SSW MSW Blog



Offer Newsletter: Issue 117

Issue No. 117                                                                                April 26, 2022

Highlighted News and Announcements

Funding Opportunity for SSW Researchers
Public Interest Technology Network Challenge
UW Internal deadline: April 29, 2022
Announcing an excellent opportunity for SSW researchers! Public Interest Technology Network (PIT UN) universities are trying innovative tactics to produce graduates with multiple fluencies at the intersection of technology and policy. For its fourth year, projects are encouraged in the following priority areas: Educational Offerings, Career Pipeline/Placement, Faculty & Institution Building, and Strengthening the PIT University Network. UW will put forward 3 proposals; to be considered, submit a 1-page letter of intent with a description of proposed objectives, work plan, impact, timeline, list of collaborators, total amount requested and matching fund source(s) along with a CV (not NIH format) of the PI to welliver@uw.edu by 5:00pm Friday April 29.

Upcoming National Academy of Sciences Workshop
Structural Racism and Rigorous Models of Social Inequity
May 16, 2022, 7:00am-1:00pm
May 17, 2022, 6:00am-12:00pm

This workshop is designed to identify and discuss the sources and mechanisms through which structural racism operates. Invited experts will not only provide insights into known sources of structural racism and models of health equity, but also go beyond these to discuss novel sources and approaches. The workshop will help identify key research and data needs and priorities for future work on structural racism and health inequity. SSW Professor Michelle Johnson-Jennings will be a featured speaker at the workshop. Registration required.

Contact the Editor
The mission of the OFFER newsletter is to inform members of our social work community about a broad range of research-related events and opportunities with the goals of both encouraging and informing social work research activities. To assist us in providing this information, contact Tasha Murphy by sending an email to tbmurphy@uw.edu (please put “OFFER eNews” in the subject line} with information on your publications or grants awarded in the last month, research funding opportunities, and upcoming research events. Thank you!

Requests for Nominations and Feedback

NIH Request for Nominations for Sexual & Gender Minority Research Investigator Awards Program
The NIH Sexual & Gender minority Research Office requests nominations for NIH’s 2022 SGM Research Investigator Awards Program, which was developed to recognize investigators who have made substantial, outstanding research contributions in areas related to SGM health and well-being. Awards are given to early-stage investigators (ESI) who are poised to become future leaders in the field.  Nominations are due on April 30, 2022.

New Publications

Zhang, H., Morris,M. E., Nurius, P. S., Mack, K., Brown, J., Sefidgar, Y. S., Xu, X., Riskin,  E. A., Dey, A. K., & Mankoff, J. (in press) Impact of online learning in the context of Covid-19 on undergraduates with disabilities and mental health concerns. In Proceedings of the 23rd International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility, ASSETS 2022.

Heerde, J. A., Bailey, J. A., Patton, G. C., & Toumbourou, J. W. (2022). A population-based study of homelessness, antisocial behaviour, and violence victimisation among young adults in Victoria, Australia. Australian Journal of Social Issues. Advance online publication.

Pandika, D., Bailey, J. A., Oesterle, S., & Kuklinski, M. R. (2022). Young adult opioid misuse indicates a general tendency toward substance use and is strongly predicted by general substance use risk. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 235, 109442.

Bailey, J. A., Epstein, M., & Kosterman, R. (2022). Parent ENDS use predicts adolescent and young adult offspring ENDS use above and beyond parent cigarette useAddict Behav, 125, 107157.

Fredriksen-Goldsen, K. I., Romanelli, M., Hoy-Ellis, C. P., & Jung, H. (2022). Health, economic and social disparities among transgender women, transgender men and transgender nonbinary adults: results from a population-based studyPreventive Medicine, 156, 106988.

Scheuer, H., Kuklinski, M. R., Sterling, S. A., Catalano, R. F., Beck, A., Braciszewski, J., Boggs, J., Hawkins, J. D., Loree, A. M., Weisner, C., Carey, S., Elsiss, F., Morse, E., Negusse, R., Jessen, A., Kline-Simon, A., Oesterle, S., Quesenberry, C., Sofrygin, O., & Yoon, T. (2022). Parent-focused prevention of adolescent health risk behavior: Study protocol for a multisite cluster-randomized trial implemented in pediatric primary careContemporary clinical trials112, 106621.

Selected Funding Opportunities
List of all active NIH grant opportunities

William T. Grant Foundation Scholars Program 2022
UW Internal deadline: April 27, 2022
The William T. Grant Scholars Program supports career development for promising early-career researchers. The program funds five-year research and mentoring plans that significantly expand researchers’ expertise in new disciplines, methods, and content areas. The Foundation supports research in two distinct focus areas: 1) Reducing inequality in youth outcomes, and 2) Improving the use of research evidence in decisions that affect young people. The UW will put forward just one application; to be considered, submit a 1-page letter of intent with a description of proposed aims and approach with a biosketch or CV of the PI to research@uw.edu by 5:00pm April 27.

Emergency Awards: RADx-UP- Social, Ethical, and Behavioral Implications Research on Disparities in COVID-19 Tetsing among Underserved and Vulnerable Populations
Deadline: May 2, 2022
The goal of this RADx®-UP Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) is to conduct social, ethical, and behavioral implications (SEBI) research to understand and reduce barriers to COVID-19 testing, as well as COVID-19 disparities that arise from barriers to testing among underserved and vulnerable populations. NOTE: A pre-application Webinar will be held on March 15 from 1:00-3:00pm.

Notice of Special Interest: Research on Barriers to Care and Risk of HIV-associated Comorbidities among Vulnerable Population Groups (R01)
Deadline: R01 Due Dates on or after May 7, 2022 (expires May 8, 2025)
This NOSI encourages applications to perform research that will advance our understanding of barriers to care and other risk factors that contribute to HIV-associated comorbidities among disproportionally affected population groups including gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men, in particular Black, Latino, and American Indian/Alaska Native men; Black women; transgender women; reproductive aged-women, people in the 13–24 year age group; and people who inject drugs.

Research and Evaluation on Hate Crimes
Deadline: May 9, 2022
The National Institute of Justice seeks proposals for rigorous research and evaluation projects that inform efforts to prevent and combat hate crimes and their effects. Though applications may cover a range of topics, NIJ is particularly interested in funding research to: (1) understand and prevent hate crime offending and reoffending, (2) identify strategies that improve the reporting, investigating, and prosecuting of hate crimes, (3) address the needs of victims of hate crimes and their communities.

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in the Justice System: A study of Existing Evidence and Public Policy Implications
Deadline: May 10, 2022
The National Institute of Justice seeks investigator-initiated proposals to conduct a comprehensive evidence-based analysis of existing evidence to examine how observed racial and ethnic disparities in the justice system might be reduced through public policy. NIJ anticipates making one award.

Research and Evaluation on Violence Against Women
Deadline: May 10, 2022
The National Institute of Justice seeks proposals for rigorous research and evaluation projects to support the development of objective and independent knowledge and validated tools to reduce violence against women (VAW) (including violence against elderly women and American Indian and Alaska Native women and girls), promote justice for victims of crime, and enhance criminal justice responses.

Biopsychosocial Factor of Social Connectedness and Isolation on Health, wellbeing, Illness, and Recovery (R01) 
Deadline: May 21, 2022 (expires June 22, 2024)
This funding opportunity announcement (FOA) invites research projects that seek to explain the underlying mechanisms, processes, and trajectories of social relationships and how these factors affect outcomes in human health, illness, recovery, and overall wellbeing. Also see related R01s here and here.

Notice of Special Interest; Research to address Vaccine Hesitancy, Uptake, and Implementation among Populations that Experience Health Disparities
Deadline: May 25, 2022; NOTE: Due date  may differ by institute (expires January 8, 2023)
This Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) highlights the need for research on strategies, and interventions to address vaccine hesitancy, uptake, and implementation among populations who experience health disparities in the US and its territories.

Stephen I. Katz Early Stage Investigator Research Project Grant (R01)
Deadline: May 26, 2022 (can submit on future NIH deadlines through September 26, 2023)
The Stephen I. Katz Early Stage Investigator Research Project Grant supports an innovative project that represents a change in research direction for an early stage investigator (ESI) and for which no preliminary data exist. Applications submitted to this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) must not include preliminary data. Clinical trials not allowed.

Notice of Special Interest: Administrative Supplements for Research on the Health of Women Understudied, Underrepresented and Underreported Populations
First Available Due Date: May 31, 2022; NOTE: Due date may differ by institute (expires February 1, 2023)
Administrative supplements are now available to PIs of active NIH awards to support projects highlighting common sources of disparities in women and girls’ health with a specific emphasis on those that integrate measures beyond the individual level and consider perspectives from multiple disciplines.

Notice of Special Interest: Epidemiologic studies in Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders
Deadline: June 5, 2022; NOTE: Due date may differ by institute (expires November 19, 2024)
The purpose of this Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) is to stimulate novel epidemiological research to address key knowledge gaps within and between subpopulations of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders. These populations are frequently aggregated in research, potentially masking important social and health differences.

Risk and Protective Factors of Family Health and Family Level Interventions (R01)
Deadline: June 5, 2022 (expires February 5, 2025)
The goal of this initiative is to support family level health observational and intervention studies in the biomedical, clinical, population, behavioral or social sciences. Projects must include a focus on families from one or more populations that NIH designates as experiencing health disparities in the US and territories, which include Blacks or African Americans, Hispanics or Latinos, American Indians and Alaska Natives, Asians, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, underserved rural populations, and sexual and gender minorities (SGM).

Notice of Special Interest: Research to Improve the Interpretation of Patient-Reported Outcomes at the Individual Patient Level for Use in Clinical Practice
Deadlines: June 5, 2022 (R01), June 16 (R21) (expires May 8, 2023)
The focus of this NOSI is on self-report (PRO) measures that: a) have already been developed and validated for use in clinical research and have strong, demonstrated psychometric properties, and b) are currently being used, or could have utility, in clinical practice. Specifically, this Notice calls for methodological studies that provide meaningful interpretation of PRO scores collected and acted upon at the individual patient level for use in clinical decision-making.

Patient-Clinician Relationship: Improving Health Outcomes in Populations that Experience Health Care Disparities (R01)
Deadline: June 5, 2022 (expires October 5, 2024)
This funding opportunity supports innovative multi-disciplinary and multi-level (e.g., patient, clinician, interpersonal, health care system, community) research designed to understand how optimizing patient-clinician communication and relationship affects health care outcomes in patients from populations with health care disparities.

Effectiveness Trials for Post-Acute Interventions and Services to Optimize Longer Term Outcomes
Deadline: June 5, 2022 (expires February 5, 2024)
The National Institute of Mental Health seeks applications for research projects to evaluate the effectiveness of therapeutic and service delivery interventions for the post-acute management of mental health conditions affecting youth, adults, and older adults.

Investigator Initiated Clinical Trials of Complementary and Integrative Interventions Delivered Remotely or via mHealth
Deadline: June 5, 2022 (expires May 8, 2023)
This funding announcement encourages applications for investigator-initiated fully remotely delivered and conducted clinical trials to assess the efficacy or effectiveness of complementary and integrative health interventions.

Comprehensive Care for Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus from Populations with Health Disparities
Deadline: June 5, 2022 (expires June 5, 2024)
This award will support innovative multidisciplinary and multi-level research designed to develop and/or test interventions to optimize care of persons with Type 2 diabetes from populations with health/health care disparities, including racial and ethnic minorities, sexual and gender minorities, socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, and underserved rural populations.

Notice of Special Interest: Social, Behavioral, and Economic Impact of COVID-19 in Underserved and Vulnerable Populations
Deadline: June 5, 2022; NOTE: Due dates vary by institute (expires September 8, 2024)
The purpose of this Notice is to highlight interest in research regarding the impact of COVID-19 on populations that experience health disparities (racial and ethnic minorities, socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, underserved rural populations, and sexual and gender minorities) and other populations with medical or social vulnerabilities.

The Role of Work in Health Disparities in the U.S. 
Deadline: June 5, 2022 (expires June 5, 2024)
This funding opportunity supports innovative population-based research that can contribute to identifying and characterizing pathways and mechanisms through which work or occupation influences health outcomes and health status among populations with health and/or health care disparities, and how work functions as a social determinant of health.

Addressing Health Disparities among Immigrant Populations through Effective Interventions
Deadline: June 5, 2022 (expires January 5, 2023)
This announcement calls for multidisciplinary/multilevel research focusing on the design and implementation of effective interventions that will address immigrant-specific factors to reduce health disparities, particularly among migrant workers, recent and 1st generation immigrants.

Maximizing the Scientific Value of Secondary Analyses of Existing Cohorts and Datasets in Order to Address Research Gaps and Foster Additional Opportunities in Aging Research
Deadlines: June 5, 2022 (R01), June 16, 2022 (R21) (expires September 8, 2023)
This notice encourages the use of existing cohorts and datasets for well-focused secondary analyses on: (1) aging changes influencing health across the lifespan (e.g., Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (AD/ADRD)), (2) diseases and disabilities in older persons, and/or (3) the changes in basic biology of aging that underlie these impacts on health. Applicants should use the parent R01 and parent R21 application materials.

Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health (R03)
Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health (R21)
Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health (R01)
Deadlines: June 5, 2022 (R01), June 16, 2022 (R03, R21) 
These FOAs invite applications that will identify, develop, test, evaluate, and/or refine strategies to disseminate and implement evidence-based practices (e.g. behavioral interventions; prevention, treatment and disease management interventions) into public health, clinical practice, and community settings.

Young Scholars Program
LOI Deadline: June 9, 2022
Application Deadline: October 13, 2022

The Young Scholars Program (YSP) supports scholarship for early-career researchers. The program funds implementation research that is policy- and practice-relevant and that examines the preparation, competency, compensation, well-being, and ongoing professional learning of the early care and education (ECE) workforce.

*Newly Added*
Demonstrating Policy Effectiveness to Promote Black Youth Mental Health
Deadline: June 22, 2022
The US Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health (OMH) solicits applications for projects for the Demonstrating Policy Effectiveness to Promote Black Youth Mental Health Initiative. This initiative seeks to identify health and wellness policies that are successful in improving Black youth mental health, including suicide prevention.

Lasker Clinical Research Scholars Program
Deadline: June 24, 2022
The NIH has created the Lasker Clinical Research Scholars (Lasker Scholars) program that will offer applicants the opportunity to compete for a unique combination of intramural and extramural resources for clinical research. The program will support a small number of exceptional clinical researchers in the early stages of their independent careers to promote their development as fully independent scientists. The program combines a period of research experience as a tenure-track Investigator in the IRP with additional years of independent financial support.

William T. Grant Scholars Program
Deadline: July 6, 2022
The William T. Grant Scholars Program supports career development for promising early-career researchers. The program funds five-year research and mentoring plans that significantly expand researchers’ expertise in new disciplines, methods, and content areas.

NSF CAREER Program
Deadline: July 27, 2022
The Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program is a Foundation-wide activity that offers the National Science Foundation’s most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization.

Emergency Awards: HEAL Initiative- New Innovator Award
Deadline: August 22, 2022
The Helping End Addiction Long-Term (HEAL) New Innovator Award supports a postdoctoral or newly independent Early Stage Investigator of exceptional creativity who proposes novel, original and insightful research concepts with the potential to produce a major impact, test scientific paradigms, or advance key concepts on broad, important problems in biomedical research related to pain, opioid use disorder (OUD), and/or overdose (OD). Applications proposing unexpected convergence of disciplines, new scientific directions, or the use of novel methodologies are encouraged.

Transition to Aging Research for Predoctoral Students (F99/K00)
Internal UW Deadline: 9/7/2022
Sponsor Deadline: 10/21/2022

This FOA seeks to foster the development of research and clinician scientists in the following areas: genetic, biological, clinical, epidemiological, neuroscientific, behavioral, social, and economic research on aging, both basic and translational. Successful applicants will be awarded the Transition to Aging Research Award, whose purpose is to facilitate the transition of outstanding and committed graduate students into aging-focused post-doctoral positions. UW will support 1 application for this FOA. If interested, please submit a 1-page LOI with a description of proposed aims and approach and a biosketch/CV of the applicant research@uw.edu by 5:00 PM Wednesday, September 7, 2022.

Addressing Mental Health Disparities Research Gaps: Aggregating and Mining Existing Data Sets for Secondary Analyses
Deadline: October 18, 2022
This initiative encourages research projects that aggregate existing data sets to examine mechanisms by which factors at multiple levels (e.g., policy, society, community, school, family, individual) contribute to, exacerbate, or reduce disparities across development in order to inform understanding of disparities in risk and etiology of mental disorders, to facilitate the development of preventive and therapeutic interventions, and/or to inform targets and timing of services interventions to address disparities in access, engagement, quality and outcomes of mental health services.

Understanding Suicide Risk and Protective Factors among Black Youth (R01)
Deadline: October 19, 2022, June 20, 2023
This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) aims to advance translational research to better understand factors that confer risk and resilience for suicide among Black youth. This FOA encourages research that is designed to identify neurobiological, behavioral, social, and structural/systemic mechanisms underlying risk and protective factors for suicide among Black youth, with consideration for identification of novel targets for future development of prevention and intervention efforts.

Understanding Suicide Risk and Protective Factors among Black Youth (R21)
Deadline: October 19, 2022, June 20, 2023
This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) aims to advance translational research to better understand factors that confer risk and resilience for suicide among Black youth. R21 exploratory grant awards in response to this FOA are intended to conduct preliminary work regarding the assessment and characterization of risk and protective factors, with consideration for the identification of novel targets for future development of prevention and intervention efforts.

Notice of Special Interest: Administrative Supplements for Research on Sexual and Gender Minority Populations
First Available Due Date: January 31, 2023 (expires February 1, 2024)
This NOSI calls for research that will enrich scientific understanding of how sexual orientation, gender identity, and/or being born with differences/disorders in sex development (DSDs) or intersex characteristics relate to health outcomes, health risks, health behaviors, perceptions and expectations about health, and access to health-related services or associated barriers.

Measures and Methods to Advance Research on Minority Health and Health Disparities-Related Constructs (R01)
Deadline: February 5, 2023 (expires February 5, 2024)
This initiative will support research to improve the measures and methods for complex social constructs that capture the lived experience of populations that experience health disparities.  Projects are expected to examine the performance and utility of specific measurement and/or methodological approaches.

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Evidence for Action: Innovative Research to Advance Racial Equity
Deadline: Rolling
This funding is focused on studies about upstream causes of health inequities, such as the systems, structures, laws, policies, norms, and practices that determine the distribution of resources and opportunities, which in turn influence individuals’ options and behaviors. Research should center on the needs and experiences of communities exhibiting the greatest health burdens and be motivated by real-world priorities.

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Pioneering Ideas: Exploring the Future to Build a Culture of Health
Deadline: Rolling
Pioneering Ideas seeks proposals that are primed to influence health equity in the future. We are interested in ideas that address any of these four areas of focus: Future of Evidence; Future of Social Interaction; Future of Food; Future of Work. Additionally, we welcome ideas that might fall outside of these four focus areas, but which offer unique approaches to advancing health equity and our progress toward a Culture of Health.

Events and Lectures

Understanding and Addressing Fathers’ Mental Health
April 27, 2022 11:00pm-12:00pm
Fathers, like mothers, are vulnerable to depression in the period surrounding the birth of a new baby, and this depression can have serious consequences for children and families. In this webinar, presenters will draw on their research and practice experience to discuss the prevalence and presentation of depression and other mental health challenges among new fathers, and the impacts of fathers’ mental health on parenting, family relationships, and child development.
Health Impacts of COVID-19 Initiative Virtual Event
April 27-28 (half days)
The NIH Social, Behavioral, and Economic (SBE) Health Impacts of COVID-19 initiative invites you to a Spring webinar event that will bring together more than 45 grantees to further connect researchers and foster collaboration opportunities. Presentations will cover COVID-19-related research topics including social networks, biological correlates, impacts on disadvantaged populations, mortality and morbidity, family impacts, mitigation efforts, interventions and more. Registration required.

Social Work and Reproductive Justice
April 28, 11:30 – 1:00pm 
Join Affilia: Feminist Inquiry in Social Work for another Critical Feminist Social Work Roundtable. We will hear Zakiya Luna, Stephanie Begun, and Erica Goldblatt Hyatt discuss their use of critical feminisms in social work research. This Zoom webinar is hosted and co-sponsored by the New York College of Technology’s Human Services Department, Gender & Sexuality Studies, and Center for LGBTQ Studies. Registration required.

2022 SSWR Roots & Wings Session I:Mentorship For Anti-Racist and Inclusive Research
April 28, 12:30pm-2:00pm
Systemic racism and a political climate that fuel xenophobia and hate against Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) challenge doctoral education to revisit how we are preparing the next generation of social work scholars to decolonize and de-center whiteness in social work research. This webinar aims to generate a dialogue about fostering anti-racist and inclusive mentoring practices and how to prepare our doctoral students to conduct anti-racist and inclusive research.

Using Innovative Data Science Approaches to Identify Individuals, Populations, and Communities at High Risk for Suicide
April 28, 8:00am-1:00pm
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Forum on Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders will host a 3-part public webinar series, Using Innovative Data Science Approaches to Identify Individuals, Populations, and Communities at High Risk for Suicide.  This webinar will focus on current approaches used by social media platforms, technology companies, and researchers to determine suicide risk in individuals and communities.

Can You Tell Me More About That? Identifying Best Practices in Conducting Research Interviews
May 4, 12:00-1:30pm
The Institute of Translational Health Sciences presentsCan You Tell Me More About That? Identifying Best Practices in Conducting Research Interviews”. In this workshop, participants will learn about the various types of research interviews and differences between them. Participants will also learn best practices and tips in conducting research interviews with vulnerable populations. Registration encouraged.

Inaugural Annual NIH AA and NHPI Health Research Conference
May 4 – 5, 2022 | Online Webinar
The NIH Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Health Scientific Interest Group (NIH AANHPI-HSIG) will host this two-day event to celebrate AANHPI heritage month, highlight AANHPI research achievements, and assess research needs. The main theme of the 2022 conference is “Mechanism and Translational Research to Improve Health and Therapeutic Outcomes for AA and NHPI Populations.” NIMHD Director Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable, M.D., will provide opening remarks.

NSF CAREER Program Briefing
May 10, 11:00-1:00pm PST
May 16, 11:00-1:00pm PST

NSF is providing information on the NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) program, which supports early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization. Webinars will include a briefing on the CAREER program and key solicitation requirements, followed by a question-and-answer session.

*Newly Added*
NIH Virtual Meeting on the Neurocognitive Mechanisms of Structural Racism
May 17-19, 9:00am-2:00pm
The Racial Equity Initiative at the National Institute on Drug Abuse is hosting a 3-day meeting for interdisciplinary researchers to unpack the effects of structural racism on neurocognition, as it relates to substance use and mental health, and to discuss how to consider and contextualize structural racism in developing research studies.

NSF Spring 2022 Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences Directorate Advisory Committee Meeting
May 20, 8:00am-2:00pm
The Advisory Committee for NSF’s Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences Directorate meets twice yearly to provide advice, recommendations and oversight to the directorate concerning support for research, education and human resources. The meeting is open, and members of the public are welcome to attend as observers.

UW School of Mental Health Assessment, Research, & Training Speaker Series
May 25, 8:30-9:45am
Please join Dr. Tunette Powell, Director of Equity, Inclusion and Community at the Mirman School in Los Angeles and Walter Gilliam, PhD – Elizabeth Mears & House Jameson Professor of Child Psychiatry and Psychology at the Yale University Child Study Center, Director of the Edward Zigler Center in Child Development and Social Policy for the their talk “What’s Going On: Choosing Understanding over Escalating and Punishing”. RSVP required.

Exploring the Science of Connection through Promoting First Relationships
May 25, 11:00-12:30pm
Promoting First Relationships ® (PFR: Kelly et al., 2008) is a brief 10-week home visiting intervention designed that focuses on the quality of the caregiver-child relationship as a source of protection from toxic stress. PFR has been evaluated in five randomized clinical trials. We will first describe the PFR model of intervention, show videotaped examples, and conclude with a brief overview of the evidence base.

Acknowledging and Rewarding Interdisciplinary Research with Appointment, Promotion and Tenure Processes. 
May 26, 12:00-1:30pm
The Institute of Translational Health Sciences presents “Acknowledging and Rewarding Interdisciplinary Research within Appointment, Promotion and Tenure Processes”. This offering will provide an overview of the current landscape and efforts by the ITHS Team Science core and colleagues to promote the recognition of interdisciplinary collaborative research in the Promotion and Tenure (PT) processes at the UW and beyond.

*Newly Added*
Team Science Workshop 2022
June 13-17, 11:30am-1:30pm daily (virtual)
The Institute for Translational Health Sciences (ITHS) at UW is offering a workshop for new and established research teams who wish to improve their team functioning, communication, project management, and role alignment. Participating teams will be introduced to best practices of high functioning research teams and strategies to address common team challenges. Registration required.

Health Equity Conversations
Ongoing
The Department of Medicine health systems team at UW is supporting Health Equity Conversations, a new limited series podcast hosted by Joshua Liao, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) and associate chair. The podcast features people and groups around the country working on payment and other systems change efforts to improve health equity. The series builds off a prior call to action and efforts to raise awareness about these issues in peer-reviewed and other venues.

Conferences, Workshops, and Training Opportunities

UW Libraries Presents: Introduction to Accessibility & Data Visualization Workshop
April 26, 12:00-1:00pm
Data visualization best practices and tools do not always discuss accessibility, which can exclude many groups of people. This workshop will review ways to make your visualizations more accessible. We will work through a visualization together and add features to make it more accessible. You are encouraged to follow along, but no active participation is necessary. Data visualization experience is not required, though some familiarity with accessing and using spreadsheet software may be helpful. Registration required.

3rd Annual Virtual Conference: Advances in Mindfulness and Acceptance Based Clinical Tools for Treating Adolescents and Young Adults
April 29, 2022
This one-day virtual symposium brings together experts to provide updates on evidence-based mindfulness and acceptance approaches to improving lives of adolescents and young adults struggling with a broad array of obstacles. Participants will learn from case examples, experiential exercises, and group discussions, and will have opportunities to network with professionals with shared interests. A “data-blitz” in the afternoon will provide opportunities to learn a snapshot of some of the latest clinical research in this area.

Call for Applications: Professional Development Training Series on Poverty and Economic Mobility
Deadline: May 17, 2022
As the National Research Center on Poverty and Economic Mobility, the Institute for Research on Poverty (IRP) at the University of Wisconsin–Madison invites applications from continuing Ph.D. and master’s degree students who are from groups that are underrepresented in academia for its 2022–2023 Professional Development Training Series on Poverty and Economic Mobility Research.

Online Certificate in Mixed Methods Research
Mondays and Wednesdays in June 2022, 3:00-5:00pm, Online
This 30-hour program is designed for researchers and practitioners who are interested in learning more about the integration of qualitative and quantitative research methods and data, commonly used data collection methods and procedures, popular data analysis techniques used in the applied professions, and effective approaches to research conducted in practice settings.

LGBTQ Research Symposium
June 2-3, 2022 (virtual)
This symposium provides researchers an opportunity to present their work, discuss challenges and opportunities, and network with others conducting LGBTQ+ research across disciplines.

*Newly Added*
ICPSR Summer Program
First Session: June 20-July 15; Registration Deadline: June 12 
Second Session: July 18-August 12; Registration Deadline: July 10

The Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) is offering 4-week sessions consisting of more than 20 courses featuring intensive instruction in quantitative methods and statistical techniques such as “Bayesian Modeling for the Social Sciences” and “Race, Ethnicity, and Quantitative Methodology”. Courses will be offered in a hybrid format, including both in-person instruction in Ann Arbor, MI and Zoom.

National Organization of Forensic Social Work Annual Conference
June 14-16, 2022
The theme of this conference is Social Justice and Unjust Systems: Strategies to Advance Structural Change. Topics will include: understanding clients’ intersectionality in order to provide more inclusive and equitable services; disaggregating data and reporting outcomes with context; and developing theories of structural/systems change to support long term transformation and justice.

National Alliance on Mental Illness Annual Conference
June 15-18, 2022
As one of the largest community-driven gatherings of mental health advocates in the U.S., NAMI’s annual national convention connects and inspires people looking for resources, research, support and programming. NAMICon as a hybrid event in 2022, combining an in-person convention experience with select events and sessions streaming online.

American Society on Aging and the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology Online Gerontology Courses
Course dates Summer- Fall 2020 Online
The American Society on Aging and the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology are offering four different five-week online gerontology courses. The online learning curriculum will expand your knowledge of aging issues with in-depth information and insights.CE credits are offered from select accreditation providers.

Cannabis Pharmacology for Substance Misuse Prevention Practitioners Course
Ongoing
Cannabis Pharmacology for Substance Misuse Prevention Practitioners is a 4.5 hour self-paced course that provides important information on what prevention professionals need to know about cannabis. This 3-part series will cover the Effects of Cannabis, Cannabis and the Adolescent Brain, and Cannabis Pharmacology.

Pharmacology for Prevention Specialists (4-part series)
Ongoing
Explore the basics of how substances impact major brain regions and the acute and chronic symptoms associated with different substances. Topics include Basics of Pharmacology and Alcohol, Opioids, Psychostimulants, and Cannabis.

Boston University School of Social Work’s Center for Aging & Disability Research & Education (CADER)
Ongoing
Prepare for the challenges of a rapidly changing society with CADER state-of-the-art online training programs. All CADER courses cover content areas related to legal and ethical considerations, cultural competence, person-centered approaches, health literacy, and strategies for communicating effectively in difficult situations. These online courses are available separately or as part of a certificate program, are self-paced, and can be taken anytime, and provide continuing education credits.

Arizona Rural Women’s Health Network: Sexual Violence Training for Community Health Workers
Ongoing-online (CHEHs)
The Arizona Rural Women’s Health Network offers a free 4 hour course that provides an introduction to basic knowledge and skills useful in assisting and responding to victims of sexual violence. The online course includes self-paced modules, a workbook, and a simulated role-play scenario.

Junior Investigator Group: Quantitative Research Methods for Behavioral research around HIV and Mental Health
The UW BIRCH Methods Core is seeking a handful of early stage investigators to join a junior investigator group focused on quantitative research methods for behavioral research around HIV and mental health. The group will meet monthly and will focus on quantitative methods topics to assist participants in securing funding, actively publishing, and otherwise advancing in their careers.

Junior Investigator Group: UW/Fred Hutch Behavioral Science Core
The UW/Fred Hutch CFAR’s Behavioral Science Core supports an ongoing “Junior Investigator Group” or JIG that is open to new members for the next academic year. Co-facilitated by Drs. Deepa Rao, Judith Tsui, and Jane Simoni, the JIG assists early stage investigators who are interested in research on the behavioral aspects of HIV. The group meets monthly and assists members in securing funding, actively publishing, and otherwise successfully advancing in their careers.

Postdoctoral Fellowships, Internships, and Research Job Opportunities

Postdoctoral Scholar Position at UC Berkeley
Deadline: April 22, 2022
Innovations for Youth (i4Y), at UC Berkeley, has an immediate opening for a postdoctoral scholar. Primary responsibilities will be intellectual and highly-skilled technical contributions to the center’s ongoing projects, with a focus on promoting the wellbeing of young people by building infrastructure for effective prevention practice in schools. The position is expected to start on or before July 1, 2022. To apply, submit a cover letter, CV, and 3 academic references to Marieka Schotland at i4y@berkeley.edu.

Presidential Postdoctoral Scholar in Social Science- Justice and Equity
Deadline: May 27, 2022
Arizona State University invites applications for up to two postdoctoral scholar positions in the area of equity and fairness at the nexus of civil and criminal justice. Relevant scholarship can include, but certainly is not limited to, work in the areas of access to justice, domestic violence, immigration, involvement in multiple justice systems, reproductive rights, school-to-prison pipeline, school violence and safety, substance use and other risk behaviors, and tribal justice.

Research Scientist Position at SDRG
The Social Development Research Group (SDRG) at UW is seeking Research Scientists (PhD required) to work on grant projects funded by the NIH. SDRG is home to several longitudinal studies broadly focused on testing long-term effects of substance use prevention systems and interventions and understanding substance use (including e-cigarette use) across adolescence, young adulthood, and extending into middle-age. We are seeking research scientists to help us meet existing study aims, develop new research projects, and write grants. Responsibilities are primarily conducting quantitative data analysis and writing for publication as part of a team. For additional details, email Martie Skinner at skinnm@uw.edu

*Newly Added*
NIH-Funded Postdoctoral Position at Harvard Medical School
Deadline: Open Until Filled
The Developmental Risk and Cultural Resilience Lab at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School is looking to hire a postdoctoral fellow to coordinate a 5-year longitudinal study focused on perceptions of racial discrimination among Chinese American adolescents, racial socialization processes that take place within parent-, peer-, and social media contexts, and impacts to mental health.

*Newly Added*
Postdoctoral Researcher Needed at Vanderbilt University
Deadline: Open Until Filled
The Center for Research on Families and Comunities Engagement to Address Health and Educational Equities (Center for RFACE-HEE) at Vanderbilt seeks a postdoctoral researcher with interest in research, preventive interventions and policies targeting African American parents/caregivers and youth for a 2-year appointment.

Science Advocacy Internship
Deadline: Rolling

The National Prevention Science Coalition to Improve Lives (NPSC) is offering an internship for undergraduate and graduate students. The purpose of the position is to expand awareness and commitment to leveraging evidence-based prevention approaches for reducing social ills (e.g., crime, poverty, trauma) and saving taxpayer dollars. The student will work with senior prevention scientists to translate research into products that are readable by a lay audience. Start date is flexible. For more information, please email Tasha Murphy (tbmurphy@uw.edu).

SSW Research Assistant/Coordinator Position
Deadline: Rolling 
Dr. Megan Moore at SSW is hiring for a Research Assistant/Coordinator position to assist with a qualitative study to understand the impacts of COVID on stakeholder engagement as part of a larger PCORI-funded study of a transitions of care model with patients and family members who have sustained a traumatic brain injury. for more information, please email Dr. Moore at mm99@uw.edu or Leslie Kempthorne (ette@uw.edu).

Postdoctoral Fellowships in Implementation Research in Suicide Prevention
Deadline: Open Until Filled
The Innovation in Suicide Prevention Implementation Research (INSPIRE) Center at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine invites applications for postdoctoral fellowships to begin in Summer or Fall 2022. This interdisciplinary training program provides an opportunity for social scientists to improve their knowledge of implementation science, health information technology, participatory design, qualitative and quantitative research methods, and how to conduct research that can improve outcomes for our most vulnerable citizens.

Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Boston College
Deadline: Open Until Filled
Boston College School of Social Work invites applications to a post-doctoral fellowship focused on issues of relevance to maternal and child health and health equity, with a special focus on child abuse prevention. This position will offer many professional growth opportunities including manuscript, report, and conference presentation writing and development; data management and analysis; grant writing; translation and dissemination of study findings; supervision and mentoring.

Postdoctoral Associate Positions in Research on Issues Related to Interpersonal Violence: Rutgers School of Social Work
Deadline: Open Until Filled
The Center on Violence Against Women & Children (VAWC) at the Rutgers School of Social Work is seeking two postdoctoral scholars interested in gaining further experience related to issues of interpersonal violence. Two postdoctoral scholars are currently sought to focus on 1) assessing campus climate related to interpersonal violence and 2) interpersonal victimization of Latinos.

Postdoctoral Fellowship in Social-Emotional Learning and Substance Abuse Prevention
Deadline: Open Until Filled
The Innovation in Child and Family Wellness Research Group of Virginia Commonwealth University is accepting applications for a postdoctoral position to examine the efficacy of a trauma-informed, social- emotional learning program to reduce adolescent substance use. This is a 1-year fellowship, with the option to renew for an additional year.

Call for Papers and Abstracts

APHA Public Health Social Work Call for Abstracts
Abstract Submission Deadline: April 30, 2022 
The Public Health Social Work Section of the American Public Health Association (APHA) invites submissions for presentations for the 2022 American Public Health Association Conference in Boston, MA (November 6-9). The theme for the 2022 conference is “150 Years of Creating the Healthiest Nation: The Path Toward Equity.”

AMERSA Annual Conference: Examining Systems, Substance Use and Disenfranchisement
Deadline: May 1, 2022
AMERSA is inviting abstracts for the 2022 AMERSA National Conference. Abstracts may be submitted to one of three categories: 1.) Research, 2.) Curricula, Quality Improvement, and Program Innovations, and 3.) Clinical Case Presentations.

Clinical Social Work Journal
Abstract Deadline: May 31, 2022
Manuscript Deadline: September 30, 2022

This special issue of the Clinical Social Work Journal seeks original manuscripts dedicated to advancing knowledge and clinical social work practice on the topic of Child Welfare: Current Realities and Future Possibilities in Clinical Social Work Practice. We are interested in innovative clinical social work practice approaches to delivery of child welfare services to children and families from initial entry into system to exit via family reunification, adoption, or aging out of the system. Please email Tasha Murphy at tbmurphy@uw.edu for information on how to prepare and submit your abstract.

Journal of Human Rights and Social Work Articles on COVID 19
Deadline: Rolling

Everyone’s well-being, livelihood, and human rights are at risk as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, however it has exacerbated existing disparities experienced by traditionally oppressed groups. The Journal of Human Rights and Social Work invites authors to contribute relevant articles examining human rights issues including but not limited to violations of the human rights to health and medical care, education, free speech, and a fair trial.

Notes from the Field: Narratives in Social Work
Deadline: Open Until Filled
For academics and practitioners who have social work direct practice experience with clients AND have experience with or are interested in writing creative non-fiction: Notes From the Field comprises essays (about 2,000 words) that encapsulate social problems through work (not office-based psychotherapy but other kinds of social work practice) with individuals, groups, families, or communities. Culturally diverse authors are particularly encouraged. If interested and to get more information, please contact Jacqueline Corcoran at cojacq@upenn.edu.

Global Social Welfare: Research, Policy Practice Special Call for COVID Research
Deadline: Ongoing
Global Social Welfare is inviting authors to contribute research articles sharing experiences and results (both positive and negative) with our readers who can use this information to inform the development and implementation of future social work, social policy and public health programs.

The database for BIPOC-Authored Social Work Papers
Deadline: Ongoing
The BIPOC-Authored Papers for Social Work database was created in an effort to amplify BIPOC voices and perspectives, and to increase the representation of BIPOC authors across social work curriculum. As faculty engage in critical analysis of their syllabi and curricula, the availability of BIPOC-authored materials is an essential element of dismantling the white supremacy embedded in social work and transforming social work education and practice. As a crowd-sourced database, this collaborative endeavor has the potential to elevate academic excellence and enhance a diverse, inclusive, values-based learning environment.

Call for Papers Related to COVID-19
Deadline: Rolling Submission
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated existing health disparities experienced by traditionally oppressed groups including older adults, low-wage workers and those living in poverty, and people with underlying health conditions. Public policies and practices that intentionally or unintentionally favor positive outcomes for certain groups over others violate human rights and must be rectified. As a result, rather than a one-time special issue of the journal, we invite authors to contribute relevant articles on a rolling basis for peer review.

Research Resources

NIH Grants YouTube Channel
The NIH hosts a YouTube channel where you can learn about NIH fundamentals, peer review, NIH policy, compliance, special funding programs, and more!

Research Resources for Investigators studying American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
The Department of Health and Human Services Office for Human Research Protections has made available several materials from a recent workshop for those interested in conducting research involving AI/AN populations.

ITHS Scientific Success Committee
ITHS has created a Scientific Success Committee, a group of experienced investigators, statisticians and bioethicists who provide feedback on study design, strategy or feasibility from early stages of development until implementation of a study. The committee meets monthly, and requires a brief application for consideration.

ITHS Career Development Series
The ITHS Career Development Series consist of monthly lectures and workshops designed to provide junior faculty and investigators with tools, a forum for discussion, and learning opportunities to help advance their careers. Below you will find all the seminars we have recorded, so you can tap into this knowledge when ever you need to! Topics include: How to write Specific Aims, study recruitment strategies, grant writing skills, and responding to reviewer comments.

Video Guide: Overview of Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards, especially the Individual Fellowships (F awards) and Institutional Training Grants (T awards)
In this video, NIH’s Dennis Twombly and Lisa Moeller will take you through an overview of these two types of awards, providing some tips along the way.

All About Grants Podcasts
The Office of Extramural Research (OER) at NIH hosts a series of podcasts relating to NIH grants that is designed for investigators, fellows, students, and research administrators. Episodes cover topics such as grant preparation, developing successful grant applications, advice for new and early career scientists, submitting your application, the peer-review process, and post-award activities and requirements. The latest episode focuses on the newly required Diversity Plans for conference applications. Episodes are available as mp3s for download, and via iTunes. To access mp3s and transcripts of each podcast, click here.

Process for submitting a grant application through SSW
OFFER has created a new proposal timeline, a step by step guide outlining all the steps involved from starting through completing the research grant application process at SSW. This form, along with a sample proposal checklist and other useful information can be accessed through MySSW/ProposalDevelopment/Getting Started.

To access an array of research resources, including guiding principles, proposal development, sample grant applications, human subject reviews and more go to MySSW. For information on the latest COVID-19 research opportunities, go here.

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