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Funding, News and Announcements

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CIHR Funding News

Posted by Suman Jha on September 22, 2015 in Research Funding

1) Funding Opportunities

a) Funding opportunities posted between August 15 and September 17, 2015 by CIHR and its partners

The following is a list of funding opportunities which CIHR and its partners posted between August 15 and September 17, 2015.

To view these opportunities, please use the .

Simply select the opportunity from the list which is sorted alphabetically.

·         Catalyst Grant: Sex as a Variable in Biomedical or Translational Research
·         Master's Award: 2015-2016
·         Other: Commonwealth Fund Dissemination Award 2015-2016
·         Other: HIV Implementation Science – Component 1
·         Other: Patient Engagement: Collaboration Grants (Fall 2015 Competition)
·         Other: Travel Awards – Institute Community Support (Fall 2015)

Please direct specific inquiries on the funding opportunity to the contact person listed at the bottom of the funding opportunity.

2) Application and Funding Policies

a) Update 12 – Renewed Canadian Common CV (CCV) for CIHR
Recently the Canadian Common CV (CCV) was updated to provide . This enhancement had an impact on CCV functionality behind the scenes and as a result, records added to a given Funding CV template as of June 29, 2015 are not by default selected for submission in other Funding CV templates. This issue is being rectified. Please ensure that any records added as of June 29, 2015 that you wish to submit to CIHR are effectively checked for submission.

We appreciate your continued support. For any questions or comments, please contact CIHR at ccv-cvc@cihr-irsc.gc.ca.

3) Training Courses

a) Sex and Gender in Biomedical Research

Since the early 2000s, there has been a growing recognition by the research community that the sex of cells, tissues, animals, and humans matter in biomedical and translational science. Every cell has a sex, with sex differences beginning at conception and varying along the lifecycle.

When sex is taken into account, it improves the reproducibility of research findings and increases scientific rigor by allowing for results to be generalizable to both men and women. When sex is not taken into account, important effects may be missed.

Failure to consider sex in biomedical or translational research has come at the cost of human lives. This was the case with several drugs that required the addition of Health Canada warnings or were removed from the market due to fatal effects in one sex or the other.

Despite the importance of sex and gender considerations in biomedical research, many biomedical researchers have not yet fully explored the potential for discovery by taking sex and gender into account.

Free Online Course
Supporting the aim of the funding opportunity, the CIHR Institute of Gender and Health (CIHR-IGH) has developed a , which examines how sex can be integrated into biomedical research at every stage of the research project.

DID YOU KNOW ?
·         Chronic pain hypersensitivity is mediated by microglial cells in male mice and by a completely different type of immune cell, likely T-cells, in female mice? *

Could you be missing an important sex difference by excluding female cells and animals from your research?
·         The X-chromosome has 1,669 genes and the Y-chromosome only 426. Only 33% of Genome Wide Association Studies include the X-chromosome.**

Does that make sense?
·         Many funding organizations around the world require the integration of sex/gender considerations at all stages of the research process.

Will your research be left behind?
·         More and more scientific journals are changing their editorial policies to require that the sex/gender of research cells, tissues, animals and human participants be reported.

Could not accounting for sex/gender make it more difficult for you to publish?
·         Sex differences in pharmacokinetics are leading drug safety organizations to recommend halving the dose of certain medications for women.

Is your research measuring these differences?

Take this to learn how to:
·         Distinguish between and define sex and gender in biomedical research;
·         Identify sex/gender differences in the mechanism, disease, or treatment under study;
·         Assess a research protocol based on the integration or omission of sex and/or gender.

Footnotes
* R.E. Sorge et al., “Different immune cells mediate mechanical pain hypersensitivity in male and female mice”, Nature Neuroscience doi: 10.1038/nn.4053, 2015
** Wise, A.L., Gyi, L., & Manolio, T.A. (2013). eXclusion: Toward integrating the X chromosome in Genome-wide association analysis. American Society of Human Genetics, 92: 643-647

CIHR Wants to Hear from You
Absence does not make the heart grow fonder – CIHR wants to hear from you as much as possible. There is a wonderful story to tell about the results and benefits of health research in Canada, but we need your help to truly make this a page turner. And, we need to keep telling this story. So, we encourage you to let us know when you have or, better still, are close to publishing the results of research funded by CIHR. Please drop us a line at mediarelations@cihr-irsc.gc.ca.

Useful CIHR Contacts
General Inquiries: 613-941-2672
Grants & Awards Information: 613-954-1968
Media Relations: 613-941-4563
Ethics Office: 613-941-6706
Technical / IT Help Desk: 613-941-0068