Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part D Coordinated HIV Services and Access to Research for Women, Infants, Children, and Youth (WICY) Existing Geographic Service Areas
Funds family-centered outpatient or ambulatory HIV care and support services for low-income women, infants, children, and youth with HIV, in existing geographic service areas, for eligible public or nonprofit providers.
⚑ Current RWHAP Part D recipients and new eligible applicant organizations in the identified service areas may apply; limited to public and nonprofit private entities providing family-centered outpatient/ambulatory care for WICY with HIV. · Funds care and support services, not research. · Includes services for affected individuals not living with HIV when needed to support care access or family stability.
Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules
| IPPRA | 54 partial | portfolio topic: public_health (primary); signature methods: community engaged; social/behavioral work is substantial; funds service delivery, not research (capped); biomedical core — IPPRA health lane is communication/crisis/policy (capped); capped at 54 (non-research funding) |
| Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) | 25 weak | technical depth: minor; funds service delivery (capped) |
| Tom Love Innovation Hub | 15 none | deep-tech content; no commercialization signal |
Description
The purpose of the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program (RWHAP) Part D program is to provide family-centered care in outpatient or ambulatory care settings to low-income women (25 years and older) with HIV, infants (up to 2 years of age) exposed to or with HIV, children (ages 2 to 12) with HIV, and youth (ages 13 to 24) with HIV. The RWHAP Part D funding is intended to improve access to coordinated and comprehensive HIV medical care and support services). The services often include case management, behavioral health, nutrition services, and referrals to specialty care. As the only component of the RWHAP that supports services for affected individuals not living with HIV, Part D may fund services when the primary purpose is to enable the affected individual to participate in the care of a person with HIV, to directly remove barriers to care for the person with HIV, or to promote family stability.
Eligibility
This competition is open to current RWHAP Part D grant recipients and new, eligible applicant organizations proposing to provide RWHAP Part D family-centered care in outpatient or ambulatory care settings to low income women, infants, children, and youth (WICY) with HIV in the entire service area as identified in the FY 2026 NOFO. As identified in section 2671 of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act, eligible applicants include public and nonprofit private entities (including a health facility operated by or pursuant to a contract with the Indian Health Service) that provide family-centered care involving outpatient or ambulatory care for WICY with HIV.
Apply
View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: Health Resources and Services Administration <AskPartD@hrsa.gov>
Proposal brief SEE AN EXAMPLE →
A one-page internal memo: fit assessment, submission requirements, document scaffold, and next steps dated back from the deadline — tailored to your project idea if you add one.
Proposal shell · HHS services agencies (SAMHSA / HRSA / CDC / ACF) conventions SEE AN HHS EXAMPLE →
Funder-faithful document skeletons — HHS services agencies (SAMHSA / HRSA / CDC / ACF)'s document set with section headings, page limits, reviewer guidance, and writing prompts; add a project idea to get [DRAFT] starter bullets. Download as .md for Word or Overleaf.
Legacy IPPRA LLM assessment (v2.0, for comparison)
18/100 · gpt-5.4-mini · 2026-07-06
This is a public health service-delivery grant for Ryan White HIV/AIDS Part D, focused on outpatient/ambulatory care, case management, behavioral health, and support services for women, infants, children, and youth affected by HIV. It has a modest public-health relevance, but it is not primarily a research, evaluation, survey, or data-infrastructure opportunity, so it is only a weak fit for IPPRA. Public and nonprofit entities are eligible, but the program is oriented to direct services rather than research.
Legacy scoring history
| 2026-07-06 | 18 | gpt-5.4-mini | This is a public health service-delivery grant for Ryan White HIV/AIDS Part D, focused on outpatient/ambulatory care, case management, behavioral health, and support services for women, infants, children, and youth affected by HIV. It has a modest public-health relevance, but it is not primarily a research, evaluation, survey, or data-infrastructure opportunity, so it is only a weak fit for IPPRA. Public and nonprofit entities are eligible, but the program is oriented to direct services rather than research. |
| 2026-07-06 | 15 | gpt-5.4-mini | This is a public health service-delivery grant for HIV clinical care, case management, and support services. While it has a behavioral health and access-to-care component, it is primarily a provider funding opportunity rather than a research or policy program, and it appears restricted to eligible care organizations rather than a typical research lead role for IPPRA. Public and nonprofit entities are eligible, but the fit for IPPRA’s research portfolio is low. |