National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
NIAID Home Health & Science Research Funding Research News & Events Labs at NIAID About NIAID

NIAID Research Funding

NIAID Funding News
Opportunities and Announcements
Paylines and Budget
Grants and Contracts
NIH Grant Cycle
All About Grants Tutorials
New Investigators
Electronic Application
Research Grants
R&D Contracts
Small Business Grants
Training and Career
Humans, Animals, More
International
Council
Extramural SOPs
Questions and Answers
Calendars and Timelines
Glossary
Find It! A-Z
Latest Updates
icon Subscribe to Alerts
Search in Research Funding

<< previous · tutorial index · next >>

Cartoon clipartNIAID offers the following career development awards, which enable scientists with diverse backgrounds to enhance their careers in biomedical research.

Keep in mind that except for the K99/R00, all K awards require either U.S. citizenship or permanent residency status (Alien Registration Receipt Card, Form I-551). People on temporary or student visas are not eligible.

To help you decide which award best suits your needs, use NIH's visual guides to career development awards for people with research doctorates and health-professional doctorates.

During the last two years of a mentored career development award (K01, K08, K22, K23, K25), NIH will permit you to receive concurrent salary support from any peer-reviewed grant from any federal agency, if you meet the following criteria:

  • You are a PI on a competing research project grant, or director of a subproject on a multi-component grant, from NIH or another Federal agency.
  • Your K award is active.

Under those circumstances, you may reduce your K award's time and effort to six person months.

In its June 4, 2004, Guide notice, NIAID announced it supports K01 and K02 awards in epidemiology and outcomes research.

NIAID will not accept K-series applications proposing to conduct new, independent clinical trials. For more information, read the March 28, 2008, Guide notice.

Note on effort requirement: Except for the K24, K awards require you to spend a minimum amount of your full-time effort, generally nine person months, on the research supported by the award and have a full-time appointment at the organization applying for the grant. You can now meet the effort requirement with your full-time position while simultaneously holding another position part-time.

An example in the August 3, 2004, Guide notice illustrates how this works: An investigator with a full-time appointment at a university and a half-time position at a clinical practice can qualify because he or she can commit at least nine person months of the full-time position to the award.

Note that NIH now uses person months to measure effort. See Person Months Calculation Example for more information.

Additional Resources

<< previous · tutorial index · next >>

Separator line
DHHS Logo Department of Health and Human Services NIH Logo National Institutes of Health NIAID Logo National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases June 25, 2008
Home | Help | Site Index | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Web Site Links & Policies | FOIA