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Climate and Health is sponsored by Wellcome. Funds research on how climate change affects human health and actions to address it.
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Climate Change and Human Health Seed Grants - Burroughs Wellcome Fund Climate Change and Human Health Seed Grants Now Accepting Applications Share this Grant Apply Now The Burroughs Wellcome Fund aims to stimulate the growth of new connections between thinkers working in largely disconnected fields, who, together, may change the course of climate change’s impact on human health.
Between Fall 2023 and Summer 2026, we will dedicate $1 million to supporting small, early-stage grants of $2,500–$50,000 toward achieving this goal.
We are primarily, but not exclusively, interested in activities that build connections between basic and early biomedical scientific approaches and ecological, environmental, geological, geographic, and planetary-scale thinking, as well as with population-focused fields, including epidemiology and public health, demography, economics, and urban planning.
Also of interest is work piloting new approaches or interactions aimed at reducing the impact of health-centered activities, such as developing more sustainable systems for healthcare, care delivery, and biomedical research. Another area of interest is preparation for the impacts of extreme weather and other crises that can lead to large-scale disruptions, immediately affecting human health and the delivery of healthcare.
Public outreach, climate communication, and education efforts focused on the intersection of climate and health are also appropriate for this call. This program supports work conceived through many kinds of creative thinking. Successful applicants include academic scientists, physicians, and public health experts, community organizations, science outreach centers, non-biomedical academic departments, and more.
Proposals will be accepted on a rolling basis through July 2026 . A review will be conducted quarterly. Deadline dates for the upcoming cycles are: Due Date: As stated in the Contract Progress and financial reports are required of all BWF grants, and are due on the date specified in the award letter or contract.
BWF has provided progress report guidelines to assist in the preparation and submission of Progress Reports in an acceptable manner. Award recipients must provide BWF with a progress report detailing outcomes as well as a financial report. A Progress Report must be completed (form accessible below) and should contain the following information: A brief narrative on the outcome of the project.
Please address in your narrative the goals of the project and how/if these goals were met. If this activity was a conference, meeting, or a seminar, attach an agenda, a program, and a participant/speaker list. A Financial Report must be completed (form accessible below) and should contain the following information: An itemized financial statement reporting how the funds were used.
For meetings and conferences, include a breakdown of the expenses for speakers, young investigators, postdoctoral students, etc., where appropriate. Can I submit a paper application? No. BWF requires that all applications for this program be submitted electronically.
Paper applications will not be accepted. Can I change my application once submitted? No. Once your application is submitted, it cannot be changed.
Can Letters of Collaboration be included in the application? No. Collaborative situations can be described in the five-page Project Plan - there is no need for individual collaborative letters. How serious are you about the page limit on the project plan?
All applicants must stay within the set five-page limit or the application will be rejected. Does the bibliography count toward the five-page maximum Research Plan? No. It is considered part of the required supporting materials.
Abbreviations should be limited in the text. Is there a font or margin requirement for the research plan? Use standard 11- or 12-point type for the text.
The text must be single-spaced, with a one-half inch or larger margins on all sides. Accessing the Application Do I need to complete my application in one session? No, you can start an application and return at a later time to complete the application.
When beginning a new application, you are required to establish a ProposalCentral log-in and password if you do not already have one. At any time during the application process, you may click the "save" button, exit the application, and return at a later time. I forgot my user id and/or password.
What should I do? For a forgotten password or user ID, visit the BWF grant application system and click the forgotten password link. I completed my application.
How do I submit it? Once the application is complete, proceed with the following steps: Click “Validate” on the sidebar to see if any errors are identified. All information must be provided prior to application submission.
If there are no missing items in the application, click on the SUBMIT link on the sidebar. Click the blue SUBMIT button. The application is NOT submitted until you complete this step.
Applications submissions must occur prior to 3:00 pm (EST) on the day of the deadline. The submit button will disappear after that time. Applicants should receive a confirmation email once your application is submitted.
If you do not receive this email, please reach out to BWF. If I’m having trouble with the electronic application, whom can I contact for help? For questions about the electronic application, please contact Darcy Lewandowski via email or by phone at 919-991-5132 .
Can we capture climate risks: assessing the ability of existing surveillance systems to identify climate-driven changes in vector-borne pathogens University of California-San Diego Alleviating Eco-anxiety and Augmenting Self-efficacy through Community Artmaking Moving Into Harm’s Way?
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Principal Investigator: Erik MacIntosh Morehead Planetarium and Science Center Sharing Your Science: An Online Science Communication Pilot Project to Train Climate and Human Health Experts. Principal Investigator: Lil Milagro Henriquez Mapping the Impact of Climate Resilient Education on the Social-Emotional Wellness of Youth.
Principal Investigator: Max Cawley North Carolina Museum of Life and Science Imagine Durham: A Whole-Family Humanities Approach to Climate, Health, and Possible Futures.
Principal Investigator: William Marciel de Souza, PhD University of Texas Medical Branch-Galveston Data science and genomic approach to mitigate arboviruses in the current era of climate change Principal Investigator: Christine Goforth Friends of the North Carolina State Museum of Natural Sciences North Carolina Climate Change Challenge: Engaging the Public in Citizen Science To Change the World Principal Investigator: Anpo Jensen International Indian Treaty Council Black Hills Environmental Health Project Principal Investigator: Gabi Steinbach, PhD Georgia Tech Research Corporation Translational fellowship program for establishing a community for 'Integrative Health and Environment' Principal Investigator: Bruce Keaulani Living Life Source Foundation Ecological Restoration of a Royal Fishpond with Native Hawaiian Youth as a Climate Change Strategy to Promote Wellbeing Principal Investigator: Braden Tierney, PhD Weill Medical College of Cornell University Towards combating climate change-induced coral bleaching with optimized DNA sequencing and strain-resolved bioinformatics Principal Investigator: Ahzin Bahraini Principal Investigator: LuAnne Pendergraft North Carolina Public Television Foundation Step Up: Youth Voices on Climate Change & Human Health Principal Investigator: Melissa S Nolan, PhD University of South Carolina Employing big data methods to elucidate the impact of three decade’s extreme weather events on early childhood development in the United States Principal Investigator: Ginny Whitelaw, PhD Institute for Zen Leadership One Earth, One Health, One With - A leadership summit for people, planet and the future Principal Investigator: Dana Haine University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Using the power of place-based, solutions-focused case studies, and hands-on STEM instruction to engage diverse youth in learning about extreme heat in Durham, NC Principal Investigator: Rebecca Fry, PhD University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Climate and Environmental Change and Preterm Birth Principal Investigator: Nina Fefferman, PhD University of Tennessee- Knoxville A Tasting Menu of Quantitative Modeling for Researchers in the Life and Earth Sciences Tackling the Interface of Climate Change and Health Principal Investigator: Ami Radunskaya, PhD The Sylvia Bozeman and Rhonda Hughes EDGE Foundation Opportunity for Students from Under-Represented Populations to Build Professional Skills and Networks in Quantitative Life and Earth Sciences at the Interface of Climate Change and Health Rolling Application Deadline
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Universities and research institutions globally, including those in the EU. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Varies Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
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Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Wellcome Genomics in Context Awards is a grant from the Wellcome Trust that funds research integrating genomic data with clinical, environmental, and social context to improve understanding of health and disease. The program supports projects that go beyond generating sequence data to investigate how genomic variation interacts with lived experience, exposures, and biological systems. Eligible applicants include researchers at universities and research institutions globally, with preference for international collaborations. Awards fund multidisciplinary teams combining genomics, epidemiology, social science, and clinical research to generate actionable health insights.
The Evidence for AI in Health (EVAH) initiative is a $60 million joint investment by the Gates Foundation, Novo Nordisk Foundation, and Wellcome Trust to support rigorous, country-led evaluations of AI health tools in low- and middle-income countries. Delivered in partnership with J-PAL and the African Population and Health Research Center, EVAH funds evaluations of AI-enabled clinical decision support tools in primary and community healthcare settings across Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia. Pathway A supports early-deployment evaluations focusing on usability, workflow integration, and safety for up to $1 million. Pathway B funds randomized controlled trials, economic analyses, and implementation science studies of tools ready for deployment at scale for up to $3 million. The initiative addresses a critical evidence gap about whether AI diagnostic and clinical decision support tools actually improve health outcomes in resource-limited settings.
This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) invites Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant applications from small business concerns (SBCs) for funding to perform research leading to the development of innovative technologies that may advance progress for early detection and assessment of individuals at risk and for early diagnosis, prognosis and follow-up of type 1 diabetes (T1D). Funding Opportunity Number: RFA-DK-15-024. Assistance Listing: 93.847. Funding Instrument: G. Category: FN,HL. Award Amount: $2M total program funding.
This initiative will stimulate and support innovative research by small business concerns that may lead to the development of novel technologies for the early diagnosis, monitoring and treatment of micro and macro vascular complications of diabetes which are associated with significant morbidity and mortality of the disease and high costs to the health care system. Funding Opportunity Number: PA-14-058. Assistance Listing: 93.847. Funding Instrument: G. Category: FN,HL.