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Some NIH grant types include : K (training grants), R21 & R01 (research project grants), U01-U54, T32, etc.
Find former and new grant funding opportunities through this link: https://grants.nih.gov/funding/searchguide/index.html#/; Researchers should check regularly and can filter by grant types and institutes.
Consider subscribing to weekly grant alerts here: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/manage-subscriptions.html
Special calls are marked with RFA, PAR, or PAS and are usually only open for a limited time.
NIH Grant Scoring
NIH review criteria may change for different types of applications
Generally, scoring is made within 5 criteria: significance, innovation, approach, investigators, environment, and an overall impact score. Scoring is on a scale of 1 to -5, with 1 being the best.
Generally, there are at least 3 scoring reviewers.
Applicants should look for opportunities to be very responsive to scoring comments. You are able to push back with strong justification if unsatisfied with specific comments.
Clairy and repetition is are essential for these grants
Finding paylines and success rates:
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ESI’s are a priority for NIH funding
ESI can receive a one-time bonus during the review for R-type grants
Determine your ESI status here:https://grants.nih.gov/policy/early-stage/determining-status
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Recording & Presentation Slides
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