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National Institutes of Health
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Mental Health Services In Non-Specialty Settings (SRNS)

Reviews applications that focus on clinical services and service systems, such as innovative service delivery systems; studies at the interface of service and interventions, such as studies of treatment guidelines and practice patterns; and policy, cost and dissemination research. For SRNS, the focus will particularly be on applications assessing service sites that are considered non-specialty mental health settings, such as primary or specialist medical care, schools, child welfare agencies, criminal justice settings, shelters, and other social service agencies where the primary focus of care is not mental health. Services studies may include data from human subjects of all age ranges and from all cultural and socio-economic backgrounds. Research may examine organizations, systems and/or communities. Research methods may include qualitative or quantitative techniques, including large data sets, such as national health data sets and Medicare claims data where those data focus on non-specialty mental health service use.

Specific Areas Covered by SRNS:

SRNS has the following shared interests within the NIMH IRG:

With Interventions Committee for Adult Mood and Anxiety Disorders (ITMA): ITMA reviews applications concerned with clinical trials and treatments as applied to mood and anxiety disorders and related mental health problems, while SRNS reviews applications of clinical services and service systems with a focus on service sites considered non-specialty mental health settings, such as primary or specialist medical care, schools, child welfare agencies, criminal justice settings, shelters, and other social service agencies where the primary focus of care is not mental health.

With Interventions Committee for Disorders Involving Children and Their Families (ITVC): ITVC reviews applications concerned with clinical trials and treatments as applied to mood and anxiety disorders and related mental health problems in children, while SRNS reviews applications of clinical services and service systems with a focus on service sites considered non-specialty mental health settings, such as primary or specialist medical care, schools, child welfare agencies, criminal justice settings, shelters, and other social service agencies where the primary focus of care is not mental health.

With Interventions Committee for Disorders Related to Schizophrenia, Late Life, or Personality (ITSP): While ITSP reviews applications concerned with the development and evaluation of interventions designed to treat schizophrenia spectrum disorders, personality disorders and disorders of late life, SRNS reviews applications of clinical services and service systems with a focus on service sites considered non-specialty mental health settings, such as primary or specialist medical care, schools, child welfare agencies, criminal justice settings, shelters, and other social service agencies where the primary focus of care is not mental health.

With Mental Health Services in Specialty Settings (SRSP): SRSP and SRNS both review applications of clinical services and service systems, however, the focus of SRNS is on service sites considered non-specialty mental health settings, such as primary or specialist medical care, schools, child welfare agencies, criminal justice settings, shelters, and other social service agencies where the primary focus of care is not mental health and SRSP reviews applications with a focus on service sites considered specialty mental health settings (i.e., mental health clinics, psychiatric hospitals, rehabilitation/reintegration, and mental health-related departments in institutions). Applications involving comparisons of specialty and non-specialty settings will be assigned on a case-to-case basis.

(* These descriptions should to be used as guidelines when determining the appropriate review locus for your application. In many instances, applications involve areas of science and/or methodologies that cross between study sections. In those instances, it is the staff within the NIMH Scientific Review Branch who, in consultation with the applicant if he/she requested a specific section, ultimately determines where an application will be reviewed.)