1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
This listing may be outdated. Verify details at the official source before applying.
Find similar grantsGrants for Organizations that Promote Comprehensive Healthcare for Adults with Developmental Disabilities is sponsored by Unspecified (found on aggregator, but likely from a real funder). This opportunity supports mission-aligned projects and measurable outcomes.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Unspecified (found on aggregator, but likely from a real funder)” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
WITH Foundation awards $450,000 towards comprehensive healthcare for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities - WITH Foundation WITH Foundation awards $450,000 towards comprehensive healthcare for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities WITH Foundation awards $450,000 towards comprehensive healthcare for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities San Mateo, CA, June 14, 2023 – The WITH Foundation is pleased to announce that $450,000 will be awarded to six organizations as a result of the November 2022 grant open cycle.
These grants will fund a variety of programs that promote comprehensive and accessible healthcare for adults with developmental disabilities. “We are pleased to support this work and how each organization will be intentional in being disabled led and/or engaging self-advocates as experts,” said Ryan Easterly, Executive Director of the WITH Foundation.
The following six organizations have been selected to receive this funding: Autistic Self Advocacy Network, Washington, D. C. The Disability Policy Center from the Autistic Self Advocacy Network (ASAN) is a driving force of health policy discussions for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
This renewal of three years of general operating support for the Disability Policy Center will assist the Center in serving as a bridge between numerous interest groups, including self-advocates and health policy organizations, as well as between disability-specific policy conversations and the broader discussion on healthcare reform.
Down Syndrome Connection of the Bay Area, Danville, CA The Mental Health Alliance provides training and support to the mental health community serving individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities to ensure that people with Down Syndrome and other forms of I/DD can have better access to quality mental health services.
This pilot aims to develop more communication-based specially trained mental health providers in the Bay Area region. The Association for Successful Parenting, Baltimore, MD The Association for Successful Parenting (TASP) will develop Training Materials for Health Providers to Effectively Support Parents with Intellectual Disabilities.
These five self-paced training modules are designed for healthcare professionals supporting families in which the parents have an intellectual and developmental disability (I/DD) or learning difficulty. Self-advocates and health providers will provide input on content. The goal of the training modules is to address the inequities in healthcare services for parents with I/DD.
This project partners with the Association of University Centers on Disabilities (AUCD) . National Alliance to Advance Adolescent Health, Washington, D. C.
The National Alliance to Advance Adolescent Health (NAAAH) will identify inequities facing Black young adults with I/DD aging out of Medicaid, CHIP, SSI, and Title V across five states in a research project.
Because information on Black young adults with I/DD aging out of public programs is not consolidated anywhere, this research effort will bring the issues and recommendations into one report that will increase knowledge and action to improve identified problems.
University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, CO The Disability Equity Collaborative (DEC) of the University of Colorado Denver will create standards and implementation guides to advance disability equity in healthcare in two areas: how to establish an accessibility program, and how to provide effective communication.
Two panels of experts will then refine and finalize the standards guides and disseminate the toolkit broadly via outreach to organizations who serve adults with I/DD. Wiki Education, Chico, CA Wiki Education will improve health and disability-related articles on Wikipedia , one of the most utilized healthcare resources in the world.
This project builds on the previous WITH-funded project and will provide training and support for experts as they systematically improve between 30 and 40 high-value Wikipedia articles about disability healthcare. The project will impact the public’s understanding of important healthcare and developmental disability studies topics and create a snowball effect on the depth and breadth of available healthcare resources in the future.
WITH Foundation promotes comprehensive and accessible healthcare for adults with developmental disabilities in the United States. Press Contact: Laura Shumaker Director of Communications, WITH communications@withfoundation. org Sofia Webster 2023-06-14T10:16:10-07:00 June 14, 2023 | Blog , News |
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Nonprofit and for-profit organizations that provide services for special education and comprehensive healthcare for adults with developmental disabilities. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $30,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Grants for Organizations that Promote Comprehensive Healthcare for Adults with Developmental Disabilities is funded by Unspecified (found on aggregator, but likely from a real funder). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
NSF's December 2025 merit review changes look procedural — two outside reviews instead of three, optional panels, three-to-five-sentence summaries. The deeper shift is the transfer of decision authority from external peer reviewers to a smaller cohort of program officers, and it will reshape how every proposal needs to be written.
Read articleDARPA-PS-26-04, published February 25, 2026 by the Tactical Technology Office, restructures the contract around three phases — Phase 0 Backbone (6 months), Phase 1 Base (12 months), Phase 2 Option (18 months) — and culminates in an instrumented flight-test campaign. The solicitation is not really about T&E. It is about the digital-twin and uncertainty-quantification middleware DoD needs for any AI-enabled combat system.
Read articleRejected SBIR proposal? Good — now you have reviewer feedback. Use it to address weaknesses, sharpen your aims, and resubmit stronger.
Read article