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Find similar grantsPersonal Responsibility Education Program (PREP) is sponsored by Wisconsin Department of Health Services. PREP funds agencies to educate young people on sexual health, focusing on positive adolescent development and healthy relationships in Wisconsin.
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Adolescent Health Programming | Wisconsin Department of Health Services The Wisconsin Adolescent Health team has current programming that helps keep young people healthy across the state. Program funding comes from several federal grants. Learn more about each initiative.
Personal Responsibility Education Program (PREP) PREP is a program that aims to prevent pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. This program focuses on providing youth with knowledge and skills around positive adolescent development, healthy life skills, and healthy relationships. PREP provides funds to support agencies, also called implementation sites.
They educate young people on sexual health. Agencies include non-profits and local health departments in the southeast and northern regions of the state. For programming, PREP agencies use high-quality, evidence-based programs.
They acknowledge the unique adolescent experience, while giving them what they need to transition to adulthood. They promote positive development, healthy connections, and healthy life skills. This approach addresses the needs of thousands of Wisconsin’s most vulnerable youth.
PREP is for youth who are in high school. It focuses on marginalized youth: Youth in a racial or ethnic minority group Youth who live in rural areas or places with high adolescent birth rates Project Wisconsin Initiative for Student Empowerment (WISE) Project WISE is a program that aims to achieve the following, long-term, in funded communities: Reduce adolescent pregnancy rates and sexually transmitted diseases.
Increase healthy behaviors among youth. This means lowered rates of alcohol/drug use and sexual risk behavior, and increased healthy relationships. Increase high school graduation rates.
How is Project WISE funded? Project WISE gets funding from the Sexual Risk Avoidance Education grant provided by the Family and Youth Services Bureau. They are part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
How does Project WISE work? Project WISE chooses sites through a competitive process. Sites get money to fund education on sexual risk avoidance.
This teaches young people to, by choice, refrain from sexual activity. Education must be: Evidence-based, using a positive youth development approach. Sites use the Wyman’s Teen Outreach Program® (also called TOP).
TOP promotes the positive development of adolescents. Through TOP, young people have curriculum-guided, interactive group talks and positive adult guidance and support. They also take part in community service learning.
Students get TOP services in school and in afterschool settings. TOP focuses on topics that relate to adolescent health and development: Building social, emotional, and life skills Developing a positive sense of self Project WISE is for youth in sixth through eighth grade. It focuses on: Youth in a racial or ethnic minority group.
Youth who live in rural areas or places with high adolescent birth rates. In Wisconsin, these areas currently have Project WISE: Oneida County (Minocqua-Hazelhurst-Lake Tomahawk schools) Vilas County (Lac Du Flambeau) Learn more about the State Sexual Risk Avoidance Education grant. Sexual Violence Prevention program The Sexual Violence Prevention program aims to decrease rates of sexual violence.
How is the Sexual Violence Prevention program funded? The program gets funding from the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Rape Prevention and Education grant. How does the Sexual Violence Prevention program work?
The program works with diverse communities to increase health and safety. It does this by addressing the root causes of sexual violence, applying primary prevention strategies. These consider the person, their connections, and other factors that put people at risk for violence or protect them from it.
Learn more about Sexual Violence Prevention. Maternal and Child Health Title V block grant The Title V block grant aims to improve the health and well-being of adolescents. Title V works to decrease the number of young people who report feeling sad or hopeless.
It also works to decrease youth reporting being bullied on school property. Title V funding supports Providers and Teens Communicating for Health . This is a youth-delivered program.
It targets barriers that get in the way of health care providers talking to adolescents effectively. It focuses on sensitive health topics. This program also provides opportunities for young people to be paid as advocates for health in their communities.
There are toolkits for parents and youth to help extend the reach of this program. Title V funding supports local and tribal health departments seeking to improve adolescent well-being in their communities. Health departments improve adolescent well-being by offering evidence-based mental health and suicide prevention trainings.
Health departments promote warmlines such as Youthline, the PRISM Program, and Iris Place. Health departments also support schools in anti-bullying strategies recommended by the Department of Public Instruction. Title V also supports the Department of Public Instruction in conducting the Wisconsin Youth Risk Behavior Survey, which measures health-risk behaviors of young people.
Often, the Title V program focuses on adolescents 11 through 18 years of age. Learn more about Providers and Teens Communicating for Health. Learn more about Bullying Prevention.
Last revised March 23, 2026
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Nonprofits and local health departments in Wisconsin. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Personal Responsibility Education Program (PREP) is funded by Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Wisconsin. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Suicide Prevention Programming Grants is sponsored by Wisconsin Department of Health Services, Division of Care and Treatment Services. This funding opportunity supports suicide prevention programming focused on improving the quality of clinical care in health and behavioral health care systems. The population of focus is adults with serious mental illness (SMI).
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