Pilot Effectiveness Trials of Peer Support Services for Suicide Prevention
Last verified by NonDilute: 2026-04-29. Official notice and agency instructions control.
If you're a researcher with a peer support or suicide prevention program, this funds the rigorous pilot work needed to prove it works.
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What this is
The National Institutes of Health is funding pilot effectiveness trials of peer support services aimed at suicide prevention. This is research funding focused on testing whether peer-led interventions reduce suicide risk and improve mental health outcomes. Applicants should have expertise in clinical trial design, suicide prevention research, and peer support program implementation. The funding supports preliminary data collection and proof-of-concept work, not full-scale trials.
Who can apply
Eligibility criteria are unspecified in this posting. Typically NIH research funding is open to universities, research institutions, non-profits, and some small businesses; contact the NIH program officer or check the full solicitation (CFDA 93.242) for definitive organization type and cost-sharing requirements.
Topics: suicide prevention · peer support services · pilot effectiveness trial · mental health research · clinical outcomes measurement
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.