
Successful Grant Writing: Strategies for Health and Human Service Professionals - Paperback
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Following in the tradition of its previous editions, the updated and fully revised fifth edition of this classic guide to grant writing is especially written for health and human service professionals. It provides a comprehensive, systematic, and easy-to-follow stepwise guide to writing competitive grant proposals for research, education, innovative practices, and demonstration projects. Never has the need to advance evidence to improve the health of the public been greater. Generating evidence requires funding, and grant writing has become an essential activity for every health and human service professional who must seek funds to advance innovative research, education, and practice initiatives.
Uniquely focused on developing grant-writing skills as part of a professional's career, this one-of-a-kind guide addresses the full range of essential competencies needed to ensure success. The new edition expands coverage on how to compose an effective aims page, explains how to write a compelling literature review to support significance of a proposal, and describes considerations for specific types of study designs. Additionally, the guide provides a more extensive discussion of mentorship, plus tips for predoctoral students and postdoctoral fellows.
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NEW TO THE FIFTH EDITION:
- Spotlights important new trends that can make or break grant success
- Features Professional Spotlights reflecting the experiences and advice from successful grant writers - from novice to expert
- Highlights special considerations for predoctoral students and postdoctoral fellows
- Examines how to write effective grant applications for specific types of study designs
- Explains how to craft compelling statements about significance and innovation
- Provides guidelines on mentorship
- Covers ways to manage postaward activities and offers strategies and templates for documenting grant progress
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KEY FEATURES:
- Key summary points in every chapter
- Case examples throughout
- Strategies for managing a grant-writing team and postaward activities
- Considerations in building a grant-writing career and matching your level of experience to funding mechanisms
- Testimonies from novices and experts describing their unique grant-writing experiences
Kevin J. Lyons, PhD, has over 40 years of experience in higher education as a faculty member and administrator. He has presented numerous papers at national and international scientific meetings and has been a frequent consultant to universities and government agencies on issues such as research development, team building, interprofessional education, and program improvement. Dr. Lyons has written chapters for the books Medicine and Health Care Into the 21st Century, Leadership in Rural Health: Interprofessional Education and Practice, and Allied Education, Practice Issues and Trends Into the 21st Millennium, and he served as coeditor for the latter. He has served on the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences' Committee on Health Services Research: Training and Workforce Issues and has recently participated in their Workshop on the Allied Health Workforce and Services. Dr. Lyons has also written a white paper for the National Commission on Allied Health on Current Organizational Research Agendas Related to Allied Health Practices. For 10 years, Dr. Lyons served as editor of the Journal of Allied Health, the scholarly journal of the Association of Schools of Allied Health Professions, has received the J. Warren Perry Distinguished Author Award, and has been elected a fellow in that organization. He also coedited a special issue of the journal that was published in September 2010 on interprofessional education, which featured papers from national and international leaders in the field.
Dr. Lyons is a funded investigator, having received grants and contracts from the Bureau of Health Professions to advance the research mission of the allied health professions. He has also served as project evaluator and member of the steering committee for two grants from the National Institutes of Health and Health Resources and Services Administration. Dr. Lyons has served on peer-review panels for Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, and National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research in the U.S. Department of Education and the Bureau of Health Professions and for numerous professional journals. Dr. Lyons is one of the founding members of the American Interprofessional Health Collaborative. He has also served on the Board of Trustees for Rocky Mountain University of the Health Professions.
Gitlin, Laura: -Laura N. Gitlin, PhD, FGSA, FAAN, is distinguished professor and dean, College of Nursing and Health Professions at Drexel University. She is also an adjunct professor at Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing. Previously at Johns Hopkins, she was the Isabell Hampton Distinguished Professor and founding director of the Center for Innovative Care in Aging. Its mission was to develop, test, and implement novel services, programs, and models that advance and support the well-being of older adults, their families, and communities as well as provide mentorship and research training in behavioral intervention research.
Dr. Gitlin's programs of research are multifold and include developing, testing, and implementing innovative psychosocial, behavioral, and environmental approaches to address a wide range of challenges in old age, including physical disability, depressive symptoms, neuropsychiatric behaviors, dementia care, family caregiving, and health disparities. A number of her proven interventions are used worldwide in a variety of healthcare settings.
Dr. Gitlin is nationally and internationally recognized in these areas and is a well-funded researcher, having received continuous research and training grant funds from federal agencies and private foundations, including the Alzheimer's Association and the National Institutes of Health, for over 38 years. For most of her career, she was fully supported by external grant funds and has garnered over $100 million in grant funding. Dr. Gitlin has served as a grant reviewer for the previously named National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (now the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research), the Alzheimer's Association, the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute on Nursing Research, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the American Occupational Therapy Foundation, and other foundations and international bodies. She has published extensively in peer-reviewed journals, with over 300 publications, including book chapters. She has also written six books, including Introduction to Research: Understanding and Applying Multiple Strategies (coauthor, Elizabeth DePoy); Occupational Therapy and Dementia Care: The Home Environmental Skill-Building Program for Individuals and Families (coauthor, Mary A. Corcoran); Physical Function in Older Adults: A Comprehensive Guide to Its Meaning and Measurement; Tips for Aging at Home: Doing What Matters to You (coauthors, Sarah L. Szanton, Jill Roth, Allyson Evelyn-Gustave); Behavioral Intervention Research (coauthor, Sara J. Czaja); Better Living With Dementia: Implications for Individuals, Families, Communities, and Societies (coauthor, Nancy A. Hodgson).
Edition
5th Edition
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Authors
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