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MTEC Solicitation Summary: National Disaster Medical Systems (NDMS) – Pilot Site Projects

Agency: DEPT OF DEFENSE
Level of Government: Federal
Category:
  • A - Research and development
Opps ID: NBD00159333018664221
Posted Date: Oct 18, 2022
Due Date: Nov 14, 2022
Solicitation No: MTEC-23-01-NDMS-PSP
Source: https://sam.gov/opp/e23b90f7ea...
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MTEC Solicitation Summary: National Disaster Medical Systems (NDMS) – Pilot Site Projects
Active
Contract Opportunity
Notice ID
MTEC-23-01-NDMS-PSP
Related Notice
Department/Ind. Agency
DEPT OF DEFENSE
Sub-tier
DEPT OF THE ARMY
Office
W4PZ USA MED RSCH ACQUIS ACT
General Information
  • Contract Opportunity Type: Special Notice (Original)
  • All Dates/Times are: (UTC-04:00) EASTERN STANDARD TIME, NEW YORK, USA
  • Original Published Date: Oct 18, 2022 11:57 am EDT
  • Original Response Date: Nov 14, 2022 12:00 pm EST
  • Inactive Policy: 15 days after response date
  • Original Inactive Date:
  • Initiative:
    • None
Classification
  • Original Set Aside:
  • Product Service Code: AN43 - Health R&D Services; Health Care - Other; Experimental Development
  • NAICS Code:
  • Place of Performance:
    Frederick , MD 21702
    USA
Description

The Medical Technology Enterprise Consortium (MTEC) is excited to post this summary announcement for a Request for Project Proposals (RPP) for an Other Transaction for prototype project focused on strengthening the capabilities of the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) to care for our Nation’s combat casualties by increasing medical surge capabilities and capacities at five regional sites. Under this new RPP, the Government is soliciting proposals from local healthcare facilities, academic institutions, and professional entities with experience working in or supporting the healthcare industry to propose and execute Pilot Site Projects. These projects will leverage a collaborative network of federal and civilian NDMS partners who support the execution and implementation of the individual projects. Under this new RPP, Pilot resources will be aimed at developing and fielding civilian NDMS partner-led projects, which include conducting further NDMS related studies, systematically implementing recommended changes, measuring intervention outcomes, and iteratively making improvements to optimize Pilot performance at the five sites. Through these partner-led projects, the Pilot aims to strengthen NDMS capacity, capability, and interoperability at each site. As a result, the Pilot will move closer to accomplishing its partner-based, outcome-focused mission.





As stated at the end of this announcement, the full RPP is posted to the MTEC website (https://www.mtec-sc.org/solicitations/); this notice is intended only to notify interested parties of the available solicitation.





Background:



In accordance with the Fiscal Year (FY)2020 and FY21 National Defense Authorization Acts (NDAA), the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) Pilot Program commenced on 30 September 2021. The Pilot’s intent is to increase medical surge capabilities and capacities to care for our Nation’s combat casualties by strengthening interoperable NDMS partnerships at five Pilot sites. As directed by the FY21 NDAA, the Pilot is a collaboration between the Secretary of Defense and the Secretaries of Veteran Affairs, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, and Transportation. These agencies are supporting the Pilot in its five sites: Washington, DC/National Capital Region; San Antonio, TX; Sacramento, CA; Omaha, NE; and Denver, CO. The Pilot was preceded by the Military-Civilian NDMS Interoperability Study (MCNIS). This study was the Pilot’s first phase. It created the partnerships and data-driven foundation for Pilot implementation (Phase II).





Over the first year of the Pilot implementation (Phase II), the collaborative Pilot team (consisting of two complementary components: the Operational Research and Integration Office-National Center for Disaster Medicine and Public Health (ORION) and the Field Implementation Team (FIT)) built on the MCNIS accomplishments and established the Pilot’s initial plans, metrics, and operational framework. This work was accomplished in collaboration with Federal agency partners at the strategic level and with both government and private sector partners at the local Pilot-site level.





During Year 2 of Phase II, in addition to Field Implementation Teams (FIT) supported efforts, Pilot resources will be aimed at developing and fielding civilian NDMS partner-led projects at the Pilot sites. This is a significant change from Year 1. In Year 1, through the prototype project previously awarded through MTEC resulting from Request for Project Proposals (RPP) MTEC-21-11-NDMS RPP (issued on April 23, 2021), the Pilot established relationships with site partners and used those partnerships to guide understanding, planning, and operational efforts. In Year 2, the Pilot seeks to develop partner-“owned” and led projects as described in the below technical requirements of this new RPP.





Solution Requirements:



It is anticipated that one or more opportunities will be funded and implemented as partner-led projects at each of the identified five sites (Washington, DC/National Capital Region; San Antonio, TX; Sacramento, CA; Omaha, NE; and Denver, CO). The Operational Research and Integration Office-National Center for Disaster Medicine and Public Health (ORION) will provide strategic direction and oversight to these partner-led projects to ensure the work is appropriately coordinated with Federal partners and integrated across the Pilot’s lines of effort. These partner-led projects will test their proposed solutions regionally and, in turn, the Pilot staff will evaluate the applicability of the projects to strengthen NDMS capacity, capability, and interoperability across the larger NDMS network. The National Center for Disaster Medicine and Public Health (NCDMPH) has identified seven (7) Focus Areas for funding site specific improvement projects under the NDMS Pilot Program.





FOCUS AREA #1: MEDICAL SURGE STAFFING



There is a national shortage of healthcare workers in the U.S. and the COVID-19 pandemic has increased the number of healthcare workers leaving their professions. Several states identified innovative ways to help share staff during the pandemic and their experience may serve as a best practices model for other states. During a national or regional medical surge to support combat casualties from an overseas contingency, the Department of Defense (DOD) and their NDMS definitive care partners will need to utilize innovative solutions to increase the number of staffed beds across the country.





FOCUS AREA #2: POST-ACUTE CARE COORDINATION



The NDMS definitive care network does not formally include post-acute providers such as skilled nursing, rehabilitation, behavioral health, long-term care and home health services. These providers do not routinely participate in regional NDMS exercises or planning events. However, a majority of NDMS stakeholders believe these providers can and should play an important role in supporting the expanded distribution of patients across the continuum of care during a regional or national NDMS activation for an overseas wartime contingency. The role of post-acute care facilities may include caring for patients as a result of bed-decompression at acute care facilities OR directly receiving and caring for lower acuity military patients returning from the combat area.





FOCUS AREA #3: REGIONAL PATIENT REGULATING & PATIENT TRANSFER MANAGEMENT



Nationally, many regions use a single healthcare or public health entity to manage patient transfers between different healthcare facilities. One of the benefits is the Federal Coordinating Center (FCC) Coordinators have a single point of contact to regulate patients across their Patient Reception Area (PRA).





FOCUS AREA #4: STATE MEDICAL SURGE & NDMS INTEGRATION



During the first year of Pilot implementation, several Pilot sites identified the need to improve the integration of local and state level patient movement related operations and processes with their corresponding federal partners and operations during an NDMS activation. This focus area promotes improved collaboration and integration of state entities with their local health jurisdictions and the relevant Federal agency partners during an NDMS activation.





FOCUS AREA #5: NDMS MEDICAL SURGE TRAINING AND EDUCATION FOR DEFINITIVE CARE PARTNERS



Based on MCNIS and the Pilot’s first year, we consistently found NDMS partners had unclear and at times conflicting understanding of associated NDMS roles, responsibilities, plans, and operations. There are multiple ways to educate and train partners on local medical surge plans. Enhanced educational materials and training platforms may improve the response to medical surge events.





FOCUS AREA #6: NATIONAL EMERGENCY MEDICAL SYSTEM (EMS) CAPABILITY AND CAPACITY



Movement of patients within the United States after transportation from an overseas conflict has been identified as a critical issue to improve the NDMS definitive care component. Concerns have been raised about local capabilities to transport large numbers of patients from FCC PRAs to an appropriate level of definitive healthcare, as well as the capability to move patients across a region, state, or the nation in a ‘hub and spoke’ model to equitably and efficiently distribute a large number of patients.





FOCUS AREA #7: ECONOMIC MODELING



The ability of private and academic healthcare systems to treat a large number of critically ill and injured patients during a large-scale crisis is complicated by their need to remain financially solvent and their dependency on high-value/high- margin care. During the COVID-19 pandemic, civilian healthcare systems required federal bailout funding to offset the large financial shortfalls incurred by canceling elective care and surgery and treating high volumes of COVID-19 patients.





As further detailed the RPP, any resultant awards may require the collaboration, support, and/or sharing of information with other MTEC members (and their lower tier awardees) currently performing under NDMS Research Project Awards. Furthermore, coordination (e.g., via attendance and participation in coordination meetings) among the Offerors selected for award and/or various stakeholders may also be required.





NOTE: Submission Guidance



To meet the intent of this RPP, each “Enhanced White Paper” proposal shall specifically address at least one of the seven Focus Areas. Offerors are not limited to a single submission but rather are encouraged to propose all possible solutions for Government evaluation. While projects may focus on a specific region’s situation and needs, they should ideally be useful for other NDMS regions nationally.



See the “Acquisition Approach” section below for more details on the proposal submission requirements. Proposed prototype projects should not be exploratory in nature and do require a foundation of preliminary data.





Potential Follow-On Tasks:



There is potential for award of one or more follow-on tasks based on the success of any resultant Research Project Award(s) (subject to change depending upon Government review of work completed). Note that any potential follow on work is expected to be awarded non-competitively to resultant project awardee(s), potentially as an addition of a new subcontractor(s). Such follow-on work may include (but is not limited to) the following:




  • Continuation of Phase II into Years 3 – 5, potentially with additional sub-studies;




  • Expansion of the program into a Phase III, which will increase the number of sites participating in the Pilot and provide comprehensive recommendations for the entire NDMS.





POTENTIAL FUNDING AVAILABILITY AND PERIOD OF PERFORMANCE:



A proposed budget and Period of Performance (PoP) should be commensurate with the nature, scope and complexity of the proposed research. For information purposes, the U.S. Government (USG) Department of Defense (DoD) Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) anticipates that the size of resulting awards will value approximately



$1 million (M) per regional site in Fiscal Year 2023 (FY23) for this program, although variability in the number and scope of proposed research projects per site may result in some sites being allocated greater funding than others. Offerors are encouraged to scope out their budgets in alignment with major deliverables of the proposed work so that large budgets are easier to evaluate and the Sponsor can more easily allocate available funding. The funding estimated for this RPP is approximate and subject to realignment. Award and funding from the Government is contingent upon the availability of federal funds for this program. Additionally, if funding is available after evaluation of all proposals received under this RPP, the Government may issue a subsequent RPP including all aspects or only a portion of those contained within this RPP to solicit for additional site projects.





MTEC expects to make multiple awards to qualified Offerors in FY23 to accomplish the scope of work.





The Period of Performance (PoP) is not to exceed 12 months, as this solicitation is focused on proposals that offer near- term solutions to immediately improve the NDMS, which can be completed within the specified PoP. However, as the Pilot Implementation will be conducted through Fiscal Year 2026, as directed by the NDAA, any resulting award(s) may be modified to extend the PoP and add additional work to further support the overall Phase II activities. Such modifications would be awarded non-competitively.





ACQUISITION APPROACH:



This RPP will be conducted using the Enhanced White Paper approach. In Stage 1, Offerors are invited to submit Enhanced White Papers using the mandatory format contained in the full version of the RPP. The Government will evaluate Enhanced White Papers and select those that best meet their current priorities using the evaluation criteria detailed in Section 5 of this RPP. Offerors whose proposed solution is selected for further consideration based on the Enhanced White Paper evaluation will be invited to submit a full cost proposal in Stage 2. Notification letters will contain specific Stage 2 proposal submission requirements.





The full RPP has been posted to the MTEC website (mtec-sc.org); this notice is intended only to notify interested parties of the available solicitation. MTEC membership is required for the submission of an Enhanced White Paper in response to this MTEC RPP. To join MTEC, please visit http://mtec-sc.org/how-to-join/.





A Proposers Conference via webinar will be held for interested parties to have their questions answered by the Consortium Manager as well as Government points of contact. MTEC Members will be notified when the Proposers Conference is scheduled.





MTEC MEMBER TEAMING:



While teaming is not required for this effort, Offerors are encouraged to consider teaming during the proposal preparation period (prior to Enhanced White Paper submission) if they cannot address the full scope of technical requirements of the RPP or otherwise believe a team may be beneficial to the Government. Refer to Section 2.6 of the RPP for resources that may help Offerors provide a more complete team for this requested scope of work.





MTEC:



The MTEC mission is to assist the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command (USAMRDC) by providing cutting-edge technologies and supporting life cycle management to transition medical solutions to industry that protect, treat, and optimize Warfighters’ health and performance across the full spectrum of military operations. MTEC is a biomedical technology consortium collaborating with multiple government agencies under a 10-year renewable Other Transaction Agreement (OTA), Agreement No. W81XWH-15-9-0001, with the U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity (USAMRAA). MTEC is currently recruiting a broad and diverse membership that includes representatives from large businesses, small businesses, “nontraditional” defense contractors, academic research institutions and not-for-profit organizations.





POINTS OF CONTACT:



Please direct your inquiries and correspondence to the following contacts:




  • Questions concerning contractual, cost or pricing related to this RPP should be directed to the MTEC Contracts Administrator at mtec-contracts@ati.org

  • Technical and membership questions – Dr. Lauren Palestrini, Ph.D., MTEC Research Associate, chuck.hutti@ati.org

  • Administrative and membership questions – Ms. Kathy Zolman, MTEC Director of Program Operations, kathy.zolman@ati.org


Attachments/Links
Contact Information
Contracting Office Address
  • 820 CHANDLER STREET
  • FORT DETRICK , MD 21702-5014
  • USA
Primary Point of Contact
Secondary Point of Contact


History
  • Oct 18, 2022 11:57 am EDTSpecial Notice (Original)

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