Research Catalog

National compensation survey.

Title
  1. National compensation survey. Occupational wages in the United States ... supplemental tables [electronic resource].
Published by
  1. [Washington, DC : U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics]
  2. Santa Monica : Rand, [2013]
Author
  1. Moore, Melinda

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Details

Additional authors
  1. Fisher, Gail
  2. Stevens, Clare
  3. United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Publication date
  1. Electronic coverage as of Oct. 26, 2001: 1998-
Description
  1. xxiv, 128 pages : illustrations (chiefly color); 28 cm.
Summary
  1. In the context of the 2012 National Strategy for Biosurveillance, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) asked the Department of Defense (DoD) to review its biosurveillance programs, prioritize missions and desired outcomes, evaluate how DoD programs contribute to these, and assess the appropriateness and stability of the department⁰́₉s funding system for biosurveillance. DoD sought external analytic support through the RAND Arroyo Center. In response to the questions posed by OMB request, this report finds the following: * Current DoD biosurveillance supports three strategic missions. Based mostly on existing statute, the highest-priority mission is force health protection, followed by biological weapons defense and global health security.^
  2. * Guidance issued by the White House on June 27, 2013, specified priorities for planning fiscal year 2015 budgets; it includes an explicit global health security priority, which strengthens the case for this as a key DoD biosurveillance strategic mission. * DoD biosurveillance also supports four desired outcomes: early warning and early detection, situational awareness, better decision making at all levels, and forecast of impacts. * Programs and measures that address priority missions⁰́₄force health protection in particular⁰́₄and desired outcomes should be prioritized over those that do not do so. * More near-real-time analysis and better internal and external integration could enhance the performance and value of the biosurveillance enterprise. * Improvements are needed in key enablers, including explicit doctrine/policy, efficient organization and governance, and increased staffing and improved facilities for the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center (AFHSC).^
  3. * AFHSC has requested additional funding to fully implement its current responsibilities under the 2012 Memorandum of Understanding between the Assistant Secretaries of Defense for Health Affairs and for Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological Defense Programs. Additional responsibilities for coordinating the entire DoD biosurveillance enterprise would need concomitant resourcing. * There is not a single, unified funding system for the DoD biosurveillance enterprise; the multiple current funding systems would likely benefit from an organizing mechanism with the authority to manage and control funds to meet enterprise goals. Interim guidance issued by the Deputy Secretary of Defense on June 13, 2013, is significant because it is the first policy to explicitly address biosurveillance; it adopts the definition from the National Strategy for Biosurveillance, calls for development of a DoD Directive for biosurveillance, and specifies tasks for DoD⁰́₉s implementation of the Strategy.
Series statement
  1. Research report
Uniform title
  1. National compensation survey. Occupational wages in the United States ... supplemental tables (Online)
  2. Research report (Rand Corporation)
Alternative title
  1. Occupational wages in the United States ... supplemental tables
Subject
  1. United States. Department of Defense > Evaluation
  2. United States. Department of Defense
  3. Wage surveys > United States > Periodicals
  4. Wages > United States > Periodicals
  5. United States
  6. United States
  7. United States > Medical care
Contents
  1. Introduction -- OMB Task 1⁰́₄Missions and Outcomes -- OMB Task 2⁰́₄Performance -- OMB Task 3⁰́₄Funding -- Conclusions -- Appendix A: Documents Reviewed -- Appendix B: Mission Authorities -- Appendix C: DoD Biosurveillance Systems and Assets -- Appendix D: GEIS Network and Partners -- Appendix E: DMSS Data Feeds -- Appendix F: Biosurveillance Outputs.
Owning institution
  1. Harvard Library
Note
  1. Description based on: 1998; title from title screen (viewed Oct. 26, 2001).
  2. GPO Cataloging Record Distribution Program (CRDP).
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references (pages125-128).
Additional formats (note)
  1. Online version of print publication.
Funding (note)
  1. The research discribed in this report was sponsored by the United States Army under Contract No. W74V8H-06-C-0001.
System details (note)
  1. Mode of access: Internet at the BLS web site (PDF only). Address as of 10/26/01: http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ocs/compub.htm#National; current access available via PURL.
  2. System requirements: Adobe Acrobat software which is available for download.
Processing action (note)
  1. committed to retain