National Bureau of Economic Research
NBER: Reminder -- Funding Opportunity: NBER Roybal Center for Behavior Change in Health (J. Doyle & D. Laibson)

Reminder -- Funding Opportunity: NBER Roybal Center for Behavior Change in Health (J. Doyle & D. Laibson)

From: Sarah Holmes Berk <sholmes_at_nber.org>
Date: Mon, 1 Nov 2021 14:59:46 -0400

Dear Affiliates:

As a reminder, the NBER Roybal Center seeks proposals from affiliates and
non-affiliates for research projects that involve randomized controlled
trials (RCTs) or other NIH-defined clinical trials, and that, if approved
for funding by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), would receive support
during the period *June 1, 2022 through May 31, 2023*. Eligible projects
must explore some aspect of the relationship between health and human
behavior. Projects that involve scalable interventions, with the potential
to broadly improve population health as people age, are of particular
interest. The deadline for submissions is *Monday, January 3rd*. *Please
take note of the updated internal deadlines below and attached, which
supersede those communicated earlier this year.*

Potential project funding is likely to fall in the range of $50,000 to
$90,000 of direct costs. Proposals will be reviewed on a rolling basis,
and early submissions are strongly encouraged.

Proposals will be evaluated by the Center co-PIs and Advisory Committee for
research design, relevance, feasibility, scalability, and timeliness. We
look for projects with the potential to advance through the NIH Stage Model
for Behavioral Intervention Development
<https://www.nia.nih.gov/research/dbsr/nih-stage-model-behavioral-intervention-development>
.

To be an NIH-defined clinical trial, the answers to the following four
questions must be “yes”:

   1. Does the study involve human participants?
   2. Are the participants prospectively assigned to an intervention?
   3. Is the study designed to evaluate the effect of the intervention on
   the participants?
   4. Is the effect being evaluated a health-related biomedical or
   behavioral outcome?

Funding is not available for secondary data analyses or other
non-clinical-trial research.

To be eligible for support, subject recruitment for the study may not have
started yet, and it must be possible to delay recruitment until after
formal NIH approval. The project must comply with all NIH clinical trial
policies <https://grants.nih.gov/policy/clinical-trials.htm>.

*Next steps / How to apply:*
**** Please note updated deadlines below. ****

   - *By Monday, January 3, 2022:* Submit a brief description of your
   project (including power calculations) and anticipated budget needs. Upload
   a PDF with this information here
   <http://conference.nber.org/confsubmit/backend/cfp?id=RCs22>. Early
   submissions are strongly encouraged.
   - *By Friday, January 21, 2022:* We will tell you if we are able to
   include your project.
   - *By Monday, February 14, 2022: *Using templates and instructions we
   will provide, submit your Specific Aims, 2-page Research Design, Human
   Subjects Questionnaire, Planned Inclusion Enrollment Report(s), Budget,
   Biosketch, and Other Support.
   - *During Early March 2022:* Review and approve your Human Subjects
   System record, which we will draft. Complete applicable NBER and NIH
   administrative requirements.
   - *Summer 2022: *We will learn if your study has been approved by the
   NIH. Depending on the risks associated with your study, the NIH may require
   your study to receive Data & Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) and/or Safety
   Officer (SO) approval before recruitment can begin.
   - *For as long as your study continues:* Update us periodically on your
   progress. If applicable, update the DSMB and/or SO periodically. Help us
   maintain your ClinicalTrials.gov and Human Subjects System records.

Please contact Sarah Holmes Berk (sholmes_at_nber.org) with any questions.

Best regards,

Joseph Doyle and David Laibson, NBER Roybal Center Co-Directors

*{Sent by Sarah Holmes Berk on behalf of the Co-Directors}*


*Sarah Holmes Berk*
Associate Director, NBER Roybal Center for Behavior Change in Health
National Bureau of Economic Research | Cambridge, MA
617-588-1445 (office) | 757-556-2684 (cell)
she, her, hers

Received on Mon Nov 01 2021 - 16:10:45 EDT