Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 76493-76499 [2015-30968]
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathy Hopkins, Procurement Analyst,
Office of Acquisition Policy, GSA at
202-969-7226 or email at
kathlyn.hopkins@gsa.gov.
ADDRESSES:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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A. Purpose
Firms performing under Federal
contracts must provide adequate
documentation to support requests for
payment under these contracts. The
documentation may range from a simple
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information is usually submitted once,
at the end of the contract period or upon
delivery of the supplies, but could be
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payment schedule established under the
contract (see FAR 52.232–1 through
52.232–4, and FAR 52.232–6 through
52.232–11). The information is used to
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payments to Federal contractors.
B. Annual Reporting Burden
Respondents: 80,000.
Responses per Respondent: 120.
Total Responses: 9,600,000.
Hours per Response: .25.
Total Burden Hours: 2,400,000.
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C. Public Comments
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Payments, in all correspondence.
Edward Loeb,
Acting Director, Federal Acquisition Policy
Division, Office of Governmentwide
Acquisition Policy, Office of Acquisition
Policy, Office of Governmentwide Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–30969 Filed 12–8–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–EP–P
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 73766–73769,
dated November 25, 2015) is amended
to reflect the reorganization of the
Division of Global HIV/AIDS, Center for
Global Health, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Section C–B, Organization and
Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the title and the
mission and function statements for the
Division of Global HIV/AIDS (CWG) and
insert the following:
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Division of Global HIV and TB (CWG).
The Division of Global HIV and TB
(DGHT) provides technical assistance to
host governments, working through its
strong partnerships with Ministries of
Health and local and international
partners to implement integrated HIV/
AIDS clinical and preventive services
and systems; develop and strengthen
laboratory services; and provide
epidemiologic science, informatics, and
research support to develop sustainable
public health systems in resourceconstrained countries. DGHT: (1)
Provides leadership, management, and
services to DGHT country offices; (2)
implements integrated evidence-based
prevention, care, and treatment
programs and services; (3) evaluates
program costs, cost effectiveness and
impact to assist with prioritization,
inform program planning, and
appropriate rates of program expansion,
and strengthens capacity for sustainable,
high quality research and service
implementation to indigenous partners
and Ministries of Health; (4) builds
sustainable public health capacity in
laboratory services and systems; (5)
ensures epidemiologic and scientific
excellence in HIV/AIDS programs; (6)
contributes to the broader scientific
body of knowledge in global public
health by systematically evaluating the
scope and quality of global HIV/AIDS
and TB programs; (7) implements
operations and effectiveness research to
inform the design of current and future
programs as well as optimize allocation
of human and financial resources; (8)
strengthens in-country capacity to
design and implement HIV/AIDS
surveillance systems and surveys; (9)
builds host government public health
management capacity and trains incountry public heath workforce with the
goal of long-term program sustainability;
(10) supports host government capacity
to monitor and evaluate the process,
outcome, and impact of HIV prevention,
care, and treatment programs; and (11)
helps countries respond to public health
emergencies, assisting in response
planning and implementation with
Ministries of Health and other
international partners.
Office of the Director (CWG1). (1)
Provides strategic leadership, guidance,
management and oversight to all DGHT
programs and ensures coordination and
communication across its branches and
with other CDC programs including
CDC/Washington; U.S. Government
(USG) agencies, including the
Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS), the United States
Agency for International Development
(USAID), and Department of State (DoS);
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and other international organizations;
(2) plans, implements, and oversees all
field programs along with other USG
agencies; (3) provides oversight,
leadership, and strategic guidance for
the management of DGHT country/
program directors and country offices
for all matters of daily operation,
including management of global
workforce staff; (4) provides leadership
and guidance on policy development
and interpretation, budget formulation,
program planning, issues management,
management and operations, and
evaluation; (5) provides leadership and
oversight for the development of
communication materials and
dissemination strategies to share best
practices through media, partners, and
other audiences to strengthen the public
health response; (6) oversees
identification of opportunities for
leveraging and enhancing partnerships
for public health protection and
synergies with other Agency programs
and partners; (7) oversees DGHT
management and operations services in
coordination with appropriate CDC staff
offices, including processing travel and
assisting with accountability and
management of HHS/CDC property,
facilities, and equipment; (8) oversees
timely and sufficient DGHT staff
placement through recruitment, hiring,
and orienting of qualified staff; (9)
provides leadership to ensure retention
of qualified staff by providing workforce
management and career development
services for DGHT staff; (10) oversees
supports to ensure scientific excellence
for all DGHT scientific, programmatic,
and informational documents/materials
which includes providing scientific
review and clearance of manuscripts for
publication, abstracts for presentation,
and protocols for institutional review
boards and human subjects review; (11)
provides leadership and support for
global public health evaluation and
operational research to maximize the
effectiveness and quality of global HIV/
AIDS interventions to guide DGHT
programs and policies; (12) establishes
and implements standards for
organizational excellence; (13) provides
direct technical assistance and
maintains relationships with host
country partners, and responds to other
health needs as required; (14) assures
accountability of program funds and
reports on progress; and (15)
collaborates with other CDC and HHS
programs and offices; other USG
agencies; and other national and
international organizations.
International Laboratory Branch
(CWGB). (1) Serves as a reference
laboratory that provides guidance on
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quality assurance, continuous quality
improvement, certification and
accreditation for international
laboratory and point of care testing
(POCT) sites; (2) provides technical
assistance to country programs in the
areas of laboratory information systems,
laboratory systems, and linkages
throughout the diagnostic cascade; (3)
provides training packages, training,
guidance, and support to host nations,
other USG agencies and international
and national partners on HIV,
tuberculosis (TB), Sexually Transmitted
Infection (STI), and opportunistic
infection (OI) diagnostics and
monitoring techniques; HIV incidence
testing; hematology; clinical chemistry;
CD4; TB diagnostic and treatment
monitoring testing; anti-tuberculosis
drug susceptibility testing (DST) ;
antiretroviral treatment (ART) resistance
testing; dried blood spot polymerase
chain reaction for early infant diagnosis;
viral load monitoring; and ensuring the
quality of laboratories and testing
activities; (4) serves as a training center
of excellence for HIV/TB/STI
diagnostics for international sites; (5)
provides laboratory assistance to
international surveillance activities to
monitor trends of HIV prevalence and
incidence; (6) provides technical
assistance and quality assurance in
support of and TB prevalence and drug
resistance surveys (6) assists in the
surveillance of HIV subtypes in the
overall context of supporting serosurveillance programs; (7) assists in the
surveillance and evaluation of HIV drug
resistance as part of antiretroviral care
and treatment programs; (8) serves as a
reference laboratory for the World
Health Organization (WHO)-CDC HIV
drug resistance network and as a WHO
Supranational TB Reference Laboratory
(8) develops strategies and
methodologies to meet the clinical and
diagnostic needs of HIV/AIDS and TB
programs; (9) assists in the evaluation
and validation of serologic and nucleic
acid assays for measurement of HIV
incidence to enable evaluation of
effectiveness of prevention programs;
evaluates performance of new assays
and platforms for HIV and TB diagnosis
and treatment monitoring; (11) develops
comprehensive testing algorithms for
HIV diagnosis; (12) provides technical
guidance on introduction of new TB
diagnostic tests and algorithms; (13)
contributes to operational research to
maximize the effectiveness and quality
of global HIV/AIDS and TB
interventions to guide Division, Agency,
and PEPFAR programs and policies; (14)
conducts laboratory capacity
assessments and assists in development
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of infrastructure for effective
implementation of programs in
countries where DGHT operates; (15)
provides laboratory guidance and
support on national strategic planning
and quality management of tiered
laboratory systems in host nations and
consults on all technical aspects of
laboratory procurement,
standardization, quality control and
quality assurance; (16) works with
international accrediting organizations
to establish guidance, training, and tools
for accreditation of laboratory systems
in resource-poor settings; (17) supports
ongoing collaboration with international
laboratory experts and national and
regional laboratory personnel to resolve
technical issues and develops
international tools, guidelines,
curriculum and other resources to
improve laboratory capacity in host
nations; (18) develops and implements
strategies to expand the laboratory
health workforce and increase human
capacity of host government public
health programs to strengthen and
ensure sustainable, integrated public
health responses to HIV/AIDS and TB;
(19) promotes a transition toward
greater sustainability of laboratory
systems through the support of countrydriven efforts; (20) establishes strategic
Public Private Partnerships for
strengthening laboratory systems,
training, development of referral
systems for transporting samples, and
quality management schemes; (19)
ensures scientific excellence for all
branch manuscripts, protocols, and
programs in collaboration with the
DGHT Office of the Director (OD)
science office; (21) contributes to the
greater body of scientific knowledge
through the presentation of laboratory
operational research findings at
conferences and through publications in
peer reviewed journals; and (22)
collaborates with other DGHT branches;
other CDC (e.g., DTBE, DGHP) and HHS
programs and offices; other USG
agencies; and other national and
international organizations.
HIV Prevention Branch (CWGC). (1)
Provides technical assistance and builds
capacity to implement, improve, and
maximize effectiveness of HIV
prevention programs; (2) provides
technical assistance for scale-up of
prevention interventions and linkage to
HIV clinical services; (3) helps to
develop, expand, and evaluate HIV
testing and counseling programs in both
clinical and community settings to
assure that all persons know their HIV
status; (4) assists in implementing, and
monitoring the quality and impact of
programs for linking HIV infected
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persons to health services for HIV care
and treatment; (5) helps strengthen,
expand, and make accessible programs
to access key populations and to link
HIV infected persons to prevention,
care, and treatment programs; (6) assists
in tailoring HIV prevention programs to
meet the special needs of youth, drugusing populations, and other key
populations; (7) assists in safe and
effective implementation of biomedical
interventions, including the scale-up of
medical male circumcision; (8) provides
technical assistance to PEPFAR partner
countries to assure availability of safe
blood by attaining blood center
accreditation, quality assurance for
blood bank laboratories, and appropriate
health information systems for blood
services; (9) supports global surveillance
systems for transfusion- and injectionassociated HIV transmission and the
transmission of other blood-borne
pathogens of public health importance;
(10) conducts investigations and
supports the development of
surveillance systems to track medical
injection use and misuse and provides
technical assistance to countries to
reduce demand for medical injections;
(11) contributes to operational research
to maximize the effectiveness and
quality of global HIV/AIDS prevention
interventions to guide programs and
policies; (12) establishes strategic Public
Private Partnerships to build capacity
for and maximize effectiveness of HIV
prevention programs in host countries;
(13) ensures scientific excellence for all
branch manuscripts, protocols, and
programs in collaboration with the
DGHT OD science office; and (14)
collaborates with other DGHT branches,
CDC and HHS programs and offices,
USG agencies, and national and
international organizations.
HIV Care and Treatment Branch
(CWGD). (1) Provides technical
assistance and builds capacity in
developing and implementing
sustainable care and treatment programs
for persons with HIV/AIDS. This
includes diagnosis, linkage to care, and
care and treatment services for HIV/
AIDS, HIV-related tuberculosis, other
opportunistic infections, and
opportunistic cancers; (2) assists
countries to achieve the 90–90–90 goals
articulated by UNAIDS and by PEPFAR
3.0; (3) provides technical expertise and
support to country programs, partners,
and Ministries of Health in planning,
implementing, and evaluating effective
strategies for care and treatment of
persons with HIV; (4) provides HIV care
and treatment expertise to country
programs, partners, and Ministries of
Health on management, standard
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operating procedures, human resources,
physical infrastructure, training, drug
and health commodities management,
laboratory services, monitoring and
evaluation, community services, linkage
between HIV and other programs,
promotion of prevention, and
sustainability; (5) provides support for
continuous quality improvement of HIV
care and treatment programs; (6)
promotes appropriate integration of
services, including HIV prevention
interventions into clinical care and
treatment settings and HIV services into
general medical services; (7) conducts
operational research in collaboration
with country programs to identify best
practices, address barriers, and respond
to emerging scientific issues related to
HIV care and treatment service delivery;
(8) collaborates with international
partners to synthesize the scientific
body of knowledge on HIV care and
treatment, including TB/HIV coinfection; (9) collaborates with
international partners to develop and
disseminate tools (e.g., protocols and
training curricula), guidelines and
policies; (10) supports analysis of
program costs and cost-effectiveness to
assist with prioritization, inform
program planning, and determine
appropriate rates of program expansion;
(11) supports capacity building of host
countries to transition responsibility for
implementation of HIV care and
treatment services to indigenous
partners and Ministries of Health, with
result of increasing ownership,
sustainability and service delivery cost
efficiencies; (12) establishes strategic
Public Private Partnerships aimed at
augmenting capacity for developing and
implementing sustainable care and
treatment programs, including
diagnosis, linkage to care, and care and
treatment services for HIV/AIDS, HIVrelated tuberculosis, other opportunistic
infections, and opportunistic cancers;
(13) ensures scientific excellence for all
branch Manuscripts, protocols, and
programs in collaboration with the
DGHT OD science office; and (14)
collaborates with other DGHT branches;
other CDC and HHS programs and
offices; other USG agencies; and other
national and international
organizations.
Maternal and Child Health Branch
(CWGE). (1) Supports the international
scale-up of comprehensive, quality
prevention of mother-to-child HIV
transmission (PMTCT) and pediatric
(Peds) programs by developing
adaptable training tools, utilizing
operational research to identify and
implement models of service delivery
adapted to district, regional, sub-
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national and national contexts; (2)
provides technical expertise and
support to countries in planning,
implementing, and evaluating effective
strategies for scaling up of sustainable
programs for the prevention, diagnosis,
and treatment of HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, and other opportunistic
infections in women, infants, and
children, including linking PMTCT/
Peds HIV programs with HIV clinical
and preventive services and other
maternal and child health settings/
contexts; (3) builds national capacity for
and provides guidance on development
of policy for formulations for and access
to appropriate long-term combination
ART for HIV-infected children; (4)
conducts operational research in
collaboration with country programs to
promote best practices, address barriers,
and respond to emerging scientific
issues for PMTCT/Peds HIV service
delivery; (5) collaborates with
international partners to contribute to
the scientific body of knowledge on
global PMTCT/Peds and broader
maternal and child health issues and to
develop and disseminate tools,
guidelines, and policies to translate
research for improved program
implementation in resource-constrained
countries; (6) provides support for
continuous quality improvement of
PMTCT and Peds HIV care and
treatment programs, including those
within broader maternal and child
health programs; (7) supports analysis of
program costs and cost-effectiveness to
assist with prioritization, inform
program planning, and determine
appropriate rates of program expansion;
(8) acts as a key part of a broader CDC
strategic response to address health
needs and gender-related issues of
maternal and child health worldwide,
supporting a comprehensive,
multidisciplinary approach to building
maternal and child health services and
systems capacity in host countries; (9)
establishes strategic public private
partnerships for HIV maternal and child
health services and systems capacity in
host countries; (10) ensures scientific
excellence for all branch manuscripts,
protocols, and programs in collaboration
with the DGHT OD science office; and
(11) collaborates with other DGHT
branches; other CDC and HHS programs
and offices; other USG agencies; and
other national and international
organizations.
Epidemiology and Surveillance
Branch (CWGG). (1) Builds the capacity
of countries to develop and/or enhance
HIV-related surveillance systems and
use the results of surveillance systems
and surveys for impact monitoring,
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program planning, and HIV policymaking; (2) implements and evaluates
novel approaches for conducting
surveillance and surveys including
small area estimation of HIV prevalence
and key population size estimation; (3)
provides capacity-building technical
assistance for in-country HIV-related
epidemiologic investigations; (4)
supports surveys and surveillance
systems that measure HIV-related
behaviors, HIV prevalence and
incidence, uptake of HIV related
services, clinical outcomes, and health
status among the general population and
at-risk populations; (5) develops
normative guidance to improve the
collection and analysis of HIV
surveillance data including morbidity
and mortality; (6) assists and provides
technical expertise and training on
collection, analysis, interpretation,
dissemination, and use of HIV
surveillance data; (7) assists and
strengthens capacity of host country
governments and organizations to assess
and ensure the quality of the data
collected in HIV-related surveillance
systems and clinic-based HIV data
systems; (8) coordinates, oversees, or
assists in the formulation of HIV
surveillance related funding/budgets
and in the execution of a variety of
acquisition and assistance awards; (9)
ensures scientific excellence for relevant
manuscripts, protocols, and programs in
collaboration with the DGHT OD
science office; and (10) collaborates
with other DGHT branches, other CDC
and HHS programs and offices, other
USG agencies, and other national and
international organizations as
appropriate.
Economics and Health Services
Research Branch (CWGH). (1) Identifies
priority information needs for program
planning, resource allocation, efficiency
and program integration, and develops
economic analysis and operational
research activities; (2) implements
economic studies, including cost and
cost-effectiveness studies, and applies
advanced modeling techniques to
inform and optimize global health
planning, policy and programs, and
provide a broader understanding of the
effects of health programs on improving
economic and other non-health
outcomes; (3) supports USG efforts in
projecting financing needs to efficiently
meet program targets in areas of
prevention, care and treatment, and
human resources for health (HRH); (4)
guides development and
implementation of monitoring systems
to routinely capture program
expenditure data to support planning,
accountability and efficient
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programming; (5) trains and mentors
partner country personnel in the
methods and application of economic
analysis of global health programs and
policy; (6) provides technical input,
guidance, review and implementation
support to operational research on and
evaluation of global HIV/AIDS
activities; (7) provides technical input
on the development of partner country
health finance systems and capacity to
develop sustainable and accountable
programs, and assists in the
implementation of national AIDS
spending assessment activities; (8)
implements and provides technical
guidance on HIV/AIDS resource
tracking exercises and monitoring of
HIV/AIDS spending; (9) assesses
financial flows and bottlenecks to
financing service delivery of HIV/AIDS
interventions in order to improve
efficient use and allocation of funds;
(10) works with health and budget
officials to further understanding of
issues with a view to improving and
sustaining the HIV program as well as
improving communication between
Ministries of Health and Finance; (11)
strengthens the capacity of in-country
counterparts of HIV financing,
sustainability, and public financial
management concepts and practices;
(12) develop, models, and analyzes the
HIV/AIDS investment and assess the
direct impact and broader
macroeconomic impacts of the HIV/
AIDS investment; (13) participates in
USG interagency technical working
groups and provides technical
leadership to address HIV/AIDS
economics and finance, Health Systems
Strengthening (HSS), and HRH issues
and initiatives; (13) provides technical
support for the routine monitoring of
health-related governance including
financial accountability, programmatic
transparency, policy development and
enforcement, and engagement and
regulation of the private health sector,
including the Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria; (14)
develops the HSS operational research
agenda for DGHT and implements
public health evaluations related to
health systems; (15) provides broad HSS
technical assistance and support to USG
in-country teams and host countries to
improve the delivery of HIV and other
health services and work toward
transition to country ownership of
program; (16) supports branches in
strengthening health systems,
developing metrics to assess DGHT’s
contribution to HSS and implementing
monitoring systems to routinely collect
DGHT’s health system impact,
especially in the areas of laboratory
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systems, maternal child health services,
HIV care and treatment service delivery,
blood safety programs, and prevention
services; (17) helps define CDC’s role
and identify priority needs for
strengthening HRH to support
sustainability of HIV programs; (18)
provides HRH technical assistance and
other support to plan and meet priority
HRH needs, including pre-service and
in- service training, task-shifting,
capacity-building of accreditation and
credentialing bodies, HRH planning and
management, workplace performance
and safety, quality of nursing and
midwifery staffing in HIV service
delivery, and the development of
human resource information systems
and their use in health decision-making;
(19) conducts monitoring and
evaluation of US-supported HRH
activities, to help inform U.S. resource
and program decision-making; (20)
conducts policy analysis and generate
evidence to enact evidence-based laws
and policies for the sustainable scale-up
of the HIV/AIDS response in U.S.
supported HIV/AIDS programs; (21)
supports operational research activities
and public health evaluations that
address current HRH questions and
monitoring needs; (22) ensures scientific
excellence for all branch manuscripts,
protocols, and programs in collaboration
with the DGHT OD science office; and
(23) collaborates with other DGHT
branches other CDC and HHS programs
and offices, other USG agencies, and
other national and international
organizations.
Overseas Strategy and Management
Branch (CWGJ). (1) Provides and
coordinates support to facilitate
effective design and delivery of global
HIV and TB activities in DGHT country
programs in the areas of program
strategy and implementation, program
monitoring and evaluation, health
diplomacy, fiscal management,
procurement, personnel, extramural
programs, and other domains; (2) serves
as the official and overarching linkage
between DGHT overseas offices and
CDC, including DGHT OD and other
DGHT Branches, components of CGH
other than DGHT, and other relevant
offices of CDC, HHS, and USG; (3)
recruits, hires, and supervises DGHT
program directors, and plays a major
role in those same functions for DGHT
Program Deputy Directors; (4)
coordinates the hiring of all US Direct
Hire (USDH) employees to DGHT
overseas positions, and manages their
pre-deployment training, preparation,
and orientation to those critical
positions; (5) facilitates and provides as
needed short- and long-term
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consultation, technical assistance, and
backstopping for program issues to
DGHT country offices; (6) manages the
Country Office Management and
Accountability System (CMAS), a
principal DGHT process for
accountability across a multiple core
functions for performance; (7) provides
long-term management and operations
support for smaller DGHT overseas
offices; and (8) serves as the CDC
representative on interagency country
support teams for the President’s
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.
Program Budget and Extramural
Management Branch (CWGK) (1)
Coordinates all DGHT procurement and
extramural activities in creating spend
plans in compliance with federal
appropriations law, congressional
intent, and global HIV/AIDS policies; (2)
facilitates and manages the
development, clearance, and award of
all new and ongoing DGHT
headquarters and field grants,
cooperative agreements, and contracts;
(3) provides technical assistance and
guidance to the countries and branches
on budget and extramural issues
including assisting programs in
determining the appropriate funding
mechanism to support global HIV/AIDS
activities; (4) provides training and tools
to DGHT country programs to improve
budget and cooperative agreement
management; (5) manages DGHT
headquarters budget and tracks overall
DGHT budget, which includes
conducting budget planning exercises
and managing the annual close-out
process; (6) provides funding and
budgetary data for regular reports
including the Headquarters Operational
Plan, GAO and IG audits, country
Annual Program Results to OGC, and
other requests for data; (8) reviews and
provides input on budgetary and
procurement policy-related documents;
(9) liaises and collaborates, as
appropriate, with the DGHT Associate
Director for Science, other financial and
procurement-related units and offices
including Office of Financial
Management, as well as other CDC and
HHS offices, OGC, and other USG
agencies; and (10) collaborates with
other DGHT branches; other CDC and
HHS programs and offices; other USG
agencies; and other national and
international organizations.
Global Tuberculosis Prevention and
Control Branch (CWGL). (1) Provides
technical assistance and builds capacity
in developing and implementing
sustainable comprehensive global TB
prevention and control programs. This
includes prevention, diagnosis, and
treatment services for TB, HIV/AIDS
and other opportunistic infections; (2)
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coordinates Division and center
international TB activities; (3)
coordinates the assessment of
immigration and its impact on TB
patterns in the U.S. and assists with the
evaluation of overseas TB screening
procedures for immigrants and refugees;
(4) conducts and coordinates
operational research and
demonstrations to improve both the
overseas screening for tuberculosis of
immigrants and refugees and the
domestic follow-up of those entering
with suspected TB (done in
collaboration with other CIOs); (5)
collaborates with WHO, the World
Bank, IUATLD, USAID, and others to
improve the quality of TB programs
globally by supporting implementation
of the WHO-recommended directly
observed therapy, short-course strategy;
(6) collaborates with the nation of
Botswana, WHO, the World Bank,
IUATLD, USAID, and others, to conduct
investigations into the diagnosis,
management, and prevention of
tuberculosis in persons with and
without HIV infection; (7) provides
technical expertise and support in
addressing the AIDS pandemic in
countries where both HIV and TB are
reported in epidemic proportions; (8)
collaborates with WHO, USAID, and
several nations to reduce the impact of
multi-drug resistant TB on global TB
control; (9) prepares manuscripts for
publication in scientific journals; (10)
presents findings at national and
international scientific meetings; (11)
supervises Epidemic Intelligence
Service Officers (EIS) in the conduct of
their two year assignments; and (12)
presents international and operational
research findings to Advisory Council
for the Elimination of Tuberculosis
(ACET) and national and international
scientific meetings.
Science Integrity Branch (CWGM). (1)
Serves as the principal advisor on
standards related to scientific activities
and human subjects protection within
DGHA, supporting headquarters and
country programs; (2) ensures scientific
excellence in DGHA scientific
documents disseminated to the public
by coordinating scientific review of
manuscripts for publication, abstracts
for presentation, and study protocols;
(3) provides coordination and support
for implementation science (operational
research) to maximize the effectiveness
and quality of global HIV/AIDS
interventions; (4) conducts regulatory
and ethical reviews for activities
involving human participants; (5)
reviews funded activities for application
of human research regulations; (6)
provides oversight for DGHA
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76497
implementation science-related
workgroups; (7) encourages internal and
external scientific collaborations and
partnerships; (8) ensures compliance
with good clinical and laboratory
practices (GCP and GCLP); and (9)
provides training to support science
quality and integrity at headquarters
and in country programs.
Management and Operations Branch
(CWGN). (1) In coordination with
appropriate CDC and CGH staff offices
provides oversight, guidance and
accountability for all administrative
functions, domestic and international
travel, human resources, and
management of equipment, property
and facilities; (2) develops and
implements administrative policies,
procedures and operations as
appropriate for the Division; and
prepares special reports and studies as
required in the administrative
management area; (3) provides
leadership and guidance in all matters
of daily operation, including
recruitment, retention and management
of a diverse, multi-disciplinary global
workforce staff; (4) ensures timely and
sufficient DGHT domestic staff
placement through recruitment, hiring,
and orienting of qualified staff; (5)
ensures retention of qualified staff by
providing workforce management and
career development services for DGHT
domestic staff; (6) ensures the full
implementation and utilization of
agency wide administrative systems and
processes in support of Division
management and operations.
Strategy, Policy, and Communications
Branch (CWGP). (1) Provides leadership
and strategic direction for the Division
in determining CDC’s global HIV and
tuberculosis (TB) objectives and
priorities; (2) provides policy direction
for the Division on sensitive or
controversial issues impacting CDC’s
global HIV and TB policies and
programs; (3) provides guidance to top
agency officials on strategies necessary
to communicate and maximize
acceptance of the agency’s positions on
issues; (4) provides leadership and
guidance on policy development and
interpretation, budget formulation, and
issues management; (5) communicates,
through all relevant forms of media, the
Division’s program priorities,
accomplishments, and value to both
internal and external stakeholders; (6)
leads and facilitates the Division’s
external relations with key nongovernmental partners, faith-based
partners, community-based partners,
international partners and other
constituencies; and (7) facilitates the
Division’s efforts to work closely with
multilateral partners to continually
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improve joint planning, data use, and
strategic alignment to maximize impact
in the fight against HIV/AIDS globally.
Special Initiatives Branch (CWGQ). (1)
Supports key leadership in assessing
issues, identifying mitigation options,
managing resolutions, coordinating
DGHT responses to complex issues; (2)
convenes relevant CDC SMEs to
facilitate quick resolution of critical and
complex concerns; (3) assures
coordination across DGHT branches,
horizontal and vertical, and with other
relevant CDC organizations units in
response to priority issues as needed; (4)
convenes relevant CDC SMEs to
conceive, define and develop concept
notes which describe new Global HIV/
AIDS special initiatives addressing
program and/or operations issues; (5)
communicates findings and status of
current and ongoing priority issues
resolution with DGHT Director and
senior leadership on a timely basis; (6)
initiates foundation documents (task
trackers, scopes of work, list of working
group participants, reporting platforms)
for priority initiatives requiring cross
branch collaboration; (7) investigates
options for preventing or early detection
of emerging issues that impact on
effective/efficient use of resources; and
(8) directs DGHT external assignees
(both domestic and international) to
assure DGHT HIV/AIDS expertise and
technical assistance is provided to
external partners effectively and
efficiently while also assuring CDC
directly learns and benefits from these
partnerships with other organizations.
Health Informatics, Data
Management, and Statistics Branch
(CWGR). (1) Provides leadership and
technical expertise to DGHT, agency,
other US government agency,
multilateral organizations, and
implementing partners in the
development, dissemination, and
implementation of information system,
data management, analytic, and
statistical standards, guidance, methods
and solutions; (2) provides specialized
expertise in health information systems,
data management, data analytics and
statistics across the life cycle of HIV
implementation science, evaluation, and
research projects, including expertise
study design, sample design and sample
size estimation, questionnaire
development, information system
design and development, data capture,
management, monitoring and use,
statistical analysis, report and
manuscript writing, and data
documentation, archival and
dissemination; (3) provides specialized
expertise in information systems, data
management and statistics to DGHTsupported and other HIV surveillance
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and survey systems and activities to
promote better understanding of HIV
epidemics and HIV program outcomes
and impact; (4) assures statistical, data
management, and analytic integrity of
DGHT and other global HIV activities
and projects through technical review of
concepts, protocols, reports,
manuscripts and other products; (5)
provides leadership and statistical
expertise to agency and other US
government agencies, multilateral
organizations to promote statistical
innovation and advance novel
approaches in the analysis and
modeling of HIV epidemics and
evaluation of HIV programs; (6)
collaborates with DGHT branches and
country offices, host country
governments and implementing partners
to develop efficient and sustainable
approaches to improve the use of
national routine health information
systems for program monitoring and
improvement; (7) provides technical
support to DGHT, agency, and
interagency global HIV initiatives to
strengthen capacity to collect, exchange,
access, manage, analyze, use, and
release HIV-related data to inform
decisions to allocate resources and
strengthen programs, including the
advancement of innovative techniques
and the appropriate use of technology;
(8) collaborates with CGH in assuring
that DGHT-sponsored information
systems comply with all legislatively
mandated requirements, including
information systems security, capital
planning, and reporting requirements;
(9) builds global capacity for efficient
and sustainable data management and
health information system design,
implementation, and use, by promoting,
supporting and training a DGHT-led
community of practice who identify and
promote best practices and identify key
competencies and curricula needed to
advance data management and health
information systems; (10) builds and
maintains an enterprise performance
monitoring data warehouse and engages
in technical partnerships with DGHT
regional and country offices to apply
appropriate data management and
analytic methodology to data systems
for performance monitoring,
accountability, and impact; (11) assures
robust, cost effective and sustainable
data management and information
system infrastructure and
methodologies for global HIV projects,
by providing reviews of program and
research data management plans,
disseminating guidelines and policy for
data management standards, and, where
appropriate, monitoring for adherence
to standards and guidelines; (12) advises
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about the resources needed to execute
health information system, data
management, analytic, and statistical
functions, including human resources,
staffing plans, and extramural activities;
(13) supports the integration of HIV data
into more comprehensive health
information systems, the development
of comprehensive health information
systems, the development of metrics for
monitoring and evaluating the
implementation and functioning of
health information systems; (14)
provides technical assistance to DGHT
regional and country offices and host
national governments to strengthen
health information systems, including
strategic planning, systems needs
assessments, identifying and resolving
gaps, describing data standards and data
exchange needed across systems, and
developing standards for system
interoperability; and (15) collaborates
with agency, interagency and
multilateral organizations to develop
standards, tools, and guidance to
improve the secure collection and use of
HIV associated data, including guidance
and tools to improve standardized
definitions for HIV-related data, open
source tools for the implementation of
patient and program monitoring
systems; security and confidentiality
guidance for HIV data; and guidance on
unique identification and matching of
patient data across information systems.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Data
Analysis Branch (CWGS). (1) Develops,
implements and evaluates standard and
novel approaches to program
monitoring and evaluation of inputs,
outputs, outcomes and impacts for
facility- and community-based HIV/
AIDS programs, appropriate to the level
and type of US government support; (2)
provides support and technical
expertise at all stages of evaluation,
including process and outcome, using
quantitative, qualitative and mixed
methods in global HIV/AIDS and TB
programs; (3) promotes and supports
agency and extramural program
performance and accountability
outcome measurement; (4) assists in and
provides training to improve HIV/AIDS
program monitoring and evaluation,
including site-based service and data
quality assessments, M&E systems
assessment, and data visualization,
analysis and use for program
improvement; (5) provides support and
technical expertise to US agency
collaborations, in-country teams and
multinational partners to monitor and
evaluate the outputs, outcomes, and
impact of US supported global HIV/
AIDS activities; (6) develops,
implements and supports innovative
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analytical approaches integrating
multiple sources of data and in using
the results for impact monitoring,
planning, and HIV/AIDS policy-making;
(7) supports and strengthens global and
country capacity to monitor and
evaluate HIV/AIDS prevention, care,
treatment programs, health system
strengthening, other related global
health programs, and health systems
through the development of standards,
guidelines, curricula, and other tools;
(8) coordinates, oversees, or assists in
the formulation of M&E funding/budgets
and in the execution of extramural
awards; and (9) collaborates with other
DGHT branches, other CDC and HHS
programs and offices, other USG
agencies, and other national and
international organizations.
James Seligman,
Acting Chief Operating Officer, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2015–30968 Filed 12–8–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and
Families
Proposed Information Collection
Activity; Comment Request
Title: Strengthening Relationship
Education and Marriage Services
(STREAMS) Evaluation
OMB No.: New Collection
Description: The Office of Family
Assistance (OFA) within the
Administration for Children and
Familes (ACF) at the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services has issued
grants to 46 organizations to provide
healthy marriage and relationship
education (HMRE) services. The Office
of Planning, Research, and Evaluation
(OPRE) within ACF proposes data
collection activity in six HMRE grantees
as part of the Strengthening
Relationship Education and Marriage
Services (STREAMS) evaluation. The
purpose of STREAMS is to measure the
effectiveness and quality of HMRE
programs designed to strengthen
intimate relationships. In particular, the
evaluation will examine HMRE
programs for youth in high school, atrisk youth, and adults. The study will
fill knowledge gaps about the
effectiveness of HMRE programming for
youth and adults and strategies for
improving program delivery and
participant engagement in services. The
STREAMS evaluation will include two
components, an impact study and a
process study.
1. Impact Study. The goal of the
impact study is to provide rigorous
estimates of the effectiveness of program
services and interventions to improve
program implementation. The impact
study will use an experimental design.
Eligible program applicants will be
randomly assigned to either a program
group that is offered program services or
a control group that is not. Grantee staff
will use an add-on to an existing
program MIS (the nFORM system, OMB
no. 0970–0460) to conduct random
assignment in sites enrolling at-risk
youth and adults. STREAMS will use
classroom-level or school-level random
assignment for programs serving youth
in high school. STREAMS will collect
baseline information from eligible
program applicants prior to random
assignment and administer a follow-up
survey to all study participants 12
months after random assignment.
2. Process study. The goal of the
process study is to support the
interpretation of impact findings and
document program operations to
support future replication. STREAMS
will conduct semi-structured interviews
with program staff and selected
community stakeholders, conduct focus
groups with program participants,
administer a paper-and-pencil survey to
program staff, and collect data on
adherence to program curricula through
an add on to an existing program MIS
(nForm, OMB no. 0970–0460).
This 60-Day Notice includes the
following data collection activities: (1)
Introductory script that program staff
will use to introduce the study to
participants, (2) the MIS functions for
conducting random assignment, (3) a
baseline survey for youth, (4) a baseline
survey for adults, (5) a follow-up survey
for youth, (6) a follow-up survey for
adults, (7) a topic guide for semistructured interviews with program staff
and community stakeholders, (8) focus
group guides for program participants,
(9) a staff survey, and (10) the MIS
functions for collecting data on
adherence to program curricula.
Respondents: Program applicants,
study participants, grantee staff, and
local stakeholders (such as staff at
referral agencies).
ANNUAL BURDEN ESTIMATES
Total number
of respondents
Instrument
Annual
number of
respondents
Number of
responses per
respondent
Average
burden hours
per response
Annual burden
hours
Impact Study, Introductory Script and Random Assignment
1. Grantee staff ....................................................................
2. Program applicants ..........................................................
3. Study MIS for grantee to conduct random assignment ..
24
7,500
16
12
3,750
8
313
1
313
.08
.08
.08
301
300
200
1,550
2,000
1,395
1,600
1
1
1
1
.5
.5
.5
.75
775
1,000
698
1,200
75
45
30
15
60
1
1
1
1
1
1
1.5
1.5
1.5
.5
75
68
45
23
30
Impact Study, Baseline Surveys
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
4.
5.
6.
7.
Baseline Survey for Youth ...............................................
Baseline Survey for Adults ..............................................
Follow-up Survey for Youth .............................................
Follow-up Survey for Adults ............................................
3,100
4,000
2,790
3,200
Process Study
8. Topic guide for process study staff and stakeholder
interviews ..........................................................................
9. Focus group guide for adults ...........................................
10. Focus group guide for youth in schools ........................
11. Focus group guide for youth out of schools ..................
12. Staff survey ....................................................................
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90
60
30
120
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 236 (Wednesday, December 9, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 76493-76499]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-30968]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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 73766-73769, dated November 25, 2015) is
amended to reflect the reorganization of the Division of Global HIV/
AIDS, Center for Global Health, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
Section C-B, Organization and Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the title and the mission and function
statements for the Division of Global HIV/AIDS (CWG) and insert the
following:
Division of Global HIV and TB (CWG). The Division of Global HIV and
TB (DGHT) provides technical assistance to host governments, working
through its strong partnerships with Ministries of Health and local and
international partners to implement integrated HIV/AIDS clinical and
preventive services and systems; develop and strengthen laboratory
services; and provide epidemiologic science, informatics, and research
support to develop sustainable public health systems in resource-
constrained countries. DGHT: (1) Provides leadership, management, and
services to DGHT country offices; (2) implements integrated evidence-
based prevention, care, and treatment programs and services; (3)
evaluates program costs, cost effectiveness and impact to assist with
prioritization, inform program planning, and appropriate rates of
program expansion, and strengthens capacity for sustainable, high
quality research and service implementation to indigenous partners and
Ministries of Health; (4) builds sustainable public health capacity in
laboratory services and systems; (5) ensures epidemiologic and
scientific excellence in HIV/AIDS programs; (6) contributes to the
broader scientific body of knowledge in global public health by
systematically evaluating the scope and quality of global HIV/AIDS and
TB programs; (7) implements operations and effectiveness research to
inform the design of current and future programs as well as optimize
allocation of human and financial resources; (8) strengthens in-country
capacity to design and implement HIV/AIDS surveillance systems and
surveys; (9) builds host government public health management capacity
and trains in-country public heath workforce with the goal of long-term
program sustainability; (10) supports host government capacity to
monitor and evaluate the process, outcome, and impact of HIV
prevention, care, and treatment programs; and (11) helps countries
respond to public health emergencies, assisting in response planning
and implementation with Ministries of Health and other international
partners.
Office of the Director (CWG1). (1) Provides strategic leadership,
guidance, management and oversight to all DGHT programs and ensures
coordination and communication across its branches and with other CDC
programs including CDC/Washington; U.S. Government (USG) agencies,
including the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID), and Department of
State (DoS);
[[Page 76494]]
and other international organizations; (2) plans, implements, and
oversees all field programs along with other USG agencies; (3) provides
oversight, leadership, and strategic guidance for the management of
DGHT country/program directors and country offices for all matters of
daily operation, including management of global workforce staff; (4)
provides leadership and guidance on policy development and
interpretation, budget formulation, program planning, issues
management, management and operations, and evaluation; (5) provides
leadership and oversight for the development of communication materials
and dissemination strategies to share best practices through media,
partners, and other audiences to strengthen the public health response;
(6) oversees identification of opportunities for leveraging and
enhancing partnerships for public health protection and synergies with
other Agency programs and partners; (7) oversees DGHT management and
operations services in coordination with appropriate CDC staff offices,
including processing travel and assisting with accountability and
management of HHS/CDC property, facilities, and equipment; (8) oversees
timely and sufficient DGHT staff placement through recruitment, hiring,
and orienting of qualified staff; (9) provides leadership to ensure
retention of qualified staff by providing workforce management and
career development services for DGHT staff; (10) oversees supports to
ensure scientific excellence for all DGHT scientific, programmatic, and
informational documents/materials which includes providing scientific
review and clearance of manuscripts for publication, abstracts for
presentation, and protocols for institutional review boards and human
subjects review; (11) provides leadership and support for global public
health evaluation and operational research to maximize the
effectiveness and quality of global HIV/AIDS interventions to guide
DGHT programs and policies; (12) establishes and implements standards
for organizational excellence; (13) provides direct technical
assistance and maintains relationships with host country partners, and
responds to other health needs as required; (14) assures accountability
of program funds and reports on progress; and (15) collaborates with
other CDC and HHS programs and offices; other USG agencies; and other
national and international organizations.
International Laboratory Branch (CWGB). (1) Serves as a reference
laboratory that provides guidance on quality assurance, continuous
quality improvement, certification and accreditation for international
laboratory and point of care testing (POCT) sites; (2) provides
technical assistance to country programs in the areas of laboratory
information systems, laboratory systems, and linkages throughout the
diagnostic cascade; (3) provides training packages, training, guidance,
and support to host nations, other USG agencies and international and
national partners on HIV, tuberculosis (TB), Sexually Transmitted
Infection (STI), and opportunistic infection (OI) diagnostics and
monitoring techniques; HIV incidence testing; hematology; clinical
chemistry; CD4; TB diagnostic and treatment monitoring testing; anti-
tuberculosis drug susceptibility testing (DST) ; antiretroviral
treatment (ART) resistance testing; dried blood spot polymerase chain
reaction for early infant diagnosis; viral load monitoring; and
ensuring the quality of laboratories and testing activities; (4) serves
as a training center of excellence for HIV/TB/STI diagnostics for
international sites; (5) provides laboratory assistance to
international surveillance activities to monitor trends of HIV
prevalence and incidence; (6) provides technical assistance and quality
assurance in support of and TB prevalence and drug resistance surveys
(6) assists in the surveillance of HIV subtypes in the overall context
of supporting sero-surveillance programs; (7) assists in the
surveillance and evaluation of HIV drug resistance as part of
antiretroviral care and treatment programs; (8) serves as a reference
laboratory for the World Health Organization (WHO)-CDC HIV drug
resistance network and as a WHO Supranational TB Reference Laboratory
(8) develops strategies and methodologies to meet the clinical and
diagnostic needs of HIV/AIDS and TB programs; (9) assists in the
evaluation and validation of serologic and nucleic acid assays for
measurement of HIV incidence to enable evaluation of effectiveness of
prevention programs; evaluates performance of new assays and platforms
for HIV and TB diagnosis and treatment monitoring; (11) develops
comprehensive testing algorithms for HIV diagnosis; (12) provides
technical guidance on introduction of new TB diagnostic tests and
algorithms; (13) contributes to operational research to maximize the
effectiveness and quality of global HIV/AIDS and TB interventions to
guide Division, Agency, and PEPFAR programs and policies; (14) conducts
laboratory capacity assessments and assists in development of
infrastructure for effective implementation of programs in countries
where DGHT operates; (15) provides laboratory guidance and support on
national strategic planning and quality management of tiered laboratory
systems in host nations and consults on all technical aspects of
laboratory procurement, standardization, quality control and quality
assurance; (16) works with international accrediting organizations to
establish guidance, training, and tools for accreditation of laboratory
systems in resource-poor settings; (17) supports ongoing collaboration
with international laboratory experts and national and regional
laboratory personnel to resolve technical issues and develops
international tools, guidelines, curriculum and other resources to
improve laboratory capacity in host nations; (18) develops and
implements strategies to expand the laboratory health workforce and
increase human capacity of host government public health programs to
strengthen and ensure sustainable, integrated public health responses
to HIV/AIDS and TB; (19) promotes a transition toward greater
sustainability of laboratory systems through the support of country-
driven efforts; (20) establishes strategic Public Private Partnerships
for strengthening laboratory systems, training, development of referral
systems for transporting samples, and quality management schemes; (19)
ensures scientific excellence for all branch manuscripts, protocols,
and programs in collaboration with the DGHT Office of the Director (OD)
science office; (21) contributes to the greater body of scientific
knowledge through the presentation of laboratory operational research
findings at conferences and through publications in peer reviewed
journals; and (22) collaborates with other DGHT branches; other CDC
(e.g., DTBE, DGHP) and HHS programs and offices; other USG agencies;
and other national and international organizations.
HIV Prevention Branch (CWGC). (1) Provides technical assistance and
builds capacity to implement, improve, and maximize effectiveness of
HIV prevention programs; (2) provides technical assistance for scale-up
of prevention interventions and linkage to HIV clinical services; (3)
helps to develop, expand, and evaluate HIV testing and counseling
programs in both clinical and community settings to assure that all
persons know their HIV status; (4) assists in implementing, and
monitoring the quality and impact of programs for linking HIV infected
[[Page 76495]]
persons to health services for HIV care and treatment; (5) helps
strengthen, expand, and make accessible programs to access key
populations and to link HIV infected persons to prevention, care, and
treatment programs; (6) assists in tailoring HIV prevention programs to
meet the special needs of youth, drug-using populations, and other key
populations; (7) assists in safe and effective implementation of
biomedical interventions, including the scale-up of medical male
circumcision; (8) provides technical assistance to PEPFAR partner
countries to assure availability of safe blood by attaining blood
center accreditation, quality assurance for blood bank laboratories,
and appropriate health information systems for blood services; (9)
supports global surveillance systems for transfusion- and injection-
associated HIV transmission and the transmission of other blood-borne
pathogens of public health importance; (10) conducts investigations and
supports the development of surveillance systems to track medical
injection use and misuse and provides technical assistance to countries
to reduce demand for medical injections; (11) contributes to
operational research to maximize the effectiveness and quality of
global HIV/AIDS prevention interventions to guide programs and
policies; (12) establishes strategic Public Private Partnerships to
build capacity for and maximize effectiveness of HIV prevention
programs in host countries; (13) ensures scientific excellence for all
branch manuscripts, protocols, and programs in collaboration with the
DGHT OD science office; and (14) collaborates with other DGHT branches,
CDC and HHS programs and offices, USG agencies, and national and
international organizations.
HIV Care and Treatment Branch (CWGD). (1) Provides technical
assistance and builds capacity in developing and implementing
sustainable care and treatment programs for persons with HIV/AIDS. This
includes diagnosis, linkage to care, and care and treatment services
for HIV/AIDS, HIV-related tuberculosis, other opportunistic infections,
and opportunistic cancers; (2) assists countries to achieve the 90-90-
90 goals articulated by UNAIDS and by PEPFAR 3.0; (3) provides
technical expertise and support to country programs, partners, and
Ministries of Health in planning, implementing, and evaluating
effective strategies for care and treatment of persons with HIV; (4)
provides HIV care and treatment expertise to country programs,
partners, and Ministries of Health on management, standard operating
procedures, human resources, physical infrastructure, training, drug
and health commodities management, laboratory services, monitoring and
evaluation, community services, linkage between HIV and other programs,
promotion of prevention, and sustainability; (5) provides support for
continuous quality improvement of HIV care and treatment programs; (6)
promotes appropriate integration of services, including HIV prevention
interventions into clinical care and treatment settings and HIV
services into general medical services; (7) conducts operational
research in collaboration with country programs to identify best
practices, address barriers, and respond to emerging scientific issues
related to HIV care and treatment service delivery; (8) collaborates
with international partners to synthesize the scientific body of
knowledge on HIV care and treatment, including TB/HIV co-infection; (9)
collaborates with international partners to develop and disseminate
tools (e.g., protocols and training curricula), guidelines and
policies; (10) supports analysis of program costs and cost-
effectiveness to assist with prioritization, inform program planning,
and determine appropriate rates of program expansion; (11) supports
capacity building of host countries to transition responsibility for
implementation of HIV care and treatment services to indigenous
partners and Ministries of Health, with result of increasing ownership,
sustainability and service delivery cost efficiencies; (12) establishes
strategic Public Private Partnerships aimed at augmenting capacity for
developing and implementing sustainable care and treatment programs,
including diagnosis, linkage to care, and care and treatment services
for HIV/AIDS, HIV-related tuberculosis, other opportunistic infections,
and opportunistic cancers; (13) ensures scientific excellence for all
branch Manuscripts, protocols, and programs in collaboration with the
DGHT OD science office; and (14) collaborates with other DGHT branches;
other CDC and HHS programs and offices; other USG agencies; and other
national and international organizations.
Maternal and Child Health Branch (CWGE). (1) Supports the
international scale-up of comprehensive, quality prevention of mother-
to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) and pediatric (Peds) programs by
developing adaptable training tools, utilizing operational research to
identify and implement models of service delivery adapted to district,
regional, sub-national and national contexts; (2) provides technical
expertise and support to countries in planning, implementing, and
evaluating effective strategies for scaling up of sustainable programs
for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis,
and other opportunistic infections in women, infants, and children,
including linking PMTCT/Peds HIV programs with HIV clinical and
preventive services and other maternal and child health settings/
contexts; (3) builds national capacity for and provides guidance on
development of policy for formulations for and access to appropriate
long-term combination ART for HIV-infected children; (4) conducts
operational research in collaboration with country programs to promote
best practices, address barriers, and respond to emerging scientific
issues for PMTCT/Peds HIV service delivery; (5) collaborates with
international partners to contribute to the scientific body of
knowledge on global PMTCT/Peds and broader maternal and child health
issues and to develop and disseminate tools, guidelines, and policies
to translate research for improved program implementation in resource-
constrained countries; (6) provides support for continuous quality
improvement of PMTCT and Peds HIV care and treatment programs,
including those within broader maternal and child health programs; (7)
supports analysis of program costs and cost-effectiveness to assist
with prioritization, inform program planning, and determine appropriate
rates of program expansion; (8) acts as a key part of a broader CDC
strategic response to address health needs and gender-related issues of
maternal and child health worldwide, supporting a comprehensive,
multidisciplinary approach to building maternal and child health
services and systems capacity in host countries; (9) establishes
strategic public private partnerships for HIV maternal and child health
services and systems capacity in host countries; (10) ensures
scientific excellence for all branch manuscripts, protocols, and
programs in collaboration with the DGHT OD science office; and (11)
collaborates with other DGHT branches; other CDC and HHS programs and
offices; other USG agencies; and other national and international
organizations.
Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch (CWGG). (1) Builds the
capacity of countries to develop and/or enhance HIV-related
surveillance systems and use the results of surveillance systems and
surveys for impact monitoring,
[[Page 76496]]
program planning, and HIV policy-making; (2) implements and evaluates
novel approaches for conducting surveillance and surveys including
small area estimation of HIV prevalence and key population size
estimation; (3) provides capacity-building technical assistance for in-
country HIV-related epidemiologic investigations; (4) supports surveys
and surveillance systems that measure HIV-related behaviors, HIV
prevalence and incidence, uptake of HIV related services, clinical
outcomes, and health status among the general population and at-risk
populations; (5) develops normative guidance to improve the collection
and analysis of HIV surveillance data including morbidity and
mortality; (6) assists and provides technical expertise and training on
collection, analysis, interpretation, dissemination, and use of HIV
surveillance data; (7) assists and strengthens capacity of host country
governments and organizations to assess and ensure the quality of the
data collected in HIV-related surveillance systems and clinic-based HIV
data systems; (8) coordinates, oversees, or assists in the formulation
of HIV surveillance related funding/budgets and in the execution of a
variety of acquisition and assistance awards; (9) ensures scientific
excellence for relevant manuscripts, protocols, and programs in
collaboration with the DGHT OD science office; and (10) collaborates
with other DGHT branches, other CDC and HHS programs and offices, other
USG agencies, and other national and international organizations as
appropriate.
Economics and Health Services Research Branch (CWGH). (1)
Identifies priority information needs for program planning, resource
allocation, efficiency and program integration, and develops economic
analysis and operational research activities; (2) implements economic
studies, including cost and cost-effectiveness studies, and applies
advanced modeling techniques to inform and optimize global health
planning, policy and programs, and provide a broader understanding of
the effects of health programs on improving economic and other non-
health outcomes; (3) supports USG efforts in projecting financing needs
to efficiently meet program targets in areas of prevention, care and
treatment, and human resources for health (HRH); (4) guides development
and implementation of monitoring systems to routinely capture program
expenditure data to support planning, accountability and efficient
programming; (5) trains and mentors partner country personnel in the
methods and application of economic analysis of global health programs
and policy; (6) provides technical input, guidance, review and
implementation support to operational research on and evaluation of
global HIV/AIDS activities; (7) provides technical input on the
development of partner country health finance systems and capacity to
develop sustainable and accountable programs, and assists in the
implementation of national AIDS spending assessment activities; (8)
implements and provides technical guidance on HIV/AIDS resource
tracking exercises and monitoring of HIV/AIDS spending; (9) assesses
financial flows and bottlenecks to financing service delivery of HIV/
AIDS interventions in order to improve efficient use and allocation of
funds; (10) works with health and budget officials to further
understanding of issues with a view to improving and sustaining the HIV
program as well as improving communication between Ministries of Health
and Finance; (11) strengthens the capacity of in-country counterparts
of HIV financing, sustainability, and public financial management
concepts and practices; (12) develop, models, and analyzes the HIV/AIDS
investment and assess the direct impact and broader macroeconomic
impacts of the HIV/AIDS investment; (13) participates in USG
interagency technical working groups and provides technical leadership
to address HIV/AIDS economics and finance, Health Systems Strengthening
(HSS), and HRH issues and initiatives; (13) provides technical support
for the routine monitoring of health-related governance including
financial accountability, programmatic transparency, policy development
and enforcement, and engagement and regulation of the private health
sector, including the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and
Malaria; (14) develops the HSS operational research agenda for DGHT and
implements public health evaluations related to health systems; (15)
provides broad HSS technical assistance and support to USG in-country
teams and host countries to improve the delivery of HIV and other
health services and work toward transition to country ownership of
program; (16) supports branches in strengthening health systems,
developing metrics to assess DGHT's contribution to HSS and
implementing monitoring systems to routinely collect DGHT's health
system impact, especially in the areas of laboratory systems, maternal
child health services, HIV care and treatment service delivery, blood
safety programs, and prevention services; (17) helps define CDC's role
and identify priority needs for strengthening HRH to support
sustainability of HIV programs; (18) provides HRH technical assistance
and other support to plan and meet priority HRH needs, including pre-
service and in- service training, task-shifting, capacity-building of
accreditation and credentialing bodies, HRH planning and management,
workplace performance and safety, quality of nursing and midwifery
staffing in HIV service delivery, and the development of human resource
information systems and their use in health decision-making; (19)
conducts monitoring and evaluation of US-supported HRH activities, to
help inform U.S. resource and program decision-making; (20) conducts
policy analysis and generate evidence to enact evidence-based laws and
policies for the sustainable scale-up of the HIV/AIDS response in U.S.
supported HIV/AIDS programs; (21) supports operational research
activities and public health evaluations that address current HRH
questions and monitoring needs; (22) ensures scientific excellence for
all branch manuscripts, protocols, and programs in collaboration with
the DGHT OD science office; and (23) collaborates with other DGHT
branches other CDC and HHS programs and offices, other USG agencies,
and other national and international organizations.
Overseas Strategy and Management Branch (CWGJ). (1) Provides and
coordinates support to facilitate effective design and delivery of
global HIV and TB activities in DGHT country programs in the areas of
program strategy and implementation, program monitoring and evaluation,
health diplomacy, fiscal management, procurement, personnel, extramural
programs, and other domains; (2) serves as the official and overarching
linkage between DGHT overseas offices and CDC, including DGHT OD and
other DGHT Branches, components of CGH other than DGHT, and other
relevant offices of CDC, HHS, and USG; (3) recruits, hires, and
supervises DGHT program directors, and plays a major role in those same
functions for DGHT Program Deputy Directors; (4) coordinates the hiring
of all US Direct Hire (USDH) employees to DGHT overseas positions, and
manages their pre-deployment training, preparation, and orientation to
those critical positions; (5) facilitates and provides as needed short-
and long-term
[[Page 76497]]
consultation, technical assistance, and backstopping for program issues
to DGHT country offices; (6) manages the Country Office Management and
Accountability System (CMAS), a principal DGHT process for
accountability across a multiple core functions for performance; (7)
provides long-term management and operations support for smaller DGHT
overseas offices; and (8) serves as the CDC representative on
interagency country support teams for the President's Emergency Plan
for AIDS Relief.
Program Budget and Extramural Management Branch (CWGK) (1)
Coordinates all DGHT procurement and extramural activities in creating
spend plans in compliance with federal appropriations law,
congressional intent, and global HIV/AIDS policies; (2) facilitates and
manages the development, clearance, and award of all new and ongoing
DGHT headquarters and field grants, cooperative agreements, and
contracts; (3) provides technical assistance and guidance to the
countries and branches on budget and extramural issues including
assisting programs in determining the appropriate funding mechanism to
support global HIV/AIDS activities; (4) provides training and tools to
DGHT country programs to improve budget and cooperative agreement
management; (5) manages DGHT headquarters budget and tracks overall
DGHT budget, which includes conducting budget planning exercises and
managing the annual close-out process; (6) provides funding and
budgetary data for regular reports including the Headquarters
Operational Plan, GAO and IG audits, country Annual Program Results to
OGC, and other requests for data; (8) reviews and provides input on
budgetary and procurement policy-related documents; (9) liaises and
collaborates, as appropriate, with the DGHT Associate Director for
Science, other financial and procurement-related units and offices
including Office of Financial Management, as well as other CDC and HHS
offices, OGC, and other USG agencies; and (10) collaborates with other
DGHT branches; other CDC and HHS programs and offices; other USG
agencies; and other national and international organizations.
Global Tuberculosis Prevention and Control Branch (CWGL). (1)
Provides technical assistance and builds capacity in developing and
implementing sustainable comprehensive global TB prevention and control
programs. This includes prevention, diagnosis, and treatment services
for TB, HIV/AIDS and other opportunistic infections; (2) coordinates
Division and center international TB activities; (3) coordinates the
assessment of immigration and its impact on TB patterns in the U.S. and
assists with the evaluation of overseas TB screening procedures for
immigrants and refugees; (4) conducts and coordinates operational
research and demonstrations to improve both the overseas screening for
tuberculosis of immigrants and refugees and the domestic follow-up of
those entering with suspected TB (done in collaboration with other
CIOs); (5) collaborates with WHO, the World Bank, IUATLD, USAID, and
others to improve the quality of TB programs globally by supporting
implementation of the WHO-recommended directly observed therapy, short-
course strategy; (6) collaborates with the nation of Botswana, WHO, the
World Bank, IUATLD, USAID, and others, to conduct investigations into
the diagnosis, management, and prevention of tuberculosis in persons
with and without HIV infection; (7) provides technical expertise and
support in addressing the AIDS pandemic in countries where both HIV and
TB are reported in epidemic proportions; (8) collaborates with WHO,
USAID, and several nations to reduce the impact of multi-drug resistant
TB on global TB control; (9) prepares manuscripts for publication in
scientific journals; (10) presents findings at national and
international scientific meetings; (11) supervises Epidemic
Intelligence Service Officers (EIS) in the conduct of their two year
assignments; and (12) presents international and operational research
findings to Advisory Council for the Elimination of Tuberculosis (ACET)
and national and international scientific meetings.
Science Integrity Branch (CWGM). (1) Serves as the principal
advisor on standards related to scientific activities and human
subjects protection within DGHA, supporting headquarters and country
programs; (2) ensures scientific excellence in DGHA scientific
documents disseminated to the public by coordinating scientific review
of manuscripts for publication, abstracts for presentation, and study
protocols; (3) provides coordination and support for implementation
science (operational research) to maximize the effectiveness and
quality of global HIV/AIDS interventions; (4) conducts regulatory and
ethical reviews for activities involving human participants; (5)
reviews funded activities for application of human research
regulations; (6) provides oversight for DGHA implementation science-
related workgroups; (7) encourages internal and external scientific
collaborations and partnerships; (8) ensures compliance with good
clinical and laboratory practices (GCP and GCLP); and (9) provides
training to support science quality and integrity at headquarters and
in country programs.
Management and Operations Branch (CWGN). (1) In coordination with
appropriate CDC and CGH staff offices provides oversight, guidance and
accountability for all administrative functions, domestic and
international travel, human resources, and management of equipment,
property and facilities; (2) develops and implements administrative
policies, procedures and operations as appropriate for the Division;
and prepares special reports and studies as required in the
administrative management area; (3) provides leadership and guidance in
all matters of daily operation, including recruitment, retention and
management of a diverse, multi-disciplinary global workforce staff; (4)
ensures timely and sufficient DGHT domestic staff placement through
recruitment, hiring, and orienting of qualified staff; (5) ensures
retention of qualified staff by providing workforce management and
career development services for DGHT domestic staff; (6) ensures the
full implementation and utilization of agency wide administrative
systems and processes in support of Division management and operations.
Strategy, Policy, and Communications Branch (CWGP). (1) Provides
leadership and strategic direction for the Division in determining
CDC's global HIV and tuberculosis (TB) objectives and priorities; (2)
provides policy direction for the Division on sensitive or
controversial issues impacting CDC's global HIV and TB policies and
programs; (3) provides guidance to top agency officials on strategies
necessary to communicate and maximize acceptance of the agency's
positions on issues; (4) provides leadership and guidance on policy
development and interpretation, budget formulation, and issues
management; (5) communicates, through all relevant forms of media, the
Division's program priorities, accomplishments, and value to both
internal and external stakeholders; (6) leads and facilitates the
Division's external relations with key non-governmental partners,
faith-based partners, community-based partners, international partners
and other constituencies; and (7) facilitates the Division's efforts to
work closely with multilateral partners to continually
[[Page 76498]]
improve joint planning, data use, and strategic alignment to maximize
impact in the fight against HIV/AIDS globally.
Special Initiatives Branch (CWGQ). (1) Supports key leadership in
assessing issues, identifying mitigation options, managing resolutions,
coordinating DGHT responses to complex issues; (2) convenes relevant
CDC SMEs to facilitate quick resolution of critical and complex
concerns; (3) assures coordination across DGHT branches, horizontal and
vertical, and with other relevant CDC organizations units in response
to priority issues as needed; (4) convenes relevant CDC SMEs to
conceive, define and develop concept notes which describe new Global
HIV/AIDS special initiatives addressing program and/or operations
issues; (5) communicates findings and status of current and ongoing
priority issues resolution with DGHT Director and senior leadership on
a timely basis; (6) initiates foundation documents (task trackers,
scopes of work, list of working group participants, reporting
platforms) for priority initiatives requiring cross branch
collaboration; (7) investigates options for preventing or early
detection of emerging issues that impact on effective/efficient use of
resources; and (8) directs DGHT external assignees (both domestic and
international) to assure DGHT HIV/AIDS expertise and technical
assistance is provided to external partners effectively and efficiently
while also assuring CDC directly learns and benefits from these
partnerships with other organizations.
Health Informatics, Data Management, and Statistics Branch (CWGR).
(1) Provides leadership and technical expertise to DGHT, agency, other
US government agency, multilateral organizations, and implementing
partners in the development, dissemination, and implementation of
information system, data management, analytic, and statistical
standards, guidance, methods and solutions; (2) provides specialized
expertise in health information systems, data management, data
analytics and statistics across the life cycle of HIV implementation
science, evaluation, and research projects, including expertise study
design, sample design and sample size estimation, questionnaire
development, information system design and development, data capture,
management, monitoring and use, statistical analysis, report and
manuscript writing, and data documentation, archival and dissemination;
(3) provides specialized expertise in information systems, data
management and statistics to DGHT-supported and other HIV surveillance
and survey systems and activities to promote better understanding of
HIV epidemics and HIV program outcomes and impact; (4) assures
statistical, data management, and analytic integrity of DGHT and other
global HIV activities and projects through technical review of
concepts, protocols, reports, manuscripts and other products; (5)
provides leadership and statistical expertise to agency and other US
government agencies, multilateral organizations to promote statistical
innovation and advance novel approaches in the analysis and modeling of
HIV epidemics and evaluation of HIV programs; (6) collaborates with
DGHT branches and country offices, host country governments and
implementing partners to develop efficient and sustainable approaches
to improve the use of national routine health information systems for
program monitoring and improvement; (7) provides technical support to
DGHT, agency, and interagency global HIV initiatives to strengthen
capacity to collect, exchange, access, manage, analyze, use, and
release HIV-related data to inform decisions to allocate resources and
strengthen programs, including the advancement of innovative techniques
and the appropriate use of technology; (8) collaborates with CGH in
assuring that DGHT-sponsored information systems comply with all
legislatively mandated requirements, including information systems
security, capital planning, and reporting requirements; (9) builds
global capacity for efficient and sustainable data management and
health information system design, implementation, and use, by
promoting, supporting and training a DGHT-led community of practice who
identify and promote best practices and identify key competencies and
curricula needed to advance data management and health information
systems; (10) builds and maintains an enterprise performance monitoring
data warehouse and engages in technical partnerships with DGHT regional
and country offices to apply appropriate data management and analytic
methodology to data systems for performance monitoring, accountability,
and impact; (11) assures robust, cost effective and sustainable data
management and information system infrastructure and methodologies for
global HIV projects, by providing reviews of program and research data
management plans, disseminating guidelines and policy for data
management standards, and, where appropriate, monitoring for adherence
to standards and guidelines; (12) advises about the resources needed to
execute health information system, data management, analytic, and
statistical functions, including human resources, staffing plans, and
extramural activities; (13) supports the integration of HIV data into
more comprehensive health information systems, the development of
comprehensive health information systems, the development of metrics
for monitoring and evaluating the implementation and functioning of
health information systems; (14) provides technical assistance to DGHT
regional and country offices and host national governments to
strengthen health information systems, including strategic planning,
systems needs assessments, identifying and resolving gaps, describing
data standards and data exchange needed across systems, and developing
standards for system interoperability; and (15) collaborates with
agency, interagency and multilateral organizations to develop
standards, tools, and guidance to improve the secure collection and use
of HIV associated data, including guidance and tools to improve
standardized definitions for HIV-related data, open source tools for
the implementation of patient and program monitoring systems; security
and confidentiality guidance for HIV data; and guidance on unique
identification and matching of patient data across information systems.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Data Analysis Branch (CWGS). (1)
Develops, implements and evaluates standard and novel approaches to
program monitoring and evaluation of inputs, outputs, outcomes and
impacts for facility- and community-based HIV/AIDS programs,
appropriate to the level and type of US government support; (2)
provides support and technical expertise at all stages of evaluation,
including process and outcome, using quantitative, qualitative and
mixed methods in global HIV/AIDS and TB programs; (3) promotes and
supports agency and extramural program performance and accountability
outcome measurement; (4) assists in and provides training to improve
HIV/AIDS program monitoring and evaluation, including site-based
service and data quality assessments, M&E systems assessment, and data
visualization, analysis and use for program improvement; (5) provides
support and technical expertise to US agency collaborations, in-country
teams and multinational partners to monitor and evaluate the outputs,
outcomes, and impact of US supported global HIV/AIDS activities; (6)
develops, implements and supports innovative
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analytical approaches integrating multiple sources of data and in using
the results for impact monitoring, planning, and HIV/AIDS policy-
making; (7) supports and strengthens global and country capacity to
monitor and evaluate HIV/AIDS prevention, care, treatment programs,
health system strengthening, other related global health programs, and
health systems through the development of standards, guidelines,
curricula, and other tools; (8) coordinates, oversees, or assists in
the formulation of M&E funding/budgets and in the execution of
extramural awards; and (9) collaborates with other DGHT branches, other
CDC and HHS programs and offices, other USG agencies, and other
national and international organizations.
James Seligman,
Acting Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2015-30968 Filed 12-8-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-18-P