MODIFICATION
R -- Health Literacy Tool Shed
- Notice Date
- 4/17/2014
- Notice Type
- Modification/Amendment
- NAICS
- 541990
— All Other Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services
- Contracting Office
- Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine, 6707 Democracy Blvd., Suite 105, Bethesda, Maryland, 20894, United States
- ZIP Code
- 20894
- Solicitation Number
- RFQ_NIHLM2014124SRE
- Archive Date
- 5/15/2014
- Point of Contact
- Sheila R. Edmonds, Phone: 3014966546
- E-Mail Address
-
sheila.edmonds@nih.gov
(sheila.edmonds@nih.gov)
- Small Business Set-Aside
- N/A
- Description
- AMENDMENT #1: This amendment is to correct the following information in Solicitation RFQ NIHLM2014124SRE : 1) Responses must be received no later than 3:00 P.M. EST on Wednesday, April 30, 2014, and 2) inquiries shall be received by 12 NOON EST on Tuesday, April 23, 2014. **************************************************************** This is a revised synopsis/solicitation for previous combined synopsis/solicitation RFQ_NIHLM2014039SRE. This is a combined synopsis/solicitation for commercial items prepared in accordance with the format in Subpart 12.6, as supplemented with additional information included in this notice. This announcement constitutes the only solicitation; proposals are being requested and a written solicitation will not be issued. This solicitation is being issued as Request for Quotations (RFQ) NIHLM2014124SRE. The resultant order will be a firm-fixed price purchase order. In accordance with FAR Parts 12 and 13, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Library of Medicine (NLM) intends to procure professional services to develop and maintain a Health Literacy Tool Shed educational and outreach website to create a unique resource center to support health literacy researchers and enhance the quality of national and international health literacy research. This acquisition is Full and Open. The North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) Code is 541990-All Other Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services. This is not a Small Business Set-Aside. Background Health literacy has become a well-established area of study. The National Library of Medicine (NLM) has a health literacy working group that coordinates NLM's work with similar working groups administered by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The National Network of Libraries of Medicine (NN/LM) also has an active health literacy interest group among its membership. The Health Literacy Tool Shed, a one-stop (Internet-based) location, will create an arena where researchers can obtain many of the quantitative tools needed to conduct and improve the methodological quality of health literacy research. The Health Literacy Tool Shed represents a service that provides outreach to health literacy professionals. For the first time, researchers and practitioners will be able to find many of the available constructs and quantitative tools used to measure health literacy in clinical, public health, and health campaign intervention research. Although the project's beneficiaries are health literacy researchers and practitioners, the project is designed to create a needed educational resource. The Health Literacy Tool Shed will organize constructs, measures, and instruments that are currently scattered across an array of health literacy research. There is no current resource where practitioners and researchers can consult what health literacy measurement measures, constructs, and instruments are best suited to a planned project. Since there is no repository for researchers, clinicians, and practitioners to retrieve detailed information on health literacy assessment instruments, this foundational gap inhibits the field's development as a coherent body of knowledge and practice. The end of methodological fragmentation in the health literacy field (and the availability of a website to find the best instruments for specific projects) also will assist NLM's future health literacy research and help make NLM a leader in health literacy research and practice. The Health Literacy Tool Shed will be a unique educational resource. While this type of resource often is touted by health literacy researchers and practitioners, currently the proposed educational resource does not exist nor is a similar resource under construction elsewhere.   Purpose and Objectives This Health Literacy Tool Shed educational and outreach project creates a unique resource center to support health literacy researchers and enhance the quality of national and international health literacy research. While the project's beneficiaries are health literacy researchers and practitioners, the current project creates an educational resource that provides outreach to a research community as well as a topic of interest to the NLM. The project will create a one-stop website, where researchers can assess many of the quantitative tools needed to conduct and improve health literacy research. The proposed Health Literacy Tool Shed educational resource will provide a vital outreach service for the health literacy research community. For the first time, researchers and practitioners will be able to identify and assess many of the available constructs and quantitative measures used to assess health literacy in clinical, public health, and health campaign intervention research in one, accessible location. Although dozens of health literacy measurement tools have been introduced and the literature has proliferated, a core problem in health literacy outreach and intervention efforts is the uneven quality of methods used by health literacy assessment teams and a confusing array of constructs, measures, and instruments. Some examples of the current methodological confusion and fragmentation in health literacy research is found in Appendix A, which suggests there are at least fifteen (15) separate measures based on the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy. Appendix A also notes there are nine (9) different measures based in the Test of Functional Health Literacy (TOFHLA) as well as many other constructs and measures of aspects of health literacy. Despite the widespread availability of health literacy measurement tools, criticisms from independent reviewers reflect that health literacy research methodological flaws may stem from a lack of infrastructure to support health literacy researchers and practitioners. Since there is no repository for researchers, clinicians, and practitioners to retrieve detailed information about health literacy assessment constructs, measures, and instruments, the gap impedes the health literacy field's development into a more coherent body of knowledge and practice. The Health Literacy Tool Shed educational resource will create for the first time: 1) access to health literacy assessment tools; 2) a health literacy tool selection process for investigators; 3) an overview of researcher adherence to various health literacy instruments; and, 4) background information about a construct/measure's validity or empirical validation. The Health Literacy Tool Shed shall be a virtual indexing system for health literacy methods with specific information on the following: ●Administration instructions (how long it takes to administer, number of questions, languages, method of administration, etc.) ●Constructs measured (i.e. numeracy, word pronunciation, problem solving, general health maintenance, etc.) ●Links to the instruments (or information on how to obtain the instrument when the Contractor has not secured permission to post the instrument) and to validation articles ●Expert commentary on strengths and limitations and on how to select instruments in various research and practice contexts The Health Literacy Tool Shed shall also identify some gaps in the current array of health literacy instruments and provide a venue for users to discuss the development of further health literacy research assessment tools. In addition, the Health Literacy Tool Shed shall provide an excellent complement to NLM's Consumer Health Informatics Research Resource (chirr.nlm.nih.gov), which provides general information about common constructs used in consumer health informatics assessment, including health literacy. Mandatory Criteria 1)The Contractor must possess extensive academic knowledge and expertise in the field of health literacy research and extensive experience in health literacy practice in both health care delivery and public health. 2)The Contractor must display a track record of national and international leadership in evaluating health literacy research. 3)The Contractor's subject matter experts (health literacy researchers and practitioners) must possess a Ph.D. or M.D. degree and publish regularly in a refereed academic journal. Contractor Requirements Independently, and not as an agent of the Government, the Contractor shall furnish all necessary labor, materials, supplies, equipment, and services needed to complete this project. All work performed under this procurement shall be monitored by the NLM Contracting Officer's Representative (COR). General Contractor Tasks The Contractor shall provide an education resource that encompasses many of the existing research measures, constructs, and instruments listed in Appendix A. The Contractor shall create and host a website that provides interactive guidance to enhance the use of health literacy research constructs, measures, and instruments. The guidance shall include specific information such as: what the construct/measure/instrument's assess, the time to administer the construct/measure, the number of questions needed to assess the construct, links to articles regarding the instrument's validation, as well as expert commentary on what instrument best fits different health literacy research and practice contexts. The Contractor shall develop the project's educational and training materials in consultation with the NLM COR. The Contractor shall provide a brief report of the resource's development, diffusion, and possible expansion in a final executive summary to the NLM COR. The executive summary shall introduce the educational materials developed within the proposed contract and should assess user feedback and provide some suggestions for the further development/expansion of the resource. The Contractor shall obtain the approval and cooperation of health literacy researchers who have developed constructs and measures to display and assess these contributions. The approval and cooperation shall include copyright reproduction permission. The Contractor shall update the Health Literacy Tool Shed website as new developments warrant throughout the term of the contract. In consultation with the NLM COR, the Contractor shall develop and host the Health Literacy Tool Shed website. The Health Literacy Tool Shed shall provide user access to health literacy constructs, measures, and instruments. The website shall be an interactive website that focuses on (and explains the use of) health literacy measurement constructs, measures, and instruments. The website shall encourage discussion between developers of health literacy constructs, measures, and instruments, the actual experiences of website users, and the Contractor's staff. The Contractor's staff shall be health literacy domain experts with the knowledge and experience to curate, monitor, and contribute to the proposed Health Literacy Tool Shed website. The Health Literacy Tool Shed's materials shall be Section 508 compliant, and the written materials shall follow the Federal Government's ‘plain writing' principles. The Federal Government's ‘plain writing' principles are located at http://www.plainlanguage.gov/index.cfm. Prior to the expiration of the contract, the NLM will make a determination on the disposition of the Health Literacy Tool Shed educational website resource. In the event of a transfer to the NLM or a NLM designated website, the NLM will advise the Contractor prior to the end of the contract. The Contractor shall ensure the Health Literacy Tool Shed website is transferable to the NLM or a NLM designated website and will also be required to cooperate, as necessary, in such a transfer. The Contractor may be granted rights to administer the Health Literacy Tool Shed to the public at the Contractor's own expense after the expiration of the contract. The NLM will make the determination to grant the Contractor rights prior to the close of the contract. Additional Contractor Tasks: The Contractor shall complete the following tasks: ●Organize the development and implementation of the Health Literacy Tool Shed educational resource website ●Provide a website design consultant and secure a web domain. The website designer shall create the Health Literacy Tool Shed website and provide quarterly website maintenance which updates the Health Literacy Tool Shed use assessment ●Obtain permission, from the appropriate authority, to use, publicize, and disseminate copyrighted domain constructs, measures, tools and measurement validation articles on the Health Literacy Tool Shed website ●Identify and involve key stakeholders, or experts in health literacy research and practice to complete reviews of the materials developed for the Health Literacy Tool Shed website ●The Contractor shall invite the creators and authors of the featured health literacy measurements on the Health Literacy Tool Shed to review the information collected and provide feedback ●The previously identified key stakeholders, or experts in health literacy research and practice (as well as the Contractor) shall become active participants and interact with Health Literacy Tool Shed website users ●Open the Health Literacy Tool Shed website to health literacy researchers, practitioners and the public ●Prepare a final executive summary about the Health Literacy Tool Shed's development, diffusion, challenges and propose future plans for the website. The executive summary shall introduce the educational materials developed within the proposed contract and should assess user feedback and provide some suggestions for the further development/expansion of the resource. Option Year 1 A 12-month option period may be exercised for the Contractor to provide additional coverage for the expansion of the content that assesses health literacy constructs and metrics. The specific areas that may need expansion include the following: ●Administration instructions (how long it takes to administer, number of questions, languages, method of administration, etc.) ●Constructs measured (i.e. numeracy, word pronunciation, problem solving, general health maintenance, etc.) ●Links to the instruments (or information on how to obtain the instrument when the Contractor has not secured permission to post the instrument) and to validation articles ●Expert commentary on strengths and limitations and on how to select instruments in various research and practice contexts ●Identification of gaps in the current array of health literacy instruments Contractor Dissemination of Findings NLM shall have exclusive ownership of all deliverables and products developed under the resultant contract. However, at the end of the contract and based on the Contractor's findings during the period of performance of the contract, the Contractor may be granted the right to use, maintain, and augment the Health Literacy Tool Shed and the website produced under the contract, at the Contractor's expense, to conduct their own outreach and educational activities including but not limited to presentations, reports, or publications. Contract Deliverables ●Health Literacy Tool Shed-a one-stop (Internet-based) interactive educational resource ●Monthly progress reports of project's progress ●Final executive summary to include a brief report of the resource's development, diffusion, and possible expansion ●Website Administration Plan on how the Contractor will administer the Health Literacy Tool Shed should the NLM determine to grant rights to the Contractor to provide the educational resource to the public at the Contractor's own expense after the expiration of the contract Reporting requirements Monthly Progress Report-The Contractor shall provide monthly reports about the project's progress. These monthly progress reports shall be electronically submitted to the NLM designated COR via email by the 5th day of the following month. The monthly progress report should be a brief overview that outlines all progress in the past thirty (30) days and outlines anticipated progress during the next thirty (30) days. Executive Summary-The Contractor shall provide a final written executive summary to the NLM COR within thirty (30) days of completion of the proposed contract. The executive summary should be written in a Microsoft Word compatible format. The executive summary shall include a brief report of the resource's development, diffusion, and possible expansion. The executive summary shall introduce the educational materials developed within the proposed contract and should assess user feedback and provide some suggestions for the further development/expansion of the resource. Website Administration Plan-Sixty (60) days prior to the end of the contract, the Contractor may draft and submit a plan to the NLM COR on how it will administer the Health Literacy Tool Shed should the NLM determine to grant rights to the Contractor to provide the Health Literacy Tool Shed to the public at the Contractor's own expense after the expiration of the contract. Any Contractor proposal to be granted such rights will be solely reviewed and determined by the NLM. If the Contractor prepares a paper for refereed academic meetings or journals based on materials developed in conjunction with the contract, the Contractor is expected to cite the NLM contract. All instruments, publications, and presentations should be section 508 complaint. The Contractor shall deposit any future publications resulting from this work in PubMed Central (PMC) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/. Period of Performance: The period of performance shall be a 12-month base period with one (1) additional 12-month option period. Requirement to Notify Government of Proprietary Work Dependencies Offerors are required to notify the Government in writing of any dependencies of the deliverables under this contract on proprietary, copyrights, or patented work that potentially inhibits, restricts, or requires permission for the dissemination of the deliverables to the public, other governmental agencies or research groups, or any other parties whatsoever. Travel Use of contract funds for travel is prohibited.   Appendix A Some currently utilized health literacy constructs/measures that may be included in the Health Literacy Tool Shed: REALM-based measures: Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine (128 words); Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine (66 words); Turkish REALM, REALM short form (REALM-SF; seven words), REALM Short form (8 words), Hong Kong Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Dentistry (HKREALD-30), Medical Term Recognition Test (METER), Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Genetics (REAL-G), Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Vascular Surgery (REALM-VS), Short Assessment of Health Literacy - Spanish and English (SAHL-S&E), Short Assessment of Health Literacy for Spanish-speaking Adults (SAHLSA-50), REALM-Teen, Test of Health Literacy in Dentistry (REALD-99), REALD-30, Validation of REALM in an UK population with Coronary Health Disease. TOFHLA-based measures: Functional Health Literacy Tests (FHLTs), Health Literacy Test for Singapore (HLTS), Hebrew Health Literacy Test (HHLT), Literacy Measure of Patients with HIV, Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (S-TOFHLA), Test of Functional Health Literacy in Dentistry (TOFLiD), Validation of a German, Italian, and French version of the S-TOFHLA to be used in Switzerland and neighboring nations, TOFHLA (in Serbian), Computerized Validated Version of the S-THFHLA Numeracy measures: Diabetes Numeracy Test (DNT), Diabetes Numeracy Test short version (DNT-15), Numeracy Understanding in Medicine Instrument (GHNT), Asthma Numeracy Questionnaire (ANQ). General Literacy assessments: PIAT-R, WRAT-R, SORT, Functional Health Literacy Tests (FHLTs), Spanish Parental Health Literacy Activities Test (PHLAT), Spanish Parental Health Literacy Activities Test short version (PHLAT-8), Health Literacy Assessment Test using Talking Touchscreen Technology (Health LiTT), Talking Touchscreen (TT), Dutch Translation of Health Literacy Scales from Ishikawa et. al., Health Literacy Skills Instrument (HSLI), Korean Health Literacy Scale (KHLS), HBP Health Literacy Scale (HBP-HLS), All Aspects of Health Literacy Scale (AAHLS), Health Literacy Management Scale (HeLMS), Medication Literacy Assessment in Spanish and English (MedLItR xSE), Validation of Self-reported Health Literacy Questions among Diverse England and Spanish-speaking Populations, Evaluate the Validity of Cancer Message Literacy Test-Listening (CMLG-Listening), Cancer Message Literacy Test-Reading (CMLT-reading). Subjective measures of health literacy: Single Item Literacy Screener (SILS), Chew Questions Validated against the REALM and TOFHLA, Subjective Numeracy Scale (SNS) NVS type assessments: Newest Vital Signs Measure (NVS), Food Label Literacy for Applied Nutrition Knowledge Questionnaire (FLLANK), Turkish NVS SECTION 508 COMPLIANCE In accordance with FAR 39.2, Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act is implemented in this task order. Pursuant to Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794d), as amended by the Workforce Investment Act of 1998, all electronic and information technology (EIT) products and services developed, acquired, maintained, and/or used under this contract/order must comply with the "Electronic and Information Technology Accessibility Provisions" set forth by the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board (also referred to as the "Access Board") in 36 CFR part 1194. Information about Section 508 provisions is available at http://www.hhs.gov/od. Mandatory Criteria Firms that do not complete and return the required Section 508 documentation with proposals will be considered non-responsive. The Section 508 mandatory criterion will be non-point scored. Section 508 Evaluation Factors Responses to this solicitation will only be considered for award after it has been determined that the proposal adequately addresses the requirements for Section 508. Only proposals which contain adequate information to document their responsiveness to the Section 508 requirements (e.g. a completed GPAT, VPAT or equivalent and supporting documentation) will be eligible for any additional merit consideration. Section 508 Acceptance Criteria The "Health Literacy Tool Shed" delivered as a result of this solicitation will be accepted based in part on satisfaction of identified Section 508 requirements for accessibility. The "Health Literacy Tool Shed" delivered must include a completed GPAT, a sample of which is included as a part of this solicitation. TECHNICAL EVALUATION FACTORS Technical factors are of paramount consideration in the award of the purchase order; however, price is also important to the overall award decision. All evaluation factors other than price, when combined, are significantly more important than cost. The Government can make tradeoffs among price and technical factors in determining which Offerer provides the best value by awarding to other than the lowest price Offerer or other than the highest technically rated Offerer. Offerers are advised that award will be made to that Offerer whose quote provides the best overall value to the Government. Technical Evaluation Criteria (Total 100 Points) In determining which quote represents the best value and results in the lowest overall price alternative (considering price, special features, administrative costs, etc.) to meet the Government's needs, the Government shall evaluate quotes using the following technical evaluation criteria, which are listed in the order of relative importance with weights assigned for evaluation processes: Technical Approach/Understanding of Requirement (40 Points) ●Quality and clarity of the methodological approach involved in accomplishing the objectives of the statement of work to coordinate the overall project and assist in providing the requested one-stop (Internet based) educational and outreach resource ●Evidence of ability to accomplish the specific tasks described in the statement of work. ●Understanding of the Government's intent for this procurement and the feasibility of approach to address its overall goals ●Demonstrate evidence of Contractor's expertise and capability to select high quality health literacy instruments from diverse research and practice contexts ●Demonstrate evidence of Contractor's expertise and capability to discern and critique the reliability and validity of current health literacy measures ●Demonstrate evidence of Contractor's expertise and capability to identify and critique the research constructs frequently used within health literacy research and practice Personnel/Staff Qualifications (30 Points) ●Proposed personnel/staff must demonstrate a history of working directly with health literacy researchers and practitioners around the world who work in public health, medical practice, health care organizational, and university settings ●Proposed personnel/staff must demonstrate extensive experience and familiarity with diverse health literacy assessment tools ●Proposed personnel/staff must possess a M.D., or Ph.D. degrees, and several years of health literacy research experience ●Proposed personnel/staff must demonstrate several, recent years of national and international leadership in health literacy research ●Proposed personnel/staff must demonstrate experience in developing health care websites and/or websites that provide public access to evidence-based health information ●Proposed personnel/staff must demonstrate a track record of refereed publications about health literacy Organizational Capabilities/Experience (30 Points) ●Demonstrate evidence of Contractor's extensive academic expertise in the field of health literacy research and extensive experience in health literacy practice in both health care delivery and public health ●Demonstrate evidence of Contractor's experience with similar projects that focus on health literacy research and/or practice ●Demonstrate evidence of Contractor's expertise and capability to obtain copyright permission in order to provide user access to health literacy constructs, measures, tools, and instruments ●Demonstrate evidence of Contractor's experience, expertise, and capability to provide information about health literacy instruments and research that is accessible to a diverse range of health care practitioners and health literacy researchers, including higher education students Section 508 Compliance (0 Points) •Firms that do not complete and return the required Section 508 documentation with proposals will be considered non-responsive. The Section 508 mandatory criterion will be non-point scored. •Responses to this solicitation will only be considered for award after it has been determined that the proposal adequately addresses the requirements for Section 508. Only proposals which contain adequate information to document their responsiveness to the Section 508 requirements (e.g. a completed GPAT, VPAT or equivalent and supporting documentation) will be eligible for any additional merit consideration. FEDERAL ACQUISITION REQULATION (FAR) CLAUSES The following provisions and clauses apply to this acquisition and are incorporated by reference. Full text may be found at https://www.acquisition.gov/Far FAR 52.212-1 Instructions to Offerors-Commercial Items FAR 52.212-2 Evaluation-Commercial Items FAR 52.212-3 Offeror Representations and Certifications-Commercial Items FAR 52.212-4 Contract Terms and Conditions-Commercial Items FAR 52.212-5 Contract Terms and Conditions Required to Implement Statutes and Executive orders FAR 52.227-14, Rights in Data - General All interested parties shall submit electronic responses to Sheila Edmonds at sheila.edmonds@nih.gov. Responses must be received no later than 3:00 P.M. EST on Wednesday, April 30, 2014 and shall not exceed 10 single-sided pages in length, exclusive of the cover page and letter, table of contents, appendices, and resumes. Please reference solicitation number RFQ-NIHLM2014124/SRE on all correspondence to this notice. Inquiries regarding this notice shall be submitted electronically to sheila.edmonds@nih.gov and shall be received by 12 NOON EST on Tuesday, April 23, 2014. The proposal submitted in response to this RFQ shall be prepared in two (2) parts and be clearly identified as a "Technical Proposal" and "Business Proposal." Proposals shall be in sufficient detail to permit proper evaluation, negotiation and/or acceptance thereof. The technical proposal must not contain reference to price; however, resource information (such as data concerning labor hours and categories, materials, subcontracts, etc.) must be contained in the technical proposal so that the Contractor's understanding of the Statement of Work may be evaluated. In order to receive an award, Contractors must have valid registration and certification in the Central Contractor Registration (CCR) and the Online Representations and Certifications Application (ORCA) through the System of Award Management (SAM) www.sam.gov.
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