Optimizing Behavioral Sleep Interventions for Adolescents and Young Adults
Last verified by NonDilute: 2026-06-08. Official notice and agency instructions control.
If you've developed or validated a behavioral sleep treatment for teens or young adults, NIH is actively funding optimization and scaling research.
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What this is
This NIH grant supports research into behavioral sleep interventions—non-pharmacological treatments like cognitive-behavioral therapy, sleep hygiene programs, or circadian rhythm interventions—specifically designed for adolescents and young adults. The initiative aims to improve sleep health outcomes in a population with high rates of sleep disorders and circadian misalignment. Applicants should have expertise in sleep science, behavioral health, adolescent/young adult medicine, or related fields, and be prepared to conduct clinical or intervention research.
Who can apply
Eligibility criteria are not specified in the provided text; however, NIH R01/R21 mechanisms typically fund academic institutions, research hospitals, non-profits, and some small businesses with institutional research capacity. Consult the full RFP or NIH GUIDE for detailed eligibility, including citizenship and institutional requirements.
Topics: sleep intervention · adolescent health · behavioral treatment · circadian rhythm · young adults · sleep disorders
Public-source funding discovery only. This summary is generated from public agency data and may be incomplete or stale. NonDilute is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of any government agency. Official notices and agency instructions control. NonDilute does not determine eligibility, provide grant-writing advice, or guarantee funding.