Notice2024-03242
Agency Forms Undergoing Paperwork Reduction Act Review
Primary source
Metadata and text below are from the Federal Register, a public-domain U.S. government work. Always verify the official published version before relying on it for any legal matter.
Published
February 16, 2024
Issuing agencies
Health and Human Services DepartmentCenters for Disease Control and Prevention
Full Text
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 89 Issue 33 (Friday, February 16, 2024)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 33 (Friday, February 16, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12345-12346]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2024-03242]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
[30Day-24-1408]
Agency Forms Undergoing Paperwork Reduction Act Review
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) received approval from the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to conduct Rapid Surveys System
(RSS)[OMB Control No. 0920-1408], which includes fielding four surveys
per year. The Round 1 survey was approved on 06/30/2023. A second and
third round of the RSS were additionally approved. In accordance with
the Terms of Clearance, NCHS will publish a 30-day Federal Register
Notice announcing each new survey so that public comments can be
received about the specific content of each survey. This notice
includes specific details about the questions that would be asked in
the fourth round of the RSS and serves to allow 30 days for public and
affected agency comments, consistent with OMB's terms of clearance.
CDC will accept all comments for this proposed information
collection project. The Office of Management and Budget is particularly
interested in comments that:
(a) Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the agency,
including whether the information will have practical utility;
(b) Evaluate the accuracy of the agencies estimate of the burden of
the proposed collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including, through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses; and
(e) Assess information collection costs.
To request additional information on the proposed project or to
obtain a copy of the information collection plan and instruments, call
(404) 639-7570. Comments and recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent within 30 days of publication of
this notice to <a href="http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain">www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain</a>. Find this particular
information collection by selecting ``Currently under 30-day Review--
Open for Public Comments'' or by using the search function. Direct
written comments and/or suggestions regarding the items contained in
this notice to the Attention: CDC Desk Officer, Office of Management
and Budget, 725 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20503 or by fax to (202)
395-5806. Provide written comments within 30 days of notice
publication.
Proposed Project
Rapid Surveys System (RSS) Round 4 (OMB Control No. 0920-1408)--
National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC),
Background and Brief Description
Section 306 of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act (42 U.S.C.), as
amended, authorizes that the Secretary of Health and Human Services
(HHS), acting through NCHS, collect data about the health of the
population of the United States. The RSS (OMB control No. 0920-1408)
collects data on emerging public health topics, attitudes, and
behaviors using cross-sectional samples from two commercially
available, national probability-based online panels. The RSS then
combines these data to form estimates that approximate national
representation in ways that many data collection approaches cannot. The
RSS collects data in contexts in which decision makers' need for time-
sensitive data of known quality about emerging and priority health
concerns is a higher priority than their need for statistically
unbiased estimates.
The RSS complements NCHS's current household survey systems. As
quicker turnaround surveys that require less accuracy and precision
than CDC's more rigorous population representative surveys, the RSS
incorporates multiple mechanisms to carefully evaluate the resulting
survey data for their appropriateness for use in public health
surveillance and research (e.g., hypothesis generating) and facilitate
continuous quality improvement by supplementing these panels with
intensive efforts to understand how well the estimates reflect
populations at most risk. The RSS data dissemination strategy
communicates the strengths and limitations of data collected through
online probability panels as compared to more robust data collection
methods.
The RSS has three major goals: (1) to provide CDC and other
partners with time-sensitive data of known quality about emerging and
priority health concerns; (2) to use these data collections to continue
NCHS's evaluation of the quality of public health estimates generated
from commercial online panels; and (3) to improve methods to
communicate the appropriateness of public health estimates generated
from commercial online panels.
The RSS is designed to have four rounds of data collection each
year with data being collected by two contractors with probability
panels. A cross-sectional nationally representative sample will be
drawn from the online probability panel maintained by each of the
contractors. As part of the base (minimum sample size), each round of
data collection will collect 2,000 responses per quarter. The RSS can
be expanded by increasing the number of completed responses per round
or the number of rounds per year as needed up to a maximum of 28,000
responses per year per contractor or 56,000 total responses per year.
Additionally, each data collection may include up to 2,000 additional
responses per quarter (8,000 for the year) to improve
representativeness. This increases the maximum burden by up to 16,000
responses per year. The RSS may also target individual surveys to
collect data only from specific subgroups within existing survey panels
and may supplement data collection for such groups with additional
respondents from other probability or nonprobability samples. An
additional 12,000 responses per year may be used for these
developmental activities.
Each round's questionnaire will consist of four main components:
(1) basic demographic information on respondents to be used as
covariates in analyses; (2) new, emerging, or supplemental content
proposed by NCHS, other CDC Centers, Institute, and Offices, and other
HHS agencies; (3) questions used for calibrating the survey weights;
and (4) additional content selected by NCHS to evaluate against
relevant benchmarks. NCHS will use
[[Page 12346]]
questions from Components 1 and 2 to provide relevant, timely data on
new, emerging, and priority health topics to be used for decision
making. NCHS will use questions from Components 3 and 4 to weight and
evaluate the quality of the estimates coming from questions in
Components 1 and 2. Components 1 and 2 will contain different topics in
each round of the survey. NCHS submits a 30-day Federal Register Notice
with information on the contents of each round of data collection.
NCHS calibrates survey weights from the RSS to gold standard
surveys. Questions used for calibration in this round of RSS will
include marital status, employment, social and work limitations, use of
the internet in general and for medical reasons, telephone use, civic
engagement, and language used at home and in other settings. All of
these questions have been on the National Health Interview Survey
(NHIS) in prior years allowing calibration to these data.
Finally, all RSS rounds will include several questions that were
previously on NHIS or other NCHS surveys, or other suitable Federal
surveys for benchmarking to evaluate data quality. Panelists in the RSS
will be asked about health status; chronic conditions; pregnancy;
disability and age of disability onset; health insurance through an
employer; healthcare access and utilization; mental health; mental
health care utilization; and health behaviors.
Rapid Surveys System (RSS) will include content on psychological
aggression by intimate partners, sexual violence, technology-
facilitated sexual violence, emerging coercive control by intimate
partners, and traumatic brain injury because of intimate partner
violence.
In Round 4, the RSS will be used as a methodological study to test
the ability to obtain data on intimate partner violence-related topics
via web panel survey. In addition, RSS Round 4 offers the opportunity
for developmental work to develop questions using a split sample to
compare current NISVS questions and modified questions to evaluate
different wording and question formats and to develop new questionnaire
content related to understudied domains of intimate partner violence.
The estimated total annual burden hours for the three-year approval
period remains at 28,079 burden hours. The NCHS RSS Round 4 (2024) data
collection is based on 13,100 complete surveys (4,367 hours). There are
no costs to respondents other than their time.
Estimated Annualized Burden Hours
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Number of Average burden
Type of respondents Form name Number of responses per per response
respondents respondent (in hours)
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Adults 18+........................... Survey: NCHS RSS Round 4 13,100 1 20/60
(2024).
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Jeffrey M. Zirger,
Lead, Information Collection Review Office, Office of Public Health
Ethics and Regulations, Office of Science, Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2024-03242 Filed 2-15-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163-18-P
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