HEAL: Translating Addiction Epidemiology, Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery Research into Practice (R61/R33 - Clinical Trial Optional)
Contract Overview
Solicitation details, issuing organization, response deadlines, documents, and interested companies for this government contract opportunity.
AI Contract Overview
The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), in collaboration with other NIH Institutes, plans to issue a Notice of Funding Opportunity focused on advancing research that expedites the application of addiction epidemiology, prevention, treatment, and recovery findings into practical solutions to combat the opioid crisis and overdose incidents. This initiative seeks studies targeting modifiable factors and overcoming barriers or leveraging facilitators across various levels, including individual, provider, community, and systemic domains, to reduce substance use, misuse, and overdose deaths. The goal is to develop effective, replicable, and scalable approaches that bring evidence-based and promising interventions into routine practice, with priority areas encompassing recovery, prevention, pain and addiction intersections, family engagement, care transitions, mental health integration, service quality improvements, and real-time data utilization for enhancing public health responses. The solicitation will use the R61/R33 activity code and is not open for applications yet, providing advanced notice for applicants to form meaningful collaborations and develop responsive projects. Investigators with expertise in addiction research, health services, implementation science, modeling, health economics, translation, and engagement science are encouraged to prepare for submission. This effort is aimed at fostering collaborative, multidisciplinary approaches to accelerate the translation of research into impactful treatment and prevention strategies. Contact for the opportunity can be made through a specific NIH representative provided, and further details will be available upon solicitation announcement.
General Info
Agency
NAICS
Place of Performance
Not specifiedSet-Aside
Documents
(0)AI Contract Breakdown
Uniform Contract FormatNo contract breakdown available.
Cannot generate Contract Breakdown because no documents were found from this contract's source.
Timeline
Organization & Contact Information
Full Description
The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), with other NIH Institutes, intends to publish a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to solicit applications to support action-oriented research that accelerates the translation of addiction epidemiology, prevention, treatment, and recovery research to practice addressing both the opioid crisis and overdose events. Research supported under this initiative would focus on identifying and characterizing malleable factors and addressing barriers or facilitators to reducing substance use, misuse and overdose deaths at the individual, provider, organizational, community, or system levels. The emphasis would be on exploring and developing effective, replicable, and scalable approaches for accelerating the movement of evidence-based and promising treatments and preventive interventions into routine use. Specific priority areas would include, but not be limited to: recovery, prevention, pain/addiction intersections, engaging family and loved ones, transitions across care settings (e.g., inpatient treatment to community treatment), mental health integration, improving quality and efficiency of existing services and interventions, examining substance use and health outcomes and meaningful real-time data capture and use to improve services and public health approaches to reducing substance use, misuse, addiction, and overdose. Applications are not being solicited at this time. Notice is being provided to allow potential applicants sufficient time to develop meaningful collaborations and responsive projects. This NOFO will utilize the R61/R33 activity code. Investigators with expertise and insights into this area of addiction epidemiology, prevention, treatment, recovery and health services research are encouraged to begin to consider applying for this new NOFO. In addition, collaborative investigations combining expertise in modeling, health economics, implementation science, translation, or engagement science will be encouraged, and these investigators should also begin considering applying for this application.
