Renewal of the Defense Health Board, 66443-66444 [2012-26911]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 214 / Monday, November 5, 2012 / Notices
Mrs.
Cindy Allard, Privacy Act Officer, Office
of Freedom of Information, Washington
Headquarters Services, 1155 Defense
Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301–1155
or by telephone at (571) 372–0461.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Office
of the Secretary of Defense systems of
records notices subject to the Privacy
Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. 552a), as amended,
have been published in the Federal
Register and are available from the
address in FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. The proposed deletion is not
within the purview of subsection (r) of
the Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. 552a),
as amended, which requires the
submission of a new or altered system
report.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dated: October 31, 2012.
Aaron Siegel,
Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison
Officer, Department of Defense.
DELETION:
DWHS P48
Biographies of OSD, WHS, and JS
Officials (August 23, 2004, 69 FR
51813).
Reason:
Based on a recent review of DWHS
P48, Biographies of OSD, WHS, and JS
Officials, it has been determined that
the OSD CIO no longer has any records
collected under this system of records
notice. Components were notified on
September 24, 2012 to identify if such
records were being maintained by their
Component. No affirmative responses
were received therefore this system can
now be deleted.
[FR Doc. 2012–26916 Filed 11–2–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
Renewal of the Defense Health Board
DoD.
Renewal of Federal Advisory
Committee.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Under the provisions of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act of
1972 (5 U.S.C. Appendix), the
Government in the Sunshine Act of
1976 (5 U.S.C. 552b), and 41 CFR 102–
3.50(d), the Department of Defense gives
notice that it is renewing the charter for
the Defense Health Board (hereinafter
referred to as ‘‘the Board’’). The Board
has been determined to be in the public
interest.
The Board is a discretionary federal
advisory committee that shall provide
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SUMMARY:
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the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of
Defense, through the Under Secretary of
Defense for Personnel and Readiness
(hereafter referred to as ‘‘the Under
Secretary of Defense’’), and the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Health Affairs, independent advice and
recommendations on matters pertaining
to:
a. DoD healthcare policy and program
management;
b. Health research programs;
c. Requirements for the treatment and
prevention of disease and injury by
DoD;
d. Promotion of health and the
delivery of efficient, effective and high
quality health care services to DoD
beneficiaries; and
e. Other matters of special interest to
DoD, as determined by the Secretary of
Defense, the Deputy Secretary of
Defense or the Under Secretary.
The Board is not established to
provide advice on individual DoD
procurements, but instead shall be
concerned with the DoD healthcare
issues facing the Department of Defense
in the areas referenced above. No matter
shall be assigned to the Board for its
consideration that would require any
Board member to participate personally
and substantially in the conduct of any
specific procurement or place him or
her in the position of acting as a
contracting or procurement official.
The Board shall be composed of not
more than 19 members who are
appointed by the Secretary of Defense.
The members shall be eminent
authorities in one or more of the
following disciplines: clinical health
care, disease and injury prevention,
health care delivery and administration,
or strategic decision-making in
government, industry, or academia.
Board members shall be appointed by
the Secretary of Defense and their
appointments will be renewed on an
annual basis according to DoD policy
and procedures. Board members who
are not full-time or permanent part-time
Federal employees shall be appointed to
serve as experts and consultants under
the authority of 5 U.S.C. 3109 and serve
as special government employees. Each
Board member is appointed to provide
advice on behalf of the government on
the basis of his or her best judgment
without representing any particular
point of view and in a manner that is
free from conflict of interest. With the
exception of travel and per diem for
official travel, Board members shall
serve without compensation.
The Secretary of Defense may approve
the appointment of Board members for
one-to-four year terms of service, with
annual renewals; however, no member,
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66443
unless authorized by the Secretary of
Defense, may serve more than two
consecutive terms of service on the
Board. This same term of service
limitation also applies to any DoD
authorized Subcommittee of the Board.
Appointments will normally be
staggered among the Board membership
to ensure an orderly turnover in the
Board’s overall composition on a
periodic basis. Regular government
officers or employees who participate in
DoD’s decision-making process for this
Board are prohibited from serving on
the Board or its subcommittees.
The Secretary of Defense, in
consultation with the Under Secretary
of Defense, shall appoint the Board’s
President. The Under Secretary of
Defense shall appoint the Vice
President. The Under Secretary of
Defense, pursuant to DoD policies and
procedures, may appoint, as deemed
necessary, non-voting experts and
consultants, with special expertise, to
assist the Board on an ad hoc basis.
These experts and consultants, if not
full-time or part-time government
employees, shall be appointed under the
authority of 5 U.S.C. 3109, shall serve as
special government employees, shall be
appointed on an intermittent basis to
work specific Board-related efforts, and
shall have no voting rights. Non-voting
experts and consultants appointed by
the Under Secretary of Defense shall not
count toward the Board’s total
membership, and shall not engage in
Board deliberations.
The Department, when necessary, and
consistent with the Board’s mission and
DoD policies/procedures, may establish
subcommittees, task groups, and
working groups to support the Board.
Establishment of subcommittees will be
based upon a written determination, to
include terms of reference, by the
Secretary of Defense, the Deputy
Secretary of Defense, or the Board’s
sponsor.
Such Subcommittees shall not work
independently of the chartered Board,
and shall report all of their
recommendations and advice solely to
the Board for full deliberation and
discussion. Subcommittees have no
authority to make decisions and
recommendations, verbally or in
writing, on behalf of the chartered
Board; nor can any Subcommittee or its
members update or report directly to the
DoD or any Federal officers or
employees.
All Subcommittee members shall be
appointed in the same manner as the
Board members; that is, the Secretary of
Defense shall appoint Subcommittee
members even if the member in
question is already a Board member.
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66444
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 214 / Monday, November 5, 2012 / Notices
Subcommittee members, with the
approval of the Secretary of Defense,
may serve a term of service on the
Subcommittee of one-to-four years;
however, no member shall serve more
than two consecutive terms of service
on the subcommittee.
Subcommittee members, if not fulltime or part-time government
employees, shall be appointed to serve
as experts and consultants under the
authority of 5 U.S.C. 3109, and shall
serve as special government employees,
whose appointments must be renewed
by the Secretary of Defense on an
annual basis. With the exception of
travel and per diem for official Board
related travel, Subcommittee members
shall serve without compensation.
Each Subcommittee member is
appointed to provide advice on behalf of
the government on the basis of his or
her best judgment without representing
any particular point of view and in a
manner that is free from conflict of
interest.
All Subcommittees operate under the
provisions of FACA, the Sunshine Act,
governing Federal statutes and
regulations, and governing DoD
policies/procedures.
Currently, DoD has approved the
following permanent subcommittees to
the Defense Health Board.
a. Public Health Subcommittee: This
Subcommittee shall be composed of not
more than 10 members who are eminent
authorities in at least one of the
following disciplines: Infectious
Disease; Occupational Health/Medicine;
Preventive Medicine; Public Health; and
Toxicology.
The Subcommittee, when tasked
according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to
improving the overall health of
members of the Armed Forces and their
families through the evaluation of DoD
public health programs and initiatives
including education, health promotion
and prevention activities, as well as
disease and injury prevention research.
b. Health Care Delivery
Subcommittee: This Subcommittee shall
be composed of not more than nine
members who are eminent authorities in
at least one of the following disciplines:
Health Care Academia; Health Care
Finance/Economics; Health Care Policy/
Executive Leadership; and Patient Care.
The Subcommittee, when tasked
according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to
health care delivery, to include DoD
health care policy and program
management, and research.
c. Neurological/Behavioral Health
Subcommittee: This Subcommittee shall
be composed of not more than 10
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members who are eminent authorities in
at least one of the following disciplines:
Neurology; Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder; Psychiatry; Psychology; and
Traumatic Brain Injury.
The Subcommittee, when tasked
according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to
psychological/mental health issues and
neurological symptoms or conditions
among members of the Armed Forces
and their families.
d. Medical Ethics Subcommittee: This
Subcommittee shall be composed of not
more than five members who are
eminent authorities in at least one of the
following disciplines: Clergy, DoD
leadership, Human Research Protection,
attorneys with expertise in medical
ethics, and Military Health System
beneficiaries. One member must have
formal bioethics or medical ethics
training or experience.
The Subcommittee, when tasked
according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to
medical ethics.
e. Trauma and Injury Subcommittee:
This Subcommittee shall be composed
of not more than 10 members who are
eminent authorities in at least one of the
following disciplines: civilian or
military trauma medicine systems.
The Subcommittee, when tasked
according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to
trauma and injury, to include methods
for prevention, recognition, clinical
management, and treatment. It is the
parent Subcommittee of the Committee
on Tactical Combat Casualty Care.
f. Committee on Tactical Combat
Casualty Care: The Committee on
Tactical Combat Casualty Care is a
permanent work group of the Trauma
and Injury Subcommittee and shall be
composed of not more than 31 members
who are physicians, nurses, physician
assistants, or combat medics with
experience in at least one of the
following: military trauma medicine or
systems; or tactical combat casualty
care.
The Subcommittee, when tasked
according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining
in-theater care in the tactical
environment.
Jim
Freeman, Advisory Committee
Management Officer for the Department
of Defense, 703–692–5952.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Board’s DFO, pursuant to DoD policy,
shall be a full-time or permanent parttime DoD employee, and shall be
appointed in accordance with
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
established DoD policies and
procedures.
In addition, the Board’s DFO is
required to be in attendance at all Board
and Subcommittee meetings for the
entire duration of each and every
meeting. However, in the absence of the
Board’s DFO, a properly approved
Alternate DFO, duly appointed to the
Board according to DoD policies/
procedures, shall attend the entire
duration of the Board or Subcommittee
meeting. The DFO, or the Alternate
DFO, shall call all of the Board’s and
Subcommittee’s meetings; prepare and
approve all meeting agendas; adjourn
any meeting, when the DFO, or the
Alternate DFO, determines adjournment
to be in the public interest or required
by governing regulations or DoD
policies/procedures; and chair meetings
when directed to do so by the official to
whom the Board reports.
Pursuant to 41 CFR 102–3.105(j) and
102–3.140, the public or interested
organizations may submit written
statements to the Defense Health
Board’s membership about the Board’s
mission and functions. Written
statements may be submitted at any
time or in response to the stated agenda
of planned meeting of Defense Health
Board.
All written statements shall be
submitted to the Designated Federal
Officer for the Defense Health Board,
and this individual will ensure that the
written statements are provided to the
membership for their consideration.
Contact information for the Defense
Health Board’s Designated Federal
Officer can be obtained from the GSA’s
FACA Database—https://www.fido.gov/
facadatabase/public.asp.
The Designated Federal Officer,
pursuant to 41 CFR 102–3.150, will
announce planned meetings of the
Defense Health Board. The Designated
Federal Officer, at that time, may
provide additional guidance on the
submission of written statements that
are in response to the stated agenda for
the planned meeting in question.
Dated: October 31, 2012.
Aaron Siegel,
Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison
Officer, Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2012–26911 Filed 11–2–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 214 (Monday, November 5, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 66443-66444]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-26911]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
Renewal of the Defense Health Board
AGENCY: DoD.
ACTION: Renewal of Federal Advisory Committee.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Under the provisions of the Federal Advisory Committee Act of
1972 (5 U.S.C. Appendix), the Government in the Sunshine Act of 1976 (5
U.S.C. 552b), and 41 CFR 102-3.50(d), the Department of Defense gives
notice that it is renewing the charter for the Defense Health Board
(hereinafter referred to as ``the Board''). The Board has been
determined to be in the public interest.
The Board is a discretionary federal advisory committee that shall
provide the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of Defense, through the
Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness (hereafter
referred to as ``the Under Secretary of Defense''), and the Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, independent advice and
recommendations on matters pertaining to:
a. DoD healthcare policy and program management;
b. Health research programs;
c. Requirements for the treatment and prevention of disease and
injury by DoD;
d. Promotion of health and the delivery of efficient, effective and
high quality health care services to DoD beneficiaries; and
e. Other matters of special interest to DoD, as determined by the
Secretary of Defense, the Deputy Secretary of Defense or the Under
Secretary.
The Board is not established to provide advice on individual DoD
procurements, but instead shall be concerned with the DoD healthcare
issues facing the Department of Defense in the areas referenced above.
No matter shall be assigned to the Board for its consideration that
would require any Board member to participate personally and
substantially in the conduct of any specific procurement or place him
or her in the position of acting as a contracting or procurement
official.
The Board shall be composed of not more than 19 members who are
appointed by the Secretary of Defense. The members shall be eminent
authorities in one or more of the following disciplines: clinical
health care, disease and injury prevention, health care delivery and
administration, or strategic decision-making in government, industry,
or academia.
Board members shall be appointed by the Secretary of Defense and
their appointments will be renewed on an annual basis according to DoD
policy and procedures. Board members who are not full-time or permanent
part-time Federal employees shall be appointed to serve as experts and
consultants under the authority of 5 U.S.C. 3109 and serve as special
government employees. Each Board member is appointed to provide advice
on behalf of the government on the basis of his or her best judgment
without representing any particular point of view and in a manner that
is free from conflict of interest. With the exception of travel and per
diem for official travel, Board members shall serve without
compensation.
The Secretary of Defense may approve the appointment of Board
members for one-to-four year terms of service, with annual renewals;
however, no member, unless authorized by the Secretary of Defense, may
serve more than two consecutive terms of service on the Board. This
same term of service limitation also applies to any DoD authorized
Subcommittee of the Board.
Appointments will normally be staggered among the Board membership
to ensure an orderly turnover in the Board's overall composition on a
periodic basis. Regular government officers or employees who
participate in DoD's decision-making process for this Board are
prohibited from serving on the Board or its subcommittees.
The Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Under Secretary
of Defense, shall appoint the Board's President. The Under Secretary of
Defense shall appoint the Vice President. The Under Secretary of
Defense, pursuant to DoD policies and procedures, may appoint, as
deemed necessary, non-voting experts and consultants, with special
expertise, to assist the Board on an ad hoc basis. These experts and
consultants, if not full-time or part-time government employees, shall
be appointed under the authority of 5 U.S.C. 3109, shall serve as
special government employees, shall be appointed on an intermittent
basis to work specific Board-related efforts, and shall have no voting
rights. Non-voting experts and consultants appointed by the Under
Secretary of Defense shall not count toward the Board's total
membership, and shall not engage in Board deliberations.
The Department, when necessary, and consistent with the Board's
mission and DoD policies/procedures, may establish subcommittees, task
groups, and working groups to support the Board. Establishment of
subcommittees will be based upon a written determination, to include
terms of reference, by the Secretary of Defense, the Deputy Secretary
of Defense, or the Board's sponsor.
Such Subcommittees shall not work independently of the chartered
Board, and shall report all of their recommendations and advice solely
to the Board for full deliberation and discussion. Subcommittees have
no authority to make decisions and recommendations, verbally or in
writing, on behalf of the chartered Board; nor can any Subcommittee or
its members update or report directly to the DoD or any Federal
officers or employees.
All Subcommittee members shall be appointed in the same manner as
the Board members; that is, the Secretary of Defense shall appoint
Subcommittee members even if the member in question is already a Board
member.
[[Page 66444]]
Subcommittee members, with the approval of the Secretary of Defense,
may serve a term of service on the Subcommittee of one-to-four years;
however, no member shall serve more than two consecutive terms of
service on the subcommittee.
Subcommittee members, if not full-time or part-time government
employees, shall be appointed to serve as experts and consultants under
the authority of 5 U.S.C. 3109, and shall serve as special government
employees, whose appointments must be renewed by the Secretary of
Defense on an annual basis. With the exception of travel and per diem
for official Board related travel, Subcommittee members shall serve
without compensation.
Each Subcommittee member is appointed to provide advice on behalf
of the government on the basis of his or her best judgment without
representing any particular point of view and in a manner that is free
from conflict of interest.
All Subcommittees operate under the provisions of FACA, the
Sunshine Act, governing Federal statutes and regulations, and governing
DoD policies/procedures.
Currently, DoD has approved the following permanent subcommittees
to the Defense Health Board.
a. Public Health Subcommittee: This Subcommittee shall be composed
of not more than 10 members who are eminent authorities in at least one
of the following disciplines: Infectious Disease; Occupational Health/
Medicine; Preventive Medicine; Public Health; and Toxicology.
The Subcommittee, when tasked according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to improving the overall health
of members of the Armed Forces and their families through the
evaluation of DoD public health programs and initiatives including
education, health promotion and prevention activities, as well as
disease and injury prevention research.
b. Health Care Delivery Subcommittee: This Subcommittee shall be
composed of not more than nine members who are eminent authorities in
at least one of the following disciplines: Health Care Academia; Health
Care Finance/Economics; Health Care Policy/Executive Leadership; and
Patient Care.
The Subcommittee, when tasked according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to health care delivery, to
include DoD health care policy and program management, and research.
c. Neurological/Behavioral Health Subcommittee: This Subcommittee
shall be composed of not more than 10 members who are eminent
authorities in at least one of the following disciplines: Neurology;
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; Psychiatry; Psychology; and Traumatic
Brain Injury.
The Subcommittee, when tasked according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to psychological/mental health
issues and neurological symptoms or conditions among members of the
Armed Forces and their families.
d. Medical Ethics Subcommittee: This Subcommittee shall be composed
of not more than five members who are eminent authorities in at least
one of the following disciplines: Clergy, DoD leadership, Human
Research Protection, attorneys with expertise in medical ethics, and
Military Health System beneficiaries. One member must have formal
bioethics or medical ethics training or experience.
The Subcommittee, when tasked according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to medical ethics.
e. Trauma and Injury Subcommittee: This Subcommittee shall be
composed of not more than 10 members who are eminent authorities in at
least one of the following disciplines: civilian or military trauma
medicine systems.
The Subcommittee, when tasked according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining to trauma and injury, to include
methods for prevention, recognition, clinical management, and
treatment. It is the parent Subcommittee of the Committee on Tactical
Combat Casualty Care.
f. Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care: The Committee on
Tactical Combat Casualty Care is a permanent work group of the Trauma
and Injury Subcommittee and shall be composed of not more than 31
members who are physicians, nurses, physician assistants, or combat
medics with experience in at least one of the following: military
trauma medicine or systems; or tactical combat casualty care.
The Subcommittee, when tasked according to DoD policy/procedures,
provides advice on matters pertaining in-theater care in the tactical
environment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jim Freeman, Advisory Committee
Management Officer for the Department of Defense, 703-692-5952.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Board's DFO, pursuant to DoD policy,
shall be a full-time or permanent part-time DoD employee, and shall be
appointed in accordance with established DoD policies and procedures.
In addition, the Board's DFO is required to be in attendance at all
Board and Subcommittee meetings for the entire duration of each and
every meeting. However, in the absence of the Board's DFO, a properly
approved Alternate DFO, duly appointed to the Board according to DoD
policies/procedures, shall attend the entire duration of the Board or
Subcommittee meeting. The DFO, or the Alternate DFO, shall call all of
the Board's and Subcommittee's meetings; prepare and approve all
meeting agendas; adjourn any meeting, when the DFO, or the Alternate
DFO, determines adjournment to be in the public interest or required by
governing regulations or DoD policies/procedures; and chair meetings
when directed to do so by the official to whom the Board reports.
Pursuant to 41 CFR 102-3.105(j) and 102-3.140, the public or
interested organizations may submit written statements to the Defense
Health Board's membership about the Board's mission and functions.
Written statements may be submitted at any time or in response to the
stated agenda of planned meeting of Defense Health Board.
All written statements shall be submitted to the Designated Federal
Officer for the Defense Health Board, and this individual will ensure
that the written statements are provided to the membership for their
consideration. Contact information for the Defense Health Board's
Designated Federal Officer can be obtained from the GSA's FACA
Database--https://www.fido.gov/facadatabase/public.asp.
The Designated Federal Officer, pursuant to 41 CFR 102-3.150, will
announce planned meetings of the Defense Health Board. The Designated
Federal Officer, at that time, may provide additional guidance on the
submission of written statements that are in response to the stated
agenda for the planned meeting in question.
Dated: October 31, 2012.
Aaron Siegel,
Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison Officer, Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2012-26911 Filed 11-2-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001-06-P