Applications for NIH funding typically require a detailed research plan, including hypotheses, methods, and analytic plans. Do responses to this RFA require a similar section?
• No. Responses to this RFA should include a broader Research Agenda which could be carried out to take advantage of the unique capabilities of the CTN, rather than a detailed plan describing a single proposed study with a discrete set of research questions. • This Research Agenda should encompass a broader set of research ideas that address current public health needs in addiction treatment and describe how knowledge gaps would be filled if the agenda were to be pursued. It should discuss the types of critical research questions that must be addressed by the addiction treatment research field in order to advance scientific knowledge and improve practice. • It is important that this discussion include the relevance and feasibility of the proposed research agenda to a broad array of community treatment practices, research methods that might be used, patient populations that might be studied, the potential for implementation and adoption by service providers, and how potential findings w
Related Questions
- Applications for NIH funding typically require a detailed research plan, including hypotheses, methods, and analytic plans. Do responses to this RFA require a similar section?
- Which application does NIH require grantees to use for Change of Grantee Institution applications?
- Can a research project also have NIH funding?