Deadline: 01-Jul-2026
The Childhood Stroke Research Grant Program supports research that improves outcomes for children and families affected by childhood stroke. It is an initiative by the Stroke Foundation marking its 30th year in 2026, designed to strengthen knowledge and care pathways in pediatric stroke.
The program focuses on translating research into real-world improvements in healthcare, recovery, and family support systems.
Key Objectives
- Improve treatment approaches for childhood stroke
- Enhance rehabilitation and recovery outcomes
- Strengthen hospital-to-home transition processes
- Improve long-term care and quality of life for survivors
- Support family and caregiver support systems
- Improve transition from pediatric to adult healthcare services
- Advance clinical and health services research in pediatric stroke
Priority Research Areas
- Pediatric stroke treatment strategies
- Rehabilitation interventions for children
- Post-stroke recovery and long-term outcomes
- Hospital discharge and transition planning
- Family support and caregiver wellbeing
- Healthcare system improvements for childhood stroke care
- Continuity of care into adulthood
Funding Details
- Maximum funding: up to $80,000 per project
- Project duration: up to 18 months
- Research period: 1 January 2027 to 30 June 2028
- Supports focused, time-limited research projects
Eligible Applicants
- Researchers at any career stage
- Must conduct research in Australia
- Must be supported by an Australian university or research institution
- Open to clinical, public health, and health services researchers
Ineligible Research Types
- Laboratory-based research
- Pre-clinical studies
- Non-applied experimental biomedical work
Eligible Research Types
- Clinical research
- Public health research
- Health services research
- Implementation and care improvement studies
How the Program Works: Step-by-Step
- Identify a key issue in childhood stroke care
- Design a clinical or health services research project
- Secure support from an Australian institution
- Develop a structured research proposal
- Submit application to the grant program
- Applications reviewed for impact and feasibility
- Selected researchers receive funding
- Conduct research over 18 months
- Deliver findings that improve pediatric stroke care
Evaluation Criteria
- Relevance to childhood stroke outcomes
- Potential for clinical or system-level impact
- Strength of research design and methodology
- Feasibility within timeframe and budget
- Innovation in care delivery or support systems
- Institutional and research capability
Why This Program Matters
- Improves survival and recovery outcomes for children
- Strengthens family and caregiver support systems
- Addresses gaps in pediatric stroke care pathways
- Enhances healthcare transition from child to adult services
- Promotes applied research with real-world impact
- Builds national expertise in childhood stroke research
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Submitting laboratory or pre-clinical research
- Lack of focus on practical healthcare outcomes
- Weak alignment with childhood stroke priorities
- Poorly defined implementation pathway
- Insufficient institutional support in Australia
- Overly broad or unfocused research scope
Pro Tips
- Focus on patient and family-centred outcomes
- Emphasise real-world healthcare improvements
- Align strongly with clinical or service delivery gaps
- Keep research design practical and achievable
- Highlight transition-of-care improvements
- Demonstrate measurable impact on children’s health outcomes
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Who can apply? Researchers at any career stage
- What is the funding amount? Up to $80,000
- How long is the project duration? Up to 18 months
- Where must research be conducted? Australia
- What types of research are eligible? Clinical, public health, health services
- Are lab-based studies allowed? No
- What is the main focus? Improving outcomes for children affected by stroke
Conclusion
The Childhood Stroke Research Grant Program supports targeted, practical research to improve care and outcomes for children affected by stroke in Australia. By funding clinical and health services research, it aims to strengthen treatment, rehabilitation, and long-term support systems for patients and families.
For more information, visit Stroke Foundation.









































