Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 6179-6185 [2018-02821]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Notices
Place: Courtyard Marriott Decatur
Downtown/Emory, 130 Clairemont Avenue,
Decatur, Georgia 30030, Telephone:
(404)371–0204.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
For Further Information Contact: Nina
Turner, Ph.D., Scientific Review Officer,
CDC/NIOSH, 1095 Willowdale Road,
Mailstop G905, Morgantown, West Virginia
26505, Telephone: (304) 285–5975.
The Director, Management Analysis and
Services Office, has been delegated the
authority to sign Federal Register notices
pertaining to announcements of meetings and
other committee management activities, for
both the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention and the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry.
Elaine L. Baker,
Director, Management Analysis and Services
Office, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2018–02824 Filed 2–12–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
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 81 FR 84583–84591,
dated November 23, 2016) is amended
to reflect the reorganization of the
National Center for Environmental
Health, Office of Noncommunicable
Diseases, Injury and Environmental
Health, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
Section C–B, Organization and
Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the titles and
mission and function statements for the
National Center for Environmental
Health (CUG) and insert the following:
National Center for Environmental
Health (CUG). Plans, directs, and
coordinates a national program to
maintain and improve the health of the
American people by promoting a
healthy environment and by preventing
premature death and avoidable illness
and disability caused by non infectious,
non occupational environmental and
related factors. In carrying out this
mission, the Center: (1) Assists in
increasing the capacity of States to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:12 Feb 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
prevent and control environmental
public health problems through
training, technology transfer, grants,
cooperative agreements, contracts, and
other means; (2) provides services,
advice, technical assistance, and
information to State and local public
health officials, other Federal agencies,
academic, professional, international,
and private organizations, and the
general public; (3) plans for and
provides emergency response assistance
to States, localities, other Federal
agencies, and international
organizations; (4) identifies, designs,
develops, implements, influences, and
evaluates interventions to reduce or
eliminate environmental hazards,
exposures to these hazards, and adverse
health outcomes resulting from
exposure to these hazards; (5) measures,
estimates, and predicts the incidence of
adverse health outcomes through
surveillance, surveys, and registries; (6)
measures, estimates, and predicts the
incidence of exposure to substances,
conditions, or forces in the environment
through surveillance, surveys, and
registries; (7) describes and evaluates
associations between environmental
exposures and adverse health outcomes
by using information from surveillance
systems, surveys, registries,
epidemiologic and laboratory studies,
and by developing and maintaining a
broad base of normative and diagnostic
laboratory data; (8) develops and
validates advanced laboratory
technology for diagnosing selected
chronic diseases and for assessing
exposure and health effects in persons
exposed or potentially exposed to
environmental toxicants or other
environmental agents; (9) develops and
validates new epidemiologic techniques
for use in study of the effects of
exposure to environmental hazards; (10)
provides leadership in coordinating
efforts in States and in national and
international organizations concerned
with standardizing selected laboratory
measurement systems; (11) conducts
special programs, e.g., coordination and
review of Environmental Impact
Statements; and (12) in carrying out the
above functions, collaborates, as
appropriate, with other Centers/
Institute/Offices of CDC.
Office of the Director (CUG1). (1)
Manages, directs, coordinates, and
evaluates all health-related programs of
National Center for Environmental
Health and Agency for Toxic Substances
and Disease Registry (NCEH & ATSDR);
(2) provides overall leadership in
health-related activities for hazardous
substances, hazardous waste sites and
chemical releases; (3) provides overall
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6179
coordination for the research programs
and science policies of the agencies; (4)
develops goals and objectives and
provides leadership, policy formulation,
scientific oversight, and guidance in
program planning and development; (5)
provides overall programmatic direction
for planning and management oversight
of allocated resources, human resource
management and administrative
support; (6) provides information,
publication and distribution services to
NCEH & ATSDR; (7) maintains liaison
with other Federal, State, and local
agencies, institutions, and
organizations; (8) coordinates NCEH &
ATSDR program activities with other
CDC components, other Federal, State
and local Government agencies, the
private sector, and other nations; and (9)
directs and coordinates activities in
support of the Department’s Equal
Employment Opportunity program and
employee development.
Office of Communication (CUG12). (1)
Serves as the principal advisor to the
center director and divisions on
communication and marketing science,
research, practice, and public affairs; (2)
leads center strategic planning for
communication and marketing science
and public affairs programs and
projects; (3) analyzes context, situation,
and environment to inform center-wide
communication and marketing programs
and projects; (4) ensures use of
scientifically sound research for
marketing and communication programs
and projects; (5) ensures accurate,
accessible, timely, and effective
translation of science for use by
multiple audiences; (6) leads
identification and implementation of
information dissemination channels; (7)
provides communication and marketing
project management expertise; (8)
collaborates with external organizations
and the news, public service, and
entertainment and other media to
ensure that scientific findings and their
implications for public health reach the
intended audiences; (9) collaborates
closely with divisions to produce
materials tailored to meet the
requirements of news and other media
channels, including press releases,
letters to the editor, public service
announcements, television
programming, video news releases, and
other electronic and printed materials;
(10) coordinates the development and
maintenance of accessible public
information through the internet, social
media and other applicable channels;
(11) provides training and technical
assistance in the areas of health
communication, risk communication,
social marketing, and public affairs; (12)
E:\FR\FM\13FEN1.SGM
13FEN1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
6180
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Notices
manages or coordinates communication
services such as internet/Intranet,
application development, social media,
video production, graphics,
photography, CDC name/logo use and
other brand management; (13) provides
editorial services, including writing,
editing, and technical editing; (14)
facilitates internal communication to
center staff and allied audiences; (15)
supervises and manages Office of
Communications activities, programs,
and staff; (16) serves as liaison to
internal and external groups to advance
the center’s mission; (17) collaborates
with the CDC Office of the Associate
Director for Communication on media
relations, electronic communication,
health media production, and brand
management activities; (18) collaborates
with the Office of Public Health
Preparedness and Response and other
NCEH & ATSDR entities to fulfill
communication responsibilities in
emergency response situations; (19)
collaborates with other CDC Centers/
Institute/Offices in the development of
marketing communications targeted to
populations that would benefit from a
cross-functional approach; and (20)
ensures NCEH & ATSDR materials meet
CDC and Department of Health and
Human Services standards.
Office of Policy, Partnerships and
Planning (CUG13). (1) Coordinates,
develops, recommends and implements
strategic planning and tracking for
NCEH & ATSDR; (2) develops and
coordinates performance management to
ensure achievement of goals in NCEH &
ATSDR programs; (3) participates in
reviewing, coordinating, and preparing
legislation, briefing documents,
Congressional testimony, and other
legislative matters; (4) maintains liaison
and coordinates with other Federal
agencies for program planning and
performance; (5) assists in the
development of NCEH & ATSDR budget
and program initiatives; (6) provides
liaison with staff offices and other
officials of CDC; (7) monitors and
prepares reports on health-related
activities to comply with provisions of
relevant legislation; (8) coordinates the
development, review, and approval of
Federal regulations, Federal Register
announcements, Freedom Of
Information Act requests, GAO and IG
reports, and related activities; (9)
develops and strengthens strategic
partnerships with key constituent
groups; and (10) facilitates
communication between NCEH &
ATSDR and its partners.
Office of Management and Analytics
(CUG14). (1) Plans, manages, directs,
and conducts the administrative and
financial management operations of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:12 Feb 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
NCEH & ATSDR; (2) reviews the
effectiveness and efficiency of
administration and operation of all
NCEH & ATSDR programs; (3) develops
and directs systems for human resource
management, financial services,
procurement requisitioning, and travel
authorization; (4) provides and
coordinates services for the extramural
award activities of NCEH & ATSDR; (5)
formulates and provides overall
programmatic direction for planning
and management oversight of allocated
resources, human resource management
and administrative support; (6) develops
and directs a system for cost recovery;
(7) enables and supports NCEH &
ATSDR data management, systems
development, and information security
needs; (8) directs and coordinates
activities in support of the Department’s
Equal Employment Opportunity
program and employee development; (9)
coordinates employee training
programs; (10) develops and directs
employee engagement programs; (11)
analyzes NCEH & ATSDR workforce,
systems, and resources; and (12)
manages and conducts a record
management program for NCEH &
ATSDR in accordance with
Congressional mandate.
Office of Science (CUG15). (1) Ensures
NCEH & ATSDR compliance with the
various statutes, regulations, and
policies governing the conduct of
science by the federal government,
including: Human subjects research
determinations, the protection of human
research subjects and the use of
Institutional Review Boards (IRBs), the
OMB Paperwork Reduction Act (relating
to the collection of information from ten
or more people in a 12-month period),
the OMB Information Quality Bulletin,
Confidentiality Protection, and the
Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA, and
its ‘‘Privacy Rule’’); and others; (2)
develops and maintains the NCEH &
ATSDR Clearance Policy and managing
and conducting clearance for NCEH &
ATSDR documents; (3) coordinates and
manages document cross-clearance
between NCEH & ATSDR and other
parts of CDC; facilitating center reviews
of external documents, coordinating and
managing information quality requests
concerning NCEH & ATSDR documents;
(4) coordinates and manages external
peer review for NCEH & ATSDR
documents and intramural programs; (5)
coordinates and manages the activities
of the NCEH & ATSDR Board of
Scientific Counselors (a Federal
Advisory Committee) and its
subcommittees and workgroups; (6)
coordinates interagency workgroups/
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
committees such as the President’s Task
Force on Environmental Health Risks
and Safety Risks to Children, and the
National Toxicology Program Executive
Committee; (7) coordinates and manages
NCEH & ATSDR involvement in the
Epidemic Intelligence Service Program;
(8) coordinates NCEH & ATSDR
involvement in CDC public health
ethics activities; (9) coordinates NCEH &
ATSDR involvement in CDC science
awards activities (e.g., the Shepard
Award, and CDC/ATSDR Honor
Awards); (10) organizes and sponsors
select training opportunities (e.g.,
Human Subjects/IRB, OMB/PRA, and
eClearance Training for Authors and
Reviewers); (11) represents NCEH &
ATSDR on various CDC/ATSDR
committees, work groups, and task
forces, such as the CDC/ATSDR Office
of the Chief Science Officer’s Excellence
in Science Committee, and the CDC
Surveillance Science Advisory Group;
(12) coordinates NCEH & ATSDR global
health activities; (13) coordinates and
manages the NCEH & ATSDR Healthy
People 2020; (14) prepares an annual
inventory of NCEH & ATSDR
publications; and (15) pursuant to the
National Environmental Policy Act,
reviews draft Environmental Impact
Statements on behalf of HHS where the
proposed federal actions impact human
health.
Division of Laboratory Sciences
(CUGD). (1) Provides advanced
laboratory science to improve the
detection, diagnosis, treatment, and
prevention of environmental, tobaccorelated, nutritional, newborn, selected
chronic and selected infectious diseases;
(2) provides advanced laboratory
science to rapidly and accurately detect
chemical threat agents, radiologic threat
agents, and selected toxins; (3)
develops, maintains, and applies
unique, rapid, and high-quality
measurement techniques to assess
disease risk, identify harmful
environmental exposures or nutrition
deficiencies among Americans, and
respond to public health emergencies
(4) provides laboratory measurements in
collaborative studies of human disease
and vulnerable populations; (5)
provides technical assistance,
technology transfer, reference laboratory
measurements, laboratory
standardization programs, and external
quality assurance to state and local
public health laboratories and health
officials; Federal agencies; international
organizations; academic, international,
and private laboratories; and
professional organizations to
continuously improve the accuracy,
precision, and cost effectiveness of
E:\FR\FM\13FEN1.SGM
13FEN1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Notices
laboratory tests for environmental
chemicals, nutrition indicators, heart
disease, stroke and newborn screening;
and (6) collaborates with other CDC
organizations; Federal, State, and local
agencies; and private and professional
organizations to investigate new or
emerging health concerns.
Inorganic and Radiation Analytical
Toxicology Branch (CUGDC). (1)
Develops, maintains, and distributes, as
appropriate, analytical methods to
measure trace essential and toxic
elements in human specimens; (2)
applies analytical methods to assess
human exposure to chemicals,
including surveillance of levels in the
population, epidemiologic studies, and
emergency-response investigations; (3)
provides training, guidance, and
assistance to state and local
governments, and domestic and
international laboratories in the
development, maintenance, and
technology transfer of analytical
capability for measuring trace-essential
and toxic elements in specimens from
people and animals; (4) develops and
maintains analytical capability and
expertise, and distributes, as
appropriate, standards, reference
materials, and protocols for measuring
chemicals in response to both terrorist
and non-terrorist events; (5) distributes,
as appropriate, standards, reference
materials, and protocols to assist state,
international, and other laboratories in
transferring laboratory technology for
urine iodine biomonitoring, blood
metals biomonitoring, and radiologic
analyses; and (6) provides technical
assistance and guidance to
governmental agencies, academia, and
professional societies regarding quality
control issues related to biomonitoring
for inorganic and radiologic chemicals.
Clinical Chemistry Branch (CUGDD).
(1) Develops and maintains analytical
methods and expertise in the
measurement, interpretation and
standardization of chronic disease
biomarkers, chemicals known to cause
disease or health concerns, and
biological toxins; (2) develops,
establishes and maintains laboratory
standardization and improvement
programs to assist state, national and
international agencies and organizations
to better diagnose, treat and prevent
selected chronic diseases and infectious
diseases; (3) applies these analytical
methods and standardization
procedures to: Assess chronic disease
status or human exposure to
environmental chemicals, toxins, and
pathogens; standardize disease
biomarker measurements; and improve
the safety and quality of biological
preparations; (4) provides laboratory
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:12 Feb 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
science to diagnose diseases caused by
selected viral and bacterial organisms,
and assess the effectiveness of disease
treatment and prevention efforts; and (5)
provides review, expert consultation,
technical assistance, training, guidance
and/or original scientific publications
and information to federal, state, local
and international investigations,
surveys, studies, and/or government
inquiries on topics related to human
exposure assessment, standards
development, analytical
instrumentation as well as prevalence,
risk factors, and treatment of chronic
diseases, exposure to environmental
chemicals, influenza, toxins and human
pathogens.
Organic Analytical Toxicology Branch
(CUGDE). (1) Develops and maintains
analytical methods to measure selected
synthetic and naturally occurring
organic chemicals, their metabolites,
and reaction products (adducts) in
human specimens; (2) applies these
analytical methods to assess human
exposures to these chemicals for many
purposes, including surveillance of
levels in the population,
epidemiological studies, and emergency
response investigations; (3) aids in
transferring these methods within
Division laboratories and to state, local
and other public health laboratories; (4)
develops and prepares various matrixbased quality control materials for use
in such analyses; and (5) provides
review, expert consultation, and original
scientific publications/information to
Federal, state, local, and international
governments and health organizations
on topics related to human exposure
assessment, organic analytical
methodology, high technology
analytical instrumentation, preparation
and analysis of biological specimens,
quality control procedures, laboratory
safety, and medical interpretation of
laboratory findings.
Newborn Screening and Molecular
Biology Branch (CUGDG). (1) Provides
leadership, technical consultation and
assistance in laboratory testing for
newborn screening, genetic and other
diseases of public health importance to
State Public Health laboratories, Federal
agencies, academic centers, professional
organizations, international laboratories,
and manufacturers of diagnostic
products involved in performing
relevant laboratory measurements; (2)
provides leadership, oversight and
administration of the dried-blood spot
(DBS) quality assurance program that is
necessary for both domestic and
international laboratories that screen for
newborn disorders including metabolic
conditions as well as inherited genetic
and other select treatable adverse
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6181
conditions in newborns; (3) develops,
evaluates, standardizes, and maintains
laboratory methods for biochemical and
genetic assays for diseases of public
health significance, immune disorders,
DBS assays utilized by newborn
screening programs worldwide; and (4)
evaluates and refines existing and
emerging laboratory technologies for
measurement and study of biomarkers
for clinical applications and populationbased screening for diseases and genetic
risk factors of public health importance.
Emergency Response Branch
(CUGDH). (1) Develops and maintains
analytical methods to measure, in
human specimens, toxic substances that
are known or potential agents for use in
chemical terrorism; (2) applies these
measurements in response to chemical
terrorism or chemical exposure
emergencies and, as part of a
coordinated Federal response, deploys a
rapid response laboratory team to assist
in obtaining human specimens for
analysis; (3) transfers technology,
provides training, and provides
technical assistance for measurement of
chemical agents in human specimens to
a network of laboratories that provide
additional capacity for responding to
chemical terrorism; (4) provides review
and expert consultation to Federal,
state, local and international
governments and health organizations
on assessing and interpreting
biomonitoring measurements of
chemical agents likely to be used in
terrorism; and (5) for toxic substances of
public health concern but unlikely to be
involved in chemical terrorism,
transfers biomonitoring technology
(including analytical methods), provides
biomonitoring training, and provides
technical assistance in biomonitoring to
state laboratories.
Nutritional Biomarkers Branch
(CUGDJ). (1) Develops and maintains
analytical methods and expertise in the
measuring and interpreting of
physiologic levels of essential nutrients,
nonessential nutrients, and relevant
metabolites; (2) develops and maintains
analytical methods to measure bioactive
dietary compounds, other than those
needed to meet basic human nutritional
needs, that are responsible for changes
in health status; (3) applies analytical
methods to assess human nutritional
status or exposure to bioactive dietary
compounds for purposes including
surveillance of levels in the population,
epidemiological studies, intervention
trails, and emergency-response
investigations; (4) provides technical
assistance, training, and guidance to
national, state, international, and local
investigations, surveys, food
fortification and clinical studies of
E:\FR\FM\13FEN1.SGM
13FEN1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
6182
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Notices
nutritional status, prevalence, risk
factors, and treatment of chronic
diseases; and (5) develops, maintains,
and distributes, as appropriate,
standards, reference materials,
protocols, standardization programs,
and external quality assessment
programs to assist state, international,
and other laboratories in transferring
laboratory technology and in
establishing and maintaining quality
control and calibration of methods for
nutritional biomarkers and markers of
physiologic changes.
Tobacco and Volatiles Branch
(CUGDK). (1) Develops, maintains, and
applies analytical methods to measure
biomarkers of exposure to toxic
substances and applies these analytical
methods to assess human exposures to
volatile organic compounds for many
purposes; (2) develops and maintains
analytical methods and measures
addictive and toxic substances in
tobacco products, in tobacco smoke and
in the blood, urine and saliva of
smokers and persons exposed to tobacco
smoke; (3) determines how different
tobacco additives and changes in
product construction and design affect
delivery of addictive and toxic
substances from tobacco products to
people; (4) for the U.S. population,
regularly measures the percent of
persons who are smokers and the
exposure of Americans to the major
toxic constituents of tobacco smoke; (5)
for the U.S. population, regularly
measures the exposure of Americans to
secondhand smoke; and (6) collaborates
in human studies of disease risk
associated with direct and secondhand
tobacco smoke exposure and use of
other tobacco products.
Division of Environmental Health
Science and Practice (CUGE). (1)
Provides national and international
leadership for the coordination,
delivery, and evaluation of
environmental health interventions and
services; (2) advances environmental
public health practice to better serve
and protect the health of all people in
the United States; (3) develops methods
and conducts activities to assess risk to
human populations from exposure to
environmental hazards; (4) conducts
and disseminates findings of
surveillance, epidemiologic research,
environmental assessments, and other
scientific investigations of human
exposure to environmental hazards; (5)
develops mechanisms to disseminate
information on environmental health
interventions, risks, technologies, and
best practices to state, tribal, local, and
territorial health departments and to
other agencies with related
responsibilities; (6) maintains liaison
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:12 Feb 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
with and serves as a primary federal
resource for consultation and
specialized technical assistance to
federal, state, tribal, local, and territorial
agencies; other national, international,
and private organizations; and academic
institutions for environmental health
issues; (7) provides consultation and
technical assistance on the development
and implementation of environmental
health programs addressing the
prevention of human health problems
associated with environmental hazards;
(8) serves as CDC lead on safe water
issues with focus on an all-hazards
approach to recreational water, drinking
water systems, private wells, and other
private drinking water sources; (9)
serves as CDC lead for control and
prevention of environmental causes of
Legionnaires’ disease; (10) serves as
CDC lead for prevention of
environmental causes of foodborne
illnesses and outbreaks; (11) operates a
model vessel sanitation program that
includes the development of standards,
inspection of vessels, sanitation and
disease prevention training of the cruise
ship industry, conducting
gastrointestinal (GI) illness surveillance
and disease outbreak investigations on
vessels sailing internationally; (12)
provides guidance and technical
assistance to the cruise ship industry on
the control and prevention of GI
illnesses on vessels; (13) plans,
develops, implements, and evaluates
training programs, workshops, technical
manuals and guidance, and model
standards to strengthen the technical
capacity of environmental health
practitioners in constituent agencies and
organizations, including state, tribal,
local, and territorial governments; (14)
provides leadership in the development
and implementation of asthma control
programs and strategies to reduce the
asthma exacerbations and deaths; (15)
serves as CDC lead for epidemiologic
research and investigations of
respiratory diseases, other illnesses
related to air pollutants, and outbreaks
of acute respiratory diseases related to
environmental hazards; (16) serves as
CDC lead for climate-related public
health activities; (17) provides national
and international leadership and
support in the development,
implementation and use of
environmental health surveillance
through the National Environmental
Public Health Tracking Program and
related efforts for climate, asthma, lead,
radiation, and other environmentally
related conditions; (18) serves as the
CDC lead for the elimination and
prevention of childhood lead poisoning;
(19) provides radiation health expertise
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
and leadership in areas addressing
public exposures to radiation including
environmental exposures, medical
exposures, and nuclear/radiological
emergency preparedness and response;
(20) serves as the HHS and CDC lead for
public health oversight associated with
chemical weapons demilitarization
processes and related activities
conducted by the Department of Defense
and its contractors; (21) conducts
emergency response and associated field
studies to address natural or man-made
events, disease outbreaks, and requests
for epidemiologic, toxicologic, or other
environmental health assistance from
federal, state, local, territorial, tribal or
international governments; (22) ensures
the participation and involvement of the
public and other stakeholders in the
division’s programs, as appropriate; and
(23) coordinates division activities with
other CDC components and HHS
agencies, as appropriate.
Office of the Director (CUGE1). (1)
Plans, directs and manages the activities
of the division; (2) directs strategic
planning and alignment with NCEH &
ATSDR mission, goals, and priorities;
(3) coordinates cross-cutting activities
on children’s health, healthy homes,
tribal activities, surveillance
harmonization, emergency
preparedness, and workforce
development; (4) serves as a conduit to
intra and inter-agency entities through
active collaborations, strategic planning
efforts and formal exchange with
emergency preparedness and response
stakeholders including intelligence,
legislative, & budgetary entities; (5)
coordinates NCEH and ATSDR
emergency management resources to
support efforts to protect the public’s
health from environmental threats; and
(6) provides incident management and
coordination for complex emergency
management including the
development, approval, and updating of
standardized processes to enable
appropriate and adequate management
of resources.
Water, Food, and Environmental
Health Services Branch (CUGEB). (1)
Advances environmental public health
practice to better serve and protect the
health of all people in the United States;
(2) provides leadership on safe water
activities from an environmental public
health perspective, with particular focus
on an all-hazards approach to
recreational water, drinking water
systems, household wells, and other
private drinking water sources; (3)
investigates risks for exposure to and
health effects from contaminants in
drinking water to identify hazardous
exposures and develop
recommendations for minimizing
E:\FR\FM\13FEN1.SGM
13FEN1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Notices
exposure and reducing public health
risks; (4) disseminates, communicates,
and promotes information to protect
communities from adverse health
impacts from water pollutants; (5)
serves as CDC lead for prevention of
environmental causes of foodborne
illnesses and outbreaks; (6) develops
methods and conducts activities to
ensure the translation of new
technology and prevention research
findings into prevention and control
programs and activities at the state,
tribal, local, and territorial levels
(especially for water and food safety);
(7) develops technical guidelines and
model standards for environmental
health program areas addressed at the
state, tribal, local, and territorial levels
(especially for water and food safety);
(8) promotes and assists in the
determination and investigation of
environmental antecedents and
solutions to disease problems,
especially when potentially related to
waterborne or foodborne agents; (9)
develops, implements, and evaluates
training programs and workshops,
develops model performance standards,
and provides decision support tools to
strengthen professional competency
among environmental health
practitioners at the state, tribal, local,
and territorial levels; (10) supports state
and local environmental health
programs through information
exchange, direct technical assistance,
and evaluation of existing programs;
(11) supports the professional
development of environmental health
practitioners through collaboration with
schools of public and environmental
health, state, tribal, local, and territorial
health agencies, and others; (12) serve as
NCEH & ATSDR lead for vector-borne
disease, in collaboration with and
support of other CDC components; (13)
serves as national and international
model and CDC lead for comprehensive
vessel sanitation operational inspections
and oversight for vessels that have a
foreign itinerary, call on U.S. ports, and
carry 13 or more passengers, including
the following responsibilities: (a)
Ensures and coordinates epidemiologic
investigations of GI illness outbreaks
occurring aboard vessels within CDC’s
jurisdiction, (b) conducts syndromic
surveillance for GI illness among
passengers and crew for all voyages on
vessels under CDC’s jurisdiction, (c)
plans, implements, and evaluates
sanitation training for cruise ship
supervisors, (d) reviews plans for vessel
renovations and new vessel
construction, and conducts construction
inspections, (e) disseminates
information on vessel sanitation
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:12 Feb 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
inspections and other related
information to the traveling public, (f)
provides direct technical assistance to
cruise lines, other U.S. government
agencies, foreign governments, and
others on the development and
maintenance of vessel sanitation
standards and policies; and (14)
coordinates activities through the
division and with other components of
CDC; other federal, state, tribal, local,
and territorial government agencies; and
other public and private organizations,
as appropriate.
Asthma and Community Health
Branch (CUGEC). (1) Develops,
implements, and evaluates the National
Asthma Control Program to reduce
asthma morbidity and mortality and to
address asthma disparities; (2) conducts
epidemiologic research and
investigations of asthma morbidity and
mortality; (3) supports surveillance
activities for asthma, and other
respiratory diseases as appropriate, to
quantify burden and guide
interventions; (4) identifies the evidence
for and promotes and tracks
interventions that reduce the burden of
asthma, focusing on populations with a
disproportionate burden of the disease;
(5) develops and disseminates training,
tools and other resources to strengthen
and sustain asthma control activities
and technical capacity among program
partners at the national, state, local,
territorial, and tribal level; (6) provides
technical consultation to state, local,
private, international, and other federal
agencies on asthma control,
surveillance, epidemiology, and
evaluation; (7) disseminates,
communicates, and promotes
information from surveillance and
health studies related to asthma control
to diverse audiences; (8) assesses the
strength of evidence on air pollution
exposures and public health; (9)
conducts epidemiologic research and
investigations of non-occupational
human exposure to air pollutants and
their potential health effects; (10)
develops methods for assessing
exposure and risk to human health from
air pollutants and, in selected
circumstances, conducts exposure and
risk assessments; (11) designs and
evaluates behavioral, policy,
technological, and community design
interventions to reduce exposures to air
pollution and improve health; (12)
facilitates international efforts to reduce
indoor air pollution from cookstoves;
(13) develops and coordinates training
and decision support tools to strengthen
and sustain air pollution activities and
technical capacity among program
partners at the national, state, local,
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6183
territorial, and tribal level; (14) provides
consultation to federal, state, local,
territorial, tribal, private, and
international agencies on nonoccupational environmental issues
related to air pollutants; (15)
disseminates, communicates, and
promotes information to protect
communities from adverse health
impacts from air pollution; (16)
conducts epidemiologic research into
the potential health effects of climate
change and climate variability; (17)
develops methods for assessing current
and projected future risk to human
health from climate change and climate
variability; (18) designs and evaluates
public health adaptation and
intervention strategies for reducing the
impacts of climate change and climate
variability on health; (19) develops and
coordinates training and decision
support tools to strengthen and sustain
public health adaptation activities
related to climate change and climate
variability; (20) helps build technical
capacity among program partners at the
national, state, local, territorial, and
tribal level; (21) provides consultation
to state, local, private, international, and
other federal agencies on human health
issues related to climate change and
climate variability; (22) disseminates,
communicates, and promotes
information about public health
adaptation to climate change and
climate variability to diverse audiences;
(23) enhances healthy community
design by helping public health, and
transportation by providing convenient
and safe opportunities to walk, bicycle,
and use public transit; (24) develops
and maintains quality partnerships with
key program stakeholders; and (25)
coordinates asthma, air, and climate
activities through the division and with
other components of CDC; other federal,
state, tribal, local, and territorial
government agencies; and other public
and private organizations, as
appropriate.
Lead Poisoning Prevention and
Environmental Health Tracking Branch
(CUGED). (1) Implements the National
Environmental Public Health Tracking
Program, establishing goals and
objectives to ensure the provision of
information from a nationwide network
of integrated health and environmental
data that drives actions to improve the
health of communities; (2) establishes
standards, processes, and protocols to
guide scientific activities and content in
the National Environmental Public
Health Tracking Network and
component state, local, territorial and
tribal networks; (3) provides
standardized and integrated health,
E:\FR\FM\13FEN1.SGM
13FEN1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
6184
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Notices
environmental, and hazard data from
multiple information systems at the
national, state, and local levels; (4) fills
key environmental health data and
information gaps through application of
novel and nontraditional data,
technologies, tools and methods; (5)
coordinates development of training,
workforce capacity, and infrastructure
to support and sustain environmental
public health tracking among program
partners at the national, state, local,
territorial, and tribal level; (6) develops
tools and products used to synthesize
environmental public health
surveillance data to support public
health decision making at the national,
state, and local levels; (7) continually
modernizes and enhances the tracking
network’s underlying IT and informatics
technology to address stakeholder
information needs; (8) develops and
maintains quality partnerships with key
environmental public health tracking
stakeholders; (9) facilitates
communication and coordination of
environmental public health tracking
activities across and within health and
environmental agencies; (10) facilitates
and conducts scientific activities for
environmental public health tracking;
(11) disseminates, communicates, and
promotes use of environmental public
health tracking information to diverse
audiences; (12) conducts continuous
quality improvement for environmental
public health tracking activities; (13)
establishes goals and objectives for a
national childhood lead poisoning
prevention program for CDC, which
includes reduction of lead exposures
from all sources, including lead-based
paint and lead in water; (14) works with
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, U.S. Department of Energy,
National Institute of Standards and
Technology and other agencies to
develop and implement an integrated
national program to eliminate childhood
lead poisoning; (15) serves as the lead
agency for coordinating efforts designed
to achieve national program objectives
and performance standards related to
the prevention of childhood lead
poisoning; (16) provides consultation
and assistance to federal agencies, state
and local health agencies, and others in
planning, developing, and
implementing childhood lead poisoning
prevention programs; (17) develops,
conducts, and evaluates epidemiologic
research on childhood lead poisoning,
its causes, geographic distribution,
trends and risk factors; (18) assists state
and local government agencies by
providing epidemiologic assistance for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:12 Feb 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
special studies and investigations
related to childhood lead poisoning
prevention; (19) develops and helps
implement, in concert with other federal
agencies, national organizations, and
other appropriate groups, a training
agenda for health professionals and
workers related to childhood lead
poisoning prevention activities; (20)
provides support to the CDC/NCEH
Federal Advisory Committee relevant to
lead poisoning prevention; and (21)
coordinates environmental health
surveillance/tracking and childhood
lead poisoning prevention activities
through the division and with other
components of CDC; other federal, state,
tribal, local, and territorial government
agencies; and other public and private
organizations, as appropriate.
Emergency Management, Radiation,
and Chemical Branch (CUGEE). (1)
Provides scientifically based technical
assistance and guidance to state, local,
tribal, and territorial health departments
to safeguard the American public
against radiation exposures; (2) provides
radiation-related education, training,
and information to the public health
and clinician communities and the
general public; (3) collaborates with
public health partners in state, tribal,
local, territorial, federal, international,
and nongovernment organizations on
radiation-related health issues; (4)
supports the ability of CDC and HHS
staff to prepare for and respond to
nuclear/radiological emergencies; (5)
explores emerging radiation-related
health threats; (6) serves as the HHS and
CDC lead for activities related to
chemical weapons demilitarization; (7)
conducts reviews of Department of
Defense (DOD) chemical
demilitarization plans, calling on
appropriate experts within and outside
CDC and HHS; (8) reviews air
monitoring and analytical plans and
performance for demilitarization of
chemical weapons; (9) ensures that
adequate provisions are made for public
health and worker safety during
chemical demilitarization activities; (10)
coordinates activities with DOD
agencies and state and local health and
environmental agencies concerning
chemical demilitarization plans and
operations, including the evaluation of
medical readiness; (11) performs site
visits before and during chemical
demilitarization operations; (12) reviews
and provides relevant public health
information to health professionals and
the public, and ensures the participation
and involvement of the public and other
stakeholders, as appropriate; (13)
reviews and evaluates closure plans for
chemical demilitarization including
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
decontamination and waste-handling
activities; (14) reviews on-site
emergency response plans for chemical
demilitarization activities; (15) conducts
epidemiologic research and
investigations of human exposure and
health effects related to environmental
hazards (excluding foodborne illness
outbreaks and lead, air and water
pollution) of the following types: (a)
Physical agents, (b) chemical and metal
agents, including those causing acute
effects and other more long-term effects
such as carcinogenesis, mutagenesis,
and teratogenesis, (c) biological agents,
including both technologic and natural
toxins and/or allergens (except
infectious disease-causing agents), (d)
natural and technologic disasters,
including natural events such as floods,
drought, tornadoes, cyclones,
earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions,
and events resulting from human
activities, (e) diseases and syndromes of
uncertain etiology and/or potentially
related to environmental hazards, (f)
multipollutant or multimedia studies,
(g) emerging environmental topics that
may impact public health; (16) provides
epidemiologic leadership, technical
assistance, and guidelines related to
investigation and communications of
disease clusters; (17) provides
epidemiologic and statistical support to
other environmental health programs as
appropriate; (18) develops methods and
activities directed toward assessing risk
to human populations from exposure to
environmental hazards; (19) provides
surveillance, epidemiologic emergency
response for, and epidemiologic study
of natural and other environmental
disasters; (20) provides consultation to
state, local, and other federal agencies,
as well as to international and private
organizations, on environmental health
issues; (21) provides public health
guidance and resources based on
scientific evidence to state, tribal, local,
territorial, and international public
health departments so that they may
prepare and respond to environmental
public health events (such as unplanned
releases and spills); (22) works in
collaboration across NCEH & ATSDR
and other CDC components to respond
to and, where designated, provide
technical assistance on HHS activities
associated with emergency response to
technological and environmental
disasters; (23) provides technical
assistance, as appropriate, on health
consultations and assistance in the
medical care and testing of exposed
individuals to private or public health
care providers in cases of public health
emergencies; (24) develops, implements,
and manages programs to enhance the
E:\FR\FM\13FEN1.SGM
13FEN1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 30 / Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Notices
emergency response readiness of CDC
and other national, regional, state, local,
and international public health
organizations; (25) develops capacity
within the states to integrate new and
existing epidemiological and scientific
principles into operational and
programmatic expertise in emergency
preparedness, response, and recovery;
(26) identifies and shares best practices
from all academic and operational fields
to develop appropriate technical
assistance for state and local
departments of health for all-hazards
preparedness, response, and recovery;
(27) provides technical assistance
related to the development of
contingency plans, training, and
operational liaison activities with other
agencies and response teams engaged in
emergency responses; (28) coordinates
activities through the division and with
other components of CDC; other federal,
state, tribal, local, and territorial
government agencies; and other public
and private organizations, as
appropriate; (29) supports NCEH and
ATSDR emergency management efforts
to protect the public’s health from
environmental threats; (31) facilitates
situational awareness, fusion, and
outreach by developing and
disseminating timely assessments of
evolving events, courses of action, and
communication to intra and interagency partners; (32) supports incident
management and coordination for
complex emergency management
including the development, approval,
and updating of standardized processes
to enable appropriate and adequate
management of resources; (33) serves as
the NCEH & ATSDR subject matter
experts for facilitating emergency
management planning, training, and
exercise; including identification of
requirements, key skillsets/capabilities,
capacity, and critical gaps in our
preparedness posture; (34) works with
the National Response Program and
CDC guidelines to collaborate with
stakeholders during emergency response
situations; and (35) provides technical
information and site-specific support in
addressing the health issues presented
by emergency or acute release events,
and on the nature, extent, status, and
implications of ongoing, emerging, and
evolving threats and subsequent efforts
to reduce their adverse impacts.
Sherri Berger,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2018–02821 Filed 2–12–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–18–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
23:12 Feb 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
[60Day–18–18LQ; Docket No. CDC–2018–
0015]
Proposed Data Collection Submitted
for Public Comment and
Recommendations
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice with comment period.
AGENCY:
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), as part of
its continuing effort to reduce public
burden and maximize the utility of
government information, invites the
general public and other Federal
agencies the opportunity to comment on
a proposed and/or continuing
information collection, as required by
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
This notice invites comment on a
proposed information collection project
titled ‘‘Assessment of Occupational
Injury among Fire Fighters Using a
Follow-back Survey.’’ The purpose of
this project is to collect follow-back
telephone interview data from injured
and exposed fire fighters treated in
emergency departments (EDs) and
produce a descriptive summary of these
injuries and exposures.
DATES: CDC must receive written
comments on or before April 16, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CDC–2018–
0015 by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
Regulations.gov. Follow the instructions
for submitting comments.
• Mail: Leroy A. Richardson,
Information Collection Review Office,
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE, MS–
D74, Atlanta, Georgia 30329.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
Docket Number. CDC will post, without
change, all relevant comments to
Regulations.gov.
Please note: Submit all Federal
comments through the Federal
eRulemaking portal (regulations.gov) or
by U.S. mail to the address listed above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To
request more information on the
proposed project or to obtain a copy of
the information collection plan and
instruments, contact Leroy A.
Richardson, Information Collection
Review Office, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6185
Road NE, MS–D74, Atlanta, Georgia
30329; phone: 404–639–7570; Email:
omb@cdc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520), Federal agencies
must obtain approval from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for each
collection of information they conduct
or sponsor. In addition, the PRA also
requires Federal agencies to provide a
60-day notice in the Federal Register
concerning each proposed collection of
information, including each new
proposed collection, each proposed
extension of existing collection of
information, and each reinstatement of
previously approved information
collection before submitting the
collection to the OMB for approval. To
comply with this requirement, we are
publishing this notice of a proposed
data collection as described below.
The OMB is particularly interested in
comments that will help:
1. Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
2. Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
3. Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
4. Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submissions
of responses.
5. Assess information collection costs.
Proposed Project
Assessment of Occupational Injury
among Fire Fighters Using a Followback Survey—New—National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC).
Background and Brief Description
Studies have reported that fire fighters
have high rates of non-fatal injuries and
illnesses as compared to the general
worker population. As fire fighters
undertake many critical public safety
activities and are tasked with protecting
the safety and health of the public, it
follows that understanding and
preventing injuries and exposures
among fire fighters will have a benefit
E:\FR\FM\13FEN1.SGM
13FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 30 (Tuesday, February 13, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 6179-6185]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-02821]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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 81 FR 84583-84591, dated November 23, 2016) is
amended to reflect the reorganization of the National Center for
Environmental Health, Office of Noncommunicable Diseases, Injury and
Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Section C-B, Organization and Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the titles and mission and function
statements for the National Center for Environmental Health (CUG) and
insert the following:
National Center for Environmental Health (CUG). Plans, directs, and
coordinates a national program to maintain and improve the health of
the American people by promoting a healthy environment and by
preventing premature death and avoidable illness and disability caused
by non infectious, non occupational environmental and related factors.
In carrying out this mission, the Center: (1) Assists in increasing the
capacity of States to prevent and control environmental public health
problems through training, technology transfer, grants, cooperative
agreements, contracts, and other means; (2) provides services, advice,
technical assistance, and information to State and local public health
officials, other Federal agencies, academic, professional,
international, and private organizations, and the general public; (3)
plans for and provides emergency response assistance to States,
localities, other Federal agencies, and international organizations;
(4) identifies, designs, develops, implements, influences, and
evaluates interventions to reduce or eliminate environmental hazards,
exposures to these hazards, and adverse health outcomes resulting from
exposure to these hazards; (5) measures, estimates, and predicts the
incidence of adverse health outcomes through surveillance, surveys, and
registries; (6) measures, estimates, and predicts the incidence of
exposure to substances, conditions, or forces in the environment
through surveillance, surveys, and registries; (7) describes and
evaluates associations between environmental exposures and adverse
health outcomes by using information from surveillance systems,
surveys, registries, epidemiologic and laboratory studies, and by
developing and maintaining a broad base of normative and diagnostic
laboratory data; (8) develops and validates advanced laboratory
technology for diagnosing selected chronic diseases and for assessing
exposure and health effects in persons exposed or potentially exposed
to environmental toxicants or other environmental agents; (9) develops
and validates new epidemiologic techniques for use in study of the
effects of exposure to environmental hazards; (10) provides leadership
in coordinating efforts in States and in national and international
organizations concerned with standardizing selected laboratory
measurement systems; (11) conducts special programs, e.g., coordination
and review of Environmental Impact Statements; and (12) in carrying out
the above functions, collaborates, as appropriate, with other Centers/
Institute/Offices of CDC.
Office of the Director (CUG1). (1) Manages, directs, coordinates,
and evaluates all health-related programs of National Center for
Environmental Health and Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry (NCEH & ATSDR); (2) provides overall leadership in health-
related activities for hazardous substances, hazardous waste sites and
chemical releases; (3) provides overall coordination for the research
programs and science policies of the agencies; (4) develops goals and
objectives and provides leadership, policy formulation, scientific
oversight, and guidance in program planning and development; (5)
provides overall programmatic direction for planning and management
oversight of allocated resources, human resource management and
administrative support; (6) provides information, publication and
distribution services to NCEH & ATSDR; (7) maintains liaison with other
Federal, State, and local agencies, institutions, and organizations;
(8) coordinates NCEH & ATSDR program activities with other CDC
components, other Federal, State and local Government agencies, the
private sector, and other nations; and (9) directs and coordinates
activities in support of the Department's Equal Employment Opportunity
program and employee development.
Office of Communication (CUG12). (1) Serves as the principal
advisor to the center director and divisions on communication and
marketing science, research, practice, and public affairs; (2) leads
center strategic planning for communication and marketing science and
public affairs programs and projects; (3) analyzes context, situation,
and environment to inform center-wide communication and marketing
programs and projects; (4) ensures use of scientifically sound research
for marketing and communication programs and projects; (5) ensures
accurate, accessible, timely, and effective translation of science for
use by multiple audiences; (6) leads identification and implementation
of information dissemination channels; (7) provides communication and
marketing project management expertise; (8) collaborates with external
organizations and the news, public service, and entertainment and other
media to ensure that scientific findings and their implications for
public health reach the intended audiences; (9) collaborates closely
with divisions to produce materials tailored to meet the requirements
of news and other media channels, including press releases, letters to
the editor, public service announcements, television programming, video
news releases, and other electronic and printed materials; (10)
coordinates the development and maintenance of accessible public
information through the internet, social media and other applicable
channels; (11) provides training and technical assistance in the areas
of health communication, risk communication, social marketing, and
public affairs; (12)
[[Page 6180]]
manages or coordinates communication services such as internet/
Intranet, application development, social media, video production,
graphics, photography, CDC name/logo use and other brand management;
(13) provides editorial services, including writing, editing, and
technical editing; (14) facilitates internal communication to center
staff and allied audiences; (15) supervises and manages Office of
Communications activities, programs, and staff; (16) serves as liaison
to internal and external groups to advance the center's mission; (17)
collaborates with the CDC Office of the Associate Director for
Communication on media relations, electronic communication, health
media production, and brand management activities; (18) collaborates
with the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response and other
NCEH & ATSDR entities to fulfill communication responsibilities in
emergency response situations; (19) collaborates with other CDC
Centers/Institute/Offices in the development of marketing
communications targeted to populations that would benefit from a cross-
functional approach; and (20) ensures NCEH & ATSDR materials meet CDC
and Department of Health and Human Services standards.
Office of Policy, Partnerships and Planning (CUG13). (1)
Coordinates, develops, recommends and implements strategic planning and
tracking for NCEH & ATSDR; (2) develops and coordinates performance
management to ensure achievement of goals in NCEH & ATSDR programs; (3)
participates in reviewing, coordinating, and preparing legislation,
briefing documents, Congressional testimony, and other legislative
matters; (4) maintains liaison and coordinates with other Federal
agencies for program planning and performance; (5) assists in the
development of NCEH & ATSDR budget and program initiatives; (6)
provides liaison with staff offices and other officials of CDC; (7)
monitors and prepares reports on health-related activities to comply
with provisions of relevant legislation; (8) coordinates the
development, review, and approval of Federal regulations, Federal
Register announcements, Freedom Of Information Act requests, GAO and IG
reports, and related activities; (9) develops and strengthens strategic
partnerships with key constituent groups; and (10) facilitates
communication between NCEH & ATSDR and its partners.
Office of Management and Analytics (CUG14). (1) Plans, manages,
directs, and conducts the administrative and financial management
operations of NCEH & ATSDR; (2) reviews the effectiveness and
efficiency of administration and operation of all NCEH & ATSDR
programs; (3) develops and directs systems for human resource
management, financial services, procurement requisitioning, and travel
authorization; (4) provides and coordinates services for the extramural
award activities of NCEH & ATSDR; (5) formulates and provides overall
programmatic direction for planning and management oversight of
allocated resources, human resource management and administrative
support; (6) develops and directs a system for cost recovery; (7)
enables and supports NCEH & ATSDR data management, systems development,
and information security needs; (8) directs and coordinates activities
in support of the Department's Equal Employment Opportunity program and
employee development; (9) coordinates employee training programs; (10)
develops and directs employee engagement programs; (11) analyzes NCEH &
ATSDR workforce, systems, and resources; and (12) manages and conducts
a record management program for NCEH & ATSDR in accordance with
Congressional mandate.
Office of Science (CUG15). (1) Ensures NCEH & ATSDR compliance with
the various statutes, regulations, and policies governing the conduct
of science by the federal government, including: Human subjects
research determinations, the protection of human research subjects and
the use of Institutional Review Boards (IRBs), the OMB Paperwork
Reduction Act (relating to the collection of information from ten or
more people in a 12-month period), the OMB Information Quality
Bulletin, Confidentiality Protection, and the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA, and its ``Privacy
Rule''); and others; (2) develops and maintains the NCEH & ATSDR
Clearance Policy and managing and conducting clearance for NCEH & ATSDR
documents; (3) coordinates and manages document cross-clearance between
NCEH & ATSDR and other parts of CDC; facilitating center reviews of
external documents, coordinating and managing information quality
requests concerning NCEH & ATSDR documents; (4) coordinates and manages
external peer review for NCEH & ATSDR documents and intramural
programs; (5) coordinates and manages the activities of the NCEH &
ATSDR Board of Scientific Counselors (a Federal Advisory Committee) and
its subcommittees and workgroups; (6) coordinates interagency
workgroups/committees such as the President's Task Force on
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks to Children, and the
National Toxicology Program Executive Committee; (7) coordinates and
manages NCEH & ATSDR involvement in the Epidemic Intelligence Service
Program; (8) coordinates NCEH & ATSDR involvement in CDC public health
ethics activities; (9) coordinates NCEH & ATSDR involvement in CDC
science awards activities (e.g., the Shepard Award, and CDC/ATSDR Honor
Awards); (10) organizes and sponsors select training opportunities
(e.g., Human Subjects/IRB, OMB/PRA, and eClearance Training for Authors
and Reviewers); (11) represents NCEH & ATSDR on various CDC/ATSDR
committees, work groups, and task forces, such as the CDC/ATSDR Office
of the Chief Science Officer's Excellence in Science Committee, and the
CDC Surveillance Science Advisory Group; (12) coordinates NCEH & ATSDR
global health activities; (13) coordinates and manages the NCEH & ATSDR
Healthy People 2020; (14) prepares an annual inventory of NCEH & ATSDR
publications; and (15) pursuant to the National Environmental Policy
Act, reviews draft Environmental Impact Statements on behalf of HHS
where the proposed federal actions impact human health.
Division of Laboratory Sciences (CUGD). (1) Provides advanced
laboratory science to improve the detection, diagnosis, treatment, and
prevention of environmental, tobacco-related, nutritional, newborn,
selected chronic and selected infectious diseases; (2) provides
advanced laboratory science to rapidly and accurately detect chemical
threat agents, radiologic threat agents, and selected toxins; (3)
develops, maintains, and applies unique, rapid, and high-quality
measurement techniques to assess disease risk, identify harmful
environmental exposures or nutrition deficiencies among Americans, and
respond to public health emergencies (4) provides laboratory
measurements in collaborative studies of human disease and vulnerable
populations; (5) provides technical assistance, technology transfer,
reference laboratory measurements, laboratory standardization programs,
and external quality assurance to state and local public health
laboratories and health officials; Federal agencies; international
organizations; academic, international, and private laboratories; and
professional organizations to continuously improve the accuracy,
precision, and cost effectiveness of
[[Page 6181]]
laboratory tests for environmental chemicals, nutrition indicators,
heart disease, stroke and newborn screening; and (6) collaborates with
other CDC organizations; Federal, State, and local agencies; and
private and professional organizations to investigate new or emerging
health concerns.
Inorganic and Radiation Analytical Toxicology Branch (CUGDC). (1)
Develops, maintains, and distributes, as appropriate, analytical
methods to measure trace essential and toxic elements in human
specimens; (2) applies analytical methods to assess human exposure to
chemicals, including surveillance of levels in the population,
epidemiologic studies, and emergency-response investigations; (3)
provides training, guidance, and assistance to state and local
governments, and domestic and international laboratories in the
development, maintenance, and technology transfer of analytical
capability for measuring trace-essential and toxic elements in
specimens from people and animals; (4) develops and maintains
analytical capability and expertise, and distributes, as appropriate,
standards, reference materials, and protocols for measuring chemicals
in response to both terrorist and non-terrorist events; (5)
distributes, as appropriate, standards, reference materials, and
protocols to assist state, international, and other laboratories in
transferring laboratory technology for urine iodine biomonitoring,
blood metals biomonitoring, and radiologic analyses; and (6) provides
technical assistance and guidance to governmental agencies, academia,
and professional societies regarding quality control issues related to
biomonitoring for inorganic and radiologic chemicals.
Clinical Chemistry Branch (CUGDD). (1) Develops and maintains
analytical methods and expertise in the measurement, interpretation and
standardization of chronic disease biomarkers, chemicals known to cause
disease or health concerns, and biological toxins; (2) develops,
establishes and maintains laboratory standardization and improvement
programs to assist state, national and international agencies and
organizations to better diagnose, treat and prevent selected chronic
diseases and infectious diseases; (3) applies these analytical methods
and standardization procedures to: Assess chronic disease status or
human exposure to environmental chemicals, toxins, and pathogens;
standardize disease biomarker measurements; and improve the safety and
quality of biological preparations; (4) provides laboratory science to
diagnose diseases caused by selected viral and bacterial organisms, and
assess the effectiveness of disease treatment and prevention efforts;
and (5) provides review, expert consultation, technical assistance,
training, guidance and/or original scientific publications and
information to federal, state, local and international investigations,
surveys, studies, and/or government inquiries on topics related to
human exposure assessment, standards development, analytical
instrumentation as well as prevalence, risk factors, and treatment of
chronic diseases, exposure to environmental chemicals, influenza,
toxins and human pathogens.
Organic Analytical Toxicology Branch (CUGDE). (1) Develops and
maintains analytical methods to measure selected synthetic and
naturally occurring organic chemicals, their metabolites, and reaction
products (adducts) in human specimens; (2) applies these analytical
methods to assess human exposures to these chemicals for many purposes,
including surveillance of levels in the population, epidemiological
studies, and emergency response investigations; (3) aids in
transferring these methods within Division laboratories and to state,
local and other public health laboratories; (4) develops and prepares
various matrix-based quality control materials for use in such
analyses; and (5) provides review, expert consultation, and original
scientific publications/information to Federal, state, local, and
international governments and health organizations on topics related to
human exposure assessment, organic analytical methodology, high
technology analytical instrumentation, preparation and analysis of
biological specimens, quality control procedures, laboratory safety,
and medical interpretation of laboratory findings.
Newborn Screening and Molecular Biology Branch (CUGDG). (1)
Provides leadership, technical consultation and assistance in
laboratory testing for newborn screening, genetic and other diseases of
public health importance to State Public Health laboratories, Federal
agencies, academic centers, professional organizations, international
laboratories, and manufacturers of diagnostic products involved in
performing relevant laboratory measurements; (2) provides leadership,
oversight and administration of the dried-blood spot (DBS) quality
assurance program that is necessary for both domestic and international
laboratories that screen for newborn disorders including metabolic
conditions as well as inherited genetic and other select treatable
adverse conditions in newborns; (3) develops, evaluates, standardizes,
and maintains laboratory methods for biochemical and genetic assays for
diseases of public health significance, immune disorders, DBS assays
utilized by newborn screening programs worldwide; and (4) evaluates and
refines existing and emerging laboratory technologies for measurement
and study of biomarkers for clinical applications and population-based
screening for diseases and genetic risk factors of public health
importance.
Emergency Response Branch (CUGDH). (1) Develops and maintains
analytical methods to measure, in human specimens, toxic substances
that are known or potential agents for use in chemical terrorism; (2)
applies these measurements in response to chemical terrorism or
chemical exposure emergencies and, as part of a coordinated Federal
response, deploys a rapid response laboratory team to assist in
obtaining human specimens for analysis; (3) transfers technology,
provides training, and provides technical assistance for measurement of
chemical agents in human specimens to a network of laboratories that
provide additional capacity for responding to chemical terrorism; (4)
provides review and expert consultation to Federal, state, local and
international governments and health organizations on assessing and
interpreting biomonitoring measurements of chemical agents likely to be
used in terrorism; and (5) for toxic substances of public health
concern but unlikely to be involved in chemical terrorism, transfers
biomonitoring technology (including analytical methods), provides
biomonitoring training, and provides technical assistance in
biomonitoring to state laboratories.
Nutritional Biomarkers Branch (CUGDJ). (1) Develops and maintains
analytical methods and expertise in the measuring and interpreting of
physiologic levels of essential nutrients, nonessential nutrients, and
relevant metabolites; (2) develops and maintains analytical methods to
measure bioactive dietary compounds, other than those needed to meet
basic human nutritional needs, that are responsible for changes in
health status; (3) applies analytical methods to assess human
nutritional status or exposure to bioactive dietary compounds for
purposes including surveillance of levels in the population,
epidemiological studies, intervention trails, and emergency-response
investigations; (4) provides technical assistance, training, and
guidance to national, state, international, and local investigations,
surveys, food fortification and clinical studies of
[[Page 6182]]
nutritional status, prevalence, risk factors, and treatment of chronic
diseases; and (5) develops, maintains, and distributes, as appropriate,
standards, reference materials, protocols, standardization programs,
and external quality assessment programs to assist state,
international, and other laboratories in transferring laboratory
technology and in establishing and maintaining quality control and
calibration of methods for nutritional biomarkers and markers of
physiologic changes.
Tobacco and Volatiles Branch (CUGDK). (1) Develops, maintains, and
applies analytical methods to measure biomarkers of exposure to toxic
substances and applies these analytical methods to assess human
exposures to volatile organic compounds for many purposes; (2) develops
and maintains analytical methods and measures addictive and toxic
substances in tobacco products, in tobacco smoke and in the blood,
urine and saliva of smokers and persons exposed to tobacco smoke; (3)
determines how different tobacco additives and changes in product
construction and design affect delivery of addictive and toxic
substances from tobacco products to people; (4) for the U.S.
population, regularly measures the percent of persons who are smokers
and the exposure of Americans to the major toxic constituents of
tobacco smoke; (5) for the U.S. population, regularly measures the
exposure of Americans to secondhand smoke; and (6) collaborates in
human studies of disease risk associated with direct and secondhand
tobacco smoke exposure and use of other tobacco products.
Division of Environmental Health Science and Practice (CUGE). (1)
Provides national and international leadership for the coordination,
delivery, and evaluation of environmental health interventions and
services; (2) advances environmental public health practice to better
serve and protect the health of all people in the United States; (3)
develops methods and conducts activities to assess risk to human
populations from exposure to environmental hazards; (4) conducts and
disseminates findings of surveillance, epidemiologic research,
environmental assessments, and other scientific investigations of human
exposure to environmental hazards; (5) develops mechanisms to
disseminate information on environmental health interventions, risks,
technologies, and best practices to state, tribal, local, and
territorial health departments and to other agencies with related
responsibilities; (6) maintains liaison with and serves as a primary
federal resource for consultation and specialized technical assistance
to federal, state, tribal, local, and territorial agencies; other
national, international, and private organizations; and academic
institutions for environmental health issues; (7) provides consultation
and technical assistance on the development and implementation of
environmental health programs addressing the prevention of human health
problems associated with environmental hazards; (8) serves as CDC lead
on safe water issues with focus on an all-hazards approach to
recreational water, drinking water systems, private wells, and other
private drinking water sources; (9) serves as CDC lead for control and
prevention of environmental causes of Legionnaires' disease; (10)
serves as CDC lead for prevention of environmental causes of foodborne
illnesses and outbreaks; (11) operates a model vessel sanitation
program that includes the development of standards, inspection of
vessels, sanitation and disease prevention training of the cruise ship
industry, conducting gastrointestinal (GI) illness surveillance and
disease outbreak investigations on vessels sailing internationally;
(12) provides guidance and technical assistance to the cruise ship
industry on the control and prevention of GI illnesses on vessels; (13)
plans, develops, implements, and evaluates training programs,
workshops, technical manuals and guidance, and model standards to
strengthen the technical capacity of environmental health practitioners
in constituent agencies and organizations, including state, tribal,
local, and territorial governments; (14) provides leadership in the
development and implementation of asthma control programs and
strategies to reduce the asthma exacerbations and deaths; (15) serves
as CDC lead for epidemiologic research and investigations of
respiratory diseases, other illnesses related to air pollutants, and
outbreaks of acute respiratory diseases related to environmental
hazards; (16) serves as CDC lead for climate-related public health
activities; (17) provides national and international leadership and
support in the development, implementation and use of environmental
health surveillance through the National Environmental Public Health
Tracking Program and related efforts for climate, asthma, lead,
radiation, and other environmentally related conditions; (18) serves as
the CDC lead for the elimination and prevention of childhood lead
poisoning; (19) provides radiation health expertise and leadership in
areas addressing public exposures to radiation including environmental
exposures, medical exposures, and nuclear/radiological emergency
preparedness and response; (20) serves as the HHS and CDC lead for
public health oversight associated with chemical weapons
demilitarization processes and related activities conducted by the
Department of Defense and its contractors; (21) conducts emergency
response and associated field studies to address natural or man-made
events, disease outbreaks, and requests for epidemiologic, toxicologic,
or other environmental health assistance from federal, state, local,
territorial, tribal or international governments; (22) ensures the
participation and involvement of the public and other stakeholders in
the division's programs, as appropriate; and (23) coordinates division
activities with other CDC components and HHS agencies, as appropriate.
Office of the Director (CUGE1). (1) Plans, directs and manages the
activities of the division; (2) directs strategic planning and
alignment with NCEH & ATSDR mission, goals, and priorities; (3)
coordinates cross-cutting activities on children's health, healthy
homes, tribal activities, surveillance harmonization, emergency
preparedness, and workforce development; (4) serves as a conduit to
intra and inter-agency entities through active collaborations,
strategic planning efforts and formal exchange with emergency
preparedness and response stakeholders including intelligence,
legislative, & budgetary entities; (5) coordinates NCEH and ATSDR
emergency management resources to support efforts to protect the
public's health from environmental threats; and (6) provides incident
management and coordination for complex emergency management including
the development, approval, and updating of standardized processes to
enable appropriate and adequate management of resources.
Water, Food, and Environmental Health Services Branch (CUGEB). (1)
Advances environmental public health practice to better serve and
protect the health of all people in the United States; (2) provides
leadership on safe water activities from an environmental public health
perspective, with particular focus on an all-hazards approach to
recreational water, drinking water systems, household wells, and other
private drinking water sources; (3) investigates risks for exposure to
and health effects from contaminants in drinking water to identify
hazardous exposures and develop recommendations for minimizing
[[Page 6183]]
exposure and reducing public health risks; (4) disseminates,
communicates, and promotes information to protect communities from
adverse health impacts from water pollutants; (5) serves as CDC lead
for prevention of environmental causes of foodborne illnesses and
outbreaks; (6) develops methods and conducts activities to ensure the
translation of new technology and prevention research findings into
prevention and control programs and activities at the state, tribal,
local, and territorial levels (especially for water and food safety);
(7) develops technical guidelines and model standards for environmental
health program areas addressed at the state, tribal, local, and
territorial levels (especially for water and food safety); (8) promotes
and assists in the determination and investigation of environmental
antecedents and solutions to disease problems, especially when
potentially related to waterborne or foodborne agents; (9) develops,
implements, and evaluates training programs and workshops, develops
model performance standards, and provides decision support tools to
strengthen professional competency among environmental health
practitioners at the state, tribal, local, and territorial levels; (10)
supports state and local environmental health programs through
information exchange, direct technical assistance, and evaluation of
existing programs; (11) supports the professional development of
environmental health practitioners through collaboration with schools
of public and environmental health, state, tribal, local, and
territorial health agencies, and others; (12) serve as NCEH & ATSDR
lead for vector-borne disease, in collaboration with and support of
other CDC components; (13) serves as national and international model
and CDC lead for comprehensive vessel sanitation operational
inspections and oversight for vessels that have a foreign itinerary,
call on U.S. ports, and carry 13 or more passengers, including the
following responsibilities: (a) Ensures and coordinates epidemiologic
investigations of GI illness outbreaks occurring aboard vessels within
CDC's jurisdiction, (b) conducts syndromic surveillance for GI illness
among passengers and crew for all voyages on vessels under CDC's
jurisdiction, (c) plans, implements, and evaluates sanitation training
for cruise ship supervisors, (d) reviews plans for vessel renovations
and new vessel construction, and conducts construction inspections, (e)
disseminates information on vessel sanitation inspections and other
related information to the traveling public, (f) provides direct
technical assistance to cruise lines, other U.S. government agencies,
foreign governments, and others on the development and maintenance of
vessel sanitation standards and policies; and (14) coordinates
activities through the division and with other components of CDC; other
federal, state, tribal, local, and territorial government agencies; and
other public and private organizations, as appropriate.
Asthma and Community Health Branch (CUGEC). (1) Develops,
implements, and evaluates the National Asthma Control Program to reduce
asthma morbidity and mortality and to address asthma disparities; (2)
conducts epidemiologic research and investigations of asthma morbidity
and mortality; (3) supports surveillance activities for asthma, and
other respiratory diseases as appropriate, to quantify burden and guide
interventions; (4) identifies the evidence for and promotes and tracks
interventions that reduce the burden of asthma, focusing on populations
with a disproportionate burden of the disease; (5) develops and
disseminates training, tools and other resources to strengthen and
sustain asthma control activities and technical capacity among program
partners at the national, state, local, territorial, and tribal level;
(6) provides technical consultation to state, local, private,
international, and other federal agencies on asthma control,
surveillance, epidemiology, and evaluation; (7) disseminates,
communicates, and promotes information from surveillance and health
studies related to asthma control to diverse audiences; (8) assesses
the strength of evidence on air pollution exposures and public health;
(9) conducts epidemiologic research and investigations of non-
occupational human exposure to air pollutants and their potential
health effects; (10) develops methods for assessing exposure and risk
to human health from air pollutants and, in selected circumstances,
conducts exposure and risk assessments; (11) designs and evaluates
behavioral, policy, technological, and community design interventions
to reduce exposures to air pollution and improve health; (12)
facilitates international efforts to reduce indoor air pollution from
cookstoves; (13) develops and coordinates training and decision support
tools to strengthen and sustain air pollution activities and technical
capacity among program partners at the national, state, local,
territorial, and tribal level; (14) provides consultation to federal,
state, local, territorial, tribal, private, and international agencies
on non-occupational environmental issues related to air pollutants;
(15) disseminates, communicates, and promotes information to protect
communities from adverse health impacts from air pollution; (16)
conducts epidemiologic research into the potential health effects of
climate change and climate variability; (17) develops methods for
assessing current and projected future risk to human health from
climate change and climate variability; (18) designs and evaluates
public health adaptation and intervention strategies for reducing the
impacts of climate change and climate variability on health; (19)
develops and coordinates training and decision support tools to
strengthen and sustain public health adaptation activities related to
climate change and climate variability; (20) helps build technical
capacity among program partners at the national, state, local,
territorial, and tribal level; (21) provides consultation to state,
local, private, international, and other federal agencies on human
health issues related to climate change and climate variability; (22)
disseminates, communicates, and promotes information about public
health adaptation to climate change and climate variability to diverse
audiences; (23) enhances healthy community design by helping public
health, and transportation by providing convenient and safe
opportunities to walk, bicycle, and use public transit; (24) develops
and maintains quality partnerships with key program stakeholders; and
(25) coordinates asthma, air, and climate activities through the
division and with other components of CDC; other federal, state,
tribal, local, and territorial government agencies; and other public
and private organizations, as appropriate.
Lead Poisoning Prevention and Environmental Health Tracking Branch
(CUGED). (1) Implements the National Environmental Public Health
Tracking Program, establishing goals and objectives to ensure the
provision of information from a nationwide network of integrated health
and environmental data that drives actions to improve the health of
communities; (2) establishes standards, processes, and protocols to
guide scientific activities and content in the National Environmental
Public Health Tracking Network and component state, local, territorial
and tribal networks; (3) provides standardized and integrated health,
[[Page 6184]]
environmental, and hazard data from multiple information systems at the
national, state, and local levels; (4) fills key environmental health
data and information gaps through application of novel and
nontraditional data, technologies, tools and methods; (5) coordinates
development of training, workforce capacity, and infrastructure to
support and sustain environmental public health tracking among program
partners at the national, state, local, territorial, and tribal level;
(6) develops tools and products used to synthesize environmental public
health surveillance data to support public health decision making at
the national, state, and local levels; (7) continually modernizes and
enhances the tracking network's underlying IT and informatics
technology to address stakeholder information needs; (8) develops and
maintains quality partnerships with key environmental public health
tracking stakeholders; (9) facilitates communication and coordination
of environmental public health tracking activities across and within
health and environmental agencies; (10) facilitates and conducts
scientific activities for environmental public health tracking; (11)
disseminates, communicates, and promotes use of environmental public
health tracking information to diverse audiences; (12) conducts
continuous quality improvement for environmental public health tracking
activities; (13) establishes goals and objectives for a national
childhood lead poisoning prevention program for CDC, which includes
reduction of lead exposures from all sources, including lead-based
paint and lead in water; (14) works with U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Energy, National
Institute of Standards and Technology and other agencies to develop and
implement an integrated national program to eliminate childhood lead
poisoning; (15) serves as the lead agency for coordinating efforts
designed to achieve national program objectives and performance
standards related to the prevention of childhood lead poisoning; (16)
provides consultation and assistance to federal agencies, state and
local health agencies, and others in planning, developing, and
implementing childhood lead poisoning prevention programs; (17)
develops, conducts, and evaluates epidemiologic research on childhood
lead poisoning, its causes, geographic distribution, trends and risk
factors; (18) assists state and local government agencies by providing
epidemiologic assistance for special studies and investigations related
to childhood lead poisoning prevention; (19) develops and helps
implement, in concert with other federal agencies, national
organizations, and other appropriate groups, a training agenda for
health professionals and workers related to childhood lead poisoning
prevention activities; (20) provides support to the CDC/NCEH Federal
Advisory Committee relevant to lead poisoning prevention; and (21)
coordinates environmental health surveillance/tracking and childhood
lead poisoning prevention activities through the division and with
other components of CDC; other federal, state, tribal, local, and
territorial government agencies; and other public and private
organizations, as appropriate.
Emergency Management, Radiation, and Chemical Branch (CUGEE). (1)
Provides scientifically based technical assistance and guidance to
state, local, tribal, and territorial health departments to safeguard
the American public against radiation exposures; (2) provides
radiation-related education, training, and information to the public
health and clinician communities and the general public; (3)
collaborates with public health partners in state, tribal, local,
territorial, federal, international, and nongovernment organizations on
radiation-related health issues; (4) supports the ability of CDC and
HHS staff to prepare for and respond to nuclear/radiological
emergencies; (5) explores emerging radiation-related health threats;
(6) serves as the HHS and CDC lead for activities related to chemical
weapons demilitarization; (7) conducts reviews of Department of Defense
(DOD) chemical demilitarization plans, calling on appropriate experts
within and outside CDC and HHS; (8) reviews air monitoring and
analytical plans and performance for demilitarization of chemical
weapons; (9) ensures that adequate provisions are made for public
health and worker safety during chemical demilitarization activities;
(10) coordinates activities with DOD agencies and state and local
health and environmental agencies concerning chemical demilitarization
plans and operations, including the evaluation of medical readiness;
(11) performs site visits before and during chemical demilitarization
operations; (12) reviews and provides relevant public health
information to health professionals and the public, and ensures the
participation and involvement of the public and other stakeholders, as
appropriate; (13) reviews and evaluates closure plans for chemical
demilitarization including decontamination and waste-handling
activities; (14) reviews on-site emergency response plans for chemical
demilitarization activities; (15) conducts epidemiologic research and
investigations of human exposure and health effects related to
environmental hazards (excluding foodborne illness outbreaks and lead,
air and water pollution) of the following types: (a) Physical agents,
(b) chemical and metal agents, including those causing acute effects
and other more long-term effects such as carcinogenesis, mutagenesis,
and teratogenesis, (c) biological agents, including both technologic
and natural toxins and/or allergens (except infectious disease-causing
agents), (d) natural and technologic disasters, including natural
events such as floods, drought, tornadoes, cyclones, earthquakes, and
volcanic eruptions, and events resulting from human activities, (e)
diseases and syndromes of uncertain etiology and/or potentially related
to environmental hazards, (f) multipollutant or multimedia studies, (g)
emerging environmental topics that may impact public health; (16)
provides epidemiologic leadership, technical assistance, and guidelines
related to investigation and communications of disease clusters; (17)
provides epidemiologic and statistical support to other environmental
health programs as appropriate; (18) develops methods and activities
directed toward assessing risk to human populations from exposure to
environmental hazards; (19) provides surveillance, epidemiologic
emergency response for, and epidemiologic study of natural and other
environmental disasters; (20) provides consultation to state, local,
and other federal agencies, as well as to international and private
organizations, on environmental health issues; (21) provides public
health guidance and resources based on scientific evidence to state,
tribal, local, territorial, and international public health departments
so that they may prepare and respond to environmental public health
events (such as unplanned releases and spills); (22) works in
collaboration across NCEH & ATSDR and other CDC components to respond
to and, where designated, provide technical assistance on HHS
activities associated with emergency response to technological and
environmental disasters; (23) provides technical assistance, as
appropriate, on health consultations and assistance in the medical care
and testing of exposed individuals to private or public health care
providers in cases of public health emergencies; (24) develops,
implements, and manages programs to enhance the
[[Page 6185]]
emergency response readiness of CDC and other national, regional,
state, local, and international public health organizations; (25)
develops capacity within the states to integrate new and existing
epidemiological and scientific principles into operational and
programmatic expertise in emergency preparedness, response, and
recovery; (26) identifies and shares best practices from all academic
and operational fields to develop appropriate technical assistance for
state and local departments of health for all-hazards preparedness,
response, and recovery; (27) provides technical assistance related to
the development of contingency plans, training, and operational liaison
activities with other agencies and response teams engaged in emergency
responses; (28) coordinates activities through the division and with
other components of CDC; other federal, state, tribal, local, and
territorial government agencies; and other public and private
organizations, as appropriate; (29) supports NCEH and ATSDR emergency
management efforts to protect the public's health from environmental
threats; (31) facilitates situational awareness, fusion, and outreach
by developing and disseminating timely assessments of evolving events,
courses of action, and communication to intra and inter-agency
partners; (32) supports incident management and coordination for
complex emergency management including the development, approval, and
updating of standardized processes to enable appropriate and adequate
management of resources; (33) serves as the NCEH & ATSDR subject matter
experts for facilitating emergency management planning, training, and
exercise; including identification of requirements, key skillsets/
capabilities, capacity, and critical gaps in our preparedness posture;
(34) works with the National Response Program and CDC guidelines to
collaborate with stakeholders during emergency response situations; and
(35) provides technical information and site-specific support in
addressing the health issues presented by emergency or acute release
events, and on the nature, extent, status, and implications of ongoing,
emerging, and evolving threats and subsequent efforts to reduce their
adverse impacts.
Sherri Berger,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2018-02821 Filed 2-12-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-18-P