Funding Opportunities
-
The Clinician Scientist Award is a bridge-to-a-K program that supports the career development of the School of Medicine’s junior faculty. Salary support is provided to grant qualified young faculty protected research time. Please see the RFA to learn about the application requirements, eligibility, and selection criteria.
Award Summary:
- Up to $80,000 total to cover salary and fringe
- Renewable for a total of (2) two years of support
- Two cycles/year: Spring (July 1 start); Fall (January 1 start)
- Eligibility: Applicants may not hold or be past recipients of K-equivalent awards.
The Fall 2024 application deadline is Monday, November 25, 2024 at 5pm. If you have any questions, please contact Sharel A. Brown, [email protected]
-
The Johns Hopkins ALACRITY Center for Health and Longevity in Mental Illness is pleased to announce Requests for Proposals for our 2025 Pilot Grant Program on topics related to improving physical health and addressing premature mortality for persons with serious mental illness.
Johns Hopkins faculty at all levels are welcome to apply and can request funding for 1-2 years up to $50,000 per year. Concept notes are due 12/2/2024.
For more information, see the JH ALACRITY Center R03 RFP. Please contact us with questions at [email protected].
-
Applicants who are accepted into the Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Scholars Program will be provided with rigorous and innovative training, help to develop and execute a clinical research project, mentorship in a multidisciplinary and collaborative research environment, and involvement in activities to promote career development
Please see funding details and application eligibility here. For any questions, reach out to Mia Terkowitz, Sr. Project Coordinator [email protected]
-
The Johns Hopkins and Kaiser Permanente Research Collaboration Committee seeks to fund research projects highlighting the effective synergy of the Johns Hopkins Medicine and Kaiser Permanente collaboration in tackling the complex and intriguing questions vexing both health systems.
Research projects should best represent initial research that leverages the unique capabilities of each learning health system and funded projects will be managed by two co-Principal Investigators (PIs); one from Kaiser Permanente and one from Johns Hopkins.
Funding is available for up to four projects with a total of $75,000/project. No indirect costs are allowed and funding will not start any sooner than May 1, 2025, pending Institutional Review Board approval. For full funding requirements, view the request for applications.
For questions, please contact Karen Chesbrough at [email protected] or an ICTR Research Navigator at [email protected].
-
The Johns Hopkins University Catalyst Awards are for early-career faculty across the university who are undertaking exceptional research or creative endeavors. The awards of up to $100,000 will help these individuals launch their promising careers during the crucial years when startup funds are depleted, and external funding or other support may be elusive. They are available to faculty members appointed to a full-time tenure-track or tenure-track equivalent faculty position within no less than three years and no more than 10 years of service effective July 1, 2025.
The Johns Hopkins University Discovery Awards focus on cross-university, faculty-led research and discovery. We aim for these awards of up to $150,000 to spark new interactions among faculty from across the university. Faculty teams use these funds to get started while they seek an externally funded large-scale grant or cooperative agreement. When an opportunity is identified, the PIs can work with our Research Development Team to prepare the application.
*Hopkins Business of Health Initiative is a partner in the Discovery Award Program for the third year running!
HBHI have funded 2 projects in each of the past 2 years and will plan to do the same again this year. HBHI supported projects will be funded at $175,000! Please apply and mark HBHI if appropriate.
HBHI is looking for projects with collaborators across JHU Divisions on topics that cover HBHI strategic pillar. We will prioritize projects that leverage HBHI data resources: http://hbhi.jhu.edu/affiliate-resource/health-analytics-research-platform-harp.
-
The Grant Accelerator Program will provide onetime grants of $5,000–$15,000 to provide Core Coins for junior and midlevel faculty members and help them overcome barriers to successful grant submissions. These small awards provide a way to rapidly fund data acquisition and analysis that investigators need as part of their grant applications. The funds may be spent at any of the Cores on iLabs for clinical or laboratory projects. In addition to the funding, Core staff will be available to help applicants design analyses and interpret data.
The Grant Accelerator application is quick and easy to complete, requiring only a few brief responses and a one-page NIH format specific aims page. The application is available.
Upcoming application deadline is February 1, 2025, and we expect to fund 20–35 projects in this cycle. Decisions and funding will be provided within one month of each application deadline.
-
The Vice Provost for Research office coordinates all limited submission activities on behalf of the University, and makes every effort to provide a current list of open opportunities to faculty. Please see list here.
Get e-mail alerts about funding opportunities at [email protected].
What's New?
-
The Johns Hopkins Editorial Assistance Services Initiative (EASI)offers editorial support forgrant proposals and journal articlesat no charge to faculty. Details of services by the Research and Development Team can be found here: EASI
-
Due to increased investment in administrative infrastructure to support SOM-sponsored research, the off-campus rate for new commercial sponsored research awards will increase to 39% from the current 34%, effective July 1, 2024.
The on-campus rate of 72% remains unchanged.
The new off-campus rate applies to all new proposals for commercial sponsored research submitted on or after July 1, 2024. Existing awards will continue under the rate in effect as of the date of their original submission, as will any pending proposals submitted before July 1, 2024.
-
The Office of Federal Strategy has developed the following resources to help faculty navigate through preparing for Congressional testimony, submitting effective comments to federal agencies, and best practices for moderating discussions with elected or appointed officials.
Tips for preparing Congressional testimony
Tips for submitting effective comments
-
Data Trust office hours: Third Thursday of the month 8:30-9:30am via the Office Hours MS Teams channel. You can also find the library of recorded sessions.
The Research Data Subcouncil has several resources to guide study teams and answer questions about the Data Trust review process, the Risk Tiers Calculator, and access to and sharing of JHM data.
The Data Trust oversees the use and disclosure of JHM patient and plan member data stored in clinical enterprise systems. Visit the Data Trust site to learn more about data governance and best practices for JHM data.
-
Do you need help navigating the IRB review process? The IRB is available to help study teams with protocol planning and answer questions about studies undergoing IRB review. Request a Consult to be matched to knowledgeable IRB staff members who can help address your specific needs.
-
For those involved in clinical research hospital billing, please note that hospital billing statements generated after April 1, 2024 Hospital Billing (HB) charges from Johns Hopkins Health System facilities in Maryland will be discounted to 29.6% of the facility charge master for Government/Not for Profit organizations and to 44.4% for Pharmaceutical/For Profit sponsors. This is an increase from the previous research discount. Hospital Billing charges from Sibley Memorial Hospital and All Children’s Hospital will have an additional discount applied to maintain consistency across the Johns Hopkins Health System. See letter for more information.
For any questions, please contact the Clinical Research Support Services (CRSS) team at [email protected].
-
Effective fiscal year 2024, we will be implementing the following fee structure for participating in the CCDA adjunct program. See letter for more information.
- Annual support fee: $5,000 per CCDA adjunct and $4,000 per registry data manager. CCDA adjuncts have access to pull data from various institutional data sources and thus typically require more CCDA staff support; registry data managers are limited to the data in their provisioned registry and need less support.
- One-time onboarding fee: $5,000 for new CCDA adjuncts and registry data managers. This fee covers interviewing candidates proposed by the sponsoring department, initial training, mentoring, and review. This fee is in addition to the annual support fee.
-
We have implemented improvements to the registration process for Human Subjects Research (HSR) Compliance Training. Investigators and Study Team Members will be able to enroll in required training courses (initial training, ICH GCP and recertification) by selecting one “bundle” in myLearning. Once enrolled in myLearning, you will be directed to the CITI site where courses will be added to your plan by selecting the “bundle” you wish to complete. Please review this guide on how to get started. For additional questions, please contact the IRB Help Desk at [email protected].
-
The OHSR and IRB staff have two new ways to communicate with you:
- Microsoft Teams. On the Contact page, you can find contact information for staff members, including new Microsoft Teams phone numbers, email addresses and newly added links to chat with a staff member.
-
Request a Consult. If you want a comprehensive discussion about, e.g., protocol planning assistance, please request a consult, and the OHSR staff will connect you with an appropriate team member.
-
Data protection attestation has been integrated into eIRB and public health institutional review system tracking (PHIRST) to enable sharing of limited data sets among Johns Hopkins University (JHU) researchers. This change eliminates the need for a data use agreement for most transfers of a limited data set to JHU collaborators. New guidance is now available to help JHU researchers?navigate the process?and requirements?for requesting use of Johns Hopkins Medicine (JHM) data.
- Review information on sharing Johns Hopkins Medicine data on the JHM Data Trust intranet site.?
- For more information on data protection attestation, see frequently asked questions.
-
If you are interested in or are working with artificial intelligence (AI), please register to join a growing Johns Hopkins University community of AI scholars. Please contact Stuart Ray with questions or for more information.