The Department of Defense's Defense Health Agency (DHA) is seeking a contractor to supply a Learning Management System (LMS) to enhance training for its personnel. This non-personal services contract requires the contractor to provide training resources, including a minimum of 500 Continuing Education (CE) and Continuing Medical Education (CME) courses, ensuring compliance with mandatory training standards from organizations like The Joint Commission and OSHA. The LMS must cater to a diverse workforce across multiple military medical treatment facilities (MTFs) and dental treatment facilities (DTFs), providing 24/7 access to web-based training.
Key responsibilities include producing, customizing, and updating training modules, maintaining user profiles, offering technical support, and ensuring accreditation compliance. The contractor will facilitate integration with government systems and produce detailed reports on training completions and user engagement. The contract specifies various performance criteria, including quality control measures and customer service requirements. The overall objective is to support the medical readiness of DHA personnel through accessible and effective training, thereby enhancing the combat readiness of the military healthcare system.
The document pertains to the Request for Information (RFI) HT0011-25-RFI-0144 regarding a Learning Management System (LMS) for the Defense Health Agency (DHA). The main topic addresses questions related to the potential development and implementation of a new LMS. Key inquiries from vendors focus on the relationship between current systems (like CCQAS and JKO), desired features, migration of existing content, security requirements, and system interoperability.
The government's responses clarify that they are not seeking a new LMS, indicating that the current system is sufficient, and that they will handle content migration with a focus on government-owned content only. Additionally, the LMS must meet specific security standards (FedRAMP certification at IL 2 Moderate) and ensure integration with existing systems, although no additional system requirements have been disclosed at this stage. The responses also confirm that collaborative learning features and hosting content are not of current interest to the government. This RFI aims to assess vendor capabilities while confirming the government's strategic approach to its LMS needs.