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Office on Smoking and Health (OSH)

Organization


Organizational Chart

OSH has a staff of about 145 people and an annual budget of approximately $100 million. Every year OSH distributes about 75 percent of these funds extramurally to support tobacco control initiatives.

OSH comprises seven major organizational units: the Office of the Director; Policy, Planning, and Coordination Unit; Resource Management Unit; Global Tobacco Control Unit; Epidemiology Branch; Health Communications Branch; and Program Services Branch.

Office of the Director Global Tobacco Control Unit Policy, Planning, and Coordination Unit Health Communications Branch Resource Management Unit Program Services Branch Epidemiology Branch OSH Organizational Chart

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Office of the Director

  • Matthew T. McKenna, M.D., M.P.H., Director
  • Lorna English, M.S., Deputy Director
  • Terry Pechacek, Ph.D., Associate Director for Science
  • Bridgette Garrett, Ph.D., Advisor for Health Disparities
  • Patty McLean, MEd., Advisor for Strategic and Organization Development

Policy, Planning, and Coordination Unit

  • Sherrill Brady, B.S.N., Acting Associate Director
  • Gabbi Promoff, M.A., Acting Team Lead, Planning Team (ATL)
  • Simon McNabb, B.A. Senior Policy Advisor (DC)

Resource Management Unit

  • Cynthia N. Johnson, Administrative Officer

Global Tobacco Control Unit

  • Samira Asma, D.D.S., M.P.H., Associate Director
  • Kristen McCall, M.P.A., Acting Deputy Director

Health Communications Branch

  • Dana Shelton, M.P.H., Acting Branch Chief
  • Steve DePaul, B.A., Deputy Branch Chief
  • Vacant, Senior Scientific Advisor
  • Patti, Seikus, M.P.H., Team Lead, Information Resources
  • Maria Rivera-Trudeau, M.B.A., Team Lead, Development/Implementation

Epidemiology Branch

  • Ralph Carabello, Ph.D., Branch Chief
  • Wayne Stephens, Ph.D., Deputy Branch Chief
  • Ann Malarcher, Ph.D., Senior Scientific Advisor
  • Martha Engstrom, M.S., Team Lead, Evaluation
  • Shanta Dube, Ph.D., Team Lead, Analytic Research & Surveillance
  • Patricia Richter, Ph.D., Team Lead, Research Development

Program Services Branch

  • Brick Lancaster, M.A., CHES, Branch Chief
  • Chris Benjamin, J.D., M.P.A., Deputy Branch Chief
  • Monica Eischen, B.S., Team Lead, Team A
  • Kevin Collins, Ph.D., Team Lead, Team B

Branches and Units

Office of the Director

The Office of the Director is responsible for providing broad leadership and direction for all scientific, policy, and programmatic issues related to tobacco control and use prevention.

The Associate Director for Science provides broad scientific direction to OSH programs and supervises the development of Surgeon General's reports on smoking and health.

The Office of the Director houses the following units: Policy, Planning, and Coordination Unit; Resource Management Unit; and Global Tobacco Control Unit.


Policy, Planning, and Coordination Unit

The Policy, Planning, and Coordination Unit, within the Office of the Director, coordinates policy and legislative activities for OSH.  The unit's functions include—

Resource Management Unit

Overview

The Resource Management Unit is responsible for managing the internal resources of OSH and the day-to-day administrative operations related to human resources, financial management, travel, procurement, facilities, and property management.

Mission, Goals, and Objectives

The Resource Management Unit, which is within the Office of the Director, coordinates support services that allow OSH to function smoothly.  The unit’s functions include—

Global Tobacco Control Unit

Overview

Responsible for fostering global tobacco control initiatives by expanding the science base through surveillance and research, building capacity, promoting information exchange, and sharing expertise.

Mission, Goals, and Objectives

The objectives for the Global Tobacco Control Unit are to—

To achieve these objectives, the Global Tobacco Control Unit works through bilateral or multilateral partnerships and with health ministries and international agencies throughout the world.

Surveillance

The Global Tobacco Control Unit collaborates with the World Health Organization (WHO) and WHO regional offices on a global tobacco surveillance system (GTSS), which currently comprises three major activities: the Global Youth Tobacco Survey (GYTS), the Global School Personnel Survey (GSPS), and the Global Health Professions Student Survey (GHPSS).

The three components of GTSS uses consistent survey designs and data-processing methodologies. This consistency allows changes to be monitored over time and program effects to be measured in a standardized way across the countries, regions, and the world.

GTSS is a successful example of monitoring tobacco use among youth and selected adult populations. The GTSS provides significant data to inform comprehensive global health promotion approaches to tobacco use prevention and control.

Research

The Global Tobacco Control Unit collaborates with other executive agencies to produce country reports, which document the national tobacco situation and control measures.

The Global Tobacco Control Unit also collaborates with partners to develop a series of published reports on products such as bidis, kreteks, and water pipes in order to address the lack of information available on novel tobacco products.

Partnerships

The Global Tobacco Control Unit partners with governments and an array of international agencies and institutions to leverage resources for mutually shared objectives to promote comprehensive tobacco prevention and control programs and policies. Partners include WHO headquarters and its regional offices—specifically, the African Regional Office (AFR), Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMR), European Regional Office (EUR), Region of the Americas (AMR), Southeast Asia Regional Office (SEAR), and Western Pacific Regional Offices (WPR)—as well as the World Bank, the International Union for Health Promotion and Education, the International Union for Cancer Control, the U.S. National Cancer Institute, and the Canadian Public Health Association. CDC is also a WHO Collaborating Center on Global Tobacco Control and works with Mexico through the U.S.–Mexico Binational Commission.


Health Communications Branch

Overview

The Health Communications Branch is responsible for (a) keeping the public, policy makers, health professionals, and partners informed of developments and initiatives related to tobacco control and (b) promoting positive changes regarding health behaviors, practices, and policies.

Mission, Goals, and Objectives

The Health Communications Branch serves as a primary resource for tobacco and health information.  The branch develops and distributes information about tobacco and health to the public, professionals, various branches of government, and other interested groups nationwide using a wide array of formats and media channels.  Communication campaigns and activities include—

Epidemiology Branch

Overview

The Epidemiology Branch is responsible for conducting and coordinating research, surveillance, and evaluation activities related to the health effects of tobacco use. The branch provides technical assistance to states, territories, national networks, and Tribal Support Centers on surveillance and evaluation methods, including working with programs to conduct the Youth Tobacco Survey (YTS) and Adult Tobacco Survey (ATS).

Mission, Goals, and Objectives

The Epidemiology Branch mission is to advance the science base of tobacco control through a multidisciplinary program of applied research, surveillance, and evaluation. The Epidemiology Branch goal is to reduce the burden of disease through the synthesis and translation of research into practice and the dissemination of scientific findings.

Surveillance

The Epidemiology Branch assesses, improves and expands surveillance at the international, national, state, and local levels; the branch also synthesizes, translates and disseminates the results.

Research

The Epidemiology Branch assesses, improves and expands applied research on tobacco and tobacco control; the branch also synthesizes, translates and disseminates the results.

Evaluation

The Epidemiology Branch assesses, improves and expands evaluation of tobacco control programs at the international, national, state, and local levels; the branch also synthesizes, translates and disseminates the results.

Strategies

The Epidemiology Branch—

Program Services Branch

Overview

The Program Services Branch is responsible for (a) directing and managing the National Tobacco Control Program (NTCP) and other extramural activities to address tobacco use and (b) providing and supporting training and technical assistance to 50 states, the District of Columbia, seven U.S. territories, eight national networks, and seven tribal support centers. OSH participated in CDC's grant consolidation and streamlining effort by including NTCP funding as a component of the Chronic Disease and Health Promotion program announcement. This tobacco component emphasizes policy-focused interventions and contains 11 performance measures that will help states achieve short-term, intermediate, and long-term outcomes. The program also encourages states to use key indicators to measure progress toward achieving the goals outlined in their annual action plans.

Mission, Goals, and Objectives

The mission of the Program Services Branch is to expand and enhance the implementation of effective tobacco use prevention and control interventions.  The branch fulfills this mission by working with state health departments, national organizations, and national and federal partners to build capacity to support successful interventions to reduce and prevent tobacco use.  The branch’s responsibilities include—

 

Page last modified 02/09/2009