OSTLTS Generic Information Collection Request
OMB No. 0920-0879
Submitted: October 22, 2014
Program Official/Project Officer
Amanda Raudsep
Public Health Advisor
Health Department & Systems Development Branch
Division of Public Health Performance Improvement
Office of State, Tribal, Local and Territorial Support
Centers for Disease Control
1825 Century Center MS E-19
Tel: 404.498.0623
Email: khy1@cdc.gov
This data collection is being conducted using the Generic Information Collection mechanism of the OSTLTS OMB Clearance Center (O2C2) – OMB No. 0920-0879. Data will be collected from 165 staff within state (51), local (95), tribal (14), and territorial (5) health departments that are acting in their official capacities working on performance improvement within their organization that attended the Public Health Improvement Training (PHIT) in Atlanta on April 24-25th, 2014.
This respondent universe depends on the work functions rather than specific job title to broadly encompass all personnel in health departments engaged in these efforts. The functions include:
Coordinating efforts to prepare and apply for national voluntary accreditation
Leading state or community health assessment and improvement planning processes
Developing an agency strategic plan
Implementing agency-wide performance management systems
Engaging in QI to gain process efficiencies or improve health outcomes
Selecting and implementing evidence-based public health strategies to address health priorities outlined in a state or community health improvement plan
Common titles of respondents include, but are not limited to: accreditation coordinator, performance improvement manager, program manager, program coordinator, health planner, Health Assessment and Improvement Coordinator, quality improvement coordinator/manager.
This data collection is authorized by Section 301 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 241). This data collection will serve to assure a competent public and personal health care workforce (essential service 8) in the area of evaluating effectiveness, accessibility, and the quality of personal and population-based health services (essential service 9).
The Public Health Improvement Training (PHIT) was established to provide training to the state, tribal, local and territorial health department workforce involved in performance and quality improvement activities. PHIT has evolved over time from training focusing on National Public Health Performance Standards (NPHPS) implementation to training on a variety of public health performance improvement topics (see A_Training Analysis 2003-2014). This change in scope has been influenced by many drivers including launch of a national voluntary accreditation program for state, tribal, local and territorial health departments in 2011, requirements of community health assessments or improvement plans by federal grants, state-specific mandates, and IRS requirements for tax-exempt healthcare facilities t (see B_Leveraging the Revised National Public Health Performance Standards).
In response to interest in the field, PHIT 2014 featured training on topics including:
Quality improvement and facilitation
Performance management and performance measures
National voluntary accreditation
Health assessment and improvement planning
Strategic planning
The goal of PHIT 2014 was to increase the public health workforce’s implementation of public health agency, system and community health improvement processes and incorporated launching sessions, skill building sessions, experiences from the field and plenaries (see C_ PHIT 2014 Agenda).
The National Network for Public Health Institutes (NNPHI) was engaged through a co-sponsorship agreement and was responsible for the overall planning, coordination and implementation of PHIT 2014. PHIT 2014 was a two-day training for STLT health departments on performance improvement topics, was co-sponsored by NNPHI and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) with input and contributions from six other key national organization partners. Partners included the Association for American Indian Physicians (AAIP), the American Public Health Association (APHA), the Association for State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO), the National Association for City and County Health Officials (NACCHO), the Public Health Foundation (PHF) and the Public Health Accreditation Board (PHAB).
In an effort to constructively assess both the overall training event and individual sessions of all types, NNPHI and CDC collaboratively designed a training assessment form (see D_PHIT Assessment Form). This assessment was administered onsite at the PHIT 2014 training event. Data from the written assessments were entered and analyzed by NNPHI. NNPHI then compiled an evaluation report and executive summary (see E_ PHIT 2014 Assessment Report and F_ Executive Summary).
This proposed data collection intends to follow up with PHIT 2014 participants on their perspective on the training six months after the event and to assess their current training needs, items not covered in the onsite assessment. This information is critical to determine the extent to which training participants have implemented the knowledge and skills learned at the training, and is important to understanding training outcomes and effectiveness. In addition, the information collected will provide insight into current training needs and interests, which will be used to inform the content and design of PHIT 2015.
The overall purpose of the data collection is to help CDC, NNPHI and the PHIT 2015 planning committee to understand the needs of STLT public health professionals in relation to the topics of quality improvement and facilitation, performance management and performance measures, national voluntary accreditation, health assessment and improvement planning and strategic planning.
Overview of the Data Collection System – The data collection system consists of a web-based questionnaire (see G_Instrument MS Word version and H_Instrument Web version) designed to assess which topics participants are most interested in for PHIT 2015. The data collection instrument will be administered as a web-based instrument. The data collection instrument was pilot tested by five public health professionals. Feedback from this group was used to refine questions as needed, ensure accurate programming and skip patterns and establish the estimated time required to complete the data collection instrument.
Items of Information to be Collected –
The data collection tool consists of 17 questions of various types including dichotomous, multiple response, filter and open-ended questions. Questions cover, participant demographics and skill level (3 questions), the usefulness of PHIT 2014 (8 questions), participant interest in attending PHIT 2014 (1 question) and desired topic areas and speakers for PHIT 2015 (5 questions).
The overall purpose of the data collection is to help CDC, NNPHI and the PHIT 2015 planning committee to understand the needs of STLT public health professionals in relation to the topics of quality improvement and facilitation, performance management and performance measures, national voluntary accreditation, health assessment and improvement planning and strategic planning.
Assessing PHIT 2014 participants aims to capture information in two ways:
assesses gains in knowledge, skills and actions 6-8 months post-PHIT
informs a participant driven agenda for PHIT in 2015
The information collected will provide insight into current training needs and interests, which will be used to inform the content and design of PHIT 2015.
Data will be collected via a Qualtrics web-based questionnaire allowing respondents to complete and submit their responses electronically. This method was chosen to reduce the overall burden on respondents. The data collection instrument was designed to collect the minimum information necessary for the purposes of this project (i.e., limited to 17 questions).
A duplicative assessment does not exist to follow up with the unique respondent universe to assess 1) the impact of PHIT 2014 and 2) the needs of the field to plan for PHIT 2015. CDC and NNPHI coordinates and shares information on upcoming assessments with other national organizations focused on these efforts.
No small businesses will be involved in this data collection.
Without collecting this information, PHIT 2015 would
not be as driven from the field, and having the field drive the content and format to PHIT is highly valued.
presenters who can share best practices that may not have been identified otherwise will not be identified.
This request is for a one time data collection. There are no legal obstacles to reduce the burden.
There are no special circumstances with this information collection package. This request fully complies with the regulation 5 CFR 1320.5 and will be voluntary.
This data collection is being conducted using the Generic Information Collection mechanism of the OSTLTS Survey Center (OSC) – OMB No. 0920-0879. A 60-day Federal Register Notice was published in the Federal Register on October 31, 2013, Vol. 78, No. 211; pp. 653 25-26. No comments were received.
CDC partners with professional STLT organizations, such as the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO), and the National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO), along with the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) to ensure that the collection requests under individual ICs are not in conflict with collections they have or will have in the field within the same timeframe.
CDC will not provide payments or gifts to respondents.
The Privacy Act does not apply to this data collection. Employees of state and local public health agencies will be speaking from their official roles and will not be asked, nor will they provide individually identifiable information.
This data collection is not research involving human subjects.
10.1 Privacy Impact Assessment Information
No individually identifiable information (IIF) collected.
No information will be collected that are of personal or sensitive nature.
The estimate for burden hours is based on a pilot test of the data collection instrument by 5 public health professionals. In the pilot test, the average time to complete the instrument including time for reviewing instructions, gathering needed information and completing the instrument, was approximately 10 minutes. Based on these results, the estimated time range for actual respondents to complete the instrument is 10 minutes.
Estimates for the average hourly wage for respondents are based on the Department of Labor (DOL) National Compensation Survey estimate for management occupations – medical and health services managers in state government (http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ocs/sp/nctb1349.pdf). Based on DOL data, an average hourly wage of $47.77 is estimated for all 165 respondents. Table A-12 shows estimated burden and cost information.
Table A-12: Estimated Annualized Burden Hours and Costs to Respondents
Data Collection Instrument: Form Name |
Type of Respondent |
No. of Respondents |
No. of Responses per Respondent |
Average Burden per Response (in hours) |
Total Burden Hours |
Hourly Wage Rate |
Total Respondent Costs |
PHIT Follow Up Assessment |
State, local, tribal, territorial health department PHIT 2014 participants |
165 |
1 |
10/60 |
28 |
$47.77 |
$1337.56 |
|
TOTALS |
165 |
1 |
|
28 |
|
$1337.56 |
There will be no direct costs to the respondents other than their time to participate in each data collection.
Table A-14: Estimated Annualized Cost to the Federal Government
Staff (FTE) |
Average Hours per Collection |
Average Hourly Rate |
Average Cost |
Lead Public Health Advisor (GS-14) Consultation with staff on OMB package preparation, instrument development, pilot testing, data collection, report preparation |
2 |
$48.90 |
$97.80 |
Public Health Advisor (GS-9) Pilot testing, OMB package preparation |
5 |
$23.99 |
$119.95 |
Estimated Total Cost of Information Collection |
$217.75 |
This is a new data collection.
Results of this data collection will inform planning efforts for PHIT 2015 in content and format to increase impact of training. The data will be cleaned, analyzed and a report will be developed to be used within CDC, NNPHI and the PHIT planning committee. The report will relay the major findings and recommendations, informed by the assessment.
Both quantitative and qualitative analyses will be performed. Quantitative analyses will involve using descriptive statistics to determine frequency distributions for responses to each scaled question. Qualitative thematic analyses will be conducted on open-ended questions.
Project Time Schedule
Depending on when the clearance process concludes, we aim to follow the following timeline:
PHIT
Design assessment tool………………………………………………………………………………….COMPLETE
Develop protocol, instructions, and analysis plan………………………………..…….…….COMPLETE
Pilot test assessment questionnaire……………………….………………………………...……..COMPLETE
Prepare OMB package…………………………………….…………………………..…………………..COMPLETE
Submit OMB package………………………………………………………………………...……………COMPLETE
OMB approval…………………………………..……………………………………………………................Tentative
Conduct data collection ………………………………..…............................................ Tentative (2 weeks)
Collect, code, enter, quality control, and analyze data................................... Tentative (4 weeks)
Prepare report…………………………………………….................................................. Tentative (6 weeks)
Disseminate results/reports…………………………............................................... Tentative (2 weeks)
We are requesting no exemption.
There are no exceptions to the certification. These activities comply with the requirements in 5 CFR 1320.9.
A_Training Analysis 2003-2014
B_Leveraging the Revised National Public Health Performance Standards
C_PHIT 2014 Agenda
D_PHIT Assessment Form
E_PHIT 2014 Assessment Report
F_ Executive Summary
G_Instrument MS Word Version
H_Instrument Web Version
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Author | gel2 |
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File Created | 2021-01-28 |