Public Health Systems Capacity Building in Central Asia
The five counties of Central Asia (CA)--Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—occupy a geographically large, strategically important position between Russia to the north, China to the east, Afghanistan to the south, and Iran to the west. Following the Russian Revolution, however, CA was brought under the hegemony of the Soviet Union, which created the modern boundaries of the five countries and installed Soviet educational, scientific and governmental systems. The near-exclusive use of the Russian language in national and regional scientific circles have created difficulties in accessing and using English-based (and, hence, Western-based) thinking in medicine. Varying projects have launched to begin to revise aspects of the existing health care systems while maintaining desirable aspects of the Soviet systems, e.g., entitlement of all citizens to health care. However, significant hurdles remain such as the following: insufficient use of evidence to guide creation of the prikaz, the Soviet-era “order” which hierarchically dictates practice at all levels of medicine in the health care sphere; medical research in CA is not currently up to the highest international standards ; there is little use of or interaction with English medical literature; an insufficient collection of and analysis and interpretation of appropriate data; a need for improved skills in the health care and laboratory setting; and a reliance on paper-based information systems.
General information about this opportunity
Last Known Status
Deleted 05/31/2014 (Archived.)
Program Number
CDC-RFA-GH14-1417
Federal Agency/Office
Agency: Department of Health and Human Services
Office: CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL
Type(s) of Assistance Offered
Cooperative Agreement
Number of Awards Available
2
Who is eligible to apply/benefit from this assistance?
Applicant Eligibility
Eligible applicants that can apply for this FOA are included in this section. Add or delete any additional eligible entities based on the program’s authorizing statute an approved Limited Eligibility Justification (LEJ), or Single Eligibility Justification (SEJ). Removal of any entity from the list below, for reasons other than the program’s authorizing statute, requires the submission of an LEJ. Government Organizations: • National Ministries of Health • State and local governments or their Bona Fide Agents (this includes the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau) . • American Indian/Alaska Native tribal governments (federally recognized or state-recognized) • Political subdivisions of States (in consultation with States) Non-government Organizations: • American Indian/Alaska native tribally designated organizations • Alaska Native health corporations • Tribal epidemiology centers • Urban Indian health organizations • Nonprofit with 501C3 IRS status (other than institution of higher education) • Nonprofit without 501C3 IRS status (other than institution of higher education) • Research institutions (that will perform activities deemed as non-research) Colleges and Universities Community-based organizations Faith-based organizations For-profit organizations (other than small business) Hospitals Small, minority, and women-owned businesses
What is the process for applying and being award this assistance?
Deadlines
05/01/2014
Other Assistance Considerations
Formula and Matching Requirements
This program does not have cost sharing or matching requirements.
Who do I contact about this opportunity?
Headquarters Office
CDC
Procurement and Grants Office
Techincal Information Management Section
Phone 770-488-2700
E-mail Address
pgotim@cdc.gov
Financial Information
Obligations
$5,000,000.00