Health and Medical Research Grants
Browse health grants and medical research funding for clinical studies, public health programs, biomedical science, and community care projects.
Health funding covers everything from basic biomedical science to clinical trials, public health interventions, health services research, and community care programs. The category splits cleanly along one line: research grants that generate knowledge, and program grants that deliver services. Disease-focused foundations and government research agencies dominate the first; health departments, hospital community-benefit funds, and charities dominate the second. Figure out which you are pursuing, because the applications look nothing alike.
If you are a researcher, expect institutional applications: your university or hospital is usually the legal applicant, and your sponsored-programs office will have internal deadlines that land days or weeks before the funder’s. Review criteria typically weigh significance, approach, investigator track record, and environment, and many programs run distinct mechanisms for early-career versus established investigators. Applying to a mechanism above your career stage is one of the fastest ways to waste a submission cycle.
If you run a health nonprofit or clinic, funders will focus on population served, evidence behind the intervention, partnerships with providers, and how you measure health outcomes rather than activity counts. Disease-specific charities often want alignment with their research agenda or patient community, and can be surprisingly narrow about which conditions, stages, or populations qualify.
Before investing effort, verify the human-subjects and ethics requirements, whether clinical work requires trial registration, whether indirect costs are capped, and whether the funder restricts overlap with other awards. The classic mistake in this category is a strong idea aimed at the wrong mechanism or the wrong disease priority. Shortlist from the live opportunities below, then read the full official announcement, including review criteria, before committing your team to a draft.
Current matching opportunities
These listings are limited to open, rolling, or upcoming opportunities that match this guide. Check the official source before applying.
PAR-27-077: NIH Science Education Partnership Award (SEPA) (R25 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
The NIH reissued PAR-27-077 SEPA to fund pre-K through grade 12 STEM education projects that increase biomedical research understanding and encourage long-term science pathways.
PAR-25-270: NCCIH Natural Product Early Phase Clinical Trial Award (R33)
NIH NOFO for R33 early-phase natural-product clinical trials focused on target-engagement evidence before larger efficacy studies, with a direct-cost cap of $1,050,000 over up to 3 years and strict clinical-trial-only eligibility.
Early independence: clinician scientist fellowship 2026-2027 (MRC)
UK Medical Research Council fellowship for clinicians and healthcare professionals moving from training or role-dependent research to independent clinical-science leadership, with 2026/2027 future application rounds.
NIH PAR-25-370: ELSI Small Research Grant (R03 Clinical Trial Optional)
NIH NOFO PAR-25-370 supports small, self-contained ethical, legal, and social implications (ELSI) projects in human genetics and genomics with up to $50,000 direct costs per year and up to two years of support.
RFA-OD-27-008: Maximizing the Scientific Value of ECHO Data (NRSA F32 Postdoctoral Fellowship)
A National Institutes of Health Office of the Director fellowship call for postdoctoral researchers using Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) de-identified cohort data through the NICHD DASH repository, with applications due in December 2026 for FY 2027 start cycles.
RFA-HD-27-007: Using Archived Data and Specimen Collections to Advance Maternal and Pediatric HIV/AIDS Research
This NIH RFA requests grant applications that use existing HIV/AIDS archives and biospecimen repositories to generate high-impact research on maternal and pediatric HIV outcomes.
NIGMS Maximizing Investigators' Research Award (MIRA) for Established Investigators (PAR-26-121)
PAR-26-121 is a National Institutes of Health/NIGMS MIRA NOFO for established investigators with a recurring submission cycle in 2026 and 2027.
NIH SBIR/STTR Commercialization Readiness Pilot (CRP) Program (Parent SB1 Clinical Trial Optional): PAR-27-098
A late-stage small business commercialization bridge for U.S. NIH SBIR or STTR Phase II projects that need outsourced technical development, clinical studies, or market-readiness work before full commercialization.
PAR-25-449: Mind and Body Interventions to Restore Whole Person Health via Emotional Well-Being Mechanisms (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
A NCCIH phased NIH parent R61/R33 NOFO supporting mind-body mechanistic clinical trials with strong preliminary data, explicit feasibility milestones, and continuation criteria, with recurring submission cycles into the 2027 review cycle.
PA-25-172: Modular R01s in Cancer Control and Population Sciences (R01 Clinical Trial Optional), 2026-2027
An NCI parent R01 notice for population-level cancer research, cancer control science, and implementation-focused projects with recurring submission cycles through the 2027 cycle.
Capacity Building: Clinical Research Training Fellowship (MRC)
A UK Medical Research Council (MRC) fellowship through UK Research and Innovation for clinically qualified PhD professionals returning to active research, supporting re-entry, retraining, and career progression in a clinical academic pathway.
NIH Support for Conferences and Scientific Meetings (PA-25-080): R13 Parent No Clinical Trials
NIH parent program PA-25-080 funds conference and workshop-style scientific meetings led by eligible U.S. institutions, with multiple 2026 and 2027 submission windows and no fixed budget cap.
Application guidance
Use the listings above as a shortlist, then build your application from the official instructions. Save the source page, deadline, eligibility rules, required documents, contact details, and any program-specific scoring criteria. If the deadline is rolling, apply early enough for review queues and budget limits. If the deadline is fixed, work backward from the closing date and leave time for recommendations, institutional approvals, financial documents, and portal errors.
Popular funding types
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Health and Medical Research Grants FAQ
Who funds health and medical research?
Government health agencies, disease-focused foundations, medical charities, universities, and industry all fund health work, each with different priorities and review processes. Always apply through the funder's official channel.
Do I need an institution to apply?
Most research grants are awarded to institutions rather than individuals, so researchers typically apply through a university or hospital sponsored-programs office. Community health programs may accept nonprofits directly.
Do health grants cover patient care costs?
Usually not. Research grants fund studies and programs, not individual treatment; people seeking help with medical bills should look at benefits and assistance programs instead.