs, develops, and coordinates the
publication of print and audiovisual
materials such as fact sheets,
newsletters, speeches and presentations,
exhibits, podcasts, and educational
videos; (10) manages NCCDPHP’s Web
site and coordinates scheduling and
production of chronic-disease-related
weekly features for main CDC Web site;
(11) responds to cross-cutting public
inquiries as part of the CDC–INFO
system and coordinates NCCDPHP’s
utilization of the CDC publication
distribution facility; (12) manages and
coordinates scientific and public affairs
clearance of NCCDPHP print and nonprint materials, ensuring adherence to
and consistency with CDC and HHS
information and publication policies
and guidelines; (13) manages CDC logo
licensing requests from external partner
organizations involving NCCDPHP
divisions and programs; (14) represents
NCCDPHP on committees, workgroups,
and at conferences relating to health
communication activities; and (15)
manages the National Conference on
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion.
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Delete in Its Entirety the Functional
Statements for the Division of
Adolescent and School Health (CUCB)
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional
Statements for the Division of Oral
Health (CUCD) and Insert the Following
Division of Oral Health (CUCD). (1)
Monitors burden of oral diseases, risk
factors, preventive services, and other
associated factors; (2) supports public
health research that directly applies to
oral health policies and programs; (3)
communicates timely and relevant
information to impact oral health
policy, practices, and programs; (4)
supports the implementation and
maintenance of effective strategies and
interventions to reduce the burden of
oral diseases and conditions; (5) builds
capacity and infrastructure for
sustainable, effective, and efficient oral
health programs; (6) evaluates oral
health programs to ensure that
implementation has been successful; (7)
identifies and facilitates partnerships to
support CDC’s strategic priorities for
oral health; (8) investigates and
diagnoses oral health hazards and
outbreaks in the community; (9)
develops and advocates sound oral
public health policies; and (10)
translates and disseminates research
findings to develop, enhance, and guide
programs, polices and strategies.
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Delete in Its Entirety the Title and
Functional Statements for the Division
of Adult and Community Health (CUCE)
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional
Statements for the Division of Diabetes
Translation (CUCG), and Insert the
Following
Division of Diabetes Translation
(CUCG). In collaboration with
NCCDPHP divisions, other CDC
components, other HHS agencies, state,
tribal, local and territorial government
agencies, academic institutions, and
voluntary and private sector
organizations, the Division of Diabetes
Translation; (1) Plans, directs, and
coordinates a national program to
prevent diabetes and reduce morbidity,
mortality, disability, and costs
associated with diabetes and its
complications; (2) identifies, evaluates,
and implements programs and policies
to prevent and control diabetes through
the translation of evidence-based
models and interventions for improved
health care and self-care practices into
widespread clinical and community
practice; (3) conducts surveillance of
diabetes, its complications, and the
utilization of health care and prevention
resources to monitor trends and
evaluate program impact on morbidity,
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mortality, disability, and cost; (4)
conducts epidemiologic studies and
disseminates findings to identify and
evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness
of potential prevention and control
strategies at the community level; (5)
develops or supports clinical and public
health guidelines and strategies to form
the basis for community interventions;
and (6) provides technical consultation
and assistance to state and local health
agencies to implement and evaluate cost
effective interventions to reduce
morbidity, mortality, and disability.
Office of the Director (CUCG1). (1)
Establishes and interprets policies and
determines program priorities; (2)
provides leadership and guidance in
strategic planning, budget formulation,
programmatic and scientific planning,
development, and management,
administrative management and
operations of the division; (3)
coordinates the monitoring and
reporting of division priorities,
accomplishments, future directions, and
resource requirements; (4) leads and
coordinates policy, communications
and partnership activities; (5) leads and
coordinates the activities to build the
National Diabetes Prevention Program;
(6) leads and coordinates cross-cutting
activities to eliminate diabetes health
disparities and improve health equity;
and (7) coordinates division activities
with other components of NCCDPHP
and CDC, organizations in the public
and private sectors, and other federal
agencies.
Epidemiology and Statistics Branch
(CUCGB). (1) Conducts national
surveillance of diabetes and its
complications and assists state health
agencies in establishing and conducting
diabetes surveillance systems at the
state level; (2) identifies basic and
clinical research findings and
technologies that have potential to
prevent or control diabetes and its
complications through public health
avenues; (3) designs, coordinates, and
funds regional and national surveillance
systems and population studies of the
effectiveness of health system and
policy-level interventions; (4) develops
and analyzes mathematical and
economic models to project the burden
of diabetes and prioritize effective
interventions to prevent and control
diabetes; (5) conducts epidemiologic
studies to identify high-risk population
groups and other risk factors for
diabetes and its complications; (6)
conducts cost and cost-effectiveness
analyses of diabetes prevention and
control technologies to prioritize
strategies for policy-makers; (7)
conducts surveillance of the degree of
diffusion and dissemination of
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preventive services and the utilization
of health care; (8) provides scientific
and technical support to division staff
and state and local health agencies in
planning, implementing, and evaluating
programs to reduce morbidity and
mortality from diabetes; and (9)
collaborates with counterparts in other
divisions, academic institutions, and
other HHS agencies by conducting
national public health research projects
and by providing technical assistance in
areas of epidemiology, surveillance, and
economics.
Program and Evaluation Branch
(CUCGC). (1) Provides programmatic
leadership, guidance and consultation
on a range of strategies to improve
diabetes prevention and control
programs in states, territories, tribes and
local jurisdictions; (2) identifies,
develops, implements and evaluates
strategies to prevent and control
diabetes through translation of science
into widespread community practice
and through the application of policy
and environmental interventions, health
systems interventions and community
interventions; (3) implements and
evaluates program policies, plans,
procedures, priorities, and guidelines to
improve health, prevent or delay the
development of type 2 diabetes, and
reduce morbidity, mortality, disability,
and costs associated with diabetes and
its complications, especially among
vulnerable and disparate population
groups; (4) obtains, analyzes,
disseminates, and publishes data from
diabetes prevention and control
programs to develop operational
strategies for translation of results into
improved practice; (5) provides
leadership, management and oversight
for the National Diabetes Education
Program with the National Institutes of
Health and other key partners; (6)
designs, evaluates, and implements
national educational strategies directed
toward health care professionals and
systems, individuals with diabetes,
community leaders, businesses, and the
general public; (7) develops diabetes
and pre-diabetes management
educational materials, training courses,
tools and other materials; (8) develops,
implements and supports work with
native populations through the Native
Diabetes Wellness Program; and (9)
coordinates and collaborates with
counterparts in other divisions, HHS
agencies, academic institutions, and
national and voluntary organizations to
improve public health diabetes
prevention and control programs,
practices and policies.
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Delete in Their Entirety the Functional
Statements for the Division of Nutrition,
Physical Activity and Obesity (CUCH),
and Insert the Following
Division of Nutrition, Physical
Activity, and Obesity (CUCH). (1)
Provides national and international
leadership for chronic disease
prevention and control and health
promotion in the areas of nutrition,
physical activity, and obesity; (2) plans
and implements surveillance to track
and analyze policy and environmental
indicators and behaviors related to
nutrition, physical activity, and related
risk factors for obesity and other chronic
diseases; (3) builds international,
national, state, and local expertise and
capacity to plan, implement, and
evaluate nutrition, physical activity, and
obesity prevention programs; (4)
conducts epidemiologic and
intervention studies related to nutrition,
physical activity, and obesity; (5)
develops and disseminates new
methods, guidelines, and
recommendations for effective nutrition,
physical activity, and obesity
prevention strategies in multiple
settings; (6) facilitates the translation
and dissemination of practice- and
research-tested findings into public
health practice for optimal health
impact; (7) provides national leadership
in health communications to promote
nutrition, physical activity, and obesity
prevention and control, and integrates
health communications with overall
program efforts; and (8) collaborates
across CDC and with appropriate federal
and state agencies, international/
national/community organizations, and
others.
Office of the Director (CUCH1). (1)
Provides leadership and direction in
establishing agency and division
priorities, strategies, programs, and
policies; (2) plans and directs resources
and activities in alignment with agency
and division goals and objectives; (3)
leads policy development efforts and
analyses related to nutrition, physical
activity, and obesity; (4) mobilizes and
coordinates partnerships and
constituencies to build a national
infrastructure for nutrition and physical
activity promotion and obesity
prevention; (5) educates healthcare
professionals, businesses, communities,
the general public, and key decisionmakers about the importance of
nutrition and physical activity in
preventing obesity and their impact on
chronic disease and public health; (6)
monitors progress toward achieving
agency and division goals and objectives
and assesses the impact of programs;
and (7) facilitates cross-functional
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activities and operations across CDC
and in coordination with other federal
agencies, partners, and constituencies.
Nutrition Branch (CUCHC). (1)
Provides technical and subject matter
expertise and training for state and
community programs on policy, systems
and environmental approaches related
to nutrition and obesity; (2) plans,
coordinates, and conducts surveillance
activities in domestic and international
settings to assess nutrition practices,
food systems, and behavioral risks in
children, adolescents, and adults; (3)
analyzes, interprets, and disseminates
data from surveys, surveillance
activities, and epidemiologic studies
related to nutrition and nutrition factors
affecting chronic disease; (4) designs,
implements, and evaluates
epidemiologic studies and intervention
projects for domestic and international
application to address nutrition; (5)
plans, coordinates, and conducts
nutrition research and surveillance of
policy and environmental strategies and
interventions; (6) develops and
disseminates nutrition guidelines and
recommendations for maternal and
child health, child growth and
development, and prevention/reduction
of chronic disease; (7) designs and
evaluates nutrition and obesity
interventions; (8) provides nutrition
expertise and consultation to develop
and promote health communication
strategies; (9) coordinates crossfunctional nutrition-related activities
across CDC; and (10) coordinates and
collaborates with appropriate federal
agencies, national and international
organizations, and other partners.
Physical Activity and Health Branch
(CUCHD). (1) Provides technical and
subject matter expertise and training for
state and community programs on
policy, systems and environmental
approaches related to physical activity
and obesity; (2) plans, coordinates, and
conducts surveillance to assess levels of
physical activity as well as determinants
of physical activity; (3) conducts
epidemiologic research related to
physical activity and its impact on
health, obesity, and chronic disease; (4)
designs and evaluates physical activity
and obesity interventions; (5) develops
evidence-based guidelines and
recommendations for physical activity;
(6) provides physical activity expertise
and consultation to develop and
promote health communication
strategies; (7) coordinates crossfunctional physical activity-related
activities across CDC; and (8)
coordinates and collaborates with
appropriate federal agencies, national
and international organizations, and
other partners.
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Obesity Prevention and Control
Branch (CUCHG). (1) Provides technical
and subject matter expertise and
training for state and community
programs on policy, systems and
environmental approaches related to
nutrition, physical activity, and obesity;
(2) plans, coordinates, and conducts
surveillance to assess levels of healthy
weight, overweight, and obesity and
associated risk factors; (3) conducts
research that utilizes data from surveys,
surveillance activities, and nutrition
and physical activity epidemiologic
studies related to overweight and
obesity and associated risk factors; (4)
designs and evaluates nutrition,
physical activity and obesity
interventions; (5) develops and
disseminates guidelines and
recommendations for policy and
environmental changes in multiples
settings; (6) provides nutrition, physical
activity and obesity expertise and
consultation to develop and promote
health communication strategies; (7)
coordinates cross-functional obesityrelated activities across CDC; and (8)
coordinates and collaborates with
appropriate federal agencies, national
and international organizations, and
other partners.
Program Development and Evaluation
Branch (CUCHH). (1) Provides technical
and subject matter expertise and
training for state and community
programs on translation and evaluation
of policy, systems, and environmental
strategies for nutrition, physical activity,
and obesity; (2) designs and conducts
applied research, evaluation, and
translation activities related to nutrition,
physical activity, and obesity
prevention; (3) uses research,
guidelines, and recommendations to
develop evidence-based interventions
and promising practices that support
improved physical activity, nutrition,
and healthy weight; (4) conducts
behavioral and communications
research to understand knowledge,
attitudes, and beliefs and achieve
healthy behavior changes in
populations; and (5) coordinates and
collaborates with appropriate federal
agencies, national and international
organizations, and other partners.
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional
Statement for the Office of the Director
(CUCL1), Office on Smoking and Health
(CUCL), and Insert the Following
Office of the Director (CUCL1). (1)
Manages, directs, coordinates, and
evaluates the activities of the Office on
Smoking and Health; (2) develops goals
and objectives for the office; (3)
provides leadership, scientific oversight,
and guidance in program planning and
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development; (4) coordinates the
development of policy related to
tobacco use and health in CDC, PHS,
and HHS; (5) coordinates assistance
provided by the Office on Smoking and
Health (OSH) to other CDC components;
federal, state, and local government
agencies; the private sector; and other
nations; (6) stimulates additional
research and program activity related to
tobacco use and health by other federal
agencies, international organizations,
and public and private organizations; (7)
coordinates the OSH public information
program, technical information
program, and surveillance and
epidemiologic projects and studies; (8)
provides program management and
administrative support services; (9) as
required by Public Law 98–474,
produces Biennial Status Report to
Congress; (10) serves as the lead for the
Tobacco and Health Objectives for the
Nation; (11) collects, maintains, and
analyzes information provided by the
tobacco industry on cigarette additives
and smokeless tobacco additives and
nicotine content; (12) provides staff
support for a Congressionally-mandated
federal advisory committee on smoking
and health; (13) serves as the principal
adviser to the Surgeon General of the
U.S. Public Health Service on all
activities related to tobacco use and
health; (14) serves a leading role in
providing proactive media outreach and
media response to the press, health
professionals, and the general public
with information on tobacco prevention
and control issues; and (15) manages/
leads and cultivates partnerships.
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional
Statement for the Health
Communications Office (CUCLC), Office
on Smoking and Health (CUCL), and
Insert the Following
Health Communications Office
(CUCLC). (1) Plans, develops, and
conducts programs to inform
researchers, health professionals,
policy-makers and the public about the
health consequences of tobacco use; (2)
provides technical guidance, assistance,
and consultation to health professionals
in the planning, development, and
implementation of information
programs at the national, state, and local
levels; (3) produces, distributes, and
evaluates educational materials and
conducts counter-advertising campaigns
to support tobacco prevention and
control; (4) develops and maintains a
Technical Information Center, including
an on-line bibliographic database of
materials relative to the OSH mission;
(5) manages production of the annual
Surgeon General’s report and other
Congressionally-mandated reports on
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the health consequences of tobacco use;
(6) conducts joint information
campaigns with other federal agencies,
voluntary health organizations, state
health departments, and others; (7)
provides reference and referral services
for OSH staff and constituents in need
of scientific and other technical
information; (8) plans and conducts
special departmental-wide initiatives
addressing high-risk groups; (9)
prepares and distributes information
products such as fact sheets, current
awareness services, bibliographies, and
legislative updates in both print and
electronic formats; (10) produces
speeches for CDC, PHS, and
departmental officials relating to
tobacco; (11) responds to public
inquiries and shares general information
on tobacco use and tobacco cessation;
(12) manages the communication
functions of OSH through activities
such as maintaining slide and video
libraries, managing mailing lists
management, and providing conference
exhibits; and (13) collaborates with
other groups within CDC, PHS, and
HHS and with other federal agencies, as
well as other professional, voluntary,
international, and professional health
organizations.
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional
Statements for the Division for Heart
Disease and Stroke Prevention (CUCM),
and Insert the Following
Division for Heart Disease and Stroke
Prevention (CUCM). (1) Plans, directs,
and coordinates programs to reduce
morbidity, risk factors, costs, disability,
mortality, and disparities associated
with heart disease, stroke, and other
cardiovascular disease outcomes; (2)
provides national leadership, technical
assistance, expert consultation, and
training to state and local health
agencies in intervention, surveillance,
evaluation, and communication or
marketing activities related to
implementing state programs, registries,
and other surveillance systems
associated with reducing and preventing
cardiovascular disease outcomes; (3)
implements surveillance systems and
conducts surveillance of outcomes and
utilization of health care and prevention
resources related to heart disease,
stroke, high blood pressure, high
cholesterol, and other cardiovascular
disease to monitor trends and evaluate
program impact on morbidity, mortality,
risk factor improvement, cost, disability,
and disparities; (4) conducts
epidemiologic studies and disseminates
findings to identify emerging risk factors
with potential for prevention and
control strategies; (5) conducts
prevention research studies and
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disseminates findings to identify and
evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness
of potential prevention and control
strategies in health care systems and at
the community level; (6) identifies,
implements, and evaluates programs to
prevent and control heart disease,
stroke, high blood pressure, high
cholesterol, other cardiovascular disease
outcomes, and disparities through the
translation and communication of best
practices in health care and risk factor
prevention into widespread health
systems policies and community
changes; (7) collaborates with within
CDC, PHS, and HHS and with other
federal agencies, as well as other other
cardiovascular health related activities
at CDC; (8) maintains collaborative
relationships with official, private,
voluntary agencies, academic
institutions, or other groups involved in
the prevention and control of heart
disease, stroke, and other cardiovascular
diseases or risk factors; and (9) provides
technical assistance and consultation to
other nations and to the World Health
Organization in the global prevention
and control of cardiovascular disease.
Office of the Director (CUCM1). (1)
Provides leadership and direction in
establishing division priorities,
strategies, programs and policies; (2)
plans and directs resources and
activities in alignment with division
goals and objectives; (3) monitors
progress toward achieving division
objectives and assessing impact of
programs; (4) insures that division
activities are coordinated with other
components of CDC both within and
outside the center, with federal, state
and local agencies, and related
voluntary and professional
organizations; (5) provides national
leadership in coordinating and
implementing activities that prevent
heart disease and stroke; (6) educates
the general public, key decision-makers,
healthcare professionals, businesses and
communities about the importance of
and opportunities to prevent heart
disease and stroke; (7) serves as co-lead
for Healthy People 2020 heart disease
and stroke objectives for the nation; (8)
develops and produces communication
tools to meet the needs of division
programs and mission; (9) develops
health communication campaigns at the
national and state levels; (10) provides
leadership to the division for health
communication efforts; (11) provides
administrative and management support
for division activities; (12) reports
accomplishments, future directions and
resource requirements; and (13)
represents the division at official
professional and scientific meetings.
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Epidemiology and Surveillance
Branch (CUCMB). (1) Monitors the
epidemiology of cardiovascular disease
risk factors, behaviors, outcomes, costs,
barriers, awareness, access to care,
geographic variations and disparities;
(2) prepares routine surveillance reports
of national and state trends in
cardiovascular disease risk factors,
behaviors, outcomes, and disparities,
which includes the mapping of
geographic variations; (3) coordinates,
manages, and maintains the activities of
the National Cardiovascular Disease
Surveillance System (NCVDSS),
including the Data Trends & Maps Web
site, the Interactive Atlas Web site,
surveillance summaries, and research
publications; (4) develops, designs,
implements, and evaluates new
cardiovascular disease registries and
other surveillance systems that address
gaps in existing CDC surveillance
systems; (5) prepares epidemiologic and
scientific papers for publication in
medical and public health journals and
for presentation to national public
health and scientific conferences on
surveillance and epidemiologic
findings; (6) identifies, investigates,
implements, and evaluates new
surveillance methodologies and
technologies that involve electronic data
abstraction and transfer to state and
national registries and spatial analysis;
(7) proposes and serves as technical
advisors and project officers for
epidemiologic research projects that fill
gaps in surveillance and intervention
and investigates emerging risk factors
that will lead to the prevention of
cardiovascular disease and the
elimination of disparities in
cardiovascular disease; (8) serves as
scientific and technical experts in
cardiovascular disease epidemiology
and surveillance methodology to state
health departments and to advisory
groups at the national/international
level; (9) provides scientific leadership
in the development, extension, and
improvement of surveillance systems,
epidemiologic strategies, and/or service
to cardiovascular health programs; and
(10) facilitates integration of
epidemiology and surveillance across
the division.
Applied Research and Evaluation
Branch (CUCMC). (1) Plans, develops,
and implements projects related to
applied research, program evaluation,
and health economics research; (2)
prepares scientific papers for
publication in public health journals
and for presentation at national and
international conferences, meetings and
seminars on applied research, program
evaluation, and health economics
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research; (3) synthesizes and translates
a body of best science and practice that
can be applied to various public health
settings; (4) prepares and disseminates
products that translate applied research,
program evaluation, and health
economics science to state programs and
others; (5) implements a comprehensive
division evaluation plan addressing all
facets of division activities, including
state-based program evaluation, research
evaluation, and evaluation training
needs; (6) provides applied research,
evaluation, and health economics
expertise, technical assistance and
training to the division, center, CDC,
and national and international partners;
and (7) implements demonstration and
pilot projects with state programs and
others to put research into practice.
Program Development and Services
Branch (CUCMD). (1) Provides
programmatic leadership and support
for prevention and control of heart
disease, stroke, and related risk factors
in states, territories, tribes and local
jurisdictions; (2) provides
comprehensive technical advice and
assistance in planning, implementing
and evaluating strategies to prevent and
control heart disease, stroke, and related
risk factors through policy, systems,
environmental changes; (3) provides
program policies and guidance outlining
CDC’s role and the national goals and
objectives related to heart disease and
stroke prevention; (4) provides technical
assistance to grantees on
implementation of evidence- and
practice-based interventions with
greatest reach and impact and potential
to be taken jurisdiction wide; (5)
provides technical assistance to enhance
coordination across chronic diseases to
ensure that heart disease and stroke
prevention planning and
implementation optimize collaboration
across chronic disease interventions; (6)
provides leadership and technical
expertise, in policy and system change,
health disparities, healthcare, worksite
and community interventions to prevent
and control heart disease, stroke and
related risk factors; (7) provides
leadership and technical expertise in
women’s cardiovascular health, health
disparities and healthcare interventions
for cardiovascular primary and
secondary prevention programs as it
relates to the Well-Integrated Screening
and Evaluation for Women Across the
Nation (WISE WOMAN) Program; (8)
facilitates programmatic coordination
across the division, center, CDC to
address heart disease and stroke
prevention; (9) works with national
partners to encourage policy and
systems changes and other actions
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5809
supportive of CDC and grantee work to
prevent and control heart disease, stroke
and related risk factors; (10) reviews and
monitors cooperative agreements and
contracts; (11) serves as technical
experts in the implementation of policy
systems, and environmental strategies
for health promotion and the prevention
and control of heart disease, stroke, and
related risk factors for grantees and
others within CDC and with partners;
(12) provides comprehensive training
expertise, including distance learning,
training seminars, meetings, how-totools, promising practices documents,
and other materials to promote the
prevention of heart disease and stroke
and assist grantees with planning,
implementing, and replicating
interventions; (13) monitors
management information systems for
heart disease and stroke prevention
efforts to assess progress toward
achieving division and center goals; (14)
obtains, analyzes and disseminates data
from interventions to develop
operational strategies to encourage
replication of promising program
practices; (15) provides technical
assistance on use of data for program
planning and priority setting, including
addressing specific populations with
documented health disparities; (16)
ensures products developed across the
division for grantees are appropriate and
supportive of priority work; and (17)
provides forums for grantees to ensure
rapid spread of promising practices and
lessons learned.
After the Title and Functional
Statement for the Division for Heart
Disease and Stroke Prevention (CUCM),
Insert the Following
Division of Community Health
(CUCN). (1) Provides national
leadership in training, consultation, and
technical assistance to partners in the
planning, development,
implementation, and evaluation of
programs to advance community health;
(2) develops, strengthens, and sustains
key community health linkages and
partnerships within and across CDC,
other federal agencies, states, tribes,
territories, local government agencies,
academia, nongovernmental
organizations and international entities;
(3) supports community health
initiatives and integrates health equity
and the elimination of health disparities
into community health practices that
improve physical and mental wellbeing; (4) conducts applied research,
epidemiology, evaluation, surveillance
and performance monitoring at the
community level; and (5) identifies,
designs, implements and administers
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programs that maximize public health
impact.
Office of the Director (CUCN1). (1)
Mobilizes and coordinates partnerships
and collaborations internally to CDC,
other divisions, offices and CIOs and
external constituencies to build a
national infrastructure for community
health and to achieve the mission of the
division; (2) in coordination with other
divisions, CIOs, and organizations,
provides leadership in community
health; (3) plans, manages, directs,
coordinates and evaluates the
operations of the division, including
division-wide administrative, fiscal,
technical, communications, research,
programmatic and logistical support
services, including comprehensive and
continual cross-branch collaboration to
assure best practices; (4) coordinates
and assures the appropriate training,
development, retention, succession
planning for all division personnel; (5)
develops budget requests, monitors and
reports on progress and allocation of
resources, responds to external inquiries
and requests, and reports
accomplishments, future directions and
resource requirements; (6) builds
partnerships with organizations focused
on promotion of health equity and
reduction of health disparities and
reports on the effectiveness of
community health programs in
vulnerable populations; (7) provides
leadership for division-wide policies,
strategies, action planning, budget, and
evaluation to eliminate health
disparities; (8) provides leadership and
technical assistance to partners to
promote evidence and practice based
policy, environmental, programmatic
and infrastructure changes that improve
community health; (9) coordinates the
development, implementation and
monitoring of guidelines and standards
to assure ongoing high quality
performance of community health
programs; (10) responds to public
inquiries and oversees the creation of
materials designed for use by the media,
including press releases, letters to the
editors, other print and electronic
materials and programs, and ensures
appropriate clearance of materials; (11)
in collaboration with the Office for
State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial
Support (OSTLTS), provides support
and consultation for, and access to
public health law expertise; including
the engagement of public health law
partners in developing and applying
legal tools to maximize health impact in
communities; (12) in coordination with
others, identifies, tracks, analyzes, and
disseminates policies, legislation and
federal, state and local laws related to
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the Division of Community Health’s
(DCH) mission and programs.
Research, Surveillance, Evaluation
Branch (CUCNB). (1) In collaboration
with other divisions, CIOs, and
agencies, serves as a national leader in
applied research, epidemiology,
evaluation, surveillance and
performance monitoring to advance
community health. (2) collects,
analyzes, integrates, and collaborates on
the dissemination of data to track and
monitor the health of communities and
their members, in collaboration with
OSELS and other partners; (3)
collaborates with other divisions to
apply GIS mapping, needs assessments,
simulation modeling, and other
innovative technologies, research and
evaluation methods to identify
community-level drivers of key chronic
disease indicators, especially as they
relate to the creation, promotion, or
elimination of health inequities; (4)
evaluates policy, environmental,
programmatic, and infrastructure
interventions, to develop and inform the
practice and evidence-base; (5)
participates in setting the national
agenda for the creation and maintenance
of a health context database that
includes information about policy,
environmental, programmatic and
infrastructure changes, including social
determinants of health and other
potential negative influences that may
impact community health; (6)
collaborates with Program
Implementation and Development
Branch to establish grantee priorities for
surveillance, applied research and
evaluation, and data collection; (7)
collaborates with Training, Translation,
Dissemination and Communications
Team in the translation and
dissemination of scientific and
evaluation findings into culturally
competent health promotion strategies,
technical assistance, and training
products; (8) supports applied research,
surveillance, epidemiology and program
evaluation to expand the evidence base;
(9) builds local capacity to assess local
conditions, evaluate interventions in
natural settings, and collaborate with
partners on the translation and
dissemination of results; and (10)
develops and supports performance
monitoring systems that align with
program and evaluation goals.
Program Implementation and
Development Branch (CUCNC). (1) In
collaboration with partner divisions,
CIOs, and other agencies, serves as a
national leader in program
implementation and development to
advance community health; (2) provides
technical consultation and guidance to
state and local health agencies,
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community based organizations,
academic institutions, other federal
agencies, and other organizations to
plan, implement, monitor, and evaluate
community-based prevention and health
promotion programs, with an emphasis
on eliminating heath disparities and
achieving health equity; (3) establishes
strategic goals, objectives and activities
and develop funding mechanisms for
intramural and extramural program
activities; (4) provides administrative
and management support for the
development of funding opportunity
announcements, oversight of grants,
cooperative agreements, contracts,
reimbursable agreements, and federal
interagency agreements; (5) plans,
develops, interprets and implements
division-wide policies procedures, and
practices for administrative
management, acquisition and assistance
mechanisms, including contracts,
memoranda of agreements, discretionary
grants, and cooperative agreements; (6)
in collaboration with other divisions
serves as subject matter experts in
community health and in the
implementation of policy, systems and
environmental strategies for disease
prevention and health promotion; (7)
works with partners to build capacity
for public health leadership and
management through a multi-phased
approach including situational analysis,
capacity development, management
analysis, technical assistance, and
sustainability; and (8) coordinates and
collaborates with other branches in DCH
to support evaluation and research and
the development and dissemination of
practice and evidence-based strategies
and tools for program implementation.
Training, Translation, Dissemination
and Communications Branch (CUCND).
(1) In collaboration with other divisions,
CIOs, and agencies, serves as a national
leader in training, translation,
dissemination and communications to
advance community health; (2) supports
the division’s community programs by
developing adaptable training tools,
utilizing operational research to identify
and implement adapted models for
state, tribal, territories, local, rural,
frontier, and national contexts; (3) in
collaboration with other divisions and
partners, provides technical
consultation, assistance, and training to
government, non-government, not-for
profit, and private sectors in evidenceand practice-based community and
clinical prevention and wellness
strategies and in capacity building at the
local level; (4) supports translation and
dissemination of practice and evidence
findings into widespread community
practices through the application of
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policy, environmental, programmatic
and infrastructure changes for optimal
community health impact; (5) serves as
a clearinghouse for the collection,
organization, and dissemination of
evidence-based and practice-based
strategies for community health
programs; (6) provides grantees
marketing/communications support,
technical assistance, and
implementation and evaluation support
for evidence-based and practice-based
communications strategies that advance
community health through policy,
environmental, programmatic and
infrastructure changes; and (7) prepares
and disseminates health communication
and media materials that advance
community health.
After the Title and Functional
Statement for the Division of
Community Health (CUCN), Insert the
Following
Division of Population Health.
(CUCP). (1) Develops and promotes
population-based policy, system, and
environmental change interventions,
programs, strategies, materials and tools;
(2) provides national and international
leadership in health education and
health promotion; (3) supports
epidemiologic and surveillance
activities, training and intervention
activities in diverse settings to promote
public health and support the
development of state chronic disease
program capacity; (4) promotes the
understanding and improvement of the
social and behavioral determinants of
and issues related to chronic conditions;
(5) coordinates activities with other
components of CDC both within and
outside the center; with federal, state,
and local health agencies; tribes,
territories, and with voluntary and
professional health and education
agencies; and (6) promotes health equity
among populations disproportionately
affected by chronic diseases and
associated risk factors.
Office of the Director (CUCP1). (1)
Manages, coordinates, and evaluates the
activities and programs of the division;
(2) ensures that division health
education and health promotion
activities are coordinated with other
components of CDC, with international,
federal, state, and local health and
education agencies, and with voluntary
and professional health and education
entities; (3) provides leadership and
coordinates division responses to
requests for research, consultation,
training, collaboration, evaluation, and
technical assistance or information on
health care, health promotion, oral
health, adolescent and school health,
aging, epilepsy, arthritis, quality of life,
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alcohol, prevention research, and
emerging chronic disease issues; (4)
provides scientific oversight and
strategic guidance of division
programmatic and research activities;
(5) provides administrative and
management support for the division
including guidance and logistics for
personnel, including field staff; the use
of financial resources; and oversight of
grants, cooperative agreements,
contracts, and reimbursable agreements;
(6) provides leadership and technical
assistance to partners to promote policy,
systems, and environmental changes
that improve population health; (7)
provides strategic guidance and
coordination of policy, issues
management, and program and
partnership development activities; (8)
coordinates and supports division-wide
communication needs; and (9) supports
the professional growth and
development of all staff to build staff
skills, knowledge, expertise, and
experience.
Applied Research and Translation
Branch (CUCPB). (1) Provides
leadership, management, and
coordination related to the planning and
implementation of prevention research,
research translation, and policy
development to address national health
priorities, including healthy aging and
workplace health; (2) develops and
manages funding mechanisms that
allow programs across CDC to support
applied public health research and
translation; and (3) supports the
development, evaluation, synthesis,
dissemination, and promotion of
innovative and cross-cutting public
health interventions, programs and
policies that improve physical, mental,
and social dimensions of health and
quality of life of people in community
settings and workplaces, and through
community and clinical partnerships.
Arthritis, Epilepsy and Well-Being
Branch (CUCPC). (1) Directs and
supports program activities that reach
and improve quality of life for people
affected by arthritis and epilepsy,
including improving access to and
availability of appropriate medical care
and self-management programs and
support, improving policies,
environments and systems, combating
stigma and depression, and increasing
public awareness and knowledge; (2)
develops, validates, refines, and
promotes surveillance measures and
develop programs, policies and
interventions, and evaluations to
enhance state and local public health
capacity and to promote national public
health action for arthritis, epilepsy,
health-related quality of life, and wellbeing; (3) directs and coordinates
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5811
strategic evaluation efforts of
community and state public health
actions for arthritis and epilepsy; and
(4) develops and disseminates health
promotion and disease prevention
programs, communication campaigns,
and public health information through
national, state and local partners.
Coordinated State Support Branch
(CUCPD). (1) Leads and coordinates
center-wide activities for Coordinated
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion Programs activities and
develops and implements guidelines,
uniform reporting procedures,
performance measures, and evaluation
criteria for grantees; and (2) provides
ongoing guidance, training, technical
assistance and support to grantees in
coordination with other NCCDPHP
divisions.
Epidemiology and Surveillance
Branch (CUCPE). (1) Provides support to
build national, state, and local public
health capacity in surveillance,
epidemiology, and spatial analyses to
monitor excessive alcohol use and other
emerging risk factors or chronic
conditions and to evaluate coordinated
chronic disease programs and policies;
(2) provides oversight and training to
state chronic disease epidemiology
assignees, state alcohol epidemiologists,
and epidemiologic trainees on methods
for measuring, reporting, and
disseminating epidemiologic research
findings to build a skilled public health
workforce for addressing the leading
chronic diseases and related risk factors;
(3) applies Geographic Information
Systems (GIS) and spatial statistical
methods for identifying geographic
variations in leading chronic diseases
and related or emerging risk factors and
providing guidance to public health
policy formulation and program
planning; (4) provides public health
leadership in the prevention of
excessive alcohol use by collaborating
with other CDC components, federal,
state, and local agencies, private,
nonprofit organizations, and
international partners to promote the
development and evaluation of
intervention strategies and policies; and
(5) communicates scientific findings on
leading chronic diseases and related or
emerging risk factors, including
information about evidence-based
prevention strategies and policies,
through publications, presentations, and
instructional activities at local, state,
national, and international levels.
School Health Branch (CUCPG). (1)
Supports state, local, territorial, and
tribal agencies and national nongovernmental organizations to develop,
implement, evaluate, and disseminate
school policy, systems, and
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environmental strategies and
interventions to improve the health of
students and school staff by promoting
healthy eating, physical activity, and a
tobacco-free lifestyle; (2) supports
implementation and evaluation of a
coordinated approach to school health
and best practices in health education;
physical education and other physical
activity programs; nutrition services;
school health services; school
counseling, psychological, and social
services; health promotion for staff;
family and community involvement;
and school health and safety policies
and environment; (3) provides
leadership and consultation on how
schools work and how to foster effective
collaboration between the public health
and education sectors; (4) documents
and strengthens the scientific
associations among chronic diseaserelated health risks, school-based health
promotion initiatives, and academic
achievement; (5) evaluates school-based
policy, systems, and environmental
changes and interventions to improve
health behaviors and reduce chronic
disease-related health risks among
children and adolescents; (6)
synthesizes and translates scientific
research to develop and disseminate
guidance, tools, and resources to help
schools prevent chronic disease-related
risks among children and adolescents;
(7) supports efforts of national, state,
and local surveillance systems to
monitor chronic disease-related health
risk behaviors among youth, along with
the policies, programs, and practices
schools implement to address those
health risk behaviors; (8) strengthens
efforts of national, state, and local
programs to provide high quality
professional development services to
support school-based chronic disease
prevention policies, programs, and
practices; (9) in accomplishing the
functions listed above, collaborates with
other components of CDC and HHS; the
U.S. Department of Education, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, and other
federal agencies; national professional,
voluntary, and philanthropic
organizations; international agencies;
and other organizations as appropriate;
and (10) assists other nations in
reducing chronic disease-related health
risks among children and adolescents
and in implementing and improving
school health programs.
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Dated: January 20, 2012.
Sherri A. Berger,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2012–2531 Filed 2–3–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–18–M
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2011–N–0672]
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for Office of
Management and Budget Review;
Comment Request; Prominent and
Conspicuous Mark of Manufacturers
on Single-Use Devices
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing
that a proposed collection of
information has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and clearance under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Fax written comments on the
collection of information by March 7,
2012.
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on
the information collection are received,
OMB recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX:
(202) 395–7285, or emailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the
OMB control number 0910–0577. Also
include the FDA docket number found
in brackets in the heading of this
document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Gittleson, Office of Information
Management, Food and Drug
Administration, 1350 Piccard Dr., PI50–
400B, Rockville, MD 20850, 301–796–
5156, Daniel.Gittleson@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
compliance with 44 U.S.C. 3507, FDA
has submitted the following proposed
collection of information to OMB for
review and clearance.
SUMMARY:
Prominent and Conspicuous Mark of
Manufacturers on Single-Use Devices
(OMB Control Number 0910–0577)—
Extension
Section 502 of the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act) (21 U.S.C.
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
352), among other things, establishes
requirements that the label or labeling of
a medical device must meet so that it is
not misbranded and subject to
regulatory action. Section 301 of the
Medical Device User Fee and
Modernization Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107–
250) amended section 502 of the FD&C
Act to add section 502(u) to require
devices (both new and reprocessed) to
bear prominently and conspicuously the
name of the manufacturer, a generally
recognized abbreviation of such name,
or a unique and generally recognized
symbol identifying the manufacturer.
Thus, the name for this information
collection activity has been changed to
more accurately describe the
information collection content.
Section 2(c) of the Medical Device
User Fee Stabilization Act of 2005 (Pub.
L. 109–43) amends section 502(u) of the
FD&C Act by limiting the provision to
reprocessed single-use devices (SUDs)
and the manufacturers who reprocess
them. Under the amended provision, if
the original SUD or an attachment to it
prominently and conspicuously bears
the name of the manufacturer, then the
reprocessor of the SUD is required to
identify itself by name, abbreviation, or
symbol, in a prominent and
conspicuous manner on the device or
attachment to the device. If the original
SUD does not prominently and
conspicuously bear the name of the
manufacturer, the manufacturer who
reprocesses the SUD for reuse may
identify itself using a detachable label
that is intended to be affixed to the
patient record.
The requirements of section 502(u) of
the FD&C Act impose a minimal burden
on industry. This section of the FD&C
Act only requires the manufacturer,
packer, or distributor of a device to
include their name and address on the
labeling of a device. This information is
readily available to the establishment
and easily supplied. From its
registration and premarket submission
database, FDA estimates that there are
10 establishments that distribute
approximately 1,000 reprocessed SUDs.
Each response is anticipated to take 0.1
hours resulting in a total burden to
industry of 100 hours.
In the Federal Register of September
27, 2011 (76 FR 59704), FDA published
a 60-day notice requesting public
comment on the proposed collection of
information. No comments were
received.
FDA estimates the burden of this
collection of information as follows:
E:\FR\FM\06FEN1.SGM
06FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 24 (Monday, February 6, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5804-5812]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-2531]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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 77 FR 509-11, dated January 5, 2012) is
amended to reflect the reorganization of the National Center for
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Office of
Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and Environmental Health, 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 Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (CUC), the
Office of the Director (CUC1), the Technical Information and Services
Branch (CUC12), and the Extramural Research Program Office (CUC18), and
insert the following:
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
(CUC). Plans, directs, and coordinates a national program for the
prevention of premature mortality, morbidity, and disability due to
heart disease, cancer, stroke, diabetes, arthritis, oral disease and
other major chronic diseases, conditions, and adverse health outcomes,
including reproductive outcomes, and the prevention of associated major
risk factors, including tobacco use, poor nutrition, and physical
inactivity; and promotes the overall health of the population across
the life span, and the health of population subgroups with
[[Page 5805]]
disproportionate burdens of chronic diseases, conditions and risk
factors. In carrying out this mission, the Center: (1) Plans, directs,
and supports population-based policy, environmental, programmatic and
infrastructure interventions to promote population health and well-
being, increase healthy life expectancy, improve quality of life,
increase productivity, and reduce health care costs; (2) provides
national and international leadership in the development,
implementation, evaluation, and dissemination of effective programs for
chronic disease prevention, risk factor reduction, and health
promotion; (3) plans, develops, implements, maintains and disseminates
information for action from surveillance systems to monitor and
understand the distribution of chronic diseases and conditions, and
risk factors, and take appropriate action to address them; (4) conducts
epidemiologic and behavioral investigations and demonstrations related
to major health behaviors, including tobacco use, nutrition, family
planning, alcohol use, and physical activity in conjunction with state,
tribal, local and territorial health agencies, academic institutions,
national, state and local partners and community organizations; (5)
plans, directs, and conducts epidemiologic and evaluative
investigations and interventions to improve health care access,
utilization, and quality of health services in order to better prevent
and control chronic diseases, conditions, and selected adverse
reproductive outcomes, and reduce health risk behaviors; (6) serves as
the primary focus for assisting states and localities through grants,
cooperative agreements, and other mechanisms, in establishing and
maintaining chronic disease prevention and health promotion programs;
(7) provides training and technical consultation and assistance to
states and localities in planning, establishing, maintaining, and
evaluating prevention and control strategies for selected chronic
disease and health promotion activities; (8) fosters collaboration and
coordination of chronic disease prevention and health promotion
activities across the Center by leading and facilitating join planning,
consultation, program management and evaluation, and technical
assistance to state, tribal, local and territorial partners; (9)
provides technical consultation and assistance to other nations in the
development and implementation of programs related to chronic disease
prevention and health promotion, and selected adverse reproductive
outcomes; and (10) in carrying out the above functions, collaborates as
appropriate with other centers and offices of CDC, other PHS agencies,
domestic and international public health agencies, and voluntary and
professional health organizations. Office of the Director (CUC1). (1)
Manages, directs, coordinates, and evaluates the national and
international activities and programs of the National Center for
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (NCCDPHP); (2) develops
goals and objectives and provides leadership, policy formulation,
scientific oversight, and guidance in program planning and development;
(3) coordinates expert consultation and assistance provided by NCCDPHP
to other CDC components, other PHS agencies, and federal, state,
tribal, local and territorial government agencies, health care and
related organizations, national and international health-related
voluntary organizations, employers and businesses, private sector
organizations, and other nations, and facilitates collaboration with
these entities; (4) provides and coordinates science and administrative
support services for NCCDPHP programs, including guidance and
coordination for grants, cooperative agreements, and other assistance
mechanisms; (5) provides support and quality assurance functions for
human subjects protection, scientific clearance of information products
produced by the Center, and plans, develops, and coordinates extramural
research activities in cooperation with centers, divisions, and
offices; (6) provides support and coordination for ongoing internal and
external review of scientific and programmatic activities and ensures
compliance with relevant rules, regulations and guidance documents; (7)
coordinates, manages, and supports analyses of surveillance systems and
activities in support of programs carried out by various NCCDPHP
components; (8) coordinates the recruitment, assignment, technical
supervision, and career development of staff, including field
assignees, with emphasis on goals for affirmative action; (9) provides
technical information services to facilitate dissemination of
significant information to NCCDPHP staff, various federal, state, and
local health agencies, professional and voluntary organizations, and
through them to selected target populations; and (10) supports ongoing
publication of Preventing Chronic Disease: Public Health Research
Practice and Policy as a resource for public health professionals.
Health Communication Science Office (CUC1B). The Health
Communication Science Office (HCSO) provides ongoing communication
leadership and support to NCCDPHP's Office of the Director and
divisions in furthering the center's mission to prevent chronic
diseases and promote overall health. The HCSO (1) plans, develops,
conducts, and evaluates cross-cutting communication projects and
campaigns to inform media, health professionals, and the public about
the prevention of chronic diseases and the promotion of healthy
behaviors; (2) provides media, communication, and marketing support to
NCCDPHP's divisions and programs; (3) facilitates cross-division
coordination of health communication activities, sharing of lessons
learned, and development of best practices; (4) serves as primary
liaison between NCCDPHP and CDC's Office of the Associate Director for
Communication on communication and marketing science and its associated
research and practice; (5) prepares CDC and HHS press releases and
media advisories, responds to center-level media inquiries, and
coordinates and clears division-level media inquiries; (6) provides
media relations support and training to NCCDPHP scientists and
communication specialists; (7) manages a centralized system for
tracking and analyzing media coverage of NCCDPHP issues and data
releases; (8) provides technical writing and editing support to NCCDPHP
scientific authors; (9) designs, develops, and coordinates the
publication of print and audiovisual materials such as fact sheets,
newsletters, speeches and presentations, exhibits, podcasts, and
educational videos; (10) manages NCCDPHP's Web site and coordinates
scheduling and production of chronic-disease-related weekly features
for main CDC Web site; (11) responds to cross-cutting public inquiries
as part of the CDC-INFO system and coordinates NCCDPHP's utilization of
the CDC publication distribution facility; (12) manages and coordinates
scientific and public affairs clearance of NCCDPHP print and non-print
materials, ensuring adherence to and consistency with CDC and HHS
information and publication policies and guidelines; (13) manages CDC
logo licensing requests from external partner organizations involving
NCCDPHP divisions and programs; (14) represents NCCDPHP on committees,
workgroups, and at conferences relating to health communication
activities; and (15) manages the National Conference on Chronic Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion.
[[Page 5806]]
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional Statements for the Division of
Adolescent and School Health (CUCB)
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional Statements for the Division of
Oral Health (CUCD) and Insert the Following
Division of Oral Health (CUCD). (1) Monitors burden of oral
diseases, risk factors, preventive services, and other associated
factors; (2) supports public health research that directly applies to
oral health policies and programs; (3) communicates timely and relevant
information to impact oral health policy, practices, and programs; (4)
supports the implementation and maintenance of effective strategies and
interventions to reduce the burden of oral diseases and conditions; (5)
builds capacity and infrastructure for sustainable, effective, and
efficient oral health programs; (6) evaluates oral health programs to
ensure that implementation has been successful; (7) identifies and
facilitates partnerships to support CDC's strategic priorities for oral
health; (8) investigates and diagnoses oral health hazards and
outbreaks in the community; (9) develops and advocates sound oral
public health policies; and (10) translates and disseminates research
findings to develop, enhance, and guide programs, polices and
strategies.
Delete in Its Entirety the Title and Functional Statements for the
Division of Adult and Community Health (CUCE)
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional Statements for the Division of
Diabetes Translation (CUCG), and Insert the Following
Division of Diabetes Translation (CUCG). In collaboration with
NCCDPHP divisions, other CDC components, other HHS agencies, state,
tribal, local and territorial government agencies, academic
institutions, and voluntary and private sector organizations, the
Division of Diabetes Translation; (1) Plans, directs, and coordinates a
national program to prevent diabetes and reduce morbidity, mortality,
disability, and costs associated with diabetes and its complications;
(2) identifies, evaluates, and implements programs and policies to
prevent and control diabetes through the translation of evidence-based
models and interventions for improved health care and self-care
practices into widespread clinical and community practice; (3) conducts
surveillance of diabetes, its complications, and the utilization of
health care and prevention resources to monitor trends and evaluate
program impact on morbidity, mortality, disability, and cost; (4)
conducts epidemiologic studies and disseminates findings to identify
and evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of potential prevention
and control strategies at the community level; (5) develops or supports
clinical and public health guidelines and strategies to form the basis
for community interventions; and (6) provides technical consultation
and assistance to state and local health agencies to implement and
evaluate cost effective interventions to reduce morbidity, mortality,
and disability.
Office of the Director (CUCG1). (1) Establishes and interprets
policies and determines program priorities; (2) provides leadership and
guidance in strategic planning, budget formulation, programmatic and
scientific planning, development, and management, administrative
management and operations of the division; (3) coordinates the
monitoring and reporting of division priorities, accomplishments,
future directions, and resource requirements; (4) leads and coordinates
policy, communications and partnership activities; (5) leads and
coordinates the activities to build the National Diabetes Prevention
Program; (6) leads and coordinates cross-cutting activities to
eliminate diabetes health disparities and improve health equity; and
(7) coordinates division activities with other components of NCCDPHP
and CDC, organizations in the public and private sectors, and other
federal agencies.
Epidemiology and Statistics Branch (CUCGB). (1) Conducts national
surveillance of diabetes and its complications and assists state health
agencies in establishing and conducting diabetes surveillance systems
at the state level; (2) identifies basic and clinical research findings
and technologies that have potential to prevent or control diabetes and
its complications through public health avenues; (3) designs,
coordinates, and funds regional and national surveillance systems and
population studies of the effectiveness of health system and policy-
level interventions; (4) develops and analyzes mathematical and
economic models to project the burden of diabetes and prioritize
effective interventions to prevent and control diabetes; (5) conducts
epidemiologic studies to identify high-risk population groups and other
risk factors for diabetes and its complications; (6) conducts cost and
cost-effectiveness analyses of diabetes prevention and control
technologies to prioritize strategies for policy-makers; (7) conducts
surveillance of the degree of diffusion and dissemination of preventive
services and the utilization of health care; (8) provides scientific
and technical support to division staff and state and local health
agencies in planning, implementing, and evaluating programs to reduce
morbidity and mortality from diabetes; and (9) collaborates with
counterparts in other divisions, academic institutions, and other HHS
agencies by conducting national public health research projects and by
providing technical assistance in areas of epidemiology, surveillance,
and economics.
Program and Evaluation Branch (CUCGC). (1) Provides programmatic
leadership, guidance and consultation on a range of strategies to
improve diabetes prevention and control programs in states,
territories, tribes and local jurisdictions; (2) identifies, develops,
implements and evaluates strategies to prevent and control diabetes
through translation of science into widespread community practice and
through the application of policy and environmental interventions,
health systems interventions and community interventions; (3)
implements and evaluates program policies, plans, procedures,
priorities, and guidelines to improve health, prevent or delay the
development of type 2 diabetes, and reduce morbidity, mortality,
disability, and costs associated with diabetes and its complications,
especially among vulnerable and disparate population groups; (4)
obtains, analyzes, disseminates, and publishes data from diabetes
prevention and control programs to develop operational strategies for
translation of results into improved practice; (5) provides leadership,
management and oversight for the National Diabetes Education Program
with the National Institutes of Health and other key partners; (6)
designs, evaluates, and implements national educational strategies
directed toward health care professionals and systems, individuals with
diabetes, community leaders, businesses, and the general public; (7)
develops diabetes and pre-diabetes management educational materials,
training courses, tools and other materials; (8) develops, implements
and supports work with native populations through the Native Diabetes
Wellness Program; and (9) coordinates and collaborates with
counterparts in other divisions, HHS agencies, academic institutions,
and national and voluntary organizations to improve public health
diabetes prevention and control programs, practices and policies.
[[Page 5807]]
Delete in Their Entirety the Functional Statements for the Division of
Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity (CUCH), and Insert the
Following
Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity (CUCH). (1)
Provides national and international leadership for chronic disease
prevention and control and health promotion in the areas of nutrition,
physical activity, and obesity; (2) plans and implements surveillance
to track and analyze policy and environmental indicators and behaviors
related to nutrition, physical activity, and related risk factors for
obesity and other chronic diseases; (3) builds international, national,
state, and local expertise and capacity to plan, implement, and
evaluate nutrition, physical activity, and obesity prevention programs;
(4) conducts epidemiologic and intervention studies related to
nutrition, physical activity, and obesity; (5) develops and
disseminates new methods, guidelines, and recommendations for effective
nutrition, physical activity, and obesity prevention strategies in
multiple settings; (6) facilitates the translation and dissemination of
practice- and research-tested findings into public health practice for
optimal health impact; (7) provides national leadership in health
communications to promote nutrition, physical activity, and obesity
prevention and control, and integrates health communications with
overall program efforts; and (8) collaborates across CDC and with
appropriate federal and state agencies, international/national/
community organizations, and others.
Office of the Director (CUCH1). (1) Provides leadership and
direction in establishing agency and division priorities, strategies,
programs, and policies; (2) plans and directs resources and activities
in alignment with agency and division goals and objectives; (3) leads
policy development efforts and analyses related to nutrition, physical
activity, and obesity; (4) mobilizes and coordinates partnerships and
constituencies to build a national infrastructure for nutrition and
physical activity promotion and obesity prevention; (5) educates
healthcare professionals, businesses, communities, the general public,
and key decision-makers about the importance of nutrition and physical
activity in preventing obesity and their impact on chronic disease and
public health; (6) monitors progress toward achieving agency and
division goals and objectives and assesses the impact of programs; and
(7) facilitates cross-functional activities and operations across CDC
and in coordination with other federal agencies, partners, and
constituencies.
Nutrition Branch (CUCHC). (1) Provides technical and subject matter
expertise and training for state and community programs on policy,
systems and environmental approaches related to nutrition and obesity;
(2) plans, coordinates, and conducts surveillance activities in
domestic and international settings to assess nutrition practices, food
systems, and behavioral risks in children, adolescents, and adults; (3)
analyzes, interprets, and disseminates data from surveys, surveillance
activities, and epidemiologic studies related to nutrition and
nutrition factors affecting chronic disease; (4) designs, implements,
and evaluates epidemiologic studies and intervention projects for
domestic and international application to address nutrition; (5) plans,
coordinates, and conducts nutrition research and surveillance of policy
and environmental strategies and interventions; (6) develops and
disseminates nutrition guidelines and recommendations for maternal and
child health, child growth and development, and prevention/reduction of
chronic disease; (7) designs and evaluates nutrition and obesity
interventions; (8) provides nutrition expertise and consultation to
develop and promote health communication strategies; (9) coordinates
cross-functional nutrition-related activities across CDC; and (10)
coordinates and collaborates with appropriate federal agencies,
national and international organizations, and other partners.
Physical Activity and Health Branch (CUCHD). (1) Provides technical
and subject matter expertise and training for state and community
programs on policy, systems and environmental approaches related to
physical activity and obesity; (2) plans, coordinates, and conducts
surveillance to assess levels of physical activity as well as
determinants of physical activity; (3) conducts epidemiologic research
related to physical activity and its impact on health, obesity, and
chronic disease; (4) designs and evaluates physical activity and
obesity interventions; (5) develops evidence-based guidelines and
recommendations for physical activity; (6) provides physical activity
expertise and consultation to develop and promote health communication
strategies; (7) coordinates cross-functional physical activity-related
activities across CDC; and (8) coordinates and collaborates with
appropriate federal agencies, national and international organizations,
and other partners.
Obesity Prevention and Control Branch (CUCHG). (1) Provides
technical and subject matter expertise and training for state and
community programs on policy, systems and environmental approaches
related to nutrition, physical activity, and obesity; (2) plans,
coordinates, and conducts surveillance to assess levels of healthy
weight, overweight, and obesity and associated risk factors; (3)
conducts research that utilizes data from surveys, surveillance
activities, and nutrition and physical activity epidemiologic studies
related to overweight and obesity and associated risk factors; (4)
designs and evaluates nutrition, physical activity and obesity
interventions; (5) develops and disseminates guidelines and
recommendations for policy and environmental changes in multiples
settings; (6) provides nutrition, physical activity and obesity
expertise and consultation to develop and promote health communication
strategies; (7) coordinates cross-functional obesity-related activities
across CDC; and (8) coordinates and collaborates with appropriate
federal agencies, national and international organizations, and other
partners.
Program Development and Evaluation Branch (CUCHH). (1) Provides
technical and subject matter expertise and training for state and
community programs on translation and evaluation of policy, systems,
and environmental strategies for nutrition, physical activity, and
obesity; (2) designs and conducts applied research, evaluation, and
translation activities related to nutrition, physical activity, and
obesity prevention; (3) uses research, guidelines, and recommendations
to develop evidence-based interventions and promising practices that
support improved physical activity, nutrition, and healthy weight; (4)
conducts behavioral and communications research to understand
knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs and achieve healthy behavior changes
in populations; and (5) coordinates and collaborates with appropriate
federal agencies, national and international organizations, and other
partners.
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional Statement for the Office of the
Director (CUCL1), Office on Smoking and Health (CUCL), and Insert the
Following
Office of the Director (CUCL1). (1) Manages, directs, coordinates,
and evaluates the activities of the Office on Smoking and Health; (2)
develops goals and objectives for the office; (3) provides leadership,
scientific oversight, and guidance in program planning and
[[Page 5808]]
development; (4) coordinates the development of policy related to
tobacco use and health in CDC, PHS, and HHS; (5) coordinates assistance
provided by the Office on Smoking and Health (OSH) to other CDC
components; federal, state, and local government agencies; the private
sector; and other nations; (6) stimulates additional research and
program activity related to tobacco use and health by other federal
agencies, international organizations, and public and private
organizations; (7) coordinates the OSH public information program,
technical information program, and surveillance and epidemiologic
projects and studies; (8) provides program management and
administrative support services; (9) as required by Public Law 98-474,
produces Biennial Status Report to Congress; (10) serves as the lead
for the Tobacco and Health Objectives for the Nation; (11) collects,
maintains, and analyzes information provided by the tobacco industry on
cigarette additives and smokeless tobacco additives and nicotine
content; (12) provides staff support for a Congressionally-mandated
federal advisory committee on smoking and health; (13) serves as the
principal adviser to the Surgeon General of the U.S. Public Health
Service on all activities related to tobacco use and health; (14)
serves a leading role in providing proactive media outreach and media
response to the press, health professionals, and the general public
with information on tobacco prevention and control issues; and (15)
manages/leads and cultivates partnerships.
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional Statement for the Health
Communications Office (CUCLC), Office on Smoking and Health (CUCL), and
Insert the Following
Health Communications Office (CUCLC). (1) Plans, develops, and
conducts programs to inform researchers, health professionals, policy-
makers and the public about the health consequences of tobacco use; (2)
provides technical guidance, assistance, and consultation to health
professionals in the planning, development, and implementation of
information programs at the national, state, and local levels; (3)
produces, distributes, and evaluates educational materials and conducts
counter-advertising campaigns to support tobacco prevention and
control; (4) develops and maintains a Technical Information Center,
including an on-line bibliographic database of materials relative to
the OSH mission; (5) manages production of the annual Surgeon General's
report and other Congressionally-mandated reports on the health
consequences of tobacco use; (6) conducts joint information campaigns
with other federal agencies, voluntary health organizations, state
health departments, and others; (7) provides reference and referral
services for OSH staff and constituents in need of scientific and other
technical information; (8) plans and conducts special departmental-wide
initiatives addressing high-risk groups; (9) prepares and distributes
information products such as fact sheets, current awareness services,
bibliographies, and legislative updates in both print and electronic
formats; (10) produces speeches for CDC, PHS, and departmental
officials relating to tobacco; (11) responds to public inquiries and
shares general information on tobacco use and tobacco cessation; (12)
manages the communication functions of OSH through activities such as
maintaining slide and video libraries, managing mailing lists
management, and providing conference exhibits; and (13) collaborates
with other groups within CDC, PHS, and HHS and with other federal
agencies, as well as other professional, voluntary, international, and
professional health organizations.
Delete in Its Entirety the Functional Statements for the Division for
Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention (CUCM), and Insert the Following
Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention (CUCM). (1) Plans,
directs, and coordinates programs to reduce morbidity, risk factors,
costs, disability, mortality, and disparities associated with heart
disease, stroke, and other cardiovascular disease outcomes; (2)
provides national leadership, technical assistance, expert
consultation, and training to state and local health agencies in
intervention, surveillance, evaluation, and communication or marketing
activities related to implementing state programs, registries, and
other surveillance systems associated with reducing and preventing
cardiovascular disease outcomes; (3) implements surveillance systems
and conducts surveillance of outcomes and utilization of health care
and prevention resources related to heart disease, stroke, high blood
pressure, high cholesterol, and other cardiovascular disease to monitor
trends and evaluate program impact on morbidity, mortality, risk factor
improvement, cost, disability, and disparities; (4) conducts
epidemiologic studies and disseminates findings to identify emerging
risk factors with potential for prevention and control strategies; (5)
conducts prevention research studies and disseminates findings to
identify and evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of potential
prevention and control strategies in health care systems and at the
community level; (6) identifies, implements, and evaluates programs to
prevent and control heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, high
cholesterol, other cardiovascular disease outcomes, and disparities
through the translation and communication of best practices in health
care and risk factor prevention into widespread health systems policies
and community changes; (7) collaborates with within CDC, PHS, and HHS
and with other federal agencies, as well as other other cardiovascular
health related activities at CDC; (8) maintains collaborative
relationships with official, private, voluntary agencies, academic
institutions, or other groups involved in the prevention and control of
heart disease, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases or risk
factors; and (9) provides technical assistance and consultation to
other nations and to the World Health Organization in the global
prevention and control of cardiovascular disease.
Office of the Director (CUCM1). (1) Provides leadership and
direction in establishing division priorities, strategies, programs and
policies; (2) plans and directs resources and activities in alignment
with division goals and objectives; (3) monitors progress toward
achieving division objectives and assessing impact of programs; (4)
insures that division activities are coordinated with other components
of CDC both within and outside the center, with federal, state and
local agencies, and related voluntary and professional organizations;
(5) provides national leadership in coordinating and implementing
activities that prevent heart disease and stroke; (6) educates the
general public, key decision-makers, healthcare professionals,
businesses and communities about the importance of and opportunities to
prevent heart disease and stroke; (7) serves as co-lead for Healthy
People 2020 heart disease and stroke objectives for the nation; (8)
develops and produces communication tools to meet the needs of division
programs and mission; (9) develops health communication campaigns at
the national and state levels; (10) provides leadership to the division
for health communication efforts; (11) provides administrative and
management support for division activities; (12) reports
accomplishments, future directions and resource requirements; and (13)
represents the division at official professional and scientific
meetings.
[[Page 5809]]
Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch (CUCMB). (1) Monitors the
epidemiology of cardiovascular disease risk factors, behaviors,
outcomes, costs, barriers, awareness, access to care, geographic
variations and disparities; (2) prepares routine surveillance reports
of national and state trends in cardiovascular disease risk factors,
behaviors, outcomes, and disparities, which includes the mapping of
geographic variations; (3) coordinates, manages, and maintains the
activities of the National Cardiovascular Disease Surveillance System
(NCVDSS), including the Data Trends & Maps Web site, the Interactive
Atlas Web site, surveillance summaries, and research publications; (4)
develops, designs, implements, and evaluates new cardiovascular disease
registries and other surveillance systems that address gaps in existing
CDC surveillance systems; (5) prepares epidemiologic and scientific
papers for publication in medical and public health journals and for
presentation to national public health and scientific conferences on
surveillance and epidemiologic findings; (6) identifies, investigates,
implements, and evaluates new surveillance methodologies and
technologies that involve electronic data abstraction and transfer to
state and national registries and spatial analysis; (7) proposes and
serves as technical advisors and project officers for epidemiologic
research projects that fill gaps in surveillance and intervention and
investigates emerging risk factors that will lead to the prevention of
cardiovascular disease and the elimination of disparities in
cardiovascular disease; (8) serves as scientific and technical experts
in cardiovascular disease epidemiology and surveillance methodology to
state health departments and to advisory groups at the national/
international level; (9) provides scientific leadership in the
development, extension, and improvement of surveillance systems,
epidemiologic strategies, and/or service to cardiovascular health
programs; and (10) facilitates integration of epidemiology and
surveillance across the division.
Applied Research and Evaluation Branch (CUCMC). (1) Plans,
develops, and implements projects related to applied research, program
evaluation, and health economics research; (2) prepares scientific
papers for publication in public health journals and for presentation
at national and international conferences, meetings and seminars on
applied research, program evaluation, and health economics research;
(3) synthesizes and translates a body of best science and practice that
can be applied to various public health settings; (4) prepares and
disseminates products that translate applied research, program
evaluation, and health economics science to state programs and others;
(5) implements a comprehensive division evaluation plan addressing all
facets of division activities, including state-based program
evaluation, research evaluation, and evaluation training needs; (6)
provides applied research, evaluation, and health economics expertise,
technical assistance and training to the division, center, CDC, and
national and international partners; and (7) implements demonstration
and pilot projects with state programs and others to put research into
practice.
Program Development and Services Branch (CUCMD). (1) Provides
programmatic leadership and support for prevention and control of heart
disease, stroke, and related risk factors in states, territories,
tribes and local jurisdictions; (2) provides comprehensive technical
advice and assistance in planning, implementing and evaluating
strategies to prevent and control heart disease, stroke, and related
risk factors through policy, systems, environmental changes; (3)
provides program policies and guidance outlining CDC's role and the
national goals and objectives related to heart disease and stroke
prevention; (4) provides technical assistance to grantees on
implementation of evidence- and practice-based interventions with
greatest reach and impact and potential to be taken jurisdiction wide;
(5) provides technical assistance to enhance coordination across
chronic diseases to ensure that heart disease and stroke prevention
planning and implementation optimize collaboration across chronic
disease interventions; (6) provides leadership and technical expertise,
in policy and system change, health disparities, healthcare, worksite
and community interventions to prevent and control heart disease,
stroke and related risk factors; (7) provides leadership and technical
expertise in women's cardiovascular health, health disparities and
healthcare interventions for cardiovascular primary and secondary
prevention programs as it relates to the Well-Integrated Screening and
Evaluation for Women Across the Nation (WISE WOMAN) Program; (8)
facilitates programmatic coordination across the division, center, CDC
to address heart disease and stroke prevention; (9) works with national
partners to encourage policy and systems changes and other actions
supportive of CDC and grantee work to prevent and control heart
disease, stroke and related risk factors; (10) reviews and monitors
cooperative agreements and contracts; (11) serves as technical experts
in the implementation of policy systems, and environmental strategies
for health promotion and the prevention and control of heart disease,
stroke, and related risk factors for grantees and others within CDC and
with partners; (12) provides comprehensive training expertise,
including distance learning, training seminars, meetings, how-to-tools,
promising practices documents, and other materials to promote the
prevention of heart disease and stroke and assist grantees with
planning, implementing, and replicating interventions; (13) monitors
management information systems for heart disease and stroke prevention
efforts to assess progress toward achieving division and center goals;
(14) obtains, analyzes and disseminates data from interventions to
develop operational strategies to encourage replication of promising
program practices; (15) provides technical assistance on use of data
for program planning and priority setting, including addressing
specific populations with documented health disparities; (16) ensures
products developed across the division for grantees are appropriate and
supportive of priority work; and (17) provides forums for grantees to
ensure rapid spread of promising practices and lessons learned.
After the Title and Functional Statement for the Division for Heart
Disease and Stroke Prevention (CUCM), Insert the Following
Division of Community Health (CUCN). (1) Provides national
leadership in training, consultation, and technical assistance to
partners in the planning, development, implementation, and evaluation
of programs to advance community health; (2) develops, strengthens, and
sustains key community health linkages and partnerships within and
across CDC, other federal agencies, states, tribes, territories, local
government agencies, academia, nongovernmental organizations and
international entities; (3) supports community health initiatives and
integrates health equity and the elimination of health disparities into
community health practices that improve physical and mental well-being;
(4) conducts applied research, epidemiology, evaluation, surveillance
and performance monitoring at the community level; and (5) identifies,
designs, implements and administers
[[Page 5810]]
programs that maximize public health impact.
Office of the Director (CUCN1). (1) Mobilizes and coordinates
partnerships and collaborations internally to CDC, other divisions,
offices and CIOs and external constituencies to build a national
infrastructure for community health and to achieve the mission of the
division; (2) in coordination with other divisions, CIOs, and
organizations, provides leadership in community health; (3) plans,
manages, directs, coordinates and evaluates the operations of the
division, including division-wide administrative, fiscal, technical,
communications, research, programmatic and logistical support services,
including comprehensive and continual cross-branch collaboration to
assure best practices; (4) coordinates and assures the appropriate
training, development, retention, succession planning for all division
personnel; (5) develops budget requests, monitors and reports on
progress and allocation of resources, responds to external inquiries
and requests, and reports accomplishments, future directions and
resource requirements; (6) builds partnerships with organizations
focused on promotion of health equity and reduction of health
disparities and reports on the effectiveness of community health
programs in vulnerable populations; (7) provides leadership for
division-wide policies, strategies, action planning, budget, and
evaluation to eliminate health disparities; (8) provides leadership and
technical assistance to partners to promote evidence and practice based
policy, environmental, programmatic and infrastructure changes that
improve community health; (9) coordinates the development,
implementation and monitoring of guidelines and standards to assure
ongoing high quality performance of community health programs; (10)
responds to public inquiries and oversees the creation of materials
designed for use by the media, including press releases, letters to the
editors, other print and electronic materials and programs, and ensures
appropriate clearance of materials; (11) in collaboration with the
Office for State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial Support (OSTLTS),
provides support and consultation for, and access to public health law
expertise; including the engagement of public health law partners in
developing and applying legal tools to maximize health impact in
communities; (12) in coordination with others, identifies, tracks,
analyzes, and disseminates policies, legislation and federal, state and
local laws related to the Division of Community Health's (DCH) mission
and programs.
Research, Surveillance, Evaluation Branch (CUCNB). (1) In
collaboration with other divisions, CIOs, and agencies, serves as a
national leader in applied research, epidemiology, evaluation,
surveillance and performance monitoring to advance community health.
(2) collects, analyzes, integrates, and collaborates on the
dissemination of data to track and monitor the health of communities
and their members, in collaboration with OSELS and other partners; (3)
collaborates with other divisions to apply GIS mapping, needs
assessments, simulation modeling, and other innovative technologies,
research and evaluation methods to identify community-level drivers of
key chronic disease indicators, especially as they relate to the
creation, promotion, or elimination of health inequities; (4) evaluates
policy, environmental, programmatic, and infrastructure interventions,
to develop and inform the practice and evidence-base; (5) participates
in setting the national agenda for the creation and maintenance of a
health context database that includes information about policy,
environmental, programmatic and infrastructure changes, including
social determinants of health and other potential negative influences
that may impact community health; (6) collaborates with Program
Implementation and Development Branch to establish grantee priorities
for surveillance, applied research and evaluation, and data collection;
(7) collaborates with Training, Translation, Dissemination and
Communications Team in the translation and dissemination of scientific
and evaluation findings into culturally competent health promotion
strategies, technical assistance, and training products; (8) supports
applied research, surveillance, epidemiology and program evaluation to
expand the evidence base; (9) builds local capacity to assess local
conditions, evaluate interventions in natural settings, and collaborate
with partners on the translation and dissemination of results; and (10)
develops and supports performance monitoring systems that align with
program and evaluation goals.
Program Implementation and Development Branch (CUCNC). (1) In
collaboration with partner divisions, CIOs, and other agencies, serves
as a national leader in program implementation and development to
advance community health; (2) provides technical consultation and
guidance to state and local health agencies, community based
organizations, academic institutions, other federal agencies, and other
organizations to plan, implement, monitor, and evaluate community-based
prevention and health promotion programs, with an emphasis on
eliminating heath disparities and achieving health equity; (3)
establishes strategic goals, objectives and activities and develop
funding mechanisms for intramural and extramural program activities;
(4) provides administrative and management support for the development
of funding opportunity announcements, oversight of grants, cooperative
agreements, contracts, reimbursable agreements, and federal interagency
agreements; (5) plans, develops, interprets and implements division-
wide policies procedures, and practices for administrative management,
acquisition and assistance mechanisms, including contracts, memoranda
of agreements, discretionary grants, and cooperative agreements; (6) in
collaboration with other divisions serves as subject matter experts in
community health and in the implementation of policy, systems and
environmental strategies for disease prevention and health promotion;
(7) works with partners to build capacity for public health leadership
and management through a multi-phased approach including situational
analysis, capacity development, management analysis, technical
assistance, and sustainability; and (8) coordinates and collaborates
with other branches in DCH to support evaluation and research and the
development and dissemination of practice and evidence-based strategies
and tools for program implementation.
Training, Translation, Dissemination and Communications Branch
(CUCND). (1) In collaboration with other divisions, CIOs, and agencies,
serves as a national leader in training, translation, dissemination and
communications to advance community health; (2) supports the division's
community programs by developing adaptable training tools, utilizing
operational research to identify and implement adapted models for
state, tribal, territories, local, rural, frontier, and national
contexts; (3) in collaboration with other divisions and partners,
provides technical consultation, assistance, and training to
government, non-government, not-for profit, and private sectors in
evidence- and practice-based community and clinical prevention and
wellness strategies and in capacity building at the local level; (4)
supports translation and dissemination of practice and evidence
findings into widespread community practices through the application of
[[Page 5811]]
policy, environmental, programmatic and infrastructure changes for
optimal community health impact; (5) serves as a clearinghouse for the
collection, organization, and dissemination of evidence-based and
practice-based strategies for community health programs; (6) provides
grantees marketing/communications support, technical assistance, and
implementation and evaluation support for evidence-based and practice-
based communications strategies that advance community health through
policy, environmental, programmatic and infrastructure changes; and (7)
prepares and disseminates health communication and media materials that
advance community health.
After the Title and Functional Statement for the Division of Community
Health (CUCN), Insert the Following
Division of Population Health. (CUCP). (1) Develops and promotes
population-based policy, system, and environmental change
interventions, programs, strategies, materials and tools; (2) provides
national and international leadership in health education and health
promotion; (3) supports epidemiologic and surveillance activities,
training and intervention activities in diverse settings to promote
public health and support the development of state chronic disease
program capacity; (4) promotes the understanding and improvement of the
social and behavioral determinants of and issues related to chronic
conditions; (5) coordinates activities with other components of CDC
both within and outside the center; with federal, state, and local
health agencies; tribes, territories, and with voluntary and
professional health and education agencies; and (6) promotes health
equity among populations disproportionately affected by chronic
diseases and associated risk factors.
Office of the Director (CUCP1). (1) Manages, coordinates, and
evaluates the activities and programs of the division; (2) ensures that
division health education and health promotion activities are
coordinated with other components of CDC, with international, federal,
state, and local health and education agencies, and with voluntary and
professional health and education entities; (3) provides leadership and
coordinates division responses to requests for research, consultation,
training, collaboration, evaluation, and technical assistance or
information on health care, health promotion, oral health, adolescent
and school health, aging, epilepsy, arthritis, quality of life,
alcohol, prevention research, and emerging chronic disease issues; (4)
provides scientific oversight and strategic guidance of division
programmatic and research activities; (5) provides administrative and
management support for the division including guidance and logistics
for personnel, including field staff; the use of financial resources;
and oversight of grants, cooperative agreements, contracts, and
reimbursable agreements; (6) provides leadership and technical
assistance to partners to promote policy, systems, and environmental
changes that improve population health; (7) provides strategic guidance
and coordination of policy, issues management, and program and
partnership development activities; (8) coordinates and supports
division-wide communication needs; and (9) supports the professional
growth and development of all staff to build staff skills, knowledge,
expertise, and experience.
Applied Research and Translation Branch (CUCPB). (1) Provides
leadership, management, and coordination related to the planning and
implementation of prevention research, research translation, and policy
development to address national health priorities, including healthy
aging and workplace health; (2) develops and manages funding mechanisms
that allow programs across CDC to support applied public health
research and translation; and (3) supports the development, evaluation,
synthesis, dissemination, and promotion of innovative and cross-cutting
public health interventions, programs and policies that improve
physical, mental, and social dimensions of health and quality of life
of people in community settings and workplaces, and through community
and clinical partnerships.
Arthritis, Epilepsy and Well-Being Branch (CUCPC). (1) Directs and
supports program activities that reach and improve quality of life for
people affected by arthritis and epilepsy, including improving access
to and availability of appropriate medical care and self-management
programs and support, improving policies, environments and systems,
combating stigma and depression, and increasing public awareness and
knowledge; (2) develops, validates, refines, and promotes surveillance
measures and develop programs, policies and interventions, and
evaluations to enhance state and local public health capacity and to
promote national public health action for arthritis, epilepsy, health-
related quality of life, and well-being; (3) directs and coordinates
strategic evaluation efforts of community and state public health
actions for arthritis and epilepsy; and (4) develops and disseminates
health promotion and disease prevention programs, communication
campaigns, and public health information through national, state and
local partners.
Coordinated State Support Branch (CUCPD). (1) Leads and coordinates
center-wide activities for Coordinated Chronic Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion Programs activities and develops and implements
guidelines, uniform reporting procedures, performance measures, and
evaluation criteria for grantees; and (2) provides ongoing guidance,
training, technical assistance and support to grantees in coordination
with other NCCDPHP divisions.
Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch (CUCPE). (1) Provides support
to build national, state, and local public health capacity in
surveillance, epidemiology, and spatial analyses to monitor excessive
alcohol use and other emerging risk factors or chronic conditions and
to evaluate coordinated chronic disease programs and policies; (2)
provides oversight and training to state chronic disease epidemiology
assignees, state alcohol epidemiologists, and epidemiologic trainees on
methods for measuring, reporting, and disseminating epidemiologic
research findings to build a skilled public health workforce for
addressing the leading chronic diseases and related risk factors; (3)
applies Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and spatial statistical
methods for identifying geographic variations in leading chronic
diseases and related or emerging risk factors and providing guidance to
public health policy formulation and program planning; (4) provides
public health leadership in the prevention of excessive alcohol use by
collaborating with other CDC components, federal, state, and local
agencies, private, nonprofit organizations, and international partners
to promote the development and evaluation of intervention strategies
and policies; and (5) communicates scientific findings on leading
chronic diseases and related or emerging risk factors, including
information about evidence-based prevention strategies and policies,
through publications, presentations, and instructional activities at
local, state, national, and international levels.
School Health Branch (CUCPG). (1) Supports state, local,
territorial, and tribal agencies and national non-governmental
organizations to develop, implement, evaluate, and disseminate school
policy, systems, and
[[Page 5812]]
environmental strategies and interventions to improve the health of
students and school staff by promoting healthy eating, physical
activity, and a tobacco-free lifestyle; (2) supports implementation and
evaluation of a coordinated approach to school health and best
practices in health education; physical education and other physical
activity programs; nutrition services; school health services; school
counseling, psychological, and social services; health promotion for
staff; family and community involvement; and school health and safety
policies and environment; (3) provides leadership and consultation on
how schools work and how to foster effective collaboration between the
public health and education sectors; (4) documents and strengthens the
scientific associations among chronic disease-related health risks,
school-based health promotion initiatives, and academic achievement;
(5) evaluates school-based policy, systems, and environmental changes
and interventions to improve health behaviors and reduce chronic
disease-related health risks among children and adolescents; (6)
synthesizes and translates scientific research to develop and
disseminate guidance, tools, and resources to help schools prevent
chronic disease-related risks among children and adolescents; (7)
supports efforts of national, state, and local surveillance systems to
monitor chronic disease-related health risk behaviors among youth,
along with the policies, programs, and practices schools implement to
address those health risk behaviors; (8) strengthens efforts of
national, state, and local programs to provide high quality
professional development services to support school-based chronic
disease prevention policies, programs, and practices; (9) in
accomplishing the functions listed above, collaborates with other
components of CDC and HHS; the U.S. Department of Education, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, and other federal agencies; national
professional, voluntary, and philanthropic organizations; international
agencies; and other organizations as appropriate; and (10) assists
other nations in reducing chronic disease-related health risks among
children and adolescents and in implementing and improving school
health programs.
Dated: January 20, 2012.
Sherri A. Berger,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2012-2531 Filed 2-3-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-18-M