96-10356. Proposed Data Collections Submitted for Public Comment and Recommendations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 82 (Friday, April 26, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 18609-18611]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-10356]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    [INFO-96-14]
    
    
    Proposed Data Collections Submitted for Public Comment and 
    Recommendations
    
        In compliance with the requirement of Section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 for opportunity for public comment on 
    proposed data collection projects, the Centers for Disease Control and 
    Prevention (CDC) will publish periodic summaries of proposed projects. 
    To request more information on the proposed projects or to obtain a 
    copy of the data collection plans and instruments, call the CDC Reports 
    Clearance Officer on (404) 639-7090.
        Comments are invited on: (a) Whether the proposed collection of 
    information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of 
    the agency, including whether the information shall have practical 
    utility; (b) the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of the 
    proposed collection of information; (c) ways to enhance the quality, 
    utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and (d) ways 
    to minimize the burden of the collection of information on respondents, 
    including through the use of automated collection techniques for other 
    forms of information technology. Send comments to Wilma Johnson, CDC 
    Reports Clearance Officer, 1600 Clifton Road, MS-D24, Atlanta, GA 
    30333. Written comments should be received within 60 days of this 
    notice.
    
    Proposed Projects
    
        1. Studies of Adverse Reproductive Outcomes in Female Occupational 
    Groups--(0920-0367)--Revised--An estimated 50,000 to 60,000 chemicals 
    are in common use throughout society today and hundreds of new 
    chemicals are introduced each year. Yet the list of environmental 
    chemicals and agents that have been investigated to determine whether 
    they have adverse effects on reproductive health is still limited. With 
    the growing number of women in the work force, it is becoming 
    increasingly important to evaluate the potential female reproductive 
    health effects of occupational and physical agents.
        In this program, NIOSH is planning to undertake a series of five 
    studies to focus on potential reproductive effects of chemical and 
    physical agents in the workplace. In the studies planned under this 
    program, the reproductive health of a group of female workers exposed 
    to the agent of interest, will be compared to the reproductive health 
    of a group of working women with no occupational exposure to known or 
    suspected reproductive toxicants.
        For all studies, data from company personnel records containing 
    demographic, and work history information will be used to estimate 
    workplace exposures. Each woman will be asked to complete a telephone 
    questionnaire on reproductive history and other factors (such as 
    cigarette smoking) that may influence reproductive function. Each 
    questionnaire will take approximately 60 minutes to complete. Medical 
    records will be requested to confirm adverse reproductive outcomes 
    reported by the participants. The risk of adverse reproductive outcomes 
    between the two groups of women will then be compared.
        The first study to be conducted under this program will be a study 
    of reproductive disorders among female flight attendants. Approximately 
    66,000 flight attendants are currently employed by U.S. commercial 
    airlines and are potentially exposed to ionizing radiation and 
    disruption of circadian rhythms, two exposures that may adversely 
    affect reproductive function. The other studies to be conducted under 
    this program have not yet been determined. The total cost to 
    respondents is estimated at 102,000.00
    
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                                                                                  No. of    Avg. burden/    Total   
                             Respondents                             No. of     responses/    response   burden  (in
                                                                  respondents   respondent   (in hrs.)      hrs.)   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Workers.....................................................        6,200            1            1        6,200
    Medical providers...........................................        1,200            1          0.5          600
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------------
          Total.................................................  ...........  ...........  ...........        6,800
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        2. Coal Mine Dust Personal Sampling Systems--(0920-148)--
    Extension--This project, mandated under the Federal Mine Safety and 
    Health Act of 1977 (Pub. L. 91-173, as amended by Pub. L. 95-164), 
    involves conducting evaluations and tests on coal mine dust personnel 
    sampling units (CMDPSUs) and issuing certifications for those CMDPSUs 
    which meet or exceed all applicable requirements listed in 30 CFR Part 
    74. It also requires conducting audits of new ``off-the-shelf'' CMDPSUs 
    certified under these regulations to determine compliance, evaluating 
    those CMDPSUs sent to NIOSH as field problems, and responding to 
    technical assistance requests. The total cost to respondents is 
    estimated at $11,000.
    
    [[Page 18610]]
    
    
    
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                                                                                  No. of    Avg. burden/    Total   
                             Respondents                             No. of     responses/    response    burden (in
                                                                  respondents   respondent   (in hrs.)      hrs.)   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Manufacturer................................................            1            1           39           39
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------------
          Total.................................................  ...........  ...........  ...........           39
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        3. Monthly Vital Statistics Report--(0920-0213)--Extension--The 
    compilation of national vital statistics dates back to the beginning of 
    this century and has been conducted since 1960 by the Division of Vital 
    Statistics of the National Center for Health Statistics, CDC. The 
    collection of the data is authorized by 42 USC 242k. The Monthly Vital 
    Statistics Report provides estimates of monthly occurrences of births, 
    deaths, infant deaths, marriages, and divorces following the end of 
    each month. Similar data have been published since 1937, and are the 
    sole source of these data at the national level. The data are widely 
    used by the Department of Health and Human Services and by other 
    government, academic, and private research organizations in tracking 
    changes in trends of vital events. The data are essential to the U. S. 
    Bureau of the Census as input to their various population estimates. 
    They are also used each month by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, 
    Department of Commerce, to extrapolate an element of the Gross National 
    Product.
        Respondents for the Monthly Vital Statistics Report and the Monthly 
    Report on Marriages, Divorces and Annulments are registration officials 
    in each state, the District of Columbia, and New York City. Respondents 
    for the Monthly Marriage and Divorce Statistical Report forms are 60 
    local (county) officials in New Mexico who record marriages occurring 
    and divorces and annulments granted in each county of New Mexico. The 
    are no direct costs to respondents; the data are routinely available in 
    each reporting office as a by-product of ongoing activities.
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  No. of    Avg. burden/    Total   
                             Respondents                             No. of     responses/    response   burden  (in
                                                                  respondents  respondents   (in hrs.)      hrs.)   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    State registration officials: Monthly Vital Statistics                                                          
     Report.....................................................           52           12          0.1         62.4
    State registration officials: Monthly Report on Marriages,                                                      
     Divorces, and Annulments...................................           52           12          0.1         62.4
    County registration officials: New Mexico: Monthly Marriage                                                     
     and Divorce Statistical Report Forms.......................           60           12          0.1           72
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------------
          Total.................................................  ...........  ...........  ...........          197
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        4. Standardized Reporting System and Associated Epidemiologic 
    Investigations of Occupationally Related Infection with Human 
    Immunodeficiency Virus in Health Care and Public Safety Settings (0920-
    0286)--Extension--The Surveillance Branch, Division of HIV/AIDS 
    Prevention, National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers 
    for Disease Control and Prevention plans to continue surveillance of 
    health care workers (HCWs) and public safety workers who may have 
    occupationally acquired human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. 
    This reporting system, initiated September 1991, collects essential 
    scientific information on workers with occupationally acquired HIV 
    infection, the exposures that led to infection, and the natural history 
    of HIV infection. State and local health departments will investigate 
    reported cases of HCWs and others with HIV infection for whom HIV may 
    have been transmitted through occupational exposures. With the consent 
    of the infected worker, the health department will collect information 
    including: HIV test results; whether the route of exposure was 
    percutaneous, mucous membrane, or skin; the type of device and 
    procedure associated with the exposure; use of postexposure 
    chemoprophylaxis; and other behavioral and transfusion risk factors for 
    HIV infection. Reports, without identifying information, will be 
    forwarded from the health department to CDC. The total cost to 
    respondents is estimated at $1,250.
    
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                                                                                              Average               
                                                                     No. of       No. of      burden /      Total   
                             Respondents                          respondents   responses/    response   burden  (in
                                                                                respondent   (in hrs.)      hrs.)   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Workers who may have occupation- ally acquired HIV infection          100            1          0.5           50
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------------
          Total.................................................  ...........  ...........  ...........           50
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        5. Development and Implementation of a Comprehensive Evaluation for 
    Project DIRECT (Diabetes Intervention: Reaching and Educating 
    Communities Together--NEW--Diabetes mellitus is more prevalent among 
    African-Americans than whites, and African-Americans with diabetes are 
    more likely to suffer its devastating complications. Compared to 
    whites, African-Americans are more likely to develop blindness and end-
    stage renal disease and are more likely to have amputations. In 
    addition, cardiovascular risk factors are more prevalent among African-
    Americans than whites and African-Americans are more likely to die with 
    diabetes than are whites. In response to this disparity, the Centers 
    for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has launched a large-scale 
    community intervention trial known as Project DIRECT (Diabetes 
    Intervention: Reaching and Educating Communities Together). Based in 
    Raleigh, North Carolina, and sponsored by CDC's Division of Diabetes 
    Translation, Project DIRECT will serve as a model for multilevel 
    community-based diabetes prevention and control programs for urban 
    African-Americans.
        This evaluation will determine the effect of (1) diabetes care; (2) 
    outreach, and (3) health promotion interventions in the targeted 
    community and compare this effect to a control community. The 
    intervention activities focus on the African-American population of a 
    geographically defined area of southeast Raleigh, North Carolina. The 
    control community
    
    [[Page 18611]]
    
    is Greensboro, North Carolina. The populations consist primarily of 
    African-Americans. Health care providers will be identified and 
    solicited from practicing physicians in Raleigh and Greensboro.
        The survey will be conducted in four phases. Phase I will randomly 
    identify and solicit participation from household members with and 
    without diabetes from the control and intervention communities. In 
    Phase II, participants with and without diabetes will be randomly 
    selected and administered the survey questionnaire upon granting 
    informed consent. During Phase III, persons with diabetes will undergo 
    a brief physical exam that will consist of physical measures for 
    height, weight, blood pressure, and body mass index. In addition, 
    collection of a venous blood sample and urine sample will be performed. 
    In Phase IV, interviewers will administer a questionnaire to primary 
    care physicians about their knowledge, attitude and practice patterns 
    for caring for persons with diabetes. This study will undergo 
    Institutional Review Board reviews and comply with human subject 
    assurances in accordance with federal regulations. The total cost to 
    respondents is estimated at $41,160.
    
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                                                                                  No. of    Avg. burden/    Total   
                             Respondents                             No. of     responses/    response   burden  (in
                                                                  respondents   respondent   (in hrs.)      hrs.)   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Households..................................................        8,000            1       0.3333        2,666
    Persons without diabetes....................................        1,600            1          0.5          800
    Persons with diabetes.......................................          600            1          0.5          300
    Primary Care Physicians.....................................          140            1          0.5           70
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------------
          Total.................................................  ...........  ...........  ...........        3,836
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        6. National Disease Surveillance Program I--(0920-0009)--
    Extension--Formal surveillance of 21 separate reportable diseases has 
    been ongoing to meet the public demand and scientific interest for 
    accurate, consistent epidemiologic data. The diseases include: HIV/
    AIDS, bacterial meningitis, dengue, idiopathic CD4+ T-lymphocytopenia, 
    kawasaki syndrome, legionellosis, Hansen's Disease, lyme disease, 
    malaria, pertussis, plague, poliomyelitis, psittacosis, Reye Syndrome, 
    Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Tetanus, Toxic Shock Syndrome, 
    toxocariasis, trichinosis, typhoid fever, and viral hepatitis. Case 
    report forms enable CDC to collect demographic, clinical, and 
    laboratory characteristics of cases of these diseases. This information 
    is used to direct epidemiologic investigations, to identify and monitor 
    trends in reemerging infectious diseases or emerging modes of 
    transmission, to search for possible causes or sources of the diseases, 
    and to develop guidelines for prevention and or treatment. It is also 
    used to recommend target areas in most need of vaccinations for certain 
    diseases and to determine development of drug resistance.
        Because of the distinct nature of each of the diseases, the number 
    of cases reported annually is different for each. The total cost to 
    respondents is estimated at $818,184.
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  No. of    Avg. burden     Total   
                             Respondents                             No. of     responses/    response   burden  (in
                                                                  respondents   respondent   (in hrs.)      hrs.)   
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Health Care Workers.........................................      125,214            1          0.5       34,091
                                                                 ---------------------------------------------------
          Total.................................................  ...........  ...........  ...........       34,091
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Dated: April 22, 1996.
    Wilma G. Johnson,
    Acting Associate Director for Policy Planning and Evaluation, Centers 
    for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
    [FR Doc. 96-10356 Filed 4-25-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4163-18-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/26/1996
Department:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
96-10356
Pages:
18609-18611 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
INFO-96-14
PDF File:
96-10356.pdf