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Health for Nonprofits Grants

Explore 154 grant opportunities

USAID/Ethiopia health Security Activity
$27,000,000
USAID-ETH (Ethiopia USAID-Addis Ababa )
Federal

Application Deadline

Jun 10, 2024

Date Added

May 1, 2024

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is seeking applications from qualified entities for an anticipated cooperative agreement to implement the USAID/Ethiopia Health Security activity. Eligibility for this award is not restricted. The purpose of the USAID/Ethiopia Health Security Activity (HSA) is to reduce the impact of infectious disease outbreaks on morbidity and mortality through building a resilient One Health (OH) surveillance, diagnostics and workforce development capacities. The HSA will achieve this through strengthening Ethiopias capacity to detect infectious disease outbreaks early, supporting the subnational laboratory systems to diagnose resistant and zoonotic pathogens and building a OH workforce to respond to any emerging or re-emerging infectious disease outbreaks. The HSA will build on the lessons drawn from the USAID Ethiopias five years of experience in the sector including but not limited to Infectious Disease Surveillance (IDDS), Core Group Partners Project (CGPP) and Africa One Health University Network (AFROHUN). The expected outcomes will be evidence-based and will objectively be measured by the progress made in the countrys capacities to prevent, detect, and respond to emerging infectious and zoonotic diseases through a One Health approach.

Health
Nonprofits
Pepfar Media Training And Hiv Anti-Stigma Programs
$40,000
U.S. Department of State - U.S. Mission to Ghana
Federal

Application Deadline

Jul 30, 2024

Date Added

Apr 25, 2024

PEPFAR Ghana is seeking two organizations to submit proposals to implement:MEDIA TRAINING - A training for selected journalists on HIVHIV ANTI- STIGMA CAMPAIGN - To organize community engagements with local Government and Traditional authorities on Stigma and discrimination to push forward the Test and Treat goal in eliminating HIV as a public health threat by 2030.

Health
Nonprofits
Statewide Health Care Facility Transformation Program IV – Residential and Community-based Alternatives to the Traditional Model of Nursing Home Care
$50,000,000
New York Department of Health
State

Application Deadline

May 2, 2024

Date Added

Apr 24, 2024

PLEASE NOTE: Addendum #3, dated 4/9/2024, has just been added to the opportunity. This Addendum extends the RFA application due date to 5/2/2024 at 4pm ET.PLEASE NOTE: Addendum #2, dated 3/26/2024, has just been added to the opportunity. Please click on View Grant Opportunity to view this material. PLEASE NOTE: Addendum #1, dated 3/13/2024, has just been added to the opportunity. This Addendum extends the RFA application due date to 4/24/2024 at 4pm ET. Please click on View Grant Opportunity to view this material. The New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) and the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY) announce the availability of funds under the Statewide Health Care Facility Transformation Program IV (SHCFTP IV), as established pursuant to Section 2825-g (7) of the Public Health Law (PHL), accompanying capital appropriations, and Section 1680-r of the Public Authorities Law (PAL), to provide grants in support of capital projects directly related to residential and community-based alternatives to the traditional model of nursing home care. Subdivision 7 of Section 2825-g of the PHL and Chapter 54 of the Laws of 2022 authorized up to $50,000,000 for awards to residential and community- based alternatives to the traditional model of nursing home care. Projects shall not receive awards under both this RFA and the Kings County Health Care Transformation Program (PHL §2825-a) or the Oneida County Health Care Transformation Program (PHL §2825-b).PLEASE NOTE: Letter of Interest is not required. Questions are due February 14, 2024 and answers will be posted on or about March 6, 2024. Please see RFA for further info. To apply for this opportunity please go to the top of this page and login to the Grants Gateway. Search for “Available Opportunities” and look for the grant opportunity name listed above.

Health
Nonprofits
PEPFAR DRC Community-Led Monitoring (CLM) Program
$100,000
DOS-COD (U.S. Mission to the Democratic Republic of Congo)
Federal

Application Deadline

Jun 18, 2024

Date Added

Apr 18, 2024

The U.S. Department of State, U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa - Democratic Republic of Congo through the U.S. Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) Coordination Office (PCO) is pleased to announce an open Notification of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) for organizations to submit applications that support Community - led Monitoring (CLM) activities, to be implemented in close collaboration with local Community-based organizations and other civil society groups, networks of key populations (KP), people living with HIV (PLHIV), youth and adolescents including children and other HIV-affected groups. The CLM program will be implemented in the three PEPFAR provinces including Kinshasa, Haut-Katanga and Lualaba. Community-led monitoring or CLM is a routinized process initiated and implemented by local HIV-positive and HIV-affected communities, community-based organizations and other civil society groups that identifies HIV service delivery successes, diagnoses problems, uses quantitative and qualitative data to overcome barriers and ensure that HIV service beneficiaries receive optimal client-centered services. The intention of CLM is for local community leadership to get inputs from recipients and providers of HIV services, including key populations and underserved groups, in a routine and systematic manner and translate their findings into action and change in collaboration with host governments and health systems. CLM is a tool within the community engagement process, a strategic collaboration of multiple partnerships within a designated geographic location. CLM leverages community engagement to empower community members to identify successes, diagnose problems, use data-driven approaches to overcome barriers, and ensure beneficiaries receive optimal client-centered services in a productive, collaborative, respectful, and solutions-oriented manner. This community-driven approach to addressing health challenges often evolves into advocacy, whether driven by the individual, community, organizations, or institutions. The CLM program is funded through the U.S. Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). The goal of PEPFAR in DRC is to support efforts to achieve HIV epidemic control through implementation of evidence-based interventions to drive progress in HIV prevention, care and treatment and ultimately, save lives. Through the PEPFAR Coordination Office, the U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa administers this Community grants program and is seeking proposals from registered local Community-based organizations and other civil society groups, networks of key populations (KP), people living with HIV (PLHIV), youth and adolescents including children and other HIV-affected groups, or community entities that gather quantitative and qualitative data about HIV services and whose mission and activities focuses on HIV programming. CLM plays key role to ensuring availability, accessibility, affordability, acceptability, and delivery of timely and quality HIV care and services. CLM will raise public awareness on the rights of PLHIV, KP groups, youth and adolescents and other affected communities, will empower beneficiaries and affected communities to speak out, to increase health literacy, to expand engagement with health service providers, to support demand creation, on one hand; and on the other hand, CLM will hold decisions makers accountable for executing changes to improve HIV service delivery. CLM data will be collected using standardized tools and synthesized through a variety of methods that reveal insights from communities about problems and solutions to health and HIV service delivery at: the facility, community, sub-national and national levels. Thus, CLM data builds evidence on what works well, what is not working and what needs to be improved, with suggestions for targeted action to improve outcomes. Monitoring data should reflect an added value and not duplicate collection of routine data already available to PEPFAR, through its standard reporting. Added value monitoring data includes, but not limited to information from beneficiaries about their experience with the health facility, information about barriers and enablers to access and retention in services etc. CLM mechanisms must be routine to ensure follow up and continuous improvement for sustainability. Results from CLM will be shared with all the stakeholders including host governments, health systems, PEPFAR implementing partners and the PEPFAR team on a regular and systematic basis (monthly, quarterly, and annually), for informing decisions, to improve time and quality service delivery.

Health
Nonprofits
2024 Community Investment Grant
$10,000
Cox Charities
Private

Application Deadline

May 1, 2024

Date Added

Apr 16, 2024

The Cox Charities Community Investment grants of up to $10,000 are available to nonprofit organizations within Cox Communications Oklahoma City service areas. Donor Name: Cox Charities State: Oklahoma City: Selected Cities Type of Grant: Grant Deadline: 05/01/2024 Size of the Grant: $1000 to $10,000 Grant Duration: Grant Duration Not Mentioned Details: Eligibility Criteria  To qualify, organizations must​:​ Qualify for tax-exempt status under IRS code 501(c)(3). ​Meet a need in the community without unnecessary duplication of services. ​Promote sound fiscal and governance practices demonstrating overall financial health and sustainability. ​Regularly measure and evaluate program outcomes. ​Submit only one application per market; Organizations submitting multiple requests in one market will be disqualified. ​Successful applications will: Leverage other funding; funding will not be awarded to an organization if the Cox Charities grant is the only source of financial support. Seek funding only for activities and programs; requests to support one-time or special events will not be considered​. Focus on a single, specific program within the organization. To optimize the impact, they do not support: Athletic clubs or organizations​. Capital campaigns and expenditures​. Endowments​. Foundations or organizations that would utilize funding for pass-through grant-making purposes. Administrative salaries or wages not directly associated with the provision of programs and services​. Fundraising or marketing expenses.​ Individuals​. Programs supporting a political campaign or specific religious beliefs​. Special or one-time events. For more information, visit Cox Charities.

Health
Nonprofits
California Veterans Health Initiative (CVHI) Mental Health Support Grant Program (MHSGP)
$38,000,000
California Department of Veterans Affairs
State

Application Deadline

Jun 28, 2024

Date Added

Apr 12, 2024

Purpose: The California Department of Veterans Affairs (CalVet) is announcing the availability of up to $38 million in competitive grants. Grantees will focus on prevention and early intervention efforts with the end goal of increasing access to mental health services for veterans and their families. This initiative is to be known as the California Veterans Health Initiative (CVHI) Mental Health Support Grant Program (MHSGP). Description: Grantees will be asked to focus on prevention and early intervention efforts with the end goal of increasing access to mental health services for veterans and their families. Proposals funded under CVHI must be inclusive, equitable, and available to all veterans regardless of age, period of service, type of service, discharge status, or disability rating. Applicants must be able to meet the eligibility requirements of California Military and Veterans Code Section 881 to be considered for funding, and proposals must aim to expand the state’s capacity to provide mental health support to veterans and to fill gaps in mental health services. Applicants are required to select the program areas they are proposing and provide a description of the proposed activities and how the proposed activities would increase mental health access for California veterans. This NOFA allows for flexibility in program design to fit the specific needs of veterans and their families across the state, Outreach, Peer Support, Case Management, Outpatient Clinical Treatment, and Innovative Approaches will be eligible for funding and are further defined in the NOFA. The Grantee staff and leadership will be expected to maintain significant engagement with CalVet for monthly check-ins, operations assistance, reporting, and evaluation. Applicants are encouraged to ensure they are budgeting for appropriate levels of staff, time for data collection and reporting, time spent in CVHI meetings and trainings, and appropriate facility requirements (office space, group space, hardware and software equipment, supplies, overhead). Through an Application process responsive to the NOFA, awarded Grantees will provide clear and convincing evidence of adequate personnel, facility, and organizational capacity to effectively carry out their proposed project. The successful Applicant will describe how they meet minimum qualifications, including their breadth of experience working with Veterans, with special emphasis on treating veterans with mental health concerns. Eligibility Requirements Eligible Applicants: Nonprofit In addition to the minimum requirements described in NOFA applicants must be able to meet the eligibility requirements of California Military and Veterans Code Section 881 to be considered for funding, and proposals must aim to expand the state’s capacity to provide mental health support to veterans and to fill gaps in mental health services. Eligible Geographies: CalVet intends to ensure access to mental healthcare through the CVHI network by targeting 8 regions in California: North Valley, San Francisco Bay Area, Central Valley, Central Coast, Los Angeles, Inland Empire, Orange, and San Diego. Multi-regional and statewide proposals will also be considered. A regional map can be found in the NOFA. Matching Funding Requirement: Grantees will receive full funding for the first year of the grant, 75% of year one funding in the second year, and 50% of year one funding in the third year of the grant term. To compensate for the decrease in funding, grantees are required to provide a 25% match in the second year and a 50% match in the third year of the grant term to account for the reduction in funding.

Health
Nonprofits
2024 L&M Medical Needs Fund Grants
Contact for amount
Community Foundation of Greene County
Private

Application Deadline

Aug 1, 2024

Date Added

Apr 8, 2024

The L&M Medical Needs Fund Grants, offered by the Community Foundation of Greene County, provide financial assistance for medical needs in Greene County, Pennsylvania. Funded by an endowed gift from an anonymous donor, these grants are available to nonprofit charitable organizations serving individuals in need of medical services, such as prescriptions, hospice care, and other medical services. Eligibility is limited to 501(c)(3) organizations in good standing with the IRS and registered with the Pennsylvania Bureau of Charitable Organizations. The grants focus on aiding individuals who struggle to afford medical services due to being uninsured or facing high costs not covered by insurance. While priority is given to lower-income families, other cases with well-documented need may also be considered. Grant amounts vary annually. Grant renewed every year. Grant Spring Annual deadline: June 1st

Health
Nonprofits
GH Social and Behavior Change (SBC) Activity
$321,500,000
USAID (Agency for International Development)
Federal

Application Deadline

May 29, 2024

Date Added

Mar 30, 2024

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) plans to invest in a five-year cooperative agreement titled GH Social and Behavior Change (SBC) Activity to support countries in achieving desired improvements in health and development outcomes.The GH SBC Activity will build upon current USAID investments in SBC research and programming, including both global and bilateral projects, to guide integration of SBC evidence and theory in development programming, support generation and use of new learning, strengthen local technical and organizational capacity, and drive local leadership of SBC programming for better, broader, and more sustainable results. The project will fulfill a global leadership function within SBC, working through new and existing partnerships to create opportunities for locally-driven, innovative, and cost-effective SBC programs; systematic integration of SBC best practices within public and private health systems; and generating, synthesizing, and catalyzing the application of evidence-based and theory-informed SBC in diverse program settings to accelerate achievement of global health and development goals.The strategic objective of the project is to increase implementation of theory-informed, evidence-based, locally-led SBC programming. While focused primarily on health, the project may address SBC needs in other sectors, with particular attention to areas of potential complementarity such as environmental conservation, agriculture, food security, and nutrition. Within the health sector, the project will maintain a substantive but non-exclusive focus on family planning, reproductive health (FP/RH) and reproductive empowerment; malaria; and maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH), with attention to emerging pandemic threats and other infectious diseases. Considerations of USAID priorities such as localization, gender integration, youth engagement/integration, health systems strengthening, the inclusion of LGBTQI+ people, the inclusion of people with physical and cognitive disabilities, engaging the voices, skills, and experiences of allincluding marginalized and underrepresented groups such as racial, ethnic, and Indigenous communities and climate change, will be a focus across the project.Please see the Full GH Social and Behavior Change (SBC) Activity RFA under the "Related Documents" tab.

Health
Nonprofits
Addiction Technology Transfer Centers Cooperative Agreements
$8,956,357
HHS-SAMHS-SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Adminis)
Federal

Application Deadline

Jun 10, 2024

Date Added

Mar 20, 2024

The purpose of this SAMHSA program is to develop and strengthen the specialized behavioral healthcare and primary healthcare workforce that provides substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and recovery support services. This is done by accelerating the adoption and implementation of evidence-based and promising SUD treatment and recovery-oriented practices and services; heightening the awareness, knowledge, and skills of the workforce that addresses the needs of people with substance use or other co-occurring physical and behavioral health conditions; and fostering regional and national alliances among culturally diverse practitioners, researchers, policy makers, funders, and the recovery community.

Health
Nonprofits
Community Health Matching Grant Program
$50,000
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation
Private
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Mar 4, 2024

This funding opportunity supports nonprofit organizations in Michigan to create and implement community-driven health programs that address local needs and improve health outcomes.

Health
Nonprofits
2024 Discretionary Grants Program
$10,000
Maine Health Access Foundation (MeHAF)
Private

Application Deadline

Nov 1, 2024

Date Added

Mar 4, 2024

The Discretionary Grants Program aims to support small-scale, project-based initiatives that explore new or different approaches within an organization's current work, aligning closely with the mission of the Maine Health Access Foundation (MeHAF). The program offers grants up to $5,000 for local or regional projects and up to $10,000 for statewide activities that significantly align with MeHAF’s objectives. Applicants must propose specific projects that either expand upon existing work or explore a particular aspect of an organization's efforts, with tangible outcomes expected within one year. These projects should contribute to expanding health access and improving health but cannot fund general operations or new/current projects without a specific focus. The application process begins with a Letter of Interest (LOI) submitted through MeHAF’s grants management system, followed by a structured conversation with program leads and a final application if advanced. Grant renewed every year. Grant annual opening/ closing deadline: program opens annual in December and stays up for 11 months until the following November.

Health
Nonprofits
Proposal Development Award Program
$3,500
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation
Private
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Mar 4, 2024

This program provides financial support to Michigan-based nonprofit organizations to hire grant writers for developing and submitting health-related grant proposals.

Health
Nonprofits
The Doctors Company Foundation Grant
$240,000
The Doctors Company Foundation
Private

Application Deadline

Jun 28, 2024

Date Added

Feb 26, 2024

Established in 2008 by the nation’s largest physician-owned medical malpractice insurer, The Doctors Company Foundation supports patient safety education and research with clinically useful applications across the United States. The foundation focuses on innovative projects that develop knowledge, techniques, and tools to reduce or eliminate the risk of adverse events causing harm to patients under care. Grants support innovative approaches that produce measurable outcomes and can be widely disseminated to improve patient safety, also encouraging projects that aim to reduce healthcare costs. LOI March 18th

Health
Nonprofits
Prevention Technology Transfer Centers Cooperative Agreement
$8,134,816
HHS-SAMHS-SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Adminis)
Federal

Application Deadline

Apr 24, 2024

Date Added

Jan 30, 2024

The Prevention Technology Transfer Centers (PTTC) program aims to maintain and enhance the PTTC Network, offering training and technical assistance to the substance misuse prevention field. The program targets professionals, pre-professionals, organizations, and communities involved in preventing substance misuse among children, youth, young adults, families, parents, and other adults. The goal is to improve the implementation and delivery of effective substance misuse prevention interventions through direct collaboration with SAMHSA and the PTTC Network. Eligible applicants include domestic public and private non-profit entities, with applications due by April 24, 2024. The anticipated total funding is $8,134,816, with an award ceiling of $739,529 per year for up to five years.

Health
Nonprofits
Health System Strengthening (HSS) Flagship Activity in Indonesia
Contact for amount
USAID-IND (Indonesia USAID-Jakarta)
Federal
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Jan 10, 2024

The United States Agency for International Development Mission in Indonesia (USAID/Indonesia) posts this Request for Information (RFI) to inform interested parties of an upcoming health system strengthening (HSS) activity designed to improve accountability, health system performance and health outcomes (especially for Maternal and Child Health, Tuberculosis, HIV, and Global Health Security) based on performance-based and sustainable health financing, a strengthened health information system, resilient human resources for health, integrated care models, and a strong evidence to policy pathway.This Request for Information (RFI) is issued solely for information gathering purposes and is published in accordance with FAR Part 10 and FAR Part 15.201(e).Through this RFI, USAID/Indonesia seeks to enhance the design of the HSS Flagship Activity in Indonesia. This RFI seeks information from capable organizations (i.e., nongovernmental organizations, universities, consortium, for-profit, and local organizations) that are implementing or have implemented HSS projects that spans more than one health system building block and may be interested to partner with USAID in achieving the goals of this future HSS activity. All capable organizations are encouraged to respond.This RFI does not constitute a Request for Applications (RFA) or a Request for Proposals(RFP). Responses to this RFI are not applications or official proposals and will in no way be deemed to form any binding agreement with the RFI issuing authority. Please do not submit applications, proposals, budget, costs, resumes or promotional materials, as they will be discarded. Proprietary information should not be sent. USAID may use any information provided without incurring any obligation. USAID reserves the right to, or not to incorporate any, some, or none of the comments received from this RFI into any subsequent solicitations or design documents.(See further information in Related Documents Tab)

Health
Nonprofits
Tennessee Project Diabetes
$150,000
Tennessee Department of Health
State
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Dec 21, 2023

To reduce the incidence of overweight, obesity, pre diabetes, and/or diabetes in Tennessee. A request for applications (RFA) is issued every three years. The next RFA is expected to be issued in January 2025. A letter of intent (LOI) is required for an invitation to apply. The Notice of Award is posted in late April or early May with a July 1 start date. Project Diabetes funds are distributed through a request for reimbursement process. Therefore, applicants must have the funds needed to implement the project upfront. Grantees are reimbursed monthly for their expenses. To be alerted to the posting of this RFA and other TDH grants, sign up on the funding opportunities website https://www.tn.gov/health/funding-opportunities.html.

Health
Nonprofits
Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield Delaware's (Highmark BCBSD) BluePrints for the Community (BluePrints)
$50,000
Delaware Community Foundation
State
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Dec 5, 2023

Highmark BCBSD BluePrints is seeking SMALL grant proposals for health related projects, programs and supportive services. BluePrints for the Community, administered by the Delaware Community Foundation, has contributed over $21 million to the community since its inception in 2007. Community based nonprofit organizations, community development organizations, and social service organizations, or other government entities, are eligible to apply. Preference is given to proposals that fit BluePrints for the Community priority areas, listed below: • Increasing access to health care for uninsured/underserved • Reducing health disparities in minority communities • Supporting early childhood and youth development with initiatives focused on health • Recruiting and training health care professionals • Addressing social determinants of health

Health
Nonprofits
Mid-Iowa Health Foundation Grant
$120,000
Mid-Iowa Health Foundation
Private
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Nov 20, 2023

This grant provides funding to nonprofit organizations in the USA for health-related initiatives, excluding for-profit entities and specific ineligible activities.

Health
Nonprofits
Adolescent Substance Use and Addiction Program at Boston Children’s Hospital
Contact for amount
Davis Family Charitable Foundation.
Private
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Nov 20, 2023

This grant provides funding to organizations focused on improving health care access and support for adolescents struggling with substance use and addiction.

Health
Nonprofits
Statewide Consumer Network Program
$1,129,938
HHS-SAMHS-SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Adminis)
Federal
Rolling

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Sep 26, 2023

The purpose of this program is to enhance the capacity of statewide mental health consumer-run organizations to promote mental health and related service systems to be consumer-centered and targeted toward recovery and resiliency, and consumer-driven by promoting the use of consumers as agents of transformation. SAMHSA was given the authority to address priority substance abuse treatment, prevention and mental health needs of regional and national significance through assistance (grants and cooperative agreements) to States, political subdivisions of States, Indian tribes and tribal organizations, and other public or nonprofit private entities. Under these sections, CSAT, CMHS and CSAP seek to expand the availability of effective substance abuse treatment and recovery services available to Americans to improve the lives of those affected by alcohol and drug additions, and to reduce the impact of alcohol and drug abuse on individuals, families, communities and societies and to address priority mental health needs of regional and national significance and assist children in dealing with violence and traumatic events through by funding grant and cooperative agreement projects. Grants and cooperative agreements may be for (1) knowledge and development and application projects for treatment and rehabilitation and the conduct or support of evaluations of such projects; (2) training and technical assistance; (3) targeted capacity response programs (4) systems change grants including statewide family network grants and client-oriented and consumer run self-help activities and (5) programs to foster health and development of children; (6) coordination and integration of primary care services into publicly-funded community mental health centers and other community-based behavioral health settings

Health
Nonprofits