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The National Institutes of Health is funding bold, new research ideas that focus on interventions to address health disparities and advance health equity. Eleven grants were awarded to support the work of exceptionally creative researchers across the United States through the NIH Common Fund’s Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity initiative totaling $58 million over five years, pending availability of funds. The grants are innovative because the applications focused on the significance of the research problem, the novelty of the idea or approach, and the magnitude of the potential impact rather than on preliminary data or experimental details.
“It is unacceptable for persistent and pervasive health inequities to continue despite the scientific advancements and knowledge base we have achieved,” said NIH Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. “This research effort will catalyze novel interventions and hasten the opportunity to put evidence into action for populations affected by health disparities.”
A health disparity is a negative health outcome that affects disadvantaged populations like racial and ethnic minority populations, socioeconomic disadvantaged groups, underserved rural populations, and sexual and gender minorities.More recently, the racial and ethnic differences in COVID-19 incidences and deaths illuminated health disparities and inequities that affect minority populations.
Each of the awards includes an innovative intervention component and focuses on one or more NIH-designated populations that experience health disparities in the U.S.,including the following examples:
•Community-based research collaborations will develop and test financial interventions that address structural racism in neighborhoods predominantly populated by African American residents and examine spiritual healing and stress reduction interventions for youth from racial and ethnic minority communities to prevent chronic disease outcomes.
•Telehealth-driven or technology-assisted interventions have surged in the wake of COVID-19 and will be integrated into several of the community-based interventions for physical and mental health.
•Technology-enhanced approaches will be designed to advance cancer health equity among diverse deaf, deafblind, and hard-of-hearing populations.
•Researchers will also develop and evaluate a new model of school-based, telehealth-driven preventive care to prevent health disparities in underserved rural and socioeconomically disadvantaged children.
To read more https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/new-highly-innovative-nih-research-awards-address-health-disparities-advance-health-equity