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United States: Virtual Consortium for Translational/Transdisciplinary Environmental Research

Deadline: 1-Feb-24

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has announced the Virtual Consortium for Translational/Transdisciplinary Environmental Research (ViCTER) program to foster and promote early-stage transdisciplinary collaborations and/or translational research efforts to address fundamental research among basic (technology and mechanism oriented), clinical (patient-oriented) and population-based researchers in the environmental health field.

The newly established collaborative teams will come together in common interest to investigate potential linkages between human health and one or more environmental stressor(s). The ViCTER program is intended to support innovative high-risk, high-reward transdisciplinary/translational research projects that are more difficult to achieve. Collaboration among investigators at different institutions through a virtual consortium arrangement is encouraged.
 
The primary goal for creating this ViCTER program is to support the exchange of knowledge among individuals from a diverse set of disciplines and accelerate the translation of scientific research into meaningful improvements in human health in those areas where environmental factors are known or suspected to influence the development or progression of disease. To accomplish this goal, each newly established collaborative team is expected to initiate research in the development and application of novel approaches for understanding the etiology of environmentally-related disease and, where appropriate, explore clinical and public health implications for diagnosis, treatment and/or prevention.
 
Research Scope
 
The transdisciplinary/translational ViCTER framework creates an opportunity to incorporate new approaches into environmental health studies research. Investigators who propose studies with a primary focus on National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) mission relevant exposures’ impact on human health may include other relevant disciplines to understand the role(s) of cofactors/modifiers of the risk or protection associated with the primary exposure(s), to explore exposure processes, and/or identify patterns in data.
 
Examples of collaborative research projects responsive to this ViCTER Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) include, but are not limited to, projects that seek to:
Funding Information
 
Eligibility Criteria
 
For more information, visit Grants.gov.

For more information, visit https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/view-opportunity.html?oppId=336025

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