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2015 State of CSTE
CSTE Business Meeting
Boston, Massachusetts
Strategic Plan 2012-2014
Drive the use of epi data to address major preventable
causes of morbidity and mortality in the nation
•
Built ID and non-ID programs, Surveillance and Informatics
•
Home organization for applied PH epi: opened Board election to all active
members
•
Diversify funding sources: CDC/EPA (waterborne fellows), CDC/HRSA (MCH
Epi), SAMHSA (in progress)
•
Communications: established marketing and communication position at
national office; blogs and social media replacing quarterly newsletter
Strategic Plan 2015-2017
CSTE Membership
CSTE Membership
• CSTE has 1,578 members (June 15, 2015)
• Grown from under 400 in 2002 to 1,208 in 2014
• Breakdown:
• 70 % active members
• 21 % associate members
• 9 % student members
CSTE Membership Structure
CD/MCH/Oral
Health Steering
Committee
Chronic disease
Cross Cutting I
Steering
Committee
Cross Cutting II
Steering
Committee
Environmental/
Occupational/
Injury
Steering
Committee
Alcohol
Border/
International
health
Climate change
Alcohol and
other drug
indicators
Disparities
Local
epidemiology
Epidemiology
methods
Environmental
epidemiology
Overdose
PH emergency
preparedness
Injury
surveillance and
control
Maternal and
child health
PH and Primary
Care Integration
Oral health
Substance
abuse
Workforce
Public health
law
Tribal
epidemiology
Surveillance/
Informatics
Steering
Committee
Food Safety
Disaster
epidemiology
CD/MCH/Oral
Health Epi
Capacity
Building
Infectious
Disease
Steering
Committee
Occupational
health
surveillance
Healthcareassociated
infections
HIV
Influenza
Electronic
laboratory and
disease
reporting
STDs
Surveillance
policy
Vaccinepreventable
diseases
Surveillance
practice &
implementation
Vector-borne
diseases
Significant Accomplishments
Significant
Accomplishments
Workforce
•
Hosted 2015 CDC Orientation for New State Epidemiologists in May
2015 for 7 new State and Territorial Epis
•
Held Epi Info in-person training for 15 epidemiologists in May 2015
•
Launched Epi Info Needs Assessment
•
Applied Epidemiology Fellowship
•
32 Class XI graduating
•
30 Class XII beginning their 2nd year
•
26 Class XIII matches as of 5/27/15, anticipating additional matches
•
New partnership with SAMHSA for Behavioral Health positions in the fellowship
Significant
Accomplishments
Workforce
•
APHIF
• 10 fellows graduated from Class III; 4 completing 2nd year
extension pilot
• Class IV begins Summer 2015 with 10 funded positions and an
extension year for Class III to have a 2nd year
• •9 Class I HSIP fellows graduating
• •8 Class II HSIP fellows begin Summer 2015
• •10 I-TIPP fellows graduating from Class II
• •10 new Class III I-TIPP fellows beginning Summer 2015
Significant
Accomplishments
Chronic Disease, Maternal & Child Health,
and Oral Health
•
Completed and distributed the final report for the CD/MCH/Oral Health
epidemiology module as part of the 2013 ECA
•
Finalized the Chronic Disease Epidemiology Orientation Manual
•
Continued partnership with Westat to improve methods and surveillance
of diabetes
•
Completed a four part CD Evaluation Webinar series
•
Drafted an oral health three year training plan to improve oral health
epidemiology capacity
Significant
Accomplishments
Cross Cutting
•
Completed a Tribal Data Linkage Toolkit as a resource to states working
with tribal health data linkages
•
Completed the Applied Epidemiology Scientific Writing Trends, Needs,
and Recommendations 2014 Report
•
Distributed the 2013 ECA Final Report, Developed ECA State Profiles,
and a MMWR Publication was released in April 2015
•
Convened a Marijuana Workgroup to assist states in the surveillance of
marijuana use and the development of evidence-based intervention
strategies
Significant
Accomplishments
Cross Cutting (continued)
• Submitted an article describing overdose death surveillance
guidelines which will be published in Public Health Reports
• Released a tool to analyze text on death certificates by identifying
specific drugs to improve drug overdose surveillance
• Partnered with SAMHSA to form a workgroup to develop case
definitions for reporting and identification of key indicators for statebased surveillance of substance abuse and mental health
Significant
Accomplishments
Environmental Health, Occupational Health, & Injury
•
Highlighted and generated state occupational health success stories
•
Convened the 7th Annual Western States Occupational Network (WestON) Meeting
•
Collaborated with the Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics (AOEC) Occupational
Health Internship Program to fund 4 students for 8-week internships in occupational health
(summer 2014)
•
Convened the 6th Annual Disaster Epidemiology Workshop
•
Completed the Assessment of State Activities in Noninfectious Environmental Health Exposure
Monitoring and Investigation Report
•
Partnered with NAPHSIS to strengthen the surveillance capability of the National Vital Statistics
System for tracking disaster-related deaths
•
Distributed the Environmental Health Module of the 2013 ECA
Significant
Accomplishments
Infectious Disease
• Coordinated Ebola responses activities among CSTE members with
CDC, partner organizations and other partners
• Supported 3 epidemiologists to travel to unaffected regions in West
Africa and 7 French-speaking epidemiologists to affected regions in
West Africa
• Distributed the 2nd Edition of the CIFOR Guidelines and Toolkit
• Supported SAS e-learning courses to HIV/AIDS surveillance
coordinators and supported peer to peer consultations
Significant
Accomplishments
Infectious Disease (continued)
•
Influenza surveillance pilots: Continued to support at multiple sites through 3 projects
•
Influenza Hospitalization Surveillance Project (IHSP)
•
Influenza Incidence Surveillance Project (IISP)
•
Severe Acute Respiratory Infections (SARI)
•
Completed international Influenza Surveillance Reviews
•
Supporting 8 sites to promote One Health initiatives by educating youth on the
epidemiology of zoonotic diseases with PH impact
•
Convened the Hepatitis C Taskforce to assess current surveillance capacity for
Hepatitis C in the United States
Significant
Accomplishments
Surveillance and Informatics
•
Supported jurisdictions in the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance
System (NNDSS) Modernization Initiative (NMI) – a multi-year
collaboration with CDC and APHL
•
Supported CDC Message Mapping Guide Development
•
Partnering with CDC in a project to demonstrate the feasibility of the
RCKMS for use in electronic case reporting
•
Submitted formal feedback for Meaningful Use Stage 3 and the
accompanying ONC NPRM 2015 Edition Certification Criteria and the
Federal Health IT Strategic Plan 2015-2020
New and Continued
Partnerships
AMCHP*
ASTHO
CDC
NASPHV
NIOSH
SAMHSA*
NACCHO
APHL
CIFOR
ISDS
NFID*
PHII
* New partner
Administrative Report
Financial Results
for Year Ending 9/30/14
Financial Results for Year
Ending 9/30/14
CSTE Revenues by Area - Year Ending 9-30-14
Infectious Disease
Applied Epidemiology Fellowship
Epidemiology & Surveillance
SHINE Fellowship
Maternal Child Health
Occupational
Environmental
Preparedness
Chronic Disease
NASPHV
Oral Health
-
500,000.00
1,000,000.00
1,500,000.00
2,000,000.00
2,500,000.00
3,000,000.00
3,500,000.00
4,000,000.00
CDC Cooperative Agreement Trend
$18,000,000
$16,000,000
$14,000,000
*
$12,000,000
$10,000,000
Carry forward
$8,000,000
Funding
* projected
$6,000,000
$4,000,000
$2,000,000
$2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
Advocacy
•
Hill visits supported several priorities in CDC budget:
•
•
ELC, food safety, public health workforce capacity program
Updated letter of support for President’s budget in April
•
Agreed with $226.754 million for the Core Infectious Diseases
program
•
Agreed with $40 million for the Advanced Molecular Detection
and Response to Infectious Disease Outbreaks (AMD)
•
Agreed with $30M expansion request for antimicrobial
resistance response
Advocacy
• Communicable Disease Reporting by VA
Medical Centers
•
•
•
Working with Congress on proposed House
legislation that mandates VA reporting via
existing mechanism of state laws and rules
Working with VA on implementation of the June
2013 VA Reporting Directive
CSTE conducted assessment in December 2013
about implementation of Directive and found
uneven implementation
Organizational Challenges
and Opportunities
• Integrating informatics and epidemiology and
modernizing the PH workforce
• Improving National Office public health
emergency response capacity with
CDC/OPHPR
• Managing the growth and diversity of CSTE
within mission
CSTE National Office
2872 Woodcock Boulevard, Suite 250
Atlanta, Georgia 30341
770.458.3811
770.458.8516
[email protected]