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Funding HIV/AIDS Research in the Current Environment Celeste Watkins-Hayes, Ph.D. Northwestern University 2009 NSF CAREER Award Recipient 2008 RWJ Health.

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Presentation on theme: "Funding HIV/AIDS Research in the Current Environment Celeste Watkins-Hayes, Ph.D. Northwestern University 2009 NSF CAREER Award Recipient 2008 RWJ Health."— Presentation transcript:

1 Funding HIV/AIDS Research in the Current Environment Celeste Watkins-Hayes, Ph.D. Northwestern University 2009 NSF CAREER Award Recipient 2008 RWJ Health Investigator Award Recipient

2 Robert Wood Johnson Health Investigator Award ► Website: http://www.investigatorawards.org/ http://www.investigatorawards.org/ ► Lynn Rogut, (lrogut@ifh.rutgers.edu) - Deputy Director of The RWJ Foundation Investigator Awards in Health Policy Research lrogut@ifh.rutgers.edu

3 Who should apply? ► Post-PhD scholars at any stage of their careers ► Scholars doing research that can directly shape US health policy and US health care ► International projects must be comparative (with the US as a case) and make a strong argument for its relevance for domestically-targeted health policy ► Limit: two principal investigators/project ► Looking for “highly qualified researchers pitching high quality projects”

4 Does the RWJ Health Investigator Awards Program fund projects on HIV/AIDS? ► Yes. They have funded projects looking at HIV/AIDS in the past and expect to fund more. The foundation does not see HIV/AIDS as an over-studied area and thinks that there is more work to be done in the field.

5 What resources do they offer? ► Up to $335,000 to be used over 2-4 years ► Time to research and write (most of the budget is to buy investigator’s time from teaching and other responsibilities) ► Annual meeting of investigators for networking and presentation of research ► Media training & media advisors to help promote research ► Alumni network ► “Unrivaled network of colleagues”

6 How competitive is the Health Investigator Award? ► Received 325 letters of intent this year (250-300/year are standard) – Due in March ► 50 researchers (solo and duos) invited to submit full proposals – Due in July ► 10 projects selected by National Advisory Board in mid-December – presented to Foundation for funding approval The NAB reviews both LOI’s and full proposals.

7 What are they looking for? ► BOLD NEW IDEAS ON THE CUTTING EDGE: study new problems, use new methods to study long-standing problems, offer new conceptual frameworks, show high social relevance & potential to inform national policy debates on health or health care ► Interdisciplinary projects a plus, work should be conversant with a variety of fields ► When assembling a funding class for the year, the NAB looks for diversity in terms of disciplines represented, research topics addressed, scholars’ demographic backgrounds, and scholars’ professional trajectories

8 What else is the NAB looking for? Scholarly Profile that includes… ► A diverse portfolio of projects –suggests wide grasp of field and broad network to advance research ► Publications in leading journals “in the broadest sense,” ideally in outlets with a strong policy focus ► Publications in mainstream outlets: op-ed pieces, articles written for the general public, presentations in a wide range of places ► Established track record as a scholar: history of grant-receipt, publications, & public scholarship

9 What else is the NAB looking for? Proposals that… ► Have clearly defined research questions, methods, and conceptual framework ► Are written in language that is accessible ► Are specific, “but not as specific as an NIH RO1 application.” Researchers should feel free to go where the research takes them even it strays a bit from the original proposal ► Are “broad, intellectual, big-think projects,” opening new areas of inquiry that have national policy relevance

10 How do I apply? Application Cycle (approximate dates): ► January 15 - Call for Applications Announced ► March 25 (5 p.m. ET) - Deadline for receipt of letters of intent (4 pgs max). ► June 12 - Applicants notified whether they have been selected to submit a full proposal. ► July 28 - Deadline for receipt of full proposals (20 pgs max). ► July 28 - Deadline for receipt of full proposals (20 pgs max). ► December 15 - Notification letters emailed to proposal applicants. ► December 15 - Notification letters emailed to proposal applicants. ► April 1 to September 1 the following year - Acceptable start dates for projects.

11 What are some strategies for success? ► The RWJ Foundation website has tips for proposals, descriptions of the work of past investigators to serve as models, and comments from the NAB offering strategies for success. ► Lynn will discuss project ideas with investigators before they submit letters of intent to offer suggestions and answer questions. ► Think broadly about your network to see who to partner with as you design the project. ► Start very early on your writing and get a lot of feedback from colleagues.

12 What are some strategies for success? ► Work with your on-campus resources – policy centers and grants offices can offer technical assistance. ► Take the LOI seriously, ensuring that every sentence packs a punch. ► Think about showing your data analysis process in the proposal. ► Work very hard on identifying the specific aims of the project, use precise language, and make sure that aims are developed in the grant ► Be as specific as possible about methodology, conceptual framework ► Watch those page limits

13 What about RWJ Foundation postdoc awards? ► Focus on career development by offering a training component (mentoring and residency at RWJ Foundation-approved institutions)

14 Scholars in Health Policy Research http://www.healthpolicyscholars.org/ ► Program for researchers who are early in their careers: must be within three years of Ph.D. ► Disciplinary focus: sociology, economics, political science ► Scholars must select an institution to be in residence: Harvard University, the University of California at Berkeley (in collaboration with the University of California at San Francisco), or The University of Michigan. ► Two-Year program ► Call for proposals will come out in late August

15 Health and Society Scholars http://www.healthandsocietyscholars.org/ ► Two-year Program ► Scholars must select one of six institutions to be in residence. ► Open to early and mid-career scholars ► Fields including, but not limited to, behavioral and social sciences, biological and natural sciences, health professions, public policy, public health, history, demography, environmental sciences, urban planning, engineering and ethics ► Call for proposals is currently out – Due Oct 2


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