Categories: All - grants - funding - education - dissemination

by Rosemary DuMont 16 years ago

192

NIH Cancer Education Grants Program (R25) PAR-08-120

The NIH Cancer Education Grants Program (R25) aims to support innovative cancer education and research dissemination projects over a five-year period. These grants are designed for a range of audiences, including students interested in cancer research, established scientists needing updates in emerging cancer fields, and health care providers requiring the latest information on cancer prevention and control.

NIH Cancer Education Grants Program (R25) PAR-08-120

NIH Cancer Education Grants Program (R25) PAR-08-120

Requirements

No cost share required
Pilot information is available on design and content
Not appropriate for pilot studies
Assurance of continued funding after grant ends

Institutional commitment

Overview Content

Purpose

Development of: (i) innovative cancer education programs; and (ii) cancer research dissemination projects that can be completed within 5 years.

Cancer Education grants

“Cancer education” grants may target a variety of audiences, including: science or health care students with an interest in cancer research careers; established cancer scientists seeking short term educational updates in emerging cancer science areas such as genetics and molecular drug discovery; and health care providers in need of information on the latest developments in cancer prevention and control. Grants that target community health care providers or community settings are intended to provide information needed to facilitate the diffusion of evidence-based findings within a relatively short time. The programs, which have been proposed for Cancer Education grants, may use a variety of formats, depending upon both target audiences and specific goals. Grants that are aimed at educating students, cancer scientists, cancer care professionals, clinicians, and/or community health providers, may develop and use primarily curriculum-based short-term educational experiences. Program delivery to the targeted audience(s) may take place in traditional educational settings or via web-based and other “virtual” approaches. Curriculum content may range from cancer biology and genetics to cancer prevention, control, and palliative care.

Project themes

Examples of project themes that may be funded through the CEGP include (but are not limited to) the following areas:

* New curriculum development within an academic institution in areas of critical importance to cancer education (e.g., nutrition, pain management, palliative care, and genetics).

* New curriculum development within the Minority Institution/Cancer Center Partnership program (MI/CCP) to motivate college students at Minority Serving Institutions to focus their careers on reduction of cancer health disparities.

* Development of primarily short-term curriculum based educational programs in academic settings to encourage college science students, pre-doctoral biomedical and health sciences students to pursue careers in cancer research.

* Short term courses to educate community health care providers in evidence-based cancer prevention and control techniques including cancer screening programs, tobacco cessation techniques, nutrition education and clinical cancer genetics.

* Educational approaches to encourage community health care providers and community-based organizations to adopt evidence-based prevention and screening interventions.

* Research dissemination approaches to increase the adaptation of evidence-based preventive interventions to ethnically and linguistically diverse communities.

* Research/practice partnership education programs that are directed to increase the utilization of evidence-based information in community settings.

Scope

5 years of support/ non renewable

Submission deadline: September 25

Submit via ERA Commons

Must include evaluation plan and dissemination plan

Tracking of student career choices pertaining to training and research