The Charles H. Hood Foundation 2020 Major Grants Initiative call for applications is closed. The previous call is below for your reference only.  This call for applications is scheduled to be update in 2020 and the deadline is anticipated to be in March/April of 2020. Please check the ECOR website and your emails from MGH Research News for updates. Click here to sign up to receive MGH Research News.

Charles H. Hood Foundation 2020 Major Grants Initiative to Advance Child Health

MGH Internal Preliminary Application Deadline
Monday, April 22, 2019 – 5:00 PM

 

DESCRIPTION OF THE AWARD


The Charles H. Hood Foundation 2020 Major Grants Initiative to Advance Child Health supports outstanding investigators conducting innovative and transformative research in child health. The overall goal of the Program is the funding of translational or clinical research that will improve child health, children's clinical outcomes, or improve health care access, affordability, and quality. For the 2020 grant cycle, the Hood Foundation requests applications related to either of two areas of child health research:  Neonatology or Brain Science and Child Development. 

"The Major Grants Initiative is a component of the Hood Foundation’s research funding portfolio. Since 1942, the Foundation has supported investigators at New England research institutions to improve the health and quality of life for children. The Hood Foundation Child Health Research Awards Program has launched the careers of  616 junior faculty whose discoveries have contributed to significant improvements in child health. Since 1989, the Foundation has also supported 47 Postdoctoral Fellows conducting projects spanning the continuum from basic laboratory research to clinical and health services research."

MGH is eligible to nominate one candidate. Preliminary applications will be reviewed and assessed by a panel of senior MGH faculty members.  The selected MGH nominee must complete the Hood Foundation's online Letter of Intent by Tuesday, May 28, 2019. If invited to submit a full proposal, he/she must submit a full proposal to the sponsor by Monday, September 16, 2019.

 

AWARD AMOUNT

This award will be a total of $450,000 over two years ($225,000 per year, inclusive of 10% indirect costs). The award period is from January 1, 2020 to December 31, 2021.

This funding opportunity is not exempt from the 15% indirect cost (IDC) floor minimum. However, ECOR policy states that for MGH investigators selected through a competitive process as the institutional nominee for a grant opportunity, in which the grant will bring in less than 15% indirect cost (IDC), ECOR will cover the IDC gap up to a maximum of $50,000 per year.

 

DEADLINES    

MGH Internal Preliminary Application Deadline:  Monday, April 22, 2019 - 5:00 p.m.
Notification to MGH Candidate: The week of May 13, 2019
Sponsor Letter of Intent Deadline: Tuesday, May 28, 2019 - 12:00 p.m.
Invited Full Proposal Deadline: Monday, September 16, 2019 - 12:00 p.m. 
 
ELIGIBILITY
  • Applicants must have a full-time primary faculty appointment at MGH.
 
RESEARCH FOCUS
 
"Two areas of focus will be considered for the 2020 Major Grants Program: Neonatology and Brain Science and Child Development.

Neonatology
Although the incidence of prematurity has been declining, recent data shows that 10% of babies born in Massachusetts are premature, 7.7% weigh less than 2.5 kg, and 1.3% weigh less than 1.5 kg. These infants require complex and expensive medical care after birth and are at high risk for pulmonary disease, neurological conditions, developmental delay and other issues. Thus, improvements in neonatal care are likely to result in better health outcomes for the infants, and lower initial and lifetime health care costs. 
 
Please note that research projects that focus on pregnant women and their fetuses will not be considered responsive to this RFA.

New England has long been a leader in neonatology research. Through the funding of the Major Grants Program in this area, the Hood Foundation hopes to continue this tradition of excellence.


Brain Science and Child Development
Groundbreaking work, beginning in the late 1990s, has demonstrated that childhood experiences determine important aspects of brain growth and development. There are at least two critical periods of rapid brain growth during childhood: the first three years of life and, again, during adolescence. In parallel with the rapid advance of brain science, a new pediatric subspecialty, Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, has begun to carve out its own research agenda.


Recent clinical and scientific advances in understanding children’s normal and abnormal development have arisen through a variety of approaches: from a basic science understanding of neural development to the epidemiology of the long-term health effects of children’s experiences. New England researchers have led many of these advances in knowledge. Therefore, this focus of the Major Grants Program will support continued innovations that will further the scientific understanding of children's brain and behavioral development that may inform improvements in the treatment of children’s physical and mental health.

Innovations
The Major Grants are intended to fund innovative work that may be difficult to fund with traditional grant mechanisms. For example, relatively few child health researchers make use of advanced statistical and computational techniques, ranging from computational biology to health services research to geographic information systems. In addition to traditional project-related costs, all projects funded under this Program may include the use of funds to bring new techniques or novel collaborations into child health research. 

Collaboration
The Charles H. Hood foundation encourages collaboration between investigators and institutions. If the project would benefit from a collaborative approach, please describe the nature of the collaboration and the scientific benefits. Although collaboration is not required for the 2020 cycle, evidence of meaningful collaboration will be considered in funding decisions.
 
Note: If the Hood Major Grant funds are intended to augment a currently funded study, the Letter of Intent must clearly describe the additional research to be conducted with Hood funding."
 

REVIEW CRITERIA

  • Investigators: Qualifications of the Principal Investigator and evidence of exceptional creativity. Where applicable, the qualifications of the entire collaborative research team will be considered.
  • Innovation: Research Project is highly innovative in methodology, research hypotheses, or patient population.
  • Impact: Successful proposals must describe research that would likely lead to important improvements in child health, knowledge of child health and disease, or children's clinical outcomes or health care access, affordability, and quality.

 

MGH INTERNAL PRELIMINARY APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS

The MGH internal preliminary application must include the following 4 items:  

  1. Project Title
  2. NIH Biosketch. Use the current NIH biosketch format. Click here for a sample NIH biosketch.  
  3. Research Project (maximum of 3 pages, excluding the Bibliography) Please include the following sections:
  • Lay Summary (up to 350 words) should be a non-technical summary that addresses its relevance to one of the Foundation’s areas of focus, and its potential for a significant impact on improving clinical outcomes, health care access, affordability and quality.
  • Background
  • Methods
  • Innovation
  • Implications for Child Health  

  4. Justification (up to 200 words): Please briefly describe why you are uniquely suited to be selected as the MGH Nominee for this award.

 

FORMAT GUIDELINES

  • Use margins of one inch or greater on all four sides.
  • Use Arial 11pt font size
  • Use single or double line spacing within paragraphs, double line spacing between paragraphs
  • Upload PDF documents only.  Limit characters to A-Z, a-z and 0-9 when naming PDF documents.  Do not use periods, commas or dashes in the file name.

HOW TO APPLY
 

ECOR accepts all applications online via the ECOR Online Grant Management Portal.  The system has been designed to allow users to:

  • Create a personal profile, which will auto-populate your future ECOR applications
  • Assign a delegate to submit applications on your behalf (optional)
  • View current calls and apply to open opportunities 
  • Save and edit current applications in progress
  • Submit completed applications.

Instructions for Applying Online:

  1. Create your account: Log in using your Partners credentials and fill-out the profile information.
  2. Complete the application: Once your profile is complete, you will automatically progress through the online application. If you cannot complete the application at one time, “save” the application and return to it at a later time to finish. Before submitting your application, you will have the ability to make changes to the application.
  3. Submit your application: Once you have completed the application click on the “submit” button at the bottom of the page. Once you submit it, you will not be able to make further changes unless you send a request to ECOR (note that once the deadline passes, requests to make changes will not be accepted).

Useful tips:

  • To avoid losing your work, remember to save frequently
  • You can only upload PDF documents
  • If you previously created a profile, please ensure your information is current prior to submitting an application.

Click 'Apply' below to begin the application.

QUESTIONS
If you have any questions, please email ECOR.

To see a current list of past awardees, click here. Look under Major Grant Awards to find winners pertaining to this particular opportunity.