Toolkit for NIH Funding
Mission and Organization of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
NIH is part of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and is the primary Federal agency
conducting and supporting medical research. NIH is composed of the Office of
Director, 20 individual Institutes, and seven Centers. Information about the organizational
structure of NIH http://www1.od.nih.gov/oma/manualchapters/management/1123/nih.pdf
and about each specific institute or center http://www.nih.gov/icd
is available online. Note: To see presentations from the most recent NIH regional grants conference, click here.
The mission of NIH is science in
pursuit of fundamental knowledge about the nature and behavior of living
systems and the application of that knowledge to promote healthy lives and
reduce the burdens of illness and disability.
Consequently, NIH funds research in the biomedical and health sciences. Fundable research projects include those
related to understanding fundamental biological processes and/or the associated
abnormalities of disease surrounding those biological processes, in addition to
outreach and education activities about disease, its prevention and treatment,
and its occurrence in specific environments or geographies. Although the individual institutes and
centers have certain areas of interest, the Office of the Director, in
consultation with various advisory committees and based on input from individual
investigators, may suggest specific areas of research for the individual
institutes and centers. Directors of each institute and center then use such
input to focus their funding priorities accordingly.
NIH Funding Priorities
NIH funds research projects both
within its own laboratories and at national or international locations. “Extramural” funding is available to people
and institutions outside NIH, while “intramural” funding is available only to
those members of specific institute or center laboratories located within the
NIH campus.
Extramural funding from NIH can
come in various forms, but in general, proposals are categorized as solicited
or unsolicited. A solicited proposal is
one where NIH or one of its institutes and centers has an interest in a
specific topic and they will advertise (post to their website) a solicitation
for proposals on that particular topic. Each institute and center within NIH
generates a list of solicitations, called requests for applications (RFA) or
program announcements (PA), which target a specific research area. There is a place to sign up for email
notification of these solicitations by going to the NIH website, http://www.grants.gov/FedGrantsNotification2. These solicitations may have due dates
different from the regular dates. Read
the solicitation carefully to determine eligibility and due dates.
On the other hand, an unsolicited
proposal is one that an investigator sends to an institute or center within a
general area of research (e.g., cell biology of cancer) using a regular cycle
of submission dates http://grants1.nih.gov/grants/funding/submissionschedule.htm. Most grant proposals submitted to NIH are
unsolicited. As a percentage of the
total number of grant proposals submitted to NIH, only a very small percentage
(~18%)
are awarded in response to a solicitation.
On the other hand, a very large proportion (~82%) of the total number
of grant applications submitted to NIH and subsequently awarded are the result
of investigator-initiated, or unsolicited proposals.
What types of projects does NIH fund and is there a specific emphasis in a particular area? That information can be found by looking at the websites of specific institutes and centers for their funding priorities http://grants2.nih.gov/grants/new_investigators/IC_Funding_Plans.htm; by reading press releases and speeches by institute and center directors; and by looking up historical award data from various institutes to see what types of proposals have been funded (either through each institute and center website, or by going to CRISP and doing a search of funding by institute http://crisp.cit.nih.gov/crisp/crisp_query.generate_screen. Brief descriptions of the institutes and centers, as well as their abbreviations are listed at http://www.nih.gov/icd/.
As a unified entity, NIH has made
some specific recommendations in terms of areas of research that will guide the
field of biomedical science through the current century. This idea began as a critical evaluation of
the current state of affairs of biomedical and health-related research
findings, and how those findings have guided the practice of medicine in terms
of reducing the burden of disease on the human population. That critical analysis led to the development
of a general set of guidelines for all institutes and centers to adopt in terms
of a more focused effort in the use of their funding allocations with respect
to the application of the funded research directly to the clinic (“bench to
bedside,” or “translational research”).
The NIH Roadmap is the overall document that provides leadership to the
directors of institutes and centers in their strategic planning for future
research initiatives http://nihroadmap.nih.gov/. There are also funding opportunities for
funding specific to the NIH Roadmap initiatives at http://nihroadmap.nih.gov/grants/index.asp. An objective of the roadmap was to encourage
investigators, institutes, and centers to cross traditional boundaries
(institute-specific, techniques and methods, career [physician/scientist],
discipline [medicine/engineering]) in order to make new and significant
discoveries towards common NIH goals.
One outcome has been Trans-NIH Scientific Initiatives (e.g., Pain
Research Consortium, Model Organisms for Research Consortium, Bioengineering
Consortium) and other non-institute and center-directed research (e.g., NIH
Obesity Research, NIH Neuroscience Blueprint).
Funding Avenues, Funding Instruments, and Research Activities
There are various resources available in order to identify the most appropriate funding mechanism for a particular research topic. See the table below for a brief description of the many programs and opportunities NIH offers to secure extramural funding. For a complete list of NIH funding mechanisms and links to a thorough description of each, see http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/funding_program.htm.
|
Funding Avenues, Instruments and Activities for Extramural Research |
|||
|
Funding Avenues |
Funding Instrument |
Research Activity (Examples) |
Features |
|
Investigator-initiated Research (Unsolicited) |
Grant |
R01, R21, etc. |
|
|
Program Announcement (PA) (Solicited) |
Grant or Cooperative Agreement |
R01, R03, R21, R43, etc.
U01 Specified in PA |
|
|
Requests for Applications (RFA) (Solicited) |
Grant or Cooperative Agreement
|
R01, R03, R21, R43, etc. U01, U43 Specified in RFA |
|
|
Requests for Proposals (RFP) (Solicited) |
Contract Mechanism |
N01, N43 Specified in RFP |
|
This
table was taken from a larger document that can be found at: http://grants2.nih.gov/grants/choosing_fundInstrument.doc.
Finally, be sure that NIH is the
right place to fund a project in a particular area of research before deciding
to which institute or center a proposal should be sent. Information about which federal government
agency can help with the process of deciding on a particular funding agency can
be found at the following website, http://www.grants.gov/TypesofGrants,
where there is a listing of different research areas funded by the various 26
federal agencies. If NIH is the right
place for a particular research project, this website provides some guidance
with respect to the decision about the appropriate grant mechanism to use.
Overview of NIH Grant Review: the Center for Scientific Review (CSR)
The Center for Scientific Review is
the main portal for NIH grant applications and their review for scientific
merit. They organize peer review groups or study sections that evaluate the
majority (70%) of research grant applications sent to NIH. They also receive all grant applications for
NIH, as well as for some other components of DHHS. The mission of CSR is to
ensure that NIH grant applications receive fair, independent, expert, and
timely reviews. CSR receives nearly
80,000 applications a year and recruits over 14,000 external experts to review
applications in its study sections, which often meet three times during the
year. Additional scientists serve on other NIH advisory councils, which provide
a second level of peer review and make funding recommendations based on
priorities set by Congress, DHHS, and the public. For a brief presentation on
the review process at CSR, go to http://cms.csr.nih.gov/NR/rdonlyres/382C309C-8393-4C78-9672-D430B0E81A08/5502/csr_overview.ppt#256,1,Center
for Scientific Review
CSR
receives all solicited and unsolicited applications for NIH extramural funding.
Study sections within the various IRGs mainly review research project grant
applications; however, some applications
are sent to specially convened study sections (e.g., special emphasis panels),
especially if the application is sent in response to a particular RFA or
PA. Most National Research Service Award
individual fellowship applications (NRSA) and other NIH Career Awards are
reviewed in special study sections that are designated for these reviews. More
information about the Fellowship Study Sections is available at http://cms.csr.nih.gov/PeerReviewMeetings/Fellowship.
Small Business
Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer Research
(STTR) applications are reviewed in Special Emphasis Panels within CSR's
integrated review groups (IRG). While most study sections at CSR are composed
of standing committee members (i.e., the same members stay on the same study
section for about three years or roughly nine grant cycles), small business
review panels are assembled on an ad hoc basis for each meeting and are subject
to change. Additional information about Small Business Applications reviews can
be found at http://cms.csr.nih.gov/ResourcesforApplicants/sbirsttr/
and on the page entitled CSR Study Section Roster Index at http://www.csr.nih.gov/Committees/rosterindex.asp.
In addition, each of the CSR IRG descriptions can be found at http://cms.csr.nih.gov/PeerReviewMeetings/CSRIRGDescription/
Grant applications are reviewed by a group of research peers;
thus the term, “peer review process” has been used to describe the grant
review. For a complete overview of specific steps in the grant review process, see
http://cms.csr.nih.gov/AboutCSR/OverviewofPeerReviewProcess.htm
The objective of the peer review
process is to provide a fair, objective review of all grant applications for
scientific merit. While most grants are
reviewed using the same general guidelines (see below), differential emphasis
is placed on some review criteria depending on the type of proposal. Basic guidelines used to evaluate a proposal
include the following five criteria: significance, approach, innovation,
investigator, and environment. For an
example of the guidelines for reviewers of R01 new grants, see http://cms.csr.nih.gov/NR/rdonlyres/849C0F12-A897-4D17-B5D0-09EFE9184667/5552/R01_Research_Grants1.pdf). However, for more information about variation
from the set criteria for specific grant applications, see http://cms.csr.nih.gov/ResourcesforApplicants/PolicyProcedureReview+Guidelines/Guidelines+for+Review+of+Specific+Applications/ (section B.)
For a good overview of the proposal submission and review process, use
the following link http://www.nibib1.nih.gov/events/thermography/ppts/Sipe/thermosipe.ppt.
Unless a proposal is streamlined or
triaged (see below), it will receive a priority score and percentile ranking
from the study section through the Scientific Review Administrator (SRA) for a
particular study section. Each scored
grant application is assigned a single, global score that reflects the overall
impact that the project could have on the research field based on consideration
of the five review criteria (significance, approach, innovation, investigator,
environment), with the emphasis on each criterion varying from one application
to another depending on the nature of the application and its relative
strengths. The best possible priority
score is 100 and the worst is 500.
Individual reviewers mark scores to two significant figures (e.g., 2.2; one
decimal place) and the individual scores are averaged by the SRA, and then
multiplied by 100 to yield a single overall score for each application, e.g.,
253. Once research grant applications
(R01s) reviewed by CSR study sections are scored, they are assigned a
percentile rank. The conversion of
priority scores to percentile rankings is based on scores assigned to
applications reviewed during the current, plus past two review rounds. Note that at CSR, applications other than
R01s are not percentiled.
Unfortunately, not all unsolicited
(or investigator-initiated) grant applications will receive a priority score
(nor a percentile rank), but all proposals will be reviewed for scientific
content and comments from each of the reviewers will be sent back to the PI
verbatim through the SRA. CSR calls this
process “streamlining” and it involves reviewers assessing the merit of each
application, and then reducing the total number of applications by half, so
only the “top 50%” of proposals submitted will get assigned a score. For more information on the streamlining
process, see http://cms.csr.nih.gov/ResourcesforApplicants/PolicyProcedureReview+Guidelines/Guidelines+for+Review+of+Specific+Applications/
Guidelines+For+Study+Section+Reviewers+and+Chairs/StreamlinedReviewProceduresusedinCSR.htm Note that the streamlining procedure only
applies to research applications, not to fellowships or career applications;
all fellowship and career applications are scored.
To view the success rate (percent
funded grant applications) for awards made through NIH broken down by specific
categories (such as agency, type of award, etc.), go to http://grants.nih.gov/grants/award/success.htm.
CSR and Agency-Specific Grant Writing Tutorials
Of all the
Federal funding agencies, NIH has one of the most structured formats for
proposal submission. The specifics of
the proposal format can be found at http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/phs398/phs398.html
and http://grants2.nih.gov/grants/funding/phs398/instructions2/p1_specific_instructions.htm.
Guidelines may differ slightly depending on a specific solicitation and the
size of the proposal (single investigator or center grant proposal). If
responding to a specific solicitation, be sure to read the entire document to
determine if the proposal format deviates from the typical NIH proposal (the
PHS398 forms). CSR, as well as specific
institutes, have developed tutorials for helping individuals prepare for
submitting proposals, found at http://www.nlm.nih.gov/ep/Tutorial.html
and http://grants2.nih.gov/grants/grant_tips.htm
NIH offers specific resources for proposal development, submission, and revised proposal submission.
Grant Writing Tip Sheets
Annotated R01 Grant
Application
Advice on
Research Training and Career Awards
Preparing Grant
Applications from the National Cancer Institute
Quick Guide for
Grant Applications from the National Cancer Institute
Quick
Guide for the Preparation of Grant Applications NCCAM
All About Grants from
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
FAQ:
Grant Application and Review Information from the National Library of Medicine
New NIH Grant Applicants from
the National Institute of General Medical Sciences
NIH website for new investigators
If
an investigator is very new to the NIH proposal preparation and submission
process, the NIH maintains a website specifically designed to answer junior
investigator’s questions. Go to http://grants2.nih.gov/grants/new_investigators/
to find out the answers to many NIH-specific questions. And finally, if help is needed with the
interpretation of an RFA or PA, call the program officer listed on the
announcement for guidance through the specifics of the announcement.
Other Helpful Resources
Excellent grant-writing manual for biomedical researchers developed by the University of Pennsylvania Medical School
NIH Presentation: "Grant Writing for Success" by Dr. Anthony Coelho
OPD Presentation on NIH

