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Forecasted

Research on System Support and Tools for Provider Training and Quality Monitoring for Suicide Preventive Care

Federal funding opportunity FOR-MH-26-145 from National Institutes of Health.

View forecast on Grants.gov →Forecasted — not yet open

Posted
June 17, 2025
Closes
See announcement
Program funding
$5,000,000
Expected awards
5
Cost sharing
No
Instrument
Grant
Assistance listing
93.242
Category
Health

Program funding history

Awards made under Assistance Listing 93.242 across FY2024–FY2026, from public federal spending records.

FY2024 obligated
$1.8B
FY2025 obligated
$1.8B
FY2026 (to date) obligated
$945.1M
Awards in window
7,145

Top recipients: Yale Univ, University of Pittsburgh - of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, University of California, Los Angeles, Washington University, the

Source: USAspending.gov · refreshed July 2026

Synopsis

The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) intends to publish a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to solicit applications for research focused on developing, optimizing, and testing the effectiveness of provider-level interventions and tools to promote competence and sustained implementation fidelity in delivering evidence-based suicide prevention interventions. NIMH seeks research to inform, service-ready implementation strategies and valid, scalable measures and tools for monitoring the delivery and outcome of suicide prevention services, including risk assessment, referral and engagement and preventative/therapeutic interventions. 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 R01 activity code. Investigators with expertise in clinical trials methodology, psychometric validation of measures for monitoring outcomes and care delivery, and implementation science related to developing and testing suicide prevention strategies for use in a variety of settings where therapeutic services are offered are encouraged to consider applying for this new NOFO. In addition, collaborative investigations combining expertise in health services research, comparative effectiveness, practice-based research, and data science are encouraged, and these investigators should consider applying for this NOFO.

Who can apply

How to apply

Applications go through the official government listing. Grants Radar links you straight to the source.

View on Grants.gov

Agency contact: Stephen O'Connor, Ph.D. National Institute of Mental Health · stephen.oconnor@nih.gov · 301-480-8366

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