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Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award Institutional Research Training Grant (NRSA)

Health Resources and Services Administration·Government

The Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award Institutional Research Training Grant (NRSA) supports the training of postdoctoral researchers in biomedical, behavioral, and health services research related to primary care. Administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration, the program is aimed at developing a skilled research workforce to address complex issues in primary care as the population grows and ages.

Go / No-Go Memo

This opportunity looks relevant, but the strongest path is likely through a partner or consortium.

Partner

The opportunity is relevant due to its focus on strengthening the workforce in primary care, which is pivotal for improving health systems.

Strategic fit

strong

Academic is the strongest profile match at 75/100; relevance is 61/100.

Eligibility risk

moderate

Eligible applicant types include Private institutions of higher education, Public and State controlled institutions of higher education.

Deadline feasibility

moderate

The call closes in 2 days, so proposal capacity is the main constraint.

Funding attractiveness

strong

The tracked ceiling is $9.6M across 20 awards.

Partnership need

moderate

This may be stronger with a Academic lead or co-applicant based on fit scores.

Recommended next action

This opportunity should be tracked for potential application.

The National Research Service Award (NRSA) program supports the training of postdoctoral researchers in biomedical, behavioral, and health services research. Funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and administered in part by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the program aims to develop a skilled research workforce to advance scientific knowledge in primary care. Under HRSA, the NRSA program provides support to train postdoctoral health care professionals who are planning to pursue careers in biomedical and behavioral health research related to primary care. As the nation"s population grows and ages, the need for well-trained primary care researchers to study the complex array of issues facing the primary care workforce gains greater importance. The NRSA Institutional Research Training Grants administered by HRSA are awarded to eligible institutions to develop or enhance postdoctoral research training opportunities for individuals who are planning to pursue careers in primary care research.

SDG 3Capacity BuildingHRSA-26-035Grants.gov

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