This award will enable promising early-career physicians to enhance their
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As children with cystic fibrosis transition toward greater independence at school and at home, they will also take greater responsibility in managing their disease.
The objective of this award is to support excellent cystic fibrosis-related research projects that have been approved by the National Institutes of Health (or governmental funding agencies in other countries) but cannot be supported by available funds.
This program is intended to introduce students to cystic fibrosis research and encourage them to remain engaged in the field.
The goal of this request for applications is to identify ambitious basic research projects aiming to utilize cutting-edge techniques and strategies that have the potential to discover new
This award provides the opportunity for clinically trained physicians to identify and study interventions to enhance successful self-management and related health outcomes among individuals with cystic fibrosis.
The Health Equity Team Science Awards are offered to provide support for multi-investigator research projects that have the potential to make an important contribution to health equity in the cystic fibrosis population.
This program is intended to support PhD students, postdoctoral fellows, and junior faculty participating in off-site training opportunities to learn new research skills and techniques to advance their research experience or to perform studies that cannot be performed at their host institution but are necessary to advance their research project.
The primary purpose of the K-Boost Award is to provide supplemental funding to qualified and promising scientists early in their faculty careers who have obtained K funding from the National Institutes of Health in areas that reflect the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation's research priorities.
The objective of this request for applications is to support excellent cystic fibrosis-focused researchers whose projects have been submitted to and approved by the National Institutes of Health but cannot be supported by available funds.