To qualify for this position, applicants must meet all requirements by the closing date of this announcement, 12/20/2024.
You may qualify based on your experience and/or education as described below:
Time-In-Grade Requirement: Applicants who are current Federal employees and have held a GS grade any time in the past 52 weeks must also meet time-in-grade requirements by the closing date of this announcement. For a GS-14 position you must have served 52 weeks at the GS-13 grade level. The grade may have been in any occupation but must have been held in the Federal service.
An SF-50 that shows your time-in-grade eligibility must be submitted with your application materials. If the most recent SF-50 has an effective date within the past year, it may not clearly demonstrate you possess one-year time-in-grade, as required by the announcement. In this instance, you must provide an additional SF-50 that clearly demonstrates one-year time-in-grade.
INDIVIDUAL OCCUPATIONAL REQUIREMENT (IOR): An IOR is a basic requirement that must be met in order to qualify for entry into this job series, and it is something that can't be waived. The education must be accredited by an accrediting body recognized by the U.S. Department of Education at the time the degree was obtained.
To qualify for the GS-0671-14 occupational series, applicants MUST possess one of the following:
Undergraduate and Graduate Education. Undergraduate and Graduate Education: Major study -- hospital administration, public health administration, or related fields such as business or public administration with course work in health care administration. (TRANSCRIPT REQUIRED)
OR
Specialized Experience or Special Provision for Inservice Placement.
Specialized Experience (for positions above GS-5).Progressively responsible analytical or administrative, or clinical management or supervisory experience in the health care field. This work may have been performed in an operating health care facility or a higher organizational echelon with advisory or directional authority over such facilities. Work must have involved a close working relationship with facility managers and analysis and/or coordination of administrative, clinical, or other service activities, and provided knowledge of the following:
- Missions, organizations, programs, and requirements of health care delivery systems;
- Regulations and standards of various regulatory and credentialing groups; and
- Government-wide, agency, and facility systems and requirements in various administrative areas such as budget, personnel, and procurement.
Applicants must also possess:
- Management ability to delegate authority, evaluate and oversee people and programs, recognize and adapt to changing priorities; and
- Knowledge of the interrelationships and interdependencies among various medical and administrative services and programs.
Special Provision for Inservice Placement.Successful completion of an agency-sponsored on-the-job training program may be substituted for qualifying experience, provided it included a formal individualized training plan. Such a training program must have been conducted in an operating health care system and included:
- Assignments providing a knowledge of basic health system administration philosophies, practices, and procedures, and basic government administrative policies and requirements;
- Practical assignments providing an opportunity to apply health system administration skills and principles (as the individual progresses, work assignments must be characteristic of the grade level to which he or she is assigned); and
- Oversight by an experienced health system administrator with periodic evaluation of the individual's progress and appropriate adjustment of the training program.
In addition to the above Individual Occupational Requirements (IOR), applicants must meet the Specialized Experience requirement for the Health System Specialist GS-0671-14:
Specialized Experience is experience that equipped the applicant with the particular knowledge, skills, and abilities to successfully perform the duties of the position, and that is typically in or related to the work of the position to be filled. To be creditable, you must have one year of specialized experience equivalent to at least the next lower grade GS-13 in the normal line of progression for the occupation in the organization.
Examples of specialized experience would typically include, but are not limited to:
- Experience in practicing analytical and evaluative methods related to suicide prevention and applying appropriate program evaluation and measurement techniques to assess compliance with established rules and regulations;
- Utilizing management and organizational principles, as well as planning, programming, and budgeting regulations, guidelines, and processes; experience gathering, assembling, and analyzing data, drawing conclusions, conducting analyses, devising recommended solutions, and compiling the entire process into briefings, papers, or reports;
- Presenting oral presentations to diverse audiences, including the press and the public, to explain programs, functions, and activities;
- Experience developing administrative regulations and guidelines for program operations, including new criteria for measuring program achievements;
- Reviewing the latest standards from the Joint Commission and the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF), along with any reported findings related to suicide prevention, to identify necessary changes in national policies and guidelines; and
- Experience drafting technical assistance responses to new legislation pertaining to suicide prevention and assisting leadership with the preparation of congressional responses and for all congressional hearings related to suicide prevention.
PREFERRED EXPERIENCE: Experience translating clinical research into practice.
You will be rated on the following Competencies for this position:
- Compliance
- Organizational Awareness
- Planning and Evaluating
- Strategic Thinking
Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religions; spiritual; community; student; social). Volunteer work helps build critical competencies, knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment. You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience.
NOTE: A full year of work is considered to be 35-40 hours of work per week. Part-time experience will be credited on the basis of time actually spent in appropriate activities. Applicants wishing to receive credit for such experience must indicate clearly the nature of their duties and responsibilities in each position and the number of hours a week spent in such employment.
WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work of the position primarily takes place in an office setting with normal environmental controls over light, temperature, and ventilation. The work may require some occasional travel. Assignments regularly require visits to manufacturing, storage, or other industrial areas, and involve moderate risks or discomforts. Protective clothing and gear and observance of safety precautions are required.