2022-03-15

[#DIV28SUPER] Fwd: [SCIENCECHANNEL] Help Fight for Fair Peer Review at NIH!

FYI
________________
Ryan Vandrey, Ph.D.
President
APA Division 28


http://www.apadivisions.org/division-28/index.aspx

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Prinstein, Mitch" <MPrinstein@apa.org>
Subject: [SCIENCECHANNEL] Help Fight for Fair Peer Review at NIH!
Date: March 15, 2022 at 11:56:36 AM EDT
Reply-To: Forum for urgent science needs with the APA Science and Advocacy Offices <SCIENCECHANNEL@LISTS.APA.ORG>


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Are you an NIH Peer Reviewer? Want Better Reviews? Take a Moment to Look Over this Plan and Send APA Your Feedback
 
The Center for Scientific Review (CSR) at NIH is updating its 5-year Strategic Plan and is asking for stakeholder feedback. Please help APA weigh in to ensure the peer review system works for psychological scientists. You can participate in two ways: send your input to APA to inform our comment to the plan (send comments by 3/20 to Pat Kobor at APA) or make comments to the plan directly at feedback@csr.nih.gov, no later than 3/23.
 
The CSR strategic plan will serve as a roadmap to advance NIH's mission-driven work in peer review over the next 5 years. The draft plan is here: if you want to look at just a couple of sections, please check out these: p.8, overview of changes CSR is implementing to ensure fairer reviews; p. 15, "Broaden the pool of reviewers and ensure that review panels are diverse on multiple dimensions" and 22, "Implement changes to the peer review process to make it more fair, effective, and efficient." 
 
Peer review is fundamental to psychology's success as a science at NIH, and psychology has much to contribute to CSR's efforts to make their processes more effective. Please take a moment to share this note with colleagues who may be interested, and to help APA weigh in on behalf of psychology.
 
Please pass this along to your division members and other scientists!!
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2022-03-09

[#DIV28SUPER] NIDA Neuroscience Update, March 9, 2022

 

Table of Contents:

I.Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity at Minority Serving Institutions (U01 Clinical Trials Optional) (RFA-RM-22-001).

II. NIH Request for Information (RFI) on Interdisciplinary Research Opportunities that Bridge Neuroscience and Environmental Health Science NOT-NS-22-076

 

I.Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity at Minority Serving Institutions (U01 Clinical Trials Optional) (RFA-RM-22-001).

 

The NIH Common Fund’s Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity initiative has issued the funding opportunity announcement (FOA) “Limited Competition: Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity at Minority Serving Institutions (U01 Clinical Trials Optional) (RFA-RM-22-001).”

This funding opportunity will support projects that propose unusually innovative research projects intended to have a major impact in developing, implementing, or disseminating innovative and effective interventions to prevent, reduce, or eliminate health disparities and advance health equity.

Key Information Include:

  • No preliminary data are required in applications.
  • Projects must clearly demonstrate potential to produce a major impact in addressing health disparities and advancing health equity.
  • All applications are due on May 23rd, 2022
  • View the RFA-RM-22-001 for more details: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-RM-22-001.html.

We encourage applicants to carefully review the Answers to Frequently Asked Questions for RFA-RM-22-001  and view slides and watch video from pre-application webinar to help prepare an application for this FOA.

 

To find resources on applying for NIH funding, visit: https://commonfund.nih.gov/healthdisparitiestransformation/applicantresources.

 

For additional information about the Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity initiative visit: https://commonfund.nih.gov/healthdisparitiestransformation.

---

 

 

II. NIH Request for Information (RFI) on Interdisciplinary Research Opportunities that Bridge Neuroscience and Environmental Health Science NOT-NS-22-076

Purpose

This Request for Information (RFI) seeks input on challenges and opportunities for interdisciplinary research that brings together neuroscientists, environmental health scientists, and scientists from other related disciplines to form new teams to advance understanding of the contribution of environmental toxicants to impaired function of the nervous system across the life span.

For the purpose of this RFI, environmental toxicants of primary interest include industrial chemicals or manufacturing byproducts, metals, pesticides, herbicides, air pollutants and other inhaled toxicants, particulates or fibers, plastics, fungal exposures, and bacterial or biologically derived toxins. Expression of toxicity can take many forms across different ages and developmental stages, ranging from neurodevelopmental to neurodegenerative disorders, and encompassing alterations in cognition and behavior that range from subtle to severe. The full range of nervous system outcomes is relevant to this RFI.

Background

A wealth of studies, including many supported by the NIH, provide numerous examples of associations between exposure to environmental toxicants and adverse nervous system outcomes. The devastating consequences of legacy toxicants such as lead and mercury on child brain development have been known for decades, while a growing body of more recent research has linked adverse outcomes of the nervous system to prevalent exposures such as pesticides, ambient air pollution and compounds used as flame retardants and plasticizers. The timing of exposure is critically important.in determining impact. While some exposures can produce rapid observable effects, there is mounting recognition of delayed effects. For example, exposures during critical windows early in development can exert delayed effects, ones not evident until adulthood. Neurotoxicologists, who represent a small fraction of the neuroscience research community, are actively pursuing the biology that links toxicant exposure to neurological outcomes; however, the wealth of knowledge and diverse expertise of the larger neuroscience community is needed.

Several recent National Academy of Science, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) workshops (Environmental Neuroscience: Advancing the Understanding of How Chemical Exposures Impact Brain Health and Disease, The Interplay between Environmental Exposures and Mental Health Outcomes, and Integrating the Science of Aging and Environmental Health Research), highlighted the importance of fostering interdisciplinary Team Research to harness the collective efforts of neuroscientists and the environmental health sciences community. These collaborations provide a means to accelerate our understanding of the role of environmental chemicals in nervous system dysfunction and the cellular and molecular mechanisms at play. This knowledge is critical for achieving a full understanding of the multifactorial etiologies of neurological disease, disorders, and dysfunctions that are relevant to the missions of several NIH Institutes and Centers. The potential modifiability of many environmental exposures creates opportunities for novel prevention and intervention strategies to reduce the burden of neurological illness across the lifespan, especially in underserved communities where health inequities are prevalent.

Information Requested

This RFI invites comments, ideas, and information related to gaps, challenges and opportunities for collaborative research bridging neuroscience and environmental health science. Comments are welcome from all stakeholders, including but not limited to, neuroscientists, toxicologists and other members of the environmental health science community, clinicians, patient advocacy groups, individuals and families affected by neurological conditions and interested members of the public. Responses may include, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  • Promoting interdisciplinary research
    • Major barriers to collaborations that could bridge neuroscience and toxicology
    • Tools and resources that could facilitate establishing and maintaining productive collaborations among neuroscientists and environmental health scientists
  • Current gaps and opportunities in research on:
    • The effects of environmental exposures on neurodegenerative and neuromuscular diseases, disorders, and stroke
    • Environmental impact on the nervous system associated with health and well-being in aging
    • The effect of environmental exposures throughout neurodevelopment
    • How socioenvironmental factors impact the brain to contribute to the initiation and/or escalation of substance use
    • Complementary and integrative health approaches that could benefit from more collaborative research between neuroscientists and environmental health scientists

How to Submit a Response

Responses will be accepted through May 7, 2022. All comments must be submitted electronically on the Web Portal at: https://www.ninds.nih.gov/EnviroNeuro-RFI. Responders are free to address any or all the questions listed above. All submitted information will be reviewed by NIH staff.

Responses to this RFI are voluntary and may be submitted anonymously. You may voluntarily include your name and contact information with your response. If you choose to provide NIH with this information, NIH will not share your name and contact information outside of NIH unless required by law.

The Government will use the information submitted in response to this RFI at its discretion. The Government reserves the right to use any submitted information on public websites, in reports, in summaries of the state of the science, in any possible resultant solicitation(s), grant(s), or cooperative agreement(s), or in the development of future funding opportunity announcements.

This RFI is for informational and planning purposes only and is not a solicitation for applications or an obligation on the part of the Government to provide support for any ideas identified in response to it. Please note that the Government will not pay for the preparation of any information submitted or for use of that information.

We look forward to your input and hope that you will share this RFI opportunity with your colleagues.

Inquiries

Please direct all inquiries to:

David A. Jett PhD
Environmental Neuroscience Working Group
National Institutes of Health
Email: EnvironmentalNeuroscience@nih.gov

The National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health is an agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services  TO UNSUBSCRIBE: send email to listserv@list.nih.gov Copy and paste UNSUBSCRIBE NIDA_NEURO_SCIENCE-L

 

 

 

2022-03-08

[#DIV28SUPER] Fwd: ABCD Associate Director position

FYI.  Apologies to those who have already received this.
Regards,

-Ryan
________________
Ryan Vandrey, Ph.D.
President
APA Division 28


Begin forwarded message:

From: "Pariyadath, Vani (NIH/NIDA) [E]" <vani.pariyadath@nih.gov>
Subject: ABCD Associate Director position
Date: March 8, 2022 at 5:47:10 PM EST
Cc: "Hoffman, Elizabeth (NIH/NIDA) [E]" <elizabeth.hoffman@nih.gov>


      External Email - Use Caution      



Hello,
 
The attached position may be of interest. Please share among your colleagues.
 
The Adolescent Brain Cognitive DevelopmentSM (ABCD) Study is seeking to recruit a leader in the area of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion (JEDI) to join the ABCD Study's Coordinating Center (https://abcdstudy.org/study-sites/cc/) as an Associate Director and member of the study's leadership team.
 
Thanks,
Vani
 
--
Vani Pariyadath, Ph.D.
National Institute on Drug Abuse | National Institutes of Health
Ph: (301) 443-3209
 

[#DIV28SUPER] Fwd: [DIV37] Fwd: [CYFLIAISONS] FW: Published: FOAs for Research on Community Level Interventions for Firearm and Related Violence, Injury and Mortality Prevention

FYI

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Dara Blachman <blachmand@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Mar 8, 2022, 3:29 PM
Subject: [DIV37] Fwd: [CYFLIAISONS] FW: Published: FOAs for Research on Community Level Interventions for Firearm and Related Violence, Injury and Mortality Prevention
To: <DIV37@lists.apa.org>



 Please distribute broadly- thank you!


Dara 

 

From: NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research <nih.ocpl@service.govdelivery.com>
Reply-To: NIH OCPL GovDelivery <nih.ocpl@service.govdelivery.com>
Date: Friday, March 4, 2022 at 3:03 PM
To: "Blachman-Demner, Dara (NIH/OD) [E]" <dara.blachman-demner@nih.gov>
Subject: Published: FOAs for Research on Community Level Interventions for Firearm and Related Violence, Injury and Mortality Prevention

 

 

OBSSR logo smaller

OBSSR Updates

March 4, 2022

Research on Community Level Interventions for Firearm and Related Violence, Injury and Mortality Prevention (CLIF-VP)
(UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) Number
PAR-22-115

Key Dates
Open Date (Earliest Submission Date): March 22, 2022
Letter of Intent Due Date(s): March 22, 2022
Expiration Date: April 23, 2022

Funding Opportunity Purpose
Violence affects people of all ages and its impact is far-reaching. It is a leading cause of death and nonfatal injuries in the United States and constitutes a major public health crisis, especially among young people, and in particular among racial/ethnic minority, sexual and gender minority (SGM) and disability populations. Firearm homicide is the third leading cause of death among persons aged 10 to 24 years and the leading cause of death among Black men (<45 years of age). NIH is committed to supporting research that identifies innovative prevention approaches to reduce firearm and related violence, injury and mortality. Within the legislative mandates and limitations of NIH funding (NOT-OD-21-058NOT-OD-21-056), this initiative will support a network of research projects to develop and test interventions at the community or community organization level that aim to prevent firearm and related violence, injury and mortality.

This FOA solicits bi-phasic research projects proposed in UG3/UH3 Phased Innovation Awards Cooperative Agreement applications. Funding for the UG3 phase (phase I) will be used to demonstrate sufficient preparation, feasibility and capacity to meet foundational milestone targets specific to the work proposed. A UG3 project that meets its milestones will be administratively considered by NIH and prioritized for transition to the UH3 award (phase II). Applicants responding to this FOA must address specific aims and milestones for both the UG3 and UH3 phases.

View PAR-22-115


Coordinating Center to Support Research on Community Level Interventions for Firearm and Related Violence, Injury and Mortality Prevention (CLIF-VP)
(U24 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)

Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) Number
PAR-22-120

Key Dates
Open Date (Earliest Submission Date): March 22, 2022
Letter of Intent Due Date(s): March 22, 2022
Expiration Date: April 23, 2022

Funding Opportunity Purpose
The purpose of this FOA is to seek applications for a Coordinating Center (CC) for Community-Level Interventions for Firearm Violence Prevention (CLIF-VP) Research Network. Members of the CLIF-VP Research Network, including the CC, will work collaboratively with the NIH to develop and test interventions at the community or community organization level that aim to prevent firearm and related violence, injury, and mortality. The CLIF-VP Research Network will include the CC funded under this Cooperative Agreement and up to 10 Research Projects funded under the companion UG3/UH3 Phased Cooperative Agreement FOA, Research on Community Level Interventions for Firearm and Related Violence, Injury, and Mortality Prevention (CLIF-VP) PAR-22-115 . In phase 1 (1-2 years) the Research Projects will need to demonstrate sufficient preparation, feasibility, and capacity for the planned intervention study. Those that pass their milestones will transition into phase 2, during which they will implement their proposed intervention. The CC will provide overarching support and guidance to the network in three domains: (1) administration, coordination, and communication; (2) data, measurement, and analytic support and consultation; and (3) public/stakeholder engagement and dissemination support. It is important that applicants for the CC also read the companion FOA to understand the full mission and structure of the research network.

View PAR-22-120


IMPORTANT NOTE
Applicant Information Webinar will be held in the coming days. An email will be sent with webinar details. 


This email was sent to dara.blachman-demner@nih.gov using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: National Institutes of Health (NIH) · 9000 Rockville Pike · Bethesda MD 20892 · 301-496-4000 / TTY 301-402-9612

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--
Dara R. Blachman, Ph.D.
blachmand@gmail.com
773-396-1311
For more information about APA Division 37: Society for Child and Family Policy and Practice, please visit our website at http://www.apa.org/divisions/div37/ Click on this link to unsubscribe from this list UNSUBSCRIBE

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twitter: @apadiv28 #div28

[#DIV28SUPER] Fwd: [SCIENCECHANNEL] NEW NIH funding opportunity- Health Disparities / Health Equity!

Div 28,

See below for funding opportunity.

-Ryan


Begin forwarded message:

From: "Prinstein, Mitch" <MPrinstein@apa.org>
Subject: [SCIENCECHANNEL] NEW NIH funding opportunity- Health Disparities / Health Equity!
Date: March 8, 2022 at 9:46:21 AM EST
Reply-To: Forum for urgent science needs with the APA Science and Advocacy Offices <SCIENCECHANNEL@LISTS.APA.ORG>


      External Email - Use Caution      



Please pass along….

 

NIH Common Fund Funding Opportunity to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity

The NIH Common Fund Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity initiative has issued the funding opportunity announcement (FOA) "Limited Competition: Transformative Research to Address Health Disparities and Advance Health Equity at Minority Serving Institutions (U01 Clinical Trials Optional) (RFA-RM-22-001)."

This funding opportunity will support projects that propose unusually innovative research projects intended to have a major impact in developing, implementing, or disseminating innovative and effective interventions to prevent, reduce, or eliminate health disparities and advance health equity.

All applications are due on May 23, 2022!

Applicants are encouraged to carefully review the Answers to Frequently Asked Questions for RFA-RM-22-001 and view slides from a pre-recorded pre-application webinar to help prepare an application for this FOA. 

 

 

 

 
 
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2022-03-05

[#DIV28SUPER] Fwd: [DIVTRIO] Behavioral and social science societies weigh in on next NIH Director

Dear Div 28 Members,

Hope everyone is enjoying a nice weekend.  Just wanted to pass along the below message to highlight APA advocacy related to the search for a new NIH director.
Regards,

-Ryan
________________
Ryan Vandrey, Ph.D.
President
APA Division 28


http://www.apadivisions.org/division-28/index.aspx

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Prinstein, Mitch" <MPrinstein@APA.ORG>
Subject: [DIVTRIO] Behavioral and social science societies weigh in on next NIH Director
Date: March 5, 2022 at 10:26:35 AM EST
Reply-To: APA Division Presidential trios communicating about divisional topics <DIVTRIO@LISTS.APA.ORG>


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APA Fighting for Social and Behavioral Science!
 

APA with 26 scientific societies signed a letter to Francis Collins, MD, PhD, the acting science adviser to President Joseph Biden, urging that the next NIH Director demonstrate a knowledge of and commitment to behavioral and social sciences research at NIH. 

Dr. Collins, who resigned as NIH Director in December, 2021, returned to serve in an acting capacity as the President's Science Adviser after the resignation of Eric Lander, PhD.  Dr. Collins has been explicitly tasked with helping to identify the next nominee for the Director of the NIH. Many psychological scientists listened with great interest when, in his final days as the Director of NIH, Dr. Collins repeatedly stated his regret that he had underestimated the importance of the behavioral sciences.

The letter, coordinated by the Federation of Associations in Behavioral and Brain Sciences, states, "…[O]ur country faces ongoing urgent health concerns on troubling trajectories. A mental health crisis, addiction, obesity, and health disparities are all growing problems with significant behavioral and social contributors. These issues coincide with the major societal challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, and racial injustice. To most effectively prevent illness and address the negative health consequences of these cascading circumstances, the NIH must recognize the interactions between biological factors and behavioral and social ones to build a better understanding of the interconnectivity of complex systems that contributes to health outcomes. A successful Director would be able to articulate a vision for a comprehensive and balanced approach to improving Americans' health that considers biological, behavioral, social, and environmental factors in tandem." For more information contact Pat Kobor atpkobor@apa.org. 

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