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As of October 17, 2014, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) requires grantees to submit all type 5 progress reports using the Research Performance Progress Report (RPPR) module in eRA Commons.   Annual progress reports submitted in any format other than the RPPR will not be processed by the NIH and will require resubmission through the RPPR.

This notice supersedes all references to the use of the PHS 2590 for annual non-competing continuation progress reports in Notices of Award.

NIH continues development of the RPPR for final progress reports and for administrative extensions (Type 4s – e.g., SBIR/STTR Fast-Track Phase II application) and will update the community as progress is made.

Additional information and resources on the RPPR, including the current RPPR Instruction Guide and training archives, can be found at: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/rppr/.

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NIH annual progress reports received on/after October 1, 2014 must include a section to describe how individual development plans (IDPs) are used to identify and promote the career goals of graduate students and postdoctoral researchers associated with the award.
Read more.
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The National Institutes of Health has issued a final NIH Genomic Data Sharing (GDS) policy to promote data sharing as a way to speed the translation of data into knowledge, products and procedures that improve health while protecting the privacy of research participants.

Starting with funding applications submitted for a Jan. 25, 2015, receipt date, the policy will apply to all NIH-funded, large-scale human and non-human projects that generate genomic data. This includes research conducted with the support of NIH grants and contracts and within the NIH Intramural Research Program. NIH officials finalized the policy after reviewing public comments on a draft released in September 2013.
The final policy was posted in the Federal Register Aug. 26, 2014 and published in the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts Aug. 27, 2014.

See complete information about genomic data sharing and a link to the GDS policy.

Read more from NIH.

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NIH’s Center for Scientific Review (CSR) has launched two America COMPETES Act challenges to help identify new methods to detect bias in peer review and strategies to strengthen fairness and impartiality in peer review.
NIH will award a first place ($10,000) and a second place ($5,000) prize in both competitions. The contests close June 30, 2014, and winners will be announced September 2.  Details on the rules and submission procedures for these two challenges are on the CSR Challenge website.

In addition to the competition, a complementary set of initiatives will allow NIH to look at the problem from multiple angles.

Read more from NIH Office of Extramural Research.

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NIH is continuing to pilot a new biosketch format that emphasizes accomplishments instead of just a list of publications. The new Biosketch format being piloted will extend the page limit from four to five pages and it will allow researchers to describe up to five of their most significant contributions to science along with the historical background that framed their research.  NIH expects to roll out the modified biosketch for all grant applications received for FY 2016 funding and beyond.

Read more from the NIH Office of Extramural Research.
Read the Notice.
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NIH has a number of policies and programs in place that facilitate innovative and exceptional science from people who are just launching their independent research careers.
Read more about NIH policies and programs to assist new researchers to become independent NIH-funded researchers, and bring fresh ideas and perspectives for solving scientific questions.
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Global health research and training efforts should focus on combatting the growing epidemic of noncommunicable diseases, better incorporating information technology into research and training, and more effectively converting scientific discoveries into practice in low-resource settings, according to the Fogarty International Center’s new strategic plan.

Fogarty is the component of the National Institutes of Health solely focused on supporting global health research and training, and coordinating international research partnerships across the agency.

Read more from NIH.

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The National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) announce a change in policy on application submissions.
Effective immediately, for application due dates after April 16, 2014, following an unsuccessful resubmission (A1) application, applicants may submit the same idea as a new (A0) application for the next appropriate due date. The NIH and AHRQ will not assess the similarity of the science in the new (A0) application to any previously reviewed submission when accepting an application for review. Although a new (A0) application does not allow an introduction or responses to the previous reviews, the NIH and AHRQ encourage applicants to refine and strengthen all application submissions.  See more.
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Updates on NIH application due dates, project titles, Unicode characters, and more.

Application Due Dates and Weather

Federal staff are teleworking during inclement weather, help desks are open, grant application due dates are on and standard submission policies are in place. If  UGA organization is closed due to weather, you can submit on the first day it reopens. Don’t forget to document your reason for the late submission in your cover letter.

Applications & Project Titles

NIH’s eRA systems can now accept project titles (item 11 on the SF424 R&R cover form) of up to 200 characters.  eRA systems will no longer truncate your project titles to 81 characters.

Keep in mind that when submitting a Revision application, you must use the exact project title displayed in eRA Commons for the awarded application.  If the project title of the awarded grant was truncated to 81 characters, then only those 81 characters can be used for the Revision application.

eRA Systems Will Soon Support Greek & Other Unicode Characters

Over the long Memorial Day weekend, eRA systems will be upgraded to support the Unicode character standard (see NOT-OD-14-071). Unicode is a computing industry standard for the consistent encoding, representation and handling of text expressed in most of the world’s writing systems, so that NIH will soon be able to recognize and store Greek and other scientific characters that systems can’t handle today.

Although Grants.gov limits the characters allowed in application form fields, you can  use a broader range of characters in your PDF attachments within your applications. eRA systems already extract information from your Project Summary/Abstract, Specific Aims and other application attachments for use in Summary Statements and reporting systems. However, since our databases don’t currently recognize all the characters, quite a bit of manual manipulation of the data is needed. The Unicode character support will greatly reduce the need to manually edit the data pulled from these attachments.

The effort to implement Unicode support touches every eRA service from eRA Commons through all internal grants administration systems. Each of these systems will be updated over the Memorial Day weekend downtime.  Some adjustments to application due dates have been made to accommodate the downtime and to ensure all systems are ready to go (see NOT-OD-14-070).

Reference Letters & Fellowship Applications

Along with an upgrade to the latest OMB-approved application forms (FORMS-C), there was a change to handling of reference letters for Fellowship applications. In the past, NIH had required the use of a specific ‘Fellowship Reference Form’ to be filled out by referees. NIH is no longer requiring that specific reference letter format. Be sure, however, to follow the new instructions outlined in the Individual Fellowship Application Guide SF424 (R&R) Section 5.4 Letters of Reference, Part B. Instructions for Referees.

Submitting Change of Institution (Type 7) Requests & Relinquishing Statements Electronically

Do you need to submit a post-award Change of Institution (Type 7) request to NIH? If so, have you tried the electronic processes NIH has in place? NIH announced the piloting of electronic Type 7 applications (NOT-OD-12-134) and associated Relinquishing Statements (NOT-OD-12-132) in August 2012. NIH is moving towards requiring electronic processes for these actions and now is the time to become familiar with them.

Don’t forget, you must use the Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) specifically published for Type 7 requests – Change of Grantee Organization (Type 7 Parent) – PA-14-078.

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NIH grant application due dates that fall on or between May 25 and May 28, 2014 will move to May 29, 2014.
More information.