Knowledge to Action Grants
Deadline dates
Please see the eligibility and requirements section prior to creating an application.
Application guides can be found on the EGrAMS documentation for applicants page.
Partner @(Model.HeadingTag)>
The Canadian Cancer Society (CCS) in partnership with the Canadian Institutes of Health Research-Institute of Cancer Research (CIHR-ICR), will jointly fund the Knowledge to Action Grants program. As described below, knowledge translation applications from all relevant areas and disciplines of cancer research will be considered eligible for funding. Applications addressing CIHR-ICR's Strategic Research Priorities are specifically encouraged.
Please see the 'Partner description' section below for more information on CIHR-ICR.
Program description @(Model.HeadingTag)>
This Knowledge to Action Grant has been created to encourage research projects that will close the gap between what is known from research and what is done with that knowledge in the health care community and public health practice. These grants are intended to provide funding for research projects that build on existing cancer research findings and aim to improve outcomes and experiences through knowledge translation (KT) for people and populations at risk, patients, their families and communities across the cancer trajectory e.g., to assist knowledge users (researchers, practitioners, policy makers, CCS program delivery staff and/or volunteers) in their awareness of knowledge or innovations and facilitating their use in health or healthcare system improvement. The grant should incorporate the principles of knowledge translation including knowledge synthesis, dissemination, exchange and/or ethically sound application of knowledge to improve health and the health system (1,2).
Note that the focus of applications should be on either: the translation of current, existing knowledge from foundational, discovery research, or the development of new, innovative approaches, models, methodologies, measurement tools, etc., for knowledge translation as outlined below. The creation of new foundational, discovery research or syntheses/systematic reviews are not responsive to this funding opportunity.
Abstract registrations will be reviewed and those that are not clearly within these two categories will not be considered appropriate for this funding opportunity and will be triaged.
This grant program is designed to support primary KT research in behavioural and psychosocial sciences that is aligned with the goals of the program. Applications from all relevant areas and disciplines of cancer research will be considered eligible for funding and will be evaluated based on a common set of criteria. Multidisciplinary collaboration is encouraged. Funding requests should not be simply to fund dissemination of results (e.g. journal publications, meetings, etc.) or for KT approaches already included in a previous grant application.
- health disparities
- prevention
- screening
- early detection
- diagnosis
- treatment
- supportive care
- survivorship
- end-of-life care
- identifying barriers and facilitators to the uptake of research findings
- adapting knowledge, tailoring messages and testing interventions to overcome identified barriers to KT to for example, target populations, health service providers, policy makers, etc.
- KT research methodology development
- KT measurement tools development
- KT innovative program and service design and implementation
- evaluating KT implementation process and outcomes
- sustaining knowledge use
Eligibility @(Model.HeadingTag)>
Applications are invited from investigators across all relevant disciplines to submit projects to develop and test knowledge to action plans that will ultimately result in the improved outcomes and experiences for people and populations at risk, patients, their families and communities across the cancer trajectory.
Investigators may propose multidisciplinary collaborations with different research institutions, as appropriate but must specify the collaborations with the knowledge users to whom the research knowledge is targeted for action.
Note that Abstract Registration must be completed in order to submit a full application.Funds available
Grants will be funded to a maximum of $100,000 to be spent over one or two years. It is anticipated that up to 4 grants will be awarded in each competition. Budgets can include (within the funding cap) a request for permanent equipment of up to $10,000.
The time-frame and associated expenses must be clearly justified in the budget. The grant is non-renewable.
Partner Description @(Model.HeadingTag)>
The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) mandate is to support research that reduces the burden of cancer on individuals and families through prevention strategies, screening, diagnosis, effective treatments, psychosocial support systems, and palliation. Partnering to support this funding opportunity with CCS responds to CIHR-ICR's Strategic Plan.
References @(Model.HeadingTag)>
(1) Graham, I.D., & Tetroe, J.M. (2009). Getting Evidence into Policy and Practice: Perspective of a Health Research Funder. Journal of the Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 18:1, 46-50
(2) For additional references on KT, dissemination, and implementation research and practice see: http://publications.cancer.gov/dipubs/Last modified on: March 6, 2020