Deadline: 17-Sep-2026
Pfizer and the Hemostasis & Thrombosis Research Society (HTRS) are offering an Independent Medical Education (IME) Grant to support Hemophilia Visiting Professorship Programs in the United States. Eligible organizations can receive up to USD 6,000 to host a one- or two-day educational programme focused on hemophilia care, shared decision-making, emerging therapies, and multidisciplinary collaboration, while HTRS separately covers the Visiting Professor’s travel and honorarium.
Pfizer and HTRS Independent Medical Education Grant for Hemophilia Visiting Professorships
What is the Hemophilia Visiting Professorship Grant?
The Pfizer and Hemostasis & Thrombosis Research Society (HTRS) Independent Medical Education Grant supports organizations seeking to strengthen education in hemophilia care through a Visiting Professorship Program.
The initiative enables eligible organizations to host one or two expert HTRS-selected Visiting Professors for educational programmes lasting up to two days. The programme is designed to address identified educational gaps, improve clinical knowledge, promote multidisciplinary collaboration, and enhance patient care through evidence-based medical education.
Approximately nine organizations are expected to receive funding.
Funding Overview
Successful applicants may receive funding to support the local delivery of the educational programme.
Funding Details
- Maximum grant amount: Up to USD 6,000
- Supports local programme logistics
- Approximately nine grants available
Eligible Grant Expenses
Funding may be used for:
- Meeting room rental
- Audiovisual equipment and technical support
- On-site event management
- Staffing
- Programme planning
- Other local logistical expenses
Expenses Covered Separately
The following costs are funded directly by HTRS and must not be included in the grant budget:
- Visiting Professor travel
- Visiting Professor honorarium
Programme Objectives
The initiative aims to:
- Improve hemophilia-focused medical education.
- Strengthen physician knowledge.
- Promote shared decision-making (SDM).
- Increase awareness of emerging hemophilia therapies.
- Encourage multidisciplinary collaboration.
- Support patient-centered care.
- Improve long-term patient outcomes.
- Foster collaboration between healthcare professionals and patient advocacy groups.
Priority Areas
Applications should address one or more of the following educational priorities.
Hemophilia Care
Projects should improve clinical understanding of:
- Diagnosis
- Management
- Long-term treatment
- Comprehensive care
Shared Decision-Making (SDM)
Educational activities should promote:
- Patient engagement
- Collaborative treatment planning
- Communication between clinicians and patients
- Individualized care decisions
Emerging Therapeutic Options
Topics may include:
- New treatment approaches
- Advances in hemophilia therapy
- Novel clinical practices
- Future treatment strategies
Multidisciplinary Care
Programmes should encourage collaboration among:
- Physicians
- Nurses
- Pharmacists
- Allied health professionals
- Patient advocates
- Care teams
Who is Eligible?
Eligible applicants include U.S.-based organizations such as:
- Medical schools
- Nursing schools
- Allied health schools
- Dental schools
- Pharmacy schools
- Universities
- Academic healthcare institutions
- Patient advocacy groups
- Nonprofit professional organizations
- Medical societies
Only organizations may apply.
Applicant Requirements
Applicants must:
- Be located in the United States.
- Designate a Project or Program Lead employed by or contracted with the organization.
- Clearly define partner roles if multiple organizations are involved.
- Provide accreditation documentation if continuing education (CE/CME) credit will be offered.
Target Audience
Educational activities should serve:
- Academic clinicians
- Physician-scientists
- Multidisciplinary care teams
- Patient advocacy organizations
- Healthcare professionals involved in hemophilia care
Application Requirements
Applicants must include:
Educational Needs Assessment
Describe:
- Current medical knowledge gaps
- Educational challenges
- Unmet learning needs
- Questions related to shared decision-making
- Needs regarding emerging therapeutic options
Programme Agenda
Provide a proposed agenda outlining:
- Educational sessions
- Faculty activities
- Learning objectives
- Programme schedule
Expected Outcomes
Applicants should define measurable outcomes, including:
- Physician knowledge improvements
- Clinical practice changes
- Patient care improvements
- Six-month outcome metrics
Budget
Submit a detailed budget covering only eligible local logistical costs.
Accreditation Documentation
Organizations offering continuing education credit must include proof of accreditation.
Why This Programme Matters
Hemophilia treatment continues to evolve rapidly with new therapies and patient-centered care approaches.
This programme helps:
- Improve clinical education.
- Increase physician confidence.
- Promote evidence-based practice.
- Strengthen multidisciplinary care.
- Enhance shared decision-making.
- Improve patient outcomes.
- Support collaboration between healthcare providers and advocacy organizations.
How to Apply
Step 1: Confirm Organizational Eligibility
Ensure your organization meets all eligibility requirements.
Step 2: Identify Educational Needs
Assess current knowledge gaps related to:
- Hemophilia management
- Shared decision-making
- Emerging therapies
- Clinical challenges
Step 3: Develop the Educational Programme
Prepare:
- Learning objectives
- Programme agenda
- Expected outcomes
- Evaluation methods
Step 4: Prepare the Budget
Develop a budget covering only eligible logistical expenses.
Exclude:
- Faculty travel
- Honoraria for the Visiting Professor
Step 5: Submit Supporting Documentation
Include:
- Organizational information
- Accreditation documentation (if applicable)
- Educational needs assessment
- Outcome metrics
- Budget
Step 6: Submit the Application
Complete and submit the application according to the programme requirements.
Tips for a Strong Application
Applicants should:
- Clearly identify educational gaps.
- Demonstrate organizational capacity.
- Develop measurable learning objectives.
- Include realistic six-month outcomes.
- Focus on patient-centered care.
- Emphasize multidisciplinary collaboration.
- Align the programme with current advances in hemophilia treatment.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Avoid:
- Including Visiting Professor travel costs in the budget.
- Providing vague educational objectives.
- Omitting outcome measures.
- Submitting incomplete accreditation documentation.
- Failing to explain unmet educational needs.
- Developing agendas that do not address programme priorities.
- Submitting incomplete applications.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. What is the Hemophilia Visiting Professorship Grant?
It is an Independent Medical Education grant funded by Pfizer and administered in collaboration with HTRS to support hemophilia-focused educational programmes hosted by eligible U.S. organizations.
2. How much funding is available?
Each selected organization may receive up to USD 6,000 to support local programme logistics.
3. Who can apply?
Eligible applicants include U.S.-based medical schools, universities, healthcare institutions, nonprofit organizations, medical societies, and patient advocacy groups.
4. What expenses are covered by the grant?
Funding supports local logistical costs such as meeting space, audiovisual services, staffing, planning, and event management. Travel expenses and honoraria for Visiting Professors are funded separately by HTRS.
5. Who are the Visiting Professors?
The Visiting Professors are distinguished experts selected by HTRS, with expertise matched to the educational needs identified by the recipient organization.
6. What information must applicants provide?
Applications should include an educational needs assessment, programme agenda, expected outcomes with six-month evaluation metrics, budget, and accreditation documentation where applicable.
7. Why is this programme important?
The programme strengthens hemophilia education by improving physician knowledge, promoting shared decision-making, encouraging multidisciplinary collaboration, and supporting better patient care through high-quality, evidence-based medical education.
Conclusion
The Pfizer and HTRS Independent Medical Education Grant for Hemophilia Visiting Professorships provides U.S. healthcare organizations with an opportunity to strengthen clinical education in hemophilia through expert-led educational programmes. With grants of up to USD 6,000 supporting local event logistics and HTRS covering faculty travel and honoraria, the initiative enables organizations to address important educational gaps, promote shared decision-making, and improve multidisciplinary care. Eligible organizations are encouraged to develop impactful programmes that enhance physician knowledge and contribute to better outcomes for people living with hemophilia.
For more information, visit Pfizer.





























