NU50CK000638
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
Coordinated training and evaluation of professionals and pre-service students to achieve an integrated workforce to mitigate community vector-borne disease risks in the Gulf Coast region.
Vector-borne diseases have increased in the past two decades at rates beyond what current infrastructure can manage. In order to protect public health, we must increase and strengthen our front line defenses, which are mosquito abatement districts and public health workers. This is particularly important in the Gulf South because of its intersection of health and economic disparities with a climate that is susceptible to vectors and pathogens.
Our proposal, entitled "Coordinated Training and Evaluation of Pest Management, Vector Control Districts, Public Health, Sanitary, and Animal Health Professionals in these Fields to Achieve an Integrated Workforce to Mitigate Community Vector-Borne Disease Risk in the Gulf Coast Region," will address critical gaps in information exchange, resources, infrastructure, evaluation methods, and training standards. The strategies outlined will address these gaps by creating education, evaluation, and partnership sustainability tools that will last beyond the scope and timeline of this proposal.
Specifically, we will train students and professionals. We will create and test educational content that highlights procedural best practices. The core curriculum will be standardized and replicated across the region, and will be offered to students, working professionals, and trainees across audiences with diverse backgrounds. Educational programming can be evaluated using standardized measurement tools.
We will implement a training system with four tiers: awareness, beginner, intermediate, and expert. The training will be centered around regional hubs that offer in-person and virtual modules to increase reach. The educational offerings will be translated into Spanish and other major languages to reach the full extent of the population in the Gulf Coast. We will also create a career exploration program to target college-level students, and our academic partners will incorporate material and guest lecturers into existing public health courses and seminar classes.
We will then evaluate the impact and effectiveness of VBD programs. We will form a working group to compile a collection of relevant information that defines current VBD preparedness, monitoring, and response capacity. The group will regularly meet to share ideas, information, relevant resources, and training materials. The group will construct a needs assessment model built on previous national and regional assessments to better understand vector control activities, knowledge gaps, and challenges to implementation in the Gulf South. We will determine best practices for our region as guided by needs assessment and survey results.
Finally, we will build a network of relevant stakeholders and partners to achieve these goals. This working group will hold regular meetings to share ideas and work to improve vector control practices. We will create mechanisms for sustainability of partnerships and infrastructure to ensure continued cooperation and information sharing among stakeholders and partners. All materials and other relevant products generated by the actions in this proposal will be housed in a centralized online platform with continued access beyond the project timeline.
The outcomes of this proposal will be achieved because of the strength of our collaborations across academia, government, national associations, private industry, and the health and veterinary fields, as these organizations already have the infrastructure in place and experience required to teach and mentor the future VBD workforce. This project will break down silos and promote interdisciplinary training through regional and national cooperation that is desperately needed to build resiliency and protect people and animals from VBDS.
Vector-borne diseases have increased in the past two decades at rates beyond what current infrastructure can manage. In order to protect public health, we must increase and strengthen our front line defenses, which are mosquito abatement districts and public health workers. This is particularly important in the Gulf South because of its intersection of health and economic disparities with a climate that is susceptible to vectors and pathogens.
Our proposal, entitled "Coordinated Training and Evaluation of Pest Management, Vector Control Districts, Public Health, Sanitary, and Animal Health Professionals in these Fields to Achieve an Integrated Workforce to Mitigate Community Vector-Borne Disease Risk in the Gulf Coast Region," will address critical gaps in information exchange, resources, infrastructure, evaluation methods, and training standards. The strategies outlined will address these gaps by creating education, evaluation, and partnership sustainability tools that will last beyond the scope and timeline of this proposal.
Specifically, we will train students and professionals. We will create and test educational content that highlights procedural best practices. The core curriculum will be standardized and replicated across the region, and will be offered to students, working professionals, and trainees across audiences with diverse backgrounds. Educational programming can be evaluated using standardized measurement tools.
We will implement a training system with four tiers: awareness, beginner, intermediate, and expert. The training will be centered around regional hubs that offer in-person and virtual modules to increase reach. The educational offerings will be translated into Spanish and other major languages to reach the full extent of the population in the Gulf Coast. We will also create a career exploration program to target college-level students, and our academic partners will incorporate material and guest lecturers into existing public health courses and seminar classes.
We will then evaluate the impact and effectiveness of VBD programs. We will form a working group to compile a collection of relevant information that defines current VBD preparedness, monitoring, and response capacity. The group will regularly meet to share ideas, information, relevant resources, and training materials. The group will construct a needs assessment model built on previous national and regional assessments to better understand vector control activities, knowledge gaps, and challenges to implementation in the Gulf South. We will determine best practices for our region as guided by needs assessment and survey results.
Finally, we will build a network of relevant stakeholders and partners to achieve these goals. This working group will hold regular meetings to share ideas and work to improve vector control practices. We will create mechanisms for sustainability of partnerships and infrastructure to ensure continued cooperation and information sharing among stakeholders and partners. All materials and other relevant products generated by the actions in this proposal will be housed in a centralized online platform with continued access beyond the project timeline.
The outcomes of this proposal will be achieved because of the strength of our collaborations across academia, government, national associations, private industry, and the health and veterinary fields, as these organizations already have the infrastructure in place and experience required to teach and mentor the future VBD workforce. This project will break down silos and promote interdisciplinary training through regional and national cooperation that is desperately needed to build resiliency and protect people and animals from VBDS.
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Place of Performance
Louisiana
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 188% from $1,643,463 to $4,733,463.
City Of New Orleans was awarded
Integrated Workforce for VBD Risk in Gulf Coast
Cooperative Agreement NU50CK000638
worth $4,733,463
from Center For Surveillance, Epidemiology, And Laboratory Services in July 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Louisiana United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.283 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Investigations and Technical Assistance.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity Strengthening Training, Evaluation, and Partnerships in the Prevention and Control of Vector-Borne Diseases.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 11/20/25
Period of Performance
7/1/23
Start Date
6/30/28
End Date
Funding Split
$4.7M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.7M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to NU50CK000638
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
NU50CK000638
SAI Number
NU50CK000638-855236954
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
City Or Township Government
Awarding Office
75CDC1 CDC Office of Financial Resources
Funding Office
75CPN0 CDC CENTER FOR SURVEILLANCE, EPIDEMIOLOGY, AND LABORATORY SERVICES
Awardee UEI
S1DGEN9NBKE3
Awardee CAGE
37FZ8
Performance District
LA-90
Senators
Bill Cassidy
John Kennedy
John Kennedy
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health and Human Services (075-0949) | Health care services | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,643,463 | 100% |
Modified: 11/20/25