Go4Life
|
Public Education Campaign
|
ACL, AHRQ, CDC, OS, OSG
|
NIA, NCCIH, NEI, NHLBI, NIAMS, NIDDK, NIMH, NINDS
|
Go4Life is an exercise and physical activity campaign from the National Institute on Aging at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), It is designed to help individuals fit exercise and physical activity into their daily life. Motivating older adults to become physically active for the first time, return to exercise after a break in their routines, or build more exercise and physical activity into weekly routines are the essential elements of Go4Life. Go4Life offers exercises, motivational tips, and free resources to help individuals get ready, start exercising, and keep going. The Go4Life campaign includes an evidence-based exercise guide in both English and Spanish, an exercise video, an interactive website, and a national outreach campaign.
|
Grants management with AHRQ
|
Other
|
AHRQ
|
CSR
|
CSR works with AHRQ to perform receipt and referral services.
|
Grants management with CDC
|
Other
|
CDC
|
CSR
|
CSR works with CDC to receive and peer review some of their grant applications.
|
Grants management with FDA
|
Other
|
FDA
|
CSR
|
CSR works with FDA through the Tobacco Regulatory Science Program in the Office of Disease Prevention under NIH OD to receive and review some of their grant applications.
|
Harmonization of various Common Data Models and Open Standards for Evidence Generation
|
Resource Development
|
FDA
|
NCATS, NCI, NLM
|
The goal of this project is to build data infrastructure for conducting patient-centered outcomes research using data derived from the delivery of health care in routine clinical settings. These data are collectively referred to as observational data. The sources of these data may include, but are not limited to insurance billing claims, electronic health records (EHRs), and patient registries. The Common Data Model (CDM) organizes data into a standard structure, which may differ across networks. This project intends to harmonize several existing CDMs in order to support research and analyses across multiple data networks. The aim is to advance the utility of data and its interoperability across networks to facilitate patient-centered outcomes research. The enhanced data infrastructure created through this project will have the capacity to support evidence generation on patient-centered outcomes that can inform regulatory and clinical decision making within federal programs.
|
Harmonization of Various Common Data Models and Open Standards for Evidence Generation
|
Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force
|
FDA, OS
|
NLM, NCATS, NCI
|
"This project is funded by the Office of the Secretary Patient Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund for Data Infrastructure. This goal of this project is to facilitate the use of Real World Data (RWD) sources (e.g., claims, EHRs, registries, electronic Patient Reported Outcomes (ePRO)) to support evidence generation for regulatory and clinical decision making. This project will: (1) Develop common data architecture as the intermediary between various Common Data Models; (2) Create a sustainable, flexible, modifiable shared resource that can evolve over time with changing requirements; (3) Validate the common data architecture through a specific use case that would evaluate the safety of newly approved oncology drugs that help to allow the immune system to target cancers; and (4) Establish methods and develop processes, policies and governance for ongoing curation, maintenance, and sustainability of the common data architecture, building upon existing resources, standards, and tools."
|
HCS Research Collaboratory
|
Research Initiative
|
AHRQ, CDC, FDA, OS
|
OD/DPCPSI, NCATS, NCCIH, NCI, NHLBI, NIA, NIAID, NIAMS, NIDA, NIDCR, NIDDK, NIEHS, NIMH, NINDS, NLM, OD/DPCPSI/OSC
|
The Health Care Systems (HCS) Research Collaboratory program is strengthening the national capacity to implement cost-effective large-scale research studies that engage health care delivery organizations as research partners. The studies funded through this program, referred to as pragmatic clinical trials, engage medical centers across the country in addressing a wide range of pressing public health concerns. The HCS Collaboratory works with representatives from the FDA, AHRQ, OHRP, and CDC in order to bring expertise from across HHS to bare on the implementation of these complex pragmatic clinical trials.
|
Health and Human Services Federal Interagency Working Group (FIW) - National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS) Indicators: Young Men who have Sex with Men (YMSM)
|
Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force
|
CDC, CMS, HRSA, IHS, SAMHSA
|
OD/DPCPSI/OAR
|
Three Federal Interagency Working Groups (FIWs) were formed to address the lack of progress on some of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS) performance indicators. This subgroup is led by Drs. David Purcell of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Susannah Allison of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and Timothy Harrison of the Office of HIV/AIDS and Infectious Disease Policy (OHAIDP). The FIW charge is to address the lack of progress regarding NHAS Indicator 3 (Reduce the percentage of young gay and bisexual men who have engaged in HIV-risk behaviors by at least 10 percent); further, the FIW is charged with reviewing the literature and developing two logic models to help illustrate how to improve upon these two indicators. The logic models are designed to capture inputs and outputs from a 30,000-foot level and drive a longer conversation about what we are doing right and where we are falling short.
|
Health and Retirement Study (HRS)
|
Research Initiative
|
CDC, CMS
|
NIA
|
This study follows more than 20,000 men and women over 50, offering insight into the changing lives of the older US population. Launched in 1992, this multidisciplinary, longitudinal study has become known as the Nation’s leading resource for data on the combined health and economic conditions of older Americans.
|
HealthMap: Knowledge Management for Emerging Infectious Disease Intelligence
|
Research Initiative
|
OS
|
NLM
|
Leveraging previous National Library of Medicine (NLM) funded work under the HealthMap project, the HHS Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR) and OPEO co-funded an administrative supplement to an NLM/NIH grant to provide funding to Harvard University for a pilot project in which Harvard will develop real-time applications to collect, parse, analyze, and display open source data in order to address the national needs of emergency preparedness and response for hurricanes.
|