Revision
applications for basic social and behavioral research on the social,
cultural, biological, and psychological mechanisms of stigma (R01:
RFA-MD-13-005)
Purpose
The
purpose of this OppNet RFA to
support projects that elucidate mechanisms underlying stigma that are
relevant across health conditions or stigmatized statuses. It
encourages revision applications to
incorporate basic research on behavioral and social mechanisms
underlying stigma into active R01 research projects. For this
initiative, projects may focus on stigma processes and mechanisms
from the perspective of stigmatized individuals or groups and/or of
individuals or groups holding stigmatizing beliefs. Projects may examine
stigma in the context of specific health conditions; however, the focus
of the work must be on the underlying mechanisms
of stigma rather than on condition-specific manifestations of stigma. OppNet intends to fund approximately 6-7 awards, corresponding to a total of approximately $1.0 million in fiscal year 2014.
An
additional goal is to encourage applied stigma researchers to
incorporate mechanistic components into their research and for b-BSSR
investigators to incorporate stigma into studies of related
phenomena.
Application due date
August 2, 2013, by 5:00 p.m. local time of applicant organization
Letter of intent due date
July
2, 2013: Although not required or binding, an intent letter allows NIH
review staff to estimate the number and themes associated with planning
this RFA’s peer review
process.
Background
NIH
has funded a large body of research on stigma. Much of this research,
however, has focused on manifestations of stigma related to specific
diseases, conditions, or populations (e.g., the
unique features of stigma associated with HIV/AIDS or mental illness).
This focus may prevent understanding the underlying psychological and
physiological mechanisms that drive the development of stigmatizing
attitudes and the experience of stigma and obscure
important commonalities or differences across stigmatized health
conditions and other stigmatized statuses, such as those associated with
race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religious affiliation.
This
research gap poses many challenges to understand stigma and to develop
effective interventions to prevent or reduce the experience of stigma or
buffer against its effects.
Without knowledge of shared underlying features of the development of
stigmatizing attitudes or the experiencing of a stigmatized identity,
future intervention models or strategies may not fully address the
complex psychological and physiological underpinnings
of stigma.
Please forward this message as you see fit. If you receive this as a basic text message, the link to this RFA is,
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-MD-13-005.html