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CFPs: Mental Health Translational Research Grant Program (Australia)

Ukraine Mental Health Initiative for National Development Activity

Deadline: 30-Jul-2026

The Mental Health Translational Research Grant Program supports research that helps implement the Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs Strategy 2026–2031 and improve mental health and wellbeing outcomes for Western Australians. The program funds evidence-based research that can be rapidly translated into policy, practice and service delivery.

Successful projects can receive up to AUD 600,000 excluding GST and must be completed within 36 months. Eligible applicants must be based in Western Australia, meet Responsible Entity and Activity Lead requirements, and demonstrate collaboration, implementation relevance and direct significance to Western Australia’s mental health sector.

Program Overview

The Mental Health Translational Research Grant Program is designed to support research that improves mental health and wellbeing in Western Australia.

The program focuses on translating research evidence into real-world practice, policy and service improvement.

It supports projects that align with the Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs Strategy 2026–2031 and contribute to better outcomes for Western Australians.

Main Objective

The main objective of the program is to accelerate implementation of evidence-based mental health approaches in Western Australia.

The program aims to:

Key Focus Areas

The program supports translational research that addresses mental health priorities and service improvement.

Key focus areas include:

What Is Translational Research?

Translational research is research designed to move evidence into practical use.

In this program, translational research means research that can help improve policy, service delivery, clinical practice, workforce capability or community mental health outcomes.

A strong translational research project should not only generate knowledge. It should also show how findings will be applied in real-world mental health settings.

Funding Available

Each successful project may receive up to AUD 600,000 excluding GST.

Funding may support eligible project costs directly related to the approved activity.

Project Duration

Funded activities must be completed within a maximum period of 36 months.

Applicants should design projects that can be planned, implemented, evaluated and translated within this timeframe.

Eligible Costs

Grant funding may be used for eligible expenses connected to the project.

Eligible costs may include:

All costs should be clearly justified and directly linked to the proposed research activity.

What the Program Supports

The program supports research that has direct significance for the mental health and wellbeing of Western Australians.

Supported projects should:

Ineligible Activities

Some activities are not eligible if they are the sole focus of the project.

The program does not fund activities focused only on:

Applicants should ensure that the project goes beyond review or assessment and includes a clear research and implementation component.

Who is Eligible?

The program is open to Western Australian researchers and their teams seeking to advance evidence-based mental health approaches.

Eligibility applies to both the Responsible Entity and the Activity Lead.

Responsible Entity Requirements

The Responsible Entity must:

The Responsible Entity must be able to manage the grant responsibly and support delivery of the proposed activity.

Activity Lead Requirements

The Activity Lead must:

These requirements help ensure that funded projects are led by eligible researchers with a strong connection to Western Australia.

Industry Exclusion Requirement

The Responsible Entity and any organisations involved in funding or delivering the project must not be part of industries that produce products or services that may contribute to poor physical health or poor mental wellbeing.

This requirement helps ensure that funded research aligns with public health, mental wellbeing and ethical funding principles.

Collaboration Requirement

The program encourages collaboration between researchers, service providers and relevant stakeholders.

A strong project should demonstrate how partners will work together to support implementation and translation.

Collaboration may include:

Consumer Involvement

The program allows funding for consumer involvement.

Consumer involvement means including people with lived or living experience in the design, delivery, interpretation or translation of research.

This can help ensure that research is relevant, respectful and grounded in real-world mental health needs.

Alignment with the Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs Strategy 2026–2031

Eligible projects must address priority areas identified in the Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs Strategy 2026–2031.

Applicants should clearly explain how their project supports the strategy.

The proposal should show how the research will contribute to implementation, policy improvement, service development or better mental health outcomes.

Why This Program Matters

Mental health research can have limited impact if findings are not translated into policy, practice or service delivery.

This program matters because it supports research that is designed for implementation from the beginning.

By focusing on translation, collaboration and direct relevance to Western Australia, the program helps turn evidence into practical improvements for people, services and communities.

It also strengthens the state’s mental health research workforce and supports more effective responses to mental health and wellbeing needs.

Expected Outcomes

Funded projects are expected to contribute to meaningful improvements in mental health research, practice and policy.

Expected outcomes may include:

How to Apply or Prepare a Strong Application

Applicants should prepare a clear, implementation-focused research proposal that shows eligibility, relevance, collaboration and impact.

Step 1: Confirm Responsible Entity Eligibility

Applicants should confirm that the Responsible Entity has an active Australian Business Number and a physical and operational presence in Western Australia.

The entity must also show that it has other external sources of income or funding and is not fully dependent on the grant.

Step 2: Confirm Activity Lead Eligibility

The Activity Lead should confirm citizenship, residency, visa, position and reporting requirements.

They must be able to reside in Western Australia for at least 80% of the project period.

Step 3: Check Strategy Alignment

Applicants should identify the relevant priority area under the Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs Strategy 2026–2031.

The proposal should explain exactly how the project supports implementation of the strategy.

Step 4: Define the Research Problem

Applicants should clearly explain the mental health challenge being addressed.

The problem should be relevant to Western Australians and supported by evidence.

Step 5: Design a Translational Research Approach

The project should include a clear pathway from research to practice.

Applicants should explain:

Step 6: Build a Collaborative Team

Applicants should include relevant partners who can support implementation and impact.

This may include researchers, clinicians, service providers, policy actors, consumers and community representatives.

Step 7: Include Consumer Involvement

A strong proposal should explain how consumers or people with lived experience will be involved.

This involvement should be meaningful and linked to project design, delivery or translation.

Step 8: Prepare a Realistic Budget

Applicants may request up to AUD 600,000 excluding GST.

The budget should clearly justify salary costs, services, supplies, specialised equipment, consumer involvement and approved overheads.

Step 9: Plan for Completion Within 36 Months

Applicants should prepare a realistic timeline that allows all research, implementation, analysis and translation activities to be completed within 36 months.

Step 10: Check Funding Duplication

Applicants must ensure that funding has not already been awarded for any component of the proposed activity.

The proposal should avoid duplication with existing funded work.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Applicants should avoid the following mistakes:

Tips for a Strong Application

A strong application should:

FAQ

1. What is the Mental Health Translational Research Grant Program?

The program funds research that supports implementation of the Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs Strategy 2026–2031 and improves mental health and wellbeing outcomes for Western Australians.

2. How much funding is available per project?

Each successful project may receive up to AUD 600,000 excluding GST.

3. How long can projects run?

Funded activities must be completed within a maximum period of 36 months.

4. Who can apply?

Western Australian researchers and their teams may apply through an eligible Responsible Entity with an active Australian Business Number and a physical and operational presence in Western Australia.

5. What costs can be funded?

Eligible costs may include salary costs, essential project-related services and supplies, specialised equipment unique to the activity, consumer involvement and approved overhead costs.

6. What activities are not eligible?

Activities focused solely on quality assurance, clinical audits, chart reviews, needs analyses or literature reviews are not eligible.

7. What are the Activity Lead requirements?

The Activity Lead must be an Australian or New Zealand citizen, permanent resident of Australia, or hold an appropriate work visa, reside in Western Australia for at least 80% of the project period, hold a position or title at the Responsible Entity, and have no overdue OMRI grant reports.

Conclusion

The Mental Health Translational Research Grant Program provides up to AUD 600,000 for projects that improve mental health and wellbeing outcomes in Western Australia.

The program supports research that is practical, collaborative and directly linked to the implementation of the Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs Strategy 2026–2031.

Applicants should prepare strong proposals that demonstrate strategy alignment, translational impact, collaboration, consumer involvement, Western Australian relevance and clear capacity to complete the project within 36 months.

For more information, visit Government of Western Australia.

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