TheĀ Health and Social Care Delivery Research (HSDR) ProgrammeĀ is looking to fund high quality, well designed research to provide findings which meet the needs of NHS and social care managers and leaders. The research will be carried out by effective and efficient research teams.
This is a 2-stage, researcher-led funding opportunity. To apply for the first stage you should submit an outline application. If invited to the second stage, you will then need to complete a full application.
Eligibility
See our HSDR Programme page for details about the overall programme remit and eligibility criteria.
Application guidance
Please read the following guidance to help you complete your application:
- domestic outline funding application guidance: this lists the fields that appear in the awards management system and explains what information you need to include for each one
- HSDR programme application guidance:Ā see the information below for specific requirements our HSDR programme looks for in applications
- HSDR programme page: details about the programme remit
- funding assessment criteria
- research inclusion guidance: it is important that you fully consider inclusion throughout the whole research life cycle
- finance guidance for applicants
Research plan
Write a maximum of 5 A4Ā pages for your research plan. When reviewing applications, we will not consider any additional information over this 5 page limit.
Background and rationale
There are different types of needs your research could address under our HSDR programme. Your research may address one or a few needs; it does not have to address all. Read each need for information on what to include in your application:
Research needs
Health or care need
If your proposed research shows the benefits of improving health for the public, patients or carers, please state the benefits and explain how they will have an impact. Benefits include potentially preventing avoidable mortality and morbidity, improving quality of life, and preventing diseases. Research in this area is likely to identify new ways of working that enhance opportunities for health promotion or quality and safety of care. Benefits may also arise from improving the acceptability and effectiveness of care, cost effectiveness to the NHS (health and social care), better targeting of services, or equity of access to care.
Expressed need
If someone from the health and care management community has expressed a need for research in a particular area, you should show the evidence for this and how it relates to the wider NHS (health and social care). You should alsoĀ consider why patients and the service will want to act on the outcomes of your research.
Sustained interest and intent
Show that the issue or area you are researching will have sustained interest in the future. The results of your research must remain highly relevant and important to the needs of the NHS in the future.Ā If your research addresses an NIHR area of ongoing need, you should reference this fact in your proposal (under this heading).
Capacity to generate new knowledge
If you have identified a knowledge gap where new research is needed which cannot be addressed by any existing research, you should describe this in your application.
Generalisable findings and prospects for change
Research in this area is likely to produce generalisable or transferable findings which are valuable to the health and care management community. In your application, describe how health and care organisations are likely to be able to use your findings in their decision-making in ways that bring about change and improvement.
Building on existing work
Your research might contribute to building a coherent body of knowledge in the area. You should show how your research builds on, but does not duplicate, previous research.
What is the problem being addressed?
You must clearly identify the health and care need your research meets or contributes to.Ā Please outline the anticipated value or contribution your study will provide.
Review of existing evidence. How does the existing literature support your proposal?
If your proposal includes primary research then you should reference the existing evidence and explain how this evidence has informed your research. Where an existing systematic review summarises the available evidence, you should reference this, as well as referencing any relevant literature published subsequent to that systematic review.
Where no such systematic review exists, you are expected to undertake an appropriate review of the currently available and relevant evidence. You should do this using a predetermined and described methodology that systematically identifies, critically appraises and then synthesises the available evidence, and then present a summary of these findings in your proposal. You must also reference relevant ongoing studies, for example from trial registries.
Aims and objectives
Please summarise the research question(s) and key aims and objectives.
HSDR funds research projects, not programmes of work or ongoing work. You must have clearly defined research questions, and aims and objectives, and describe how the planned methodology is likely to achieve these objectives.
Methodology/plan
Include the below detail in your methodology and plan:
Project design and methods
Summarise your project plan plus any additional points required to support statements made in the previous sections. Include any key references required to justify them, for example, the use of particular outcome measures or methods of analysis.
For HSDR funding opportunities there are no fixed limits on the duration of projects, funding amount, or the number of co-applicants.
Design
Clearly summarise the type of study design you will be using. For example, primary research; controlled trial; evidence synthesis; or systematic review. Include methods, proposed sample size, and analysis methods, and explain why you have chosen the proposed methodology.
Studies within a trial, project or review
We encourage you to embed methodological sub-studies (up to a maximum funding of £30,000) into your research. See our methodological sub-studies page for more information.
Timeline and milestones
Project timetables including recruitment rateĀ
Indicate the anticipated duration of the study. Where relevant, pay particular attention to the expected recruitment rate and justify your estimate. Outline the main stages of your proposed project including regulatory steps; team recruitment; participant recruitment; data collection, access, linkage, analysis; and knowledge mobilisation. Include the expected duration of each.
Study management
Clinical Trials Unit involvementĀ
Clinical Trials Units are regarded as an important component of many trial applications. They can advise and participate throughout the process from initial idea development through to project delivery and reporting. However, they may not be essential for all types of studies. If you feel this is the case, please justify the reasons in your application.
If you are looking for a Clinical Trial Unit to collaborate with in your application, you can find all UK-registered units on theĀ UKCRC CTU Network website.
Please note that we will check all proposals recommended for funding which involve a clinical trial. We check potential overlaps usingĀ WHO trialsĀ before we communicate any funding decision. Consequently, a funding recommendation may not be taken forward if a major overlap is identified at this stage. It is therefore important that you highlight any potential overlaps before your application is considered by the funding committee.
UK Biobank
UK BiobankĀ is a major national health resource, and a registered charity in its own right. It holds a health research database and aims to improve the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of a wide range of serious and life-threatening illnesses.
We encourage you to consider whether Biobank may be able to provide suitable data for your study. We do not want to discourage you from establishing new participants and data where this is necessary to address your research question. Our aim is to avoid applications looking to set up Biobank-like cohorts where the use of Biobank would prevent wasteful duplication of Biobank-like activities.
Reasonable costs and value for money
The HSDR Programme accepts that some variance in costs is likely to occur between the outline and full applications. We will carefully scrutinise all full application costs and any variance from the outline application. All costs need to be fully justified by the applicants to reassure that the study offers good value for money for the NHS and social care services.
Uploads
Please add the following to the āUploadsā section of your application.
References (mandatory)
Upload 1 single-side A4 page .pdf document of references.
Flow diagram (mandatory)
Upload a flow diagram on a single side of A4. The diagram should illustrate the study design and the flow of participants, if appropriate. If your project consists of more than one work package, consider a diagram that conveys the sequence and timing of research packages as well as how the work packages are linked. For qualitative work it may be appropriate to set out your theoretical framework. You must give full consideration to research inclusion and working with people and communities.
Visit funding web page
(https://www.nihr.ac.uk/funding/health-and-social-care-delivery-research-hsdr-researcher-led/2025330)