Agency Information Collection Activities: Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request, 97015-97017 [2024-28556]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 235 / Friday, December 6, 2024 / Notices
2. Vulnerability, or a community’s or
communities’ access to health care
services and surge capacity (or lack
thereof), quantified by proportion-based
public health metrics (e.g., the ‘‘health
care access’’ vulnerability parameter is
comprised of the number of staffed
hospital beds per capita by recipient).
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
[
l
Risk
Information Requested
Please reference the tables found at
https://aspr.hhs.gov/
HealthCareReadiness/HPP/Pages/
rfi.aspx to answer the following
questions.
(1) What, if any, feedback do you have
regarding the current datasets? For
example, are there any current datasets
you recommend retiring? Please specify
why and if you would recommend any
replacements.
(2) What, if any, additional datasets
would you recommend including in the
risk calculation? Please specify the data
source and associated risk
subcomponent (i.e., threat,
vulnerability, consequence). You may
recommend adding one of the ‘‘potential
datasets’’ included in the tables found at
https://aspr.hhs.gov/HealthCare
Readiness/HPP/Pages/rfi.aspx and/or
suggest new datasets for consideration.
(3) What, if any, additional
considerations would you recommend
including in the calculation of risk (e.g.,
threats that are not included in the
current datasets)? Please also include
datasets that can be used to measure
these factors.
You may address as many or as few
questions as you choose. You may
provide additional feedback relevant to
the HPP funding formula. When
responding, please identify the
corresponding question. Datasets used
for the risk calculation must be national
in scope and either publicly available or
readily available to the federal
government.
This RFI is for planning purposes
only and should not be construed as a
policy, solicitation for applications, or
as an obligation on the part of the
government to provide support for any
ideas in response to it. ASPR will use
the information submitted in response
to this RFI at its discretion and will not
provide comments to any of your
submissions. The government is under
VerDate Sep<11>2014
3. Consequence, or the potential
negative impacts associated with a
particular threat/hazard occurring,
quantified by the historic number of
casualties per event associated with
each threat/hazard (e.g., the ‘‘flood’’
consequence parameter captures the
expected number of casualties
associated with a flooding event).
18:02 Dec 05, 2024
Jkt 265001
no obligation to acknowledge receipt of
the information received or provide
feedback with respect to any
information submitted. No proprietary,
classified, confidential, or sensitive
information should be included in a
response. The contents of all
submissions may be made available to
the public in the future. Submitted
materials should therefore be publicly
available or be able to be made public.
The Administrator and Assistant
Secretary for Preparedness and
Response of ASPR, Dawn O’Connell,
having reviewed and approved this
document, authorizes Adam DeVore,
who is the Federal Register liaison, to
electronically sign this document for
purposes of publication in the Federal
Register.
Adam DeVore,
Federal Register Liaison, Administration for
Strategic Preparedness and Response.
[FR Doc. 2024–28740 Filed 12–5–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–37–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
Periodically, the Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA) will publish a summary of
information collection requests under
OMB review, in compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
chapter 35). To request a copy of these
documents, email the SAMHSA Reports
Clearance Officer at samhsapra@
samhsa.hhs.gov.
PO 00000
Frm 00080
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Project: SAMHSA Unified Client-Level
Performance Reporting Tool (SUPRT)—
(OMB No. 0930–NEW)
SAMHSA is the agency within the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services that leads public health efforts
to advance the behavioral health of the
nation. SAMHSA is seeking approval for
the new SAMHSA Unified Performance
Reporting Tool (SUPRT) which will (1)
combine and align the existing clientlevel performance instrument for the
SAMHSA Center for Substance Abuse
Treatment (CSAT) and National
Outcomes Measures (NOMs) instrument
for the SAMHSA Center for Mental
Health Services (CMHS), and (2) create
a two-component tool that will allow for
a client (or caregiver) self-administered
questionnaire (called SAMHSA Unified
Performance Reporting Tool (SUPRT)–
C: Client or Caregiver Form or ‘SUPRT–
C’) and a grantee completion of
administrative data (called SAMHSA
Unified Performance Reporting Tool
(SUPRT)–A: Administrative Report or
‘SUPRT–A’). The revisions also allow
for the client portion to move from
interviewer-administered to selfadministered with the aim of potentially
reducing burden and increasing
reporting accuracy.
SUPRT will allow SAMHSA to (1)
continue to meet Government
Performance and Results Modernization
Act (GPRAMA) of 2010 reporting
requirements; (2) reduce the scope and
associated burden of questions requiring
responses directly from clients; (3)
standardize questions across programs
wherever possible; and, (4) elicit
programmatic information that will help
to assess the impact of discretionary
grant programs on the achievement of
SAMHSA’s 2023–2026 Strategic Priority
Area goals and objectives.
Furthermore, this effort is designed to
align performance reporting
requirements with other parts of the
Federal Statistical System. For example,
E:\FR\FM\06DEN1.SGM
06DEN1
EN06DE24.006
1. Threat, or the likelihood of a
particular threat event occurring,
quantified by the number of events
occurring within a recipient’s
jurisdiction (e.g., the ‘‘flood’’ threat
parameter is comprised of the number of
flooding events occurring within a
recipient’s jurisdiction).
97015
97016
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 235 / Friday, December 6, 2024 / Notices
to the extent possible, SAMHSA aims to
align with measurement indicators used
by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services; the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention; the U.S. Census Bureau;
and the Office of Management and
Budget. For instance, the race and
ethnicity question is aligned with the
Office of Management and Budget’s race
and ethnicity standards.
Currently, over 7,500 grantees across
a range of prevention, harm reduction,
treatment, and recovery support
discretionary grant programs have
reported program performance data into
SAMHSA’s Performance Accountability
and Reporting System (SPARS) that
serves as a central data repository.
SPARS functions as a performance
management system that captures
information on the substance use and
mental health services delivered via the
range of SAMHSA’s discretionary
grants.
The new SUPRT tool reflects diverse
feedback SAMHSA obtained through
multiple listening sessions conducted
with key stakeholders, in addition to
extensive deliberations conducted by
different working groups within
SAMHSA. Accordingly, SUPRT aligns
with some prior questions and deletes
other questions from the client-level
performance reporting tools currently in
use. SUPRT also incorporates select new
Hours
per
response
1
488,775
0.250
122,194
$28.9
$3,530,177
91,225
1
91,225
0.133
12,163
28.9
351,399
2,125
314
668,250
0.280
187,110
28.9
5,405,608
329,212
1
329,212
0.167
54,869
28.9
1,585,156
61,444
1
61,444
0.050
3,072
28.9
88,756
2,125
212
450,097
0.330
148,532
28.9
4,291,086
2,125
256
543,097
0.100
54,310
28.9
1,569,551
91,540
1
91,540
0.117
10,680
28.9
308,535
2,125
59
125,153
0.330
41,300
28.9
1,193,170
1,070,696
....................
2,848,793
................
634,230
..............
18,323,437
Included domains
Client-level baseline assessment—
SUPRT–C Adult.
Client-level baseline assessment—
SUPRT–C Youth, Child, or
Young Child.
Client-level baseline—SUPRT–A ...
Demographics, SDOH, Core Outcomes of Recovery, Goals.
Demographics, SDOH ...................
488,775
Record Management, Behavioral
Health History, Behavioral
Health Screening, Behavioral
Health Diagnoses.
SDOH, Core Outcomes of Recovery, Goals.
SDOH .............................................
Client-level close-out record—
SUPRT–A.
Client-level annual SUPRT–C Adult
Client-level annual—SUPRT–A ......
Total .........................................
Record Management, Behavioral
Health History, Behavioral
Health Screening, Behavioral
Health Diagnoses, Services Received.
Record Management, Services Received.
Core Outcomes of Recovery,
Goals.
Record Management, Behavioral
Health History, Behavioral
Health Screening, Behavioral
Health Diagnosis, Services Received.
........................................................
Written comments and
recommendations concerning the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:02 Dec 05, 2024
Jkt 265001
Responses
per
respondent
proposed information collection should
be sent by January 6, 2025 to the
PO 00000
Frm 00081
(1) standardized questions about
demographic information (asked
directly of clients at baseline only); (2)
social determinants of health (asked
directly of clients at baseline and at 3 or
6 months post baseline reassessment);
and, (3) recovery, quality of life, and
client goal measures as impacted by
services received (asked of clients at
baseline and reassessment during the
client’s first year of treatment, then
annually). Therefore, not all questions
are asked of each respondent (child/
adult) or at each information collection
period (e.g., baseline, reassessment,
annual).
The second component of SUPRT,
SUPRT–A, is to be completed by
grantees. SUPRT–A consists of a
streamlined set of questions describing
clients’ behavioral health history,
screening and diagnosis items, and
services provided to clients. SUPRT–A
is collected from client-records kept by
the grantee, for example in paper or
electronic health records (EHRs).
Grantees may need to adjust their record
keeping, intake or behavioral health
history taking to ensure that they are
able to complete the SUPRT–A.
Question(s) about services provided to
the client will only be required at
reassessment and annually.
The chart below summarizes the
annualized burden for this project.
Total
responses
Number of
respondents
SAMHSA tool
Client-level 3- or 6-month reassessment—SUPRT–C Adult.
Client-level 3- or 6-month reassessment—SUPRT–C Youth,
Child, or Young Child.
Client-level 3- or 6-month—
SUPRT–A.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
measures/questions into a multicomponent client-level tool. SAMHSA
will provide guidance about these
changes, specifying which items
grantees can complete using
administrative data and which can be
self-administered to clients. This new
SUPRT will reduce client reporting
burden and is projected to enhance the
accuracy of the collected performance
data.
SAMHSA will use the data collected
through the new SUPRT for annual
reporting required by GPRAMA, grantee
monitoring, and continuous
improvement of its discretionary grant
programs. The SUPRT will also align
with, and strengthen, SAMHSA’s
complementary evaluation activities of
its discretionary grant programs
providing client services.
The information collected through
this process will allow SAMHSA to (1)
monitor and report on implementation
and overall performance of the
associated grant programs; (2) advance
SAMHSA’s proposed performance
goals; and (3) assess the accountability
and performance of its discretionary
grant programs, focused on efforts that
promote mental health, prevent
substance use, and provide treatments
and supports to foster recovery.
The first component of SUPRT, the
SUPRT–C, is to be completed by clients
or caregivers. SUPRT–C is composed of
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Total
hour
burden
Hourly
cost
Total cost
SAMHSA Desk Officer at the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
E:\FR\FM\06DEN1.SGM
06DEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 235 / Friday, December 6, 2024 / Notices
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). To ensure timely receipt of
comments, and to avoid potential delays
in OMB’s receipt and processing of mail
sent through the U.S. Postal Service,
commenters are encouraged to submit
their comments to OMB via email to:
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov.
Although commenters are encouraged to
send their comments via email,
commenters may also fax their
comments to 202–395–7285.
Commenters may also mail them to:
Office of Management and Budget,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, New Executive Office Building,
Room 10102, Washington, DC 20503.
97.033, Disaster Legal Services; 97.034,
Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA);
97.046, Fire Management Assistance Grant;
97.048, Disaster Housing Assistance to
Individuals and Households In Presidentially
Declared Disaster Areas; 97.049,
Presidentially Declared Disaster Assistance—
Disaster Housing Operations for Individuals
and Households; 97.050, Presidentially
Declared Disaster Assistance to Individuals
and Households—Other Needs; 97.036,
Disaster Grants—Public Assistance
(Presidentially Declared Disasters); 97.039,
Hazard Mitigation Grant.
Alicia Broadus,
Public Health Advisor.
BILLING CODE 9111–23–P
[FR Doc. 2024–28556 Filed 12–5–24; 8:45 am]
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
[Internal Agency Docket No. FEMA–4832–
DR; Docket ID FEMA–2024–0001]
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Internal Agency Docket No. FEMA–4712–
DR; Docket ID FEMA–2024–0001]
Tennessee; Amendment No. 3 to
Notice of a Major Disaster Declaration
This notice amends the notice
of a major disaster declaration for the
State of Tennessee (FEMA–4712–DR),
dated May 17, 2023, and related
determinations.
SUMMARY:
This change occurred on October
7, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dean Webster, Office of Response and
Recovery, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street SW,
Washington, DC 20472, (202) 646–2833.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) hereby gives notice that
pursuant to the authority vested in the
Administrator, under Executive Order
12148, as amended, Darryl L. Dragoo, of
FEMA is appointed to act as the Federal
Coordinating Officer for this disaster.
This action terminates the
appointment of Leda M. Khoury as
Federal Coordinating Officer for this
disaster.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
DATES:
The following Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Numbers (CFDA) are to be used
for reporting and drawing funds: 97.030,
Community Disaster Loans; 97.031, Cora
Brown Fund; 97.032, Crisis Counseling;
18:02 Dec 05, 2024
Tennessee; Amendment No. 4 to
Notice of a Major Disaster Declaration
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice amends the notice
of a major disaster declaration for the
State of Tennessee (FEMA–4832–DR),
dated October 2, 2024, and related
determinations.
DATES: This amendment was issued
November 4, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dean Webster, Office of Response and
Recovery, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street SW,
Washington, DC 20472, (202) 646–2833.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The notice
of a major disaster declaration for the
State of Tennessee is hereby amended to
include the following areas among those
areas determined to have been adversely
affected by the event declared a major
disaster by the President in his
declaration of October 2, 2024.
SUMMARY:
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Jkt 265001
Hancock County for Public Assistance,
including direct Federal assistance.
Sevier County for permanent work
[Categories C–G] (already designated for
debris removal and emergency protective
measures [Categories A and B], including
direct Federal assistance, under the Public
Assistance program).
The following Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Numbers (CFDA) are to be used
for reporting and drawing funds: 97.030,
Community Disaster Loans; 97.031, Cora
Brown Fund; 97.032, Crisis Counseling;
97.033, Disaster Legal Services; 97.034,
PO 00000
Frm 00082
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA);
97.046, Fire Management Assistance Grant;
97.048, Disaster Housing Assistance to
Individuals and Households In Presidentially
Declared Disaster Areas; 97.049,
Presidentially Declared Disaster Assistance—
Disaster Housing Operations for Individuals
and Households; 97.050, Presidentially
Declared Disaster Assistance to Individuals
and Households—Other Needs; 97.036,
Disaster Grants—Public Assistance
(Presidentially Declared Disasters); 97.039,
Hazard Mitigation Grant.
Deanne Criswell,
Administrator, Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
[FR Doc. 2024–28672 Filed 12–5–24; 8:45 am]
[FR Doc. 2024–28633 Filed 12–5–24; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
BILLING CODE 4162–20–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Deanne Criswell,
Administrator, Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
97017
BILLING CODE 9111–23–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Internal Agency Docket No. FEMA–3617–
EM; Docket ID FEMA–2024–0001]
North Carolina; Emergency and
Related Determinations
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This is a notice of the
Presidential declaration of an
emergency for the State of North
Carolina (FEMA–3617–EM), dated
September 26, 2024, and related
determinations.
SUMMARY:
The declaration was issued
September 26, 2024.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dean Webster, Office of Response and
Recovery, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street SW,
Washington, DC 20472, (202) 646–2833.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that, in a letter dated
September 26, 2024, the President
issued an emergency declaration under
the authority of the Robert T. Stafford
Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 5121–5207
(the Stafford Act), as follows:
I have determined that the emergency
conditions in certain areas of the State of
North Carolina resulting from Hurricane
Helene beginning on September 25, 2024,
and continuing, are of sufficient severity and
magnitude to warrant an emergency
declaration under the Robert T. Stafford
Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance
Act, 42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq. (‘‘the Stafford
Act’’). Therefore, I declare that such an
emergency exists in the State of North
Carolina.
You are authorized to provide appropriate
assistance for required emergency measures,
E:\FR\FM\06DEN1.SGM
06DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 235 (Friday, December 6, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 97015-97017]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-28556]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Agency Information Collection Activities: Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
Periodically, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration (SAMHSA) will publish a summary of information
collection requests under OMB review, in compliance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35). To request a copy of these
documents, email the SAMHSA Reports Clearance Officer at
[email protected].
Project: SAMHSA Unified Client-Level Performance Reporting Tool
(SUPRT)--(OMB No. 0930-NEW)
SAMHSA is the agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services that leads public health efforts to advance the behavioral
health of the nation. SAMHSA is seeking approval for the new SAMHSA
Unified Performance Reporting Tool (SUPRT) which will (1) combine and
align the existing client-level performance instrument for the SAMHSA
Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) and National Outcomes
Measures (NOMs) instrument for the SAMHSA Center for Mental Health
Services (CMHS), and (2) create a two-component tool that will allow
for a client (or caregiver) self-administered questionnaire (called
SAMHSA Unified Performance Reporting Tool (SUPRT)-C: Client or
Caregiver Form or `SUPRT-C') and a grantee completion of administrative
data (called SAMHSA Unified Performance Reporting Tool (SUPRT)-A:
Administrative Report or `SUPRT-A'). The revisions also allow for the
client portion to move from interviewer-administered to self-
administered with the aim of potentially reducing burden and increasing
reporting accuracy.
SUPRT will allow SAMHSA to (1) continue to meet Government
Performance and Results Modernization Act (GPRAMA) of 2010 reporting
requirements; (2) reduce the scope and associated burden of questions
requiring responses directly from clients; (3) standardize questions
across programs wherever possible; and, (4) elicit programmatic
information that will help to assess the impact of discretionary grant
programs on the achievement of SAMHSA's 2023-2026 Strategic Priority
Area goals and objectives.
Furthermore, this effort is designed to align performance reporting
requirements with other parts of the Federal Statistical System. For
example,
[[Page 97016]]
to the extent possible, SAMHSA aims to align with measurement
indicators used by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; the U.S. Census Bureau; and
the Office of Management and Budget. For instance, the race and
ethnicity question is aligned with the Office of Management and
Budget's race and ethnicity standards.
Currently, over 7,500 grantees across a range of prevention, harm
reduction, treatment, and recovery support discretionary grant programs
have reported program performance data into SAMHSA's Performance
Accountability and Reporting System (SPARS) that serves as a central
data repository. SPARS functions as a performance management system
that captures information on the substance use and mental health
services delivered via the range of SAMHSA's discretionary grants.
The new SUPRT tool reflects diverse feedback SAMHSA obtained
through multiple listening sessions conducted with key stakeholders, in
addition to extensive deliberations conducted by different working
groups within SAMHSA. Accordingly, SUPRT aligns with some prior
questions and deletes other questions from the client-level performance
reporting tools currently in use. SUPRT also incorporates select new
measures/questions into a multi-component client-level tool. SAMHSA
will provide guidance about these changes, specifying which items
grantees can complete using administrative data and which can be self-
administered to clients. This new SUPRT will reduce client reporting
burden and is projected to enhance the accuracy of the collected
performance data.
SAMHSA will use the data collected through the new SUPRT for annual
reporting required by GPRAMA, grantee monitoring, and continuous
improvement of its discretionary grant programs. The SUPRT will also
align with, and strengthen, SAMHSA's complementary evaluation
activities of its discretionary grant programs providing client
services.
The information collected through this process will allow SAMHSA to
(1) monitor and report on implementation and overall performance of the
associated grant programs; (2) advance SAMHSA's proposed performance
goals; and (3) assess the accountability and performance of its
discretionary grant programs, focused on efforts that promote mental
health, prevent substance use, and provide treatments and supports to
foster recovery.
The first component of SUPRT, the SUPRT-C, is to be completed by
clients or caregivers. SUPRT-C is composed of (1) standardized
questions about demographic information (asked directly of clients at
baseline only); (2) social determinants of health (asked directly of
clients at baseline and at 3 or 6 months post baseline reassessment);
and, (3) recovery, quality of life, and client goal measures as
impacted by services received (asked of clients at baseline and
reassessment during the client's first year of treatment, then
annually). Therefore, not all questions are asked of each respondent
(child/adult) or at each information collection period (e.g., baseline,
reassessment, annual).
The second component of SUPRT, SUPRT-A, is to be completed by
grantees. SUPRT-A consists of a streamlined set of questions describing
clients' behavioral health history, screening and diagnosis items, and
services provided to clients. SUPRT-A is collected from client-records
kept by the grantee, for example in paper or electronic health records
(EHRs). Grantees may need to adjust their record keeping, intake or
behavioral health history taking to ensure that they are able to
complete the SUPRT-A. Question(s) about services provided to the client
will only be required at reassessment and annually.
The chart below summarizes the annualized burden for this project.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Responses Total
SAMHSA tool Included domains Number of per Total Hours per hour Hourly Total cost
respondents respondent responses response burden cost
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Client-level baseline assessment--SUPRT-C Demographics, SDOH, Core 488,775 1 488,775 0.250 122,194 $28.9 $3,530,177
Adult. Outcomes of Recovery,
Goals.
Client-level baseline assessment--SUPRT-C Demographics, SDOH......... 91,225 1 91,225 0.133 12,163 28.9 351,399
Youth, Child, or Young Child.
Client-level baseline--SUPRT-A........... Record Management, 2,125 314 668,250 0.280 187,110 28.9 5,405,608
Behavioral Health History,
Behavioral Health
Screening, Behavioral
Health Diagnoses.
Client-level 3- or 6-month reassessment-- SDOH, Core Outcomes of 329,212 1 329,212 0.167 54,869 28.9 1,585,156
SUPRT-C Adult. Recovery, Goals.
Client-level 3- or 6-month reassessment-- SDOH....................... 61,444 1 61,444 0.050 3,072 28.9 88,756
SUPRT-C Youth, Child, or Young Child.
Client-level 3- or 6-month--SUPRT-A...... Record Management, 2,125 212 450,097 0.330 148,532 28.9 4,291,086
Behavioral Health History,
Behavioral Health
Screening, Behavioral
Health Diagnoses, Services
Received.
Client-level close-out record--SUPRT-A... Record Management, Services 2,125 256 543,097 0.100 54,310 28.9 1,569,551
Received.
Client-level annual SUPRT-C Adult........ Core Outcomes of Recovery, 91,540 1 91,540 0.117 10,680 28.9 308,535
Goals.
Client-level annual--SUPRT-A............. Record Management, 2,125 59 125,153 0.330 41,300 28.9 1,193,170
Behavioral Health History,
Behavioral Health
Screening, Behavioral
Health Diagnosis, Services
Received.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................ ........................... 1,070,696 ........... 2,848,793 ......... 634,230 ........ 18,323,437
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Written comments and recommendations concerning the proposed
information collection should be sent by January 6, 2025 to the SAMHSA
Desk Officer at the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
[[Page 97017]]
Office of Management and Budget (OMB). To ensure timely receipt of
comments, and to avoid potential delays in OMB's receipt and processing
of mail sent through the U.S. Postal Service, commenters are encouraged
to submit their comments to OMB via email to:
[email protected]. Although commenters are encouraged to send
their comments via email, commenters may also fax their comments to
202-395-7285. Commenters may also mail them to: Office of Management
and Budget, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, New Executive
Office Building, Room 10102, Washington, DC 20503.
Alicia Broadus,
Public Health Advisor.
[FR Doc. 2024-28556 Filed 12-5-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4162-20-P