-
- About ASB Main Page
- Deployment Travel and Travel Readiness
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Government Travel Charge Card
- Household Goods Officers
- Important Regulation Changes
- Junior COSTEP Travel Information
- Links
- Official Travel Forms
- Permanent Change of Station (PCS)
- Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA)
- Table of Frequently Used Acronyms
- Temporary Duty Assignments (TDY)
- Transportation
- Travel and Transportation
- Travel and Transportation Allowances FAQ
- Travel and Transportation Entitlements Summary
- Travel, PCS and Transportation
- Important Regulation Changes
- Travel & Transportation Entitlements Summary
- Permanent Change of Station (PCS)
- Temporary Duty (TDY)
- Junior COSTEP Travel Information
- Official Travel Forms
- Household Goods Officers
- Transportation
- Government Travel Charge Card
- Table of Frequently Used Acronyms
- Servicemembers Civil Relief Act
- Links
- Travel and Transportation Allowances FAQ
- Managing TSP after separation or retirement
- Retiree Pay-USCG Website
- SGLI Information
- SGLI Premium Rates (PDF, 20kb)
- T-SGLI Information
- TSP Information (PDF, 99kb)
- Uniformed Service Member Pay
- PHSPay
- Dependent Care Flexible Spending Account (DCFSA) Overview
- DCFSA Fact Sheet
- Benefits
- Eligibility Guide
- Enroll in a DCFSA Plan
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
- Fact Sheet for Military Spouses
- DCFSA Video Series
- Dependent Care Tax Credit Worksheet
- Contacts For Questions about DCFSA
- About Personnel & Career Management
- Awards-Introduction
- USPHS Award Recipients
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Background
- Awards Process
- General Guidance
- Types of Awards
- USPHS Awards
- Non-PHS Awards
- Leadership
- List of Agency Awards Coordinators
- List of Agency Liaisons
- USPHS Awards Process Flow Chart
- DEERS Information (PDF, 139kb)
- Important Information Regarding DEERS and ID Cards During COVID-19 (PDF, 57kb)
- eCORPS Information
- Education Benefits Overview
- FAQs
- Forms
- Electronic Official Personnel Folder (eOPF)
- eOPF FAQs
- eOPF Status
- FAQs Practice Hours and Special Pay Changes
- Practice Hours User Guide
- Licensure
- Transcripts FAQs
- Extramural and Intramural Training FAQs
- Officer Leave and Absence Request FAQ
- Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA)
- Veteran Health Administration (VHA) Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for Practice Hours
- Link to list of Professional Advisory Committee (PAC) Chairs (PDF, 19kb)
- About Policy
- Commissioned Corps Issuance System
- Commissioned Corps Legislative Liaison Program (CCLLP)
- Equal Opportunity
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Political Restrictions
- Promotion Ceremony Protocol (PDF, 126kb)
- SGHG Drill and Ceremonies Manual (PDF, 3.39mb)
- Uniform Specifications
- PHS Hard Shoulder Boards and Sleeve Insignia (Male and Female) (PDF, 828kb)
- PHS Soft Shoulder Marks (Unisex) (PDF, 324kb)
- Promotion Preparation
- Checklist (Due Dates & Reminders)
- Precepts & Benchmarks
- Administrative Checks
- General Guidance
- Promotion Process
- Eligibility
- Opt Out/Promotion Deferral
- Zones
- Below the Zone
- Failure of Promotion
- Leadership
- List of Agency Liaisons
- List of Chief Professional Officers (CPO)
- Deployment Information
- Operations and Deployment
- On-Call Schedule
- Deployment Awards
- Other Resources
- About the Training Branch
- Training Dates
- Career Pathways
- Webinars
- Career Development Trainings
- Officer Basic Course (OBC)
- Officer Intermediate Course (OIC)
- Advanced Leadership Development Program
- Preparedness Trainings
- Military Facility Annual Training (MFAT)
- PHS Deployment Role Training
- Partner Trainings
- Army War College (AWC)
- Interagency Institute for Federal Health Care Executes (IAI)
- Capstone Leadership, Education, Analysis, Development, Sustainment (LEADS)/Joint Medical Executive Skills Institute (JMESI) Course
- Command and General Staff Officer Course (CGSOC)
- Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA)
- Joint Medical Executive Skills Institute (JMESI) Intermediate Executive Skills (IES)
- Office of National Drug Control (ONDCP)
The USPHS Commissioned Corps is committed to our mission to protect, promote, and advance the health and safety of the nation. Public Health Service officers are trained and equipped to provide crucial public health leadership, assist with policy development, advance innovation and science, provide essential care services and respond to national and global public health emergencies. Through our Active Duty Regular Corps, our Public Health Response Strike Team (PHERST) and our Ready Reserve Corps, we remain responsive and available to rapidly deploy in the service of health.
-
Training
Command General Staff Officer Course - (CGSOC)
Effective February 2020, The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health has entered into a Memorandum of Understanding with the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College to authorize Commissioned Corps Headquarters to send officers to participate in the U.S. Army Command and General Staff Officer Course (CGSOC).
Background
This training is presented by the Command and General Staff College (CGSC) at Ft. Belvoir, VA. The CGSOC is one of the oldest and largest military leadership courses for senior O-3s and junior O-4s to assist in transitioning officers from a tactical-level focus to an operational-level perspective. The goal of the CGSOC is to “educate and train field grade leaders to serve as staff officers and commanders with the ability to build teams, lead organizations and integrate Unified Land Operations with Joint, Interagency, Intergovernmental, and Multinational partners in complex and uncertain environments.”
Purpose
The Commissioned Corps Headquarters has been granted training seats for the CGSOC Selected Commissioned Corps officers have the option to attend the course at one of the four satellite campuses (Fort Belvoir, VA, Fort Lee, VA, Fort Gordon, GA, and Redstone Arsenal, AL). The satellite course is a full-time, 14-week course, requiring on-site attendance. There is no tuition associated with this training.
Command and General Staff Officers' Course consists of courses offered in an experiential learning environment which yields adaptive, self-aware, field-grade leaders of character and competence who are capable of shaping the joint operational environment.
Objectives
The Core Course curriculum includes eight blocks of instruction:
- Foundations
- Strategic Context of Operational Art
- Unified Action
- Operational Art & Planning
- Managing Army Change
- History: Rise of the Western Way of War
- Leadership: Developing Organizations and Leaders
- Apply U.S. Army Doctrine The Foundations block establishes a foundation and sets the conditions for all subsequent learning within the Command and General Staff Officers' Course Common Core and elective courses.
- The Foundations block establishes a foundation and sets the conditions for all subsequent learning within the Command and General Staff Officers' Course Common Core and elective courses.
The Strategic Context of Operational Art block introduces students to the joint, interagency and multinational environment and the doctrinal and theoretical concepts required to perceive, understand, and analyze strategic-level military problems and challenges.
The Unified Action block helps students to understand the strategic and operational level joint force capabilities and limitations, operational level joint force capabilities, national, and legal considerations. It includes an examination of the roles, functions, capabilities, and limitations of the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Army, U.S. Special Operations Forces (SOF), U.S. Space Forces, interagency capabilities and issues, multinational considerations, and operational legal issues.
The Operational Art & Planning block integrates U.S. Army doctrinal concepts and principles as they apply to tactical units executing full-spectrum operations through participation in classroom discussions and practical exercises. These lessons require students to recognize that one's understanding of an operation, situation, or problem involves a mental process or model, and helps them analyze complex problems, determine requirements, capabilities, and shortfalls, and to then develop feasible plans for developing and executing solutions.
The Managing Army Change block serves to familiarize students with the higher-level (strategic) agencies and the complex/interdependent force management processes used to change the Army to meet DoD transformation and the 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review goals of the contemporary operational environment.
The History: Rise of the Western Way of War block covers the history of the evolution of warfare and its applicability to current military planning. It explores the relationship between war and society from 1300 to the present, and assesses how the social, political, and economic changes in the larger society force changes within military organizations.
The Leadership block introduces students to the challenges of organizational leadership in a changing and uncertain environment. It also focU.S.es on the concept of leadership styles and their underlying theories or strategies. Specifically, students discuss the relationship between leadership style, climate, and performance, and then conclude with a discussion to develop an understanding of the complexities of leading a change management process.
The Apply U.S. Army Doctrine block focU.S.es on two primary doctrinal subjects: What the Army does: Unified Land Operations and How the Army does it: Mission Command. These lessons will build further on the previous blocks of instruction. This theme of instruction will address significant portions of each of the six Joint Learning Areas and Objectives of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Officer Professional Military Education Policy (OPMEP) Learning Areas for CGSOC.
Throughout the entire Core Course, the student is taught "How to Think" instead of "What to Think" while using the Military Decision-Making Process, thereby enabling him/her to develop focused solutions to entirely new problems that evolve in today's uncertain and volatile world. This is done with a balanced focus on Current Operations, Future Operations, and Planning functions, along with an attempt to teach students how to synchronize actions to attain the effects desire.
Target Audience
The course is designed for officers in the rank of O-3 and O-4 in any USPHS category who are Active Duty or Reserve Commissioned Corps*.
*Ready Reserve officers will be selected by their Regional Commanders but will still need to apply.
Schedule:
Session 3: September 04 – December 19, 2024
Location:
Fort Belvoir, VA
Application Opens:
Session 3: June 07, 2024
Application deadline:
Session 3: July 11, 2024
Course Length:
14 Weeks
Officers per Date:
3
Ranks Eligible:
O-3 and O-4
Selecting official:
CCHQ Director (w/DSG concurrence)
Application for Training:
There is no tuition associated with these trainings; however, the selected Officer’s agency is responsible for continuing to pay the Officer’s salary/benefits. Per diem, lodging, and travel expenses will be covered by officer’s respective agency. Officers accepting an assignment to attend this training are expected to attend and complete the entire 14 weeks and as well as any designated asynchronous pre-work prescribed by CGSOC when receiving the acceptance letter. If you are interested in attending this training, you must submit an online training application as well as the following supporting items/documents.
Participation in CGSOC is dependent on submission of required documents, supervisor approval, and concurrence by the Deputy Surgeon General.
Required applications materials for the CGSOC training packet:
- Letter explaining why the officer would be a good fit for the Program, how the officer plans to use the skills/knowledge gained to advance the mission of the Corp, and attesting the officer meets all conditions of service.
- COER scores for previous 3 years.
- Supervisory approval.
- Full-length Photos in uniform (ODU and SDBs) standing at attention. Professional photos not required.
- No active Adverse Actions & must be basic ready qualified.
- Officers applying must have a valid security clearance and upload the clearance as part of their packet.
Required additional applications materials for the Long-term application training packet:
- FORM PHS 1122-1
- FORM PHS 1122-Supplement to Form PHS 1122-1
- FORM PHS 6373
- FORM PHS 1662
- FORM PHS 1881-1
All officers interested in participating this training opportunity must complete an application using the link below:
Command General Staff Officer Course (CGSOC) - Session 3 - 2024
The application package and all required materials (Required applications materials for the CGSOC training packet & required additional applications materials for the Long-term application training packet) for this opportunity must be sent to PHSCOTA@hhs.gov using the subject line: CGSOC Application submission (For any questions or assistance on long-term trainings, reach out to your respective agency's liaison OR PHSlongtermtraining@hhs.gov)
Last Updated: 03/04/2024
-
USER ASSISTANCE
Please check our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) . FAQs are located at the top of the page next to the search function.
Having Access Issues or Need IT Help? Please contact the Commissioned Corps Helpdesk at: CCHelpDesk@hhs.gov
COMMISSIONED CORPS NEWS
Officer Spotlight November 2024
Officer Spotlight
Practice Hours Opportunities
Practice Hours Opportunities
2023 Temporary Grade Promotions
CC News Announcement 2023 Temporary Grade Promotions
Changes in Tattoo Policy in CCI 412.01, Uniforms and Appearance
Changes in Tattoo Policy in CCI 412.01, Uniforms and Appearance
Surgeon General Priorities
Surgeon General Priorities
January 2021: United States Public Health Commissioned Corps Doctrine
The link above will take you to the Noncompetitive Promotion Roster for Promotion Year 2020.
FAQs Practice Hours and Special Pay Changes
This is first in a series of FAQs, more FAQs will be forthcoming on Practice Hours and Special Pays.
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Mission - Deployments Readiness Updates
As we position ourselves to assist with controlling the spread of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), please note that we’re in an “all-hands on deck” status. Messaging has gone out from the Assistant Secretary for Health reminding Commissioned Corps officers of their deployment responsibilities...
Protecting, Promoting and Advancing the Health and Safety of Our Nation. Commissioned Corps Headquarters
1101 Wootton Parkway, Suite 300
Rockville, MD. 20852
240-453-6000-
COMMISSIONED CORPS- Home
- Contact Us
- About Us
- Site Map
-
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES- HHS Home
- Office of Assistant Secretary for Health
- Office of the Surgeon General
- USPHS.gov
-
U.S. GOVERNMENT- The White House
- USA.gov
- USAJOBS.gov
- DATA.gov
-
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION- Plain Writing Act
- Accessibility
- Privacy Notice
- Freedom of Information Act
- Disclaimers
- Vulnerability Disclosure Policy