Invitation To Become a Healthy People 2030 Champion, 58361-58363 [2022-20693]
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BILLING CODE 4153–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Invitation To Become a Healthy People
2030 Champion
Office of Disease Prevention
and Health Promotion, Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Health, Office of
the Secretary, Department of Health and
Human Services.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services’ (HHS)
Office of Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion (ODPHP) invites public and
private sector organizations that support
Healthy People 2030, the nation’s
disease prevention and health
promotion plan, to become a Healthy
People 2030 Champion. The selected
Healthy People 2030 Champions will be
recognized for their commitment and
work toward achieving Healthy People
2030’s vision of a society in which all
people can achieve their full potential
for health and well-being across the
lifespan.
DATES: Online applications will be
accepted starting on September 21, 2022
and will be reviewed on a rolling basis.
ADDRESSES: Interested organizations are
invited to submit an online Healthy
People 2030 Champion application,
which can be found at https://
health.gov/healthypeople/about/
healthy-people-2030-championprogram. Questions about the Healthy
People 2030 Champions may be emailed
to HP2030Partners@hhs.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Emmeline Ochiai, Office of Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion,
Office of the Assistant Secretary for
SUMMARY:
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Average
burden hours
per response
Total burden
hours
15,446
1
45/60
11,585
30,392
1
45/60
22,794
45,838
........................
45/60
34,379
Health, U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services; 1101 Wootton
Parkway, Suite 420, Rockville, MD
20852; Telephone: (240) 453–8280.
Email: HP2030Partners@hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Requirements of Interested
Organizations. Organizations that
support Healthy People 2030, disease
prevention, health promotion, and wellbeing and that demonstrate efforts
toward addressing social determinants
of health (SDOH) and health literacy,
eliminating health disparities, and
achieving health equity in the United
States may submit an application online
to become a Healthy People 2030
Champion. The online application is
available at https://health.gov/
healthypeople/about/healthy-people2030-champion-program.
Eligibility for Interested
Organizations. To be eligible to become
a Healthy People 2030 Champion, an
organization shall: (1) have a
demonstrated interest in, understanding
of, and experience with disease
prevention, heath promotion, SDOH,
health disparities, health equity, health
literacy, and/or well-being or (2) have
an organizational or corporate mission
that is aligned with the Healthy People
2030 vision, mission, overarching goals,
foundational principles, or objectives;
and (3) agree to sign a letter of
understanding (LOU) with ODPHP,
which will set forth the details of how
the organization is supporting the vision
of the Healthy People 2030. Individuals
are not eligible to be Healthy People
2030 Champions.
Healthy People 2030 Champions.
Healthy People 2030 Champions can be
public and private organizations such as
those at the state, local, county, and
tribal levels, non-governmental
organizations, non-profit organizations,
businesses, academic organizations,
organizations that impact health
outcomes, philanthropic organizations,
and tribal organizations that identify
themselves as being aligned with or
PO 00000
Number of
responses per
respondent
promoting Healthy People 2030,
including the Healthy People 2030
vision and overarching goals. All
organizations may apply. Applicants for
Healthy People 2030 Champions shall
complete an online application (located
at https://health.gov/healthypeople/
about/healthy-people-2030-championprogram) and identify in the application
how they address or support health
promotion, disease prevention, SDOH,
health disparities, health equity, health
literacy, and/or well-being and how
they work in alignment with Healthy
People 2030 through activities,
philanthropy, or other means.
Applicants for Healthy People 2030
Champions will be evaluated according
to the organization’s demonstrated
commitment to support the overarching
goals of Healthy People 2030 and the
Healthy People 2030 objectives.
The following activities may be
considered as an organization’s
demonstrated commitment to Healthy
People 2030’s overarching goals and
objectives (https://health.gov/healthy
people/about/healthy-people-2030framework):
• Promoting and increasing access to
disease prevention and health
promotion activities;
• Providing access to training or
certification programs for disease
prevention and health promotion;
• Addressing SDOH, eliminating
disparities, achieving health equity,
promoting health literacy, and/or
promoting well-being using evidencebased interventions;
• Providing training and other
necessary resources to adapt or modify
disease prevention and health
promotion activities to meet the needs
of diverse populations, address SDOH,
promote health literacy, eliminate
disparities, achieve health equity, and/
or promote well-being;
• Developing partnerships across a
variety of sectors, including business,
community, academia, education, faith-
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 185 / Monday, September 26, 2022 / Notices
based, government, health care, media,
public health, and technology;
• Working across sectors to address
SDOH, promote health literacy and
well-being, eliminate disparities and
achieve health equity;
• Evaluating health promotion and
disease prevention programs or
partnering with academic institutions or
public health organizations to evaluate
health promotion and disease
prevention activities;
• Including information in public
facing materials about programs for
disease prevention, health promotion,
addressing SDOH, eliminating
disparities, achieving health equity,
and/or promoting health literacy or
well-being in community needs
assessments;
• Adopting or implementing the
Healthy People 2030 framework (i.e.,
vision, mission, overarching goals,
foundational principles), Leading
Health Indicators (LHIs), Overall Health
and Well-Being Measures (OHMs) and/
or Healthy People 2030 objectives in
their strategic plan;
• Promoting Healthy People 2030 and
providing opportunities and venues for
disease prevention and health
promotion activities;
• Partnering with national, state,
tribal, or local volunteer organizations
to provide education, training, or
programs regarding health promotion,
disease prevention, SDOH, health
disparities, health equity, health
literacy, and well-being;
• Supporting an entity with the
responsibility to organize and
coordinate efforts within and across
sectors to foster health promotion and
well-being;
• Promoting collaboration across all
levels, including neighborhoods,
communities, tribes, cities, states,
counties, and localities, to increase and
expand participation in health
promotion and disease prevention
activities;
• Disseminating through a variety of
platforms messaging about the benefits
of and resources available to promote
disease prevention, health promotion,
well-being and the importance of
addressing SDOH, health literacy,
health disparities, and health equity;
• Supporting the coordination and
standardization of data to enable
comparisons across national, state,
local, county, and/or tribal levels;
• Providing grants, funding
opportunities, and other resources to
programs that address disease
prevention, health promotion, wellbeing, SDOH, health literacy, health
equity, and health disparities.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:43 Sep 23, 2022
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Funds: None. Neither HHS nor
ODPHP will provide funds to support
Healthy People 2030 Champions.
Applicants and Healthy People 2030
Champions will not be expected to
contribute funds.
Application Requirements:
Organizations may apply to be a Healthy
People 2030 Champion. Organizations
should complete a Healthy People 2030
Champion application located at https://
health.gov/healthypeople/about/
healthy-people-2030-champion-program
and describe in their application their
support of the Healthy People 2030
vision of a society in which all people
can achieve their full potential for
health and well-being across the
lifespan. Each Healthy People 2030
Champion applicant shall provide the
following information via the Healthy
People 2030 Champion online
application: (1) Organization name,
location, website, and submitter’s
contact information; (2) a brief
description of the organization’s
mission and/or values; (3) the
communities, clients, or constituents
the organization strive to assist, support,
or serve; (4) a description of activities
that demonstrate the organization’s
commitment to Healthy People 2030’s
vision (i.e., a society in which all people
can achieve their full potential for
health and well-being across the
lifespan) and how the organization
supports or plans to support the Healthy
People 2030 vision and address disease
prevention, health promotion, SDOH,
health disparities, health equity, health
literacy, or well-being, such as
prioritizing underserved populations,
philanthropy, or alignment with specific
Healthy People 2030 objectives, LHIs, or
OHMs. Submission of an application
does not guarantee acceptance as a
Healthy People 2030 Champion. ODPHP
will review and evaluate applications
for alignment with the Healthy People
2030 vision.
Organizations selected by ODPHP to
be Healthy People 2030 Champions will
sign a letter of understanding (LOU)
with ODPHP outlining the terms and
parameters of their support for Healthy
People 2030. Organizations that are
selected to participate in the Healthy
People 2030 Champion program,
maintain an active LOU, and work in
alignment with the Healthy People 2030
will be recognized as Healthy People
2030 Champions on Health.gov/
healthypeople2030 and provided with a
digital Healthy People 2030 Champion
badge for their website in addition to
Healthy People 2030 information, tools,
and resources for dissemination. Use of
the Healthy People 2030 Champion
badge does not imply any federal
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endorsement of the collaborating
organization’s general policies,
activities, or products.
Background: Each decade since 1980,
the Healthy People initiative has
established and monitored national
health objectives with 10-year targets to
meet a broad range of health needs,
encourage collaborations across sectors,
guide individuals toward making
informed health decisions, and measure
the impact of disease prevention and
health promotion activities. Launched
August 2020, the current iteration—
Healthy People 2030—leverages
scientific insights and lessons from the
past decade, along with the new
knowledge of current data, trends, and
innovations. Healthy People 2030
provides science- and evidence-based,
10-year national objectives for
promoting health and preventing
disease and sets targets to be achieved
by the year 2030. It identifies public
health priorities that address the major
risks to health and well-being and
serves as a resource for preventing
disease, promoting health, addressing
SDOH and health literacy, eliminating
health disparities, and achieving health
equity. Healthy People 2030 reflects
input from the Secretary’s Advisory
Committee on National Health
Promotion and Disease Prevention; the
National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine; a technical
expert panel; subject matter experts
from across HHS and other federal
agencies; and members of the public via
multiple public comment periods.
ODPHP leads and manages the
development and implementation of
Healthy People 2030 on behalf of HHS.
The Healthy People 2030 framework
and objectives outline the nation’s plan
for achieving the Healthy People 2030
vision of a society in which all people
can achieve their full potential for
health and well-being across the
lifespan. Healthy People 2030’s
framework includes its vision, mission,
overarching goals, guiding foundational
principles, and is supported by over 350
specific measurable objectives with
targets, LHIs, and OHMs. Healthy
People 2030 serves as a resource and
provides user-centered tools for disease
prevention and health promotion,
including science-based objectives,
national and population-level data,
evidence-based resources, and SDOH
literature summaries. Detailed
information about Healthy People 2030
is available at https://health.gov/
healthypeople.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 300u(a).
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 185 / Monday, September 26, 2022 / Notices
Dated: September 9, 2022.
Paul Reed,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health,
(Disease Prevention and Health Promotion).
[FR Doc. 2022–20693 Filed 9–23–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–32–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Assistant Secretary for Administration
for Strategic Preparedness and
Response; Delegation of Authority
Notice is hereby given that I have
delegated to the Assistant Secretary for
Preparedness and Response (ASPR), or
their successor, the priorities authority
under Section 101 of the Defense
Production Act (DPA) of 1950, as
amended (50 U.S.C. 4501, et seq.), as
delegated to the Secretary of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) by section 201 of
Executive Order 13603, dated March 16,
2012 (77 FR 16651; 3 CFR, 2012, Comp.,
p. 225), subject to the limitation stated
herein. The delegation authorizes the
ASPR, on behalf of the Secretary, to
approve DO–HR 1 priority rating
requests for health resources that
promote the national defense. The
delegation excludes the authority to
approve all priorities provisions for
health resources that require DX–HR
priority ratings. This delegation does
not confer authority to issue regulations.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Paige Ezernack; Defense Production Act
Office; Administration for Strategic
Preparedness and Response; U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services; phone: (202) 260–0365; email:
Paige.Ezernack@hhs.gov.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2022–20737 Filed 9–23–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–37–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Interagency Coordinating Committee
on the Validation of Alternative
Methods Biennial Progress Report:
2020–2021; Availability of Report
AGENCY:
National Institutes of Health,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The National Toxicology
Program (NTP) Interagency Center for
SUMMARY:
1 Or
another equivalent rating designation.
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the Evaluation of Alternative
Toxicological Methods (NICEATM)
announces availability of the
Interagency Coordinating Committee on
the Validation of Alternative Methods
(ICCVAM) Biennial Progress Report:
2020–2021. This report, prepared in
accordance with requirements of the
ICCVAM Authorization Act of 2000,
describes activities and
accomplishments from January 2020
through December 2021.
ADDRESSES: The report is available at
https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/
2021iccvamreport.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Nicole Kleinstreuer, Acting Director,
NICEATM, Division of Translational
Toxicology, NIEHS, P.O. Box 12233,
K2–17, Research Triangle Park, NC
27709. Phone: 984–287–3150, Email:
nicole.kleinstreuer@nih.gov. Hand
Deliver/Courier address: 530 Davis
Drive, Room K2032, Morrisville, NC
27560.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The ICCVAM Authorization Act of
2000 established ICCVAM as a
permanent interagency committee of the
National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences (NIEHS) under
NICEATM. ICCVAM’s mission is to
facilitate development, validation, and
regulatory acceptance of new and
revised regulatory test methods that
reduce, refine, or replace the use of
animals in testing while maintaining
and promoting scientific quality and the
protection of human health, animal
health, and the environment.
A provision of the ICCVAM
Authorization Act states that ICCVAM
shall prepare ‘‘reports to be made
available to the public on its progress
under this Act.’’ The eleventh progress
report describing ICCVAM activities and
accomplishments from January 2020
through December 2021 is now
available.
Summary of Report Contents: Key
ICCVAM, ICCVAM agency, and
NICEATM accomplishments
summarized in the report include:
• Publication by the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and
Development of Guideline 497, Defined
Approaches on Skin Sensitisation, the
first internationally harmonized
guideline to describe a non-animal
approach that can be used to replace an
animal test to identify skin sensitizers.
Guideline 497 was drafted and
sponsored by ICCVAM agency scientists
and international partners.
• Recommendations in March 2021
by the ICCVAM Metrics Workgroup on
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federal agency progress in promoting
alternative toxicological methods. The
workgroup recommended each agency
develop its own metrics relevant and
practical to their own situation.
• Establishment of the Workgroup on
Microphysiological Systems for COVID
Research, an international collaborative
workgroup to coordinate use of
microphysiological systems to reduce
animal use in COVID–19 studies and
future emerging infectious diseases. A
key accomplishment of the workgroup
was the establishment of a COVID–19
disease portal in an existing
microphysiological systems database.
• Further development of the
Collaborative Acute Toxicity Modeling
Suite (CATMoS), an online resource for
in silico screening of organic chemicals
for acute oral toxicity. During 2020 and
2021, the utility of CATMoS for
predicting acute oral toxicity in research
and regulatory contexts was explored in
projects conducted by ICCVAM
agencies, including the U.S. Department
of Defense and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
• Updates of the Integrated Chemical
Environment Search tool during 2020
and 2021 to enable search results to be
sent to query other data resources.
Updates also allowed users to explore
similarities among chemicals, find
information on chemical use categories,
search for structurally similar
chemicals, and view and interact with
concentration-response curves from
curated high-throughput screening data.
Availability of Report: The report is
available at https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/
go/2021iccvamreport. Links to this
report and all past ICCVAM annual and
biennial reports are available at https://
ntp.niehs.nih.gov/go/iccvam-bien.
Background Information on ICCVAM
and NICEATM: ICCVAM is an
interagency committee composed of
representatives from 17 federal
regulatory and research agencies that
require, use, generate, or disseminate
toxicological and safety testing
information. ICCVAM conducts
technical evaluations of new, revised,
and alternative safety testing methods
and integrated testing strategies with
regulatory applicability. ICCVAM also
promotes the scientific validation and
regulatory acceptance of testing
methods that more accurately assess the
safety and hazards of chemicals and
products and replace, reduce, or refine
animal use.
The ICCVAM Authorization Act of
2000 (42 U.S.C. 285l–3) establishes
ICCVAM as a permanent interagency
committee of NIEHS and provides the
authority for ICCVAM involvement in
activities relevant to the development of
E:\FR\FM\26SEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 185 (Monday, September 26, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 58361-58363]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-20693]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Invitation To Become a Healthy People 2030 Champion
AGENCY: Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Office of
the Assistant Secretary for Health, Office of the Secretary, Department
of Health and Human Services.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) Office
of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP) invites public and
private sector organizations that support Healthy People 2030, the
nation's disease prevention and health promotion plan, to become a
Healthy People 2030 Champion. The selected Healthy People 2030
Champions will be recognized for their commitment and work toward
achieving Healthy People 2030's vision of a society in which all people
can achieve their full potential for health and well-being across the
lifespan.
DATES: Online applications will be accepted starting on September 21,
2022 and will be reviewed on a rolling basis.
ADDRESSES: Interested organizations are invited to submit an online
Healthy People 2030 Champion application, which can be found at https://health.gov/healthypeople/about/healthy-people-2030-champion-program.
Questions about the Healthy People 2030 Champions may be emailed to
[email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Emmeline Ochiai, Office of Disease
Prevention and Health Promotion, Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; 1101 Wootton
Parkway, Suite 420, Rockville, MD 20852; Telephone: (240) 453-8280.
Email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Requirements of Interested Organizations. Organizations that
support Healthy People 2030, disease prevention, health promotion, and
well-being and that demonstrate efforts toward addressing social
determinants of health (SDOH) and health literacy, eliminating health
disparities, and achieving health equity in the United States may
submit an application online to become a Healthy People 2030 Champion.
The online application is available at https://health.gov/healthypeople/about/healthy-people-2030-champion-program.
Eligibility for Interested Organizations. To be eligible to become
a Healthy People 2030 Champion, an organization shall: (1) have a
demonstrated interest in, understanding of, and experience with disease
prevention, heath promotion, SDOH, health disparities, health equity,
health literacy, and/or well-being or (2) have an organizational or
corporate mission that is aligned with the Healthy People 2030 vision,
mission, overarching goals, foundational principles, or objectives; and
(3) agree to sign a letter of understanding (LOU) with ODPHP, which
will set forth the details of how the organization is supporting the
vision of the Healthy People 2030. Individuals are not eligible to be
Healthy People 2030 Champions.
Healthy People 2030 Champions. Healthy People 2030 Champions can be
public and private organizations such as those at the state, local,
county, and tribal levels, non-governmental organizations, non-profit
organizations, businesses, academic organizations, organizations that
impact health outcomes, philanthropic organizations, and tribal
organizations that identify themselves as being aligned with or
promoting Healthy People 2030, including the Healthy People 2030 vision
and overarching goals. All organizations may apply. Applicants for
Healthy People 2030 Champions shall complete an online application
(located at https://health.gov/healthypeople/about/healthy-people-2030-champion-program) and identify in the application how they address or
support health promotion, disease prevention, SDOH, health disparities,
health equity, health literacy, and/or well-being and how they work in
alignment with Healthy People 2030 through activities, philanthropy, or
other means. Applicants for Healthy People 2030 Champions will be
evaluated according to the organization's demonstrated commitment to
support the overarching goals of Healthy People 2030 and the Healthy
People 2030 objectives.
The following activities may be considered as an organization's
demonstrated commitment to Healthy People 2030's overarching goals and
objectives (https://health.gov/healthypeople/about/healthy-people-2030-framework):
Promoting and increasing access to disease prevention and
health promotion activities;
Providing access to training or certification programs for
disease prevention and health promotion;
Addressing SDOH, eliminating disparities, achieving health
equity, promoting health literacy, and/or promoting well-being using
evidence-based interventions;
Providing training and other necessary resources to adapt
or modify disease prevention and health promotion activities to meet
the needs of diverse populations, address SDOH, promote health
literacy, eliminate disparities, achieve health equity, and/or promote
well-being;
Developing partnerships across a variety of sectors,
including business, community, academia, education, faith-
[[Page 58362]]
based, government, health care, media, public health, and technology;
Working across sectors to address SDOH, promote health
literacy and well-being, eliminate disparities and achieve health
equity;
Evaluating health promotion and disease prevention
programs or partnering with academic institutions or public health
organizations to evaluate health promotion and disease prevention
activities;
Including information in public facing materials about
programs for disease prevention, health promotion, addressing SDOH,
eliminating disparities, achieving health equity, and/or promoting
health literacy or well-being in community needs assessments;
Adopting or implementing the Healthy People 2030 framework
(i.e., vision, mission, overarching goals, foundational principles),
Leading Health Indicators (LHIs), Overall Health and Well-Being
Measures (OHMs) and/or Healthy People 2030 objectives in their
strategic plan;
Promoting Healthy People 2030 and providing opportunities
and venues for disease prevention and health promotion activities;
Partnering with national, state, tribal, or local
volunteer organizations to provide education, training, or programs
regarding health promotion, disease prevention, SDOH, health
disparities, health equity, health literacy, and well-being;
Supporting an entity with the responsibility to organize
and coordinate efforts within and across sectors to foster health
promotion and well-being;
Promoting collaboration across all levels, including
neighborhoods, communities, tribes, cities, states, counties, and
localities, to increase and expand participation in health promotion
and disease prevention activities;
Disseminating through a variety of platforms messaging
about the benefits of and resources available to promote disease
prevention, health promotion, well-being and the importance of
addressing SDOH, health literacy, health disparities, and health
equity;
Supporting the coordination and standardization of data to
enable comparisons across national, state, local, county, and/or tribal
levels;
Providing grants, funding opportunities, and other
resources to programs that address disease prevention, health
promotion, well-being, SDOH, health literacy, health equity, and health
disparities.
Funds: None. Neither HHS nor ODPHP will provide funds to support
Healthy People 2030 Champions. Applicants and Healthy People 2030
Champions will not be expected to contribute funds.
Application Requirements: Organizations may apply to be a Healthy
People 2030 Champion. Organizations should complete a Healthy People
2030 Champion application located at https://health.gov/healthypeople/about/healthy-people-2030-champion-program and describe in their
application their support of the Healthy People 2030 vision of a
society in which all people can achieve their full potential for health
and well-being across the lifespan. Each Healthy People 2030 Champion
applicant shall provide the following information via the Healthy
People 2030 Champion online application: (1) Organization name,
location, website, and submitter's contact information; (2) a brief
description of the organization's mission and/or values; (3) the
communities, clients, or constituents the organization strive to
assist, support, or serve; (4) a description of activities that
demonstrate the organization's commitment to Healthy People 2030's
vision (i.e., a society in which all people can achieve their full
potential for health and well-being across the lifespan) and how the
organization supports or plans to support the Healthy People 2030
vision and address disease prevention, health promotion, SDOH, health
disparities, health equity, health literacy, or well-being, such as
prioritizing underserved populations, philanthropy, or alignment with
specific Healthy People 2030 objectives, LHIs, or OHMs. Submission of
an application does not guarantee acceptance as a Healthy People 2030
Champion. ODPHP will review and evaluate applications for alignment
with the Healthy People 2030 vision.
Organizations selected by ODPHP to be Healthy People 2030 Champions
will sign a letter of understanding (LOU) with ODPHP outlining the
terms and parameters of their support for Healthy People 2030.
Organizations that are selected to participate in the Healthy People
2030 Champion program, maintain an active LOU, and work in alignment
with the Healthy People 2030 will be recognized as Healthy People 2030
Champions on Health.gov/healthypeople2030 and provided with a digital
Healthy People 2030 Champion badge for their website in addition to
Healthy People 2030 information, tools, and resources for
dissemination. Use of the Healthy People 2030 Champion badge does not
imply any federal endorsement of the collaborating organization's
general policies, activities, or products.
Background: Each decade since 1980, the Healthy People initiative
has established and monitored national health objectives with 10-year
targets to meet a broad range of health needs, encourage collaborations
across sectors, guide individuals toward making informed health
decisions, and measure the impact of disease prevention and health
promotion activities. Launched August 2020, the current iteration--
Healthy People 2030--leverages scientific insights and lessons from the
past decade, along with the new knowledge of current data, trends, and
innovations. Healthy People 2030 provides science- and evidence-based,
10-year national objectives for promoting health and preventing disease
and sets targets to be achieved by the year 2030. It identifies public
health priorities that address the major risks to health and well-being
and serves as a resource for preventing disease, promoting health,
addressing SDOH and health literacy, eliminating health disparities,
and achieving health equity. Healthy People 2030 reflects input from
the Secretary's Advisory Committee on National Health Promotion and
Disease Prevention; the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering,
and Medicine; a technical expert panel; subject matter experts from
across HHS and other federal agencies; and members of the public via
multiple public comment periods. ODPHP leads and manages the
development and implementation of Healthy People 2030 on behalf of HHS.
The Healthy People 2030 framework and objectives outline the
nation's plan for achieving the Healthy People 2030 vision of a society
in which all people can achieve their full potential for health and
well-being across the lifespan. Healthy People 2030's framework
includes its vision, mission, overarching goals, guiding foundational
principles, and is supported by over 350 specific measurable objectives
with targets, LHIs, and OHMs. Healthy People 2030 serves as a resource
and provides user-centered tools for disease prevention and health
promotion, including science-based objectives, national and population-
level data, evidence-based resources, and SDOH literature summaries.
Detailed information about Healthy People 2030 is available at https://health.gov/healthypeople.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 300u(a).
[[Page 58363]]
Dated: September 9, 2022.
Paul Reed,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health, (Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion).
[FR Doc. 2022-20693 Filed 9-23-22; 8:45 am]
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