A Demonstration to Scale Innovative Person-Centered Approaches to Falls Prevention through Clinical-Community Partnerships
This cooperative agreement funds one grantee to run and evaluate up to three demonstrations scaling person-centered, evidence-based falls prevention and related chronic disease management through clinical-community partnerships, community care hubs, and data/technology tools.
⚑ Single cooperative agreement to one grantee; likely no more than one award. · Foreign entities are ineligible. · Includes required rapid-cycle evaluation and administration of subawards to demonstration sites/community care hubs. · Project involves collaboration with ACL and scaling demonstrations through aging-services network partners.
Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules
| IPPRA | 92 strong | portfolio topic: public_health (primary); social/behavioral work is substantial; funds evaluation research |
| Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) | 50 partial | technical depth: substantial; funds evaluation research (capped) |
| Tom Love Innovation Hub | 15 none | deep-tech content; no commercialization signal |
Description
The purpose of this funding announcement is to demonstrate and evaluate the scalability of person-centered and evidence-based approaches to falls prevention that leverage clinical and community partnerships and related data and technology tools. ACL intends to award a single cooperative agreement to one grantee for a three-year project period with the expectation that the grantee will fund up to three demonstrations. This award will build on the ACL Innovation Lab to demonstrate the scaling of person-centered and evidence-based approaches to falls prevention and related chronic disease management programs through community care hubs and their respective clinical partners and community-based organizations in the aging services network. The successful applicant will be expected to collaborate with ACL in the design and implementation of these demonstrations in the scalability of falls prevention and related chronic disease management interventions through approximately three advanced community care hubs that support care transitions and screening for the risk of falls. They should also have the capacity to 1) do rapid cycle evaluation to iterate and improve the impact of the interventions as they are scaled and, 2) administer sub-awards to community care hubs that can implement and scale person-centered interventions enabled by artificial intelligence, data analytics, assistive technology, virtual delivery of interventions, tools to support consumer behaviors, and related data infrastructure.
Eligibility
Foreign entities are not eligible to compete for, or receive, awards made under this announcement. Faith-based and community organizations that meet the eligibility requirements are eligible to receive awards under this funding opportunity announcement.
Apply
View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: Administration for Community Living <william.bleser@acl.hhs.gov>