World Trade Center Health Program; Petition 004-Cardiovascular Disease; Finding of Insufficient Evidence, 25766-25767 [2014-10434]
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25766
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
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§ 165.T07–0165 Safety Zones; July 4th
Fireworks Displays within the Captain of the
Port Miami Zone, FL.
(a) Regulated Areas. The following
regulated areas are safety zones. All
coordinates are North American Datum
1983.
(1) Stuart, FL. All waters within a 400
yard radius around the barge from
which the fireworks will be launched,
located on the St. Lucie River north of
City Hall at approximate position
27°12′09″ N, 80°14′20″ W.
(2) West Palm Beach, FL. All waters
within a 300 yard radius around the
barge from which the fireworks will be
launched, located on the Intracoastal
Waterway north of the Royal Palm
Bridge at approximate position
26°42′36″ N, 80°02′45″ W.
(3) Miami, FL. All waters within a 400
yard radius around the barge from
which the fireworks will be launched,
located on the waters of Biscayne Bay
east of Bayfront Park at approximate
position 25°46′30″ N, 80°10′56″ W.
(b) Definition. The term ‘‘designated
representative’’ means Coast Guard
Patrol Commanders, including Coast
Guard coxswains, petty officers, and
other officers operating Coast Guard
vessels, and Federal, state, and local
officers designated by or assisting the
Captain of the Port Miami in the
enforcement of the regulated areas.
(c) Regulations.
(1) All non-participant persons and
vessels are prohibited from entering,
transiting through, anchoring in or
remaining within the safety zones
unless authorized by the Captain of the
Port Miami or a designated
representative.
(2) Non-participant persons and
vessels desiring to enter, transit through,
anchor in, or remain within a regulated
area may contact the Captain of the Port
Miami by telephone at 305–535–4472,
or a designated representative via VHF
radio on channel 16. If authorization to
enter, transit through, anchor in, or
remain within a regulated area is
granted by the Captain of the Port
Miami or a designated representative,
all persons and vessels receiving such
authorization must comply with the
instructions of the Captain of the Port
Miami or a designated representative.
(3) The Coast Guard will provide
notice of the safety zones by Local
Notice to Mariners, Broadcast Notice to
Mariners, and on-scene designated
representatives.
(d) Effective Date. This rule is
effective on July 4, 2014. This rule will
be enforced from 8:30 p.m. until 10:15
p.m. on July 4, 2014.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:56 May 05, 2014
Jkt 232001
Dated: April 10, 2014.
A.J. Gould,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Miami.
[FR Doc. 2014–10270 Filed 5–5–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
42 CFR Part 88
World Trade Center Health Program;
Petition 004—Cardiovascular Disease;
Finding of Insufficient Evidence
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, HHS.
ACTION: Denial of petition for addition of
a health condition.
AGENCY:
On March 7, 2014, the
Administrator of the World Trade
Center (WTC) Health Program received
a petition (Petition 004) to add ‘‘heart
attack,’’ which the Administrator has
interpreted to mean ‘‘cardiovascular
disease,’’ to the List of WTC-Related
Health Conditions (List). Upon
reviewing the scientific and medical
literature, including information
provided by the petitioner, the
Administrator has determined that the
available evidence does not have the
potential to provide a basis for a
decision on whether to add
cardiovascular disease to the List. The
Administrator finds that insufficient
evidence exists to request a
recommendation of the WTC Health
Program Scientific/Technical Advisory
Committee (STAC), to publish a
proposed rule, or to publish a
determination not to publish a proposed
rule.
DATES: The Administrator of the WTC
Health Program is denying this petition
for the addition of a health condition as
of May 6, 2014.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rachel Weiss, Program Analyst, 4674
Columbia Parkway, MS: C–46,
Cincinnati, OH 45226; telephone (855)
818–1629 (this is a toll-free number);
email NIOSHregs@cdc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
A. WTC Health Program Statutory
Authority
Title I of the James Zadroga 9/11
Health and Compensation Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111–347), amended the Public
Health Service Act (PHS Act) to add
Title XXXIII 1 establishing the WTC
1 Title
XXXIII of the PHS Act is codified at 42
U.S.C. 300mm to 300mm-61. Those portions of the
Zadroga Act found in Titles II and III of Public Law
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Health Program within the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
The WTC Health Program provides
medical monitoring and treatment
benefits to eligible firefighters and
related personnel, law enforcement
officers, and rescue, recovery, and
cleanup workers (responders) who
responded to the September 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks in New York City, at the
Pentagon, and in Shanksville,
Pennsylvania, and to eligible persons
(survivors) who were present in the dust
or dust cloud on September 11, 2001 or
who worked, resided, or attended
school, childcare, or adult daycare in
the New York City disaster area.
All references to the Administrator of
the WTC Health Program
(Administrator) in this notice mean the
Director of the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) or his or her designee.
Pursuant to section 3312(a)(6)(B) of
the PHS Act, interested parties may
petition the Administrator to add a
health condition to the List in 42 CFR
88.1. Within 60 calendar days after
receipt of a petition to add a condition
to the List, the Administrator must take
one of the following four actions
described in section 3312(a)(6)(B) and
42 CFR 88.17: (i) Request a
recommendation of the STAC; (ii)
publish a proposed rule in the Federal
Register to add such health condition;
(iii) publish in the Federal Register the
Administrator’s determination not to
publish such a proposed rule and the
basis for such determination; or (iv)
publish in the Federal Register a
determination that insufficient evidence
exists to take action under (i) through
(iii) above.
B. Petition 004
On March 7, 2014, the Administrator
received a petition to add ‘‘heart attack’’
to the List (Petition 004).2 The petition
was submitted by a WTC Health
Program member who responded to the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in
New York City. The petitioner indicated
that he has been diagnosed with a
number of WTC-related health
conditions, and has suffered a heart
attack. Also included in his petition was
a press release published by the New
York City Department of Health and
Mental Hygiene describing a WTC
Health Registry study authored by
Hannah T. Jordan et al. and published
111–347 do not pertain to the WTC Health Program
and are codified elsewhere.
2 See Petition 004. WTC Health Program: Petitions
Received. https://www.cdc.gov/wtc/received.html.
E:\FR\FM\06MYP1.SGM
06MYP1
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 87 / Tuesday, May 6, 2014 / Proposed Rules
in the Journal of the American Heart
Association on October 24, 2013.3
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
C. Administrator’s Determination on
Petition 004
The Administrator has established a
methodology for evaluating whether to
add non-cancer health conditions to the
List of WTC-Related Health Conditions.4
A health condition may be added to the
List if published, peer-reviewed
epidemiologic evidence provides
substantial support for a causal
relationship between 9/11 exposures
and the health condition in 9/11exposed populations.5 If the
epidemiologic evidence provides
modest support for a causal relationship
between 9/11 exposures and the health
condition, the Administrator may then
evaluate studies of associations between
the health condition and 9/11 agents in
similarly-exposed populations.6 If that
additional assessment establishes
substantial support for a causal
relationship between a 9/11 agent or
agents and the health condition, the
health condition may be added to the
List.
In accordance with section
3312(a)(6)(B) of the PHS Act, 42 CFR
88.17, and the methodology for the
addition of non-cancer health
conditions, the Administrator reviewed
the evidence presented in Petition 004.
Although the petitioner requested the
addition of ‘‘heart attack,’’ the
Administrator determined that the more
appropriate health condition is
‘‘cardiovascular disease,’’ which
includes heart attack, acute or chronic
coronary artery disease, cardiac
arrhythmia, angina, and any other heart
condition. The Administrator then
selected a team under the direction of
the WTC Health Program Associate
Director for Science (ADS) to perform a
systematic literature search and provide
3 Jordan HT, Stellman SD, Morabia A, MillerArchie SA, Alper H, Laskaris Z, Brackbill RM, and
Cone JE [2013] Cardiovascular disease
hospitalizations in relation to exposure to the
September 11, 2001 World Trade Center disaster
and posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of the
American Heart Association 2(5).
4 This methodology, ‘‘Policy and Procedures for
Adding Non-Cancer Conditions to the List of WTCRelated Health Conditions,’’ is available on the
WTC Health Program Web site, at https://
www.cdc.gov/wtc/policies.html.
5 The substantial evidence standard is met when
the Program assesses all of the available, relevant
information and determines with high confidence
that the evidence supports its findings regarding a
causal association between the 9/11 exposure(s) and
the health condition.
6 The modest evidence standard is met when the
Program assesses all of the available, relevant
information and determines with moderate
confidence that the evidence supports its findings
regarding a causal association between the 9/11
exposure(s) and the health condition.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:56 May 05, 2014
Jkt 232001
input on whether the available scientific
and medical information has the
potential to provide a basis for a
decision on whether to add the health
condition to the List. The ADS
conducted a search of the existing
scientific/medical literature for
epidemiologic evidence of a causal
relationship between 9/11 exposures
and cardiovascular disease. Among the
studies identified by the literature
search, four were found to be published,
peer-reviewed epidemiologic studies of
9/11-exposed populations.7 However,
when reviewed by the ADS for
relevance, quantity, and quality, each of
the four published, peer-reviewed
epidemiologic studies of 9/11-exposed
populations were found to have
significant limitations, both
individually and in combination.
Limitations of the four studies included
selection, recall, and confounding bias 8;
poor generalizability among all exposed
groups; and lack of consistency among
the associations reported between 9/11
exposures and cardiovascular disease
between studies. Thus, the ADS
concluded that the available
information did not have the potential
to form the basis for a decision on
whether to propose adding
cardiovascular disease to the List.
The findings described above led the
Administrator to determine that
insufficient evidence exists to take
further action, including either
proposing the addition of cardiovascular
disease to the List (pursuant to PHS Act,
section 3312(a)(6)(B)(ii) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(ii)) or publishing a
7 Jordan
HT, Brackbill RM, Cone JE,
Debchoudhury I, Farfel MR, Greene CM, Hadler JL,
Kennedy J, Li J, Liff J, Stayner L, Stellman SD
[2011]. Mortality among survivors of the Sept 11,
2001, World Trade Center disaster: results from the
World Trade Center Health Registry cohort. The
Lancet 378: 879–87; Jordan HT, Miller-Archie SA,
Cone JE, Morabia A, Stellman SD [2011]. Heart
disease among adults exposed to the September 11,
2001 World Trade Center disaster: Results from the
World Trade Center Health Registry. Preventive
Medicine 53:370–376; Jordan HT, Stellman SD,
Morabia A, Miller-Archie SA, Alper H, Laskaris Z,
Brackbill RM, Cone JE [2013]. Cardiovascular
Disease Hospitalizations in Relation to Exposure to
the September 11, 2001 World Trade Center
Disaster and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. J Am
Heart Assoc; Brackbill RM, Cone JE, Farfel MR,
Stellman SD [2014]. Chronic Physical Health
Consequences of Being Injured During the Terrorist
Attacks on World Trade Center on September 11,
2001. American Journal of Epidemiology. Advance
Access published February 20, 2014.
8 In this case, ‘‘selection bias’’ refers to study
populations that include individuals who were selfidentified as heart patients but whose reported
illness was not independently verified; ‘‘recall bias’’
refers to the inaccuracies or incompleteness
inherent in the self-reporting of 9/11-related health
conditions years after the event; and ‘‘confounding
bias’’ refers to the existence of risk factors for
cardiovascular disease that have not been
accounted for by study authors.
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
25767
determination not to publish a proposed
rule in the Federal Register (pursuant to
PHS Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(iii) and
42 CFR 88.17(a)(2)(iii)). The
Administrator has also determined that
requesting a recommendation from the
STAC (pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(i) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(i)) is unwarranted.
For the reasons discussed above, the
request made in Petition 004 to add
cardiovascular disease to the List of
WTC-Related Health Conditions is
denied.
Dated: May 1, 2014.
John Howard,
Administrator, World Trade Center Health
Program and Director, National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, Department
of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2014–10434 Filed 5–5–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Part 488
[CMS–1605–P]
RIN 0938–AS07
Medicare Program; Prospective
Payment System and Consolidated
Billing for Skilled Nursing Facilities for
FY 2015
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would
update the payment rates used under
the prospective payment system (PPS)
for skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) for
fiscal year (FY) 2015. In addition, it
includes a proposal to adopt the most
recent Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) statistical area
delineations to identify a facility’s urban
or rural status for the purpose of
determining which set of rate tables
would apply to the facility and to
determine the SNF PPS wage index
including a proposed one-year
transition with a blended wage index for
all providers for FY 2015. It also
includes a discussion of the SNF
therapy payment research currently
underway within CMS. This proposed
rule also proposes a revision to policies
related to the Change of Therapy (COT)
Other Medicare Required Assessment
(OMRA). This proposed rule includes a
discussion of a provision related to the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\06MYP1.SGM
06MYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 87 (Tuesday, May 6, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 25766-25767]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-10434]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
42 CFR Part 88
World Trade Center Health Program; Petition 004--Cardiovascular
Disease; Finding of Insufficient Evidence
AGENCY: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, HHS.
ACTION: Denial of petition for addition of a health condition.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On March 7, 2014, the Administrator of the World Trade Center
(WTC) Health Program received a petition (Petition 004) to add ``heart
attack,'' which the Administrator has interpreted to mean
``cardiovascular disease,'' to the List of WTC-Related Health
Conditions (List). Upon reviewing the scientific and medical
literature, including information provided by the petitioner, the
Administrator has determined that the available evidence does not have
the potential to provide a basis for a decision on whether to add
cardiovascular disease to the List. The Administrator finds that
insufficient evidence exists to request a recommendation of the WTC
Health Program Scientific/Technical Advisory Committee (STAC), to
publish a proposed rule, or to publish a determination not to publish a
proposed rule.
DATES: The Administrator of the WTC Health Program is denying this
petition for the addition of a health condition as of May 6, 2014.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rachel Weiss, Program Analyst, 4674
Columbia Parkway, MS: C-46, Cincinnati, OH 45226; telephone (855) 818-
1629 (this is a toll-free number); email NIOSHregs@cdc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. WTC Health Program Statutory Authority
Title I of the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111-347), amended the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act)
to add Title XXXIII \1\ establishing the WTC Health Program within the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The WTC Health Program
provides medical monitoring and treatment benefits to eligible
firefighters and related personnel, law enforcement officers, and
rescue, recovery, and cleanup workers (responders) who responded to the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York City, at the
Pentagon, and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, and to eligible persons
(survivors) who were present in the dust or dust cloud on September 11,
2001 or who worked, resided, or attended school, childcare, or adult
daycare in the New York City disaster area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Title XXXIII of the PHS Act is codified at 42 U.S.C. 300mm
to 300mm-61. Those portions of the Zadroga Act found in Titles II
and III of Public Law 111-347 do not pertain to the WTC Health
Program and are codified elsewhere.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All references to the Administrator of the WTC Health Program
(Administrator) in this notice mean the Director of the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) or his or her
designee.
Pursuant to section 3312(a)(6)(B) of the PHS Act, interested
parties may petition the Administrator to add a health condition to the
List in 42 CFR 88.1. Within 60 calendar days after receipt of a
petition to add a condition to the List, the Administrator must take
one of the following four actions described in section 3312(a)(6)(B)
and 42 CFR 88.17: (i) Request a recommendation of the STAC; (ii)
publish a proposed rule in the Federal Register to add such health
condition; (iii) publish in the Federal Register the Administrator's
determination not to publish such a proposed rule and the basis for
such determination; or (iv) publish in the Federal Register a
determination that insufficient evidence exists to take action under
(i) through (iii) above.
B. Petition 004
On March 7, 2014, the Administrator received a petition to add
``heart attack'' to the List (Petition 004).\2\ The petition was
submitted by a WTC Health Program member who responded to the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks in New York City. The petitioner indicated
that he has been diagnosed with a number of WTC-related health
conditions, and has suffered a heart attack. Also included in his
petition was a press release published by the New York City Department
of Health and Mental Hygiene describing a WTC Health Registry study
authored by Hannah T. Jordan et al. and published
[[Page 25767]]
in the Journal of the American Heart Association on October 24,
2013.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See Petition 004. WTC Health Program: Petitions Received.
https://www.cdc.gov/wtc/received.html.
\3\ Jordan HT, Stellman SD, Morabia A, Miller-Archie SA, Alper
H, Laskaris Z, Brackbill RM, and Cone JE [2013] Cardiovascular
disease hospitalizations in relation to exposure to the September
11, 2001 World Trade Center disaster and posttraumatic stress
disorder. Journal of the American Heart Association 2(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Administrator's Determination on Petition 004
The Administrator has established a methodology for evaluating
whether to add non-cancer health conditions to the List of WTC-Related
Health Conditions.\4\ A health condition may be added to the List if
published, peer-reviewed epidemiologic evidence provides substantial
support for a causal relationship between 9/11 exposures and the health
condition in 9/11-exposed populations.\5\ If the epidemiologic evidence
provides modest support for a causal relationship between 9/11
exposures and the health condition, the Administrator may then evaluate
studies of associations between the health condition and 9/11 agents in
similarly-exposed populations.\6\ If that additional assessment
establishes substantial support for a causal relationship between a 9/
11 agent or agents and the health condition, the health condition may
be added to the List.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ This methodology, ``Policy and Procedures for Adding Non-
Cancer Conditions to the List of WTC-Related Health Conditions,'' is
available on the WTC Health Program Web site, at https://www.cdc.gov/wtc/policies.html.
\5\ The substantial evidence standard is met when the Program
assesses all of the available, relevant information and determines
with high confidence that the evidence supports its findings
regarding a causal association between the 9/11 exposure(s) and the
health condition.
\6\ The modest evidence standard is met when the Program
assesses all of the available, relevant information and determines
with moderate confidence that the evidence supports its findings
regarding a causal association between the 9/11 exposure(s) and the
health condition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with section 3312(a)(6)(B) of the PHS Act, 42 CFR
88.17, and the methodology for the addition of non-cancer health
conditions, the Administrator reviewed the evidence presented in
Petition 004. Although the petitioner requested the addition of ``heart
attack,'' the Administrator determined that the more appropriate health
condition is ``cardiovascular disease,'' which includes heart attack,
acute or chronic coronary artery disease, cardiac arrhythmia, angina,
and any other heart condition. The Administrator then selected a team
under the direction of the WTC Health Program Associate Director for
Science (ADS) to perform a systematic literature search and provide
input on whether the available scientific and medical information has
the potential to provide a basis for a decision on whether to add the
health condition to the List. The ADS conducted a search of the
existing scientific/medical literature for epidemiologic evidence of a
causal relationship between 9/11 exposures and cardiovascular disease.
Among the studies identified by the literature search, four were found
to be published, peer-reviewed epidemiologic studies of 9/11-exposed
populations.\7\ However, when reviewed by the ADS for relevance,
quantity, and quality, each of the four published, peer-reviewed
epidemiologic studies of 9/11-exposed populations were found to have
significant limitations, both individually and in combination.
Limitations of the four studies included selection, recall, and
confounding bias \8\; poor generalizability among all exposed groups;
and lack of consistency among the associations reported between 9/11
exposures and cardiovascular disease between studies. Thus, the ADS
concluded that the available information did not have the potential to
form the basis for a decision on whether to propose adding
cardiovascular disease to the List.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Jordan HT, Brackbill RM, Cone JE, Debchoudhury I, Farfel MR,
Greene CM, Hadler JL, Kennedy J, Li J, Liff J, Stayner L, Stellman
SD [2011]. Mortality among survivors of the Sept 11, 2001, World
Trade Center disaster: results from the World Trade Center Health
Registry cohort. The Lancet 378: 879-87; Jordan HT, Miller-Archie
SA, Cone JE, Morabia A, Stellman SD [2011]. Heart disease among
adults exposed to the September 11, 2001 World Trade Center
disaster: Results from the World Trade Center Health Registry.
Preventive Medicine 53:370-376; Jordan HT, Stellman SD, Morabia A,
Miller-Archie SA, Alper H, Laskaris Z, Brackbill RM, Cone JE [2013].
Cardiovascular Disease Hospitalizations in Relation to Exposure to
the September 11, 2001 World Trade Center Disaster and Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder. J Am Heart Assoc; Brackbill RM, Cone JE, Farfel MR,
Stellman SD [2014]. Chronic Physical Health Consequences of Being
Injured During the Terrorist Attacks on World Trade Center on
September 11, 2001. American Journal of Epidemiology. Advance Access
published February 20, 2014.
\8\ In this case, ``selection bias'' refers to study populations
that include individuals who were self-identified as heart patients
but whose reported illness was not independently verified; ``recall
bias'' refers to the inaccuracies or incompleteness inherent in the
self-reporting of 9/11-related health conditions years after the
event; and ``confounding bias'' refers to the existence of risk
factors for cardiovascular disease that have not been accounted for
by study authors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The findings described above led the Administrator to determine
that insufficient evidence exists to take further action, including
either proposing the addition of cardiovascular disease to the List
(pursuant to PHS Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(ii) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(ii)) or publishing a determination not to publish a
proposed rule in the Federal Register (pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(iii) and 42 CFR 88.17(a)(2)(iii)). The Administrator has
also determined that requesting a recommendation from the STAC
(pursuant to PHS Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(i) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(i)) is unwarranted.
For the reasons discussed above, the request made in Petition 004
to add cardiovascular disease to the List of WTC-Related Health
Conditions is denied.
Dated: May 1, 2014.
John Howard,
Administrator, World Trade Center Health Program and Director, National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2014-10434 Filed 5-5-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163-18-P