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Community Organization Funding Opportunities is sponsored by MSINBRE (Mississippi INBRE). Supports community organizations providing goods, services, support, resources, or advocacy to Mississippi communities. Eligible applicants include faith-based organizations, public healthcare systems, school districts, and social services agencies.
Official opportunity description and requirements excerpt:
Community Organization Funding Opportunities - MSINBRE External Advisory Committee External Advisory Committee Community Organization Funding Opportunities Community Organization Funding Opportunities DannyHolland 2026-02-11T15:36:24-06:00 Community Organization ENGAGE Award The Mississippi IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence (MS-INBRE) invites community organizations to apply for the Community Organization Proposal Awards. The Community Organization Proposal Awards are intended to provide funding for community organizations to build community-academic teams that can address the critical challenges imposed by Mississippi’s top public health issues. Topic areas must align with federal funding initiatives and may focus on a variety of health topics, including but not limited to the following areas: Affordable Prescription Drug Access – Initiatives to promote cost transparency, bulk purchasing, or community-led distribution programs to reduce medication costs and quality. Opioid & Addiction Recovery Programs – Community-based interventions for opioid use prevention, treatment, and non-opioid pain management alternatives. Fentanyl addition treatment, prevention, and education. Veterans’ Health & Well-being – PTSD support networks, community reintegration programs, and innovative mental health therapies for veterans. Telehealth Expansion – Implementing digital health tools, mobile clinics, and telemedicine services to enhance access in underserved areas. Rural & Tribal Healthcare Solutions – Strengthening community clinics, mobile health units, and local healthcare workforce training. Mental Health & Suicide Prevention – Community-based mental health first aid training, peer support networks, and crisis intervention services. Pandemic & Public Health Preparedness – Localized emergency response strategies, vaccine education, real food production, and supply chain resilience projects. Market-Based Health Insurance Education – Consumer education on alternative insurance models, direct primary care, and cost-sharing networks. Regulatory Reform & Healthcare Access – Identifying local regulatory barriers and advocating for streamlined licensing and service delivery models. Chronic Disease Prevention & Management – Addressing environmental and lifestyle factors contributing to chronic illnesses through education and advocacy. Environmental exposure and chronic disease. Alternative & Holistic Medicine Healthcare Integration – Promoting access to non-pharmaceutical treatments such as supplements, diet-based therapies, and traditional medicine. Community-driven wellness programs, including nutrition/metabolic health, alternative medicine, food quality, environmental exposure, and individualized care strategies. Real Food & Health – Promoting the selection of healthier meals through community lead initiatives, food selection and chronic disease, removal of harmful dyes and chemical, nutrition and metabolic health. Vaccine Education & Safety Research – Community engagement on vaccine policies, informed choice initiatives, and research on natural immunity and gut microbiome. Prescription Drug Reform Advocacy – Supporting policy research and local initiatives aimed at expanding access to off-label and alternative drug treatments. Accelerating EPA approval for innovative agricultural products. Medicare & Medicaid Innovation –
Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
Community Organization Funding Opportunities - MSINBRE External Advisory Committee External Advisory Committee Community Organization Funding Opportunities Community Organization Funding Opportunities DannyHolland 2026-02-11T15:36:24-06:00 Community Organization ENGAGE Award The Mississippi IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence (MS-INBRE) invites community organizations to apply for the Community Organization Proposal Awards.
The Community Organization Proposal Awards are intended to provide funding for community organizations to build community-academic teams that can address the critical challenges imposed by Mississippi’s top public health issues.
Topic areas must align with federal funding initiatives and may focus on a variety of health topics, including but not limited to the following areas: Affordable Prescription Drug Access – Initiatives to promote cost transparency, bulk purchasing, or community-led distribution programs to reduce medication costs and quality.
Opioid & Addiction Recovery Programs – Community-based interventions for opioid use prevention, treatment, and non-opioid pain management alternatives. Fentanyl addition treatment, prevention, and education. Veterans’ Health & Well-being – PTSD support networks, community reintegration programs, and innovative mental health therapies for veterans.
Telehealth Expansion – Implementing digital health tools, mobile clinics, and telemedicine services to enhance access in underserved areas. Rural & Tribal Healthcare Solutions – Strengthening community clinics, mobile health units, and local healthcare workforce training. Mental Health & Suicide Prevention – Community-based mental health first aid training, peer support networks, and crisis intervention services.
Pandemic & Public Health Preparedness – Localized emergency response strategies, vaccine education, real food production, and supply chain resilience projects. Market-Based Health Insurance Education – Consumer education on alternative insurance models, direct primary care, and cost-sharing networks.
Regulatory Reform & Healthcare Access – Identifying local regulatory barriers and advocating for streamlined licensing and service delivery models. Chronic Disease Prevention & Management – Addressing environmental and lifestyle factors contributing to chronic illnesses through education and advocacy. Environmental exposure and chronic disease.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Community organizations including faith-based organizations, public healthcare systems, school districts, social services agencies, non-federal government agencies (local, regional, Tribal, or state level), and their re… Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Not specified in search results Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is March 13, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Rural Communities Opioid Response Program (RCORP) - Impact is sponsored by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Funds community capacity building for prevention, treatment, and recovery services for substance use disorders in rural areas. Application snapshot: target deadline February 23, 2026; published funding information $200,000 - $1,000,000; eligibility guidance Rural organizations and communities addressing opioid response Use the official notice and source links for final requirements, attachment checklists, allowable costs, and submission instructions before applying.
Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use Grants Program is sponsored by Bloomberg Family Foundation Inc.. This program supports projects to develop and deliver high-impact, evidence-based tobacco control interventions in low- and middle-income countries. Funding focuses on policy reforms such as strengthening tobacco taxation, implementing smoke-free laws, advertising bans, and graphic pack warnings. It includes both 'Open Rounds' for broad policy work and a specific 'Tobacco Industry Interference' (TII) subset to counter industry tactics. Geographic focus: Low- and middle-income countries (Global) Focus areas: Public Health, Tobacco Control, Policy Reform Official opportunity description and requirements excerpt: Contact | Bloomberg Philanthropies Strengthening Local Arts Organizations Connecting Audiences to Culture Online or Onsite Advancing the Arts Around the World Collaborating with Cultural Funders Expanding College Access and Success Supporting Career and Technical Education Supporting Educational Institutions Supporting Sustainable Cities Driving Sustainable Finance Spurring Innovation in Cities Strengthening City Data to Improve Lives Promoting Healthy Food Choices Combating the Overdose Epidemic Increasing Access to Reproductive Health Care Promoting Cardiovascular Health Building Public Health Coalitions Strengthening Health Data Women’s Economic Development Perelman Performing Arts Center at the World Trade Center Charlotte and William Bloomberg Medford Public Library Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses English French German Spanish Portuguese (Brazil) Italian Korean Russian Hindi Japanese Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) English French German Spanish Portuguese (Brazil) Italian Korean Russian Hindi Japanese Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Bloomberg Philanthropies is only as strong as its connections. Whether you have questions or want to get involved, we want to hear from you. Please use the following information or fill out the form below to contact us and we’ll do our best to send you a prompt response. If your inquiry involves a request for funding or partnership, please note Bloomberg Philanthropies works with existing partners on all of our key initiatives and does not make grants outside our focus areas or directly to individuals. Grant proposals are by invitation only and news on grants competitions are posted regularly on our website. Members of the media may contact communications@bloomberg.org . Choose Your Subject General Inquiries Grants Events Careers Arts Education Environment Government Innovation Public Health Bloomberg Associates Founder's Projects Please note grant proposals are by invitation only and we do not make grants outside our focus areas or directly to individuals. Top photo: Christo’s temporary sculpture in Hyde Park, London, “The London Mastaba,” located in Serpentine Lake, Hyde Park during summer of 2018. Application snapshot: target deadline February 25, 2026; published funding information $50,000 - $250,000 per year; eligibility guidance Government agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) as categorized by the World Bank. Priority is given to countries with the highest tobacco use. Use the official notice and source links for final requirements, attachment checklists, allowable costs, and submission instructions before applying.
Application snapshot: target deadline March 13, 2026; published funding information Not specified in search results; eligibility guidance Community organizations including faith-based organizations, public healthcare systems, school districts, social services agencies, non-federal government agencies (local, regional, Tribal, or state level), and their re…
Use the official notice and source links for final requirements, attachment checklists, allowable costs, and submission instructions before applying.
Alternative & Holistic Medicine Healthcare Integration – Promoting access to non-pharmaceutical treatments such as supplements, diet-based therapies, and traditional medicine. Community-driven wellness programs, including nutrition/metabolic health, alternative medicine, food quality, environmental exposure, and individualized care strategies.
Real Food & Health – Promoting the selection of healthier meals through community lead initiatives, food selection and chronic disease, removal of harmful dyes and chemical, nutrition and metabolic health. Vaccine Education & Safety Research – Community engagement on vaccine policies, informed choice initiatives, and research on natural immunity and gut microbiome.
Prescription Drug Reform Advocacy – Supporting policy research and local initiatives aimed at expanding access to off-label and alternative drug treatments. Accelerating EPA approval for innovative agricultural products. Medicare & Medicaid Innovation – Piloting community-driven models for cost-effective senior care and Medicaid alternatives.
School Based Nutrition and Fitness – Launching of nutrition and school-based programs. The Community Proposal Awards occur in two competitive phases: the ENGAGE Award and PROPOSE Award. Awards will support the meaningful involvement of community organizations with our Community Engagement and Training Core and Data Science Core faculty who have grant experience and expertise in lifestyle behaviors (i.
e. , nutrition, physical activity, sleep) and interventions, integrative care, mental health, body composition and cardiometabolic outcomes assessment, health communication techniques, health promotion/outreach, digital health innovations, statistical analysis and modelling, and cardiometabolic diseases, such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity and HIV/AIDS.
ENGAGE awardees will create community-academic teams that will participate in trainings and workshops to support the design of a pilot research project and subsequent proposal submission plan. The pilot research plan should focus on secondary data analysis that is an important part of the health issue of interest.
As a part of the ENGAGE award, funding will be provided to support the development of a research plan for the PROPOSE application. The competitive PROPOSE award is a two-year award where applicants complete their pilot project and submit a funding application that is intended to continue the pilot work through larger NIH federal funding avenues. Eligible applicants include community organizations.
For this award, a community organization is defined as a non-Federal or non-academic organization whose primary purpose is to provide goods, services, support, resources, or advocacy to members of a Mississippi community.
Examples of eligible organizations include faith-based organizations, public healthcare systems, school districts, social services agencies, non-federal government agencies (including local, regional, Tribal or state level governments and their respective departments of public health, commerce, labor, transportation, housing and recreation).
Community organizations must also have appropriate systems, policies and procedures in place to manage funds and activities. Academic research centers and academic healthcare organizations are not eligible to apply for these awards, however, individual academic researchers can be involved as key collaborators and partners of the community organizations. Total allowable direct costs: $20,000/year for 1 year.
Indirect costs (F&A) are in addition to the allowable direct costs. Costs must be germane to participating in training activities to develop the research project, and cannot include any human subjects or data collection activities.
Letter of Intent Due Date: February 13, 2026 Full Application Due Date: March 13, 2026 Application Review: March 15-31, 2026 Finalist presentations to External Advisory Board: May 2026 Award Notifications Begin: June 2026 Project Start Date: September 1, 2026 Project End Date: August 31, 2027 4-hour Required Orientation at USM campus: August 2026 1-hour Team Meetings and Workshops: Twice per month, August 2026 – May 2027 Download Full Funding Opportunity Announcement Click the button below to submit your Letter of Intent: The University of Southern Mississippi Grant Information & Disclaimer: “The Mississippi INBRE program is supported by Award Number P20GM103476 from the National Institutes of General Medical Sciences.
The content of this website is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of General Medical Sciences or the National Institutes of Health. ”
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