1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Research Related to Deafness and Communication Disorders - Training, Institutional (TI) is sponsored by Department of Health And Human Services. To investigate solutions to problems directly relevant to individuals with deafness or disorders of human communication in the areas of hearing, balance, smell, taste, voice, speech, and language.
The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) supports research and research training, including investigation into the etiology, pathology, detection, treatment, and prevention of disorders of hearing and other communication processes, primarily through the support of basic and applied research in anatomy, audiology, biochemistry, bioengineering, epidemiology, genetics, immunology, microbiology, molecular biology, the neurosciences, otolaryngology, psychology, pharmacology, physiology, psychophysics, speech-language pathology, and other scientific disciplines.
The NIDCD supports: (1) Research into the evaluation of techniques and devices used in diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation, and prevention of disorders of hearing and other communication processes; (2) research into prevention and early detection and diagnosis of hearing loss and speech, voice, and language disorders and research into preventing the effects of such disorders by means of appropriate referral and rehabilitation; (3) research into the detection, treatment, and prevention of disorders of hearing and other communication processes in the elderly population and its rehabilitation to ensure continued effective communication skills; and (4) research to expand knowledge of the effects of environmental agents that influence hearing or other communication processes.
This listing is currently active. Program number: 93. DC6.
Last updated on 2026-01-30.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Department of Health And Human Services” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: For-profit institutions are not eligible for institutional National Research Service Awards. All proposals are reviewed for scientific merit, for evaluation of the qualifications of the investigators, for adequacy of the research and/or research training environment and for significance of the problem. Approved proposals compete for available funds. Awardees of almost all Research Career Development Programs must be citizens or have been admitted to the United States for permanent residence. Candidates must be nominated for the program by a nonfederal public or private nonprofit institution located in the United States, its possessions or Territories. To be eligible, postdoctoral NRSA trainees and fellows must have a professional or scientific doctoral degree (PhD, MD, DO, DC, DDS, DVM, OD, DPM, ScD, EngD, Dr PHPhD, MD, DO, DC, DDS, DVM, OD, DPM, ScD, EngD, Dr PH, DNSc, ND {Doctor of Naturopathy}, PharmD, DSW, PsyD, AUD or equivalent doctoral degree from an accredited domestic or foreign institution). To be eligible for funding, a grant application must be approved for scientific merit and program relevance by a scientific review group and a national advisory council. Eligible applicant types include: For-Profit Organization, Nonprofit Organization, Not-for-Profit Organization. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows recent federal obligations suggest $7,289,000 (2026). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Yes — Research Related to Deafness and Communication Disorders - Training, Institutional (TI) is offered by Department of Health And Human Services and this listing comes from SAM.gov, an official U.S. federal source. Federal applications generally require registrations (for example SAM.gov or an agency submission portal), so allow extra lead time.
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
Utah Primary Care Grant Program is a grant from the Utah Department of Health and Human Services – Office of Primary Care and Rural Health that funds organizations providing primary healthcare to medically underserved and low-income populations across Utah. The program increases access to ambulatory primary care services for low-wage workers, children, the elderly, migrant farmworkers, and the uninsured or underinsured. Eligible applicants include private non-profit and public organizations delivering primary healthcare in Utah. The 2026 application cycle opened March 9 and closed March 31, 2026, with an application orientation held on March 17.
Resource-Related Research Projects for Development of Models and Related Materials for Studying Human Health and Diseases (R24 Clinical Trials Not Allowed) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, Office of Research Infrastructure Programs. This grant supports the development of broad-impact human health and disease models and resources for biomedical research, applicable across multiple NIH institutes.
The STOMP program funds measurement tools and removal therapies for microplastics in human tissue. Proposals due June 22. Eligibility, phases, and strategy.
Read articleThe Lilly Foundation's 2026 Open Call accepts pre-applications June 1 through July 3. Its three priorities — Global Health, K-12 STEM Education, and Economic Mobility — look national, but the education and mobility tracks concentrate heavily in Marion County, Indiana, while the health track funds cardiometabolic work abroad. Here's how to read the geography before you spend a week on a pre-application you can't win.
Read articleThe CDC's Notice of Funding Opportunity CDC-RFA-JG-26-0056, Continuing to Enhance Global Health Security, closes for applications on June 25, 2026, with $75 million on the table and eight cooperative agreements anticipated. The NOFO sits inside an unusually compressed window for global health implementing partners — after the USAID dismantling and the 2025 CDC reorganization, this is one of the largest remaining flexible federal vehicles for outbreak-prevention work executed through bilateral partnerships with foreign health ministries. Here is what the solicitation requires, why the eligibility design favors specific applicant types, and what to do if you are still considering whether to apply.
Read article