U.S. Department of Health & Human Services |
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Tuesday, Sept. 21, 1999 |
Contact: | CDC Press Office (404) 639-3286 |
Six systems were identified for end-to-end testing to ensure public confidence. Three of the systems were disease surveillance and reporting systems and the other three support financial payment information.
Testing of these systems were performed during May and July and all systems tested successfully. An independent team observed the testing and verified the results.
"We coordinated testing with CDC partners for data being received as well as for reports and data being sent," said James Seligman, Director, Information Resources Management Office, "and we are confident that there is low risk of Y2K failures associated with data exchanges in the new millennium for the agency."
To accomplish this end-to-end testing, CDC carefully reviewed the inventory of information systems in the context of: 1) systems with external data exchanges, 2) disease surveillance systems that are time-sensitive, and 3) other systems that support major financial payments and/or other critical resources.
In March, the President's Council for Y2K Conversion and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) charged federal agencies to ensure that "high impact" federal programs work end-to-end into the new millennium. These systems must function as designed including all data exchanges and processes with private entities, local and state governments, and other federal agencies.
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