Title Collaboration Type HHS Participating Agencies NIH Participating Institutes, Centers, and Offices Description
Interdepartmental Substance Use Disorders Coordinating Committee (ISUDCC) Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force SAMHSA NIDA The Secretary of Health and Human Services, in coordination with the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, is required by the SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act Public Law 115-271 to establish an Interdepartmental Substance Use Disorders Coordinating Committee composed of federal and non-federal members to accomplish the following duties: 1. Identify areas for improved coordination of activities, if any, related to substance use disorders, including research, services, supports, and prevention activities across all relevant federal agencies; 2. Identify and provide to the Secretary recommendations for improving federal programs for the prevention and treatment of, and recovery from, substance use disorders, including by expanding access to prevention, treatment, and recovery services; 3. Analyze substance use disorder prevention and treatment strategies in different regions of and populations in the United States and evaluate the extent to which federal substance use disorder prevention and treatment strategies are aligned with State and local substance use disorder prevention and treatment strategies; 4. Make recommendations to the Secretary regarding any appropriate changes with respect to the activities and strategies described in items (1) through (3) above; 5. Make recommendations to the Secretary regarding public participation in decisions relating to substance use disorders and the process by which public feedback can be better integrated into such decisions; and 6. Make recommendations to ensure that substance use disorder research, services, supports, and prevention activities of the Department of Health and Human Services and other federal agencies are not unnecessarily duplicative.
International Cancer Control Partnership (ICCP) Other CDC NCI The National Cancer Institute and the Union for International Cancer Control convened global partners including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to cooperate in assisting countries to develop and implement quality cancer plans linked to Non-communicable Disease (NCD) control. This International Cancer Control Partnership, ICCP, believes that prioritizing cancer is critical to reaching the “25x25” goal. ICCP partners assist countries by: (1) Creating and maintaining a searchable database of current cancer control plans from around the globe; (2) Performing analysis of gaps and highlighting priority areas for inclusion in plans; (3) Providing technical assistance to countries working to develop plans with targets and evaluation strategies; (4) Providing planners with relevant existing materials and tools; and (5) Coordinating an online community of practice (through partnership with the University of New Mexico's Project ECHO) for dissemination and utilization of scientific knowledge for National Cancer Control Plan implementation. ICCP partners will use their collective state, country, and regional-level planning experience to guide plan development and implementation and will ensure planners utilize effective, evidence-based strategies to help meet the global NCD targets.
International Cancer Screening Network (ICSN) Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force CDC NCI The International Cancer Screening Network (ICSN) is a voluntary consortium of screening practitioners who work in countries that are planning for or implemented population-based cancer screening programs with the mission of reducing the burden of cancer by promoting dialogue and collaborative cancer screening research, evaluation and dialogue regarding the effectiveness of context-specific evidence-based cancer screening programs, including promotion, recruitment and follow-up among other relevant topics. ICSN goals include: 1. To provide global leadership in cancer screening research and evaluation by organizing scientific studies, biennial conferences, consultations, mentorship, training, and by publishing collaborative papers. 2. To create a community of screening practitioners (researchers, evaluators, implementers and screening program staff) to exchange data, evidence, ideas and experiences that advance the field of cancer screening. 3. To assist in the design of studies to evaluate the process and effectiveness of cancer screening programs; to evaluate and promote innovation in cancer screening through new technologies; to enhance the screening process for treatment of screen-detected lesions, among other topics. 4. To be a source of education and dialogue about basic aspects of cancer screening as well as advanced and emerging concepts and technology. 5. To include membership who conducts cancer screening research, develop infrastructure for cancer screening, and establish programs whose goal is to deliver the highest quality health care while producing the maximum benefit to the population and minimizing its harms.
International Neonatal Consortium Meeting/ Workshop FDA NICHD Launched on May 19, 2015, INC is C-Path’s ninth consortium – a global collaboration formed to forge a predictable regulatory path for evaluating the safety and effectiveness of therapies for neonates. “By uniting stakeholders from research institutions, drug developers, regulatory agencies, patient advocacy and other organizations,” said Janet Woodcock, Director of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (FDA/CDER), “INC can develop practical tools that can be incorporated into clinical trials for neonates, which will then lead to more successful, efficient trials and provide this population with better treatments.”
International Rare Diseases Research Consortium (IRDiRC) Funders Committee Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force FDA NICHD, NCATS, NCI, NEI, NHGRI, NIAMS, NINDS The International Rare Diseases Research Consortium (IRDiRC) teams up researchers and organizations investing in rare diseases research in order to achieve two main objectives by the year 2020, namely to deliver 200 new therapies for rare diseases and means to diagnose most rare diseases. A number of grand challenges are being addressed through collaborative actions to reach these 2020 goals such as establishing and providing access to harmonized data and samples, performing the molecular and clinical characterization of rare diseases, boosting translational, preclinical and clinical research, and streamlining ethical and regulatory procedures.
International TB Working Group Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force CDC NIAID This is a working group of the Federal Tuberculosis (TB) Task Force. The International TB Working Group is chaired and organized by the US Agency for International Development (USAID). It meets monthly to coordinate international TB support.
Interoperability Standards Priorities Task Force of the Health Information Technology (HIT) Standards Committee Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force ONC NLM The Interoperability Standards Advisory Task Force of the Health Information Technology (HIT) Standards Committee is part of the Federal Advisory Committee that is charged with making recommendations to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) on standards and implementation specifications to promote interoperability of computer systems and health information (The Health Information Technology Advisory Committee, or HITAC).
Intragovernmental Select Agents and Toxins Technical Advisory Committee (ISATTAC) Committee, Work group, Advisory group, or Task Force CDC, FDA, OS NIAID, NCI, OD/ORS, OD/OSP The ISATTAC is a working group of subject matter experts from the Federal Government formed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director to provide recommendations to the CDC's Division of Select Agents and Toxins in three technical areas: 1) review requests for exclusion of attenuated strains, 2) review requests to conduct restricted experiments, and 3) review select agents and toxins. The Committee conducts a biannual review, required by the Select Agent Rule, of the Select Agents and Toxins list for HHS.
Iodine Initiative Resource Development FDA, CDC OD/DPCPSI/ODS, NICHD, OD/DPCPSI/ORWH The National Institutes of Health's, Office of Dietary Supplement's Iodine Initiative was originally developed in response to concerns that some pregnant women in the U.S. might have inadequate iodine intake at a time of high physiological demand. Past and current activities include convening state of the science workshops and symposia, development of databases that characterize the iodine content of foods and dietary supplements, supporting the improvement of existing analytical methods, new methods and development of standard reference materials for assessing iodine status, assessments of U.S. population-level iodine intake and iodine status via funding iodized salt collection and markers of iodine status in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, and funding opportunities for investigator-initiated iodine research. Finally, summaries of the scientific literature on iodine are made available on the Office of Dietary Supplement's website.
Its a Noisy Planet. Protect Their Hearing® Public Education campaign Public Education Campaign CDC NIDCD The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) sponsors It’s a Noisy Planet Protect Their Hearing®, a national public education campaign to increase awareness among parents of children ages 8 to 12 about noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) and how to prevent it. The campaign disseminates messages through print and digital materials, social media, community events, school presentations, and other methods. The CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health and National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) have actively collaborated with the NIDCD for this campaign.