Funding Amount

US $50,000 - US $100,000

Deadline

Rolling / Open

Grant Type

foundation

Overview

AOTF Implementation Research Grant

Status: ACTIVE
Funder: The American Occupational Therapy Foundation Inc
Amount: US $50,000 - US $100,000
Last Updated: June 20, 2025

Summary

The AOTF Implementation Research Grant supports innovative research aimed at integrating evidence-based practices into occupational therapy. This grant encourages projects that directly involve stakeholders, particularly from underrepresented populations, to address health inequities. With funding options of up to $100,000 for two years or $50,000 for one year, the AOTF seeks to enhance the effectiveness of care through practical implementation strategies in diverse clinical settings.

Overview

AOTF Implementation Research Grant The American Occupational Therapy Foundation (AOTF) awards Implementation Research (IR) Grants as part of its mission to advance the science of occupational therapy to support people's full participation in meaningful life activities. The IR grant specifically supports research that is focused on helping occupational therapists take evidence-informed practice from theory to reality in their practice setting. This research grant develops and evaluates the processes used to implement, sustain, and or scale-up evidence-based practice into routine care with an end goal to improve the quality and effectiveness of care. Projects submitted for funding through this research grant may include one or more stages of implementation of an evidence-based program into a specific clinical practice and/or method to assist practitioners, patients, caregivers, health systems, and additional members of trans-disciplinary teams to develop and implement best evidence into their practice. These activities can be aimed at a specific clinical situation in a single practice setting with the purpose of improving practice at that site or on a more global level. Implementation research must be grounded in the needs of clinicians, patients, caregivers and/or health systems. Hence, stakeholders must be an integral part of the development and execution of the proposed project. To this end, all projects must include stakeholder partners who are explicitly and clearly integrated into the planning and implementation of the project. We are actively soliciting grant applications that examine racial, social, and health inequities and injustices and promote social justice. Grant applicants are now asked to address how they will involve participants from underrepresented populations. Plans for the inclusion of women and minorities must be included and scientifically justified within the application or proposal. Applications and proposals should describe the composition of the proposed study population in terms of sex/gender and racial/ethnic groups, and provide a rationale for selection of such subjects. Any exclusions based on sex/gender or race/ethnicity must include a rationale and justification based on a scientific or ethical basis. Investigators should also plan for appropriate outreach programs and activities to recruit and retain the proposed study population consistent with the purposes of the research project. The Implementation Research grant program receives major funding from The National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT®). Two Options IR Pilot Study Option #1: Includes pilot studies examining an occupational therapy-related question in Implementation Research Funding Required: $100,000 per grant. These studies may run up to 2 years.IR Pilot Study Option #2: Includes pilot studies examining an occupational therapy-related question in Implementation Research Funding Required: $50,000 per grant. These studies may run up to 1 year.

Eligibility

You can learn more about this opportunity by visiting the funder's website. PI General Personal Criteria:The PI has a terminal research degree (PhD, ScD) or has an OTD or EdD with advanced research training (e.g. completion of a post degree research fellowship). The PI is a credentialed occupational therapist with a full-time faculty position appointment or an equivalent research position at the time of application OR a non-OT investigator with a primary academic appointment in an occupational therapy department. The PI is employed by a U.S. domestic, public or private, non-profit organization/institution that is eligible to receive Foundation research grants and will provide assurance of its accountability and support for the project. The PI is a U.S. citizen or non-citizen national of the U.S. admitted for permanent residence OR applied for permanent residence.For non-citizens/visa holders, the applicant organization must have policies in place to determine whether residence status or visa status will allow completion of the research.The PI should have a funding history associated with early stage, emerging, or early midcareer investigators that may include small research grants and training-related or mentored career awards.Early Career Researcher - A Principal Investigator (PI) who has completed their terminal research degree (PhD/DSc) or the post degree research fellowship (for non-research degrees e.g. OTD/EdD), within the past 6-10 years and are currently employed as a Lecturer or Instructor or Assistant Professor (or equivalent) level.

Focus Areas & Funding Uses

Fields of Work

health-disparitieshealthcare

Categories

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