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CFDA 93.110  ·  retired  ·  Funded this fiscal year

Special Projects of Regional and National Significance

HEALTH RESOURCES AND SERVICES ADMINISTRATION  ·  HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF  ·  Program page ↗

Objective

The Special Projects of Regional and National Significance Program (SPRANS) carries out maternal and child health (MCH) projects to support training and research; oral health integration; genetic disease testing, counseling, and information development and dissemination programs; newborn screening for sickle cell anemia and other genetic disorders; and comprehensive hemophilia diagnostic and treatment centers. The Supporting Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) Screening and Intervention helps reduce alcohol use during pregnancy and improves outcomes for children with FASD nationwide, especially in communities where there is a high rate of binge drinking during pregnancy, including rural areas and medically underserved communities. The program focuses on educating primary care providers and increasing the use of screening, intervention, and referral processes for high-risk pregnancies. The State Maternal Health Innovation program creates state-led maternal health task forces to bring together the voices of key leaders, and pregnant and postpartum individuals using state-specific maternal health data to develop and implement innovative approaches to address the most pressing maternal health needs and disparities. State approaches include strengthening partnerships and collaborations, improving state-level data surveillance on maternal mortality and severe maternal morbidity, and promoting and executing innovation in maternal health service delivery. The MCH Research Portfolio includes the MCH Research Consortium, Maternal Health Research Collaborative for Minority-Serving Institutions, MCH Research Network, and MCH Field-Initiated Innovative Research Studies programs. The research portfolio advances maternal and child health by generating and testing innovative, real-world approaches to improve population-level outcomes. The program addresses critical evidence gaps through the development of research infrastructure and the conduct of rigorous, community-engaged research in close partnership with families and other stakeholders. MCH RNs focus on collaborative, interdisciplinary. The Children’s Safety Network (CSN) purpose is to increase the capacity of Title V agencies to adopt and implement evidence-based child and adolescent safety programs, practices, and policies, with a specific focus on injury and violence-related to Title V performance and outcome measures, such as injury hospitalizations, bullying, safe sleep, and suicide, as well as leading causes of injury-related deaths among children and adolescents (e.g., motor vehicle crashes, firearms, and poisonings).

Who Can Apply

  • U.S. State Government (including the District of Columbia)
  • Local
  • Nonprofit Organization
  • Federally Recognized Indian/Native American/Alaska Native Tribal Government
  • Indian/Native American/Alaska Native Tribal Government (Other than Federally Recognized)
  • U.S. Territory (or Possession) Government (including freely-associated states)
  • Other

Training grants may be made to public or private nonprofit institutions of higher learning. Research grants may be made to public or private nonprofit institutions of higher learning and public or private nonprofit private agencies and organizations engaged in research or in MCH or Children with Special Health Care Needs (CSHCN) programs. Any public or private entity is eligible for hemophilia, genetics, and environmental health grants and other special project grants, including SPRANS and CISS. Eligible entities for the Supporting Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Screening and Intervention program are any domestic public or private entity, including Indian tribes or tribal organizations (as those terms are defined at 25 U.S.C. 450b). See 42 CFR § 51a.3(a), and domestic faith-based and community-based organizations. Eligible entities for the State Maternal Health Innovation program include any domestic public or private entity, including Indian tribes or tribal organizations, as well as domestic faith-based and community-based organizations. Eligible entities for the Integrated Maternal Health Services program include any domestic public or private entity, including Indian tribes or tribal organizations, as well as domestic faith-based and community-based organizations.

Who Benefits

  • Health Professional
  • Infant and Toddler (0-3)
  • Other
  • Young Child (4-9)

Specialized group (e.g. health professionals, students, veterans), Health Professional, Student/Trainee, Women, Infant (0-5), Child (6-15) For training grants: (1) Trainees in the health professions related to MCH; and (2) mothers and children who receive services through training programs. For research grants: public or private nonprofit agencies and organizations engaged in research in MCH or CSHCN programs. For hemophilia, sickle cell, thalassemia, genetics, newborn screening, environmental health, and other special projects: (1) Public or private agencies, organizations and institutions; and (2) mothers and children, and individuals with genetic conditions (any age) who receive services through the programs.

Assistance Types

  • Grant
  • Cooperative Agreement

Program Contact

EHeppner@hrsa.gov
301-443-2170