This scholarship page was last updated on 15 December 2022. Some details may have changed since then. Please check the Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - ERA website or the Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - ERA page for current opportunities.

Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research Centers: 2023 Special Interest Project Competitive Supplement (SIPS)

Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - ERA
Posted on:

Application Deadline:

Expired

Type

Fellowships

Reference Number

RFA-DP-23-004

The CDC Prevention Research Centers (PRC) Program was established by Congress in 1984 (Public Law 98-551) to conduct research in health promotion, disease prevention, and methods of appraising health hazards and risk factors. Congress mandated that the centers be located at academic health centers capable of providing multidisciplinary faculty with expertise in public health, relationships with professionals in other relevant fields, graduate training and demonstrated curricula in disease prevention, and a capability for residency training in public health or preventive medicine. The PRCs also serve as demonstration sites for the use of new and innovative applied public health research and activities for disease prevention and health promotion. CDC administers the PRC Program and provides leadership, technical assistance, and oversight. Funded PRCs are able to compete for SIPs, research projects sponsored by CDC, HHS, and other federal agencies, to conduct research and other activities in priority areas. Funded PRCs are encouraged to apply for SIPs that expand and strengthen their PRC's mission and increase their applied public health research activities. The purpose of the PRC program's SIP mechanism is to support supplemental projects in health promotion and disease prevention research. A major focus of this supplemental funding program is to design, test, evaluate, translate and/or disseminate effective applied public health prevention research strategies. The SIP mechanism, created in 1993, allows the PRCs to compete for research projects sponsored by CDC organizational units and other HHS agencies. Prevention research includes applied public health research that develops and evaluates health promotion and disease prevention and control strategies that are community- and population- based. It can involve testing interventions for efficacy, effectiveness, or translational power; may focus on primary, secondary, or tertiary prevention; or may improve health and prevent disease through approaches that involve changes to individual behavior, policy or environmental structure, health systems, or socio-economic factors. Prevention research may provide initial evidence of the efficacy or effectiveness of a health promotion or prevention strategy, raise current evidence to a higher level, or provide evidence of the effectiveness of a practice-based strategy. Healthy People 2030 and other National Strategic Priorities This NOFO supports efforts that align with the following public health priorities: Healthy People 2030 Social Determinants of Health: health care access and quality Health topic, objective, and the associated SIP: Vaccination: SIP 23-001 National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion's Four Domains of Chronic Disease Prevention Domain 4: community programs linked to clinical services https://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/center/nccdphp/how.htm
Categories: Health.

More Information

Posted on:

Application Deadline:

Expired

Type

Fellowships

Reference Number

RFA-DP-23-004

Prescott%2C%20United%20States

Prescott , United States