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Building Sustainable Community-Linked Infrastructure to Enable Health Science Research (RC4) RFA OD-09-010. Pre-application workshop October 23, 2009. Overview. Orientation and Introductions The NIH Purpose Requirements Questions. Background. Origins Opportunity Development. Origins.
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Building Sustainable Community-Linked Infrastructure to Enable Health Science Research (RC4)RFA OD-09-010 Pre-application workshop October 23, 2009
Overview • Orientation and Introductions • The NIH • Purpose • Requirements • Questions
Background • Origins • Opportunity • Development
Origins • Why community research? • Why research? • Why now?
Opportunity • Economic Crisis • American Recovery and Reinvestment Act 2009 • NIH ARRA funding • Chance to act on community health and research infrastructure
Development • NIH leadership convened a trans- NIH working group • Concept paper • Invited HHS sister agencies • Developed final RFA
The NIH • 27 Institutes and Centers (IC’s) • Mission: “science in pursuit of fundamental knowledge about the nature and behavior of living systems and the application of that knowledge to extend healthy life and reduce the burdens of illness and disability”
The Grants Process Preparation Submission Receipt Review Award
Request for ApplicationsRFA Special pool of funds? Yes Special application deadlines? Yes How long active? Until deadline Special review panel? Yes Reissued? No
RC4 Mechanism • To fund infrastructure, not research or service delivery • To create jobs • All funds awarded first year • Three year funding period • Not renewable
Timeline • November 11, 2009 (Earliest date to submit application to Grants.gov) • Letters of Intent Receipt: November 12, 2009 • Application Due : December 11, 2009 • Peer Review: February/March 2010 • Council Review: May 2010 • Earliest Anticipated Start: July 2010 • Expiration Date: December 12, 2009
NIH Staff • Program Staff • Scientific Review Staff • Grants Management Staff
Eligibility • Academic Health Centers-Primary Applicant in partnership with • Community Entity(ies)
Eligibility • Notice:NOT-OD-10-006 Clarification of Eligibility as Primary Applicant for the RFA-0D-09-010 “Only Academic Health Centers may serve as the primary applicant. Although multiple Principal Investigators are permitted, the primary award will go to a single Academic Health Center.”
Academic HealthCenter • An accredited academic institution that regularly and widely engages in health research and where health research is part of that institution’s identity
Community may be defined • “. . . geographically (e.g., a neighborhood or county), demographically (e.g., Native Americans), by health condition (e.g., mental health, wellness, primary care), or by a common interest (e.g., community coalitions, churches, local businesses).” (Part II, section I1-research objectives)
Community includes… • “ neighborhoods, schools, and workplaces; public health departments, health care providers, and social service agencies; community coalitions; state, county, and local governments; business-community collaborations; campus-community partnerships; public-private partnerships; and other types of organizations and institutions that filter or translate research findings to the American public.” (part II, section III, 1A-eligibility)
Community Research Associate(s) • Individual(s) who legitimately represent(s) the interests of the community partner and is accountable to the community.
Leadership • Leadership team including CRA’s and PI’s at minimum demonstrating equity in sharing of resources and responsibility
Grants Administration • The National Institute on Drug Abuse will initially be the administrative and fiduciary home • Proposals later assigned to individual IC’s for administration and program management
Review • Special Emphasis Panel (SEP) • Convened and conducted by the NIH Center for Scientific Review (CSR)
Core Review Requirements • Significance. • Investigator(s). (and CRA’s) • Innovation. • Approach. • Environment. .
Points of Review • Scientific Peer Review • Program Priority Review • National Advisory Council Review
Requirements 1 • AHC must demonstrates commitment to a long-term collaborative program with the community-clear plan for building or expanding the proposed infrastructure; • Must describe each partner’s expertise and the potential mutual benefit of knowledge to be gained and actions taken; • Partners must have been actively involved in the conceptualization, design, and implementation of the project and are prepared to convene immediately upon issuance of funding;
Requirements 2 • Must have a shared work plan delineating roles and responsibilities. • Must define the identity and role of the Community Research Associate(s) including evidence that the CRA (s) represent(s), engage(s), and effectively work(s) with the entities involved • The collaborative project must be responsive to the needs of the target community, and empowers the target community to engage and utilize the findings of health science research in the pursuit of healthy lifestyles for its citizens
Requirements 3 • Must describe the essential impact and transformative nature of the collaborative arrangement and resulting community-linked infrastructure. • Must state how applicants envision using the collaborative infrastructure to enhance the design, execution, dissemination, implementation, and impact of research with a concrete example of possible future health science research facilitated by the new infrastructure.
Requirements 4 • Must have a concrete plan for sustaining the collaborative infrastructure without NIH support beyond the life of the grant award • Must show how the proposed collaborative builds upon existing infrastructures (including other HHS-funded networks and initiatives, if applicable) and the potential synergies to be gained
NIH also requests that grantees agree to participate in its own independent evaluation of the overall program being receptive to periodic requests for information.
Allowed, but please note that reviewers are not required to read them Appendices