Supporting Interventions with Technical Assistance
One organization is funded by HRSA to provide tailored technical assistance, start-up resources, and implementation evaluation to selected Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program recipient and provider sites to help adapt or replicate HIV care innovations.
⚑ Cooperative agreement · One award to a single organization · Up to 20 subrecipient sites funded in two phases · Tailored TA plus one-time start-up funding for sites; implementation science and evaluation required
Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules
| IPPRA | 54 partial | portfolio topic: public_health (primary); signature methods: community engaged, policy analysis; social/behavioral work is substantial; funds technical assistance, 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 technical assistance (capped) |
| Tom Love Innovation Hub | 15 none | deep-tech content; no commercialization signal |
Description
The purpose of this funding opportunity is to fund one organization to implement and evaluate tailored technical assistance (TA) to Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program (RWHAP) recipients. The purpose of this initiative is to support the uptake of interventions by providing tailored, needs-based TA to RWHAP recipients and providers to address barriers to intervention start-up, such as competing priorities and not knowing how to adapt interventions to fit their organizational structures or client populations. By providing tailored TA and a one-time funding amount to cover start-up costs, RWHAP recipients and providers will be able to address these barriers and strengthen their ability to integrate and sustain innovative HIV care models. The adoption of these interventions across the HIV health care system will improve HIV health outcomes and reduce transmission of HIV. This funding opportunity is supported by the HRSA RWHAP Part F: Special Projects of National Significance (SPNS) Program. Funding supports an implementation science approach to adapt, implement, and evaluate the implementation of HIV care innovations. It also builds upon previous and current projects to increase the uptake of disseminated interventions that have been funded by HRSA"s HIV/AIDS Bureau (HAB).The proposed initiative will identify a representative set of RWHAP recipient and/or provider sites (up to 20 sites funded as subrecipients by the recipient, divided into two (2) phases) to receive short-term, tailored implementation support and resources to jump start efforts to adapt or replicate existing interventions. The recipient will work with the sites to understand their specific needs and organizational structure to develop tailored resources and TA to adapt or replicate selected emerging, evidence-informed, and evidence-based interventions and other HIV care innovations.
Apply
View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: Health Resources and Services Administration <spns@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)
40/100 · gpt-5.4-mini · 2026-07-06
This is a public health implementation-science/cooperative agreement focused on tailored technical assistance to HIV care providers, with explicit evaluation of uptake and sustainability. The fit for IPPRA is only partial because the main work is service/TA delivery rather than a research or survey-driven study, though the evaluation and implementation science components are relevant. Eligibility is unclear in the notice, but HRSA cooperative agreements like this are often open to research organizations and public universities as recipients or partners.
Legacy scoring history
| 2026-07-06 | 40 | gpt-5.4-mini | This is a public health implementation-science/cooperative agreement focused on tailored technical assistance to HIV care providers, with explicit evaluation of uptake and sustainability. The fit for IPPRA is only partial because the main work is service/TA delivery rather than a research or survey-driven study, though the evaluation and implementation science components are relevant. Eligibility is unclear in the notice, but HRSA cooperative agreements like this are often open to research organizations and public universities as recipients or partners. |
| 2026-07-06 | 42 | gpt-5.4-mini | This is a solid public health implementation-science opportunity focused on HIV care innovation, tailored technical assistance, and evaluation of adoption barriers and sustainability. The social/behavioral angle is meaningful because the work centers on organizational adaptation, implementation support, and uptake across provider sites, but it is more health-services/implementation focused than IPPRA’s core survey or risk-communication strengths. Eligibility is not clearly stated, but HRSA cooperative agreements of this type are typically open to nonprofit and university applicants, so a public R1 could plausibly participate or lead. |