Skip to Content

Senior Individual Biomedical Informatics Fellowships

bullet   Introduction
 PAR Number: PAR-03-109
Clarification Of Eligibility For: Par 03-109 - Senior Informatics Research Fellowship (F37) (NOT-LM-04-006) National Library of Medicine INDEX: LIBRARY MEDICINE http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-LM-04-007.html
Release Date: 04-18-03
Expiration Date: 04-18-06, unless reissued

bullet   Scope and Priorities
 Purpose
NLM senior fellowships in biomedical informatics provide support for the training of experienced health professionals in informatics. Training may be for informatics research or for the application of informatics to any area of biomedicine, including, among others, clinical medicine, basic biomedical research, education, or. administration.

These fellowships are intended for experienced scientists, physicians, and other professionals who wish to make major changes in the direction of their careers or who wish to broaden their scientific background by acquiring new capabilities in informatics research and development. These awards will enable professionally independent individuals with at least ten years of post-graduate experience to take time from their regular professional responsibilities for the purpose of receiving training in informatics. This award can be used in conjunction with a sabbatical experience. The fellowship is not designed for post- doctoral level investigators prior to independence or for pre-doctoral training per se.

The majority of candidates for this award will have a research or health-professional doctorate, and post-doctoral clinical or research experience at the time of application. The requirement for a doctoral degree may be waived for candidates in the following professional fields: engineering, computer science, library and information sciences. Applicants without a doctoral degree should contact the Program Officer named at the end of this announcement for information regarding eligibility.

Research Objectives
Fellowship training is intended to help meet the growing national need for professionals able to do research in informatics or to apply the power of computation to the myriad domains of biomedicine. Thus, this fellowship is suitable for training in informatics specializations ranging from clinical informatics to the informatics of molecular biology and other large research datasets. Applications that focus on building new skills or extending the applicant's existing expertise are particularly desirable.

Upon completion of training, fellows should be able to conduct basic or applied research at the intersection of biology and medicine with computer and cognitive sciences, and are expected to be familiar with the use and potential of modern information technology. Fellows in informatics will achieve this goal through an individually tailored program of formal coursework and research experience, associated with a project.

Although a canonical set of basic courses for informatics training has not yet evolved, there is general agreement that the field is interdisciplinary, and includes, among others, components of computer science, information science, cognitive science, and knowledge of one or more domains of biomedicine. The program of coursework should develop or augment the trainee's basic competency in each of these areas. This fellowship may lead to a degree, although it is not a requirement. Whether or not the training is to be used for credit or certification in an educational program is up to the applicant, the fellowship sponsor, and the organization involved. The curriculum for applied research training may be different from that needed for basic research training, but should provide sufficient theoretical foundation in the area of application.

An opportunity to carry out supervised research and/or applications development in informatics is essential to achieve the primary objective of developing or extending knowledge and skills. The fellowship must provide hands-on experience obtained via a defined project. Projects may be in basic informatics research areas or address an informatics application. An applied informatics project does not require the form or concepts of a research project, and need not be hypothesis-driven, but the proposal should provide sufficient detail to permit reviewers to judge importance of the problem, feasibility of the approach, and the post-training utility of the informatics techniques required.

bullet   Eligibility
 Individuals Eligible To Become Principal Investigators
By the date of appointment, applicants must have at least ten full years of relevant research or other professional experience beyond the qualifying degree. Relevant postdoctoral experience may include research experience (including industrial), teaching, internship, residency, clinical duties, or other time spent in full-time studies in a health-related field following the date of the qualifying doctoral degree. All candidates must be willing to spend a minimum of 50 percent of full-time professional effort conducting research and research career development during the entire award period.

Candidates for the F38, under some circumstances, may have been principal investigators (PIs) on NIH research or career development awards, provided the research experience proposed in this application is in a fundamentally new field of study or there has been a significant hiatus in their research career because of family or other personal obligations. Current PIs on NIH career awards are not eligible. A candidate for the F38 award may not have pending nor concurrently apply for any other type of NIH career development award. F38 recipients are encouraged to apply for independent research grant support during the period of this award.

Postdoctoral Trainees
Postdoctoral trainees must have received a Ph.D., M.D. or comparable doctoral degree from an accredited domestic or foreign institution. Eligible doctoral degrees include, but are not limited to, the following: D.D.S., D.M.D., D.O., D.V.M., O.D., D.P.M., Sc.D., Eng.D., Dr. P.H., D.N.Sc., D. Pharm., D.S.W., and Psy.D. Documentation by an authorized official of the degree-granting institution certifying all degree requirements have been met prior to appointment is acceptable.

Professional degrees
The NLM recognizes that graduates of training programs in professions that do not customarily require a doctoral degree (e.g., library science and nursing) can make important contributions to Informatics. The NLM also encourages applications on behalf of individuals without doctoral degrees, but who have significant professional training and experience in closely related cognate fields. Nurses, health science librarians, researchers, educators, administrators, and other health professionals are eligible, as are computer scientists and engineers who wish to focus on the health domain.

Clarification Of Eligibility For: Par 03-109 - Senior Informatics Research Fellowship (F37) (NOT-LM-04-006) National Library of Medicine INDEX: LIBRARY MEDICINE http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-LM-04-007.html

Applications on behalf of women and other groups underrepresented in biomedical informatics are strongly encouraged.

Citizenship
By the time of award, individuals must be citizens or non-citizen nationals of the United States, or must have been lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence (i.e., possess a currently valid Alien Registration Receipt Card I-551, or other legal verification of such status). Non-citizen nationals are generally persons born in outlying possessions of the United States (e.g., American Samoa and Swains Island). Individuals on temporary or student visas are not eligible.

Eligible Sponsoring Institutions
Before submitting a fellowship application, the applicant must identify a sponsoring institution and an individual who will serve as a sponsor (also called mentor or supervisor) and will supervise the training and research experience.

To apply for support, an institution must submit an application on behalf of the individual seeking the fellowship. Applications on behalf of prospective fellows may be submitted by domestic non-profit organizations, public or private, such as universities, colleges, hospitals, laboratories, units of State or local government, and eligible agencies of the Federal government. Applicants proposing training at their doctorate institution or at the institution where they have been training for more than a year must document the opportunities for new training experiences designed to broaden their scientific background.

Each fellow must have a mentor who provides guidance and oversight for the training program. The mentor should be expert in an area of informatics or information science that is pertinent to the proposed program, and should be an active investigator in the area of the proposed research who will directly supervise the candidate's research. The sponsor must document the availability of staff, research support, and facilities for high-quality research training. The mentor may be at the applicant's home institution or at another institution. If the latter, the plan for supervision and interaction must be described.

The Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications (LHCNBC)
Co- Mentorship Program is available to NLM Individual Informatics Fellows with project interests that coincide with research and development ongoing at the NLM. In this program plan option, the Fellow spends the academic year at the home (sponsoring) institution, and the three summer months of each fellowship year on site at the LHNBC in Bethesda doing a relevant research project under the supervision of an NLM staff scientist. See http://lhncbc.nlm.nih.gov/mitp/training.html

Applications from underrepresented minorities (African Americans, Alaskan Native, Hispanic Americans, Native Americans and Pacific Islanders) and persons with disabilities are encouraged to apply as applicants and as mentors.

bullet   Mechanism of Support
 This program announcement for Senior Individual Biomedical Informatics Fellowships uses the F38 funding mechanism. For NLM, these awards are authorized by the Medical Library Assistance Act and are not a part of the National Research Service Awards Program (NRSA) of the Public Health Service. However, the policies and requirements of the NLM program are similar in most respects to NRSA awards. Applicants with fewer than ten years of professional experience are encouraged to investigate their eligibility for the Individual Informatics fellowship (F37). The project period may be for one to two years, and awards are not renewable.

bullet   Review Criteria
 Candidate: An assessment of the candidate's previous academic and research performance and the potential to become an important contributor to biomedical, behavioral, or clinical science.

Sponsor and Training Environment: An assessment of the quality of the training environment and the qualifications of the sponsor as a mentor for the proposed research training experience.

Research Proposal: The merit of the scientific proposal and its relationship to the candidate's career plans.

Training Potential: An assessment of the value of the proposed fellowship experience as it relates to the candidate's needs in preparation for a career as an independent researcher.

Additional Review Criteria

In addition to the above criteria, your application will also be reviewed with respect to the following:

Protections. The adequacy of the proposed protection for humans, animals, or the environment, to the extent they may be adversely affected by the project proposed in the application.

Inclusion. The adequacy of plans to include subjects from both genders, all racial and ethnic groups (and subgroups), and children as appropriate for the scientific goals of the research. Plans for the recruitment and retention of subjects will also be evaluated. (See Inclusion Criteria included in the section on Federal Citations, below)

Budget. The reasonableness of the proposed budget and the requested period of support in relation to the proposed research.

Training In The Responsible Conduct Of Research. Applications must include a description of a program to provide instruction in scientific integrity and the responsible conduct of research. (See the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts, Volume 21, Number 43, November 27, 1992. and http://ori.dhhs.gov/html/programs/rcr_requirements.asp )

Data Sharing. The adequacy of the proposed plan to share date, if applicable. All applications must include in the proposed research plan an outline and description of the project including specific hypotheses, objectives, and milestones as appropriate.

OTHER REVIEW CRITERIA

All applications must include in the proposed research plan an outline and description of the project including specific hypotheses, objectives, and milestones as appropriate.

Applications with an applied rather than research focus must include a specific section labeled Milestones following the Research Plan. Milestones should be well described, quantifiable, and scientifically justified. A discussion of the milestones relative to the progress of the project, as well as the implications of successful completion of the milestones for further investigation or implementation, should be included. The milestone section should be indicated in the Table of Contents. The clarity and completeness of the application with regard To specific goals and feasibility of milestones is critical. The presentation of milestones that are not sufficiently scientifically rigorous to be valid for assessing progress will reflect upon the scientific judgment of the applicant in this application.

Applications for the LHNCBC co-mentorship program must clearly describe the plan for shared mentorship as well as supervision of the proposed project(s), and must include a letter of commitment from the proposed NLM mentor and the Director of the LHNCBC.

bullet   Award Criteria
 Applications will compete for available funds with all other approved applications assigned to NLM. The following factors will be considered when making funding decisions:
  • Scientific merit of the proposed project as determined by peer review
  • Availability of funds
  • Relevance to program priorities

bullet   Trainee Terms of Apointment
 Full-time Fellows
Funded training periods may be for one to two years, and customarily require a full-time commitment. That is, trainees are typically required to pursue their research training on a full-time basis, devoting at least 40 hours per week to the program. Within the 40 hours per week training period, research trainees in clinical areas must devote their time to the proposed research training and must confine clinical duties to those that are an integral part of the research training experience. If the fellowship is proposed at less than full time, stipends will be adjusted appropriately. The minimum effort permitted is 50 percent of full-time.

Part-time Fellows
Fellows are typically expected to make a full-time commitment to their training program. However, under unusual and pressing personal or professional circumstances, part-time training may be appropriate. Part-time training program at a level of 50 to 99 percent effort will be considered on an ad hoc basis with sufficient justification of need. If part-time training is requested, the application clearly justify the level of effort proposed, and clearly demonstrate how the research and program of study will be accomplished with respect to other duties and responsibilities. A fellow will not be permitted to engage in NLM- supported research training for less than 50 percent effort. Individuals desiring to reduce their commitment to less than 50 percent effort must take a leave-of-absence from NLM fellowship support. The fellowship notice of award will be reissued and the stipend will be pro-rated during the period of any approved part-time training. Stipend levels for part-time trainees will be appropriately pro-rated according to their level of effort.

Other Appointment Terms
No individual trainee may receive more than 4 years of aggregate NLM support at the predoctoral level or 3 years of support at the postdoctoral level, including any combination of support from institutional training grants and individual fellowship awards.

Any extension of the total duration of trainee support at either the predoctoral or postdoctoral level requires approval by NIH. Requests for extension must be made in writing by the trainee, endorsed by the sponsor and the appropriate institutional official, and addressed to the NLM Program Officer. The request must include a sound justification for an extension of the limits on the period of support.

General information about NIH support of fellowships, including those awarded by the NLM, can be found at http://grants.nih.gov/training/extramural.htm . Please note that the "Service Payback" provisions do not apply: NLM's Individual Informatics Fellowships require no payback. Information about current NIH stipend levels and other support may be found in NATIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE AWARD (NRSA) STIPEND INCREASE AND OTHER BUDGETARY CHANGES EFFECTIVE FOR FISCAL YEAR 2002 at http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-02-028.html .

bullet   Other Special Requirements
 Certification and Reporting Procedures. No application will be accepted without the applicant signing the certification block on the face page of the application. Individuals admitted to the United States as Permanent Residents must submit notarized evidence of legal admission prior to the award. When support ends, the fellow must submit a Termination Notice (PHS 416-7) to the NIH. Forms may be found on the NIH Website at http://grants.nih.gov/grants/forms.htm .

Activation No funds may be disbursed until the fellow has started training under the award and an Activation Notice (PHS 416-5) has been submitted to the NIH. An awardee has up to 6 months from the issue date on the award notice to activate the award. Under unusual circumstances, an NIH institute may grant an extension of the activation period upon receipt of a specific request from the fellow.

Terms And Conditions Of Support Fellowships must be administered in accordance with the current NRSA Policy Guidelines for Individual Awards and Institutional Grants (see the NIH Website at http://grants.nih.gov/training/nrsa.htm), the current NIH Grants Policy Statement (see the NIH Website at http://grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/policy.htm), and any terms and conditions specified on the award notice.

Inventions and Publications. Fellowships made primarily for educational purposes are exempted from the PHS invention requirements. F38 awards will not contain any provision giving PHS rights to inventions made by the awardee.

Data Sharing. It is the policy of the DHHS that the results and accomplishments of all funded activities should be made available to the public. This policy also applies to individuals supported by individual NRSA postdoctoral fellowships. The sponsoring institution should place no restrictions on the publication of results in a timely manner.

Copyrights. Except as otherwise provided in the terms and conditions of the award, the recipient is free to arrange for copyright without approval when publications, data, or other copyrightable works are developed in the course of work under a PHS grant-supported project or activity. Any such copyrighted or copyrightable works shall be subject to a royalty-free, nonexclusive, and irrevocable license to the Government to reproduce, publish, or otherwise use them, and to authorize others to do so for Federal Government purposes.

bullet   Application Receipt Dates
 The receipt dates and the three annual review cycles are as follows:

Application Receipt Dates: Apr 5 Aug 5 Dec 5
Initial Review Dates: Jun/Jul Oct/Nov Feb/Mar
Secondary Review Dates: Aug/Sep Dec/Jan Apr/May
Range of Likely Start Dates: Sep 1 - Dec 1 Jan 1 - Mar 1 May 1 - Jul 1

bullet   Application & Process
 Individuals must submit the application form PHS Individual National Research Service Award (PHS 416-1). APPLICATIONS MUST INCLUDE AT LEAST THREE SEALED LETTERS OF REFERENCE. APPLICATIONS WITHOUT AT LEAST THREE LETTERS OF REFERENCE MAY BE RETURNED OR DELAYED IN REVIEW. Application kits are available at most institutional offices of sponsored research offices, online at http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/416/phs416.htm , and may be obtained from:

Extramural Outreach/Information Resources
National Institutes of Health
6701 Rockledge Drive, MSC 7910
Bethesda, MD 20892-7910
telephone 301/435-0714
FAX 301/480-0525
email: grantsinfo@nih.gov

Complete Item 3 on the face page of the application indicating that the application is in response to this announcement and print F38 NLM SENIOR INDIVIDUAL INFORMATICS FELLOWSHIP.

If the applicant has been lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence, the appropriate item should be checked on the Face Page of the application. Applicants who have applied for and have not yet been granted admission as a permanent resident should check the Permanent Resident block on the Face Page of the PHS 416-1 application, and also write in the word "pending." A notarized statement documenting legal admission for permanent residence must be submitted prior to the issuance of an award.

Submit a signed, typewritten original of the application (including the Checklist, Personal Data form, AT LEAST THREE SEALED REFERENCE LETTERS, and all other required materials) and two (2) exact, clear, single-sided photocopies of the signed application, in one package to:

Center for Scientific Review
National Institutes of Health
6701 Rockledge Drive, Room 1040, MSC 7710
Bethesda, MD 20892-7710
Bethesda, MD 20817 (for express/courier service)

Incomplete Applications Will Not Be Reviewed.

Concurrent Applications
An individual may not have more than one individual NRSA fellowship or comparable application pending review or award at the NIH or other DHHS agencies at the same time. The CSR will not accept any application in response to this PA that is essentially the same as one currently pending initial review unless the applicant withdraws the pending application. The CSR will not accept any application that is essentially the same as one already reviewed. This does not preclude the submission of a substantial revision of an application already reviewed, but such application must include an Introduction addressing the previous critique.

bullet   Peer Review Process
 Fellowship applications undergo a review process that takes between 5 and 8 months.

Fellowship applications undergo a review process that takes between 5 and 8 months. Applications will be reviewed for scientific and technical merit by the NLM Biomedical Library and Informatics Review Committee (BLIRC) in accordance with standard NIH peer review procedures. In general, the merit review criteria customarily employed by the NIH for fellowship applications will be followed. Additional information may be found at http://grants.nih.gov/training/nrsa.htm . After the initial merit review, the NLM program official will forward to each applicant a written critique and summary of the review of the application prepared by the Scientific Review Administrator.

After scientific-technical review, staff within the NLM will provide a second-level review to evaluate relevance to the mission and scope of NLM. Following the second-level review, the NLM program official will notify each applicant of the final disposition of the application. Any questions on BLIRC recommendations and funding possibilities should be directed to the NLM program official, not the Scientific Review Administrator.

bullet   Contact Information
 Inquiries from potential applicants concerning this PA are encouraged. Direct your questions about scientific/research issues to:

Dr. Charles P. Friedman
Extramural Programs
National Library of Medicine
Rockledge 1, Suite 301
6705 Rockledge Drive MSC 7968
Bethesda, MD 20892
Telephone: (301) 594-4882
FAX: (301) 402-2952
Email: friedmc1@mail.nih.gov

bullet   Required Federal Citations
 http://www.nlm.nih.gov/ep/GrantFedCitations.html

bullet   NIH Guide Document
 NIH Guide for Senior Biomedical Informatics Fellowship,
PAR 03-109
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-03-109.html
Change of Contact Information for PA-03-109
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-LM-04-005.html

Last updated: 09 September 2004
First published: 21 November 2003
Metadata| Permanence level: Permanence Not Guaranteed