CIHR- Team Grant: Transitions in Care Phase 2 – Application
Well-being, Health and Biomedical Discovery
Deadlines
Academic Unit: Inquire within your unit
Memorial Deadline: Tuesday 18th, January 2022
External Deadline: Tuesday 25th, January 2022
Description
SIRI will be offering support with application development for this opportunity. Prospective applicants are encouraged to contact Jennifer Stevens (v5js@mun.ca) early during the development process to discuss the services available to them.
The focus of Transitions in Care (TiC) Team Grants Phase 2 is to support inter-disciplinary teams that are poised and ready to optimize health outcomes during transitions in care. The grants will provide support to co-develop, implement, evaluate, and equitably spread and/or scale (share) pragmatic solutions to challenges associated with transitions in care from a clinical, health care or health system perspective. This funding opportunity welcomes any clinical, health systems, health services, policy, community-based, and/or digital health innovation research related applications addressing applied research questions deemed relevant and important by health system decision-makers in Canada. The proposed research should be relevant to communities and decision-makers by engaging them in the research process and producing results that can be applied and/or adapted to multiple regions and/or settings. In addition, the proposed TiC solution(s) should have the potential to improve the health outcomes and experience of all peoples in Canada including Indigenous Peoples (First Nations, Inuit, Métis and/or Urban Indigenous communities), racialized groups and historically underserved and/or excluded groups, undergoing transitions in care.
CIHR has developed a partner linkage tool to facilitate connections between interested researchers and stakeholders. Please complete a short survey to be identified in the linkage tool.
Information webinar: September 28, 2021 at 11:00 am ET Join
Application deadline: January 25, 2022
Additional information can be found at ResearchNet.