Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 17452-17459 [2015-07348]
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of one felony count under Federal law
for conduct relating to the importation
into the United States of an article of
food and that he is subject to a 4-year
period of debarment.
As a result of the foregoing finding,
Jun Yang is debarred for a period of 4
years from importing articles of food or
offering such articles for import into the
United States, effective (see DATES).
Pursuant to section 301(cc) of the FD&C
Act (21 U.S.C. 331(cc)), the importing or
offering for import into the United
States of an article of food by, with the
assistance of, or at the direction of Jun
Yang is a prohibited act.
Any application by Mr. Yang for
termination of debarment under section
306(d)(1) of the FD&C Act should be
identified with Docket No. FDA–2014–
N–0964 and sent to the Division of
Dockets Management (see ADDRESSES).
All such submissions are to be filed in
four copies. The public availability of
information in these submissions is
governed by 21 CFR 10.20(j).
Publicly available submissions may
be seen in the Division of Dockets
Management between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
Dated: March 26, 2015.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–07439 Filed 3–31–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
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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 80 FR 1417–1419, dated
January 9, 2015) is amended to reflect
the reorganization of the Office of Public
Health Scientific Services, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
Section C–B, Organization and
Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the title and
functions statements for the Health
Information Technology and
Surveillance Strategy Unit (CPA3),
Office of the Director (CPA),
Delete in its entirety the title and the
mission and function statements for the
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Center for Surveillance, Epidemiology
and Laboratory Services (CPN) and
insert the following:
Center for Surveillance, Epidemiology
and Laboratory Services (CPN) The
mission of the Center for Surveillance,
Epidemiology, and Laboratory Services
(CSELS) is to provide scientific service,
expertise, skills, and tools in support of
CDC’s efforts to promote health; prevent
disease, injury and disability; and
prepare for emerging health threats.
CSELS focuses on improving
information and data quality, laboratory
systems, and the public health
workforce, through modernization,
innovation, and service. To carry out its
mission, CSELS (1) leads and executes
a national public health surveillance
strategy for human health that builds
upon current resources, establishes
priorities for the nation’s nextgeneration capability and provides
timely, comprehensive, and accessible
information to strengthen public health
practice, and provide value to
clinicians; (2) participates in the
identification, development, evolution,
and adoption of informatics standards;
(3) facilitates and coordinates program
and laboratory systems integration for
the Agency; (4) provides leadership and
support to strengthen the quality and
safety of laboratory practices; (5)
provides leadership for scientific
workforce education and advances
professional development; (6) provides
leadership on public health genomics
strategy, activities, and planning; (7)
creates and promotes access to quality,
timely and useful cross-cutting
scientific guidance, products, and
services to strengthen the science and
practice of public health and to improve
public health decision-making.
Office of the Director (CPN1). (1)
Provides strategic direction regarding
surveillance, epidemiologic
investigation, and data and information
sciences; (2) supports OPHSS’s CDCwide coordination and strategic
activities in areas of health informatics
technology, including the meaningful
use of electronic health records for
public health surveillance and the
coordination of partners and
stakeholders for biosurveillance,
genomics, and publication science; (3)
leads the development of public health
workforce training; (4) guides the
development of laboratory systems
standards for quality and safety,
including the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments (CLIA) and
engagement with relevant federal
advisory committees; (5) manages,
directs, coordinates, and evaluates the
activities of the Center; (6) defines goals
and objectives for policy formation,
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scientific oversight, and guidance in
program planning and development; (7)
establishes and implements a
communications strategy in support of
CSELS overarching goals and priorities;
(8) provides oversight for the evaluation
of programmatic performance of all
CSELS activities to ensure health
impact; (9) plans, coordinates, and
manages all aspects of program business
services including human and fiscal
resources, extramural activities, space,
and all administrative services; (10)
devises information technology
practices and procedures, and provides
direction, innovation, planning and
evaluation for information technology
systems, services, security, and
resources for CSELS; (11) provides
leadership on issues management,
budget formulation and performance
integration; (12) manages intergovernmental and external affairs and
cultivates strategic partnerships; (13)
ensures scientific quality, integrity, and
clearance across the Center; (14)
provides guidance and strategic
oversight to the processes within the
Center that access, collect, manage,
analyze, and visualize data, including
assistance for involvement with federal
advisory committees and other high
level groups; (15) monitors projects for
effective focus on the analytical,
informatics, data management, and
statistical infrastructure to deliver
quality data, accurate analysis services
and dependable software products and
systems to customers and partners; (16)
collaborates and consults with other
Centers, working groups, state and local
health departments, other federal
agencies, and other partners, to
accomplish the mission of the Center;
(17) reviews, prepares, coordinates, and
develops Congressional testimony and
briefing materials; and (18) represents
the CSELS and at times CDC at
professional and scientific meetings,
within and outside CDC.
Division of Laboratory Systems
(CPNB). The mission of the Division of
Laboratory Systems (DLS) is to provide
leadership, support, and cross-cutting
services to continually strengthen the
capability, sustainability, and quality of
laboratory science, policy, and practice
at CDC, in clinical and public health
laboratories, both in the United States
and with international partners. DLS
strives to strengthen and align the
capacity and ability of both clinical and
public health laboratories to perform
their critical roles in protecting the
public’s health. In this mission, DLS: (1)
Fosters collaboration across the
laboratory community; (2) strengthens
integration of laboratory science,
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practice, and informatics into public
health and patient care; (3) develops
and advances the use of standards,
policies, and guidelines to ensure safe
and accurate laboratory performance
and strong laboratory systems; (4)
conducts studies to evaluate and
improve the quality of laboratory
practices and services; (5) strengthens
the laboratory workforce; and (6)
enhances the efficiency, effectiveness,
capacity and capability of the public
health laboratory system through
integration of CDC program support.
Office of the Director (CPNB1). (1)
Provides leadership and guidance for
strategic planning and implementation,
establishes goals and program priorities,
and engages in policy development to
advance the mission of the Division, the
Center, and CDC; (2) directs and
provides public health vision for
laboratory practices and systems; (3)
contributes to national cross-cutting
efforts to standardize and accelerate
electronic reporting of laboratory results
to improve patient care and public
health surveillance; (4) provides
leadership, oversight, and guidance in
the business management and
operations, including budget
formulation and planning, of the
Division of Laboratory Systems (DLS)
programs; (5) directs, applies, and
translates research and evaluation
initiatives for laboratory practices,
standards, and services; (6) oversees
laboratory specimen management
policies and the CDC/ATSDR Specimen
Packaging, Inventory, and Repository
(CASPIR); (7) oversees, manages, and
supports the CLIA program and relevant
federal advisory committees; (8)
collaborates with the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
and the Food and Drug Administration
in the CLIA program; (9) coordinates
CDC efforts to support state and local
public health laboratories in promoting
sustainability of national testing
services and capacity; (10) coordinates
CDC’s interaction with other
government agencies; (11) performs
scientific review and clearance for
Division publications, presentations,
and reports; (12) assists in the
management the information collection
and training to support the reporting
and the implementation of CDC various
regulatory requirements; (13) assist the
agency in the development and
management of laboratory domains for
various trainings and fellowships; (14)
provides communications, web support,
responses to media requests, and
Division communication outreach
efforts; (15) advises the Center OD on
matters relating to laboratory practice
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and coordinates Division responses to
requests for technical assistance or
information about activities supported
by the Division; (16) reviews, prepares,
coordinates, and develops
Congressional testimony and briefing
materials; and (17) represents the
Division and at times CSELS or CDC at
professional and scientific meetings,
within and outside CDC.
Laboratory Training and Services
Branch (CPNBC). (1) Provides advanced
laboratory training to maintain a
competent, prepared, and sustainable
national and global laboratory workforce
for testing of public health importance;
(2) engages agency and laboratory
community experts to collaboratively
develop effective training products
which incorporate safety and quality
laboratory practices; (3) assesses,
designs, develops, and implements
effective needs-based training pertaining
to clinical and public health laboratory
methodology, technology, safety and
practice; (4) evaluates the efficiency and
effectiveness of public health laboratory
education and training for state and
local public health, clinical, uniformed
service, CDC, and other federal agency
laboratory professionals; (5) evaluates
the effectiveness and measures the
outcomes of all training to ensure
quality and safety; (6) provides
oversight and management for CDC/
ATSDR Specimen Packaging, Inventory,
and Repository (CASPIR); (7) provides
services for the safe storage, cataloging,
assembly and shipping of isolates,
panels, and other reference materials;
(8) provides informatics support and
project management for the specimen
inventory management system and other
databases related to public health
laboratory services; and (9) evaluates the
effectiveness of the branch’s scientific
support services and products to its
customers.
Laboratory Practice Standards Branch
(CPNBD). (1) Provides technical
expertise and support for oversight and
implementation of the CLIA program
and relevant federal advisory
committees; (2) develops laboratory
practice standards and guidelines, and
assists with their adoption and
validation; (3) supplies technical
assistance and review of laboratory
accreditation, state licensure programs,
and proficiency testing programs; (4)
provides scientific consultation for
inquiries about testing complexity,
personnel qualifications, quality control
and quality assessment, and proficiency
testing; (5) evaluates the applicability of
federal quality standards to new
laboratory technologies and establishes
new alternative quality assurance
measures; (6) interprets and assists the
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implementation of CLIA regulations; (7)
collaborates to develop standards and
guidance for laboratory information
management in electronic health
records and laboratory reporting for
CDC’s surveillance strategy; (8) supports
the Clinical Laboratory Improvement
Advisory Committee, its subcommittees,
and workgroups; (9) provides scientific
support for issues related to the
development and implementation of
cytology and related pathology
standards; (10) assists in the
development and review of laboratory
performance standards and guidelines;
and (11) disseminates information about
laboratory standards and practices.
Laboratory Research and Evaluation
Branch (CPNBE). (1) Encourages
establishment and adoption of
performance standards and guidelines
for laboratory practice; (2) develops,
evaluates, and implements systems for
measuring and assessing laboratory
quality; (3) facilitates and conducts
research and demonstration projects to
support the scientific development of
performance standards and guidelines,
evaluation systems, and regulatory
standards; and assesses the efficacy of
established standards; (4) develops,
promotes, implements, and evaluates
intervention strategies to improve
general performance deficiencies in
health laboratory systems and worker
competencies; (5) provides a forum for
exchange of information about
laboratory practice and research and
development activities to promote the
coordination of federal, state, and
clinical laboratory improvement efforts;
(6) coordinates and conducts activities
that provide technical and scientific
support to CMS in its evaluation,
development, and revision of standards
and guidelines; (7) evaluates current
and emerging practices and provides
guidance to ensure and promote quality
in the application of advanced
molecular technologies; (8) evaluates
emerging technology and the impact on
clinical and public health laboratory
practice; (9) collaborates with other CDC
genomics programs, including the Office
of Public Health Genomics, for broad
genomics policy initiatives; and (10)
collaborates in the development of
standards and guidance for laboratory
information management in electronic
health records in support of CLIA
objectives and electronic laboratory
reporting to support CDC’s surveillance
strategy.
Division of Public Health Information
and Dissemination (CPNC). The primary
mission of the Division of Public Health
Information and Dissemination (DPHID)
is to serve as a hub for scientific
publications, information and library
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sciences, systematic reviews and
recommendations, and public health
genomics, thereby collaborating with
CDC CIOs and the public health
community in producing,
disseminating, and implementing
evidence-based and actionable
information to strengthen public health
science and improve public health
decision-making.
In carrying out its mission, DPHID: (1)
Provides leadership and overall
direction for the execution of programs
that produce scientific publications,
strengthen public health science, and
provide access to scientific research and
innovative products for improving
population health and public health
decision making; (2) identifies what
works in community preventive services
and collaborates with CDC and the
public health community to educate and
encourage action to improve public
health; (3) serves as a hub of research,
information exchange, and learning for
the CDC and the public health
community; (4) provides access to
scientific literature and systematic
review support; (5) sets and ensures
adherence to quality standards for
manuscripts, reports, and other
scientific products; (6) develops
curriculum, training, and consultation
services for CDC and other federal and
non-federal partners to foster the
development of skills in publication of
public health information, systematic
reviews, library sciences, and
information literacy; (7) presents a
selection of public health genomic
approaches, studies, and lessons learned
from efforts to build greater program
collaboration and service integration; (8)
advances the field of public health
informatics for CSELS and the Agency
through applied research and
innovation; and (9) through strategic
communications, fosters collaboration
with CIOs across CDC and the public
health community to encourage dialog
about actions that can be taken to
improve the quality of science and
public health decision making.
Office of the Director (CPNC1). (1)
Provides leadership and strategic
direction on program priority setting to
advance the mission of the Division,
Center and CDC to achieve critical
public health outcomes; (2) advises
CSELS OD on matters relating to
genomics, systematic reviews and
recommendations, information and
library sciences, scientific publications,
dissemination and implementation, and
informatics innovation; (3) defines goals
and objectives for policy formation,
scientific oversight, and guidance in
program planning and development; (4)
develops budgets, allocates resources,
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monitors progress, and reports
accomplishments, future directions, and
resource requirements; (5) establishes
and implements a communications
strategy in support of the Division’s
overarching goals and priorities; (6)
fosters engagement, collaboration, and
strategic partnerships with CDC
Programs, other federal agencies, and
with the public health community in
support of Division and Center
priorities; (7) oversees and coordinates
proactive and reactive issues
management related to Division
programs; (8) provides oversight for the
evaluation of programmatic
performance of all Division activities to
ensure health impact; (9) ensures
scientific quality and integrity across
the Division; (10) performs scientific
review and clearance and may provide
direct managerial and editorial oversight
for Division publications, presentations,
and reports; (11) collaborates with
CSELS OD and Division programs to
ensure adherence to information
technology standards, procedures and
requirements; (12) provides Divisionlevel oversight to management,
administration, human resources,
business, extramural, space, and
support services, and coordinates with
relevant offices and programs on
administrative matters; (13) reviews,
prepares, coordinates, and develops
Congressional testimony and briefing
materials; and (14) represents the
Division and at times CSELS or CDC at
professional and scientific meetings,
within and outside CDC.
Informatics Innovation Unit (CPNC12)
(1) Advances the field of public health
informatics for CSELS and the Agency
through applied research and
innovation; (2) collaborates with CDC
programs and the broader public health
community to develop innovative
technologies and techniques to
positively impact public health practice;
(3) transitions new informatics
solutions, standards, and techniques to
public health programs for deployment
and implementation; (4) provides CDC
and its external research and public
health partners with consultation,
evaluation, guidance, and support in the
use of new informatics solutions for
public health practice; (5) leverages its
resources to rapidly create prototypes,
conduct pilot projects, and examine and
test hypotheses generated by CSELS,
CDC, and its external partners to
support innovative public health
informatics solutions; (6) provides CDC,
and its external partners an optimal (i.e.,
flexible and scalable) environment for
the rapid development of prototype and
pilot public health informatics solutions
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for collaboration, testing and evaluation
purposes; (7) participates and represents
CSELS within innovation committees,
workgroups, organizations, and
councils, within CDC and with other
federal agencies as well; (8) facilitates
public health informatics innovation
within the Agency and the public health
community, through partner outreach
and collaboration, using crowdfunding,
challenge grants, and other novel cost
efficient mechanisms; (9) disseminates
relevant knowledge to CDC and its
partners via presentations, manuscripts,
web-based content and other modalities;
(10) provides education to fellows,
colleagues, and partners on emerging
informatics tools, techniques, and
methodologies; and (11) provides
regular updates to CSELS leadership as
to the status of all projects in the
technology laboratory.
Office of Public Health Genomics
(CPNC13). The Office of Public Health
Genomics is charged with identifying
opportunities for genomics to improve
health and transform health care,
informing CDC and partners about
evidence-based genomic applications to
impact health, and integrating evidencebased genomic applications into
practice and programs—including
pathogen genomics (advanced
molecular detection), genomic markers
for birth defects, reproductive health,
child health, chronic disease as well as
environmental and occupational
exposures. To accomplish these aims,
the Office (1) integrates advances in
pathogen and human (e.g., birth defects)
genomics responsibly and effectively
into health care and disease prevention;
(2) provides technical assistance and
advice to CDC leadership and programs,
other federal agencies, state health
departments, and other external
partners by identifying, evaluating, and
implementing evidence-based genomics
practices to prevent and control the
country’s leading chronic, infectious,
environmental, and occupational
diseases; (3) supports policy, education,
and surveillance frameworks to promote
effective implementation of evidencebased recommendations for genomic
tests and family health history
applications that can save lives now, as
well as those applications that will
emerge in the next decade and beyond;
(4) fosters public health genomics
programs at the state and national level
by providing ongoing consultation and
tools to state health departments, CDC
programs, and other stakeholders to
share successful approaches to promote
the optimal use of genomic tests; (5)
evaluates emerging genomic
applications with the potential to
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impact population health; (6) supports
the evaluation of genomic applications
in the development of an evidence
framework for introducing whole
genome sequencing into practice,
assessing the role of genomics and
family history in recommendations for
chronic disease; (7) identifies new
emerging genomic applications with the
potential to impact population health
through horizon scanning and evidence
summaries of validity and utility; (8)
sponsors the development of
stakeholder driven methods working
group for accelerating research
translation of genomics into practice
and programs; (9) communicates
evidence-based messages through wellestablished communications channels,
including the Genomics and Health
Impact Update & Blog, CDC Expert
Commentary Series on Medscape, the
CDC Web site, publications, and other
means; (10) conducts programmatic
efforts to implement public health
genomics interventions and surveillance
in partnership with state public health
departments; and (11) conducts public
health genomics epidemiologic studies
and analyses based on health and
biometric data.
Community Guide Branch (CPNCC).
The Community Guide Branch
collaborates with CDC and the public
health community to identify effective
community preventive services and to
educate and encourage action to
improve public health. To accomplish
these aims, the Branch: (1) Convenes
and provides ongoing administrative,
research, and technical support for the
operations of the independent
Community Preventive Services Task
Force (Task Force), as directed by
statutory mandate; (2) conducts and
oversees production of the systematic
reviews that serve as the scientific basis
for Task Force findings and
recommendations; (3) coordinates and
manages large and diverse teams of
internal and external partners
participating in the systematic review
process; (4) participates with other CDC
programs and other federal and nongovernmental partners in developing
and refining methods for conducting
systematic reviews; (5) assists CDC and
other federal and non-federal partners in
understanding, using, and
communicating methods for conducting
systematic reviews; (6) assists CDC and
other federal and non-federal partners in
linking reviews of evidence to
guidelines development and program
implementation; (7) assists the Task
Force in producing reports on evidence
gaps and priority areas for further
examination; (8) establishes, updates,
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and evaluates the utility and use of the
Community Guide Web site
(www.thecommunityguide.org) by
intended users; (9) convenes and
participates with other CDC programs
and other federal and non-governmental
partners in (a) disseminating products
and promotional materials throughout
the U.S. health care and public health
systems and to their multi-sectoral
partners via a variety of media, such as
journals, books, documents, the World
Wide Web, and other media, (b)
developing and testing policies and
processes for referencing Task Force
findings in research and programmatic
funding announcements to increase use
of Task Force findings and fill evidence
gaps, and (c) developing, refining, and
evaluating methods for assisting users in
implementing Task Force
recommendations; (10) convenes and
participates with other CDC programs
and other federal and non-governmental
partners in establishing methods for
evaluating implementation, use, and
impact of Task Force-recommended
strategies; (11) participates in the
development of national and regional
public and private partnerships to
enhance prevention research and the
translation of evidence into policy and
action; (12) provides epidemiologic and
scientific support for health
departments, non-profit hospitals and
other community-based organizations
engaged in community health
improvement; (13) maintains scientific
expertise in cross-cutting measures of
population health and population
health determinants; (14) develops
stakeholder-driven epidemiological
resources including analytic tools and
scientific resources for identifying
community health priorities and health
disparities, and monitoring and
evaluating public health impact; (15)
hosts and periodically updates the
Community Health Status Indicators
web application; and (16) participates
with CDC and other federal and nonfederal partners to encourage multisector collaborations that support
shared ownership of community health
improvement.
Library Science and Services Branch
(CPNCD). The Stephen B. Thacker CDC
Library supports CDC’s scientific and
public health information needs by
serving as CDC’s resource for library
collections, electronic and hardcopy
resources, customized library services
and tools, and information exchange
and learning. To accomplish these aims,
the Branch: (1) Develops, curates, and
sustains collections of public health
information, including (a) providing a
user-friendly portal to collections
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through cataloging, classification, and
metadata tagging that improves
efficiency and access, (b) evaluating
library resource usage data to assess
collection usefulness and inform
purchasing decisions; and (c) preserving
collections that document CDC’s role in
public health missions, and unique,
one-of-a-kind, historical, out-of-print
and archival collections, (2) provides
CDC scientists with ready and timely
access to electronic and hardcopy
scientific and public health
programmatic resources, including (a)
document delivery and interlibrary loan
services, and (b) access to journals,
databases, electronic and print books,
(most via the CDC intranet to the
employee’s desktop); (3) provides
library science technical assistance
(including for systematic reviews),
training, and tools including (a) tailored
literature searches, (b) reference services
at the main library and library branches,
(c) subject matter depth to better assist
CDC science staff including the science
and practice of systematic reviews, (d)
training CDC staff to utilize library
resources more efficiently and
effectively, and (e) delivery of Science
Clips—a weekly summary of notable
publications—to CDC scientists and
external partners; (4) provides and
manages facilities for scientific inquiry,
learning and research including space
for conferences, meetings, computer and
other training, hoteling, accessing
special collections, and checking email;
(5) provides staff support to the Library
Advisory Board, whose members ensure
their CIO’s needs are considered in
library operations and planning; and (6)
collaborates with other federal libraries,
Atlanta medical libraries, other library
and information scientists, and public
health partners to increase access to
resources and explore innovations in
information and library science that will
enhance efficiency and effectiveness in
meeting the information needs of the
public health workforce.
Scientific Publications Branch
(CPNCE). Produces and disseminates
timely, reliable, accurate, credible
scientific information for public health
action through publications and
companion materials. Branch includes
the MMWR Series and Vital Signs, and
may accommodate other CDC
publications. To accomplish these aims,
the Branch: (1) Develops publications
and companion materials that serve as
primary vehicles for dissemination of
CDC policy statements (MMWR) or calls
to action (Vital Signs); (2) works
directly, quickly and collaboratively
with CDC programs and CDC OD, and
actively solicits content; (3) provides
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complete editorial services, from
conception of content to final
proofreading; (4) builds public health
capacity to share information for public
health action by publishing the work of
state, local and foreign health
departments and working with
inexperienced authors, as well as,
provides consultation and training on
relevant publication matters; (5) assures
that publications and companion
materials meet current publications and
scientific standards, facilitates
compliance with OSTP memo to link
published reports with underlying data,
and advances publication platforms
such as inclusion of interactive options;
(6) actively seeks mechanisms to
disseminate content further through
collaboration with the CDC Office of the
Associate Director for Communication
(e.g., media releases, fact sheets, Web
sites, and social media), non-CDC
publications (e.g., Journal of the
American Medical Association, Journal
of Public Health, Pediatrics), and other
federal, state and local government
agencies and non-government partners;
(7) leads innovation in publication
standards across the publication field
that affect CDC’s mission, such as
recommendations and guidelines, in
collaboration with other scientific
publications and the Council of
Scientific Editors; (8) meets
informational needs of primary and
secondary audiences, including state
and local health agencies, policy
makers, public health practitioners,
clinicians, nurses and school and health
educators, and the general public; (9)
monitors and evaluates dissemination
strategies, publication impact, and
public health impact to optimize
publications and companion materials;
(10) produces and disseminates
evidence-based, actionable information
on a selected topic each month to the
public, media outlets, and public health
and medical health providers; and (11)
coordinates and manages all aspects of
Vital Signs releases by the Office of the
Director, CDC.
Division of Scientific Education and
Professional Development (CPND). The
primary mission of the Division of
Scientific Education and Professional
Development (DSEPD) is to improve
health outcomes through a competent,
sustainable, and empowered public
health workforce. In carrying out its
mission, DSEPD: (1) Plans, directs and
manages programs that develop the
current and future public health
workforce (including the field of public
health laboratory science and practice);
(2) provides leadership in scientific
workforce education and development,
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including quality assurance, technical
consultation and evaluation; and (3)
provides leadership to facilitate or
coordinate CDC and partner strategic
workforce initiatives to increase
capability of the current workforce,
expand pipeline programs to recruit
new talent, strengthen systems to
support the workforce, and leverage
partnerships to maximally achieve
goals.
Office of the Director (CPND1). (1)
Provides leadership and overall
direction for DSEPD; (2) develops goals
and objectives, and provides leadership,
policy formation, scientific oversight,
and guidance in scientific education
and professional development program
planning and development; (3) plans,
coordinates, and develops workforcerelated research plans for DSEPD; (4)
ensures adherence and provides training
to DSEPD on CDC and HHS sciencerelated policies; (5) oversees and
manages DSEPD clearance process for
scientific, technical, and programmatic
documents; (6) manages DSEPD
communication activities, including
communication product development,
promotion and dissemination strategies,
media relations coordination, and
DSEPD Web sites; (7) responds to
freedom of information requests and
controlled correspondence; (8)
coordinates all DSEPD program reviews;
(9) reviews, prepares, coordinates, and
develops Congressional testimony and
briefing materials; (10) leads Division
programmatic evaluation activities,
assists DSEPD programs in establishing
performance metrics, and coordinates
quarterly reviews with programs to
ascertain status on meeting of the
metrics; (11) coordinates DSEPD budget
formulation and negotiation related to
program initiatives and goals
management; (12) provides leadership,
oversight, and guidance in the
management and operations of DSEPD
programs, including agency-wide
assistance with OMB requirements and
policy; (13) ensures and promotes the
use of best practices in scientific
education and professional
development processes, services, and
products; (14) provides leadership and
guidance on new developments and
national trends for public health
workforce education and training; (15)
establishes policies and standards for
public health education and training
activities and initiatives, including but
not limited to, competency
development, quality assurance, and
evaluation, and works collaboratively
within DSEPD and other components of
CDC to ensure their implementation and
adoption; (16) develops and implements
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a crosscutting framework for planning,
implementing, and evaluating
fellowship training programs that
provide service to the organizations
where fellows are assigned (e.g., CIOs,
SLHDs) and the communities they
serve, and are responsive to the needs
of CDC’s internal workforce and to the
needs of DSEPD’s external partners,
including the academic sector; (17)
manages pilot fellowship programs in
early stages of development, as needed;
(18) develops and manages unified
DSEPD-wide administrative systems
and supports the commitment of
resources for application development;
(19) coordinates management
information systems and analyses of
data for improved use of DSEPD
resources; and (20) directs systems
analysis and design, programming, and
systems training as it relates to
implementation of new and existing
administrative, management, and
executive information systems; (21)
provides leadership to coordinate CDC
and partner strategic workforce
initiatives to increase capability of
existing workforce, expand pipeline
programs to recruit new talent, and
strengthen systems to support the
workforce; and (22) represents the
Division and at times CSELS or CDC at
professional and scientific meetings,
within and outside CDC.
Education and Training Services
Branch (CPNDB). (1) Plans, directs, and
manages training design, development,
consultation, and delivery, and
accredits educational activities for entry
level public health professionals and the
existing public health workforce; (2)
identifies and implements best practices
and methods for developing the public
health workforce; (3) develops evidencebased policies and standards for public
health education and training activities
and initiatives, including but not
limited to, competency development,
quality assurance, and evaluation, and
provides technical assistance within
DSEPD and other components of CDC to
ensure their implementation and
adoption; (4) develops and maintains
appropriate liaisons with all fellowship
programs in DSEPD, and provides
technical assistance to other programs
across the agency to ensure the
development of rigorous educational
programs based on the science of adult
learning and instructional technology;
(5) facilitates a cross-cutting approach
and sharing of educational/evaluation
lessons learned and tools across DSEPD
programs, as well as other programs
across the agency; (6) provides guidance
in planning and implementation of the
educational components of complex
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systems and processes to support
learners, such as fellows and other
learners seeking continuing education to
ensure data requirements are consistent
with the evaluation framework and
capture educational outcomes of
learners; (7) provides consultation,
guidance, and technical assistance to
course developers, incorporating
principles of learning theory to ensure
consistent design and delivery of
accredited educational activities; (8)
maintains knowledge of continuing
education standards and applies quality
assurance practices required to uphold
national accreditations; (9) assesses
need and demand for additional
accreditations to support professional
license and certification needs of
technical and professional staff within
the health workforce; (10) develops and
maintains internal and external
partnerships to foster best practices in
the design and delivery of educational
activities and training; (11) maintains
knowledge of information technology
and learning standards as they apply to
education and training to demonstrate
and promote compliance and best
practices by CDC programs; (12) applies
the principles of instructional systems
design and learning theory to design,
develop, deliver, and evaluate
informational and instructional
products; (13) implements and
maintains technology-based systems to
support learners, such as CDC Training
and Continuing Education Online, a
web-based accreditation and registration
system; (14) coordinates educational
opportunities and resources for learners
across public health and health care
through the CDC Learning Connection
Web site, which includes CDC TRAIN,
an online portal that provides learners
no-cost access to a comprehensive
catalog of learning products; (15) adapts
information systems and processes to
reflect current best practices and
adherence to accreditation
requirements; and (16) provides
technical assistance and guidance to
learners to ensure accreditation and
learner support.
Epidemiology Workforce Branch
(CPNDC). (1) Plans, directs, and
manages CDC-wide training and service
programs for teaching and training
future public health professionals, and
supports the existing workforce in
applied epidemiology, including but not
limited to the Epidemic Intelligence
Service Program, Epidemiology Elective
for Senior Medical and Veterinary
Students, and the CDC-Hubert Global
Health Fellowship; (2) plans, directs,
and evaluates elementary and high
school student program pipeline
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activities intended to increase the
number of individuals aware of and
choosing a career in public health; (3)
sponsors complementary activities to
train teachers to develop lesson plans of
public health significance for middle
and high school students; (4) establishes
and implements overall Branch policies,
plans, and procedures; (5) develops and
implements a formal plan to evaluate
the effectiveness of all fellowship
program activities, including the
completion of program activities by EIS
officers (EISOs), quality of field and HQ
assignments, performance of officers,
and effectiveness of educational
activities; (6) conducts site visits and
maintains liaison with supervisors of
EISOs within CDC and in field
assignments; (7) coordinates the
assignment and deployment of EISOs in
response to natural disasters, terrorist
events, and other large scale public
health emergencies; (8) provides
technical assistance, consultation,
resources, and training for DSEPD, other
components of CDC, and the broader
health workforce (e.g., state and local
workers), including, but not limited to
the development and dissemination of
standard curricula, training, and related
materials, in epidemiology; (9)
maintains liaison with alumni within
and outside CDC to assist with training,
recruitment, and promotional activities;
(10) responds to domestic and
international requests for assistance and
consultation (e.g., Epi-Aids); (11)
maintains liaison with other
governmental agencies, academic
institutions and organizations, state and
local health agencies, private health
organizations, professional
organizations, and other outside groups;
(12) assumes an active national and
international leadership role in applied
epidemiology training; and (13)
collaborates, as appropriate, with the
CDC/OD, other CIOs, and domestic and
international agencies to carry out the
functions of the branch.
Population Health Workforce Branch
(CPNDD). (1) Plans, directs, and
manages CDC-wide training and service
programs for teaching and training
future public health professionals, and
supports the existing workforce in
applied public health sciences,
including but not limited to the
Preventive Medicine Residency/
Fellowship, Public Health Informatics
Fellowship, Prevention Effectiveness
Fellowship, and the Presidential
Management Fellows Program; (2)
operates and maintains an accredited
preventive medicine residency program
for physicians in CDC through the
Accreditation Council for Graduate
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17457
Medical Education and a
complementary fellowship program for
public health veterinarians; (3)
establishes and implements overall
Branch policies, plans, and procedures;
(4) develops and implements a formal
plan to evaluate the effectiveness of all
fellowship program activities, including
the completion of program activities by
fellows and residents, the quality of
field and HQ assignments, performance
of fellows/residents, and effectiveness of
educational activities; (5) conducts site
visits and maintains liaison with
supervisors of fellows/residents within
CDC and in field assignments; (6)
coordinates the assignment and
deployment of fellows/residents in
response to natural disasters, terrorist
events, and other large scale public
health emergencies; (7) provides
technical assistance, consultation,
resources, and training for DSEPD, other
components of CDC, and the broader
health workforce (e.g., state and local
workers), including, but not limited to
the development and dissemination of
standard curricula, training, and related
materials, in preventive medicine,
informatics, prevention effectiveness
and leadership/management and policy;
(8) maintains liaison with alumni
within and outside CDC to assist with
training, recruitment, and promotional
activities; (9) responds to domestic and
international requests for assistance and
consultation (e.g., Info-Aids, EconAids); (10) maintains liaison with other
governmental agencies, academic
institutions and organizations, state and
local health agencies, private health
organizations, professional
organizations, and other outside groups;
(11) assumes an active national and
international leadership role in applied
public health sciences training in
preventive medicine, public health
informatics, prevention effectiveness,
and leadership and management, and
policy; (12) collaborates, as relevant,
with the CDC/OD, other CIOs, and
domestic and international agencies to
carry out the functions of the branch;
(13) fosters closer linkages between
academia and public health practice;
(14) supports and provides oversight for
cooperative agreements with academic
partner organizations to enhance
development of public health and
health professionals skilled in
improving the health of populations;
(15) provides technical consultation to
academic associations regarding
improvements in curriculum and
experiential learning opportunities; and
(16) works with partners in academia,
state and local health agencies, public
health and health professional
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organizations to address public health
educational needs, including
developing population health
competencies for academia to improve
health professional education (e.g.,
schools of medicine, nursing, and
public health).
Division of Health Informatics and
Surveillance Systems (CPNE). The
mission of the Division of Health
Informatics and Surveillance Systems
(DHIS) is to provide leadership and
cross-cutting support in developing
public health information systems,
managing public health surveillance
programs, and provisioning healthrelated data required to monitor control,
and prevent the occurrence and spread
of diseases and other adverse health
conditions. DHIS strives to improve
surveillance and the quality of data for
decision making through a focus on
transparency and trust in collaborations
with public health partners while
applying new and efficient information
technologies, standardized data
collection processes, improved data
analysis methods, and versatile and user
friendly information systems. DHIS
promotes a multidisciplinary approach
(which includes epidemiology,
statistics, analytics, data management,
informatics, and evaluation sciences) to
assure that the surveillance programs,
information systems, and data serve
public health program objectives.
Office of the Director (CPNE1). (1)
Provides leadership and overall
direction for execution of programs that
support public health surveillance,
access to data for public health decision
making, development of public health
information systems, and the
application of epidemiology and
informatics to improve public health,
playing a significant role in advising
CDC senior leadership; (2) conducts
strategic planning and establishes
Division goals, objectives and priorities
and assures alignment with the Center’s
and CDC goals, objectives and priorities;
(3) provides coordination and guidance
for a portfolio of projects and activities
that address notifiable disease reporting,
syndromic surveillance, surveillance
best practices, data standards and
harmonization, cutting edge IT
solutions, analytic data management,
software development for epidemiologic
investigations, and partnership
engagement on Division programs; (4)
promotes a multidisciplinary approach
(epidemiology, statistics, analytics, data
management, informatics, evaluation
sciences, and contract management) to
assure that CDC surveillance and
information systems serve public health
program objectives; (5) works with
internal and external partners to
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monitor and inform strategies related to
informatics, data standards, health
information technology, and health
care-public health integration; (6)
monitors progress in implementation of
Division projects and activities, and
evaluates the impact of Division
initiatives that support CDC and the
Center’s goals, objectives, and priorities;
(7) provides oversight and approval of
scientific products including
manuscripts, Web sites, databases,
reports, and other documents; (8)
assures compliance with all federal
rules and regulations regarding research
with human subjects, the paperwork
reduction act, and data sharing; (9)
facilitates scientific, policy,
communication, technology, and
program collaboration among Divisions
and centers, and between CDC and other
federal and non-federal partners; (10)
provides communication and policy
expertise in support of Division
activities and responds to requests for
information from CSELS OD and
Divisions, OPHSS OD, and other
internal and external organizations; (11)
provides Division-level management,
administration, support services, and
coordinates with appropriate offices on
program and administrative matters;
(12) develops Division budget, monitors
progress and allocation of resources,
and plans for future resource
requirements; (13) coordinates Division
requirements relating to procurement,
grants, cooperative agreements, material
management, and interagency
agreements; (14) provides fiscal
management and stewardship of grants,
contracts, and cooperative agreements,
serving as a resource for robust contract
management for CSELS; (15) develops
and implements administrative policies,
procedures, and operations for the
Division; (16) represents the Division
and at times CSELS and CDC at official
professional and scientific meetings,
both within and outside of CDC; (17)
advises CSELS OD on workforce
engagement CSELS-wide; (18) reviews,
prepares, coordinates, and develops
Congressional testimony and briefing
materials; and (19) performs scientific
review and clearance for Division
publications, presentations, and reports.
Surveillance and Data Branch
(CPNEC). (1) Provides leadership,
operational support, and data
management for two national
surveillance programs, the National
Notifiable Disease Surveillance System
(NNDSS) and the National Syndromic
Surveillance Program (NSSP); (2)
collaborates with stakeholders to
identify and analyze surveillance needs
and align them with informatics
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solutions and data management
practices and policies; (3) provides
subject matter expertise (SME) and
technical assistance for harmonizing
data collection across surveillance
programs and employing current data
standards; (4) uses analytic data
management techniques to provision
surveillance data to CDC programs and
partners, and provides analysis and
interpretation for MMWR tables and
reports based on NNDSS data; (5) works
with CDC programs and State, Tribal,
Local and Territorial (STLT) programs
on business requirements for the IT
solutions used for surveillance
including the CDC Platform and
Message Validation Processing System
(CDCP–MVPS) and the BioSense
application; (6) manages data use
agreements and memorandums of
understanding for data sharing and
acquisition of external data sources (e.g.,
CMS, MarketScan, VA data) for use by
CDC programs; (7) provides technical
assistance and consultation on analytic
methods, analytic data management,
and analysis of complex data to other
units within CDC; (8) supports the
acquisition of analytic tools, and the
development of analytic and
visualization methods for data analysis;
(9) develops and maintains the
WONDER Web site for the
dissemination of multiple data sources;
(10) collaborates with CDC and STLT
programs on studies of data quality,
representativeness, and investigations of
disease or condition occurrences; and
(11) provides technical monitoring for
cooperative agreements with public
health partners on informatics and
surveillance related projects.
Information Systems Branch CPNEB.
(1) Provides innovative informatics
solutions and services that support
public health information systems for
CDC programs and external partners; (2)
develops and supports a portfolio of
preparedness information systems
including the Countermeasure Tracking
Systems and the Laboratory Reporting
Network; (3) provides subject matter
expertise (SME) and technical support
to client programs in information
technology systems design, project
management, data interchange
strategies, data management, security,
architecture, systems integration,
technical standards, best practices,
federal regulations, and protocols for
deploying and operating systems at
CDC; (4) finds opportunities for and
develops shared information technology
components that can be used by
multiple programs and partners in order
to increase efficiency, decrease cost, and
promote interoperability and
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information sharing; (5) provides
information technology services to CDC
programs and external partners
including modernization of legacy
applications; (6) provides IT project
management for two surveillance
programs—the National Notifiable
Disease Surveillance System and the
National Syndromic Surveillance
Program—including the development of
the CDC Platform and Message
Validation Processing System (CDCP–
MVPS) the BioSense application, and
the NEDSS Base System (NBS); (7)
develops, maintains, and improves
epidemiologic tools for data collection,
data management, and data analysis,
including Epi Info; (8) provides training,
technical assistance, and support to
public health partners and entities using
Epi Info for outbreak investigations,
studies, and surveillance; (9) provides
SMEs, specifications, and services for
standards-based data interchanges,
electronic messaging, vocabulary
management, message validation,
security and credential management,
routing and directory management; (10)
provides consultation and technical
assistance to CDC programs and to
external partners on technical and
informatics aspects of systems and tools
required or endorsed by CDC; (11)
provides Public Health Information
Network (PHIN) certification; and (12)
provides support, technical assistance,
and strategic counsel to CDC programs
for the transition from ICD–9 to ICD–10
(and future iterations).
Partnerships and Evaluation Branch
(CPNED). (1) Supports CDC and STLT
Programs in the conduct of national
surveillance; (2) supports and manages
STLT and partner organizations
cooperative agreements with regard to
fiscal support and monitoring of
expenditures; (3) coordinates the
development of Funding Opportunity
Announcements, Interim Progress
Report Guidance, and Continuation
Applications; (4) monitors activities of
partner organizations and STLT
cooperative agreements to assure
program goals, objectives and key
performance indicators are achieved; (5)
assesses technical assistance needs of
grantees and develops strategies to
address those needs; (6) collaborates
with other DHIS branches and programs
in the development of evaluation
criteria and performance measures for
program planning and improvement; (7)
leads and coordinates or develops and
implements guidelines, uniform
reporting procedures, performance
measures, and evaluation criteria for
STLT and other external partner
cooperative agreements and grants; (8)
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works with other DHIS branches to
synthesize, translate, and disseminate
evaluation findings, success stories, and
lessons learned; (9) coordinates and
supports Division training activities
related to analytic data bases and data
collection and information systems; (10)
develops and manages collaborative
relationships with grantees and partners
to increase awareness, understanding,
and support for DHIS initiatives and
priorities; (11) supports and facilitates
partnership outreach and
communications to existing and new
partners; (12) provides guidance and
support on the establishment and
governance of Communities of Practice
associated with DHIS programs; and
(13) provides leadership for
coordinating technical assistance and
support to other CDC programs, STLT
grantees, and other external partners or
organizations.
James Seligman,
Acting Chief Operating Officer, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2015–07348 Filed 3–31–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Prospective Grant of Start-Up
Exclusive Evaluation Option License
Agreement: Pre-Clinical Evaluation
and Commercial Development of AntiTyrosine Kinase-Like Orphan Receptor
1 Antibody-Drug Conjugates for the
Treatment of Human Cancers
Correction
In notice document 2015–06486
appearing on pages 15226–15227 in the
issue of Monday, March 23, 2015 make
the following correction:
On page 15226, in the third column,
under the DATES heading, in the last
line, ‘‘April 6, 2015’’ should read ‘‘April
7, 2015’’.
[FR Doc. C1–2015–06486 Filed 3–31–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1505–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Docket ID FEMA–2015–0001; Internal
Agency Docket No. FEMA–B–1474]
Changes in Flood Hazard
Determinations
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
17459
Notice.
This notice lists communities
where the addition or modification of
Base Flood Elevations (BFEs), base flood
depths, Special Flood Hazard Area
(SFHA) boundaries or zone
designations, or the regulatory floodway
(hereinafter referred to as flood hazard
determinations), as shown on the Flood
Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs), and
where applicable, in the supporting
Flood Insurance Study (FIS) reports,
prepared by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) for each
community, is appropriate because of
new scientific or technical data. The
FIRM, and where applicable, portions of
the FIS report, have been revised to
reflect these flood hazard
determinations through issuance of a
Letter of Map Revision (LOMR), in
accordance with Title 44, Part 65 of the
Code of Federal Regulations (44 CFR
part 65). The LOMR will be used by
insurance agents and others to calculate
appropriate flood insurance premium
rates for new buildings and the contents
of those buildings. For rating purposes,
the currently effective community
number is shown in the table below and
must be used for all new policies and
renewals.
DATES: These flood hazard
determinations will become effective on
the dates listed in the table below and
revise the FIRM panels and FIS report
in effect prior to this determination for
the listed communities.
From the date of the second
publication of notification of these
changes in a newspaper of local
circulation, any person has 90 days in
which to request through the
community that the Deputy Associate
Administrator for Mitigation reconsider
the changes. The flood hazard
determination information may be
changed during the 90-day period.
ADDRESSES: The affected communities
are listed in the table below. Revised
flood hazard information for each
community is available for inspection at
both the online location and the
respective community map repository
address listed in the table below.
Additionally, the current effective FIRM
and FIS report for each community are
accessible online through the FEMA
Map Service Center at
www.msc.fema.gov for comparison.
Submit comments and/or appeals to
the Chief Executive Officer of the
community as listed in the table below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Luis
Rodriguez, Chief, Engineering
Management Branch, Federal Insurance
and Mitigation Administration, FEMA,
SUMMARY:
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[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 62 (Wednesday, April 1, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17452-17459]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-07348]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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 80 FR 1417-1419, dated January 9, 2015) is
amended to reflect the reorganization of the Office of Public Health
Scientific Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Section C-B, Organization and Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the title and functions statements for the
Health Information Technology and Surveillance Strategy Unit (CPA3),
Office of the Director (CPA),
Delete in its entirety the title and the mission and function
statements for the Center for Surveillance, Epidemiology and Laboratory
Services (CPN) and insert the following:
Center for Surveillance, Epidemiology and Laboratory Services (CPN)
The mission of the Center for Surveillance, Epidemiology, and
Laboratory Services (CSELS) is to provide scientific service,
expertise, skills, and tools in support of CDC's efforts to promote
health; prevent disease, injury and disability; and prepare for
emerging health threats. CSELS focuses on improving information and
data quality, laboratory systems, and the public health workforce,
through modernization, innovation, and service. To carry out its
mission, CSELS (1) leads and executes a national public health
surveillance strategy for human health that builds upon current
resources, establishes priorities for the nation's next-generation
capability and provides timely, comprehensive, and accessible
information to strengthen public health practice, and provide value to
clinicians; (2) participates in the identification, development,
evolution, and adoption of informatics standards; (3) facilitates and
coordinates program and laboratory systems integration for the Agency;
(4) provides leadership and support to strengthen the quality and
safety of laboratory practices; (5) provides leadership for scientific
workforce education and advances professional development; (6) provides
leadership on public health genomics strategy, activities, and
planning; (7) creates and promotes access to quality, timely and useful
cross-cutting scientific guidance, products, and services to strengthen
the science and practice of public health and to improve public health
decision-making.
Office of the Director (CPN1). (1) Provides strategic direction
regarding surveillance, epidemiologic investigation, and data and
information sciences; (2) supports OPHSS's CDC-wide coordination and
strategic activities in areas of health informatics technology,
including the meaningful use of electronic health records for public
health surveillance and the coordination of partners and stakeholders
for biosurveillance, genomics, and publication science; (3) leads the
development of public health workforce training; (4) guides the
development of laboratory systems standards for quality and safety,
including the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) and
engagement with relevant federal advisory committees; (5) manages,
directs, coordinates, and evaluates the activities of the Center; (6)
defines goals and objectives for policy formation, scientific
oversight, and guidance in program planning and development; (7)
establishes and implements a communications strategy in support of
CSELS overarching goals and priorities; (8) provides oversight for the
evaluation of programmatic performance of all CSELS activities to
ensure health impact; (9) plans, coordinates, and manages all aspects
of program business services including human and fiscal resources,
extramural activities, space, and all administrative services; (10)
devises information technology practices and procedures, and provides
direction, innovation, planning and evaluation for information
technology systems, services, security, and resources for CSELS; (11)
provides leadership on issues management, budget formulation and
performance integration; (12) manages inter-governmental and external
affairs and cultivates strategic partnerships; (13) ensures scientific
quality, integrity, and clearance across the Center; (14) provides
guidance and strategic oversight to the processes within the Center
that access, collect, manage, analyze, and visualize data, including
assistance for involvement with federal advisory committees and other
high level groups; (15) monitors projects for effective focus on the
analytical, informatics, data management, and statistical
infrastructure to deliver quality data, accurate analysis services and
dependable software products and systems to customers and partners;
(16) collaborates and consults with other Centers, working groups,
state and local health departments, other federal agencies, and other
partners, to accomplish the mission of the Center; (17) reviews,
prepares, coordinates, and develops Congressional testimony and
briefing materials; and (18) represents the CSELS and at times CDC at
professional and scientific meetings, within and outside CDC.
Division of Laboratory Systems (CPNB). The mission of the Division
of Laboratory Systems (DLS) is to provide leadership, support, and
cross-cutting services to continually strengthen the capability,
sustainability, and quality of laboratory science, policy, and practice
at CDC, in clinical and public health laboratories, both in the United
States and with international partners. DLS strives to strengthen and
align the capacity and ability of both clinical and public health
laboratories to perform their critical roles in protecting the public's
health. In this mission, DLS: (1) Fosters collaboration across the
laboratory community; (2) strengthens integration of laboratory
science,
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practice, and informatics into public health and patient care; (3)
develops and advances the use of standards, policies, and guidelines to
ensure safe and accurate laboratory performance and strong laboratory
systems; (4) conducts studies to evaluate and improve the quality of
laboratory practices and services; (5) strengthens the laboratory
workforce; and (6) enhances the efficiency, effectiveness, capacity and
capability of the public health laboratory system through integration
of CDC program support.
Office of the Director (CPNB1). (1) Provides leadership and
guidance for strategic planning and implementation, establishes goals
and program priorities, and engages in policy development to advance
the mission of the Division, the Center, and CDC; (2) directs and
provides public health vision for laboratory practices and systems; (3)
contributes to national cross-cutting efforts to standardize and
accelerate electronic reporting of laboratory results to improve
patient care and public health surveillance; (4) provides leadership,
oversight, and guidance in the business management and operations,
including budget formulation and planning, of the Division of
Laboratory Systems (DLS) programs; (5) directs, applies, and translates
research and evaluation initiatives for laboratory practices,
standards, and services; (6) oversees laboratory specimen management
policies and the CDC/ATSDR Specimen Packaging, Inventory, and
Repository (CASPIR); (7) oversees, manages, and supports the CLIA
program and relevant federal advisory committees; (8) collaborates with
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Food and
Drug Administration in the CLIA program; (9) coordinates CDC efforts to
support state and local public health laboratories in promoting
sustainability of national testing services and capacity; (10)
coordinates CDC's interaction with other government agencies; (11)
performs scientific review and clearance for Division publications,
presentations, and reports; (12) assists in the management the
information collection and training to support the reporting and the
implementation of CDC various regulatory requirements; (13) assist the
agency in the development and management of laboratory domains for
various trainings and fellowships; (14) provides communications, web
support, responses to media requests, and Division communication
outreach efforts; (15) advises the Center OD on matters relating to
laboratory practice and coordinates Division responses to requests for
technical assistance or information about activities supported by the
Division; (16) reviews, prepares, coordinates, and develops
Congressional testimony and briefing materials; and (17) represents the
Division and at times CSELS or CDC at professional and scientific
meetings, within and outside CDC.
Laboratory Training and Services Branch (CPNBC). (1) Provides
advanced laboratory training to maintain a competent, prepared, and
sustainable national and global laboratory workforce for testing of
public health importance; (2) engages agency and laboratory community
experts to collaboratively develop effective training products which
incorporate safety and quality laboratory practices; (3) assesses,
designs, develops, and implements effective needs-based training
pertaining to clinical and public health laboratory methodology,
technology, safety and practice; (4) evaluates the efficiency and
effectiveness of public health laboratory education and training for
state and local public health, clinical, uniformed service, CDC, and
other federal agency laboratory professionals; (5) evaluates the
effectiveness and measures the outcomes of all training to ensure
quality and safety; (6) provides oversight and management for CDC/ATSDR
Specimen Packaging, Inventory, and Repository (CASPIR); (7) provides
services for the safe storage, cataloging, assembly and shipping of
isolates, panels, and other reference materials; (8) provides
informatics support and project management for the specimen inventory
management system and other databases related to public health
laboratory services; and (9) evaluates the effectiveness of the
branch's scientific support services and products to its customers.
Laboratory Practice Standards Branch (CPNBD). (1) Provides
technical expertise and support for oversight and implementation of the
CLIA program and relevant federal advisory committees; (2) develops
laboratory practice standards and guidelines, and assists with their
adoption and validation; (3) supplies technical assistance and review
of laboratory accreditation, state licensure programs, and proficiency
testing programs; (4) provides scientific consultation for inquiries
about testing complexity, personnel qualifications, quality control and
quality assessment, and proficiency testing; (5) evaluates the
applicability of federal quality standards to new laboratory
technologies and establishes new alternative quality assurance
measures; (6) interprets and assists the implementation of CLIA
regulations; (7) collaborates to develop standards and guidance for
laboratory information management in electronic health records and
laboratory reporting for CDC's surveillance strategy; (8) supports the
Clinical Laboratory Improvement Advisory Committee, its subcommittees,
and workgroups; (9) provides scientific support for issues related to
the development and implementation of cytology and related pathology
standards; (10) assists in the development and review of laboratory
performance standards and guidelines; and (11) disseminates information
about laboratory standards and practices.
Laboratory Research and Evaluation Branch (CPNBE). (1) Encourages
establishment and adoption of performance standards and guidelines for
laboratory practice; (2) develops, evaluates, and implements systems
for measuring and assessing laboratory quality; (3) facilitates and
conducts research and demonstration projects to support the scientific
development of performance standards and guidelines, evaluation
systems, and regulatory standards; and assesses the efficacy of
established standards; (4) develops, promotes, implements, and
evaluates intervention strategies to improve general performance
deficiencies in health laboratory systems and worker competencies; (5)
provides a forum for exchange of information about laboratory practice
and research and development activities to promote the coordination of
federal, state, and clinical laboratory improvement efforts; (6)
coordinates and conducts activities that provide technical and
scientific support to CMS in its evaluation, development, and revision
of standards and guidelines; (7) evaluates current and emerging
practices and provides guidance to ensure and promote quality in the
application of advanced molecular technologies; (8) evaluates emerging
technology and the impact on clinical and public health laboratory
practice; (9) collaborates with other CDC genomics programs, including
the Office of Public Health Genomics, for broad genomics policy
initiatives; and (10) collaborates in the development of standards and
guidance for laboratory information management in electronic health
records in support of CLIA objectives and electronic laboratory
reporting to support CDC's surveillance strategy.
Division of Public Health Information and Dissemination (CPNC). The
primary mission of the Division of Public Health Information and
Dissemination (DPHID) is to serve as a hub for scientific publications,
information and library
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sciences, systematic reviews and recommendations, and public health
genomics, thereby collaborating with CDC CIOs and the public health
community in producing, disseminating, and implementing evidence-based
and actionable information to strengthen public health science and
improve public health decision-making.
In carrying out its mission, DPHID: (1) Provides leadership and
overall direction for the execution of programs that produce scientific
publications, strengthen public health science, and provide access to
scientific research and innovative products for improving population
health and public health decision making; (2) identifies what works in
community preventive services and collaborates with CDC and the public
health community to educate and encourage action to improve public
health; (3) serves as a hub of research, information exchange, and
learning for the CDC and the public health community; (4) provides
access to scientific literature and systematic review support; (5) sets
and ensures adherence to quality standards for manuscripts, reports,
and other scientific products; (6) develops curriculum, training, and
consultation services for CDC and other federal and non-federal
partners to foster the development of skills in publication of public
health information, systematic reviews, library sciences, and
information literacy; (7) presents a selection of public health genomic
approaches, studies, and lessons learned from efforts to build greater
program collaboration and service integration; (8) advances the field
of public health informatics for CSELS and the Agency through applied
research and innovation; and (9) through strategic communications,
fosters collaboration with CIOs across CDC and the public health
community to encourage dialog about actions that can be taken to
improve the quality of science and public health decision making.
Office of the Director (CPNC1). (1) Provides leadership and
strategic direction on program priority setting to advance the mission
of the Division, Center and CDC to achieve critical public health
outcomes; (2) advises CSELS OD on matters relating to genomics,
systematic reviews and recommendations, information and library
sciences, scientific publications, dissemination and implementation,
and informatics innovation; (3) defines goals and objectives for policy
formation, scientific oversight, and guidance in program planning and
development; (4) develops budgets, allocates resources, monitors
progress, and reports accomplishments, future directions, and resource
requirements; (5) establishes and implements a communications strategy
in support of the Division's overarching goals and priorities; (6)
fosters engagement, collaboration, and strategic partnerships with CDC
Programs, other federal agencies, and with the public health community
in support of Division and Center priorities; (7) oversees and
coordinates proactive and reactive issues management related to
Division programs; (8) provides oversight for the evaluation of
programmatic performance of all Division activities to ensure health
impact; (9) ensures scientific quality and integrity across the
Division; (10) performs scientific review and clearance and may provide
direct managerial and editorial oversight for Division publications,
presentations, and reports; (11) collaborates with CSELS OD and
Division programs to ensure adherence to information technology
standards, procedures and requirements; (12) provides Division-level
oversight to management, administration, human resources, business,
extramural, space, and support services, and coordinates with relevant
offices and programs on administrative matters; (13) reviews, prepares,
coordinates, and develops Congressional testimony and briefing
materials; and (14) represents the Division and at times CSELS or CDC
at professional and scientific meetings, within and outside CDC.
Informatics Innovation Unit (CPNC12) (1) Advances the field of
public health informatics for CSELS and the Agency through applied
research and innovation; (2) collaborates with CDC programs and the
broader public health community to develop innovative technologies and
techniques to positively impact public health practice; (3) transitions
new informatics solutions, standards, and techniques to public health
programs for deployment and implementation; (4) provides CDC and its
external research and public health partners with consultation,
evaluation, guidance, and support in the use of new informatics
solutions for public health practice; (5) leverages its resources to
rapidly create prototypes, conduct pilot projects, and examine and test
hypotheses generated by CSELS, CDC, and its external partners to
support innovative public health informatics solutions; (6) provides
CDC, and its external partners an optimal (i.e., flexible and scalable)
environment for the rapid development of prototype and pilot public
health informatics solutions for collaboration, testing and evaluation
purposes; (7) participates and represents CSELS within innovation
committees, workgroups, organizations, and councils, within CDC and
with other federal agencies as well; (8) facilitates public health
informatics innovation within the Agency and the public health
community, through partner outreach and collaboration, using
crowdfunding, challenge grants, and other novel cost efficient
mechanisms; (9) disseminates relevant knowledge to CDC and its partners
via presentations, manuscripts, web-based content and other modalities;
(10) provides education to fellows, colleagues, and partners on
emerging informatics tools, techniques, and methodologies; and (11)
provides regular updates to CSELS leadership as to the status of all
projects in the technology laboratory.
Office of Public Health Genomics (CPNC13). The Office of Public
Health Genomics is charged with identifying opportunities for genomics
to improve health and transform health care, informing CDC and partners
about evidence-based genomic applications to impact health, and
integrating evidence-based genomic applications into practice and
programs--including pathogen genomics (advanced molecular detection),
genomic markers for birth defects, reproductive health, child health,
chronic disease as well as environmental and occupational exposures. To
accomplish these aims, the Office (1) integrates advances in pathogen
and human (e.g., birth defects) genomics responsibly and effectively
into health care and disease prevention; (2) provides technical
assistance and advice to CDC leadership and programs, other federal
agencies, state health departments, and other external partners by
identifying, evaluating, and implementing evidence-based genomics
practices to prevent and control the country's leading chronic,
infectious, environmental, and occupational diseases; (3) supports
policy, education, and surveillance frameworks to promote effective
implementation of evidence-based recommendations for genomic tests and
family health history applications that can save lives now, as well as
those applications that will emerge in the next decade and beyond; (4)
fosters public health genomics programs at the state and national level
by providing ongoing consultation and tools to state health
departments, CDC programs, and other stakeholders to share successful
approaches to promote the optimal use of genomic tests; (5) evaluates
emerging genomic applications with the potential to
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impact population health; (6) supports the evaluation of genomic
applications in the development of an evidence framework for
introducing whole genome sequencing into practice, assessing the role
of genomics and family history in recommendations for chronic disease;
(7) identifies new emerging genomic applications with the potential to
impact population health through horizon scanning and evidence
summaries of validity and utility; (8) sponsors the development of
stakeholder driven methods working group for accelerating research
translation of genomics into practice and programs; (9) communicates
evidence-based messages through well-established communications
channels, including the Genomics and Health Impact Update & Blog, CDC
Expert Commentary Series on Medscape, the CDC Web site, publications,
and other means; (10) conducts programmatic efforts to implement public
health genomics interventions and surveillance in partnership with
state public health departments; and (11) conducts public health
genomics epidemiologic studies and analyses based on health and
biometric data.
Community Guide Branch (CPNCC). The Community Guide Branch
collaborates with CDC and the public health community to identify
effective community preventive services and to educate and encourage
action to improve public health. To accomplish these aims, the Branch:
(1) Convenes and provides ongoing administrative, research, and
technical support for the operations of the independent Community
Preventive Services Task Force (Task Force), as directed by statutory
mandate; (2) conducts and oversees production of the systematic reviews
that serve as the scientific basis for Task Force findings and
recommendations; (3) coordinates and manages large and diverse teams of
internal and external partners participating in the systematic review
process; (4) participates with other CDC programs and other federal and
non-governmental partners in developing and refining methods for
conducting systematic reviews; (5) assists CDC and other federal and
non-federal partners in understanding, using, and communicating methods
for conducting systematic reviews; (6) assists CDC and other federal
and non-federal partners in linking reviews of evidence to guidelines
development and program implementation; (7) assists the Task Force in
producing reports on evidence gaps and priority areas for further
examination; (8) establishes, updates, and evaluates the utility and
use of the Community Guide Web site (www.thecommunityguide.org) by
intended users; (9) convenes and participates with other CDC programs
and other federal and non-governmental partners in (a) disseminating
products and promotional materials throughout the U.S. health care and
public health systems and to their multi-sectoral partners via a
variety of media, such as journals, books, documents, the World Wide
Web, and other media, (b) developing and testing policies and processes
for referencing Task Force findings in research and programmatic
funding announcements to increase use of Task Force findings and fill
evidence gaps, and (c) developing, refining, and evaluating methods for
assisting users in implementing Task Force recommendations; (10)
convenes and participates with other CDC programs and other federal and
non-governmental partners in establishing methods for evaluating
implementation, use, and impact of Task Force-recommended strategies;
(11) participates in the development of national and regional public
and private partnerships to enhance prevention research and the
translation of evidence into policy and action; (12) provides
epidemiologic and scientific support for health departments, non-profit
hospitals and other community-based organizations engaged in community
health improvement; (13) maintains scientific expertise in cross-
cutting measures of population health and population health
determinants; (14) develops stakeholder-driven epidemiological
resources including analytic tools and scientific resources for
identifying community health priorities and health disparities, and
monitoring and evaluating public health impact; (15) hosts and
periodically updates the Community Health Status Indicators web
application; and (16) participates with CDC and other federal and non-
federal partners to encourage multi-sector collaborations that support
shared ownership of community health improvement.
Library Science and Services Branch (CPNCD). The Stephen B. Thacker
CDC Library supports CDC's scientific and public health information
needs by serving as CDC's resource for library collections, electronic
and hardcopy resources, customized library services and tools, and
information exchange and learning. To accomplish these aims, the
Branch: (1) Develops, curates, and sustains collections of public
health information, including (a) providing a user-friendly portal to
collections through cataloging, classification, and metadata tagging
that improves efficiency and access, (b) evaluating library resource
usage data to assess collection usefulness and inform purchasing
decisions; and (c) preserving collections that document CDC's role in
public health missions, and unique, one-of-a-kind, historical, out-of-
print and archival collections, (2) provides CDC scientists with ready
and timely access to electronic and hardcopy scientific and public
health programmatic resources, including (a) document delivery and
interlibrary loan services, and (b) access to journals, databases,
electronic and print books, (most via the CDC intranet to the
employee's desktop); (3) provides library science technical assistance
(including for systematic reviews), training, and tools including (a)
tailored literature searches, (b) reference services at the main
library and library branches, (c) subject matter depth to better assist
CDC science staff including the science and practice of systematic
reviews, (d) training CDC staff to utilize library resources more
efficiently and effectively, and (e) delivery of Science Clips--a
weekly summary of notable publications--to CDC scientists and external
partners; (4) provides and manages facilities for scientific inquiry,
learning and research including space for conferences, meetings,
computer and other training, hoteling, accessing special collections,
and checking email; (5) provides staff support to the Library Advisory
Board, whose members ensure their CIO's needs are considered in library
operations and planning; and (6) collaborates with other federal
libraries, Atlanta medical libraries, other library and information
scientists, and public health partners to increase access to resources
and explore innovations in information and library science that will
enhance efficiency and effectiveness in meeting the information needs
of the public health workforce.
Scientific Publications Branch (CPNCE). Produces and disseminates
timely, reliable, accurate, credible scientific information for public
health action through publications and companion materials. Branch
includes the MMWR Series and Vital Signs, and may accommodate other CDC
publications. To accomplish these aims, the Branch: (1) Develops
publications and companion materials that serve as primary vehicles for
dissemination of CDC policy statements (MMWR) or calls to action (Vital
Signs); (2) works directly, quickly and collaboratively with CDC
programs and CDC OD, and actively solicits content; (3) provides
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complete editorial services, from conception of content to final
proofreading; (4) builds public health capacity to share information
for public health action by publishing the work of state, local and
foreign health departments and working with inexperienced authors, as
well as, provides consultation and training on relevant publication
matters; (5) assures that publications and companion materials meet
current publications and scientific standards, facilitates compliance
with OSTP memo to link published reports with underlying data, and
advances publication platforms such as inclusion of interactive
options; (6) actively seeks mechanisms to disseminate content further
through collaboration with the CDC Office of the Associate Director for
Communication (e.g., media releases, fact sheets, Web sites, and social
media), non-CDC publications (e.g., Journal of the American Medical
Association, Journal of Public Health, Pediatrics), and other federal,
state and local government agencies and non-government partners; (7)
leads innovation in publication standards across the publication field
that affect CDC's mission, such as recommendations and guidelines, in
collaboration with other scientific publications and the Council of
Scientific Editors; (8) meets informational needs of primary and
secondary audiences, including state and local health agencies, policy
makers, public health practitioners, clinicians, nurses and school and
health educators, and the general public; (9) monitors and evaluates
dissemination strategies, publication impact, and public health impact
to optimize publications and companion materials; (10) produces and
disseminates evidence-based, actionable information on a selected topic
each month to the public, media outlets, and public health and medical
health providers; and (11) coordinates and manages all aspects of Vital
Signs releases by the Office of the Director, CDC.
Division of Scientific Education and Professional Development
(CPND). The primary mission of the Division of Scientific Education and
Professional Development (DSEPD) is to improve health outcomes through
a competent, sustainable, and empowered public health workforce. In
carrying out its mission, DSEPD: (1) Plans, directs and manages
programs that develop the current and future public health workforce
(including the field of public health laboratory science and practice);
(2) provides leadership in scientific workforce education and
development, including quality assurance, technical consultation and
evaluation; and (3) provides leadership to facilitate or coordinate CDC
and partner strategic workforce initiatives to increase capability of
the current workforce, expand pipeline programs to recruit new talent,
strengthen systems to support the workforce, and leverage partnerships
to maximally achieve goals.
Office of the Director (CPND1). (1) Provides leadership and overall
direction for DSEPD; (2) develops goals and objectives, and provides
leadership, policy formation, scientific oversight, and guidance in
scientific education and professional development program planning and
development; (3) plans, coordinates, and develops workforce-related
research plans for DSEPD; (4) ensures adherence and provides training
to DSEPD on CDC and HHS science-related policies; (5) oversees and
manages DSEPD clearance process for scientific, technical, and
programmatic documents; (6) manages DSEPD communication activities,
including communication product development, promotion and
dissemination strategies, media relations coordination, and DSEPD Web
sites; (7) responds to freedom of information requests and controlled
correspondence; (8) coordinates all DSEPD program reviews; (9) reviews,
prepares, coordinates, and develops Congressional testimony and
briefing materials; (10) leads Division programmatic evaluation
activities, assists DSEPD programs in establishing performance metrics,
and coordinates quarterly reviews with programs to ascertain status on
meeting of the metrics; (11) coordinates DSEPD budget formulation and
negotiation related to program initiatives and goals management; (12)
provides leadership, oversight, and guidance in the management and
operations of DSEPD programs, including agency-wide assistance with OMB
requirements and policy; (13) ensures and promotes the use of best
practices in scientific education and professional development
processes, services, and products; (14) provides leadership and
guidance on new developments and national trends for public health
workforce education and training; (15) establishes policies and
standards for public health education and training activities and
initiatives, including but not limited to, competency development,
quality assurance, and evaluation, and works collaboratively within
DSEPD and other components of CDC to ensure their implementation and
adoption; (16) develops and implements a crosscutting framework for
planning, implementing, and evaluating fellowship training programs
that provide service to the organizations where fellows are assigned
(e.g., CIOs, SLHDs) and the communities they serve, and are responsive
to the needs of CDC's internal workforce and to the needs of DSEPD's
external partners, including the academic sector; (17) manages pilot
fellowship programs in early stages of development, as needed; (18)
develops and manages unified DSEPD-wide administrative systems and
supports the commitment of resources for application development; (19)
coordinates management information systems and analyses of data for
improved use of DSEPD resources; and (20) directs systems analysis and
design, programming, and systems training as it relates to
implementation of new and existing administrative, management, and
executive information systems; (21) provides leadership to coordinate
CDC and partner strategic workforce initiatives to increase capability
of existing workforce, expand pipeline programs to recruit new talent,
and strengthen systems to support the workforce; and (22) represents
the Division and at times CSELS or CDC at professional and scientific
meetings, within and outside CDC.
Education and Training Services Branch (CPNDB). (1) Plans, directs,
and manages training design, development, consultation, and delivery,
and accredits educational activities for entry level public health
professionals and the existing public health workforce; (2) identifies
and implements best practices and methods for developing the public
health workforce; (3) develops evidence-based policies and standards
for public health education and training activities and initiatives,
including but not limited to, competency development, quality
assurance, and evaluation, and provides technical assistance within
DSEPD and other components of CDC to ensure their implementation and
adoption; (4) develops and maintains appropriate liaisons with all
fellowship programs in DSEPD, and provides technical assistance to
other programs across the agency to ensure the development of rigorous
educational programs based on the science of adult learning and
instructional technology; (5) facilitates a cross-cutting approach and
sharing of educational/evaluation lessons learned and tools across
DSEPD programs, as well as other programs across the agency; (6)
provides guidance in planning and implementation of the educational
components of complex
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systems and processes to support learners, such as fellows and other
learners seeking continuing education to ensure data requirements are
consistent with the evaluation framework and capture educational
outcomes of learners; (7) provides consultation, guidance, and
technical assistance to course developers, incorporating principles of
learning theory to ensure consistent design and delivery of accredited
educational activities; (8) maintains knowledge of continuing education
standards and applies quality assurance practices required to uphold
national accreditations; (9) assesses need and demand for additional
accreditations to support professional license and certification needs
of technical and professional staff within the health workforce; (10)
develops and maintains internal and external partnerships to foster
best practices in the design and delivery of educational activities and
training; (11) maintains knowledge of information technology and
learning standards as they apply to education and training to
demonstrate and promote compliance and best practices by CDC programs;
(12) applies the principles of instructional systems design and
learning theory to design, develop, deliver, and evaluate informational
and instructional products; (13) implements and maintains technology-
based systems to support learners, such as CDC Training and Continuing
Education Online, a web-based accreditation and registration system;
(14) coordinates educational opportunities and resources for learners
across public health and health care through the CDC Learning
Connection Web site, which includes CDC TRAIN, an online portal that
provides learners no-cost access to a comprehensive catalog of learning
products; (15) adapts information systems and processes to reflect
current best practices and adherence to accreditation requirements; and
(16) provides technical assistance and guidance to learners to ensure
accreditation and learner support.
Epidemiology Workforce Branch (CPNDC). (1) Plans, directs, and
manages CDC-wide training and service programs for teaching and
training future public health professionals, and supports the existing
workforce in applied epidemiology, including but not limited to the
Epidemic Intelligence Service Program, Epidemiology Elective for Senior
Medical and Veterinary Students, and the CDC-Hubert Global Health
Fellowship; (2) plans, directs, and evaluates elementary and high
school student program pipeline activities intended to increase the
number of individuals aware of and choosing a career in public health;
(3) sponsors complementary activities to train teachers to develop
lesson plans of public health significance for middle and high school
students; (4) establishes and implements overall Branch policies,
plans, and procedures; (5) develops and implements a formal plan to
evaluate the effectiveness of all fellowship program activities,
including the completion of program activities by EIS officers (EISOs),
quality of field and HQ assignments, performance of officers, and
effectiveness of educational activities; (6) conducts site visits and
maintains liaison with supervisors of EISOs within CDC and in field
assignments; (7) coordinates the assignment and deployment of EISOs in
response to natural disasters, terrorist events, and other large scale
public health emergencies; (8) provides technical assistance,
consultation, resources, and training for DSEPD, other components of
CDC, and the broader health workforce (e.g., state and local workers),
including, but not limited to the development and dissemination of
standard curricula, training, and related materials, in epidemiology;
(9) maintains liaison with alumni within and outside CDC to assist with
training, recruitment, and promotional activities; (10) responds to
domestic and international requests for assistance and consultation
(e.g., Epi-Aids); (11) maintains liaison with other governmental
agencies, academic institutions and organizations, state and local
health agencies, private health organizations, professional
organizations, and other outside groups; (12) assumes an active
national and international leadership role in applied epidemiology
training; and (13) collaborates, as appropriate, with the CDC/OD, other
CIOs, and domestic and international agencies to carry out the
functions of the branch.
Population Health Workforce Branch (CPNDD). (1) Plans, directs, and
manages CDC-wide training and service programs for teaching and
training future public health professionals, and supports the existing
workforce in applied public health sciences, including but not limited
to the Preventive Medicine Residency/Fellowship, Public Health
Informatics Fellowship, Prevention Effectiveness Fellowship, and the
Presidential Management Fellows Program; (2) operates and maintains an
accredited preventive medicine residency program for physicians in CDC
through the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and a
complementary fellowship program for public health veterinarians; (3)
establishes and implements overall Branch policies, plans, and
procedures; (4) develops and implements a formal plan to evaluate the
effectiveness of all fellowship program activities, including the
completion of program activities by fellows and residents, the quality
of field and HQ assignments, performance of fellows/residents, and
effectiveness of educational activities; (5) conducts site visits and
maintains liaison with supervisors of fellows/residents within CDC and
in field assignments; (6) coordinates the assignment and deployment of
fellows/residents in response to natural disasters, terrorist events,
and other large scale public health emergencies; (7) provides technical
assistance, consultation, resources, and training for DSEPD, other
components of CDC, and the broader health workforce (e.g., state and
local workers), including, but not limited to the development and
dissemination of standard curricula, training, and related materials,
in preventive medicine, informatics, prevention effectiveness and
leadership/management and policy; (8) maintains liaison with alumni
within and outside CDC to assist with training, recruitment, and
promotional activities; (9) responds to domestic and international
requests for assistance and consultation (e.g., Info-Aids, Econ-Aids);
(10) maintains liaison with other governmental agencies, academic
institutions and organizations, state and local health agencies,
private health organizations, professional organizations, and other
outside groups; (11) assumes an active national and international
leadership role in applied public health sciences training in
preventive medicine, public health informatics, prevention
effectiveness, and leadership and management, and policy; (12)
collaborates, as relevant, with the CDC/OD, other CIOs, and domestic
and international agencies to carry out the functions of the branch;
(13) fosters closer linkages between academia and public health
practice; (14) supports and provides oversight for cooperative
agreements with academic partner organizations to enhance development
of public health and health professionals skilled in improving the
health of populations; (15) provides technical consultation to academic
associations regarding improvements in curriculum and experiential
learning opportunities; and (16) works with partners in academia, state
and local health agencies, public health and health professional
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organizations to address public health educational needs, including
developing population health competencies for academia to improve
health professional education (e.g., schools of medicine, nursing, and
public health).
Division of Health Informatics and Surveillance Systems (CPNE). The
mission of the Division of Health Informatics and Surveillance Systems
(DHIS) is to provide leadership and cross-cutting support in developing
public health information systems, managing public health surveillance
programs, and provisioning health-related data required to monitor
control, and prevent the occurrence and spread of diseases and other
adverse health conditions. DHIS strives to improve surveillance and the
quality of data for decision making through a focus on transparency and
trust in collaborations with public health partners while applying new
and efficient information technologies, standardized data collection
processes, improved data analysis methods, and versatile and user
friendly information systems. DHIS promotes a multidisciplinary
approach (which includes epidemiology, statistics, analytics, data
management, informatics, and evaluation sciences) to assure that the
surveillance programs, information systems, and data serve public
health program objectives.
Office of the Director (CPNE1). (1) Provides leadership and overall
direction for execution of programs that support public health
surveillance, access to data for public health decision making,
development of public health information systems, and the application
of epidemiology and informatics to improve public health, playing a
significant role in advising CDC senior leadership; (2) conducts
strategic planning and establishes Division goals, objectives and
priorities and assures alignment with the Center's and CDC goals,
objectives and priorities; (3) provides coordination and guidance for a
portfolio of projects and activities that address notifiable disease
reporting, syndromic surveillance, surveillance best practices, data
standards and harmonization, cutting edge IT solutions, analytic data
management, software development for epidemiologic investigations, and
partnership engagement on Division programs; (4) promotes a
multidisciplinary approach (epidemiology, statistics, analytics, data
management, informatics, evaluation sciences, and contract management)
to assure that CDC surveillance and information systems serve public
health program objectives; (5) works with internal and external
partners to monitor and inform strategies related to informatics, data
standards, health information technology, and health care-public health
integration; (6) monitors progress in implementation of Division
projects and activities, and evaluates the impact of Division
initiatives that support CDC and the Center's goals, objectives, and
priorities; (7) provides oversight and approval of scientific products
including manuscripts, Web sites, databases, reports, and other
documents; (8) assures compliance with all federal rules and
regulations regarding research with human subjects, the paperwork
reduction act, and data sharing; (9) facilitates scientific, policy,
communication, technology, and program collaboration among Divisions
and centers, and between CDC and other federal and non-federal
partners; (10) provides communication and policy expertise in support
of Division activities and responds to requests for information from
CSELS OD and Divisions, OPHSS OD, and other internal and external
organizations; (11) provides Division-level management, administration,
support services, and coordinates with appropriate offices on program
and administrative matters; (12) develops Division budget, monitors
progress and allocation of resources, and plans for future resource
requirements; (13) coordinates Division requirements relating to
procurement, grants, cooperative agreements, material management, and
interagency agreements; (14) provides fiscal management and stewardship
of grants, contracts, and cooperative agreements, serving as a resource
for robust contract management for CSELS; (15) develops and implements
administrative policies, procedures, and operations for the Division;
(16) represents the Division and at times CSELS and CDC at official
professional and scientific meetings, both within and outside of CDC;
(17) advises CSELS OD on workforce engagement CSELS-wide; (18) reviews,
prepares, coordinates, and develops Congressional testimony and
briefing materials; and (19) performs scientific review and clearance
for Division publications, presentations, and reports.
Surveillance and Data Branch (CPNEC). (1) Provides leadership,
operational support, and data management for two national surveillance
programs, the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System (NNDSS)
and the National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP); (2)
collaborates with stakeholders to identify and analyze surveillance
needs and align them with informatics solutions and data management
practices and policies; (3) provides subject matter expertise (SME) and
technical assistance for harmonizing data collection across
surveillance programs and employing current data standards; (4) uses
analytic data management techniques to provision surveillance data to
CDC programs and partners, and provides analysis and interpretation for
MMWR tables and reports based on NNDSS data; (5) works with CDC
programs and State, Tribal, Local and Territorial (STLT) programs on
business requirements for the IT solutions used for surveillance
including the CDC Platform and Message Validation Processing System
(CDCP-MVPS) and the BioSense application; (6) manages data use
agreements and memorandums of understanding for data sharing and
acquisition of external data sources (e.g., CMS, MarketScan, VA data)
for use by CDC programs; (7) provides technical assistance and
consultation on analytic methods, analytic data management, and
analysis of complex data to other units within CDC; (8) supports the
acquisition of analytic tools, and the development of analytic and
visualization methods for data analysis; (9) develops and maintains the
WONDER Web site for the dissemination of multiple data sources; (10)
collaborates with CDC and STLT programs on studies of data quality,
representativeness, and investigations of disease or condition
occurrences; and (11) provides technical monitoring for cooperative
agreements with public health partners on informatics and surveillance
related projects.
Information Systems Branch CPNEB. (1) Provides innovative
informatics solutions and services that support public health
information systems for CDC programs and external partners; (2)
develops and supports a portfolio of preparedness information systems
including the Countermeasure Tracking Systems and the Laboratory
Reporting Network; (3) provides subject matter expertise (SME) and
technical support to client programs in information technology systems
design, project management, data interchange strategies, data
management, security, architecture, systems integration, technical
standards, best practices, federal regulations, and protocols for
deploying and operating systems at CDC; (4) finds opportunities for and
develops shared information technology components that can be used by
multiple programs and partners in order to increase efficiency,
decrease cost, and promote interoperability and
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information sharing; (5) provides information technology services to
CDC programs and external partners including modernization of legacy
applications; (6) provides IT project management for two surveillance
programs--the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System and the
National Syndromic Surveillance Program--including the development of
the CDC Platform and Message Validation Processing System (CDCP-MVPS)
the BioSense application, and the NEDSS Base System (NBS); (7)
develops, maintains, and improves epidemiologic tools for data
collection, data management, and data analysis, including Epi Info; (8)
provides training, technical assistance, and support to public health
partners and entities using Epi Info for outbreak investigations,
studies, and surveillance; (9) provides SMEs, specifications, and
services for standards-based data interchanges, electronic messaging,
vocabulary management, message validation, security and credential
management, routing and directory management; (10) provides
consultation and technical assistance to CDC programs and to external
partners on technical and informatics aspects of systems and tools
required or endorsed by CDC; (11) provides Public Health Information
Network (PHIN) certification; and (12) provides support, technical
assistance, and strategic counsel to CDC programs for the transition
from ICD-9 to ICD-10 (and future iterations).
Partnerships and Evaluation Branch (CPNED). (1) Supports CDC and
STLT Programs in the conduct of national surveillance; (2) supports and
manages STLT and partner organizations cooperative agreements with
regard to fiscal support and monitoring of expenditures; (3)
coordinates the development of Funding Opportunity Announcements,
Interim Progress Report Guidance, and Continuation Applications; (4)
monitors activities of partner organizations and STLT cooperative
agreements to assure program goals, objectives and key performance
indicators are achieved; (5) assesses technical assistance needs of
grantees and develops strategies to address those needs; (6)
collaborates with other DHIS branches and programs in the development
of evaluation criteria and performance measures for program planning
and improvement; (7) leads and coordinates or develops and implements
guidelines, uniform reporting procedures, performance measures, and
evaluation criteria for STLT and other external partner cooperative
agreements and grants; (8) works with other DHIS branches to
synthesize, translate, and disseminate evaluation findings, success
stories, and lessons learned; (9) coordinates and supports Division
training activities related to analytic data bases and data collection
and information systems; (10) develops and manages collaborative
relationships with grantees and partners to increase awareness,
understanding, and support for DHIS initiatives and priorities; (11)
supports and facilitates partnership outreach and communications to
existing and new partners; (12) provides guidance and support on the
establishment and governance of Communities of Practice associated with
DHIS programs; and (13) provides leadership for coordinating technical
assistance and support to other CDC programs, STLT grantees, and other
external partners or organizations.
James Seligman,
Acting Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2015-07348 Filed 3-31-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-18-P