IPPRA / Grant Monitor

2026-07-07
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HEAL Initiative: Translating Addiction Epidemiology, Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery Research into Practice (R61/R33 - Clinical Trial Optional)

RFA-DA-27-016 · National Institutes of Health

public health biomedical clinical mental behavioral health ai data science Health

Closes
2029-02-09 · 948 d
Award ceiling
Award floor
Program funding
Expected awards
Cost sharing
No
Posted
2026-06-04
Instrument
Grant
Characterization · gpt-5.4-mini · 2026-07-07

NIH funds action-oriented research to translate addiction epidemiology, prevention, treatment, and recovery interventions into practice for opioid crisis and overdose reduction, including chronic pain with substance use comorbidity.

Funds
applied research
University
direct
social behavioral
substantial
engineering
minor
life biomedical
central
computational data
substantial

⚑ Foreign organizations and non-domestic components of U.S. organizations are not eligible; foreign components are allowed. · Clinical Trial Optional. · R61/R33 phased mechanism.

Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules

Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) 80 strong technical depth: substantial; funds applied research
IPPRA 58 good portfolio topic: public_health (primary); signature methods: community engaged, policy analysis; social/behavioral work is substantial; funds applied research; biomedical core — IPPRA health lane is communication/crisis/policy (capped); clinical-trial/biomedical core — IPPRA angle is policy/community (capped)
Tom Love Innovation Hub 30 weak funds applied research; deep-tech content

Description

The goal of this notice of funding opportunity (NOFO) is to address the opioid crisis and/or overdose events by supporting action-oriented research, accelerating the translation of addiction epidemiology, prevention, treatment services, and recovery research to practice. Proposed studies may target the individual, provider, organizational, community, or system level. This initiative prioritizes replicable and scalable approaches for accelerating the routine use of effective, evidence-based prevention, treatment and recovery interventions and services. The translation of research to practice and research relevant to chronic pain comorbid with substance use is also a priority. Research may deploy a variety of methods and approaches, including but not limited to identifying and characterizing malleable factors, developing and testing interventions and implementation strategies, deploying and testing collaborative data science approaches, and/or developing and testing approaches that integrate the collaboration of researchers and decision-makers at any levels (e.g., clinical-, health system-, public health- or policy-level).

Eligibility

Refer to Section III. Eligibility Information in the NOFO for additional information on eligibility.Foreign Organizations/International Collaborations:Non-domestic (non-U.S.) Entities (Foreign Organizations) are not eligible to apply.Non-domestic (non-U.S.) components of U.S. Organizations are not eligible to apply.Foreign components, as defined in the NIH Grants Policy Statement, are allowed.

Apply

View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: National Institutes of Health <NIDA-26-063@nih.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.

ONE LLM CALL (~1¢) · CACHED · REQUIRES STAFF KEY

Proposal shell · National Institutes of Health conventions SEE AN NIH EXAMPLE →

Funder-faithful document skeletons — National Institutes of Health'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.

ONE LLM CALL (~2-3¢) · CACHED · SCAFFOLDING, NOT GHOSTWRITING